ARIZONA ST A B UNIVERS ITY An Independent Morning Daily Vol. 78 No. 9 Friday, January 28,1994 ASU in danger o f losing faculty, provost says In the money ? B y G a r in G r o ff S t a t e P ress ASU Provost Milton Glick said Thursday that the University is threatened with losing its best faculty, because most of the nation’s institutions pay their faculties an average of 15 percent more than Arizona. . Glick said pay at Arizona universities was Competitive 10 years ago but has since fallen below other institutions. He said he was concerned that faculty pro­ ductivity and quality will drop because it is not being financially rewarded for its work. “We’re very concerned about losing some of our very best faculty,” Glick said. A recent ASU report stated that 40 of the 100 faculty who left the University in the 1992-93 year left because of financial reasons. Raises are the University’s No. 1 concern, because low pay could h urt the quality of instruction, Glick said. “We’ve got to be competitive in the market­ place, and bringing up salaries is an important step,” he said. ■ Raises can only be approved by the Arizona Legislature, which is currently contemplating a proposed 5 percent pay raise for all state employ­ Ethnic/racial coalitions assemble at mini-retreat ees. Faculty has not had a raise in the past three years, Glick said, except for a $1,000 across-theboard raise during the 1992-93 fiscal year. “By not giving raises, the whole faculty falls below the market and is falling below the stan­ dard of living,” he said. In the past five years, the state’s faculty salaries increased 16.7 percent, compared to 29.1 for other states.' Glick said average pay in the 1992-93 year at the state’s three universities was $60,750 for full T urn to Employees, page 2. Estimated Average pay for A SU faculty; 1992-93 N u m b e r,a s o f 1992 Professors $60,750 567 Associate Profs. $44,750 474 Assistant Profs. $39,000 292 Source: ASU Provost Office ASU g la d ia to rs By M ik a A k jk u n i S t a t e P ress ASU President Lattie Coor addressed the importance of cultur­ al diversity on campus Thursday night at a mini-retreat that gath­ ered members of the four existing ethnic and racial coalitions on campus, “I salute each of you today for retaining your cultural identi­ ty,” Coor Said. “And also, for forming coalitions where you work together in ways that I think arc appropriate for the future.” Coor spoke to nearly 30 students, faculty and staff who partici­ pated in a pilot project aimed at uniting thé four racial and ethnic coalitions on campus. At the gathering, which took place in the MU, leaders of the Hispanic, Black/African, Asian American and American Indian coalitions announced to the audience their respective coalitions’ plans for the academic year. “We are having this small retreat today in order to test the waters, so that in the future, we can organize a larger retreat involving the four coalitions,” said Jesus Trevino, Assistant Dean of Student Life for cultural diversity. “We are also here to look for a strategy to support racial and ethnic coalitions, each of which face issues and problems as well,” Trevino added that he will propose that the four coalitions meet every month starting this semester, so that “we will be able to increase our communication." Law professor Charles Calleros, who couldn’t attend the meet­ ing, Sent a video ca sse tte in w hich he talked about F irst Amendment rights, Calleros also said that a racist person’s views should not force one to think that he is unwelcome on campus. T urn t o C ulture, pag e 2. Kent Snyder (left), a senior business management major, and M ike Lum, Junior justice studies major, square off in a friendly game o f “Joust a Bout” at Thursday’s Sports Illustrated Sports Festival at the Student Recreation Center. Lum was victorious in this particular encounter, winning the bout 2-1. Hermon makes run for Congress official ASU supporter vows to keep working for University at federal level B y J a s o n H il l S t a t e P ress “(Bev Harm on) particularly understands ASU ana has been a very strong champion of ours in all of her years, and we will miss her very m uch,” ASU President Lattie Coor said after H erm on an n o u n ced h er can d id a cy fo r U .S . H o u se o f Representatives Thursday. STA TE PRESS W eather Outlook A chance for showers and cooler. High 58. ASU will lose a legislative “champion” when state Sen, Bev Herman wraps up her final term in office to run for Congress this fall, ASU President Lattie Coor said. “Bev Hermon understands universities and their importance,” Coor said Thursday, after Hermon announced her candidacy for the U.S. House of Representati ves. “She particularly understands ASU and has been a very strong Champion of ours in all of her years, and we will miss her very much.” Hermon, R-Tempe, made the announcement at the Tempe Center for Habilitation. Hermon is running for the District 1 seat currently held by U.S. Rep. Sam Coppersmith, a Democrat. “I am proud to have had the opportunity to work with citizens o f the area who have proudly supported ASU and M esa Community College,” she said in her announcement speech. “I enter this race for Congress with the same resolve with which I entered my fust city council race, I will insist that govern­ ment be accountable to people — not simply make demands Upon people”’ ► The Arizona Board of Regents is searching for candidates to fill two administrative vacancies. Page 6 ^ World/ Nation Champion skater Tonya Harding admits to knowing ASASU has formed a commit­ about the attack on tee to pick former Vice rival Nancy Kerrigan President Caesar Tima’s shortly after its successor. Page 7 occurrence,’ Page 3 Hermon said after