ASU won’t ban anti-Israel poster Administration tries to balance speech with safety, dean says By SANAA AL-MARAYATI Staff Writer ASU administrators reversed their decision late Tuesday and decided they cannot prevent Palestinian students from displaying a poster of the Israeli Flag with the Star of David replaced by a swastika, the dean of Student Life said. Leon Shell met with Mary Stevens from ASU Legal Ser­ vices and Commander Richard Hydro from the University Police and said they concluded that ASU administrators can­ not prevent the General Union of Palestinian Students' from displaying the poster on Cady Mall. “We never said (he GUPS have no right to display the flag," Shell said. “We initially decided to prevent the poster from being displayed because we are concerned with the safety of students. ” Shell said the County Attorney's Office verbally informed ASU Police last week that the GUPS display is legal. Hydro could not be reached for comment. Shell said GUPS and Israel Action Committee leaders have been cooperative. GUPS President Baker Khalil has agreed not to display the poster until non-confrontation is insured. “I have not decided exactly when the paster will be displayed, but it will be up when we think it is needed,” Khalil said. “We are not out to provoke anyone," he said. “We are out there to to get a message across to the people that Israel is a Naci state.” IAC Chairman Mark Duskin said all he will try to do is maintain peace. A dispute developed on Cady Mall Oct. 5 when IAC members approached the GUPS table in an attempt to take the poster down. The incident was broken up when administrators and ASU police officers prevented IAC members from removing the poster. Shell said the problem facing the administration is balanc­ ing freedom of speech and the safety of students. “We want to allow speech,” Shell said. “If anyone disrupts a particular event, the police may arrest those who disrupt. We are trying to avoid arresting students.” Shell said he does not have a definite answer to prevent confrontations, but is working with both groups to maintain order. “It is a complex matter in maintaining order, but it may take more police officers to protect students. ” he said. th u rsd a y October 18,1984 s ta te p re s s Tempe. Arizona Arizona State University Vol. 67 No. 37 •fr** ____________ Copyright. State Press. 1984 **> photot hy Mich— I Conner Hittin’ the Sack Senior business and psychology student Larry Bishop breaks In a new Hacky Sack on the lawn near Cady MaW Wednesday. Bishop says he has been luggNng the leather footbags lo r about three years. Lawyer: Gift to A S U may be unconstitutional By W. TIMAHL 8taff Writer The gift of the former Arizona Children's Hospital to ASU by the state’s Department of Health Services could be considered un­ constitutional, according to a lawyer for the Arizona Senate's Republican Party. Martin Willett, referring to an opinion solicited from the state attorney general’s office by Senate Majority Leader R obot Usdane, said the Department of Health Ser­ vices may not have the authority to give the property away. “It is common for transactions such as this to take (dace, but it is not determined if this department has that authority," Willett said. He said health services has been granted authority in the past by the Legislature to acquire or buy land, but was never given the right to give property away. “It is undetermined if state agencies such as this have the power to barter, sell or give away land without consenting the Legislature,” Willett said. The hospital, located at 200 N. Curry Road, was given to ASU in late August. “I haven’t perceived a problem that it was done, but I’m not in a position to speak for an 90 people (in the Legislature),” Willett said. “But it should be looked at by die representatives of the people. “In this instance it is peculiar because the authority wasn't delegated to the depart­ ment,” he said. “It isn’t bad that die transfer occurred, but it probably should be looked at tty a legislative committee,” Willett said. “It raises a question of the checks and balances in state government. ” At the Arizona Board of Regents meeting Friday, the board approved an $865,000 re­ quest from University officals to complete die transfer of die hospital facilities from theDKStoASU. Jim West, press secretary to Gov. Bruce Babbitt, said the governor’s office is not concerned with the attorney general’s deci­ sion, expected to be published this week. West said he believes the DHS has the jurisdiction to give the hospital to ASU “ (Usdane’s opinion is) not our reading of die law, but we will have to wait for the at­ torney general to determine if there is a problem,” West said. “The problem is not a concern at all.” The Legislature must give final approval to the funds granted to ASU by the regents because the Rinding is part of ASU’s operating budget request for next year. It will consider the budgets for the state’s three universities in March. Willett said an opinion has not yet been issued by die attorney general's office, and any forthcoming opinion will have no authority. “We are just trying to determine whether the transfer was done properly,” West said. According to Willett, if the attorney general’s office decides there is a problem with the DHS gift to ASU, the Legislature will ha ve to decide what happens next. Rather than hold up the transfer of die property, Willett said the Legislature would probably enact and pass a bill giviig DHS the authority to donate the property. ASU-West campus not needed, NAU president says By SHERRY LOWE Staff Writer The ASU branch campus on the west side of Phoenix is destined to become the state's fourth university, NAU’s president said earlier this week. “Personally, I think ASU-West, in five to 10 years, will be Arizona’s fourth university," Eugene Hughes said. Hughes said the west-side campus is not needed because the three state universities and community colleges can pro­ vide course work that students require. “There are ways to meet needs besides ASU-West,” said Hughes. “We should utilize the resources existing at our com­ munity colleges and universities now.” According to a report prepared by the Arizona Board of Regents staff, ASU’s Tempe campus could lose approximate­ ly 5 percent of its student enrollment when ASU-West opens U of A would lose about 0.7 percent, and total enrollment would drop about 2.6 percent at NAU, according to the report. The report estimated the new facility would enroll 2,500 students during it’s first term, based on the number'of ASU, U of A and NAU students from the west ride of the Valley. “It’s a good study, but our report will be more in-depth.” Hughes said. Hughes said his staff members are working on a report that will project the impact ASU-West will have on NAU. “My staff is collecting data over and above the other report. We’re looking at which programs will be affected,” hesaid. Hughes said he is not sure whether NAU will change cur­ rent curriculum to combat the effects ASU-West may have on Ms university. “When ASU-West opens, we’ll have a better idea of what we need to do,” he said. The report states a reduction in enrollment may take place in the off-campus counseling program offered by NAU. Hughes said the program is offered at Luke's Air Force base for graduate students in counseling. “We offered a graduate counseling program because ASU hasn't,” he said. Hughes said he could not project a decrease in enrollmen’ in NAU’s counseling program until the west-side campus opens. The ASU-West campus, which will be located at 43rd Avenue and Thunderbird Road, is scheduled to open in the early 1990's. According to the regents study, population increases may offset any losses in enrollment. “I think the impact will be greater than the study shows,” Hughes said. “It may bea very bad impact. He said increases in population are projected for Maricopa and Pima counties. “The possibility of those students going to NAU is unlike­ ly," he said. Page 2 State Pres« Thursday, October Ifl^ 1964 nation/world Q M strikes in C an ad a m ay fo rc e la yo ffs in U .S . TORONTO (AP) — About 36,000 auto worker« struck all nine General Motors plants in Canada on Wednesday in a walkout that threatens to quickly force layoffs at GM plants in the United States as parts supplies dwindle. Robert White, United Auto Workers union director for Canada, said there was no reason to hope for an early settlement. He said negotiations with General Motors of Canada Ltd. would continue, at least for the next few days. “We have a fundamental disagreement," White said. “It’s not just money issues. There's some principles here about how workers will benefit both now and in the future." Rod Andrew, chief GM negotiator, said the company’s U.S. operations would be affected within days. He said a wide gap separates the two sides. GM officials in Canada and the United States declined to provide details of the effects, but several of the Canadian plants supply components to GM assembly plants in the United States, and GM’s just-in-time inventory system has eliminated stockpiles of many parts. Gary Glaser, an automotive analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York, estimated GM's strike losses would come to $16 million the first week and would escalate quickly, perhaps to 10 times that in three or four weeks. GM was struck at 17 sites in the United States before reaching a U.S. labor agreement Sept. 21. Analysts said those strikes cost the company $200 million or more. The Canadian strike would affect Chevrolet and Pontiac operations hardest, since a variety of those cars and Chevrolet and GMC trucks are built in Oshawa, Ontario. Britain fo llo w s N o