State Press ©Copyright, State Press, 1992 Tempe, Arizona W e d n e sd a y , A p ril 2 2 ,1 9 9 2 A riz o n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity ’s In d e p e n d e n t M o rn in g D a ily V o l. 7 5 N o . 129 Senator withdraws scalping measure S w earin g i n Instead promises code of ethics B y C H A D REDW ING State P re ss A sso ciated S tu d e n ts of ASU Sen. Sanford Stokes withdrew a bill Tuesday to make scalping tickets reserved by the organization grounds for im peachment, and instead promised th at a full code of ethics would be created for adoption next year. S to k es, from th e C ollege of E n g in e e rin g a n d A pplied S ciences, originally drafted a bill in an effort to co m b at tic k e t ab u se w ith in th e organization after ASASU Executive Vice President Christian Hageseth’s intention to sell 48 U2 tickets reserved for ASASU members. But a t the last Senate meeting of the academic year, Stokes said th at there is a need for a com plete code of eth ics to monitor the actions of ASASU members instead of simply a bill dealing with ticket scalping. “I have talked to a few people, such as lay co-partner (Engineering and Applied Sciences) Sen. (Clay) Haden, and decided th a t w hat we need now is a full code of ethics,” said Stokes. He said the full code of ethics will be T u rn to A S A S U , pag e 15. Internationals at A SU strive for recognition B y SO N D R A R O B E R TO State P ress Sean O penshaw/State Press A sso c ia te d S tu d en ts o f A S U E x e cu tive V ice P resid en t C h ristia n H ageseth (right) dem onstrates the oath of office to newly elected Senators at a sw earing-in Cerem ony Tuesday. A ssisting Hageseth is A SASU Executive V ice President-elect Je ssica Klinger. A slightly altered plan to provide ASU in tern a tio n al stu d en ts w ith th e ir own governing d ep a rtm en t w ith in ASASU resurfaced Tuesday night during the final S enate m eeting of th e sem ester, more than a year after it was initially proposed. “International students are the only s tu d e n ts h o t officially recognized by A SA SU ,” sa id P u b lic P ro g ra m s Sen. H eather Collins while explaining Senate Bill 55 to the Senate. Senate Bill 55, introduced by College of Business Sen. Alex Bouzari, would add to ASASU a dep artm en t of In tern atio n al Students Affairs to address specific needs of in te rn a tio n a l stu d e n ts and provide funding for their programs. T u rn to In te rn a tio n a l, p ag e IS . ■ Professors chip in to make orphans computer literate B y JA C K IE R U TYN A State P ress Two ASU professors have joined to recycle used computer equipment so a group of El Salvadoran orphans will have the opportunity' to become computer literate. D enis Sorenson, a program coordinator in ASU’s Center for Latin American Studies, and ASU economics professor Jose Mendez are hoping to tak e com puter equipment to the orphanage by the end of the slimmer. “Dr. Mendez visits El Salvador four times a year to prepare reports on the E l Salvador Project,” Sorenson said. “On one of his trips he was invited out to tour the orphanage. “He ju st felt he could put together something to help those kids.” Mendez, who is visiting El Salvador now, was born there and is familiar with the language and the culture. He directs th e El Salvador Project, a program th a t loans money to cooperatives and agrarian reform groups to improve the gross national product of the country. “El Salvador is getting more and more sophisticated all the tim e because of w hat personal computers have done to the world,” Sorenson said. “We thought it would help those kids a lot more if we could help them with com puter literacy, using some of the used com puters people would be willing to donate.” About 100 children, ranging in age from 2 to 18, live at the Dr. Gustavo Magana Mendez Orphanage, located in Ahuachapan, about 60 miles west of San Salvador. Sorenson said the children are given some training Staying SLIM: À representative fro m G ov. F ife S ym in g to n ’s S L IM p roject says m ore m oney can be saved b y re o rg a n izin g the U n iv e rsity while they live at the orphanage, but there is very little money and materials available. “They have some opportunity to learn shoe making and carpentry and things like that,” he said. S orenson said if th ey a re able to g et co m p u ters donated, there are volunteers in the community who could teach the children to use them. J.B. Smith, a music professor, donated an Apple IIE computer. “It was obsolete,” Smith said. “I wouldn’t get any of the return I put in it originally if I tried to sell it, so it had been earmarked for donation for a while.” M aterials for a library and musical instrum ents are also being collected to send to the orphanage. “We are looking for anything in Spanish -textbooks, poetry o r perio d icals,” S orenson said , “We are also looking for musical instrum ents like trombones, trum pets or guitars.” Sorenson and Mendez are also collecting any language m aterials th at would teach a foreign language to Spanish speakers. So far, they have collected three computers. They hope to g et a n in te rn a tio n a l c a rrie r to d eliv er th e donations on one of their regular runs. Jack Rendon, a m ail services employee, donated a word processor to the orphanage. “I have h ad it about three or four years and it was o u td ated ,” Rendon said. “For years El S alvador has trained people to be carpenters or cooks. Maybe this will give them a little headway to learn how to work th e Ticket p ile up: Stu den ts w ith u n p a id p a rkin g tick e ts co u ld face h avin g th e ir U n iv e rs ity p rivileg es suspended, electronic equipm ent” Rendon said he does not mean to make carpentry or cooking seem like inferior professions, but he hopes the children a t the orphanage can expand their ambitions if they know something about computers. Softball action: T h e A S U so ftb a ll team plays U o fA to n ig h t a t 6 a t th e S un D e v il C lu b S tadiu m . Page 17 A S U o ffic ia ls say. a d m in istra tio n . Page 2 SMnOpmMSUhPiiM D en is Soren son , program coordinator for A S U ’s Center for Latin Am erican Studies, is collecting used com puters, books and m u sic a l in stru m e n ts to g iv e to an o rp h a n a g e In E l -Salvador. Page 10 Today’s w eather: Sonny and a little w an n er w ith a few high clouds. High in th e low er 90s. T IT -T .— T „_ C lassifieds.............. ...__ ...ifi . ............. (i H oroscope trtrt_ .. ......-—2* Sports............................---- 17 Program seeks to SLIM costs, cut inefficiency By CHRIS DRISCOLL State Press While many defenders of ASU’s budget say it’s been pared to the bone, a representative from Gov. Fife Symington’s project SLIM claims that more money could be saved by reorganizing University administration. “I think that the whole concept of what we’re doing (with SLIM) needs to be done elsewhere,” said David St. John, project executive of SLIM (Statewide Long-term Improved Management). St. John said he didn’t think the Project SLIM model would be applied to the state university system or to K-12 until after it had been implemented at the 12 state agencies included in the initial project study. He said implementation at the first 12 agencies will provide proof that the SLIM concepts work and are achievable. Symington has promised that Project SLIM will reduce government inefficiencies, reduce bureaucracy, and actively involve state employees in the process. “With the preliminary recommendations from Project SLIM, we are looking at potential savings of more than $125 million annually — if they are implemented,” Symington The project also aims to avoid layoffs as a method of force reduction in the government. said. He said they will transfer and retrain rather than lay off. The governor expects savings of as much as $500 million in Arizona now hires about 5,000 people a year and there are four or five years. George Leckie, Project SLIM’s chief operating officer, currently 1,000 vacancies. They have an attrition rate of said the concept the program is based on — total quality about 11 percent. He said transfers of employees in management —- targets state employees in the process of eliminated jobs into those jobs will allow them to avoid making Arizona government run more efficiently. layoffs. Employees will be trained to identify problems before they St. John said he thinks the same personnel policies are an example of portions of SLIM that could help ASU. arise rather than after, he said. Leckie said eventually the Project SLIM concepts will be ASU Spokesman George Cathcart said the University applied to the universities and other state agencies. already has a program to hire laid-off employees in “I think the principles of total quality management — comparable positions. So far 19 have been hired of the 100 laid which is taught in parts of the University — are very off. applicable (to University management),” he said. Susan Malaga, assistant vice president of Business Affairs, The essence of TQM, he said, is to empower the employees is in charge of a pilot project at ASU to apply TQM techniques who are in the best position to know how they can do their to 12 areas of the University including human resources, jobs more effectively. libraries, and academic advising. He said that most of Project SLIM can be implemented by She said she thinks big savings can result but that it will be Symington without legislation. St. John said Project SLIM aims to reorganize government along process. She points out that saving jobs in the manner adm inistration to remove unnecessary layers of St. John suggests is wonderful in theory but is realistically more difficult that he suggests it will be. management and make better use of automation. Today The Tod ay section is a daily calendar o f events printed oh a space-available b asis a s a service to the A S U com m unity. C am pu s clu b s and organizations can subm it written en tries to the S late P ress, located in the basem ent o f M atthew s Center, Room IS . En tries are subject to editing fo r content, sp ace and clarity, and w ill not be taken o ver the phone. D eadline fo r the en tries is 1 p.m . the previous b u sin e ss day. Meetings • A lcoh o lics Anonym ous: closed meeting, noon, Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. •N arcotics Anonym ous: open meeting, 5:30 p.m ., Community Christian Church, 1701 S.-College Ave. •SEAC: Earth Day m arch down Mill Avenue, candlelight ceremony, planting of trees at Tem pe Beach Park, 6 p.m., meet at Mill Avenue & University Drive. •Alpha Lam bda Delta: elections of new officers, 4:30 p.m., MU La Paz Room 223. •EckankSr S o ciety: “ Recycled Soul: The Gift of Life,” all welcome, noon, MU Room 216. •African-Am erican Student Coalition: recognition awards voting, 7:30 p.m ., MU La Paz Room. •M UAB M arketing Com m ittee: last meeting of semester, 3 p.m ., MU Kaibab Room 208. •Adult C h ildren o f A lco h o lics: 12-step self-help group with speaker, noon, MU Kaibab Room 208E. •IEEE, T ech n o log y Chapter: election of chapter officers, pizza served, 11:30 a. m-; T C 317. a time designed for the p e o p t • M .E .C h .A .: meeting, elections for next year, all welcome, 3:30 p.m ., L L A18. •M UAB C ulture & A rts Com m ittee: coffeehouse finale featuring clarinet quartet & A S U steel drum band, 11 a m . to 1 p.m ., MU Programming Lounge, lower level. •Lesbian & G ay A cadem ic Union: meeting, 7:30 p.m .,.M U Mohave Room 222. •Alpha Mu Gamma: meeting, 3 p.m ., MU Havasupai Room. •European D iscu ssio n Club: study in Europe & the United States * what’s best? All welcome, 5:30 p.m ., M U Kaibab Room. •Phi A lph a Delta: officer elections & initiation, 3 p.m ., MU Pinal Room. ooo co Ol j l < o C A R N IV A L ! April 24th-26th 1240 E. University (2 Blocks East o f Rural) < Q to o LJ to FI AV CAMMACK ad. to SHOWS. World/Nation % Page 3 Perot tops Texas election poll list A ssociated P ress photo Steven Baker, the father of one of the two boys slain by Robert Alto Harris, gets a hug from Nina Solam o, whose sister was m urdered in 1978 Murderer H am s executed S u p re m e C o u r t lifts stay; e x e c u tio n C a lifo rn ia ’s first in 2 5 years SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP) — Double m u rd erer Robert Alton Harris Was put to death in the gas chamber Tuesday after the U.S. Supreme Court lifted à dramatic last-m in u te stay th a t had blocked C alifornia’s first execution in 25 years. “You can be a king or a street sweeper, but everybody dances with the Grim Reaper,” H arris said in a final statem ent, released after he was executed for the 1978 murders of two San Diego 16-year-old boys. H a rris , 39, died q u ie tly a t daw n a f te r an e x tra o rd in a ry n ig h t of cross-country ju d icial duels betw een th e U.S. Suprem e C ourt a n d th e 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Following the filing of four stays by the 9th Circuit on Monday, frustrated justices in Washington voted 7-2 to order th e appeals court not to issue any more stays without permission. The dissenters — Justices John P aul Stevens and Harry A. Blackmum — focused on the issue of the gas chamber as cruel and uniisal punishment. The last stay came after H arris was strapped to the death seat. W itn esses s p e n t a n u n co m fo rtab le 12 m in u te s watching Harris as he waited to die, smiling and nodding in the brightly lighted green chamber. A telephone ran g w ith a reprieve about a m inute before the execution was to start, said prison spokesman Lt. Vemell Crittendon. About two hours later, Harris was back in the metal chair, looking more sober. Still, he winked and nodded. At one point, he looked at San Diego Police Det. Steven Baker, father of victim Michael Baker. “He mouthed the words Tm sorry,’” Baker said later. On the day of the killings, it was Baker who arrested H arris for bank robbery without knowing his son was dead and Harris the killer. Outside San Quentin’s gates Tuesday, B aker said he nodded back to H arris — but only as acknowledgement. “He was probably sorry a t the time, but that’s 14 years too late,” Baker said. The gas was released a t about 6:05 a.m., and shortly afterward H arris’ head jerked from left to right before falling slowly to his chest. He appeared to be unconscious about 6:12 a.m., and was pronounced dead at 6:21 a.m. In th e w itn ess cham ber, B ak er a n d his ex-wife, Sharron Mankins, showed little emotion as they watched their son’s killer die. Those watching on H arris’ behalf hugged each other as he went into his death throes. In San Diego, Michael’s stepsister Laura Mankins was relieved. “This brings finality to these heinous crim es,” she said. “For me it ends this whole tragic 13baT2ea years.” WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s a long drive to Election Day, b u t in a n A p ril show, of stre n g th , n o t-y et-can d id ate Ross Perot sits atop the latest presidential poll in his home state of Texas. I t ’s d angerous to p u t too much stock in polls a full six m onths before th e election, particularly one gauging the su p p o rt of an unan n o u n ced Perot and u n te s te d p o te n tia l candidate suteh as billionaire Perot. Still, the survey results are a slap a t adopted T ex an G eorge B u sh a n d a n o th e r sig n t h a t Democrat Bill Clinton, who ran a distant third, is having trouble attracting the independent voters *s who swing presidential elections. The survey also provides fresh evidence of the potent protest vote lurking in the electorate and a striking show of strength for Perot in the state with the third-most electoral votes. T he T exas P o ll, re le a se d for p u b licatio n Tuesday, showed Perot supported by 35 percent, B ush by 30 percent, w ith 20 percent for Texas neighbor Clinton, the Arkansas governor and likely Democratic nominee. Bush aides cast the numbers as the product of a media honeymoon for Perot th a t won’t last if he enters the race as an independent, as now appears likely. C linton aid es jo ined th e B ush camp in predicting th at closer scrutiny of Perot’s business d ealin g s an d views would u n d e rc u t h is ea rly favorable reviews. “Hé better get ready for criticism,” said White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, who predicted Bush “will do very well in Texas ... we expect to win.” “It’s not something we’ve given a whole lot of thought to a t this point although we’re certainly going to begin to give it more as it looks more like he is going to be in the contest,” Clinton campaign manager David Wilhelm said of a Perot candidacy. Perot, asked about the poll results on CSS-TV’S “This Morning,” show, said, “Fm honored the people of Texas feel th at way. It gives m e a great sense of responsibility.” . In an interview later, Perot dismissed the poll as “another blip on the screen” and said, “I don’t pay any attention to polls.” H e described his p o ten tial candidacy as “a campaign in reverse. I am not sending a message to ; the people. This is a grass-roots campaign coming from the people. It is in their hands.” GOP pollster Bill Mclnturff called the new Texas survey “an attention grabber.” The telephone poll of 674 registered voters was conducted April 9-18, an unusually long sampling period that coincided with a wave or largely favorable media atten tio n for Perot, particularly in Texas. Afghan leadership ready to surrender power to rebels KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Bowing battlefield of the Cold War. U.N. S e c re ta ry -G e n e ra l B outros to re b el pow er, th e crip p led A fghan leadership agreed Tuesday to tu rn over B o u tro s-G h a li a rriv e d in In d ia on the government to a guerrilla-run council Tuesday and was traveling to Pakistan on but appealed for moderate factions to take Friday, apparently to speak w ith rebel commanders. charge. Boutros-Ghali said in New Delhi his M uslim g u errilla factions continued t h e ir ran co ro u s p o w e r-sh arin g objective was to m ain tain th e political discussions, and hopes appeared dim for a independence of Afghanistan “to defend te rr ito r ia l in te g rity (and) to prom ote quick end to the 14-year-old civil war. J u s t o u tsid e K abul, forces u n d e r national reconciliation.” His special envoy, Benon Sevan, was to ra d ic a l reb el le a d e r G u lb u d d in H ekm atyar battled more than six hours join him in Pakistan. Sevan currently is in w ith g o v ern m en t forces before being .Afghanistan trying to win the safe exit of driven back and away from the capital, ousted President Najibullah. Acting P resident Abdul Rahim H atif th e only m ajor city no longer in rebel conceded t h a t th e m u jah ed e en , th e hands. In P a k is ta n , h e a d q u a rte rs o f th e Islam ic holy w arriors, call the shots to re sista n c e , rebels failed to agree on a form an interim governing council. “As fa r as th e fu tu re o f th e re cen t le a d e r o f a new 20-m em ber governing council to take control of the government. governm ent... this is a m atter completely H e k m a ty