her announcement that she would continue to work for ASU’s well-being at the federal level. “Naturally, if elected, I will still work for ASU in obtaining research dollars,” Hermon said. ASU’s current level of federal research and developm ent grants, $54 m illion, should be increased, she said. Hermon said she is moving upward because she will soon reach the Legislature’s term limit. “I read an article that said, ‘Why is she leaving us,’ or words to that effect, but everyone has term limits these days,” the lawmaker said. “I would have had to have left in two years anyway, since I have been there for 16 years.” Hermon. will still retain heir seat until January, but Coor is already concerned about the loss’ effect on thé University. Coor rated Hermon’s commitment to ASU as “very substan­ tial” and similar to the support former state Sen. Doug Todd gave to ASU in the past. Allan Price, associate vice president of University Relations, said, “There are other legislators who see ASU as a priority and see the universities as a priority, but Bev Hermon has been an effective' advocate for ASU.” Price cited what he said was Hermon’s exemplary work in try­ ing to ensure that the level of funding for ASU is appropriate for T urn to H ermon , Sports The No. 13 Sun Devil baseball team begins its season in high style, with an 11-2 thrashing of New' Mexico State Thursday afternoon at Pakard Stadium. Page 11 page 2. W here To Find It Advertiser Index..................13 Classifieds........................... 13 Comics..,............................10 Crossword........................ .6 Horoscopes .......... 15 Opinion..........................,.„....4 Police Report.............,...,,.....8 Sports....................... 11 Today’s Activities ................2 World/Nation..............,..,......3 P age 2 TP" S tate P ress Friday, January 28, 1994 Culture T T oday C ontinued Cam pus clubs and organizations m ay subm it w ritten entries to the State P i t » in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room iS. Requests m il not be taken aver the phone. Entries must contain the fid l name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, tim e and th e fu ll address o f the location. A it requests are subject Jo editing fo r content, space and clarity. ~ Deadline fo r entries a-noon the day before publication. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily meeting, noon, basement of the old church at the Newman Center, aorftw ett corner of College and University, • Counselor T raining C enter — Counseling for ASU stu­ dents, friends and family provided by counseling graduate stu­ dents, directly supervised by faculty, free to students, Payne Hall Room 402. Information tmd appointments available by calling Jan at 965-5067. • American M arketing Association — Working in junction with the American Red Cross, collecting monetary donations through Jan. 28 for& eeutiiqpadtem idf& etid^rinC U ^m ia, 9 a.m .-2 p.m.. Business College Dean’s Patio. • A IE SE C -Intem ational Business O rganization — New member orientation, guest speaker Atul Vashistha of Rural Metro Corp., everyone welcome, 4 p.m., MU Mohave Room 222. • Devil’s Juggling Club — Learn to juggle or improve your skills, S pm . -dark. West Lawn above Hayden Library. • University A rt Museum — Free screening of " th e Wave” as part o f the Cinema of Mexico film series, introduction by Dr. Foster, English dubbed, 7:30 p.m., Union Cinema, MU, lower level, southwest corner. • Farce Side Comedy Hour/MUAB Comedy Committee-~> One hour o f sketch comedy featuring ASUHs own, free, 12:40 p a t , MU Programming Lotmge. • University Libraries — Free Medline Compact Disc class discusses the medical database that indexes 3,300 national and international journals, 1:30 p.m. -2:30 p m ., Noble Science library Classroom 229. Information available by calling 9657607 or 905-7609 or by stopping by the Science Referent» Desk. • Alpha K appa Psi (Professional Business Fraternity) — Nation’s oldest coed business fraternity informational meet­ ing. all business majors and minora welcome, 7 p.m., MU VentaaaRootn A 226. • Students for the National Organization for the Reform of M arijuana Laws — Meeting to discuss rally, camping trip and AiMHl, everyone welcome, 2:30 p.m., MU Santa Cruz Room 213. • All Saints Catholic Newman C enter — Welcome side-byside mass, dinner and movie, 5 p.m.. College Avenue and University Drive. • Society o f H um an Resource M anagement — Rush patty, free food, drinks and information about this club, 5 p.m., UNO’s, Mill Avenue and Seventh Street from rage 1. “I know this is a very difficult thing to do, but If somebody shouts a racial slur to you, just feel pity for that person,” Calleros said. Plans by the four coalition leaders for their semester agenda were announced in the last part of the meeting. Yvette Maldonado, a member of the Hispanic Coalition, said her coalition is planning to donate notebooks and pencils to chil- dren living in the poverty-stricken state of Chiapas, Mexico. Sakena de Young Marshall of the Black/African Coalition focused on the need to eliminate strata among races. Kwok K eong L in, co -ch airm an o f the A sian Students Coalition, emphasized his coalition’s need to urge its member clubs to organize larger events. Hermon C ontinued from page 1. the University’s goals. “She also worked hard to make sure that the tuition that stu­ dents spent stayed on the campuses of their own universities,” said Price, referring to the issue of decoupling. He added that Hermon was also an integral force behind a cost-equity study which showed that ASU had not been allocated the correct proportion of budgetary funds from the Legislature. CORRECTION State Sen. Bev