rw a y lead, cu ts N orth Sea oil prices LONDON (AP) — Britain, following Norway’s lead, cut prices on its North Sea oil Wednesday, raising the prospect of widespread reductions by oil exporters. Last year, after a similar round of price-cutting by the North Sea oil countries, the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries cut prices for the first time in its existence. “So far, it looks like we're moving down the same road,” said Eurgene Nowak, an oil industry analyst at the investment firm of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. in New York. But Nowak said the price cuts to date would not immediately result in additional declines in prices at the gasoline pump. Even before the British action, an OPEC minister was quoted as saying an emergency meeting of the cartel would be convened before the end of the month if price-cutting spread. Great Selection for Gals & Guys (Plus Bits & Pieces — Accessories) At a news conference 181«*, he said he didn’t know what he would do with the $193,000 prize money. “I could use a new car, but I really haven’t given any thought to that," he said, adding that the prize might mean, “maybe I can get a few more rooms" in the lab. European research c a tc h e s up, scien tists w in N o b e l in ph ysics GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) — The Nobel Prize for physics, awarded Wednesday to two scientists at the European laboratory CERN, underscores the post-World N e w Y o rk b io ch e m ist w in s Nobel; War II recovery of European scientific research, the physicists' colleagues and experts say. 26-year U .S . streak con tin u es Carlo Rubbia, the Italian-born senior physicist at the STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) — An American biochemist Europea Laboratory for Particle Physics, and his co-winner, on Wednesday won the 1984 Nobel Prize in chemistry (or Simon Van der Meer of the Netherlands, exemplify this research that led to safer medication, and the prize in recovery. physics was awarded to an Italian-Dutch team of nuclear Rubbia, who headed the international, 126-member team physicists who found particles scientists had sought for 50 that discovered the prize-winning “W-weak" and “Z-zero” years. particles last year, relied on the inventiveness he learned as The chemistry prize, to R. Bruce Merrifield, 63, of New a child tinkering with wrecked World War II army vehicles. York’s Rockefeller University, gave Americans a 26-year And Van der Meer, the Dutch engineer who invented a way record of at least one Nobel Prize a year. The United Stat<*s of manufacturing and storing “anti-protons” needed to has won or shared more than half the three annual Nobel conduct Rubbia’s experiments, proved that what was science prizes since World War II. thought impossible could be done. Merrifield was honored for work he did in the 1950s and Along the way, they brought the 13-member nation CERN 1960s, developing a new method of synthesizing amino-acid onto a par with labs in the traditionally stronger United compounds called peptides, which has revolutionized the States, developed its reputation as a top center of scientific manufacture of drugs such as high blood pressure medicine, engineering and gave it the lead in research on sub-atomic insulin and other hormone medications, and has been used in particles, described as the basic building blocks of nature. gene technology. “I think it indeed has shown that 30 years of effort, of hard The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences gave the Nobel work, have resulted in the fact that now Europe is fully Prize in Physics to Carlo Rubbia, 50, of Itaiy and Simon van competitive and at the same levels as other parts of the der Meer, 59, of the Netherlands for discovering the W and Z world," said Herwig Schopper of West Germany, the director subatomic particles which are believed to carry one of of CERN nature’s four basic forces — the “weak interaction force” -in much the same way that photons carry light. N A S A to help estab lish Unlike the Rubbia-van der Meer discovery, which has no immediate practical application, Merrifteld’s development b io tech n o lo g y ce n te r at U o f A of a simple peptide-synthesis process has “become a basic tool that all laboratories use," said the Swedish Academy 's TUCSON (AP) — The National Aeronautics and Space Ad­ Professor Bengt Lindberg. ministration will help establish biotechnology research Merrifield, a native of Fort Worth, Texas, described his centers at the University of Arizona and in Philadelphia, of­ prize-winning work as “an idea I had 25 years ago on how we ficials said Wednesday. can do chemical synthesis of compounds, particularly The centers will have the potential for revolutionizing the peptides, by anchoring them to some insoluble support. ” purification of pharmaceutical drugs, said Milan Bier, who He didn't know he’d won until he arrived five minutes late will head the Arizona center. to his laboratory and got the news from the cleaning woman. NASA is to announce the centers officially on Friday. “Some years ago, I knew that somebody had nominated me. The space agency is to contribute $1.35 million over a threeBut that was years ago and I had assumed that nothing had year period for the Arizona center. Bier and a NASA official happened," Merrifield said in a telephone interview, his said. Bier said he estimated that the NASA funding level for voice still shaking. the Philadelphia center would be comparable. W e’re looking fo r a college m an to te n u re in our English Leather m usk advertising. W in cash , p rize s, and an all-expensepaid trip to New York. TRACY’S NEARLY NU-SHOP '5612 E astT hom asR o a d ,P hoenix• 994-9722 Join the dynamic team of exciting new national restaurant chain, soon to open the first of several restaurants in the vafiey. Become a part of this fun-fifled, actionpacked restaurant/entertainment concept. Full- end part-time available, day and night. •Food servers »Pantry •Hostess «Bussers •Bartenders »Dishwashers •Cocktail waitresses »Cooks Exceptional opportunities for advancem ent! •Now hiring for Kent Tower location to train for Corner­ stone location, opening in January (Tempe). The prospect of a collapse of oil prices sent oil company stocks tumbling on Wall Street and pushed the British pound to new lows on global foreign exchange markets. While lower oil prices help contain inflation, analysts have warned that an uncontrollable slide in prices could endanger economies of oil-producing countries in developing nations, and leave them unable to meet payments on loans from Western banks. In July, Saudi Arabia’s oil minister. Sheik Ahmed Zhari Yamani, warned that if the price of oil dropped to $25 a barrel, “a large number of small and middle-sized U.S banks will be affected." Join the Campus Search! COSTUME RENTALS Interviews will be held at two convenient locations-. Del Prado at Kent the Biltmore Tower 5110 N. 32nd St. 100 W. Clarendon Phoenix Phoenix •Wed.-Sat, Oct. 17-20, 9-12 a.m. & 3-6 p.m p re ss a _____ JB M The 1984 English Leather Musk Man Do you know a guy on campus who represents the “bold/shy" appeal of English Leather* Musk Cologne? Send (or have him send) his photo, name and address, and the name of his college to Campus Search, English Leather, c/o the Editor-inChief of this newspaper. That's all! It's fun, exciting and it just may be that your nominee or you yourself will end up in the English Leather* Musk advertising in 1985. There will be 3 semi-finalist winners from your campus as well as a national winner. Nothing to buy. no obligations of any kind Photos must be received by the editors of this newspaper by November 15th, 1984. Be sure you write'entrant’s name, address, phone number, and the name of the college he attends on the back of the photograph you enter. Complete rules are available from the Editor-in-Chief of this newspaper State Press ________________________________________________ Thursday, October 18, 1984 E3Ü Funding Student Bar Association holds forum on LG AU By CINDY PEARLMAN S t a f f W r it e r Addressing academic and First Amendment freedoms, views were mixed when 70 students met with ASU’s Student Bar Association Wednesday to discuss possible funding and legal support for the Lesbian/Gay Academic Union. The LGAU was denied funding two weeks ago by the Associated Students Senate. Lou Holscher, president of the SBA, indicated the purpose of the meeting was to determine the nature of the SBA’s role on campus when possible student discrimination is involved. “Who should be more concerned about fairness and upholding the Constitution than law students?" asked Tony Celaya, a third-year law student. Celaya was one of eight students who chose to speak on the SBA’s responsibility to the LGAU. “ It’s time for SBA to stand up and participate in protest," he said. Law student Jim Holmes said the SBA is not a “University funding base” and cannot afford to provide funds for non-law school groups. Holmes also mentioned SBA funding problems, such as un­ paid dues. Kim Hunter, senator for the School of Social Work and chairman of the LGAU, said the SBA could be a helpful sup­ port outlet. “This is not the first time our organization has asked for funding. Last year we received $125," Hunter said. The Senate denied funding for the LGAU earlier this month, following guidelines set by ASASU President Ray Burnell. Burnell said it would be inappropriate to provide groups with funding for food or to fund groups subsidized by the University that advocate or inhibit the exercise of religion, that promote sexual preference or further the interests of political candidates. Holscher said the SBA considered the LGAU issue at a