a r re fu se d to accep t th e belonging to the mujahedeen themselves,” leadership of moderate rebel chief Ahmed said H atif, a non-com m unist who took o v er a f te r th e o u s te r o f P re s id e n t Shah Masood, whose forces ring Kabul. E a r lie r , A fg h a n so u rces sa id a Najibullah last week. B ut a source in H a tifs governm ent compromise candidate, Mohammed Nabi Mohammedi, th e leader of a small group, said Najibullah’s successors were trying to had been proposed to head th e interim e n su re t h e ir sa fe ty by en c o u rag in g m oderate rebels to prevent H ekm atyar council in Kabul. More than 2 million people have been from dominating the mujahedeen council. k ille d a n d 5 m illio n d riv e n from th e T he official spoke on co n d itio n of h om es d u r in g th e co n flict, th e la s t anonymity. Afghan armoured soldiers sat their lunch bssida their tank Tuesday on a highway where rival factions of Mujahedden have been fighting near the capital Kabul. Najibullah’s departure from power has laid bare years of ethnic and personal rivalries am ong rebels who fought th e Soviet-backed government since the late 1970s. Gunfire and m o rtar rounds could be h eard south of th e city throughout the night. At least two of Maaood’s m en were k ille d in a n am b u sh by H e k m a ty a r’s fighters. Opinion Slate Press Wednesday, April 99, 1999 Page 4 Students’ voice t etterste lile editor Prevention protects ASU Dear Editor; I have a few comments to share in regard to the front­ page story th at appeared in the State Press of Friday April 17. The story was about a visually im paired student, Cheryl Meadors, and her seeing-eye dog Barkley, who was attacked by another dog on Campus. F irs t of all, in my opinion being blind would be terrifying enough, and then in addition to endure the hustle and bustle of campus traffic would probably push me over the edge! I am certainly on Ms. Meadors side with this issue. I w ant to clearly sta te how disappointed l a m in th e irresponsible, b u reau cratic, blow-off com m ent th a t William Wright (ASU police spokesman) is responsible for! . . His quote, “Since it has not been a problem in the past or accounted for any number a t all of complaints, it is not something where we actually send a squad out to go track down th e dogs not on a leash .” Mr. W right’s statem ent proves without a doubt ASLTs unwillingness to accommodate and give safe passage to the visually impaired. It is my belief that Mr. Wright and the bureaucrats of ASU should learn a lesson fire departm ents and EMS learned long ago. Prevention equals protection. John Gallaher Junior, Fine Arts Laws apply on campus Dear Editor: In the dog policy article that the State Press ran last Friday William Bess, ASU director of public safety, was quoted as saying th at Tempe dog leash laws do not apply to campus. How can this be? I have always been under the impression that the laws of the land apply on campus as well as off Campus. I live in on-campus housing and it has always been stressed to me th at I am not exempt from the laws of the city of Tempe, or th e law s of th e s ta te of Arizona. Another thing Mr. Bess said th at confused me was that since the owner of the attacking dog was not a student, according to Arizona Board of Regents policy, he did not have to have a leash shorter than six feet. To me this suggests two things: 1) th a t there is an ASU dog leash policy th a t says dog owners m ust have their dogs on leashes shorter than six feet, and 2) th at if you are not a student at ASU the policies of the school don’t apply to you. ' I don’t think that’s right. I feel the policies of our school should apply to anyone who com es on th e p rem ises. To W illiam W right, spokesm an for ASU police, 1 recom m end th a t if he doesn’t know the specifics of ASU’s dog leash polity that he find out. To David Bowman, program coordinator for visually impaired students, I ask, why wait until students with guide dogs keep having problems accessing campus to do something about it? My philosophy is to deal with it now and nip it in the bud. The problem is serious; the solution is simple. Paul Hernandez Junior, Chemistry 3 tïafif i KRIS MAYES KEN BROWN.......... KAY OLSON ..................... LARRY SALZMAN......... ANDREW FAUGHT........... IRWIN DAUGHERTY....... SEAN OPENSHAW.... DAN ZEIGER.............. ..... DARREN URBAN ............... VICKI CULVER.............. LAURIE NOTARO............ Kick dogs off campus Dear Editor: I have been following the story about Cheryl Meadors an d “B ark ley ” for th e p a s t sev e ral days an d I am shocked, to say the least. What happened to Barkley and Cheryl should never have been permitted to occur. The way the University is handling the situation is appalling. It seems as though the University is waiting for the whole incident to just “blow over” so there will be no reason to rectify the problem (and it is a problem). There is no reason why a student who is dependent on a dog’s p a ir o f eyes in s te a d of h e r own sho u ld be hindered while walking on campus. I do not believe a leash law revision is going to rem edy th e problem b ecau se i t w as a lre a d y s ta te d by th e ASU police spokesman, William Wright, th a t the police would not send anyone out to reprim and th e violator. He also stated th at they act only on complaints. Well, now he has one. How many is he waiting for? Where there are only seven to 10 people on campus who rely on working dogs, don’t you think th at one complaint is enough? I believe th at the only way to solve the problem is to ban all dogs on campus if they are not working dogs. There is no reason a dog should be here. The dogs are not allowed into the buildings therefore they are tied up outside, further inhibiting the students with working dogs from entering. This is an educational campus, not a park. If you want to walk your dog, take it to Kiwanis! Jennifer Simone-Malcor Senior, Chemistry Hageseth responds Dear Editor: I u n d e rsta n d your p ath e tic a tte m p ts to provide students with newsworthy and insightful commentary, to compliment our pursuit of knowledge, are a t times challenging. Specifically, when duty should compel you to provide objective journalism, and you allow “yellow journalism” to symbolize the State Press. Quality journalism requires a passive insightfulness, not slander and innuendo. Your comments regarding me are indeed personal attacks (calling me an “idiot"). You have gone too far, Michelle. I learn from my mistakes • •I hope you can learn from yours. Christian Hageseth Executive Vice President, ASASU Article points to prejudice Dear Editor: It was disturbing to read William Wright’s pompous and single minded letter in which he called “In Love and Gay” and the participating in the article “out of touch with the real and paramount problems facing gays and lesbians today.” Mr. W right seems to have missed th e point of the article. Neither the author nor the interviewees intended to undermine or ignore the Very serious issues of hate crim es, A rizo n a sodom y law s or th e h y p o critica l existence of ROTC on a campus th a t professes not to allow discrim ination based on sexual orientation, to name only a few problems. In fact, if Mr. Wright knew any of the interviewees, he would find th a t most of them are actively opposing these injustices. As a homosexual, Mr- W right should realize th at it is very difficult, especially for uncloseted gays and lesbians, to be “out of touch” with the problems of discrimination th at face them throughout their lives. The purpose of “In Love and Gay” was not meant to be a summary of all the major problems facing gays and lesbians today, problems th a t most people are already aw are of and th a t are too great to be contained in a single article, nor was it meant as an attem pt to convey the opinions of the interviewees “as the concerns of all gays and lesbians.” Instead, it was designed to point out small, sometimes subtle effects of prejudice on a gay person’s life every day and to show people th a t gay love and gay people are really not a t all different from non-gay love and people. This is in fact th e first and foremost crucial step in overcom ing all of th e “p aram o u n t” problem s facing lesbians and gays. This article was aimed a t the root of discrimination. I believe it accomplished its purpose very effectively, and I applaud Patricia Mah’s efforts in writing it. Adam Leeds Sophomore, Biology MICHELLE ROBERTS, Editor PATRICIA MAH, Managing Editor ........ .......... City Editor REPORTERS: D J. Burrough, Christopher Driscoll, Margo Gillman, C arol Ann Hansen, Blake Herzog, Lisa Kranz, Corey Lewis, Shannon Loughrin, C ecilia M arquis, Chad Redwing, Jackie Rutyna, Sondra Roberto, Irma Rosales, Richard Ruelas. SPO R T S R E PO R T E R S: Brian Charles, Michael Flores, Greg Sexton. MAGAZINE STAFF: Dawn DeVries, Richard Ruelas. CARTOONIST: Ken Collins. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Henri Cohen, Michelle Conway, T J. Sokol, Darryl Webb, Carl York. C O PY ED ITO RS: Joanna Glickler, Kate Wagstaffe. COLU M N ISTS: Nicholas Gerbis, Lois GriffittS, Lorenzo Sierra Jr., Ashahed Triche. PRODUCTION: Christine M. Armstrong, Kai Barrett, Celia Hamman C ueto, Jeff Hams, K evin H eller, Barry Kelly, A ngela L aP orte, Jefrey L ucas, D an R ick erb y , E hren Schwiebert. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcock, Jesus Barron, Sonia Benson, Tom Curtis, Heather DeShong, Lori Guthart, Brittin Karbowsky, Shawn Loos, Lance Newman, Jennifer Rishel, Neil Schnelwar, Dennis Talbot. The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502.W e do not answer questions of a general nature. T he S ta te P ress is the o n ly new sp ap er ex clu siv e ly published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. Editorial Board Unsigned editorials reflect die views of the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: MICHELLE R O B E R T S v:.;....f....^^.....^.„..,»....Editor .......Managing Editor PATRICIA MAH LARRY SALZM A N .Opinion Editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the university) and phone number. O nly signed letters w ill be considered for'publication. R equests fo r anonym ity w ill be g ranted o n ly w ith an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. All letters must be either brought in person with a photo I.D . to t h e S ta te P ress fro n t desk in the basem ent o f M atthew s C en ter o r else addressed to State P ress, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempo, Ariz. 85287-1502. State Press Phone Numbers ......965-7572 Front Desk.^..:.„..„........ Newsroom......................................... 965-2292 Magazine............... :......................................... ...........965-1695 Display Advertising .........................................»......... 965-6555 Classified Advertising. . . . . . . . . . ................ 965-6731 _P age£ Wednesday, Apt« 8 2 ,199« Police Report ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday: • A skylight window in Armstrong Hall received $400 worth of damage. • A parking lot attendant was struck by a vehicle in Lot 13. The vehicle then left the area. • Two students, a man not affiliated with the University and a juvenile were warned against rollerblading on Forest Mall. They were told that the next time they were stopped, their rollerblades would be impounded. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • A 22-year-old man and a 21-year-old man, both Tempe residents, were arrested and charged with assault after the night monitor at Desert Palm Apartments, 1216 E. Vista Del Cerro Drive, told police the two punched him in the face. • Ella Blair, 35, a Glendale resident, was arrested and charged with child abuse, a Class 2 felony, after two women told police they saw her strike her 5-year-old son in the mouth with her fist, knocking out his left front tooth and causing him to fall on the sidewalk. While he was on the ground, the ^^F^^F ^^F PICK-UP & DELIVERY ON ALL REPAIRS MOUNTAIN AND FITNESS BIKE SPECIALIST NOW $19.95 Reg. $24.95 Very com plete tune-ups. FR E E pick-up & delivery Compiled by Stà te Press reporter Richard Ruelas. with this ad • limit one coupon per customer • after 5 pm expires 5-2-92 Take-Out Available 4 NOW $59.95 NOHASSLES - 644-1233 855w • A 28-year-old Phoenix man and a 20-year-old Phoenix man were arrested and charged with public sexual indecency at Moeur Park, 715 N. Mill Ave. The 20-yearold said he heard about the park at a “gay bar.” ^ 1 F . ^ F i ^ F * ,4 F .^F ,^ 6 F ^ P ''» ^ F .^ P F r^ F ^ tlF $10 OFF OVERHAUL 644-1233 • A 24-year-old Tempe man was arrested and charged with stealing his roommate’s gold necklace and selling it at a Scottsdale pawn shop for $35. ^ Buy one beef or chicken fajita at regular price and get second fajita for 99 0 Member $5 OFF TUNE-UP evacuated and counted, and police found 375 patrons in the 250-occupancy bar. | Fajita Prima M B A .A iin iO C E S T O / K witnesses said the mother kicked him in the back. • A 1986 Chevrolet pickup was stopped for a noise ordinance violation in the 600 block of South Mill Avenue. The officer involved reported that he saw a .22-caliber revolver hidden in the waistband of the passenger. The passenger, a 21-year-old Yuma resident, was arrested for concealing a weapon. • The manager of the Vine Tavern, 801 E. Apache Blvd., was cited for exceeding the building’s maximum occupancy . Police called a fire department captain to the bar to witness the violation. The patrons were Reg. $69.95 Very complete overhaul. FR EE pick-up $ delivery 644-1233 IN TH E CORN ERSTO N E 921-1230 Fajita Prima Drlve University 0 * ¿ ¡ 2 2 RECYCLING SINCE 1974 “Best of Phoenix NcwTimM * FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL... 7 2 4 E G le n d a le . Phx. 2 2 7 W. U n i v e r s i t y Dr.. T e m p e 8 7 0 -8 5 0 7 9 6 8 -2 5 5 7 Wednesday, April 22,1998 Unpaid tickets bring sanctions By RICHARD R UELAS State Press Although paying old parking tickets may be the last thing on students’ minds as the end of the semester nears, ASU officials warn that the neglect could have dire consequences. Sgt. Bill Wright, spokesman for the ASU Department of Public Safety, said if citations remain unpaid, students could risk having all of their University privileges suspended, which include registration, access to transcripts and library check-out. The suspension holds even after graduation, Wright said. “ It’s nothing to sneeze at just because you’re graduating,” he said, adding that many graduates need their transcripts after leaving. “Even when a person graduates from ASU, they’re still gonna need things down the road. ” Wright said that “it’s not the semester that counts so much as the time the citation is issued.” After a citation is issued, it is entered into the ASU DPS computer system. Although an attempt is made to enter the citations on the day they are received, Wright said that due to system renovations, it may take up to 30 days. Once the Computer has the ticket in memory, a bill for the citation is sent out. Thirty-one days after that, a late charge of $10 is added, and University privileges — “essentially everything that requires an ID number” — are suspended, Wright said. “ So, early in the spring semester, if you got into some shenanigans, it might affect you for the fall,” he said. After the 6lst day, a second $10 penalty is added, and after the 9lst, Die matter is turned over to Deliquent Receivables, where a collection agency and legal action might be used to get the money. “It’d take a sizeable bill for the University to undertake legal action,” Wright said. Usually, imposing University sanctions takes care of the problem, Wright said. Tickets can be cleared through payment or, if a student feels the citation was given unfairly, through appeals. Appeals must be made within 14 days of receiving the citation. Linda Riegel, assistant director of Parking and Transit Services, said the rate of unpaid tickets is very low. Part of that is attributed to the decreasing number of citations being written. In 1990,20,000 citations were written. Last year, 7,000 were handed out. Riegel said the most frequent citations are penalties for not having a proper decal and overtime parking at a meter. Wright said: ‘‘You can’t ignore these things and expect them to go away because they don’t. The Computer has an excellent memory.” Sgt. Al Taylor, spokesman for the Tempe police, said there is no Special effort made to snare students before they leave their delinquent tickets behind. “We’ll boot the same anyday,” he said, A Car can be booted —secured in place with an orange lock around the wheel — after one unpaid ticket. Cars with outstanding Tempe parking tickets of more than seven days are entered into a computer. Each day the computer generates a list of all the license plates, and parking officers attempt to locate them for boots. Cheryl Vocke, a Tempe traffic court clerk, said if a student gets out of town, “there’s not a whole lot (officers) can do.” But, since the list is on a computer, a student’s plate can come up during the next semester, she said. Releasing the boot costs $48, plus a mandatory $8 late fee, on top of the cost of the original parking tickets. The GMAT Tests You On The Things You've Been Trying To Forget For Years 15. In the figure* O PQ R if a quadrilateral with two right interior angles, and arcs O P, PQ, QR, and RO are semidrcks. If the sum of the areas o f regions A and B it l4lC* what is the sum o f the areas o f the regions C and D? (A) 7% (B) 12* (Q 14* (D) 28% (E) It cannot be determined from the information given C S IA N L E Y R KAPLAN JL Take Kaplan Or Take \b u r Chances Classes begin M ay 10 for June Exam ENROLL N O W FREE D iagnostics & T uition Assistance Available ,1000 E . A p a c h e B lv d . * S u ite 211 • T e m p e 1 B lo c k E a s t o f R u ra l • 967-2967 B E V E L MA L E S 1 C 1 L V u S AG E T H E F R S HMA N S OW 1 K A DD S C EW BO UT s T HE T A A U R A■ ■ E V E N E0Y R 1NGS s SM LL So P A 1 Es S T HE G R DUA T E 1NS ET ES S EX R O 0 Ms s EEPY C R O SSW O R D by TH O M A S JO S E P H B r o a d e n Y o u r H o r iz o n s Read the State Press O P IN IO N Section P E P P E R O N I! P E P P E R O N I! ACRO SS 1 Dwellings 7 Cathedral part 11 Scarcity 12 Rocky outcrop­ ping 13 Mar 14 Visitor to Oz 15 Specula­ tive question 17 Funda­ mentals 20 Unfin­ ished 23 Low sound 24 W elsh port 26 Sam ovar 27 Fizzy quaff 28 Hostel 29 Diner drinks 31 Like “first” or “fifth": Abbr. 32 Coin ridge 33 Wallet fillers 34 G lass ingredient 37 Early killer 39 Fellow actor 43 Eager 44 Soar 45 Radius, for one 46 Fit within one another DOW N 1 Count up 2 Contest 3 Clum sy one 4 T ies 5 Engrave 6 Big Apple stadium 7 Director's cry 8 Ex cess 9 Used a Hassock 10 Conceit 16 G olf bunkers 17 Frenzied 18 Rare metal 19 Mix-up 21 Literary 2 1 Y esterday’s A nsw er class 22 Rounds of poker 24 Hex 25 Misery 30 Curtain feature 33 Caravan stop 35 Sammy Davis Jr.’s “Y e s — " 36 Inlet 37 Airport auto 38 In the past 40 Make lace 41 Chowed down 42 Blushing 11 L 82;:7| ■8 4 3 5 6 8 9 fb 21 22 41 42 ’ li :’ 13 12 14 16 W F. 18 W 2^ 28 26 29 ■i 30 32 34 35 31 33 36 _ 39 38 37 40 44 43 46 4¿ 4-22 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is! ON G FELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etç. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different. 4-22 L W CRYPTOQUOTE G B M G L W G J G K N B M G SB K U R S T M • ’V M G G R F U M C G F M C M L W L F T M • C F F C . — Y K C G M R S C U U C T G . W B U U G K Yesterday's C ryptoquote: THE FOUNDATIONS OFTHE WORLD WILL BE SHAKY UNTILTHE MORAL PROPS ARE RESTORED. — ANNE O'HARE MCCORMICK 0 1992 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Page 7 Wednesday, April « , 199g ASU critics sp lit o n Perot SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Round, trip from Phoenix O th e r C itie s A v a ila b le Paris ...— .............$648.00 Lon d on .................$672.00 Frankfurt ...............$648.00 B russels................$648.00 R om e.....................$748.00 M ilan..................... $648.00 Amsterdam ...........$648:00 Helsinki................. $648.00 Copenhagen ....„...$648.00 C h icag o ................$250.50 New Y ork..............$256.50 SLLouis............ $205.20 D enver___ i.........$178^ 0 San Francisco.......$124.20 D es M oines...........$178.20 New Orleans .........$278.00 A tlanta.................. $214.30 Cabo San Lucas ...$254.00 M IL L A V E N U E TRAVEL <0 > 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 R EST R IC T IO N S A PPLY. SU BJEC T TO A VA ILA BILITY HOURS: SUN-THURS □ Choice of Crusts: Originator Honey Wheat 11 AM-2 AM FRI SAT 11 AM -3 AM PIZZA 2107 S. Rural RdL 921 -F A S T C921-3278J DAMMIT Medium Cheese Pizza _ H B ^ Only $ 3 * 9 9 MADNESS Extra Large Cheese Pizza ! ¡ Only $ 5 . 4 9 J By B LA K E HERZOG State Press With a recent poll revealing that H. Ross Perot garners more support among Texas voters than either George Bush or Bill Clinton, many ob­ servers are taking a closer lode at the w m billionaire presidential candidate. Jack Crittenden, an assistant pro­ fessor of political science, said he thinks Perot will be on the November ballot. Perot has said he will run for P e ro t the presidency if he can get onto the ballot in all 50 states. “He appears to have a lot of grassroots support — people are willing to go out to get signatures to put him on the ballot,” Crittenden said. “ I don’t think there’s any question that he’ll be on the ballot in 50 states.” Crittenden said he feels Perot’s “can-do” image was helping the Texan get in the door. “He’s made his own fortune, he has been involved in the educational system in Texas, he ‘rescued’ some of his own employees in Iran, and looks like a man who can make things happen,” Crittenden said. Some ASU political observers feel that Perot has been vague when taking a stand on the issues. “I don’t really know that much about the guy, nor does anyone else,” said ASU political science Professor David Berman. Bill Tierney, a sophomore business management major who is the state chairman of Campus Republicans, agreed. “As far as I can tell, he’s an economic conservative and a social liberal, but what’s interesting is that he’s started to change that,” Tierney said. Lonnie Johnson, Young Democrats president and a junior political science major, said he is concerned by the support Perot has received. “It’s scary that people will line up so much behind him when they don’t even know exactly what he’s all about,” Johnson said. Tierney said he feels Perot has waffled on some issues. “He started off strongly pro-choice,” Tierney said. “Now he’s qualifying that, and he’s suggesting a lot of alternatives as far as abortion goes. “I almost think he’s going to reverse his position on that.” Several ASU experts said they doubt Pérot can win the White House, but added that he could influence the outcome of the election by drawing support from the major-party candidates. Richard Herrera, an assistant professor of political science, said Perot could draw support from the two major parties. “He could affect the outcome by winding, although that would be highly unlikely, but he could take votes away from candidates in key states,” he said. ' Berman offered a sample scenario. “ (Perot) can influence the outcome,” he said. “I’m not sure how he’s going to do that, but the conventional wisdom is that he’ll hurt Bush more than he’ll hurt Clinton, and he’ll hurt Bush in the South and in the Sun Belt states, particularly. “It could be that he’ll take enough votes away from Bush to throw the election into Congress.” But Berman added that “my real feeling is that he will lose support as time goes on.” Regardless of the outcome, Johnson warned that Perot should be taken seriously. “ (He has) a $100 million of his own money to spend, and he’s got an appealing message of cleaning up Washington,” Johnson said. 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APACHEBLVD. 968-2446 Paseó State Pitá» Wednesday, Apri) 82,1992 Tempe nixes bungee jum p appeal By D .J. BURROUGH State Press Like an untethered jumper leaping from a crane, a local bar owner’s appeal to the city council to allow bungee jumping in his parking lot has plunged to its death. “I thought it was something that would attract a lot of attention to our business,” said Dana Dutton, owner of Rocky’s bar at 1212 E. Apache Blvd. “I also thought it would give people an opportunity to do something in a close location. It is something that people can store in their minds that they will just never forget.” On Thursday, Dutton’s appeal to the city council failed. His appeal garnered only three votes from the six council members present, one short of the majority needed to overturn the city staff’s denial of the permit. Councilman Don Cassano, who voted against the appeal, said he was worried about the city’s liability in approving such an eye-catching event. “I have no problem with what they want to do,” he said of thé bungee jumping. “I can see some guy like me driving down there saying, ‘What the héck is going on,’ looking up as I plow into somebody that is running across the street.” Dutton said business has been slow at the bar he opened two months ago on the northeast corner of Apache Boulevard and Terrace Road. Having people leap off a crane over a parking lot with an elastic cord attached to them was the best idea for attracting more customers, Dutton said. “It is kind of our last effort to stay in business, ” he said. “It has been pretty quiet. It has been really tough getting going. ’’ Romley chastised for comments on AzScam trial PHOENIX (AP) — A judge chastised Maricopa County Attorney Richard Romley Tuesday for his public comments on the AzScam political-corruption (rial and warned him not to talk about it in the future. “I don’t want to see you in here again. Otherwise bring your toothbrush,” Judge Michael Ryan told Romley at the conclusion of a brief hearing in Superior Court. Thè hearing followed the first full day of the trial of former state Sen. Carolyn Walker and Ronald Tapp, the first defendants to go to trial as a result of the yearlong AzScam investigation. Romley admitted talking about the trial at a political meeting last week. He said he told about 35 to 40 people at the meeting that Ms. Walker’s attorney, Murray Miller, had approached his office and offered to have his client plead guilty to two felony counts if bribery charges against her were dropped. Ms. Walker and Tapp, a former bail bondsman and lobbyist, face multiple felony charges, including bribery, fraud, conspiracy and racketeering. “I understand that you are running for office and that you have certain First Amendment rights, ” Judge Michael Ryan told Romley. “But these defendants have a right to a fair trial.” Ryan told Romley that his public comments on the case were in direct violation of ethics rules that specifically prohibit public discussion of possible guilty pleas. “Plea negotiations are always a very sensitive topic, especially in a case like this,” Ryan said. Romley promised to abide by the court rule in the future, although he said it puts him in a difficult position as a public official who has a duty to inform his constituents. “It’s a very difficult role, especially when my constituents hold me accountable for cases like this,” the county attorney said. Ryan took no action against Romley, saying the case apparently had not been prejudiced because the jurors all said they had not seen or heard anything about his commente. Earlier, a jury panel of 10 women and seven men, including five alternates, was sworn in and chief prosecutor James Keppel, a deputy county attorney, began delivering his opening arguments. “This case is about breech of the public trust by public officials,” Keppel told the jury. “It is about bribery of public officials. It is about lying under oath by public officials.” Keppel said in most cases jurors have to rely on the ability of witnesses to recall past events. But in this case, “you’re in a better position, you’re going to see it first hand because 90 percent of it is on tape,” he said. The prosecution is expected to base its case on hours of secretly videotaped meetings between the defendants and Joseph Stedino, the undercover police operative who posed during the AzScam operation as a crooked lobbyist offering bribes to lawmakers and others in exchange for their promises to support legalized gambling in Arizona. Keppel said Ms. Walker took more than $5,000 from Stedino during their very first meeting. “During the course of the next several weeks, Carolyn Walker makes a number of visits to Stedino’s office and she takes money out,” he said. “And she doesn’t report the money.” In exchange for the more than $25,000 she eventually received from Stedino, Ms. Walker promised to introduce a legalized gambling hill, to shepherd in through committee and to recruit other supporters, Keppel said. Had the council approved the appeal, Dutton planned to have bungee jumping from a crane in his parking lot Saturday, April 18, from noon to midnight. He expected about 300 people to attend the event. “It would attract a lot of attention to Apache,” he said. “ There are a lot of closed businesses down here,” Dutton said he felt that businesses on Apache Boulevard have not gotten the same amount of support from the council as businesses on Mill Avenue. The original request for a permit was denied by the city staff mainly because of anticipated traffic problems, said Tempe’s Deputy City Manager Gary Brown. ‘‘Being so close to the road, it is just too tempting for people to watch that rather than the road, and collide,” he said. The jump site’s late operating hours were also considered to be a problem by the city staff, Brown said. “You could have all sorts of people who are not quite sober driving by,” he said. Security personnel would be on the site to help with traffic flow and signs would have been erected along both cross streets cautioning drivers to be alert, Dutton said. Dutton said he was planning to file another request this, week for a permit from the city to allow for bungee jumping on May 18. ‘‘We are open to any suggestions they have on how we could better control it,” he said. “If that is the difference between doing the event or not, of course we would do it. As much as everybody else we want this to be a safe event too.” S ta te P re s s You can say many things about Macintosh. But “I can’t afford it” is no longer one of them. You can talk about how simple the Apple* Macintosh® computer is to use. Or how it can think the way you think. Or how compatible it is with other computers. But think again when the word “expensive” com es to mind. Because it’s just not true any m ore.„ Introducing the Macintosh Classic* computer. It’s the most affordable Macintosh, yet it has all the capabilities you need to handle basic applications, such as word processing and spreadsheet analysis. The Classic is a completely integrated Macintosh system. Its monitor, keyboard, mouse and system software are all included, as are extras you might not expect—such as built-in networking and the Apple SuperDrive"disk drive, which lets the Classic read from and write to MS-DOS, OS/2, and ProDOS® files. Stop in today. We’ll show you how it’s possible for nearly anyone to afford a Macintosh. Comfortably. See the new systems on display at COMPASS in the Moeur Building, Room 108 965-2379 © 1990 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, die Apple logo, Macintosh, SupoDriw and ProDOS aie registered trademarks of AppleComputer, ine. Chate is a regiteied trademark licenrd to Apple Computer, Inc MS-DOS b a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation OS/2 is a registered trademark of International Business Machines Corporation. Page 9 Wednesday, April gg, 1992 BankAmerica gives plan to sell 49 banks F re e u tilitie s . F re e b a sic ca b le on e Discounted single rooms. Optional call-waiting & call-forwarding In-house computing facilities. Special Interest Communities. Tennis, swimming, & exercise facilities. Proximity to campus, y ^ ^ ^ C heck o u t o u r b o tto m lln e . C6 NT C l a s s e s S t a r t T h e We e k O f 10 w eek S e s s io n 5 We e k S e s s io n June 15 0gp6B £D May 11 June 20 0M 9S8D May 18 June 6 a ia sB » June 3 June 15 May 4 Sept. 19 A p r il 2 4 th . fo r furth er le t t e r s iz e b la c k & w h it e ! o o n Te s t d ate LSA T GM AT GRE M CAT A ll Thesale is subject to regulatory approval. State Banking Superintendent Harold Feeney met Tuesday with Frank and Decker but said later be didn’t know what specific approval was needed because his department had yet to receive a' formal application. Rob Caray, chief assistant state attorney general, said a divestiture agreement negotiated between BankAmerica and the state requires the Attorney General’s Office to endorse the sale as long as it won’t harm competition. t a r t in g Test K in k o 's o n “We want to lend in the state. We want to focus in the local communities,” Decker said. s S to •Focus on non-construction lending to small and medium-sized companies and on m o rtg a g e a n d c o n su m e r lo an s to individuals. c S C o m e The 49 branches include 28 in the Phoenix area and nine in Tucson, with the remainder in Green Valley, Sierra Vista, Yuma, D o u g las, C asa G ra n d e , P re s c o tt, Cottonwood, Flagstaff, Lake Havasu City and Bullhead City. Of the 49 branches, 30 are operated by Bank of America, 10 by Security Pacific and nine by Caliber Bank of Arizona, a statechartered bank owned by BankAmerica. Frank, who served as postmaster from 1988 until earlier this year, said he probably will be chairman of the new bank. Decker said he will be president and chief executive. Frank and Decker said the new bank would: •Have $200 million in capital, all from within the United States and most now arranged. •Offer employment to all the 380-400 employees of (lie 49 branches and gradually hire an additional 350-400 employees for headquarters and support jobs. PHOENIX (AP) — BankAmerica Corp. on Tuesday announced an agreement to sell 49 Arizona branches to an investment group which will set up a new bank. The move c le a r s th e l a s t m a jo r h u rd le to BankAmerica’s merger with Security Pacific Corp. Under an agreement signed Sunday, Independent Bancorp of Arizona will operate the 49 branches as a yet-to-benamed bank based in Phoenix. The sale is expected to close in late sum m er, spokesmen said. Organizers of the investor group include former U.S. Postmaster General Anthony M. Frank and another former California banker, Richard W. Decker Jr. Investors who won’t take a direct management role include former Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth and an undisclosed state pension fund, Decker and Frank said at a news conference. To satisfy antitrust concerns related to the merger, BankAmerica had agreed with the U.S. Justice Department to sell 211 branches with $8.8 billion in deposits in five states, includinjg the 49 branches in Arizona. With the Arizona divestiture, “we’re free to merge,” BankAmerica spokesman Peter Magnaiti said from San Francisco. The merger is to take effect Wednesday. The divestiture will leave Bank of America Arizona with 169 branches and*$8.5 billion in deposits, making it second largest in the state in deposits behind Valley National Bank, Magnani said. Valley National —the state’s largest bank and its last remaining independent — agreed last week to be bought by Banc One Corp. of Columbus, Ohio. In addition to the branches, Independent Bancorp said it also will get $2.1 billion of deposits and $1.23 billion of loans from BankAmerica. Terms were not disclosed. Decker said the new bank will be the state’s fifth largest in terms of deposits. T e m p e S C Info rm atio n • 7 3 1 -9 4 0 0 e n t e r c o t t s d a l e July 6 • 4 8 3 -2 1 0 0 THE-_______ EDUCATIONAL GROUP LSAT • GM AT •G RE • M CAT T e s t P r epa r a tio n G r a d u a te S c h o o l S e l e c t io n & A pplic a tio n a s s is t a n c e W e ’l l Ma k e S u r e Yo u Ma k e It , Page to Wednesday, April « . 1998 Engineers earn top chapter By JACKIE RUTYN A State Press A year of sharpening people skills instead of technical skills has paid off for a group of industrial engineering students. The ASU chapter of the Institute of Industrial Engineers was named the outstanding student chapter in the United States. “We had to prepare what is called a chapter development report to highlight all the activities, events and functions the chapter puts on through the year,” said John Vekich, the club’s president. Each of the 120 chapters in the country is awarded points for activities ranging from touring industrial plants to publishing a student newsletter. Points are given for special projects done beyond what the development report requires. “That’s where we got a lot of our points this year,” Vekich said. “We did an Adopt-a-Troop where we sent letters, to troops in the Persian Gulf War, we had a bike raffle to raise money to bring speakers to campus, and we sent a delegation of students to visit a university in Mexico.” Vekich said Philip Wolfe, the chair of the industrial and management systems engineering department, had been a strong influence in the club winning the national award. “I can’t take any credit,” Vekich said. “They have just done an excellent job, coming from virtually nowhere in three years to the top student chapter in the country.” Wolfe said that a lot of the course work required for industrial engineers is technical rather than interpersonal. “A lot of these students go on to become managers so they need to understand how important those skills are,” Wolfe said. “Students need to learn more than technical skills.” Wolfe said the chapter has existed at ASU for as long as there has been an industrial engineering department, since 1959. Vekich, who will travel to Chicago in May to accept the award, said about 100 industrial engineering majors are in the organization. “We meet once a week to discuss chapter development,” Vekich said. “We have speakers come to speak to our group and this gives us a chance to learn about different companies and make job contacts.” Vekich said industrial engineering encompasses thé technology and automation aspects of engineering such as the involvement of computers in manufacturing and computer simulation, and the designing of computer work stations. “ There are a lot of different areas to specialize in,” Vekich said. “Industrial engineering is sometimes called ‘people engineering.’ ” Toni Trexler, president-elect of next year’s chapter, is already planning to win the award next year. “Now that we have won first place, it is definitely my duty to see that we don’t lose it,” Trexler said. She plans to create a peer advisement program in which an upperclassman student is paired with an undergraduate in a buddy system for academic and moral support. “A lot of new students don’t even know what engineering is, let alone know about which classes they should take,” Trexler said. “They are just overwhelmed with the curriculum.” Q O S Cruise with the State Pres a London rib! Did YOU forget about I the noon deadline for ah ad In ÊÊÊSbÊÊBÊÊÊ / S ta te : Press? , $290* Frankfurt — ...$324* Amsterdam .-$384* Parts------ ;— $384* M adrid------- $324* •Fares are each way from Phoenix based on a roundtrip purchase. Taxes not included. Restrictions may apply. Fares subject to charge. Many Other destinations available America's oldest and largest student travel organisation. Council fraud H ayden's Fe rry Review 965-1243 Located a t Forest and University, directly across fiomAS.U.1 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, A Z 85281 966-3144 Call for a FREE 1992 Student Travel Catalog! 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Selected Academ ic Solutions or B M 1 80 0 222-7257,Oders are subject to »« ¡lability Prices ere subject to change and IBM m^r withdraw the otter at any time without node« "P S /2 Loan tor Learning late you borrow $1,500-S3.000. IBM and PS/2 are registered trademarks ot International Business Machines Corporation. 01992 B M C om M 31 Page 11 wednesda^Agrjlï^W Ï Tempe chief s actions ruled OK LSAT • MCAT GMAT • G RE By RICHARD RUELAS State Prase The Princeton Review offers ASU*s best prep courses. Skeptical? • Cross examine us! • Consult our experts! • Do your research! Go ahead, make our day. 967-1480 TH E PRINCETON REVIEW W tS m iM o rt! F in d a b e d in t h e State Press C la s s ifie d s The Phoenix Police Department has found no violations of policy in its investigation of a Jan. 7 incident a t the home of the Tempe police chief in which he used police to settle a fight between his son and his wife. Chief David Brown said he is “quite happy about them resolving the investigations” into the police detainment of his son Robert after the dispute. Phoenix Internal Affairs, in its review, found that“ Chief Brown acted appropriately as a citizen in asking for police help with a domestic disturbance, and the police acted appropriately in responding.” BroWn had his 18-year-old son taken into custody by a sergeant and placed in a holding cell without a complaint, arrest or incident report being filed. “Supposedly, a sergeant was supposed to fill out a field information card,” Brown said, adding that he did not tell anyone not to fill out proper paperwork. On March 20, Maricopa County Attorney Richard Romley’s office issued die results of its investigation, which found that Brown acted within his legal authority when he had his son arrested. Brown said he does not believe the image of the Tempe Police Department will be negatively affected by the incident. “The fact that we went outside for the investigation shows we wanted to get to the bottom of it,” he said, adding “it should reinforce the image.” Both the county attorney and the Phoenix police investigations were requested by Tempe City Manager Terry Zerkle with Brown’s approval. Robert Brown spent about two hours in police custody, 20 minutes of which was inside a: cell. He is still facing felony theft charges for allegedly stealing his father’s service revolver from his desk. The gun, which was recovered in Mexico earlier this month, had been missing from Brown’s desk since December. Tempe police detectives believe it changed hands eight times and was stolen once after it was initially sold for $1(10 by Robert Brown. ' : - ' I BURGER MONDAYTHRUTHURSDAY 1/4 lb . 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Page 15 J W tó n e * ta £ A g r« 8 £ J 9 9 fi_ ASASU C on tin u ed from page 1. brought before the Senate next year. “I am going to work very hard to get together a code of ethics, and with the help of the senators next year, I can bring it up before the Senate,” he said. “T hat way there will be no question whether or not things th at occur here are ethical.” Haden brought forth the initial charges of wrongdoing against Hageseth. The Senate did not remove Hageseth from office, but formally censured him for his actions. Haden said th a t the code of ethics would include a provision dealing with ticket scalping. “It will be worked in there as far as th at you cannot in any way use your position to get monetary gain,” he said. S tokes sa id he w ill u se th e A rizona H ouse of Representatives conduct codes as a model in creating ASASlFs ethics provisions. ■“I’m ju st going to go get their code of ethics and cross out w hat is irrelevant to us and bring th a t before our Senate next year,” he said. B efore th e S e n a te ’s 1991-92 ad jo u rn m e n t, th e organization’s new senators were sworn in. In te rn a tio n a l international student departm ent to be L a st y e a r an effo rt to add an equal in power to the MCAB, rather than in tern atio n al student representative to under the direction of the board: H o w ev er,th e proposed $2,000 in th e e x istin g ASASU M u ltic u ltu ra l A w aren ess B oard w as th w a rte d by a p p ro p ria tio n s for th e d e p a rtm e n t opponents who said the needs of foreign representing, ASU’s 2,206 international students were already addressed by the stu d en ts is considerably less th a n th e A sian an d H ispanic co alitio n s of th e $11,886 allocated to re p re se n t ASU’s 5,504 minority students. MCAB. “I t’s a fa ir way to create Something The MCAB oversees funding to four recognized minority groups: the African- that is going to be specific to international American, Asian, Native American and. student needs,” Bouzari said. But, ju st as President Greg Mechem Chicano-Hispano coalitions. Bouzari said student leaders gave up last week called a proposal to add a vice on the idea of restructuring the MCAB. .p re s id e n t of c u ltu ra l d iv e rsity w as Therefore, the revised bill requires the “r a ilro a d e d ” th ro u g h th e S e n ate, C on tin u ed from page 1. Want a liner ad in the State Press Classifieds section tomorrow? Bulls LOU FERRIGNÔ The Hulk MARK GASTENEAU Jets KEN HARVEY Cardinals JOSE CANSECO A's MICHAEL JORDAN RKKY HENDERSON A 's MARK McGURE A 's TONY PtttlJPS Tigers MITCH WILLIAMS Phillies HULK HOGAN W W F Champ THE UDMAIE WARRIOR W W FC hanp THE BUSHWACKERS W W F C h a n p s BEN JOHNSON Olym pic Sprinter MATT GAFARI Olym pic W estler l£E HANEY Mr. Olym pia SAMR BANN0UT Mr. Olym pia MRŒASHLEY Mr. Universe JJ. MARSH Top IFBB P ro BOYER C0C Top IFB8 P ro JACKE PAISLEY Top IFBB P ro SANDY RDDEU Top IFBB P ro VWNEY C0MEF0RD WBF P ro TONY PEARSON WBF P ro LAURA LOMANO IFBB USA Chomp U M IMBRIAU IFBB In te rn a tio n a l Champ ROBERT MALT C owboys GERRA1D RIGGS R edskins TODD KAUS V ikings SIEVE JORDAN V ikings RANDAU McDANEL V ikings BYRON EVANS E agles TERRANCE FLAGLER 4 ? e rs CHUCK CECIL P ackers SHAWN PATTERSON P ackers MARK MMIZACX C hargers CRAIG "BtON HEAD" HAYWARD S aints NMHANIADUKEASZ/Ar Activities Vice President Amy Golden said th e in tern a tio n al stu d en t bill is being rushed through the final hours of the 11th session w ithout sufficient research and debate. Although the session is officially over, senators will vote on th e bill during a special legislative session next week. “They will create a new d epartm ent with no details or outlines in writing, with nothing on paper,” Golden said. “There needs to be extensive debate about this.” Bouzari disagreed. “This is an appropriate time,” he said. “Nobody can say i t ’s political, to gain constituents. We started on this one year ago. They knew about it. Its coming out at the end of the session has nothing to do with the obvious facts.” Allan Figueredo, a graduate student from In d ia , sa id specific n ee d s of international students include funding for programs and dealing with issues such as im m ig ra tio n , n a tu ra liz a tio n , fam ily members and financial aid, winch foreign students are ineligible for, but m ust pay a yearly $6 fee. “A lo t of people believ e t h a t in te rn a tio n a l stu d e n ts do n o t w a n t to belong to ASASU but that’s not true. We want to contribute as much as we can to this campus,” he said.' We’ll need to receive it before noon today! Matthews Center, Basement • 965-6731 WHAT DO THESEPEOPLE HAVE IN COMMON? STORE NOW PAY LATER Pay in August for your storage today! 966*7021 AZTEC STORAGE CENTER o n C u rry , ju s t W e s t o f H a y d e n THEY'VEALL WORKEDOUTAT ! Ü“ 1 BEAUVAIS! Director o f Muslim Public Affairs Council NOW'SYOURCHANCE. S ALAM AL-M AR AYATI V isiting A SU Cam pus to D iscuss: MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT ISLAM Memorial Union Room 218 Thurs. April 23,1992 11:00-12:30 SPONSORED BY PROGRESSIVE STUDENTS UNDERSTANDING ISLAM Comics State Pu W e d n « d 2 ^ g ilíJ J 9 9 2 Page 16 D o o n e s b u ry BY G AR R Y TR U D EAU T H E F A R h S I D E By G A R Y L A R SO N I MEAN, U HILE HIERE SITTING HERE, THIS 8RANP-NEW U FE, THIS INSAN E M IRACLE, IS TAR­ ING PLACE IN THENEXT ROOM! IT S JU ST \ INCREDI­ BLE! Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson WAIT.' WAIT.' SUSIES COMING.' TAKE IT BACK I'M NEVER GETTING MARRIED: NEVER.' WHAT ? SHE AS? M Q l' SHE 15/ T V E GOT TO DISCOURAGE ROMANCE YOU CANT / SMOLDERING PASSION IS YOUR FATE.' ■ .... ..." — \ ^ GC6H.CAL.VIN, CM NO, ITS TRUE! I'M THE DIRT A LCNE CbVERlNGYoOR MAGNET.' FEATURES IS A BIG IMPROVEMENT. r/ r • SEBASTOPOL, Calif. (A P )— Finnegan the kitten is safe at home after four days atop a 60,000-volt power pole. The fire department and animal control officials wouldn’t attempt to rescue Finnegan because of the electrocution danger, but a crew from Pacific Gas & Electric Co. was up to the challenge Monday. Finnegan’s family noticed the cat had climbed up the 60-foot pole on Thursday. Try as they might, they were unable to get the kitten to come down. “We were at our wit’s end,” said Miriam Cox, who with her husband, Shane, adopted the cat a few months ago. After four unsuccessful attempts by PG&E, crews figured a way of maneuvering a crane to rescue Finnegan without interrupting power to customers in Sebastopol, 50 miles north of San Francisco. “I’ve never seen a cat go that high,” said rescuer Clarence Lua, who has rescued 15 cats in his 30 years with the company. The Cox family said they planned a kitten-suitable welcome for Finnegan. “Huge bowls of cat fo5d, and I think we have some fish,” Mrs. Cox said. contest on Chicago radio, 16-year-old Matt Legg stands a good chance of winning. The teen-ager from suburban Elk Grove Village has had one goal for the past two years: Win anything and everything he can off the radio. And he has done just that, often taking home more prizes than he could ever need. “You never get tired of winning,” Legg said recently. His booty includes about 250 sets of movie passes, 150 Compact discs, 75 sets of concert tickets, 20 portable tape players, five stereos, four plane tickets to California, two miniature TV sets, one videocassette player and a car that he’s not yet licensed to drivé. “ I don’t buy anything, ever,” Legg said. WJMK-FM disc jockey Shawn Burke, who gave away the car, said, “To me, it’s partly get-a-life time, but there’s really no objection.” “There’s one in every market,” he said. “We call them contest pigs.” Legg settles on his bed each day after school, checks his calendar (won from a bank) to see which stations are on the day’s list of potential prize-givers and gets down to business. • WETHERSFIELD, Conn. (AP) — It reaily was in the mail. It just took 56 years to get there and when it did, the envelope was empty. A letter from the Aetna Life Insurance Co., postmarked June 5,1936, and bearing a red 2-cent stamp of George Washington, arrived at the state Department of Transportation on Thursday. There was a second postmark on the back of the envelope, dated April 14, 1992' The letter was addressed to “Albert L. Donnelly, Highway. B usiness M anager, S ta te Highway Department, Hartford, Conn,” Donnelly retired in 1957. The highway business manager position has been eliminated and the state Highway Department changed its name and moved its headquarters to Wethersfield. Oh, and the cost of sending a letter has risen to 29 cents. Terry Conlon, the department’s chief mail handler, opened the sealed letter, but found nothing inside., “I honestly can’t explain it,” said Linda Crabb, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Postal Service. • CHICAGO (AP) — He’s the bane of disc jockeys, a whiz at one-handed dialing. And if there’s a phone-in CO • Ò 2 < 5 N OÜ o a DOMINO'S PIZZA DEALS! 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I InektómtÉ t& fnkU MaliwwfloodtDt Our oawytea» t un $30.00. jJaicdddhrcrya . ©1982 Domino1» Pizza, ho. — 3PR E88J State Press Wednesday, April 22, 199g fS S L lZ i A S U f a c e s n a s t y U o fA S o ftb a ll tr y in g to h o l d 3 r d p la c e w ith g a m e s le ft w ith U C L A , C a ts By MICHAEL FLO R ES State Press After a week off, the 20th-ranked ASU softball team jumps in against one of thé best teams in the country tonight as it hosts rival UofA. “To get a game from them would be significant,” said ASU coach Linda Wells of the doubleheader which begins at 6 at Sun Devil Club Stadium. The second-ranked Wildcats are a remarkable 46-4 for the season, and on April 7 snapped top-ranked UCLA’s 33-game winning streak by defeating the Bruins 1-0. Not surprisingly, UofA and UCLA are perched atop the Pac-10 Conference standings at 7-1 and 9-1, respectively. “They’ve split their two games against each other and have been beating up on every other team in the conference,” Wells said. ASU (25-17, 5-5 Pac-10) is third with all eight of its remaining regular season games to be played against conference opponents. Wells agreed that, without a victory or two against UofA tonight or against UCLA in the season-ending doubleheader May 3, the Sun Devils will be hard pressed to hold the third spot in the league standings unless they sweep this weekend’s fourgame series in Oregon. “I think the most critical games will be against the Oregon schools this weekend,” Wells said. “Those are the ones we are supposed to win. Against Arizona and UCLA, we just want to relax and play well. If we get a game, great.” The Sun Devils have not beaten UofA this season, having lost two games in Tucson, each by tough 1-0 scores. “They’re a very talented group,” Wells said. “They’ve got great pitching, and they play well as a team.” The Wildcats, who have allowed more than two runs in only one game this season, are led by pitchers Debby Day and Susie Parra. The two have been involved in the outcome of every UofA game, Day boasting a record of 25-2 and P arra an equally impressive 21-2 mark. Day, a senior, was named the Pac-10 Sports Briefs Basketball fills void at guard with Capers Com piled from staff reports The ASU men’s basketball team filled its point guard void Monday by signinjg junior college All-American Marcell Capers to a letter of intent. Capers, who was named All-America by Blue Ribbon College Basketball Yearbook, was also named the second-best JC point guard in the nation by The Sporting News. He averaged 15 points, 7.7 assists and 4.8 rebounds a game for the College of the Sequoias (Calif.). ASti coach Bill Frieder had been looking for a replacement for Lynn Collins, who ran out of eligibility after this season. Incoming freshman Quincy Brewer is expected to be the Sun Devil point man of the future, but Frieder doesn’t want the frosh have that pressure immediately. The 6-foot-2, 175-pound Capers was also sought by Arkansas and Memphis State before signing with ASU. B adm inton w in s N ationals The ASU badminton team took three titles last weekend at the 1992 U.S. National Championships, held in Colorado Springs, Colo. Sun Devil star Tim Reidy, a junior, shared a men’s double crown while freshm an Kathy Zimmerman scored championships in the women’s singles and doubles of the junior division. M ickelson clo se to Crenshaw Dawn w ood and the ASU softball team are hoping to upset UofA in their m eeting tonight at 6 at Sun Devil Club Stadium. pitcher of the week for April 13 after going 5-0 on the m ound, including the aforementioned two-hit shutout of UCLA, P arra, a sophomore who attended Chaparral High School in Scottsdale, threw her first-ever perfect game in a six-inning 10-0 victory over Oregon State April 11. She was the Pac-10 pitcher of the week April 6. “We had a couple of opportunities to get some early runs off them in Tucson, ’’ Wells said. “We’ll have to take advantage of those opportunities if we expect to play with them tonight.” The Sun Devils Will counter with their usual rotation of senior Terri Camicelli (10-6) in the first game and sophomore Mona Nard (9-4) in the nightcap. The Wildcats’ speed on the basepaths will also be Something the Sun Devils — particularly catcher Christy Serritella — will have to contend with. “They (UofA) stole seven bases in two games off of us in Tucson,” Wells said. “If we can’t keep them off (the bases), it’s going to be a challenge for Serritella to throw them out.” ASU senior Phil Mickelson needs to win the three remaining golf tournaments to tie Ben Crenshaw’s collegiate win record of 18. Mickelson swung a season best seven-under 65 in th e f ir s t round in th e Sun D evil/Thunderbird Classic held la st weekend at ASU, going on to finish the event seven-under to notch his 15th career win. Mickelson said he plans to turn pro in June at the U.S. Open. Student-athletes honored Director of Athletics Charles Harris said ASU will honor 196 student-athletes who have achieved a 3.0 cumulative or semester grade point average during the 1992 Maroon and Gold Scholar-Athlete Luncheon on April 29. Sun Devils rolling towards NCAAs with SAG results H ysong, C ollins m ove closer to possible O lym pic chance By BRIAN CH AR LES State Press The success for the ASU track and field teams continues to snowball after an outstanding performance this past weekend at the Mount SAC Invitational, one of the most prestigious meets in the country. The men’s squad got another 65-foot shotput throw from senior Shane Collins in the invite section, which was good enough to take third place. Collins continues his consistency and a shot at winning both the Pac-10 Championship and the NCAA Championship looks very realistic, not to mention a chance at the U. S. Olympic team. Collins’ protege, Dennis Black, also had a good showing in the shotput, hurling the shot 59-2 in the invite section to provisionally qualify for the NCAA. Another consistent performer for ASU was sophomore AllAmerican Nick Hysong, who continues to soar to new heights in the pole vault. He took second overall with a vault of 18-1+. Hysong has already automatically qualified for the NCAAs and also has his sights on the Olympic team, according to ASU coach Tom Jones. “Nick definitely has a shot,” Jones said. “Nineteen feet should get him on for sure, but we will have to wait and see.” Another possible Olympic hopeful is junior Gabe Beechum, whose 7-5] launch in the high jump was not only good for second place in the invite section, but good enough to earn him Pac-10 Field Athlete-of-the-Week honors. In HHiHftn, Beechum ’s jum p was also his personal best. ASU «foo took second place in toe long jump, thanks to freshman Brian Ellis’s 24-4 effort. Teammate Jimmy Kegler took third in the open 200 meters at 21.32, and Lamont Dailey took fifth in the open 110m high hurdles at 14.72. Leading toe way for toe Sun Devil women were 100m hurdlers Ime Akpan and Lashawn Simmons. Akpan and Simmons not only took first and second in toe hurdles, but their times were also the first- and second-best times so far this year in the Pac-10. Sharette Garcia won the open 800m in 2:05.97, which was good enough for a provisional qualifer and toe school record. But two hours later, teammate Kim Toney participated in the invite 800m, in which she also took first place with a personal best of 2:04.4. to reset toe record. ASU also got big performances from high jumper Shelly Choppa, who went 5-10] to provisionally qualify, and Kelly Cordell, who also earned a provisional spot with a 34:24 mark in the 10,000m. ASU’s long jump trio of seniors Simmons, Tesra Bester, and Lisa Hale also turned in another noteworthy performance, as Simmons and Bester took second and third in the invite section. Hale took second in the open section. In addition, All-American Shanequa Campbell took first in the open 200m in 24.24. ASU’s quartet of Akpan, Simmons, Campbell, and LaNia Brice took top honors in toe 4x100m relay, and despite toe slow average time of 45.53, Jones is happy with the foursome’s progress. “They have really been moving the baton around toe track well lately,’’ Jones said.