Hermon, R-Tem pe, was misidentified in a photograph in T hursday’s State P ress. Herm on is pictured at left. H erm o n Price said that ASU is fortunate that Hermon still has a year left in her term and that there ate other legislators who will keep ASU’s concerns in mind. “Bev is definitely among the strongest supporters for ASU,” Price said. “She is an ASU supporter, as well as a higher educa­ tion supporter.” Employees ____ C ontinued from page 1. professors, $44,750 for associate professors, and $39,750 for assistant professors. In the 1992-93 fiscal year, ASU employed 567 full-time pro­ fessors, 474 associate professors and 292 assistant professors at the time, Glick said. The UofA paid the same amount and employed 506 professors, 328 associate professors and 300 assistant professors at the same time, according to Linda Dobbyn, UofA senior research specialist. The Maricopa County Community College District doesn’t have the same classification system for professors. MCCCD employs 864 full-time residential faculty and paid them an average of $52,559 in 1992-93, said Louise Gacioch, an MCCCD spokesperson. She estimated that MCCCD faculty made an additional $3,000 last year in benefits. The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook An investment in your lifetime Order yours today for $36.93, M atthews Center basem ent, rm 50, 965-6881 About a dollar a slice. About a dollar a day Introducing the new Apple Computer Loan. Right now, with this spe­ January 28,1994, your first payment is deferred for 90 days. It’s an cial financing program from Apple, you can buy select Macintodf and incredible deal no matter how you slice it. So, why should you buy an FowerBook* computers for about $30* a month. Or about a dollar a Apple*computer? It does more. It costs less. It’s that simple. / In tro d u cili» T h e New Apple C o m p u ter L oan day. (You could qualify with just a phone call.) And if you apply by Visit your Apple Campus Reseller for more information. Visit ASU Bookstore M o n -F ri 9:30-3:30 o r c a ll 965-7917 'Monthlypayment isan estimate basedon an Apple ComputerLoan of ft/446¡or IbeMacmtosb 1C475 system shorn above. Priceand loan amount are basedon Apple'sestimate ofhigher educationprices as ofOctober21,1993-Adcomputersystemprices, loan amounts and monthlypayments may vary. Seeyour AppleCampus ResellerJor current systemprices. A33% loan originationfee will be atlitedto the requested¡¿an amount. Tie interest rate is variable, basedon lie commercialpaper raleplus535%. Por Ibe month ofOdober 1993, tbeirUerest ratemss 831%, with an APRof990%.8-yearloan term wilt noprepaymentpenalty. Tie tnontidypayment sbotm assumes no defermentofprmdpat (wintered (defermentwill changeyour monthlypayments). tie Apple ComputerLoan issubjectto creditapproval © 1993AppleComputer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, theApplelogo, MacmbxhandPowerBoahan registeredtrademark cfApple Computer, btc. W orld/N ation H arding adm its know ing o f attack ro g iH ■ P ag e 3 Friday, January 28,1994 State P ress unzona for business in South Africa PHOENIX (A P) Having helped persuade business to kave South Africa in a crusade against apartheid, the Rev. Leon H. Sullivan is hoping to lead the return to the market The Baptist minister who authored the “Sullivan principles" of integration and equal opportunity has organized a group o f black leaders to draw up guide­ lines to encourage business to return to South Africa. " I f w e’re n o t careful, political ap arth eid co u ld becom e econom ic apartheid,” Sullivan said Wednesday. But the African National Congress, which will have a large influence on a new, ethnically diverse government, is cool to the idea o f foreigners dictating guidelines. T he ANC fears foreign influence could infringe on sovereignty and lead to a confusing array of rules and regula­ tions. The ANC has said it will not set quotas but companies will have to abide by affirmative action laws. Arizona legislators support lifting embargo in Vietnam PHOENIX (AP) - U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who spent six years as a prisoner o f w ar ip North Vietnam, voted with the majority as the Senate urged the Clinton administration to lift the tw o-decade-old trad e em bargo against Vietnam. Sen. D ennis D eC oncini, D -A rizM voted against it the m easure, which passed 62-38 on Thursday. Voting “yes” were 42 Democrats and 20 Republicans. Verting “no” were 14 Democrats and 24 Republicans. Environment license plate rescued from extinction PHOENIX (AP) — A Senate com­ m ittee m oved T hursday to save Arizona’s distinctive fuchsia, purple and turquoise environmental license plates from threatened extinction. The environmental plate, which has generated tens of thousands of dollars to support a statewide environmental edu­ cation program, will go the way of the dodo bird without legislative action. Current law requires environmental plates issued before June 30 to be turned in to the A rizona D epartm ent o f Transportation when they expire. New plates would have to comply with the design and color scheme being devel­ oped by a license plate commission the Legislature established two years ago to standardize Arizona license plates, A b ill approved by the Senate T ransp o rtatio n C om m ission w ould exempt the environm ental plate from having to comply with the standardized design and would repeal the provision requiring existing plates to be turned in. America West reports profits PHOENIX CAP) — America West Airlines today reported its fourth consec­ utive quarter of profit, $10.4 million, fol­ lowing 2 1/2 years of losses. That brings the year’s profit to $37.2 million for the Phoenix-based airline, which has been operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from creditors since Ju a el9 9 L Company officials said the fourthquarter contrast to the rest, of the indus- gj try. which slid in tike final months of m f l H M p i tik e airlin e $339.3 «ttiiion in the fourth quarter, up f to h $302 million in the same period fee I I . America West has and it needs $150 m illion to $200 m illion in capital to eaiKXfe ¿ ^ B a n k r u p tc y iGnat. t e t w i 1 H ie said in D ecem ber a por i j i g i investor, the Steinhardt Croup, which m«Mges ^w fl® iem funds, ceiklipMMt j up to $250 m iiaoa hs > i : i i ilM 1991 U.S. figure skating champion Tonya Harding delivers a prepared news conference Thursday in Portland, OR. Harding continues to deny involve­ ment in the attack on rival skater Nancy Kerrigan. WASHINGTON (AP) — Twenty years after the last American soldier left Vietnam, two sena­ tors who bear the scars of that war helped con­ vince their colleagues Thursday the time has come to lift trade sanctions. It's time to “put the war behind us,” said Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., a Vietnam veteran who was wounded three times. The 62-38 vote urging the administration to lift the trade embargo “expeditiously” was not binding, but it provides considerable impetus for the administration as it moves toward normaliz­ ing relations with the former enemy. V eterans’ groups, most strongly against relaxing restrictions on Vietnam until there is a full accounting of Americans still missing from PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Tonya Harding admitted today she failed to tell authorities what she knew about the Nancy Kerrigan attack, but denied planning to injure her figure skating rival and asked to remain on the U.S. Olympic team. The U.S. Olympic Committee said it was “deeply concerned” with Harding's admission that she withheld information about the K errigan attack. The USOC and the U .S. Figure Skating Association have said Harding could be removed from the team if she is linked to the attack. Harding’s statement today came as her ex-husband, who was arrested in the attack, was apparently working out a deal with authorities to testify against her. W earing a jacket from the U.S. team at the 1991 World Championships, Harding said she was “embarrassed and ashamed to think that anyone close to me could be involved” but said she had “no prior knowledge” of the attack. “I am responsible, however, for failing to report things I learned about the assault when I returned home from nationals,” she said, reading from a statement in a voice that shook with emotion at times. , It was at the U.S. National Figure Skating Championships in Detroit that Kerrigan was smashed on her right knee Jan. 6 with a metal baton, knocking her from the competition won by Harding. “Many of you will be unable to forgive me for that,” she said about her failure to inform authorities. “It will be difficult for me to forgive myself.” "v , She did not say what information she withheld. Harding said that a few days after returning home Jan. 10, she learned “persons that were close to me” may have been involved. Harding and her ex-husband, Jeff Gillooly, spoke with author­ ities for 10 1/2 hours on Jan. 18. It was during that session that Harding issued a statement breaking off her live-in relationship with Gillooly, with whom she had reconciled after divorcing-in August. Gillooly, her former body guard and two other men have been arrested in the attack on Kerrigan. the war, were angered by the vote. “We were somewhat stunned that they didn’t listen to the veterans and families” who feel Vietnam is still not forthcoming on the POWMIA issue, said Phil Budahn, spokesman for the American Legion. ■ Yet it was the Vietnam veterans in the Senate — led by Kerry and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. — who were the most eloquent in urging an end to the enmity and the beginning of trade rela­ tions. “If you want to serve the families you will vote to lift the embargo. If you want to put the war behind us and act in à statesmanlike fashion and move to the future and protect the interests of this nation you will vote to lift the embargo,” Kerry said. McCain spoke in a hushed voice of his own six years in captivity in a North Vietnam prison­ er-of-war camp. He said the fates of those still missing could best be learned by expanding rela­ tions with Hanoi. Six of the eight senators who served in Vietnam approved the legislation, including Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., a Congressional Medal of H onor w inner who lo st p art o f his leg in Vietnam. The legislation, written as an amendment to the State Department authorization bill, includes a provision that V ietnam m ust do more to improve its human rights record. Kerrey said this must not be ignored. North begins bid for U.S. Senate NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — Oliver L. North was once convicted o f helping to obstruct Congress. Now, he wants to be in it. North formally launched his bid for the U.S. Senate on Thursday, telling 500 supporters at a hotel rally that he is a “conservative outsider” who will “strike a blow to give government back to the people.” North has been raising money for months to win the seat of Democrat Charles Robb, who is seeking a second term. North faces form er Reagan budget d irecto r Jim M iller for the Republican nomination. A state GOP convention will choose a nomi­ nee June 4. The Democrats pick a nominee on June 14. “I believe that we, those of us gathered in this room, represent the real hopes and the real aspi­ rations and dreams and values of the working men and women,” North said. “I believe that if we have