meeting last week, and the 12-member SBA council decided at that time to hold an open forum to discuss the scope of the organization. It also decided to delay any vote on the LGAU issue until opinions expressed at Wednesday's meeting were taken into account. In the past, the role of the SBA has been to fund guest speakers, intramuralB and other social events for law students. “I don’t think law students should shy away from con­ troversial issues," Holscher said. Other law students said the SBA would “chill academic freedom” if it remained solely a social club. "We ought to be able to function as a group of law students concerned about the community,” Celaya said. A senator from the College of Law, Jay Heiler, proposed the ASASU amendment striking the LGAU proposal. Heiler was not at Wednesday’s meeting. The SBA will decide whether to take an active role in sup­ port of LGAU at a closed meeting next week. police report pipes have been tested and there are no leaks at the present time. In other activity, University Police reported the following incidents in the 24hour period ending at 2p.m. Wednesday: •Someone broke off tie outside mirror from an ASU student’s vehicle and shoved chew­ ing gum in the car door keyhole Tuesday, causing $50 damage, police said. The vehi­ cle had been parked in Lot 40. •An ASU student reported Tuesday after­ noon that someone took the front brake assembly from her bicycle, police said. The bicycle had been parked in a rack outside OcotilloHall. •A green canvas car cover, valued at $65, ASU Police reported a chlorine leak alarm was activated at ASU’s Aquatic Center late Tuesday. ASU Fire Marshall An­ dy Anderson and Central Plant electricians responded. A low level leak was located in a valve and the area was ventilated to allow necessary repairs. Anderson said the pool maintenance man changed the defective regulator in the chlorine tank late Tuesday night. Anderson said it was a small leak, but because the alarm is sensitive, it set off the detector. A similar incident occurred when the chlorine-leak alarm was activated Friday. Anderson said the alarm was activated due to a power failure. He said Wednesday the was taken from a vehicle parked in Lot 63 Tuesday, police said. •An orange Schwinn Varsity 10-speed, valued at $40, was reported stolen from the MU sometime between 10:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Monday, police said. •A backpack and its contents valued at $126 were taken from the math testing center of the Physical Science Building Tuesday, police said. •A marroon wallet with black trim was reported stolen Tuesday from a janitor's closet at the Gammage Center. The value was unknown. •Someone damaged trash cans in both the men’s and women’s restrooms on the third "1 WEEKEND RETREAT Photo Finishing Savings in P re sc o tt O C T O B E R 26-28 Relax with good music, good friends and good discussions Meet people fro m Northern Arizona State $30 fee R.S.V.P. U/ 967-7563 H ILLE L: Jewish Student Center I floor of the Business Annex Wednesday, causing $18 damage, police said. •Someone activated the northwest door alarm of Manzanita Residence Hall early Wednesday, police said. Responding police officers checked and found no problems in the area. •A fire alarm was activated on the second floor of the Engineering Research Center Wednesday. Responding officers found the area secure. •An intrusion alarm was activated on the basement floor of the Business Annex due to an electrical malfunction, police said. Responding officers found no problems in the area. —SHERRY LOWE • nLi/AADÈSÊÈJC K i\in D 4StereQ CharmTheatres eiSound TWILIGHT SHOW S 2 SO A p e r f o r m a n c e of e x tr a o r d in a r y d e lic a c y fro m : ; Albe r t R n nè y J a c q u e Im e B is s e t p la y s Y vonne Uns w ife) e le g a n tly a n d movingly." y ■ ' ^ Jam*t (VIt.slin, NE W YORK Tl WE S John Huston is powerfully successful.. Albert Finney is remarkable.'* - jmv k»oii Newsweek Our everyday low prices 12 e x p o s u r e ........................................ $ 2 .4 9 15 e x p o su re d is c .................................. $ 3 .0 9 2 4 e x p o s u r e ........................................ $ 4 .2 9 3 6 e x p o s u r e ........................................ $ 6 .0 9 R e p rin ts ................................................. 19< CAMPUS DRUGS 712 S. 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K eep Y o u r Sum m er Ten J S u n -T a n s Wtii pu Li* Prado* Townhomi1 Street Address - ------ ------- jjj................•;----------------- —---City. State, Zip------------- ----------------------------------------Phone * —— --- -------- — ------------ ------------ ---Mail to or tall fur information: (602) 966-1800. Los Prados Townhomes, 1323 S. Hardy. Tempe AZ #5281. 4415 S. Rural Tempe MARSH* McCREAOtE, ARIZONA REPUatlC -s e d u c t i v e : IVpvhI Ansrn Mrw.wu'A 831-2884 f"* I I i I I T a n n in g B o o t h 5 V is it s f o r $ 5 T a n n in g B e d 5 V is its f o r $ 2 0 1 0 V is its fo r $ 3 5 S IB » jp = — ::—==--mf =3mb - ------- i-plr- 1 LJU L f V « /“7 A page from Garth Molyneux's String Quartet li C orn e rsto n e S hopping C e n te r Name & f 1 715 S. Rural Tempe M By JESSICA KREIMERMAN Entertainment Writer If you have ever taken a class in Gammage Center or the Music Building, you probably already know that those are no ordinary courses going on inside the classrooms. Walk through the aisles and your senses will be treated to sounds unheard in other buildings. Trumpets and pianos and violins seem to be everywhere. Whole ensembles and solos. And more than th at This is the kind of environment which inspires people to create beautiful things. And in certain cubicles inside the buildings, some very creative people are working hard every day to do something most members of the ASU community are not even faintly aware of. They are composing. That’s right, just like Mozart and Chopin and Stravinsky, ASU dwellers, from undergraduates to graduates to faculty members, are creating music from individual notes and a lot of imagination. And hard work. These artists have been shuffling papers, composing, drafting scores, recopying than, getting people to perform, arranging the performance, setting up the rehearsals, coaching the players and attending the rehearsals for a pair of upcoming musical events on campus. On Monday, at 7:30 p.m., the compositions of several students of Professor Ronald LoPresti will be performed in the Recital Hall, on the fifth floor of the Music Building. On Sunday, at 7 p.m., graduate students John Hammitt, Garth Molyneux and Robert Rabinowitz will present several of their works to the public. For most of LoPresti’s students, composing is a new experience. They are undo-graduates and have worked to create pieces which may or may not work. But LoPresti said it doesn’t matter. “It’ll probably be a small audience attending this concert. We are expecting oily music people and friends of the composers. In this case, some students are presenting pieces for the first time.’’ After some time, LoPresti said, they begin to develop their ear. LoPresti is a composer in his own right. A faculty member for 30 years, he has written “hundreds” of pieces that have been performed in Arizona and the United States. Now, most of the work he does is by commission. And he is in demand. least three hours every day composing. It is a non-stop process, and LoPresti said people will never take you seriously as a composer if you do not produce good material constantly. Garth Molyneux, a 26-year-old graduate student, spends at least one hour a day, early in the morning, in the process of writing new pieces. He composes “serious music, as most late 20th century musicians Tike to call it. Serious music is to the 20th century what “classical” music was to the 16th, 17th 18th and 19th centuries. In the future, perhaps, the best of these yet unknown composers will be remembered as the Bachs, Beethovens and Bartoks of this era. ----------------- Exp_______ Order shipped within 48 hours Offer good m US only Öfter void where prohibited by taw No produca purchase nenaroary Everctaar bolted by World Wide Ftoduai Company, Si. Loua . MO 63136 Evurctear. the ukunaie mone, uro in modere non. km m ended fee consumption untaro m in d «nth non-alcoholic h e s s p a i HALLOWEEN! “When I got out of the service, 1 realized that my electronics, which was where I was during the serv had to get into music.” Originally, he thought he would become a perforr consistently got better grades in theory/compositioi follow that course. Thus far, he has completed man already been performed. John Hammitt’s pieces will also be featured in th Germany and spent the most of his youth living in i ASU. He is a quieter man and his style is obviously Hammitt had a lot of opportunities to see live per living in Germany. He was already composing whil main interest then was rock and roll and jazz, he is movement described earlier. But as far as describing the particular category ii Hammitt is reluctant: “I’ll let the musicologists wo B y PETEJUNKER Entertainment Writer Stop me if you’ve heard this one: What’s the difference between Beethoven’s “ E ro ica” and Stockhausen's “Kreuzspiel”? If you want to find out, don’t go to a book of old jokes, go to a concert of New Music. Karlheinz Stockhausen is one of the contemporary com­ posers whose works will be performed by the ASU New Music Ensemble in its first concert of the year, at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Music Theatre. The Ensemble specializes in music written since World War II, an event which had a great effect on the young Stockhausen, who served on the battlefield as a medic and whose work marks a decisive break from German musical Romanticism. To the listener, Stockhausen's break from the old romantic styles is obvious. Jam es DeMars, director of the New Music Ensemble, describes “ Kreuzspiel” by noting that there is “nothing sweet about it.” Dentistry S t u d e n t S p e c ia l S11 E X A M & X -R A Y C a ll F o r A p p o in t m e n t •M asks «Costume Sales & Rentals •W igs • Make-up 12 M i n u t e s F r o m C a m p u s 894-1684 933 E. U N IV E R S IT Y , S U I T E 101 D R . B R I A N D . F O W , D .D .S . 