“ They just need to work on some exchanges.” ■ £ ' Despite being optimistic about his team’s youth and lack of experience, Jones is pleased with toe performances he has been getting out of his athletes. “Between the UofA meet and this past weekend, we have H w irl Cohen/State Press Dennis Black provisionally qualified fo r the NCAAS In this weekend’s Mt. S A C Invite. had 29 Pac-10 qualifiers and four automatic qualifiers,” Jones said. “This is a big accomplishment for us and I think that toe consistency we are getting out of our athletes right now is really helping the team.” Jones added that the areas in which they were weak at the beginning of toe season are starting to come around as well. The team willfhe^plit up this coming weekend, as some members wil be traveling to Philadelphia to participate in the Penn Relays, while the rest of the Squad will travel to Irvine, Calif, to run in toe UC-Irvine Invitational. f i y l l Slat« Press Wednesday, A pril 28,1992 A n A ussie at ASU ASU as the fifth-leading scorer on the team, averaging 7.4 points a game, joining Mario Bennett—also a freshman — as the only Sun Devils to play in all 33 games. His other totals were unspectacular: a 39 percent shooter from the field, 69 percent from th e free-throw line and only 2.5 — S to ry b y D a r r e n U rb a n — rebounds an outing. But the numbers are respectable for a Pac-10 rookie. ony Ronaldson dreamed of living in virus, should participate for the United As th e la te afte rn o o n su n blazed America, and for eight months of his States, the Australian team physician has th ro u g h h is dorm room w indow, come out telling his country’s athletes to 19 years he did. Ronaldson was interrupted when a pair of Basketball was his ticket. The 6-foot-9, boycott the Games should Johnson play. h a n d s g rab b ed th e window from th e Ronaldson chose his words carefully, 220-pound Australian played for a single walkway outside and lifted it open. In season as a Sun Devil, helping guide ASU leaving no doubt th at he would still go if popped th e shaved head of team m ate to a 19-14 record and à Second-round asked, yet questioning Johnson’s possible Dwayne Fontana, a sophomore on ASU presence. National Invitation Tournament berth. “I would play regardless, because it is coach Bill Frieder’s young team. Homesickness finally wore down the “What’s up, fellas?” Fontana asked in Aussie, however, and without discussing a dream of mine,” Ronaldson said- “But his always upbeat tone. Ronaldson looked it w ith his te am m ates or coaches, he my feelings are th at maybe he shouldn’t over h is sh o u ld e r a t h is te a m m a te , slip p ed o u t of Tem pe M arch 30. He play simply because, however remote the apparently finding nothing strange about returned to Melbourne, where he now is chances a re , h e ’s s till en d a n g e rin g Fontana’s point of entry. p lay in g in th e N a tio n a l B a sk e tb a ll people’s lives. “This is Dwayne,” Ronaldson said. “I think Magic’s a great player, a great L eague, A u s tra lia ’s eq u iv ale n t of th e Fontana paused when he saw the tape am b assad o r to th e gam e. B ut I th in k NBA. recorder rolling on the chair’s armrest. “I missed home and the people I left whenever there’s a risk of endangering “Oh, w h a t is th is , a n in terv iew or behind,” Ronaldson said in a telephone another person’s life, maybe he shouldn’t something?” interview, his Australian accent strong as play.” Ronaldson responded w ith a casual ever. “I knew I was missing out on making “yeah.” money, and I have a good chance to get American dorm life “W here’s Jim m y K at?” th e 6-foot-4 myself financially secure.” Ronaldson was pursuing a degree in Fontana asked. He might not have made any money at architecture while he was at ASU. When . “He’s at his parents’ place,” Ronaldson ASU, b u t he h ad th e experience of a not on the court or in class, he was in his sa id , sa tisfy in g F o n ta n a ’s c u rio sity . lifetime while he was here. th ird -flo o r dorm room in th e S onora F o n ta n a ducked aw ay and closed th e com plex, w hich seem ed sm all for window. Future Olym pian Ronaldson and his roommates, 6-foot-6 “Dwayne’s a g re at guy,” Ronaldson H om esickness was not R onaldson’s Jim m y Kolyszko and 6-foot-11 Robert said. “He’s cool.” only re aso n for leav in g ASU. The C onlisk, both team m ates on th e ASU Fitting in with the team wasn’t a basketball squad. Olympics was the other. problem for Ronaldson, who went from Sitting in his living room shortly before a white-dominated league in Australia He said t h a t w hile he b e n e fitte d somewhat from collegiate experience, his he left, when not even his room m ates to a racial mix in Tempe. Overcoming time in the United States at school—when knew yet th at this gentle man would soon the Australian stereotype wasn’t quite the core of the Aussie squad was already be gone, Ronaldson had some time to talk as easy. practicing together—may have hu rt him about his favorite subjects: basketball, “People think of the outback, ASU, America and Australia. in his quest. they see the MasterCard ad “The thing that annoys me—no, annoy and they think th at’s all “1 th in k th e A u stra lia n b ask e tb a ll team h a s got to be looking to win a isn’t the right word—the thing about back there is,” he said. medal,” Ronaldson said. “The U.S. team is home was I had a lot more responsibility “I don’t want to be going to kill everyone, most likely, but put on myself,” he said, his A ustralian ra c ia l, b u t to we’re not going to go in with the attitude accent pinching off certain sounds and th e black guys ... we’re not going to go into a game saying adding others. “I was more independent. I I’m d iffe re n t, th ey a re going to kill us. T h a t’s ju s t could go out whenever I wanted to. and to “The legal age back home is 18, so you Jim m y I’m ridiculous. , “I t ’s h ard for me to say th e U.S. is can do whatever, go to clubs, and I could d i f f e r e n t. going to beat us, because you don’t want come home at 5 o’clock in the morning— We’re ju s t and I often did. to say that.” from d iffe re n t “And I had a car. In America, I had to c u ltu re s . Some of The Australians will begin a five-day training camp May 10, which Ronaldson rely on people to take me here, take me the stuff they do I find said he will be attending now th at he has there. O ther people are organizing my intriguing, and I’m sure returned home. Still, he doesn’t know if school for me, other people were always some of the stuff I say, they doing something for me. I think th at’s a find intriguing. he’ll make the Olympic squad. He has experience in the A ustralian drawback.” “There were definitely little Ronaldson’s “living room” was not for th in g s from tim e to tim e, b u t National program, taking tours in various foreign countries—including the United living at all; there were only a couple of nothing th at stands out.” S tates—w ith both th e Ju n io r N ational posters, a couch, chair and an empty wood and Senior National teams. Although he entertainment center. All the “stuff”—the The Australian way performed well w ith the ju n io r team — te le v isio n , stere o , VCR—w as in S ittin g in a T -sh irt and a finishing in the top 10 in both scoring and Ronaldson’s bedroom. pair of USA Basketball shorts— A Domino’s pizza box lay upside down rebounding during last summer’s World th e re s u lt of a tra d e d u rin g Junior Championships—he rarely left the off to the side of the living room, which Ju n io r N ationals w ith .Duke bench with the senior team , the squad was in need of a good vacuuming. freshm an C herokee P a rk s— “We spend all the time in the rooms,” th a t included most A ustralian Olympic Ronaldson sta rte d , stopped, Ronaldson said. “No one is out here. It’s hopefuls. started and stopped again as just a place for old pizza boxes and cans.” A final training camp will be held June he tried to find the easiest way The frequent restrictions on his time 28—July 8. The Olympics begin July 22 to d esc rib e th e A u s tra lia n with the mighty U.S. team—for the first hampered the possibility of a social life for system of basketball, which is time made up of NBA stars—heading up Ronaldson, whose sandy-blond h air and so different from th a t in th e an always-improving international field. tiny ea rrin g in his left e a r give him a United States. Australia, which earned its fourth-place California beach bum look. U nlike th e U n ited S ta te s , “I’d like to meet a lot more people, but in the 1988 Olympiad after falling to the where school and athletics are United States in the bronze medal game, it’s just too hard to do that,” he said. “You intertwined until the professional h a s a ch ance a t im proving th a t, have to take the good with the bad, so level, A ustralia and many other Ronaldson said, and he wants to be part of you’ve got to accept everything.” co u n trie s o p e ra te on a club Ronaldson named Kolyszko, a fellow it. system . A u s tra lia h a s v ario u s He added th at he is not upset over the freshman from nearby Scottsdale, as his leagues of players under 14 years United States Bending pros. He said the b est friend on th e team , and th e two of age; under 16, under 18, under spirit of the Olympics—the best against frequently made trips out to the Sonora 20. More ta le n te d p lay ers can th e best—m eans NBA all-stars are the tennis courts just to hit some volleys and play a level or two above th eir “screw around,” according to Kolyszko. way to go. age. “It keeps me in shape,” joked Kolyszko, “It was always th e best ag ain st the “I’ve done a lot to get where who received only a fraction of the playing second-best Americans,” Ronaldson said. I am in b a s k e tb a ll,” time th a t Ronaldson did. “We get along T alk of th e O lym pics an d th e U.S. Ronaldson said. “It team in v a ria b ly fin d s its way to th e p retty good. A ustralia is a lot like the becomes subject of Magic Johnson’s participation. U.S., so there wasn’t th at much difference W hile th e w orld d e b a te s w h e th e r between us.” Ronaldson finished his only season at Johnson, who tested positive for the HIV Basketball player Tony Ronaldson fulfilled a dream with his season in America T fairly robotic after awhile: school, practice, weights, homework ” Ronaldson, who sta rte d playing the gam e.in 1981 when he was 9 years old, m ade a ra p id ad v an ce th ro u g h th e programs because of both talent and size, graduating into the threé-tiered system of older players: the Victorian Basketball A ssociation, th e S o u th e a st A u stra lia B a sk e tb a ll L eague a n d th e N a tio n a l Basketball League, Australia’s equivalent to the NBA. The lowest on th e scale is th e VBA, whose teams play once a week with fairly tale n te d a th letes, although “you can’t make a living in it,” Ronaldson said. The SABL is more advanced, comparable to the Continental Basketball Association in the United States. In the SABL, multiple team s representing Victoria, New South W ales, South A u stralia and T asm ania compete. Outside help, such as American athletes, can earn up to $70,000, a large am ount even if the A ustralian dollar is w o rth ab o u t 80 p ercen t of its U n ited States counterpart. The NBL is th e u ltim ate , however. Calling it “the place where Australians make their money,” Ronaldson estimated the average salary at $30,000 to $40,000 p er season. Lack of crowd su p p o rt for anything other than weekend games has k e p t th e NBL from e x p a n d in g its sch ed u le. T he r e s u lt is a chance for p la y e rs lik e R o n ald so n —who n ev er seemed to get tired of playing—to p lay in th e NBL on th e w eekends an d in th e VBA Wednesday nights. R onaldson s p e n t two seasons in the SABL, playing in th e second division on a team called th e A u stra lian Institute of Sport. AIS, unlike other SABL squads th a t so u g h t th e b est players possible, . fields a team up-and- Rotialdson's Season Statistics 7.4 P oin ts per gam e 2.5 R ebounds per gam e 39.2 S h o o tin g % 32.3 %from 3-point range F ree throw % •P layed in a ll 33 gam es in season State Prass Page 19 Wednesday, A pril 22,1992 Ronaldson guards Craig Rydalch in the March NIT game against Utah, which ASU lost to Utah, 60-58. One of Ronaldson's duties on the court was to take on the opponent's big man inside. Ronaldson on the walkway of his dorm in the Sonora com plex where the Australian spent much of his time. — P h o to s b y T .J . S o k o l— coming young Australian athletes. Then came his first stint in the NBL with the Eastside Spectres. His first year, a t age 17, Ronaldson was the youngest p la y e r in th e league. O ver h is two seasons, he averaged 12. points and seven reb o u n d s a gam e. All of i t w as done without pay, because Ronaldson wanted to keep his am ateur status for collegiate play. He Was rew ard ed in o th e r w ays, however. The experience of being with players as much as 15 years his senior paid dividends—both on and off the court. “I used to go out four nights a week, n o t h av in g school th e n e x t d a y ,” Ronaldson said with a smile. “I never went out the night before or two nights before a game, but if.I could go out, I would go out—believe me. “(But) I would say yes, in everyday life and experience, 1 am more m ature (than other people my age). I was responsible and n ev e r got into, tro u b le. If I w as driving, I’d never drink, and I usually don’t drink anyw ay. My p aren ts, they worry, but parents always worry—they never had to ring anyone. If I was going to stay somewhere else, I’d always call.” T hose who know R onaldson often comment on his maturity. “J u s t lik e any young kid, he goes through places where he has to adjust,” ASU assistant coach Lynn Archibald said. “B u t h e ’s one in a m illion. He can communicate with all the different levels of individuals we have on this team.” Ronaldson’s father, John, concurred, but he would not characterize his son as an angel. “He’s certainly somebody th a t we’re quite proud of,” the elder Ronaldson said in a telephone interview from Australia. “But he’s a normal kid at home, up to a bit of mischief. He does what he is told on some occasions and is somebody you feel is doing th e rig h t thing in th e fam ily environment.” T hen Jo h n R onaldson s ta rte d to chuckle. “Other times, as my wife puts it, he can be a little shit.” Ups and dow ns in America Without a doubt, the biggest win of the year for ASU came when the Sun Devils defeated the University of Arizona 77-74 in Tempe Feb. 20, their first win over the Wildcats in 11 meetings. Ronaldson was happy with the win but said he was bothered afterw ard by his poor play. His final totals read ju s t as negatively: 0 points, two m issed shots, one rebound and four fouls in under 10 m inutes of playing time. For most of the season, Ronaldson was steady and a starter, scoring some points and covering the opposition’s best big man inside. H is role in the offense changed o v er tim e . As B e n n e tt becam e m ore proficient in the paint, Ronaldson drifted outside, and when open could nail the 3pointer as well as anyone on the squad. His success was quite rem arkable to u n k n o w in g o b serv ers, b u t R onaldson, confident b u t not cocky, said he w asn’t surprised. m atters most in this situation. Tony and comes with my position.” his fam ily fe lt it was b est for him to return home.” The m en In lils life W hat R onaldson got when he firs t R o n ald so n ’s f ir s t A m erican coach arrived on cam pus was a team full of wasn’t Frieder; in fact, his first American expectations and youth. While B ennett coach was also his biggest influence from showed off during Midnight Madness, the the United States, when as a boy of 14, te a m ’s cerem o n ial . f irs t p ra ctice, Ronaldson met Georgin. Ronaldson showed he would be more than Georgin, a U.S. citizen, played college ju st a bench-sitter in his first year. The b ask e tb a ll a t P ep p erd in e in th e midrookie grab b ed som e reb o u n d s, and . 