the courage and determination to do right by them , we can m ake a change in Washington.” During the mid-1980s. North was a national security aide to former President Reagan. He played a central role in the clandestine arms-forhostages deals involving Iran and Nicaragua’s Contra rebels. N orth said W ednesday n ig h t on C N N 's “Larry King Live” that his actions helped free the American hostages in Lebanon and led to democracy in Nicaragua. “I am not ashamed of what we did in saving lives,” the former Marine lieutenant colonel said. ‘I ’m not going to apologize for i t ” North was convicted o f aiding and abetting an obstruction of congress, destroying govem- Associated Press Oliver North gestures as he announces his candidacy for the Republican nomination for the Virginia U.S. Senate seat during a rally in Norfolk, Va,, Thursday. ment documents and accepting an illegal gratu­ ity. All three felony convictions were over­ turned. He admitted in sworn testimony to Congress in 1987 that he lied to members of Congress on Aug. 6,1986, by covering up his role in running the secret Contra arms resupply network. North, who said he was not interested in serv­ ing more than two terms in the Senate, made no mention of Iran-Contra on Thursday. And he ignored a comment from Virginia’s other sena- tor, Republican John W. Warner, that North doesn’t belong in the Senate because he was convicted of felonies in die Iran-Contra affair. ? “What sort of signal does that send?” Warner asked. North said President Clinton’s administration is crippling the country with higher taxes and more spending. He said Robb and other “senator-for-life types” are rubber stamps for such policies. O pinion P age 4 S tate P ress Friday, January 28,1994 State P ress ■ o o s & 7* I D Y~ H H R r a v o s i Ü BRAVO — For ASU Itag sijJew I^rttteljo w r who, as part of his cultural diversity initiative, took a firm step forward in announcing that gays and lesbians will be eeotillBied-STOAiaffll com­ munity here OH ethnic/racial coalitions regarding funding, and « itifiiW M on campus has heretofore been dtacninuuaca against and silent. BOO — 1b ASU’s low faculty pay. The figures released on Tuesday by ASU President Lattie C oot, which indicated that 40 pcreeat-of deput­ ing faculty left because o f low pay, should be a so u rce University, and the fact that three-quarters of the nation's universities pay better doubly so. Once again, the need for better faculty- salaries is demonstrated, and unless Gov. Symington and the Legislature take action with this year’s bud­ get. it is unlikely that things will get any better. BRAVO — To A SU ’s M ars O b serv er Spaceflight Center and to the team o f profes­ sors, researchers and graduate students who worked on the Thermal Emission Spectrometer. After the failure of the Mars Observer, the ASU team has proven tenuous and has fought hard for a second mission to be launched. Despite tbe dismal state of the space program, with tuck a second mission to M ars.cosdd ^•■ aaw i^.tyjk; yi anil, mat foi 'ntfmfiuirijlty Ifili 1|Mif ifiiif last probe. A prophetic boo to Congress and funds for a key scientific mission and instead favor special interest groups'. BOO — To Oliver North, who plans to run for the U.S. Senate from the state o f V irginia. North, who belies the phrase “crim e doesn’t pay,” apparently sees nothing wrong in working for Congress, a body whom he sought to cir­ cumvent and undermine during the Iran-Contra affair. Such blatant hypocrisy (one doubts North will be keen on those who circumvent his power while a member o f the Senate) indicates that perhaps N orth is more self-interested pow er monger than patriot ' BRAVO — To John Minett’s plan for the future of University Drive, which would transform the motor way into a rather pleasant two-lane mall. Such a park-like atmosphere would help to cen­ ter student activities around ASU, provide a great place to relax between classes, and make it easier for bicyclists and pedestrians to travel on and off campus. The only hesitation is whether or not Tempe w ill be able to re-route traffic BOO — To Gov. Fife Symington and his four regents ftmtHriates who approach ■ Symington, who had ptcd&ni to affiliated with ASU. sold out to Tucson voters and ignored the needs of the Valley’s residents. ■ STA T E PRESS s TAFF ASU s ‘oath o f office’ for jobs raises peculiar moral questions during the Gulf War. Why should I be bugged by a litde oath that It’s difficult to take principled directs me to do what I arguably do already? TTie innocent have action in areas where you find you ate 'ILLY nothing to fear, right? uncertain ju st what your principles I have to support and defend the U.S. Constitution. After a re .... B IS H O P studying constitutional history, this is not very troubling because, I found m yself in a situation of its plasticity. For good of ill, there is very little I can’t do and illustrating this idea over W inter Guest still say I support the Constitution. I don’t know anything about Break, My long search for employ­ Columnist the Arizona Constitution, but then, very few others do, given the ment finally ended with me landing a good, on-campus job. As you all probably know, part of getting a fact it took a school child to point out that it prohibited women job is filling out a number of forms for the government, and when from being secretary of state (this was fixed by an amendment). you get hired for a state job, you get to fill out yet another form, a The “and laws” portion is more troubling. I worry because of the large number o f federal and loyalty oath. state laws that I may be break­ T his form is very _ ing the law without knowing it. forthright, almost apologetic, I might lose my job for taking a tellin g you that ASU is “I have voted in most elections Vve been shortcut across one of the cam­ required by state law to present e lig ib le fo r, even th ou gh vo tin g i s pus’ grass lawns that are feder­ it to you, with its empty, wait­ ally protected wetlands for all I ing signature line. The body of arguably irrational given the time know. the oath (or affirmation, as it is Of course, I don’t knowcareful to point out) provides necessary to become an informed voter. , ingly break the law. That would that you have to support and I even had a yellow ribbon on my car certainly violate my oath. I defend the Constitution and laws of the United States and during the G u lf War. Why should I be wonder though, that if I were to exceed the speed limit, what Arizona. 