7 5 5 5 Osborn Rd., Suite 2 0 4 Scottsdale. AZ • 949-1234 But th progran concertmight si piece in of it. Thi are crea “In pr consider him or h the gesti them th for Beet closer to DeMa defining mean co play art ss Slate Press iing the trials performance M E M O R IA L U N IO N LO W ER L E V E L HALLOWEEN FILM SALE NOW IN PROGRESS John Hammitt is reluctant to describe the particular category in which his work belongs. Til let the musicologists worry about labels.’ © 110-24 EXP. (100ASA) $ 1 .8 3 IS EXP. DISC (MOASA) $ 1 .7 0 3SM M -24 EXP. OMASA) $ 1 .8 9 ALL SIZKS A SPEEDS... ON SALE! P O M N O M INFORMATION CALL: 965-4322 /mf TP ----------- rM----h-Tt- - F = mj --------! i i H* — -r*f ~ klsU L: t.y j i i f —4-— f — i~fjTr~T « s 5h P h i ÉÉ ”7 String Quartet In B. I realized that my life was not meant for doing is during the service,” Molyneux said. “I knew I become a performing musician. But when he heory/ composition classes, Molyneux decided to is completed many pieces, some of which have i be featured in the concert. Hammitt was born in is youth living in various places until he came to style is obviously different from Molyneux’s. ies to see live performances of jazz while he was y composing while in high school, and a lth o u g h his oil and jazz, he is also part of the serious ticular category in which his work belongs, m usicologists worry about labels.” rence sen s af old com- lusic toy in >W ar oung : anc* sic a l n the rfth e th at What drives someone to dedicate their time and energy to what is often a financially unrewarding field? Molyneux has no doubt about his needs. “I must compose. There is sort of an inner ear that demands satisfaction, and the only way it gets it is by writing, every day, and writing a lot. ‘T here’s a need for me to express myself in music,” he said. Molyneux’s music is undoubtedly an extension of the man. His major project, “Requiem for an American f amily, is an ambitious and at the same time poignant portrait of his relatives their lives, ami how they have affected his personality. The requiem’s second movement will be performed Sunday. The time it takes to compose a piece depends on the composer and on the length of the piece. The “Introduction Fugue and Chorale” took Molyneux two months to compose, while writing the requiem has taken 10 months so far. But unlike popular preconceptions, the art of composing is not a fast process “It’s usually a long process, you work two hours every day. You’re not struck by lightning and whip out a piece over the weekend,” Hammitt said. " • „• you re Rossini,” Molyneux said, saying Rossini preferred to compose a totally different arrangement rather than pick up a piece of paper that had fallen from his bed. Hammitt will be completing two more works before he begins his thesis. He still doesn’t know the ‘topic,’ though. “I’ll do whatever I feel like writiig then,” he said. And he’s not worried about ideas. Hammitt doesn’t want to deal with the theories of creativity, the right and left brain. “How I get an idea is not something I can describe. I get it in my head first and then I practice on the piano, which I consider a tool,” Hammitt said. Composers have to go through intense sessions with their thoughts and gut filin g s. A piece may sound good one day and they may hate it the next. Molyneux likes to research also. He listens to his favorites, Maurice Ravel and Samuel Barber. I think to myself, ‘Can I use these ideas?’ I compose first in my head and then at the piano and finally on paper. That way I erase a lot less often,” Molyneux said. And then, after the struggle to find the right sound, the composers have to arrange so their piece will be interpreted the way they intended it to be. For the most part, LoPresti has been satisfied with the performances of his works. And so have Hammitt and Molyneux. But what if, when performed a niece sounds wrong? “When you have a premiere performance, the only people that know what the piece sounds like are the performers and the composer. Mistakes can happen within the piece and some people will not even notice it, but you would, W m iffe you envision it in a certain way,” Hammitt said. Molyneux said "what’s really disturbing” is when he listens to a performance and finds a chord that has no reason to be there. The only saving grace with that, he said, is he’s the only person who knows the chord is wrong. “I can live with a performer missing a note or something, as long as he gets back ing-HMw ” Molyneux said. Even though Monday’s recital is to LoPresti‘s students what a laboratory experiment is to a biology student, the young composers are probably anxious and tense. But by the end of the evening, the students — David McGuire, Cindy Walley, Frederick Gurney, James DeFazio and Rick Roth — will have the experience to add to the relief. Professor LoPresti encourages people to attend the concerts. “Come to the recital, and just sit there. It’s quite different music from what you’re accustomed to.” But there are more than just formal differences between the program erf the New Music Ensemble and your standard concert-music repertoire. For other concerts, DeMars said, “I might sit and listen to various recordings of such and such a p iece in order to become aware of the different interpretations of it. There is a tradition there to acknowledge. In this case, we a re creating the tradition. “in preparing to perform contemporary music, we take into consideration who the writer is, and what the influences upon him or her are. But we also have to take a much closer look at the gestures that are made in a piece. We really need to think them through, because there is not the tradition that there is for Beethoven’s Fifth, for example. It really brings us much closer to the creative process." DeMars said the creative process is the crucial point in defining the Ensemble's repertoire. “Contemporary doesn’t mean commercial. We don’t play Linda Rondstadt music, we play art music.” Miriam Prum D ire c to r o f A d m issio n s a t th e U niversity o f Ju d aism w ill b e a t A S U t o discu ss: OPPORTUNITIES IN ADVANCED JEWISH STUDIES A N D CAREERS IN THE JEWISH COMMUNITY T u esd ay, O c t 2 3 • 9:3 0 -4 :3 0 Call HILLEL fo r an a p p o in tm e n t 9 6 7 -7 5 6 3 He paints out the trends in contemporary music often parallel trends in other art forms such as painting, dance and poetry, and that interest and involvement on the part of the listener is an important part of the performance of new music. Ideas from the visual arts and their corresponding buzz­ words (minimalism, pointillism, etc.) are also in the musical vocabulary. The work of many contemporary poets, notably Sylvia Plath, have been put to music in recent years. The Friday night concert will feature three solo works: “Ariel” by Ned Rorem will performed by soprano Beverly Hubbard; Roger Hannay’s “Elegy,” written for amplified viola and tape recorder, will be performed by violist Carol Porter; and saxophonist Jeff Mitchell will perform “Tag" a composition by Eric Stokes. The program also includes Rzewski’s “Les Moutons de Panurge” as well as “Kreuzspiel” by Karlheinz Stockhausen James DeMars will conduct the EiwmM» Admission to the concert is free. Professional Guitar Instruction All Styles — A ll Levels T h e G u it a r S t u d io FINE CLASSICAL GUITARS 808 S. M ill 968 -2 5 2 9 SALE ENDS 10/25/84 "H ¡nur ß/rtvrmm arant »•csnw„, to roo, roo «Aon» bo comtoy » us.” I " “ “ " — COUPON*“ “ ” — | D O U BLE BURG ER FU LL M EAL DEAL { Look w hat you get* An a ll-b e e f burger A sm all order of crispy g o lden fries vpur favorite sm all soft drink. And, to to p it off. a coo l an d cream y 5 o r DAIRY QUEEN* Soft Serve Sundae H ead for your particip atin g DAM7V QUEEN* BRAZIER * store, to g e t the Burger Full M eal D e a l'* — th e best bargain in,own WK TREAT YOU MONT 4AM00 Coro IM3 ONLY AT: 1 3 8 9 E. A P A C H E (Between Rural & McClintock) ■ ■ ■ ■ m COUPON h b m m m m Looking for o New Wardrobe? BUFFALO E X C H A N G E BUY-SELL-TRADE New and Used Cfothtng 3 East 54h St. Tem ps, AZ 968-2567 Page 12 s State Press Thursday. October 18,1984 p o t l i g h t ; Thursday, Oct. t l •T h e ASU Jazzy Rock Ensemble will perform at 7:30 p.m. in the Music Theatre. Admission is $1. • The Valley Art Theatre has scheduled a Bogart triple Mil for Oct. 18-20: "The Big Sleep” plays a t 6 p.m., “The Maltese Falcon" plays a t 8:10 p.m. and ‘T o Have and Have Not” plays at 9:45 p.m. •T h e Scottsdale Center for the Arts Cinema will screen “Dr. Stangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb” and “Seven Days in May” beginning at 7 p.m. Oct. 18-20 and at 1 p.m. Oct. 20. Admission is 83.50, or $2.50 for students, seniors and SACA members. Friday, Oct. 19 • “Quintessence,” the Grand Canyon College wind ensemble, will perform works of Elgar, Jacob, Holst and Vaughn Williams, as well as “Three Impressions far Wind Quintet” by E ric Hughes, a piece commissioned by Quintessence, a t 8 p.m. in the Ethington Theatre at the college, 3300 W. Camelback Road in Phoenix. The concert is free and open to the public. • Triple Bogey, see Oct. 18. • “Dr. Strangelove” and “Seven D aysin May,” see Oct. 18. Saturday, Oct. 20 • John Gibbons, resident