1970s w ith fo rm er P h oenix S un and o u tp lay ed h is th e n out-O f-shape Boston Celtic Dennis Johnson. Like his teammates. father, currently an a ssistan t coach at Frieder didn’t have to use talent as a UNLV, Georgin began coaching Down deciding factor for Ronaldson’s playing Under. Eventually, he became the most time. When sophomores Fontana, Jam al in flu e n tia l b a s k e tb a ll p erso n in Faulkner, Stevin Smith and senior Lynn Ronaldson’s life. Collins were suspended for misuse of a “I first met Tony when he was about University telephone credit card, Frieder 14, and for the A ustralian program, he w as forced to go w ith a com pletely was very talented,” Georgin said in an u n te s te d s ta rtin g lin eu p to open th e interview from A ustralia. “He was ju st season in the Maui Invitational. advanced for his age, always playing with older people. I rem em ber coming back th at day and saying ‘I just saw a special kid.’” G eorgin k ep t in close contact w ith “You u s u a l l y have fo s i t down w ith kids and discuss Ronaldson, and eventually tabbed th e rapidly improving Ronaldson for a spot on things like goals and where they want to go. Tony had the NBL Spectres, a team th a t Georgin everything he wanted to do mapped out.” still coaches although it is now known as the Melbourne Magic. While Georgin has been amazed at the —Brian Georgin improvement his protege has made—the coach has seen tapes of Ronaldson’s play Ronaldson's NBL coach a t ASU—he Sees potential problems for R onaldson m ak in g th e 1992 Olympic team. He blames both Ronaldson’s time in R onaldson said he n ev er fe lt any the United States and politics within the Ronaldson’s interest. Ronaldson made visits to USC, UCLA, pressure to perform, especially since so Australian program. ; Pepperdine and UofA as well as ASU, but little was known about his play in game “The guys he’s competing against (for a he w as an unknow n com m odity. His s itu a tio n s . W ith th e su sp en sio n s, spot on the squad) are a lot older and just, basketball future was tied to a couple of a tte n tio n was tu rn e d to B en n ett, th e trying to keep what they’ve got,” Georgin m uch-talked-about frosh from Denton, said. “I think he’s definitely capable of videotapes and word of mouth. Archibald, who eventually made the Texas. Ronaldson was allowed to ease into m aking the team . It’s ju st w hether the . 17-hour plane trip to Australia to make his role without too much scrutiny. coach is willing to make a move like that. “The pressure was more on M ario,” There are guys th at are entrenched there ASU’s pitch, said the coaching staff had no intention of recruiting Ronaldson in Ronaldson said. “It’s a shame. If he had th at they’d have to dig out. maybe my experience, then maybe he’d be the beginning. “But there’s no doubt in my mind he’ll “We heard about two o th er players scoring 30 points a game. It’s got to be be an Olympian—if not in this one then over th ere,” Archibald said. “We called hard to have all those expectations. I had the next one (in 1996).” around about the other players, and as we expectations back home, but not a t this Ronaldson comes from athletic blood called a ro u n d , I k e p t g e ttin g ‘Tony level.” lin es. H is 4 5 -year-old fa th e r w as a Ronaldson’s play in those initial three professional in Australian Rules Football Ronaldson, Tony Ronaldson.’ I’d ask who are the best players, what do you think of games was ragged, like the entire team’s, for eight years. He was never a star, but this player, and Tony Ronaldson came up, and m any view the phone suspensions he played on two Grand Finale winners— so I s ta r te d ask in g ab o u t Tony and the resulting start as the key to the the equivalent of two Super Bowls. And S un D ev ils’ up-and-dow n season. b ro th e r M atthew , 17, h as followed in Ronaldson.” Ronaldson’s first choice, ironically, was R onaldson, who m et th e ad v e rse R onaldson’s footsteps as a b ask etb all the UofA in Tucson. B ut Ronaldson got s itu a tio n s w ith an u p b e a t tone, said player, although not to the level of his the feeling th at Coach Lute Olson and his optimism is integral to success. 'older brother. “There’s always going to be negatives sta ff had a take-it-or-leave-it attitu d e Tony Ronaldson talks glowingly of his ab o u t him a tte n d in g UofA, so th e in whatever you do,” he added. “Even if father. you w in a gam e, th e r e ’s going to be commitment was made to ASU. “H e’s' alw ays su p p o rted me in One key to Ronaldson’s recruitm ent negatives. So you w ant to look a t th e w hatever I’ve done,“ he said. “I played was a concern from Ronaldson’s family p o sitiv e s a n d find m ore of th em . som e fo o tb all before b a s k e tb a ll, b u t ab o u t h is tim e in th e U n ited S ta te s, H opefully, you’ll become b e tte r from whatever the sport, my father has been so m eth in g F rie d e r said becam e a learning from the experience.” behind it. He’s like th at in everything.” R onaldson also took on e x tra lingering concern for the coaching staff. S u p p o rtin g y o u r ch ild re n , Jo h n “We w ere w orried ab o u t h is being responsibility early on. A fter th e first Ronaldson said, is what being a parent is homesick, and it was a major topic with exhibition games, while his team m ates all about. his family when we were recruiting him,” were showering and winding down, he sat “You w ant to encourage them in the F ried er said. “We knew it would be a on th e couch in th e lo cker room ’s path they w ant to follow w ithout being problem (after the season) to convince him interview area, fielding questions. • overly pushy,” the elder Ronaldson said. “I have no problems speaking to the “As far as Tony’s basketball is concerned, to stay. “Obviously, we’re disappointed to lose media,” he said. “If I’m asked to speak to it offers him a huge future, and if you him. B ut w hat's best for Tony is w hat someone, then or now, I don’t mind. It T u rn to R onaldson, p ag e 20. “I alw ays knew I could perform somewhat in th is league,” he said. “No superstar status or whatever, but I felt I could give this team something.” A lthough R onaldson said his final decision to attend college in the United S ta te s d id n ’t come u n til 1988, B rian G eorgin, h is NBL coach, and Jo h n Ronaldson said, he had had a collegiate career in mind for a long time. “You usually have to sit down w ith kids and discuss things like goals and where they w ant to go,” Georgin said. “Tony had everything he w anted to do mapped out.” Ronaldson was talking about coming to the United States as early as age 11, but serious talk about the subject didn’t come up until he was a junior in high school, when a friend was offered a scholarship to an American school. The friend turned the opportunity down, but the episode perked State Press Wednesday, A pril 22,1992 Page go R o n a ld s o n _ C ontinued from p age 19. don’t get behind Him, he won’t make it by himself,” F in ish in g th e to u r o f d u ty The young Sun Devils, who played so well in th e second h a lf of th e season, faltered in the regular-season’s finales. They lost games against top-10 USC and UCLA, placing them on the bubble for an NCAA Tournament berth. A y e a r ago, w ith a NCAA bid imminent, Frieder held a party for team members, boosters and media to watch the tourney’s selection show, so everyone could revel in ASU’s dramatic turnaround from a d o rm a n t conference secondd ivision team to a “M arch M ad n ess” participant. This season, with a slot much more in doubt, Frieder kept Ronaldson and the rest of the team sequestered to watch the p a irin g s. CBS aire d th e selectio n s promptly at 4:30 p.m. in rapid-fire order, and the 64 teams were announced within 10 m inutes, The Sun Devils were not included. Four hours later, Frieder informed the team th a t ASU w as selected by th e N ational In v itatio n T ournam ent. The season wasn’t over yet. “Considering we wanted to win a game, I th o u g h t we perform ed well in LA,” Ronaldson said. “We were disappointed about the NCAAs, but we wanted to go on to the NIT and perform well.” ASU upset UC-Santa B arbara in the first round of the NIT, then hosted Utah in what turned out to be the Sun Devils’ final home game of the year. R onaldson was especially fired up, showing more emotion during pre-game introductions than normal. The starters were announced one by One— B ennett, Smith, Fontana, Collins and Lester Neal. R onaldson w as no longer s ta rtin g —a victim to F rie d e r’s code of going w ith who’s hot. The play of N eal had been decidedly m ore effective th a n th e A ustralian over the last six games—but Ronaldson was in Frieder’s seven-player rotation. D espite a ll h is pre-gam e em otion, Ronaldson was ineffective when he came in the game, looking noticeably tired. It was a problem th a t had been feared by both Ronaldson and th e coaching staff, R onaldson is rig h t back to p lay in g basketball, coming off the bench for his pro team. His goals now are to make the Olympics and to become the sta r in the NBL th at everyone expects him to be. He is co u n tin g on h is b rie f life in America to help him toward those goals. “R ig h t now I’m j u s t going to concentrate on basketball and see how that goes for awhile,” Ronaldson said from “I say that if I was grow ing up in A m erica, I wouldn’t be a great student, but maybe a B-average student. Back home, I passed— I always passed— but I was never great.” —-Tony Ronaldson because Ronaldson was playing in what his Melbourne home. Still, he said he had every intention of was practically his third straight year of rem ain in g in Tempo th ro u g h his four competitive basketball. With the national teams, the NBL and y e a rs of e lig ib ility , to im prove h is ASU, Ronaldson’s longest break from play basketball and get a degree. His final 3.3 had been about six weeks, and the step up grade-point average proved he didn’t come to collegiate play appeared to have taken to ASU just for basketball. If he had a chance at a possible NBA its toll on him. The Sun Devils went cold late in the career, he may have stayed in the United gam e an d lo st 60-58. R onaldson was ■States, but Ronaldson knew a professional scoreless in his last game in a Sun Devil basketball job in America would be tough to get. , ' ■„ uniform. B esides, w ith his experience in th e “I think he was tired all year,” Frieder said . “I th in k h e ’s play ed too m uch NBL and his improvement while in the basketball and needs to take a break from college game, Ronaldson could aim to be one of th e su p e rsta rs of b ask etb all at it.’' home. “There’s a salary cap (in the NBL) of B ack hom e to b a sk etb a ll about $360,000 (per team ), b u t I don’t Now back in A u stra lia , R onaldson doesn’t have time to think about his last know any te a m t h a t stick s to t h a t ,” game in America or taking a break. The R onaldson said. “I ’ve h eard th e re are current NBL season began March 27, and players making $130,000. You can make a » com fortable livin g if you in v e st your S ta te P re s s money right.” His contract num bers are something t h a t R onaldson w ill n o t divulge, b u t sources estim ate his first salary to be between $50,000 and $100,000. Ronaldson a d m itte d h e ’s m ak in g “a com fortable living.” “Salaries for Australians can be fairly com parable to A m ericans,” Ronaldson said . “I t ’s j u s t h a rd e r to find good Australiáñs. I’m in a fairly good position because I’m 6-foot-9, and in A u stralia there aren’t too many th at big.” Ronaldson’s plan includes a lengthy career on the court, then, with money in the bank, a second job with less sweat, in architecture. College is precious to Ronaldson, as much as basketball, because he realizes it is his ticket to a life where he does not have to worry about money. “I say t h a t if I w as grow ing up in America, I wouldn’t be a great student, b u t m aybe a B -av a rag e s tu d e n t,” Ronaldson said. “Back home, I passed—I always passed—but I was never great. “And most of the m ath (at ASU), I’ve done in my second-to-last y ear in high school.” 1 N ot t h a t it m a tte rs now; w ith Ronaldson- back in the NBL, any further schooling will be put off while he makes some money. “ASU gave me a s t a r t a t le a s t,” Ronaldson said. “It’s very tough to get into an y th in g a rc h ite c tu ra lly in A u stra lia u n le ss you g e t th e g ra d es. A lm ost everyone in the S tates, it seems to me, goes to college. B u t back hom e, not everyone goes, simply because you can’t get in. It’s too hard.” . He’s a world away from Sun Devil land now, but Ronaldson said he’ll never forget his short stay in the United States. “It was a good experience, my time in A m erica,” he said . “My tim e a t ASU b e tte re d my p ersp ectiv e on w h a t everything’s about. I don’t regret it a t all.” ENCOUNTERS THE DATING GAME OF THE 90s Newsroom Staff Openings: Applications for positions on the News Staff of the State Press for the Fall Semester 1992 are now being accepted at room 15, Matthews Center, North Basement. Applications are being distributed at this location. The State Press will hire for the following positions: Managing Editor News Editor Opinion Page Editor City Editor Assistant City Editor Sports Editor • Assistant Sports Editor • Photo Editor Photographer Copy Editor Arts & Entertainment Writer Reporter Sports Reporter Columnist Deadline for applications: Wednesday, April 29th, 1992 Applicants must be full-time students at ASU, but any major is acceptable, as is class standing of freshman through graduate. Newspaper experience is desirable, but not mandatory. These are salaried positions open to any student in good standing. REGISTER AN HOUR AHEAD TO PLAY THE ENCOUNTERS DATING GAME AT 8:15 AND 11:15 WEDNESDAYS LIVE MUSIC BY UNITY APRIL 22-26 AT THE BUTTES, 48TH ST. SOUTH OF BROADWAY MORE INFO: LIZARD LINE, 431-9078 Classifieds Page 21 Wednesday, April gg, 1998 A N N O U N C EM |N T^ ATTN. GREEKS!! Did you know you can put Greek sym­ bols in your State Press personal ad for an extra fifty cents? Ask us for details. Call us at 965-6731 or stop by our Mat­ thews Center basement location today ! IF YOU need a ride back to the East coast after finals or want someone to follow call Matt 921-3834. PICTURE T H IS You can have a .bold centered headline On your State Press liner ad for an addi­ tional $1! What a great way to get atten­ tion! Ask us for details! Call 965-6731 or stop by today! POS 462 1 need notes for last Wednesdays class. Will pay big bucks for your time! C alf 759-463Ó leave message. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS RENTAL SHARING ATTRACTIVE RESORT condo master $200, loft 175 plus utilities each. Fabu­ lous lifestyle! See today!!! 351-8683. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 and 2 bed­ room s. W alk to ASU. Pool, laundry room, 1 block south o f University on 8th Street. Now accepting reservations on a 2 bedroom for Super Summer Spe­ cial. $199 moVe-in! Cape Cod Apart­ ments, 968-5238. FEMALE ROOMMATE nonsmoker to share large 2 bedroom, 2 bath luxury ap artm e n t at D obson R anch. $220/month plus utilities. 838-9384. EXTRA LARGE 3 bedroom , 2 bath apartment. Easily accommodates four people. Gall; 968-6725. FEMALE ROOMMATE share 2 bed­ room townhouse. Own room/bath. $200 + 1/2 utilities. 230-3206, ROOM FOR rent South S co ttsd ale, p o o l, a ir, w ash er/ d ry e r, $225 p e r month 1/3 utilities 945-6225. FEMALE SHARE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, dishwasher, etc. Hardy/University. $217/month. 829-7173/437-1048. TO R ESPO N SIB LE person, superb summer sublet. Two bedroom , light, sp ac io u s, g o lf, b ik in g . 5/1 5 - 8/15, $1200,423-4)314 FEMALE SITTER/DRIVER needed af­ ternoons summer, in exchange for room and board. Pleasant accomodations in Tempe. Must have car and good driving record. Contact Mary Ann 839-9820. TWO BEDROOM house available May 1. C lo se to cam p u s, low u tilities. $385/month. Call Mary 968-7354. UTILITIES FREE. Ask about special. Unfurnished studios and 1 bedrooms. Call 9am-5pm weekdays: 966-8597. LARGE 2 bedroom, 2 bath, potil, J a ­ cuzzi, tennis, dishwasher, etc. Southem/Rural. $230.784-6091,437-1048. HOMES FOR RENT L A R C E C LEA N 3 bedroom , 2 bath home, close to ASU, $330 includes util­ itie s . Share w ith co n sid erate room ­ mates. Call 99(31751. 1* 2 bedroom, 1 block from ASU, fur­ nished, laundry, special $190. 8205027,966-1136. 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, garage, fenced yaid, nice house, $600/month, 1/2 mile ASU. 731--9460. MALE ROOMMATE needed in house, 4 blocks from campus, $187.50/month + 1 /4 utilities, 894—1635. 2 BED, 2 bath, rent $530, keep security deposit and futon. Move in asap. Lease ends July 31 ■Call 966-4803. ASU PROFESSOR, experienced homeo w n er, seeking m odest, in terestin g home for rent/purchase option, August, 423-9314. M A LE/FEM A LE ROOM M ATES to share Sail Francisco style condo near downtown Scottsdale. Own bedroom and bath, pool, Jacuzzi, etc. Flexible lease, no deposit. Stacy 840-2819. 1 BEDROOM, secluded, private patio, covered parking, laundry facility, pool, dishw asher, self-cleaning oven. 968- Sl 83 Sait Miguel Apartments LARGE 2 bedroom, across the street from Gammage, 4 2th & M aple. Call Tim 894-0288. LO U N G E P O O L S ID E , 10 m inutes ASU, 5 m ature individuals. Large 5 bed, 2 bath, remodeled interior, all ap­ pliances, 2,000 feet, lease summer or year- $230 each plus deposit, 1/5 utili­ ties. Available 5/18. 273-6310 or 9694480. y V /■ ' • Large 2 bdrm , 2 bath TWO BEDROOM house available May Ì. C lo se to c am p u s, low u tilitie s . $385/month. Call Mary 968-7354. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 910 S . Lem on #2 1 BEDROOM, fully furnished, dishes, linens, 2 twin beds, washer/dryer, pool. $400. Phyllis 844-5900. 966-8704 2 BEDROOM d eco rato r a p artm en t,v North Tempe, private patio, self-cleanirig oven, pool, Covered parking. 8941041. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo near ASU, washer/dryer, fenced backyard, pool, $495. 3 bedroom available June 1, $675. D uplex in N orth Tem pe. $475. 96M )987. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath unfunished, washer/dryer in unit, walk to ASU. Dorsey and Lemon area. M ay-August. $375. 4964)561893-1994. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, Papago II, $600 to $650.-Bob Bullock, Realty Execu­ tives, 998-2992. 2 BLOCKS south o f ASU, 1 bedroom apartments. Pool, spa, laundry facili­ ties, covered parking, free basic cable TV , special student rates. Uiiiversity A p artm en ts, 1700 S outh C o lleg e. 967-7212: GET PERSONAL! Give that special someone a State Press Persona] Ad! Come to the basement of Matthews Center with your student ID and place that ad today! MOVE-IN SPECIAL! 1/2 Block from Campus B e a u t if u lly fu r n is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m . 1 b a th ; 2 b e d ro o m , 2 b a th a p a rt­ m e n t s . A l l b i l l s p a id . C a b l e TV, h e a t e d p o o l a n d s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . F rie n d ly , c o u r t e o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S t o p b y to d a y ! Terrace Road Apartments 9 5 0 S. Terrace 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 FOR RENT: Quésta Vida 3 bedroom- 3 bath- washer/dryer- all- appliances- un­ furnished. Pool- racquetball- jacuzzi$795 -per m onth. C o n ta ct D arryl 759-2133. FURNISHED 2 bedroom, 2 bath, I mile from ASU (Worthington Placé). Pool, Volleyball, clubhouse. Summer aiid/or fall occupancy. Tracy 894-2848. LEASE UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, 2 bath- condo, 56th Street & Thom as. SRP, fireplace. Available 6/1/92. $535 per month. Evenings 952-8978. PAPAGO PARK. Responsible female to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Fully furnished. $230. + 1/2 utilities. M ust sign le a se from M ay to D ecém ber/January. 