1 suppose I shouldn't have bugged by a little oath that directs me to g reater harm I w ould cause a non-state employee who been surprised by the form. I do w hat 1 argu ably do a lready? The than must also obey the traffic code. worked for the University of My job does not involve driv­ Arizona during the time I spent innocent have nothing to fear, right?” ing, and very few people in the there, and I had to sign a simi­ Valley will know that I am a lar oath, although th at one didn’t try to excuse itself for being what it was with a disclaimer. I state employee. Whatever this harm is, it must be enough to make wonder if that is indicative of a difference in style between the me swear not to drive 36 mph on the Maricopa Freeway. two schools? : Why should I have to be tom between the state’s wish to 1 had other friends who got jobs at the UofA, and they have me sign a paper giving me an unclear obligation and my laughed nervously when they mentioned the oath. It always felt desire to work. Certainly, I should not have to prove, or even like something of a shameful secret to me, not to be mentioned in assert, my patriotism to anyone without a very good reason. It’s polite company. Of the small, non-random group of people I’ve all very fine for presidents, governors and members of the mili­ spoken with about the oath, all have expressed some discomfort tary, but for minor state employees? with it. I’m still not exactly sure why, however. I am reminded of the scene in “Ghostbusters” where a man is Most of my actions toward die state (meaning government) applying for a position with the team. The secretary asks the man are usually informed by a simple-minded patriotism, that unfash­ ionable kind some still try to teach in grade school. For example, if he believes in a long list of fringe science and parapsychologiI’m generally pleased with the structure (if not the dynamics) of cal hypotheses, to which his reply goes something like, “Lady, if there’s a paycheck in it, I’ll believe whatever you say.” So much our government. I have voted in most elections I’ve been eligible for, even for principled behavior. though voting is arguably irrational given the time necessary to become an informed voter. I even had a yellow ribbon on my car Billy Bishop is a second-year law student. B JAKE BATSELL, Editor SHAUN RACHAU, Managing Editor CHRIS DRISCOLL—.*...... JASON OWSLEY.... . . . .......AssL CityEditor ANGELA BENOCHE — Edi t or JAMES roUSETTA........................ ..............Opinion Editor BRIAN FITZGERALD........................................ Photo Editor SAMANTHA FELDMAN................. ........ AssL Photo Editor MIKE BRANOM..— ....................... ........... Sports Editor JEREMY STEIN........................................ A sst Sports Editor DIANE BOUDREAU___ 1................... World/Nation Editor TROY FUSS......................................... . Magazine Editor BRITTON MAUCHLINE.....^.«...;..... A sst Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Mika Akikuni, Shawn Boyd, Garin Groff, Maxwell Higgins, Jason Hill, Paul Matthews, Mary Leigh Sum m erton, Joni T a it, V icky Y oung S ch au er, G reg Zemeida. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Todd K elly, Julie Reuvers, Evelyn Sheinkopf, Dawn Wagner. C O PY E D IT O R S : Bob Felix, K ris Fridrich, K ristine Holter-Sorensen, Dave Proffitt. PH O TO G RA PH ERS: W illiam L ynam , C raig Macnaughton, Fredrick Medanich. COLUMNISTS: David Don, A- Marjory Kaminski, Barry Kelley, Diana Lopez, Maureen McClarnon, Tammy MesaSierra, Sean O’Neil, Melanie Selcho, Shayne Whitehead. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, George O'Connor, Mateo Willis1. GRAPHIC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. PRODUCTION: Kenneth Collins, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Britton Mauchline, Skip Schrader, Anna Ulinich, Dave Weber. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : K elly A dcock, Sonia Benson, Dan Ellstrocn, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JAKE BATSELL SHAUN RACHAU JAMES FRUSETTA ANGELA BENOCHE Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year* except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s C enter, RooriT IS , Arizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is die only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished 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 or student body. State Press P hone N umbers Information............. 