harpsichordist for the Musical Instrument Collection a t the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, will perform Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Goldherg Variations" a t 8 p.m. in Kerr Cultural Center, 6110 N. Scottsdale Road in Scottsdale. Tickets a re $8, and are available at Kerr, Gammage Center and Diamonds box offices, and at the University Ticket Agency. • TheTempe Little Theatre will present the final shows of “ Love, Sex and the I.R.S.” a t 2 and 8 p.m. in the Tempe Community Center, 3500 S. Rural Road. Tickets for the comedy, written by William VanZandt and Jane Milmore and directed by Alice Scannell, are $5 for adults, 83 for students, 82.50 for senior citizens and 81 for children under 12. Tickets can be obtained a t the door or reserved by calling Mary Valpey a t 964-1040 (days) or «68-5395 (evenings) • Triple Bogey, see Oct. 18. • “Dr. Strangelove" and “Seven Days in May,” see Oct. 18. Sunday, Oct. 21 • The ASU trum pet ensemble, directed by School of Music faculty member David Hickman, will perform a t 7 p.m. in the Music Theatre. The program includes works by Joseph Tun-in, Gordon Jacob, Bruce Broughton and ASU professor of composition Ronald LoPresti Ad­ mission is free. • “Soldier of Orange” from the Netherlands and “Das Boot” from Germany comprise the bill for the Oct. 21-22 installment of the Valley Art Theatre’s “Foreign Classic” series. “Soldier of Orange” shows at 8:45 p.m. each night and a t 12:30 p.m. Oct. 21 ; “Das Boot" (pronounc­ ed “boat” — ju st like in English) plays a t 6 p.m. each night and at 3 p.m. Oct. 21. Monday, Oct. 22 • California a rtist Dinah Jam es will present a ' slide lecture on creative processes, a t 1:30 p.m. in the MU Gallery where several of her works are on display. The lecture is free and open to the public. • Robert Fichter, a visiting artist from the Visual Arts Institute, will lecture on photography and printmaking a t 7 p.m. in Art Building Room 220. This Centennial event is presented by the ASU School of Art. • “Soldier of Orange” and “Das Boot,” see Oct. 21 . Tuesday, O c t 23 • The Valley Art Theatre’s “Foreign Classic” series turns its atten­ tion to France Oct. 23 and 24 with screenings of “E ntre Nous” at 7 p.m. and “La Nuit de Varennes ” a t 9 :05 p.m. Ongoing exhibits •T h e Matthews Center gallery is hosting “ From Flagstaff to Helsinki and Back,” featuring works by contemporary ceram ic m asters Rudy Autio, Jim Leedy and P eter Voulkos, through Oct. 28, and Selections from the Melvin Hellwitz Collection through Nov. 4. “Two Generations of German Expressionist Printm aking” runs through Nov. 18. Gallery hours are 8 a.m . to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. • The ASU Planetarium is presenting “ 100 Times Around the Sun,” a program exploring the evolutionary journey from the beginning of the universe to the formation of galaxies, stars, suns and planets. Filmmaker Allen Hubbard will predbnt his new travel-oriented work, “Song of India,” at 8 p.m. In Kerr Cultural Center, 6110 N. Scottsdale Road in Scottsdale. Tickets for the screening are $5, and are available at Kerr, Gammage and Diamonds box offices and at the University Ticket Agency. Showings a re a t 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., Tuesdays and Thursdays, through Nov. 22. Admission is 81 at the door. Reservations are re ­ quired and obtainable by calling 965-6891. • The MU Gallery will feature mixed media works by Dinah Jam es and painted fiberglass/monotypes by Suzan Woodruff through Oct. 29. Gallery hours a re 9 a.m . to5p.m . Monday through Friday. Valley film society trying to retrieve classic movie magic By GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS Entertainment Writer If you opened a Hollywood cookbook, rif­ fled through the recipes and found one that called for putting Laurel and Hardy, Jimmy Stewart, Jean Harlow and The Phantom of The Opera together in a huge, sparkling mixing bowl, what would you get? □ A new Michael Jackson video? □ Steven Spielberg’s latest film idea? □ A raunchy hew nighttime soap opera? The answer is a firm “ none of the above.” What you would get is a fancy taste of nostalgia, strung together by the Classical Film Society run by Tempe resident Joyce Beadle. The Classical Film Society (CFS) of Paradise Valley has been supplying the public with an alternative to the current movie spectrum. Beadle, with the help of other community members has been run­ ning the organization for 10 years and the interest in it appears to be growing. “We’re really the only group that does this type of thing,” Beadle said. “We try to pro­ mote film as an art form and we do not com­ pete with other movie houses. ” CFS allows film fans in the Valley to experience a wide range of classic movies, which not only generate a sense of historical reference but also emphasize how films used to be. Therefore, in contrast to a recent crop of blockbusters, it may be safe to say CFS probably will not be showing any films containing gremlins, a rock star named Prince or anyone involved in any way with Bo Derek. This group tries to bring back the old movie magic. “A lot of people are movie buffs,” Beadle said. “We get a variety of age groups; there’s no set one, people come here because it is like a hobby.” Besides CFS, the Valley Art Cinema and ASU’s Neeb Hall, the Valley itself does not offer any type of program resembling Beadle’s. “We thought that there should be a film society that shows a wide variety of classics in the broadest sense,” Beadle said. “ I know of only one other in Phoenix, but they’re not doing specifically what we are.” continued pagt 13 SUPER SAVER SUPER FU H ! This Christmas Phoenix/Chicaso: $319* (round trip) Phoenix/Minneapolis-St. Paul: $329* (round trip) •Exclusive flights for ASU students •OPEN BAR •Decem ber 21 departure •Guaranteed fun 9 6 7 -8 5 6 5 A IR W E S T E N T E R P R IS E S Prices subject to change without prior notice. Limited availability. State Press Film s__ continued from page 12 CFS is an organization that provides a more com­ fortable atmosphere most theatres in town seem to be missing. Although Beadle claims she is not opposed to modern movies, she does point out that some of the more recent offerings rely mainly on gimmicks and special ef­ fects. “Some films (today) are too commercial,” Beadle said. “There are good films being released, b u t. . .” R e tire d e le c tro n ic s engineer, ASU student and CFS .member Harry Hyder agrees. “The only thing cur­ rent films seem to concen­ trate on is special effects and usually they have no strong charcater development,” he said. “They seem to be aim­ ing more toward a juvenile audience than a mature one.” Unlike the basic plot in some movies today — where one is shown a hero, a beautiful maiden, laser beams and flying saucers — the films Beadle offeis tend to vary in substance. Instead of Cheech and Chong, CFS members get Laurel and Hardy. In place of the “Fri­ day the 13th” spectacles, CFS rewards its audience with a classic 1922 version of “Dracula.” Beadle said much of her ability to keep the club alive comes from the support of other members in the group, like Hyder, who has been af­ filiated with CFS for four years. “I’d be lost if we didn't have (m e m b e rs) who wanted to run the projector, set up the refreshments and provide us with films they themselves have collected as film buffs through the years,” she said. CFS’s schedule looks like this: On Oct. 19, “Swing High Swing Low” (1937) directed by Mithcell Leisen, stars Fred MacMurray and Carole Lombard. Oct. 26, marks the Hallo­ ween Horror Show, pro­ viding an audience with “ Nosferatu,” the original “Dracula” movie, followed by the 1925 version of “The Phantom of The Opera.” This showing will be pre­ ceded by a pot-luck dinner. On Nov. 16, CFS will pre­ sent “ Le Plaisir,” a 1952 Max Ophuls effort involving three ironic stories staring Simone Simon, followed by yet another foriegn film, “Zero for Conduct” (1933). This rarely seen film in­ volves a schoolboy revolting against the dictatorship of a French boarding school. Both films are in French with English subtitles. Dec. 7 marks CFS’ Holiday Potpourri, presenting the 1934 Laurel and Hardy epic, “The March of the Wooden Soldiers,” which finds the two in Toyland with predict­ ably humorous results. Two holiday cartoons complete the program. The films are shown begin­ ning at 7:45 p.m. in the Uni ta ria n -U n i v e r s a lis t Church, 4027 E. Lincoln Drive in Paradise Valley. Each program lasts approx­ imately two hours. The general public is invited to attend; donations of $2 for non-members and 50 cents for children are requested. ■Yearly membership fee in the Classical Film Society is $4. Thursday, October 18, 1984 « K A f TERMINAL RENTALS n s s ft | Decw riters and CRTs # ! ' U p p e r Case C R Ts $40 & U p p e r/L o w e r Case $45 FREE POOL 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Sm.-Fri. Beer - Booze - Pool *Pood- Games 3129 S. Mill 967*9781 Tempe pi cm a n u m m i “ i C all 966-3105 Computer Terminal Service Delivery Available m u l f i Compliment Tour Ears Fashionably At Dollar'S Earrings only $1 a pair or 3 pr. lor $ 2 .5 0 Also Belts only $1 aa. or 6 lor $ 5 Dollar'S Fashion Xcessories 4 1 4 S. M ill #207, Tempo A b o v e S p a g h e tti Co. THERE'S GOT TO BE A BETTER WAT! HOLYROMANEMPIREj I K 3© lï ? S $ oV Championships. In that competition, held in August, Baxwon the 100-meter breaststroke event. After the disappointment of the Olympic trials, Baxter said she came very close to quitting swimming. “After the trials I didn't ever want to swim again,” Baxter said. “I wanted to quit; however, ASU offered me a full scholarship so I decided to continue my swimming.” Another major disappointment in Bax­ ter's career occured when she qualified for the 1980 Olympics. However, the United States, along with several other countries, will ieature teams from the Soviet Union and West Germany. The top eight swimmers from the U.S.S. Nationals qualified for the trip. Gillett was also asked to make the trip. However, he is hoping instead to travel with an American team to the Soviet Union sometime in the near future. According to Gillett, Baxter has had an up-and-down career. “Alter the 1980 boycott, Terri was at a low point,” Gillett said. “She has steadily im­ Baxter ‘After the trials I didn’t ever want to swim again. I wanted to quit; however, A SU offered me a full scholarship so I decided to continue my swimming.’ decided to boycott the Moscow Games in protest of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Because of her first-place finish at the U.S.S. Nationals, Baxter has qualified to travel to Rio de Janeiro with an American team comprised of six men and six women. This competition will be held Oct. 22-29 and proved, and now she’s on the way up. ” Coming into the 1984-85 season, Baxter said she needs to improve on her attitude more than anything else. “I’m two different people in and out of the water,” Baxter said. “ I really need to re­ arrange my priorities, and put my best ef­ fort into my swimming.” T«rri Baxter Stete P ro t Page 17 Thursday, October 1g, 1984 Gators ignore impending doom; concentrate on S E C title GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — The University of Florida, ridiculed for more than half a century for its inability to win a Southeastern Conference football championship, is eyeing the 1964 title with a team that is picking up momentum in the face of adversity. The 17th-ranked Gators, 4-1-1, are 2-0-1 in league play and are 3-0 since Galen Hall took over as coach from Charley Pell. Pell was fired a few days before the NCAA charged the school with 107 alleged rules infractions uncovered during a 21-month probe. “I think the character of this team has really come to the surface. It is determined to play well through the distractions and prove to outsiders that this is still a very good football team,” Hall said Wednesday. Hall, an assistant at Oklahoma for 18 years before coming to Florida as offensive coordinator this season, was named interim coach Sept. 16, the day Pell was dismissed. Since Hall took over, the Gators have fought their way into the Top 20 after being dismissed following a season-opening loss to Miami and a 21-21 tie with Louisiana State in their SEC opener. Hall said the development of Kerwin Bell, a redshirt walkon, has been a key to the team’s success, as well as a power­ ful running game that has produced 1,410 yards, an average of 235 yards per contest. A charter member of the SEC, Florida is one of only two schools that has never won a conference title, despite fielding teams in the past 53 years that produced one Heisman Trophy winner, Steve Spurrier (1966); 27 All-Americans; and more than 75 players who went on to play in the National Football League. Conference victories over Mississippi State and Tennessee in recent weeks have thrust the Gators into the title picture, but the road ahead could be rocky with Auburn, Georgia and Kentucky —all ranked in the Top 20—lying in wait. The Gators meet No. 13 Auburn at home, where Florida is 20-1-1 since the start of the 1961 campaign; play 15th ranked Kentucky on the road; and face No. 14 Georgia at a neutral site. All three are unbeaten in SEC play. Cubs’ skipper Frey wins National League Award NEW YORK (AP) — Jim Frey, who turn­ ed the Chicago Cubs from a lower-echelon team to a division winner in his first year with the club, Wednesday was named the National League’s Manager of the Year by the Baseball Writer’s Association of America (BBWA). Frey received 16 of the possible 24 firstplace BBWA votes and seven for second for a total of 101 points to win easily over Dave Johnson of the New York Mets, whose team contended for most of the season with the Cubs for the NL East championship and finished second in the division. “I'm honored and proud that people thought I did a good job,” Frey said. “ But it was the organization that went out and spent the money to get the ballplayers. A lot of people deserve credit. I’m just the guy who happens to be standing here.” He said that “individual awards are nice” but “the biggest thrill is being on a cham­ pionship team.” While Frey was left off one writer’s ballot, Johnson was named on all 24 with four votes for first place, 16 for second and four for third. Dick Williams of the San Diego Padres, the NL champions, finished in third place in the balloting, also with four votes for first place, one for second and 18 for third. Houston’s Bob Lillis was the only other manager receiving a vote, colfecting two for third. Two writers in each of the NL cities voted and the point system is based on five for first-place votes, three for second and one for third. This was only the second year the the BBWA have voted for the Manager of the Year award, which they gave last year in the NL to Tom Lasorda of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Frey, in 1980 as a freshman major league manager, led the Kansas City Royals to the American League pennant. Frey, 52, was hired by former New York Mets Manager George Bamberger as the Mets’ batting coach in 1982 and continued those duties, plus coaching first base, through the 1983 season in New York. The Cubs in 1983 finished fifth in the NL East with a 71-31 record, but Frey got them turned around with a blend of youngsters and veterans acquired in some sharp trade acquisitions by General Manager Dallas Green. Fighting neck-and-neck with the Mets, the Cubs pulled away the last two weeks in September with some timely vic­ tories over their closest contenders. The last time the Cubs had won a cham­ pionship of any kind was in 1945, when they won the NL pennant before losing the World Series to the Detroit Tigers. BMNG M IM S COUPON | y * h e EXPIRES 11-18-84. HOB'NOB THRIFT SHOP MOVED Tempc's largest selection of quality used clothing and fashion accessories for men and women 968-7114 414 S. 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T H O M A S 2 6 9 -0 0 0 4 « 68-2233 W ELCO M E D E LEG A TES ★ T O N IG H T * O ctober 18- 20,1984 A major sneak preview C o lu m b ia P ic tu re s p resen ts Bill Murray in A R IZ O N A S T A T E U N IV ER S ITY M E M O R IA L UNIO N TEM PE, A R IZO N A RAZORS EDGE Free Free Neeb Hall Film Series Neeb Hall 8 p.m. Free Free ASSOCIATEDBSTUDENTS O F • A R IZ O N A • S T A T E • U NIVER SITY ^ *98 4 C O H f ^ State Press T hursday, October 18,1984 Page 18 Sweeping up Brock sees room for improvement despite fall ball wins By MICHAEL KONZ Sport* Writer Although the ASU baseball team swept a four game series from the Santa Ana Cardinals to open its fall season, Coach Jim Brock wasn’t completely thrilled with his team’s performance. “We weren't overjoyed about our performance,’’ Brock said. “Our pitching was pretty good, but we didn’t swing the bat as well as we would have liked. ’’ The Sun Devils defeated the Cardinals 2-1, 7-3,10-6 and 5-3 in two doubleheaders Friday and Saturday. The top hitters for ASU were junior shortstop Keith Bennett and junior infielder Ed Serrano. Bennett had four hits in six at-bats. He had five RBI, two doubles and a home run. Serrano was three for five and drove in a run. Jim B ro c k Brock said the team’s level of play was as expected in the beginning of fall play. “ It takes time to get in the groove,” he said. “Plus it’s tough to keep up the intensity through a four-game series. That fourth game can be tough.” Brock is not concerned about the Sun Devils lack of hitting. “It got better (aft the series progressed),” Brock said. “I’m not concerned about our offense. We hit well overall, but part of the problem is the high expectations we have because there are so many proven hitters on the team.” In the field, Brock was pleased with the play of Bennett and second baseman Rick Morris. Calif., won the fourth game as a starter. He pitched four innings and allowed one run on two hits. He struck oti three and walked one batter. r Brock said both pitchers will benefit from the fall schedule. “Since the season is not as strong or long (as the regular season), it gives them a chance to gain confidence,” he said. However, the team play in the fall is no indication of how it will play in the spring, Brock said. “One of the problems in the fall is that we’re not playing the caliber of teams that we will play in the (Pac-10) conference,” Brock said. “You never know if the team is playing to win or if they are playing like Brock ‘One of the problems in the fall is that we’re not playing the caliber Pf teams that we will play in the (Pac-10) conference.’ “Morris and Bennett are coming along at a good rate,” Brock said. “A key was seeing how we were doing up the middle. They are really doing well. We’re pleased. ” Brock said Morris is a pleasant surprise since he had never played second base before. The performance of the pitching staff has Brock smiling. “We were pitching with a lot of new people,” he said. "We were very pleased. The fall season is very good for our young pitchers.” Brock pointed out freshmen Dean Douty and Kurt Dempster as the top young pitching prospects. Douty, a freshman from Fountain Valley, Calif., won the first game by letting up only one hit in three innings of relief pitching. Dempster, a freshman from Yorba Linda, G ilb e rt V illa n u e v a they can.” ASU was without the services of three players for the series against Santa Ana. Pitcher Doug Henry and outfielder Barry Bonds are playing in the World Championship of Baseball in Havanna, Cuba. Henry, a junior, is ASU’s most experienced returning pitcher. He had a 11-2 record last year with an ERA of 3.20. Bonds, a junior, was a member of the all-Coliege World Series team in 1963 and 1964. He hit .360 last year with 11 home runs and 20 doubles. Brock said the temporary loss of Henry and Bonds will help ASU. “The whole concept of fall baseball is to get the players ready for the spring,” Brock said. “It will work to our advantage because we did not have to evaluate those two, and it forced us to use other people. It will also be better for those two players." Brock also lost junior pitcher Gilbert Villanueva to a shoulder injury. A bone chip was discovered in Villanueva's shoulder, and he underwent surgery to remove it. Brock said the surgery was not serious, but Villanueva, 6-3 last year, will be out for four to five weeks. “ It would have been excellent for him to have had a good fall,” Brock said. The Sun Devils meet Cal-Poiy Pomona in two doubleheaders Friday ami Saturday. Brock said he expects to meet a hard-hitting team with adequate pitching. “They always swing the bat well," he said. “ (They have) a fine hitting instructor, and they are able to recruit well because of him. “Their pitching is okay. They usually have one outstanding pitcher ." r EVERYONE IS INVITED TO H EAR’ ROBERT J. SIMMONS T o n ig h t is Free Adm ission! Exec. V.P. ofCorp. Mkting. • •# • M • • • • • • • • M M * • • • • • • * • • • • • • • 1 0 W ell, W ine, D raft American Hospital Supply 7:30-9:00 G u y s : 2/1 W e ll, W in e , D ra ft p A ll N ig h t One week only from Las Vegas: Little Sister •P ro v id e s 130,000 p ro d u cts •7,000 h o sp itals • 125,000 cu sto m ers •T h ro u g h 146 d istrib u tio n fa c ilitie s •G e n e ra tin g sales w orld w id e $3.3 b illio n •E a rn in g w orld w id e $212 m illio n 36,000 em p lo ye es SPEAK ON OCTOBER 19 AT 3:00 IN THE NEW BUSINESS BUILDING, ROOM 216 TEMPE • 966-7 S P O N S O R E D B Y M A R K E T IN G C L U B State Pres* Page 19 Thursday, O ctober 18,1984 classifieds The STATE PRESS disdain is sll respon sibfllty for quality and prtets of goods and services offered In both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. A nnouncem ent« f o r Renter Lease H elp W anted H elp W anted R eal E state Travel AILING AXE. heard of us? W e're the new place to go for your guitar repair work and customizing Come by for free guitar analysis and register to win a hot guitar tremelo or shadow transducer. 2247 N. 32nd Street. Suite C, 225-0080.___________ ______ FEMALE UNDERGRAD. $205 month, own room, heated pool, iacuzzi. tennis court, BB Q 's. mostly furnished. 3eahhe. 966-4315; 947-1963._________ BOMBAY BICYCLE Club needs janito­ rial service. 5 or 6 days per week. 1Vt to 2 hours per day. Set your own hours. $325 per month, 946-5530, Scottsdala DELI H ELP wonted. Approximately 20 hours per week. Apply In person at 113 E. Southern.____________________ PARENTS COMPLAINING about out-ofstate tuition? Give them a tax shelter and you a place to live. 2 bedroom, 2 bath Papago Park condo. 10.5%. no qualifying, FHA loan, $5000 down. 894-5306. ROUND TRIP cocktail flights to Chicago or Minneapolis/ Saint- Paul this Christmas. Super savers, super fun1967-6866.__________ _________ GREAT STUDIO apartment - Foxtree, fully furnished, pools, tennis courts, jacuzzi. dishwasher, etc $350 Includes everything. 941 1106._______________ O VERESEAS JOBS.. Summer, yearround, Europe. S. America, Australia. Asia. All fields. $900- 2000 month Sightseeing. Free info. Write IJC, PO Box 52-A2-3, Corona Del Mar. CA 92825.__________________________ PARADICE CREAM now hiring. Both locations. Own transportation, own phone. Apply in person. 1044 S. Terrace. Tempe.__________ __ R oom m ate w«nted SHABBAT SERVICES 7:30pm followed by the movie ‘The Chosen." 8:45: Hlllel 1012 S. Mill Ave._________ _________ SIMCMAT TORAH services and Israeli dancing: Thursday. October 18th. 7:30pm. Hlllel. 1012 S. Mill Ave. Autom obiles 1968 VW. Excellent running condition. $600 paint job. Asking $1299. 967-1779 pm and evenings.________________ 1978 FORD Fiesta, white. 4-speed, air. AM-FM stereo cassette. Excellent condition. Moving, must seli. $2200 275-4991 .evenings. 1979 MUSTANG AM-FM cassette, tinted windows. Great looking, great shape. 23mpg city. Kip. 963-7959: 965-2292. 1981 HONDA Prelude, mint condition. Will negotiate. 949-8889. 66 NISSAN Patrol 4x4. In cherry condition. Asking $3500. Call 948-7886. leave name and number. LOST CAR title, expired plates? Avoid the long lines. Let us title and register your car. Fast and convenient service. Open till 8 Tuesday Thursday. Saturday 8 to 12. Sunburst Business Services. 275-9877. B u sin e ss Opp. FREE! “SECRETS of Starting Your Own Profitable Business Without Capital!" Rush! Name, address: FTM Marketing. PO Box 1826. Sierra Vista. AZ 85636 Absolutely free! No obligation. _______ __________ Clothing VINTAGE CLOTHES, endless costum­ ing possibilities 1890 through 1956 6713 E. 2nd Street. Scottsdale. Call anytime, ask for Ruby. 949-1319. F o r Rent or Lease ATTENTION DOG lovers: Condo to share, private room and bath, fully furnished or not. Community pool, covered periling. Scottsdale. $250 per month includes everything Call C o l­ leen. 991-2005 evenings, or 951-2633. Monday through Thursday. r ONE BEDROOM condo, full kitchen, washer, dryer, air. $325 per month plus electric. University/ Hardy. Don. 9653633.__________________________ ROOM FOR rent: In large 4 bedroom, m/f. 8 blocks to ASU. Pool washer, dryer, satellite TV. dishwasher, much more. $230 month, 'A util. Call Art. John. 968 7283.968-5815. F or Sale 10x50 TRAILER: 2 miles from ASU. new paint, kitchen floor carpeted. Must see to appreciate. $3900 firm. 272-4733. BLATZ 12 pack- $2.99: Highland coolers, six pack $3.99: used Playboy magazines $.71: imported beers, cold drinks, ice. adult magazines. Rundle's. University and M i l l __________ LIGHTED BEER signs and novelty bar accessories. 1982 Suzuki 550 Kotana. low mileage. $1200.275-0256.__ MOBILE HOME. 14x65. 2% miles ASU. beautiful park. 263-0900^1ays.__ STEREO BRAND new. never used, cassette deck, turntable, receiver, speakers. Cost over $400, $165 takes everything. 954-9541._ F u rn itu re DON'T BUY that futon till you'«« seen ours. Can Sweet Dreams, we ll tell you wtty t aO oft all lutons. 946-5687 H elp W anted ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS at Leo’s - 20 openings: that's right! Our new concept in low cal. greaaelesa cooking restaurants is looking for attractive, intelligent and assertive employees. Starting wage wilt be from $3.50 to $4.00 per hour, depending on ex­ perience. Rapid expansion will create room to grow. Apply October 18. 19 or 20 at 526West Broadway. 629-0121.___ AIRPORT DRIVERS needed: Monday Friday. 6am to 2pm. also 5am to 9am. Minimum wage phis tips Call Frank. 10am to 2pm. M-F 231-0963 _ EARN $6-6 per hour as a delivery person with Domino's Ptzza. We’re number one in delivery nationwide with over 1400 stores. Drivers earn excellent hourly wage plus tips and mileage. Full or part-time, flexible, day or evening hours. A fun and rewarding job. Many delivery people. Advance to our management training program. Must be 18 or older with a good driving record, car and insurance. We want dependable, clean cut people willing to hustle. Apply after 11:00 am at 903 South Rural Road. Tempe or any of our east Valley stores.______________ E AR N EXTRA m oney! Wanted silversmith- goldsmith experienced handling jewelers gold, (ok. gold), nickle silver, copper for belt jewelry making. 948-7990._____________ I I I I MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share house Vi mite from campus. Low utilities, $165/ month. 829-9228 between 2pm and 6pm._______________ GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16.559 ♦ $50. 553/year. Now hiring. Your area. Call 1-605-667-6000. Ext. R-9624__________ TELEPH O NE SALES: 3 shifts available, good money, honest work. Call Mika at 436-1137.________________________ MALE STUDENT: share expenses; new two bedrom. two bath apartment, Tempe. 951-2337.__________________ IF INTERESTED In selling diet or health products, please contact Nick or Tammy attar 5pm. 945-9347._________ WAITERS AND waitresses: Wa need experienced people for a breakfast banquet Wednesday. October 24, Sam to noon. Central Phoenix location. $4.50 per hour. Never a fee. Please call for appointment. Valley Temporary Services, 639-2625. ____________ LO CAL NEWSPAPER in the seat Valley area la hiring afternoon motor route drivers. Permanent part-time employ­ ment for those who have good transportation. Call Hank at 994-0766 for i n t e r v i e w . _________________ NOW HIRING part-time days, evenings, nights. 1139 W. Broadway. Apply in person.__________________________ $5 to $7 Per Hour • We Fully Train The nation's finest telem arketing firm is now accepting ap p lication s for th e follow ing shifts: 12 noon-5 p.m. • 5-9:30 p.m. • 6:30-9:30 p m. • W eekends O ur safes people w ork in a m odem , com fortable business environ­ ment contacting established custom ers on lon g d istan ce W A T S lin es G uaranteed salary o r co m m issio n, w hichever is greater, and averages $5 to $7 an hour O ur Tem pe o ffice is located approxim a­ tely five minutes from cam pus BRIGHT ELECTRONIC student wanted to repair VCR and TV at low cost. 964-7651. 829-1140 10/31 I e ...................... LO NG H A IR V lfG H IL V HIGHER EDITING TERMPAPERS. dissertations. Will perfect your grammar, word choice, sentence clarity and flow, paragraph construction, organization, ate., for best expression of your ideas. Professional, inexpensive Susan, 8346036.