894-8189. ROOM IN fully furnished contempo­ rary home available today. Beautifully landscaped, diving pool, satellite, fire­ place, etc: $375 includes utilities. Reli­ able nonsmoker, please call 820-2875. ROOMMATE WANTED! 3 bedroom, 1 bath. O w n room plus study room. Quie.t and cozy $275 negotiable plus 1/2 utilities. 894-4643; ROOMMATE WANTED, 3 bedroom house near McDowell, rent negotiable per exchange fo r part tim e care for working handicapped male, will train. 946-8083. ROOM S FOR RENT CLOSE TO ASU, rooms in spacious 4 bedroom house, pool, w asher/dryer, $225 plus 1/4 utilities. 491-8776. HOM ES FOR SALE DRASTICA LLY REDU CED 3 bed­ room, 1-3/4 baths, masonry construc­ tion, néw roof, newly painted exterior. Large yard, in-ground sprinkler, citrus tre e s. D ouble carport* large storage/workshop area. Easy access to ASU. Friendly neighborhood. $59,900. Call CyntfiiaPeW ys, 893-2888. E X E C U T IV E 3 bedroom , lo ft. Price/Broadway. Fireplace, 2 car ga­ rage, spa, private. Narcie, Prudential, 730-5200. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE LUXURY 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo, Questa Vida, washer/dryer, pool, avail- - ASSUME, NO qualify, $64,700, low ab le 6/1 ,$700/month. (714)673-3122. * down. 2 bedroom condo, Price/Southem. Narcie, Prudenial, 730-5200. PAPAGO PARK II, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, STATE PRESS Classifieds work! Call washer/dryer, unfurnished, pool, avail­ 965-6731 today!, able July 1. $575/month. Plan fo r the fall semester now. 494-9105, QUESTA VIDA 2 bedroom , 2 bath, w asher/ dryer, dishw asher, fireplace, co v ered p atio s, e x tra-sto rage. V ery clean. $675. Available May. 994-0811. WHY PAY rent next year, take over condo, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, pool, tennis. (714)499-4065. APARTMENTS Buy of the Week Questa Vida 3b®d.Sbatti Bob Bollock R /th y Fim y liw i 998-2992 APARTMENTS TOWHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE DESPERATE! NO qualifying, $1500 down, take over $734 payment, lower in 6 months. Close to ASU, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished, 1128 square feet. Great investment. 494—7290 or 921-0506. • SPECIAL TERMS for 1992 Graduates. No qualifying. Private owner Will carry on these condos. Studio, 1 bedroom and tw o bedroom condos include all ap­ pliances even washer/ dryer Payments from $240/ m onth (based on selling price of $17,000, $500.00 down, 9%. 20 year fixed loan- 1 bedroom and two bedroom units higher) $800 North 8th S tree t, PhoCnix. D iam ond/ A nne 861-0632. tOO&l •TW O BED Ri H ot W ater • G reat Location TRAVEL ADC HAS free cars available to most ar­ eas. Gas allowance. Over 21 only. Re­ fundable security de p o sit required. Auto Driveawày Co. 9561406. W ASHINGTON D C. airline ticket. A m erica W est from S ky H a rb o r to Washington National, leaves May 8th, $180. Call Jason 784-0671. Males only. AUTOMOBILES HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1986 HYUNDAI Excel. White, 61 ¿000 m iles, air, $2,800 or best offer. Mia 945-2379. 1990 JEEP Wrangler, excellent condi­ tion, white with gray, soft-top, 4 cylin­ der, A lpine S tereo , 3 0 ,000 m iles, $10,500.649-7547. 87 D ODGE O m ni. G ood condition. R uns g re a t, $19 9 5 / o ffer. C all 224-3214 day, 759-5989 night. REAL ESTATE______ CHEAP! FBI/UJS. FA C U LTY FA M ILY see k s to buy house near ASU, prefer Broadmor Ele­ mentary. If you are thinking of selling, call Kathryn and Donald at 967-3510. Seized. 89 Mercedes $200, 86 VW $50, 87 M ercedes $100, 65 M ustang $50. Choose from thousands starting $25. Free 24 hour recording reveals details (801)379-2929. Copyright #AZ10KJC. GARAG |_SAL|S__s_ M OV IN G SA L E. C ouch, bed, TV , dresser, tables, lam ps, washer/dryer, m icrow ave, m uch m o re... M ia 945-2379. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 7-FOO T HAMILTON drafting table with Bruning Drafting machine. Spare top. $300.952-8978. LA RA D A 'S ARM Y Surplus has all your cam ping needs- inexpensively. A lso m ore w eird stu ff than you Can im agine. 764 W est M ain, M esa 834-7047. Ì978 YAMAHA 400 DT. Low mileage. Graduating. $600/offer. Call 965-3585 befoie 5:00.784-6029 after. Jeff. 1981 HONDA 650, looks good! Runs good! Very dependable. $650. Please call 350-9121. 1984 HONDA Aero80 scooter. Eco­ nomical, convenient, lots o f fun! Asking $650 or best offer. 464-2129. 1986 HONDA 80 Elite scooter. $600. G ood c o n d itio n . C all Suzanne829-3793. 1987 HONDA Elite 80cc. Good condi­ tion! $650 or best offer. Call Geotfge 345-9786. ^ ' TW IN BED: M attre ss, b o x sp rin g , frame. Like new. Best offer. Suzanne 829-3793. BICYCLES BOOKS SPOKE EASY Bicycles now on Mill Avenue. Tune ups $7.95. Buy, sale, re­ pairs 3569320,225-7550. RECYCLE FOR $$$ SeU your books f°r cash (no textbooks, please) or get trade credit towards the p u rch ase o f an y th in g in the store. Choose from 3 floors o f new and used books, posters, music, etc . Call ahead for buying hours. Browsers welcome. Changing H ands Bookstore, 414 Mill • Avenue, 966-0203. FURNITURE 7 BEAUTIFUL WHITE lacquer bedroom set, includes queen-size bed and all dresser and amenities. Like new, $600 or best offer. Call 784-4652. QUEEN SIZE futon bed/ Couch, like new, $400.826-7229, Z GALLERY chair and sofa. Black, like new. $175 or best offer. Call 967-3644. COMPUTERS MAC 512K, two 800K drives, modem, ImageWriter II, carry Case, dustcovers, software. $685. Jamie 921-3484. JEWELRY A LW A Y S B U Y IN G je w elry o f all kinds, including gold, sterling, gems, pearls, antiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S outh M ill A venue, Tem pe C enter, 968-6074. CASH FOR gold, diamonds. Mill Ave­ nue Jewelers* 414 South Mill, Suite 101, Tempe. 968-5967. TICKETS KISS TICKETS, big time fan needs tick­ ets, pay top dollar. Leave message, call John 833-0621. SUNS PLAYOFF tickets, Sunday 2nd home* game. Good seats for $40 each. Call 945-9595,967-4476. APARTMENTS SH O RTTERM ¿0* T jM N Ig O jllA n g N ^ LEASES AVAILABLE 1855 E. D on Carlos, Tempe CALL N O W 9 6 8 -6 9 2 6 2 bedrooms from $375 Casa Grande A PA R T ME NTS TRAVEL AIRLINE TICKET for 5/10 to New Jer­ sey. $150 or best offer. Female only. Rich 732-9876. D EN V ER: O N E-W A Y , M ay 7th, males. $99.964-4962. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap* in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places USA. Also worldwide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. FOR SA LE: O ne w ay airlin e ticket from Phoenix to Newark, New Jersey on T uesday, A pril 28. If in te re sted please call 890-0976. BUDGET TRAVEL •Student flights •Eurail passes •Hostel cards • Int. students ID's •Travel equipment •Lots more! »ft AncMltaniouBS 1046 E . Lem on S t. Tem po • 894-5128 HEADED FOR Europe this summer? Just $269 will g et you there (and/or back!) any time from SFO or LAX on a commercial jet, no catches, just be minim ally fle x ib le . A irh itch (R ), 1(800)397-1098. HIGHER EDUCATION! Mountain bike touring in Mexico: Class tidies include: carrying contraband, bike maintenance and flat repair, u tilization o f public transportation, and tequila abuse. Cop­ per Canyon open air campus. 6 days. May 14-19, $225, includes transporta­ tion and lodging. Info. Wild Hare Insti­ tute, 611 East River Avenue, El Paso, Texas 79902. (915) 532-1787. A divi­ sion o f Wild Hare Escapes. ALASKA SUMMER employment- fish­ eries. Earn $5,000+/month. Free trans­ portation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 openings. N o experience necessary. Male or female. For employment pro­ gram call Student Employment Services at 1(206)545-4155 e x t 1603. APPOINTM ENT SETTERS needed, fle x ib le fu ll’ or p a rt tim e. C all 481-9200^ ATHLETIC DEMIGODS need driver fo r all day athletic event 5/2. M ust be fun lo v in g and re sp o n sib le . C all 230-1655. CALL SM ALL businesses for infor­ mation to quote employee benefit plans. Part tim e days, $5 depending on ex­ p e rie n c e. S c o ttsd a le A irp ark . C all Tony, 991-4525. CONSULTANT Trainee needed for dynamic, aggressive national company. Must have BS, 3.0 GPA, stable history, self-m otivated, m anagement skills, possibility to re­ locate. Position opening May 1st. Send resume to: John McCollum, P.O. Box 26451, Tempe, Arizona 85252. » SU M M ER JO B S TO SA V E TH E ENVIRONMENT EARN $2500*3500 National campaign positions to promote comprehensive recy­ cling, pesticide reform, and curb global wanning. Available in Phoenix, 29 states and D C. Campus interviews 4/23. Call Jamie: 1-800-75-EARTH. COPYWRITERS The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for copywriters. This is a fun at­ mosphere and a great way to get your work in print Please apply in room 50, Matthews Center or. call 965-6881 for more information. COUNSELOR AT residential treatment center for emotional handicapped adol­ escent. M ales encouraged to apply. 10pm-8am, $12,000, resume: P.O. Box 8500, Phoenix, Arizona 85066. CRUISE LINE, entry level, onboard/ landside positions available, year round or summer (612) 643-4333. D EPENDABLE PERSON needed to contact Scottsdale businesses. Part time, fle x ib le h o u rs, no sellin g , a u to re ­ quired, salary plus commission. Call for 483-1477, Com prehensive Business S ervices, 8040 E ast M organ T rain, Suite 6, Scottsdale. DISC JOCKEY wanted for parties, club work and weddings. 759-7977, GRAPHIC ARTIST needed for startup venture to put ideas few series of child­ ren’s books, board games, and software into pictures. Contribute labor for fu­ ture profits and exposure. Hard-work­ ing, creative person only. Send creative expression (no cartoons) of interest to Smart Ideas! 2147 West Isthmus Loop, Mesa 85202. GET PERSONAL! Did you know that you can send a personal ad to someone special for as little as $2?! Come to the basement of Matthews Center for information (sorry, we cannot accept personals over the phone)!! And don't forget your student ID! ORDER CLERKS 12 persons n eed ed fo r inside sales order d ep a rtm en t $5/hr LONG DISTANCE Rider, one way- di­ rect to Philadelphia, departs May 11. Best offer. Cali J.P. 921-3689. guaranteed plus bonus, ONE WAY, Phoenix to Chicago, leaves May 8. $175.820-2339. ■ . advancem ent. Tem pe ONE-WAY TICKET- Phoenix to Denv­ er, May 17th. $125,835-7308. ONE-WAY* LOS Angeles to Phoenix* leaves 1:40pm on 5/17. Best offer. Male only. 829-3759. / ; benefits a n d rapid location. AM /PM shifts. Part-time. Call NeH 968-1966 AMednesA£Agril2^992 E 9 £ » OUT OF STATERS JOB BULLETIN Arizona Students' Association is con­ ducting a search for qualified candidates to assume the position o f ASA Execu­ tiv e D irecto r fo r the 1992-93 fiscal year. ASA is a state wide independent non-profit organization. ASA's mission is to represent, advocate, and lobby on behalf o f issues that impact Arizona uni­ versity students' education. The ASA Executive Director works in Tempe for a nine m ember tri^universify student board o f directors. Interested applicants should subm it a letter o f interest, re­ sume, and two letters o f recommenda­ tion by May 8 to: Randall Udelman, Ar­ izona Students' Association, 511 West U niversity, Suite 4, Tempe, A rizona 85281 LIPE GUARD: Summ er position for Red Gross Certified. 1(M Monday- Fri­ day. Begin 6/1. Chaparral Mobile Vil­ lage 839-3050. Create a summer income in your home­ town. N o in v en to ry, no investm ent. Contact Pat, 345-6637 or Suzanne 491.. 9726. ' - .. PAID SUMMER internship; opportun­ ity for travel, average $475/ week, 3 hours college credit. Call Varsity Com­ pany 894-5283, Open to all majors. PHOTO EDITOR The Sun Dévil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for a Photo Editor. Must have pho­ tography experience and be able to su­ pervise a photo staff. A portfolio will be required. Apply in M atthews C enter room 50, or call 965-6881 for mote in­ formation. • PHOTOGRAPHERS The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for photographers. This is a great opportunity to get your work in print.. Please apply in room 50, Matthews Cen­ ter or call 965-6881 for more iriformation. SECTION EDITORS The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook is look­ ing for section editors. This position re­ quires some yearbook experience. This is a great way to get involved with ASU. Apply in Room 50, Matthews Center or Call 965-6881 for more information, Maks sama quick cash..« tali it in tha Stata Pratt Classifieds! State Press Classifieds 9 * 5 -4 7 3 1 SIM PLY UNBELIEVABLE! JLG is seeking quality appointm ent setters. Earn $4-12 per hour depending on per. formance. Do not call unless .you can work 9am-2pm or 2pnv7pmv 6 days a week. Immediate employment. You will' work 30 hours/week in a plush office. Motivation and confidence a .must. Earn money this week. Call 24 hours, ask for Patricky 967-7866. INVESTMENT S u r v e y i n t e r v i e w e r s , no sales, part time, flexible afternoon, evening and Saturday shifts. Comfortable office environment. Frequent raise reviews. Walk from ASU. Apply 4-8pm Tuesday through Friday, Higginbotham Asso­ ciates 829-3282. Investment banking firm in Scottsdale willing to train bright enthusiastic peo­ ple to become leading stock brokers. Will trade stocks in the NYSE and OTC markets. Prefer college degree b ut per­ sonal interview deciding factor. Thirty positions available. Must apply now if May graduate. Call David Kramer at Franklin-Lord, Inc. 947-6262. TH E W EK EELA C am ps, C anton, Maine. One of America's most prestig­ ious camps, seeks creative dynamos for staff positions June 21-August 22 for tennis, athletics, gymnastics, competitve swimming, water skiing, sailing, piano, guitar, dance/ballet, drama, song lead­ ers, ceramics, art, woodworking, photography/yearbook. Also kitchen and m aintenance positions. If you think you're tops, reply to: 130 South Merkle R oad, C olum bus, O hio 43,209. (614)235-3177, PHOENIX, LAS V egas, San Diego! Will you be in any of these cities over the summer break? If so, call now to see how you can earn a lucrative summer income. 921-7755,1-4pm. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL WANTED:' COMPUTER programmer working on Database, Dataflex, Novell Advanced Netware. Part time. BarrettJackson 273-0791. W EST PHOENIX real estate office, part time receptiortist/secretary. Hours flexible. Call Dick 951-8666. HELP WANTEDSALES LIVE- IN / sleep over. 2 po sitio n s , teach, care and assist developmental^ disabled adults in group home. Work mornings and evenings, days free from 8am to 4pm. $5.55- $6 per hour. Apply TCH 2720 South H ardy #2, Tempe. EOE LOOKING FOR bright dynamic indi-. viduals w ith strong backgrounds in physics, chemistry, and biology to teach for the nations #1 test prep company. Also, must score high on standardized tests. Part time, evenings and weekends. Call the Princeton Review 967-1480. MAIL ORDER softw are company is looking for full-time or part-time sales persons. Engineering majors with pro­ gramming experience preferred. Com tact personnel at Programmer's Ware­ house, 443-4)580. M EN 'S C LO TH IN G m a n u fa c tu re r seeks student for internship. Must have art or design experience. Fashion back­ ground helpful. Duties include sketch­ ing, drafting styles, general office. Ap­ p ro x im ate ly 10 h o u rs p er w eek. • 947^9710; MODELS Print & TV for gals & guys. Experience not necessary. Part-time OK. En Avant A gency 8 3 9 -1 9 6 9 4 5 0 0 S outh Lakeshore Drive, Tempe. NOW LOOKING for enthusiastic, hard working, go-getters for an exciting ca­ reer as a night club DJ, some experience necessary. Apply in person 2-5pm Mon­ day 4/27 at 7000 E. Shea Boulevard, Scottsdale, ask for Gary . BUY IT, tell it, find it, sell it - only in the State Press Classifieds! Call 965-6731 today for rates and information! STATE PRESS Classifieds wok! Call 9656731 today for rates and information on how State Press Classifieds, can work for you! SUMMER JOB in the White Mountains, June-August, Fundraising Director to coordinate summer money-making ac-^ tivities. Base pay plus lucrative com­ missions. Only ambitious, energetic and earnest! need apply. Resumes only to: Humane Society o f the White Moun­ tains, PO Box 1070, Pinetop, Arizona ' 8593s- V-' :.v ' - - National marketing firm willing to train energetic males or females, locations across the USA. 921 r-1849, SUMMER JOBS SU M M ER W O RK . $ 3 60/w eek full tim e, $180/week part tim e. Interna­ tional retail chain is filling 15 positions. No experience required. Scholarships available Call 352-7037: SUN, FUN in the mountains!: Whitewa­ te r ra ftin g o u tfitte rs, re so rts, dude ranches"and summer camps now hiring for this summer in Colorado. Toll- free (24 hours) 1-800-777-3077. Find out how easy, safe and fast it is to earn $30 a week, & up to $120 a month to help supplement your income, pay those bilk, or simply earn extra spending money while donating critically needed plasma for a variety o f therapeutic blood products. * * $5 baans fo r sew doaorsl $5 b o a u for rrtu n i d o a o n who kavea't bcca ¡a for 2 ■MMitki « r loagcr. ABI - University Plasma Center i,Inc. INCREDIBLE OPPORTUNITY! Make $20+ per hour woriung for yourself in any part of the country. We're looking fo r a few good reps. C all W ilm a 998-9059 for further information. NEED A back issue of the State Press? Come to the basement of Matthews Center to the Front Information Desk MondayFriday, 8am-5pm. If we have die issue you need, it's yours! RESTAURANTS/ BARS PETS CHINESE (WRINKLE dog) Shar-Pei. Extremely rare "Albino" puppy- worth $1,500- will sell for $550.820-2875. F R |jy O S T £ F O U N ^_ FOUND: 5 grey kittens, approximately 5 weeks old. Will go to good home. Call Melanie 829-0640. L O ST: D O CK ERS gym bag, w ith clothes. Lost in Life Science Building on 4/16. Call 983-0804. LOST: PUPPY, White with tan spots, no tags- m issing since 4/16. Rew ard if found. 894-1215, LOST: SILVER ring with three green diagonal stones. Left by middle sink in Matthews Center restroom last Thurs­ day. Chris 839-5602. PERSONALS A DOZEN beautiful red roses delivered only $20.00 + tax. We also have baloons: 894-3419. AA THE Greek Review is hiring now for Fall*92! Positions include: Ad Sales, staff writers, editorial assistant, graphics/layout and photographers. Applica­ tions available at JBMOC/GR office at 712 South College in the basement o f Campus Comer- enter around back. Or call 829-14U. AA WHEN you close your eyes you can feel the looming -ecstacy; as you break into a cold sweat you almost embrace iL But not yet. It's almost time - the time of Kappa Sigma Jungle Fever *92. AXO LAUREN- Get ready for the time of your life Saturday in Laughlin! Lee. CORK ’N CLEAVER AATI's KELLE, Sue and Sandra, jello and jenga was a blast, but hope ya'll have some energy left to learn how to twostep tonight! KA old south week! Joe and Greg. accepting applications for lunch wajtre ss. W ill train. C oncern, w ith a p ­ pearance, reliability and personality are im portant. Apply in person M ondayFriday 2-5pm or by appointment. 