965-7572 Newsroom..............965-2292 Magazine................965-1695 Advertising.............965-6555 Classifieds...............965-6731 O pinion State P ress _______________________ :___________________ Friday, January 28,1994 _________ ' __________ P ag e 5 State P ress etters to the editor Greek traditions d o n t offer ASU as m uch as some think It seems that Mr. O’Neill feels that Greek traditions improve our university’s image. Since I participated in the Greek system for three semesters I would like to enlighten those 93 percent nonG reeks, com m only characterized as G D I’s (God Dammed Independents), that some of these Greek “traditions” are not ail that great. Hazing is one of the Greek’s systems most notorious tradi­ tions. As of 1988, Eileen Stevens, an advocator of anti-hazing policies in the Greek system, has documented 93 hazing related deaths, 74 of them occurring after, 1970 and 42 between 1978 and 1988. Fortunately, hazing is banned from the Greek system here at ASU and on most fraternal national levels. Hazing is a huge loss of tradition in the Greek system and thankfully so. Mr. O’Neill also seems to think that regulated parties at this university are a tradition when in fact they are relatively a new concept here a ASU. The only reasons the regulations, as Mr. O ’Neill defined, were instated was because of the problems in the past. Some of these problems included but were not limited to drunk driving, minors in possession of alcohol, alcohol poisoning, fights and arrests. In regard to last fall’s blow-out at the off-campus FIJI house, Mr, O’Neill has the notion that the party was “ran effectively.” I spoke to a GARP member. GARP is the Greek Alcohol Reduction Program, a policy-setting program organized in effort to solve the problem s o f the unregulated traditional parties Greeks have become famous for. He told me that the party “was a disaster” and that “this will show the University that on-campus parties are more safe.” GARP only regulates on-campus parties to insure safety. It seems that unsafe parties are what Mr. O’Neill feels are in the interest of Greeks since he called off-campus housing a “blessing in disguise for the Greeks.” Also, I would like to inform Mr. O’Neill that the wealthy are thé elite and belonging to a fraternal organization costs a signifi­ cant amount of money. I think that the student body should also be aware that upon pledging a house you are not joining a fireeentry, free-exit organization. If you decide that the fraternity or sorority is not for you, you can be facing a law suit. A friend of mine can attest that sisterhood for a particular house on this cam­ pus only goes as far as you write checks. After she withdrew in April 1993, she received court papers approxim ately seven months later stating that she owes dues for the fall ’93 semester as * well as fines for all events unattended for fall ’93. She had under­ stood that she was withdrawn and is now facing a court date in February. Since sorority rush is coming up next week, I feel that I should share my experiences o f the other side with potential rushees. The parties that you will be attending will last 15 to 20 minutes and in that time you will talk with approximately three to five members per a party. At the end of each party, the girls you spoke with will fill out your rush card with comments and a numerical rating. For my house it was a one-to-five scale, five being the highest. Comments include colorful expressions. On the good side these may include “cute,” “friendly,” “smart,” “talkative,” “wants to get involved and interested in intramurals” and on the not so good side, these included “fat,” “ugly,” “chowder*’ (a particular favorite of my okl house), “I wouldn’t want to see her in our let­ ters” and “I wouldn’t want to see her at one of our exchanges.” Day to day, your semes are averaged and decisions to call you back are made accordingly, all comments considered. A word of advice: Friends are free, don’t rush! ! Deborah E. Murphy junior computer information systems W , LOOK KnHKT CHIIP DOWNTHERE,,.THE ONE INTWE&APER WITH*1994"ONIT,,; State Press, America leave sport of soccer out of bounds Logic makes rare appearance in the pages of the State Press I am writing in response to David Don’s editorial in the Jan. 25 edition of the State Press. I simply wanted to state that it is refreshing to read an opinion that utilizes logic to elucidate and persuade. Unfortunately, the majority of opinion pieces and letters to the editor do not follow these same guidelines. They attempt to per­ suade either through the use of fallacious information or a simple appeal to emotion. Thanks again for the refreshing jolt of reasoned discourse. Lance A. Hawk, senior political science CORRECTION I would like to comment on the fact that ASU recently hosted an international event that went by unnoticed — at least unnoticed by the State Press. The United States will, this coming summer, be the host of the biggest event in soccer — the World Cup. Soccer is one of the most popular sports in the world. The total number exceeds most, if not all, other team sports. I am fully aware that soccer does not attract the larger public in the United States. However, considering that “kick o ff' is with­ in six months, and that this game in Sun Devil Stadium was an important one for both sides, it would have been a nice opportuni­ ty to educate your readers, and yourself, about coming attractions. 