______________ ____________ FR EE HAIRCUTS: Models needed for training classes every Tuesday. Cali for appointment. Cersten Heircutters, 8404240.___________________________ HAVE UNWANTED faciei or body heir removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation. Located in Tempe. Call Sharon, Desert Electrolysis Center 839-1885.__________________ _ THE PHOENIX Rape and Battering Hotline, if you need help call 256-3074. If interested in volunteering can 966-4291 or 957-3543. _____ Roger S. Barkin t iu t DOCS NO T INCLUDE H A * CUT C O L O R S ............................................... $10-$15 SC U LPT U R E D N A IL S ............................ $19.50 23 W. 7tk St. Suite 104 Tempe. AZ 85281 Just across Mill trom ASU Free resume wit* classes 10/18 Bring this ad. Expires »-31-84. W /participating designers only. 903 S. Rural • Cinnamon Tree • 894-0184 M otorcycles MUST S ELL Moped, excellent condì tion. ready for delivery. $295.964-7466. P ersonal________ BILL: i love you. twice m much as yesterday, but only half as much as tomorrow. Happy birthday?! Terri._____ HARPY CAMPERS- Tontozona la wait­ ing for us. Far out! Kappa Delta love, Elaine. NEXTTOD.Q. at 10th &Mill 967-3493 INFORMATION KEYBQARDMG LA8 966-7111 20% most procedures Call for appointment is enhanced by 10-key and CTR ___________ ______ HYPNOSIS. DEVELOP salt-confidence, remove stress, improve memory and concentration, become more outgoing, stop smoking or lose weight. Arizona Hypnosis Center. Lindsay A. Brady. RH, certified hypnotist. 10 years experience. 966-6571 JJHGoGreyhoiXKl W jS p ano leave the drivin g lo us Tam pa Greyhound Tarm im i 10/19 Typing ______ A1 PROFICIENT typing: IBM Selactric. Loraine. 833-8365; at University end Dobson In Meta.__________________ AAA QUALITY guaranteed. Fast, ac­ curate. professional typing or word processing. $1.25/ page. Call Linda, 962-6076.________________________ ACCURACY/ SPEED/ specialities Call Teresa (apa/ mkt) at 962-0079 or Linda (elite/ eng/ math) at 969-5775._______ _ ACCURATE TYPING, word processing. All types. Fast turnaround. N. Central Phoenix location. Why Worry Business Services . 943-3552.________________ ACCUTYPE SERVICES: Fast and ac­ curate. Only $1.50 per page. After 5 call Linda, 6366630 or Nancy. 630-5572. ALL PAPERS typed to your complete satisfaction. IBM Safactric. Near ASU. Reasonable. Mrs. Oakley. 967-0802. D E N T IS T JtCCOUNTMS MAJORS EMPIDYAMUTY 15% OFF ON REGULAR FARES CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All States Pflve-away, 992-5200._________ •FACULTY t STAFF nSUMNCE •STUDENT DISCOUNT H A IR C U T S ___ M E N $6.75------ W O M E N $*.25 r n , . r f c K l^ b In stru c tio n STUDENT DISCOUNT 9 6 7 -4 0 3 0 S erv ices 946 S. Mill Tem pe “ “ 1 THANKSGIVING 84 ski Vail/ Baaver Creek! 364 day packages, lodging, lifts, equip. $125- $1651 person. Call 1-800-222-4840 Com er of 5th * College PLEASE CALL DIALAMERICA FOR DETAILS. *50% OFF O N ALL SERVICES* n r WANTED: RECEPTIONISTS, security, bar back, cocktail waitresses and bartenders. Apply in person Monday Friday, 11- 5. 3000 E. Thomas Road. 954 7362. ____________ ANYTIME / PART-TIME (FOR NEW A N D REGU LAR CLIENTS) I I FEMALE TO share home with female. Non-smoker, near ASU. $180 plus 16 utilities 253-1210,254-4167. SECURITY OFFICERS, full or part-time. Car and phone necessary. Uniforms furnished. Internal Security Agency, 8 2 0 - 1 9 1 9 . ____________________ ENTHUSIASTIC- ARTICULATE? If this is you. why not work part-time with other ASU students who are making big bucks and having a good time doing III Cat! G rig , 829-6691._______ Celebrating our 4th Anniversary I RED ROBIN now hiring line and prap cooks, flexible hours, meals, uniforms supplied. Apply in person, 1539 N. Scottsdale Rd., Los A rco i Mall. FEM ALE ROOMMATE wanted: Share 2 bedroom apartment with three others. ASU location. $100 month, 838-8620 evenings.___________ ____________ HELP! NEED m/f roommate for 3 bedroom house. Pay Vb utilities and get tights. Only $200/ month. Prefer liberal minded conservative. Furnished pool. 967-8422.________________________ h air p e ! PIZZA TIME Thaater la now accepting applications. Full and part-time, weekends, day and night. 1000 E. Broadway. Tempe. Arizona, 85283. FEM ALE ROOMMATE wanted: $225 per month includes utilities, covered parking. Call after 6.894-2113.________ SALES: Earn good money in spare lime on and off campus, raising funds for established national charity. Crew manager potential, very easy sale. Call Mr. Milier. 966-1112. Sam to 10am, or 3pm to 5pm.______________________ The I PART-TIME CH A UFFER 25 years or older. Minimum wage plus tips. Talk to Jim after 2 pm. Monday through Friday. 244-1618.________________________ 2 BLOCKS from campus. Master bedroom available. Male only. Private bath, $195. 829-9228 between 2pm and 6pm.__________ _________________ SKI BRECKENRIDGE January 6-9. Roundtrlp airfare, condos, lift tickets, rental car Included. 3days. 3nlghts. $229.95.833-5900. __________ ion. ALWAYS AVAILABLE for typing CaR Susan at 8390373________________ ALWAYS DEPENDABLE, typing edit­ ing, term papers, books, dissertations, resumes. Excellent skills. Shirley's Typing Service 838-5099.____ ____ EXPERIENCED TYPIST Fast, pro­ fessional work. IBM Selectrie. $170 per pape. Chari, 967-3747 evenings.______ EXPERIENCED' IBM Seiecfric self correcting. 24-hour service, pickup and delivery 2290594 o r947*6609._______ HIGH QUALITY, great prices, personal word processing Cali J A P Entarprtsas, 894 9607._________ * Sw ap’n Trade NEED CASH? Reel Rock Records will buy your used albums & cassettes. KINKO'S COPIES now offers full service word processing W t specialize in resumes snd term papers Call 966-2035 for mors information_______ N O R TH W EST PHOENIX, quality typing Theses, dissertations, research projects, 9363397. ____________ MOST NEW LP’s ONLY $5.99 NEW-USED-IMPORTS REEL R O C K PROFESSIONAL TYPIST Will adit spelling, punctuation, and grammar Fast return/ accuracy guaranteed Joan 6360772.________________________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING Close to ASU. Call Brenda. 964-0273._________ 933 E. University (T e m p » To w n» P it t a ) 968-6544 ------ A L L TYPING done fast end accurata. 1.15 s page. Word processing avail* ble. Cfoee to ASU . Call Bobbi 9669166. 10 / 1« T re n d AIRLINE CO UPON S $250 to NYC. Special low tares to most cites. USA. Call Brent 829-7300 ___ _ STATE-OF-the-art word processing Quality guaranteed Term papers. theses, tetters , resumes. 990-1556. WORD PROCESSING. Editing, extra copies, and document storage avails bie Substantial student discount Cloae to ASU. Robtn62B6660_______ WORD PROCESSING and editing services by professional editor. $1 ~ $2/page. Edith. 4360462 after 4pm ASU/ U of A. November 24th. Bus overnight at HNton. Game ticket $49.95 833-5600 W anted________ _ INCREASE YOUR mental awareness and physical dexterity without drugs 633 3795 CHINA 14 days Shanghai Bejing, Sian. Hangzhou. Guilin. Hong Kong. $2495 July 18-Aug 2. 1985 (Optional 10K run. Great Chins Wall) Dr R Axford 839*3255. Joyful Journeys MY PARENTS are coming to Phoenix tor approximately one month around December 1st. Looking tor apartment or house to rent for them If you can help, please call Wayne at 829-8496 VERY DESPERATE! Wilting to bargain for good Bruce Springsteen tickets Ptease call 1-624-8106 collect nights FLY HOME for the holidays ' Book now and save! Tom. your ASU travel rep 829 1772 or 833 5900 diamonds, class rin g s M ill A venue Jewelers. 414 S M ill Avenue. PAYING CASH fo r g o ld , s ilv e r and Page 20 K»t»N«l Thurid*^Octob«22t^22i Order one of Crusty’s Delicious EXTRA! EXTRA!™ pizzas with all of your favorite toppings, and well give you the second pizza FREE! To make it even better, well give you FREE DELIVERY! B uy O n e, G et O n e FREE A' CRUSTY’S MENU ITEMS PEPPERONI BEEF HAM ONIONS OLIVES ANCHOVIES HOURS: ITALIAN SAUSAGE MUSHROOMS GREEN PEPPERS HOT PEPPERS EXTRA CHEESE THICK CRUST 4:00 • 1:00 SUN. • THURS. 4:00 - 2:00 FRI. • SAT. 1340 E. Apache Btvd. 966-0808 EXTRA! EXTRA!™ EXTRA! EXTRA!™ EXTRA! EXTRA!™ Buy O ne, G et O ne FREE! Buy O ne, G et O ne FREE! Buy O ne, G et O ne FREE! TWO SMALL PIZZAS TW O LARGE PIZZAS (With Two Items) PLUS TWO 12oz. CANS OF COKE® (With One hem) PLUS TW O SMALL PIZZAS 7.95 No other coupon accepted with EXTRA! EXTRAfru Price*i do * not include tux. EXPIRES 1 1 4 0 4 « FO U R ? H i ! C A N S O F COKE® $ 9.95 (With Three Items) PLUS TWO I2oz. CANS OF COKE® s8.95 C R U ST Y S 2 .0 0 O f f ANY LARGE PIZZA (With Three or More Items) N o other coupon neenpted wMh EXTRA! EXTRA!™ Price» do nor Include i n . EXPIRES 1 1 4 0 4 « N o other coupon «oenptod with EXTRA! EXTRA!™ Price» d e not Inrlud» «us. EXHRES 1 1 4 0 4 4 EXTRA! EXTRA!™ EXTRA! EXTRA!™ EXTRA! EXTRA!™ C R U ST Y S Buy O ne, G et O ne FREE! Buy O ne, G et O ne FREE! Buy O ne, G et O ne FREE! TWO SMALL PIZZAS TW O SM A LL PIZZAS (With Three Items) (With Two Items) PLUS TWO 12oz. CANS OF COKE® TW O L A R G E PIZZAS O N E W H O LE S U B M A R IN E S A N D W IC H (Italian or Ham and Cheese) PLUS TWO 12oz. CANS OF COKE® PLU S T W O 12oz. C A N S O F COKE® $8.95 s7.95 No other coupon accepted with EXTRA! EXTRA!™ Prices do not include tun. No other coupon accepted with EXTRA! EXTRAItm Prices do not include tax. EXPIRES 11-30-84 E X P IR E S 1 1 4 0 4 4 (With Three hems) PLUS FOUR 12oz. CANS OF COKE® s12.95 N o other coupon occop»«d with EXTRA! EXTRA!™ Price* do not Include lux. EXPIRES 1 1 4 0 4 « pood ou EXTRA! EXTRA!™. Doubt» Toppur or Deep Dhh Pirrn No od w coupon accepted M» a fe . E X P R E S !!4 0 4 4 *4.95 No other coupon accepted with this offer Prices do not Include tun. EXPIRES 1 1 4 0 4 4 i