5101. N orth 44th Street (44th/Cam elback) 952-0585. C a tc h A b u z z w ith ^ >25-40% commission >exclusive accounts •flexible hours >part-time/full-time positions available Clean cut, professional dress C A L L 267-0500 for immerfiate consideration S ta te P re s s A d v e rtis in g ... W e h e lp you fin d it! Zuba I NOW HIRING cooks. All shifts, full tim e/part tim e. Experience required. A pply in person. EO E, 1343 W est Broadway, Tempe. SWENSEN'S TEMPE has immediate openings for waitresses, day and night available, full or part time. Apply Mon­ day through Friday 4 5pm, Price and Baseline. 99Í Kamte ic ^ 4045. MILSuite101 (HaydenSquarc)966-1300 L O N G W O N G ’S ADPI KELLE- Rest thee well, for the Fever cometh on its merciless way. À LPHA PH I- M rs. C onroy-;F orget­ fulness really isn't a Virtue, it is ju st a way that one can blame it on just not : knowing. HELP WANTED -GENERAL HELP WANTED -GENERAL ALYSSA ARE you ready to see a trae gentleman? Get ready for Old South KA Bob, -, ... • : /.- ,' :; ;■' ANN MARIE B. ' 1 want you! I need you! 1 love you! Jerry. • 9 M 4 -Ô M -F 11-2 S a t , S u n 894-0264 lYD MV ■ r.A Morning, Afternoon, Evening ( ÿ D fi .. -V i *¡fro-&lU/nUUrí $5.50/Guarantee/Hnur ★ Nation’s most experienced, largest Telemarketing Co. ★ Hundreds of dollars in cash, bonuses given out weekly ★ Call on great programs like: Magazine Renewals «Telephone Services Trial Preview Book Clubs Non-Profit Representation “GREATADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES” •Management staff committed to your success. •Part or full time, flexible scheduling. •Lots of sales made hourly. 1015 S. Rural Hd. (Next to Sno Oasis) M 4-2250 GROUND FLOOR in V S . $40 minion c o m p a n y .. m a rk e ts fa s t m oving health/diet products. Timing, timing, timing. 924+2930. Jockey Club night club, 52 East Camelback, Phoenix is looking for part time evening, 20-25 hour/ week, experience required. Call Bobby at 279-7777. GET PERSONAL! SUMMER JOBS Perfect for students, day and night time p o sitio n s a v ailab le from 15-35 hours/week. Hiring immediately. Call Bob at 921-4044. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES COCKTAIL SERVER HOTEL SALES Manager for Phoenix a irp o rt hotel. Experience preferred. High energy, professional person re­ sponsible for ASU education and enter­ tainment markets. Fax resume to 8940326. : " ; i: . Full time/part time, Phoenix/Mesa area company has 15 openings fo r students marketing our product line throughout the Valley. Good pay, good hours, 9 sch o la rsh ip s a lso o ffered : C all 1(800)773-1777, ask for Mr. Davis. THE SPAGHETTI Company w ill be holding interviews on Friday 4/24 and Saturday 4/25 from 9-5pm. Hiring for all position for our New Scottsdale lo­ cation that will be opening soon. Apply at 7373 North Scottsdale Road! HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE GAIN EXPERIENCE D id you know that you can send a personal START AT $360.00 weekly. International ad to someone special for ps little as $27! retail chain has summer openings in re­ Come to the basement of Matthews Center tail salés, customer service and display. for information (sorry, we cannot accept P p è n in g s. a re th ro u g h o u t P hoenix, personals over the phone)!! And don't Southern Nevada, and the following forget your student ID! Southern California counties: San Die­ go, Riverside,'San Bernardino, Orange, Kern, Ventura, Santa Barbara, and Los Angeles. N o experience required. In­ ternships and scholarships available. W e work with 15 of AZ*s Flexible hours. M u st call now, start after finals! For the Placement Center largest employers since nearest you, call our Regional Place­ 1972 ment Directory: (7 14)991-2752» .-■* START YOUR summer job early! All ; Green Corp. is . looking for students to fill part time position in our customer service departm ent. M ust have good communication skills and flexible even­ ing schedule. No selling required. $5 an hour base salary +• incentive 966-8788. Ask for Zachary. , PART TIME office person, must have super phone skills, light bookkeeping, general office. 30 hours plus per week, good hourly rate. Leave name and mes­ sage on m achine fo r appointm ent: 966-2526.-Kell Distributing/The New York Tilhes. TRAVEL AND earn college credit in an 11 -w eek paid sum m er in ternship. - 731-9460. I F SALES $$ ^LITTLE ONES & Co, Nanny positions available throughout summer valleywide! $4 an hour, transportation and ex­ perience required. Part o r full time, " Also, nanny needed. Central Phoenix for 1-1/2 year old, Tuesday and Thurs­ day 7am -6pm , F riday ipm -O pm . 431-9216. Immediate openings! HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTED -SALES HELP WANTED -GENERAL HELP WANTED -GENERAL HELP WANTED -GENERAL DIAL AMERICA A ll sum m er/in house m m m m ...5o good A t m . GREEKS!! Did you know you can put Greek sym­ bols in your State Press personal ad for an extra fifty cents? Ask us for details. Call us at 965-6731 or stop by our Mat­ thews Center basement location today! GAMMA PHI Amy B.: Congratulations on 1-week! Hope this week is special. Love, your secret sis. GAMMA PHI Missy: You're an awe­ some SWAG! Bet ya can't wait until you find out w ho I am! Love, your secret sis. GAMMA PHI Shanna: Hope you are having a great time with I-week! Check your box! Love, your secret sis. GAMMA PHI stud Staci G.: You made it and I'm so proud! G ood luck! Michelle. GAMMA PHI S.W.A.G. Danielle. Have a good week! See you Sunday lovç? HUB Ç A R O L K - Y ou te rrific S.W .A .G ! C ongrats on graduating! Good luck in the future! Love, your se­ cret S.W.A.G. sis! FO B HEIDI M. I love my S.W.A.G! You're almost there. Your Secret Sis. FOB KIM Stanfield hope you have a g re a t sen io r w eek lo v e yo u r secret s w a g . ■■■•-.■: ■/ y . . V . : FB SWAG Kris C. Good luck with the last week o f classes and finals. On Sun­ day you’ll learn who4 am. Love ITKE LADIES FIND your favorite Theta Delt it's time once again for Pledge Presents.0' GRADUATING GREEKS: Greek grad­ uation celebration at Point South Moun­ tain featuring August Red. Call Warren 921 3632 or Kelli 784-9072 for infor­ mation. PICTURE THIS You can have a bold centered headline On your State Press liner ad for an addi­ tional $1 ! What a great way to get atten­ tion! Ask us for details! Call 965-6731 or stop by today! $ 1 PAGE, all typing, experienced, reli­ able, accurate, free editing, rush jobs accepted. 897-7670, Gail. TONY- WORDS can’t express what I think of you. Does this? You know who. WILD AND crazy summer job!! If you can leave Arizona for entire summer, want to learn about business, and make $5,300 doing it—call 968-4167. G ET REALLY PER SO N AL! J ASÓN M OODY- If y our n o t busy April 24th, how does Canery* Flakeys, formal... Sound?? JENNIFER- LET'S do it again. And again. And again. Marty, KAPPA SIGS-1 am Simba, god o f love. Assemble tomonow night, give me an offering and I will lift my curse. Jungle Fé v è r is spreading. Bew are! -Love, Simboo. KAO DENISE G. We shall kick some Old Southern butt bowling—se y'all ion­ ite. KA Pledge Tattoo: KAO WOULD like to thank Cindy W., Jen B., Carrie P., and Kim K," We would never be outstanding chapter without .you! •' -/ ' : ‘ / " br eak fast s p e c ia l \ -7a.m.- 2 Pancakes 2 Eus 2 Pcs. of Bacon Sf 99 I ART A CCURATE, EX PER IEN C ED typing/word processing. Word Perfect 5.1. Reports, resumes, charts, graphs. Lau­ ra, Add S p ice to Y ou r Personate! A sk u s about them ! 965-6735 State P ress C la ssifie d s. POS 462 I need notes for last Wednesdays class. Will pay big bucks for your time! Call 759-4630 leave message. RITES OF Passage o f Rites of Passage o f... M ay 12, 1992: Indigo G irls 1(800)554-3742; . SHAWN, TO be or not to be, that is the question? Does die answer lie over the rainbow o r at the ZBT Fonnal, Mitch. EK LISA. I'm so glad you're my dot! Get excited for I-week! XAQ Jen. -NO SUBSTITUTIONS- TIGER, YOU are the greatest. Thanks for everything. Chameleon. 6Cafe *Mill DID YOU KNOW— -ACR O SS STR EET FROM CO FFEE puwnmoN- ---------- - the O fC t A if y o u r la s t n a m e begins w ith an A , yo u can have a FREE P E R S O N A L A D fro m th e S ta te P re s s Classified departm ent! Just com e in to d ay b y 11:45am / w ith your student ID and w e ll give you a 15w o rd p erson al ad* fo r FREE! •tWs a d m ust b e p la c e d in th e next •*- S J 24 HOUR turnaround- for most papers. Processing/resumes. Laser. Near ASU. Quality assurance. Caroline 892-7022. A 1 W ORDPRO CESSIN G Services, E verything from resum es to theses typed qu ick ly and p ro fessio n ally . G raphics and delivery available. Best job in town. Sue 831-6148. a-m a-bobs 0B Ô 1-DAY TURNAROUND- for most pa­ pers- Typing. Reasonable. Close/ASU. L aser F a e u lty /S tu d e n ts. D iane 966-5693. PIKES MELLON, Moody: T m inter­ ested in your shiny hardly used lavaliers. Meet me at Zorbas. HAPPY BIRTHDAY Loretta! Let’s par­ ty! Love, your fourth floor buds! that you can place your classified ad over the phonew ith Visa* M asterC ard or American Express? (Sorry, personals cannot be accepted over die phone.) Call 965-6731 today! • available State Press. CH ILD CAR E LO O K IN G FO R a b a b y sitte r for 3 young children, northeast Scottsdale. Will pay top dollar. Call 860-0742. W ANTED: DAYCARE at my North Tempe home for 2 girls, ages .8 and 11. June 8-July 8. Leave message: 945-3914. ADOPTION PLEASE CONSIDER us as adoptive parents for your unborn child. We are a happily married professional couple liv­ ing in New England. We wish to adopt a newborn into our loving home. We can provide relocation during your preg­ nancy: Please call Patricia and Tom at (401)621-8931 confidential. SERVICES I-HAUL M oving and transit. Y our stuff, my truck. B ed, couch, m iscellaneous. 967^3774. WHY HAUL it home? Store it! See our ad to d a y • B est L ittle W arehouse in Tempe 967-3900. Ch evron S h a r i P a tr ic k - 961-1411 F r o d a n e « S a c ’y . S a v k a a D a a k to p P u b lis h in g T a m P a p a ra /N a w a la tta rs R s s u m s s /G ra p h lc a Lasar Printing Notary Publlo 1 Day Satw/7 Days Waak Dlacounl Studfit Prioaa A PA /M LA EX PER IEN C ED typing/woid processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing, and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. ASU GRADUATE will professionally type your reports, term papers, e tc .: R ush jo b s no problem . T heresa, 924-1976. V-.Ó ■’ Highest Prices Paid PHOTOGRAPHY____ 7 1 2 S. C o l l e g e 9 6 7 - 4 0 4 9 PHOTOGRAPHY BY Jules- graduat­ ion, commencement, families and par­ ties. Reasonable rates/ excellent refer­ ences. Call Julie-990-1626. WANTED TUTORS Summer sessions move quickly, don't let yourself get off to a bad start W e can help make your decision to take classes over the summer a rewarding one. You can also pre-register now for Fall Semester, to be sure there will be a spot for you. W e offer tutorial for the following classes: MAT 106, MAT 117, MAT 118, M AT 119, MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271, PHY 101, PHY 111, PHY 112, PHY 121, QBA221, PSY 230, CHEM 101, CHEM 113, CHEM 115 Give us a call today and ask about our low er summer rates. MATRIX EDUCATIONXENTER - “SIMON" CORNERSTONE MALL, D207 • TEMPE 968-4 668 Your Individual PERFECT PAPERS RESUMES prepared, by a professional with 5 years experience in executive-level recruit­ ment. Call 968-8898 for a resume that will get you the interviews you want. Reasonable rates. TOWNSEND WORD Processing. Thes­ es, dissertations, term papers. Call Mau­ reen 274-3891,955-0969. CAMPUS CHEVRON 966-3330 A ir C o n d itio n in g S p e c ia l $9.95 plus Freon APACHE & RURAL THIRSTY? C h e c k o u t th e R e s ta u ra n ts /B a rs s e c tio n in th e S ta te P r e s s C la s s ifie d s ! State Press Classifieds 965-6731 TUTORS G ood new s...so are we. W e'll be open during both summer sessions to assist you in achieving a higher letter grade, with a true desire and understanding of your most difficult classes. LOGO RESUMES « jobs! 945-1551 or self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Box 10293, Scottsdale 85271-0293 for details. '. ■^ /■ High sucess rate f Reports- best prices, editing. Laser printing, same day. NeaiÁSU967-0907. ------ STAYING FOR SUMMER SCHOOL? LETTER QUALITY word processing. APA/M LA thesis, resum es, fast tur­ naround. $1.5Q/up. Roxanne 437-8830. PROFESSIONAL TYPING- esfiiys, re­ ports, resumes, etc. Fast turnaround. Laser printer. Karen 786-1895 leave message. '.. •. ... . " '•’ I Sun Devil Spark Yearbook 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 NEW GALLERY looking for student art work. Call Chuck at 835-7263 for more information. EDITING/PROOFING Complete editing, grammar Correction, spelling check. Research papers, theses, reports, resumes. Experienced editor. Computerized: Quick turnaround. Best rates around. Near-.Urutversity. Jim. 945-6793, . ‘ - C am pus Corner PHOTOGRAPHIC ENLARGER, black and white, with paper safe, accessories, excellent condition- $150. 968-0454 after 4pm. . C REA TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resum es, essay s, la se r p rin ter, rea­ sonable rates, fast; turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. : * ~; for editing and proofreading that will let you turn in your paper, diesis, or dis­ s ertatio n w ith c o n fid e n c e. C all 968-8898. Editor with 12 years experi­ ence, Reasonable rates. We Buy Used CDS WORD PROCESSING- Resumes, term papers, letters, reports, manuscripts, mailings. Highest quality- lowest prices. Karen, 833-5563. ■:. H o ro sco p e — FrancesD r a k e = ~ mm) f Apy RESUMES $15 EL EC TR O LY SIS— PERM A N EN T hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. Student discounts. C all for more information: 969-6954<, MISCELLANEOUS TYPING/WORD PROCESSING reR SO N A U i W w : T week tanning"1 $27 (with this ad) . University & Dorsey (Next to Beauvais) For Wednesday, April 22,1992 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You are ready to move forward with th a t new idea of yours. Talks with higher-ups are favorednow. An intím ate question may concern you tonight. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Meetings with advisers are favored today. A sudden trip may be for business reasons. Legal affairs, pub­ lishing and education are highlighted now. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Talks related to business and fi­ nancial concerns are favorable to­ day. Still, good judgment is needed about what financial obligations you are ready to assume. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Couples see eye to eye about a child's welfare. Collaborative efforts are favored now. It is nothing major, but you could become mildly upset with a relative. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Your common sense brings you gains where family and job are con­ cerned now. Singles may be in the awkward position of having to de­ cline a date. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You have much creative energy today which you should put to good use. An unwanted romantic attrac­ tion could come now. Leisure inter­ ests are happily accented. L IB R A (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) It is a good day for shopping and malting important domestic deci­ sions. Unexpected company could drop by. Get more than one estimate on the coat of legal advice. 829-1737 I SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Make important phone calls and begin creative projects today while your communicative skills are a t a peak. Some distractions though im­ pede job accomplishment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Talks about money should be kept confidential. Mental and research projects are now favored. Undercur­ rents may affect a relationship with a close tie. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You will enjoy a stimulating ex­ change of ideas with a friend today. You are searching now for a new outlet for your individuality and cre­ ativity. New goals are forthcoming. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You may have to say no to a social invitation in order to have more time fora work or research project. H ank­ ing is excellent and you are pleased with your insights. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) You will be getting in touch now with friends a t a distance. Meetings with agents and advisers are fa­ vored. Tonight accents social life, but be carefol not to overdo. YOU BORN TODAY are inven­ tive, nervous and sometimes highstnmg. You are capable of work that is ahead of the times and do best in fields that reflect your ideals. You are both intuitional and skeptical. Concerned with the meaning of life, you have strong philosophic lean­ ings. Usually, you work better on your own th a n in partnership. Birthdate of: Jack Nicholson, actor; Kant, philosopher; and J. Robert Oppenheimer, scientist. 01992 by King Faaturaa Syndicate, Inc. W e d n e s d e j^ ^ rj^ ^ W ^ CHILD C A R E CEN TER LO TTERY ENRO LL YO UR CHILD NOW The University Children's Center is here tor you! OConvenient location (Rural/Terrace) OFlexble scheduling 02 - 6 year olds (diapers accepted) OLow child/teacher ratios OSmall group sizes OMeals provided The Recycle Sale Trade your unw anted copies lo r new ones at K inko's the copy centerl For every unwanted copy on whits paper you bring to Kinko's you will receive credit for a free new letter size black & white self serve copy. Limit 2 0 0 free copies. O ffer is valid on A pril 2 2 , 1992 only. Enrollment Lottery Applications are available through April 24 at: •All Main Cam pus Registrar Sites «Child Care Resources (MU 14G) •Human Resources Office (ASB Third Floor) Form s are due at any registrar site by 5pm, April 24. You will know by M ay 1 if your name is drawn through the lottery. If you are selected, a $40 registration fee is due by May 8, which guarantees your child's space in the center. University & Rural • 694-1797 • Open 24 Hours University 6 Forest • 894-9588 • Open 24 Hours 11 A Z locations: C a l 1-800-93*CO PY For m ore inform ation, ca ll 965-9515. ★ CARS ★ • C O M P A C TS •MIDSIZE • FU LL SIZE •lu x u r y & * VANS * DAILY WEEtflV * LUXURY ‘ MINIVANS _ J5 5 S ih w *7’ 9' 12’ T5 MONTHLY passen g er CONVERTIBLES S P E C IA L MONTHLY RA T ES UNLIMITED MILEAGE AVAILABLE WE FEATURE GM PRODUCTS I M A JO R CR ED IT C A R D S • O P EN 7 P A Y S 3625 VIL IN D IAN SCHOOL RD. • 2934 E. M cDOW ELL RD. TRY OUR D E L IC IO U S P IZ Z A T O D A Y O U R P IZ Z A IS EXCELLEN T 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. O ne mile north of A SU 9 4 5 -8 8 5 0 We deliver! Open 7 Days a Week EXTRA LARGE CHEESE PIZZA With One Topping $ 6.99 Not good with any other offer. Valid with coupon only. lF-- -1_sliKSSE.- -i p r o f e s s i o n a ll y m a n a g e d b y B E R M R D /F U iS E T M A.UG EHEH T SER V ER S.!*«'. Sum m er also available Call Us 602/ 894-2320 525 S. Forest Avenue