1 must also comment on the poor conditions that were offered here. Norway was in the last FIFA (Federal International Football Association) ranking a top-10 team. This was not respected, and they were given a baseball field without goals to practice on. Further, at Sun Devil Stadium stood international reporters with­ out guidance, who had to find their way on their own. Needless to say, these blunders were heavily criticized in the European press, and the expectations for the World Cup arrangements have dropped significantly in Europe. It is also anticipated that playing fields made for American football will not meet international guidelines for soccer. Once again, that was the case here in Phoenix. To me it is strange that an upcoming event like the World Cup does not get more attention by the host. Furthermore, why try to cover sport results at all in the State Press when you cannot cover a happening like this on campus. Happenings on campus are of common interest to all your readers. You could improve a lot by cutting down editorials that only nourish the writer’s ego and often cover a whole page, and try to write “down to earth” stories about campus events. The American, as I know him, is very proud. So at least you could let readers know that the United States won against Norway, one of the best soccer teams in the world. That effort will not be repeated Feb. 20 in Miami. Then, the U.S. selection needs all the support they can get. A lfredo G utierrez’s nam e was m isspelled in a colum n Thursday. Magnus Thysell senior finance S tM u u i O ff: 9 6 5 THE OPENING OF A NEW 4 2 8 7 W K^it^Staie P re ss would like to hear from you on. its Sound O ff Line. Each week, the opinion page will print a question of University or community interest, taking answers all week, 24 hours a day at 965-4287. When leaving a message, please any other afRKation witfi the University)' | and a number where you can be reached.1 Calls w illb e verified, and responses will be published every Monday. Responses profanity. Sorry, the State Press will not grant inquests for anonymity on the Sound 1 1 1 1 1 £ '» <&} Sta te P ress Friday, January 28,1994 Pag*e 6 R e g e n ts search fo r 2 n e w e m p lo y e e s 20 applications already received for vacant administrative positions Besnette felt that die university system has many well-qualified people. “Me felt we had enough talent in the university system that we wanted to go internal first,” Pfister said. Pfister added that there is By S haw n Boyd a limited possibility that people outside the universities will be considered. State P ress The second position, associate executive director of academic The Arizona Board o f Regents is currently conducting a search in the state’s universities for qualified people to fill two and student affairs, will open July 1, when Clyde Holland’s tem­ porary term ends. vacant administrative positions. Holland, an NAU administrator appointed to the position for “We’ve all been working very hard,” said ABOR spokeswom­ one year, said knowledge of an Suzanne Pfister, referring to _ _ t he entire education system, the extra work caused by a ^ from elementary school to the vacant budget/finance position. universities, is necessary for Pfister said the ABOR has the job. received 20 applications for “He (Arizona Boardof Regents Executive “It requires someone with both positions in the board’s DirectorFrankBesnette)fd t we had enough a basic understanding o f the central office. education process,” he said, In January, Steve Jordan tcdentin dwuniverstiy system that we wanted adding that' the officeholderleft his ABOR p osition as must “be a person who is a executive director for finance to go internedfirst** good listener and observer.” and planning to take a job as - S u z a n n e P fis te r, A B O R s p o k e s w o m a n He said One of the major the executive d irec to r of a b o u t d e c is io n to s e a rc h fo r q u a lifie d a p p lic a n ts problems facing his successor -Kansas’ Board of Regents. -— and especially state univer­ That position has remained w ith in th e s ta te fo r 2 v a c a n t sities — is access to higher vacant, and P fister said' the a d m in is tra tiv e p o s itio n s . education. vacancy needs to be filled as quickly as possible. This includes financial ....... ...•“ ..... ... aid, he said. ■... The officeholder will work ...1...................... . “Who can .afford higher w ith universities in various education, and oh what basis?” capacities, including: The job’s responsibilities includes: • Examining financial conditions at the universities • Keeping tabs on board policies relating to academic and stu• Working with regents on long-term strategic plans and • Assisting communication between the universities, gover­ dent issues • Heading groups dealing with academic and student affairs nor’s budget office and the Arizona Legislature’s budget commit­ and tee. ’ » Working on long-term plans that impact the academic side of Originally, the search for Jordan’s replacement was to be nationwide, but Pfister said ABOR Executive Director Frank the universities. T H E G R E A T IN V O C A T IO N From the point o f Light within the M ind o f God Let Light stream forth into the minds o f men. Let Light descend on Earth. From the point o f Love within the H eart o f God Let Love stream forth into the hearts o f men. May Christ return to Earth. From the center where the Will o f God is known Let purpose guide the wills o f men The purpose which the M aster knows and serves. From the center we call the race o f men Let the Plan o f Love and Light work out And may it seal the door where evil dwells. Let Light and Love and Power restore the Plan on Earth. S e e Esoteric Viewpoints: W ed. 9:00 p.m., C hannel 22 For infomtation call: 8 9 0 0 8 6 4 CROSSWORD s T ¥ p S by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS OHA STATE <1HIVER SI 'AlnÈ JPiR]ESS don'it e v e n \ l a v e to You take note s CHINA GATE 50% OFF DINNER! H a r k in s s ^ o betöre o Sho ws 6 PM |S- ' ' L u x u r y T h e a tr e s Gourmet Snack Bar •Stereo Surround Sound . denolci Sp«Ml Enq^qim. nl 'Best o f Phoenix'Snodi Ban •f die Heftton large Popcorn& Urge Drink • TUET(HINGEDTHEHANCAMPAIGNSAREHON Student or Faculty I.D. required. Exp. 2-28-94 : w im m iim m s is p iM • Buy one dinner, get 2nd dinner 1/2 price • SCOTTSDALE LOCATION ONLY 7820 E. McDowell • Scottsdale • 946-0720 ASHtPMSINGLVENTERTAININGTALL A n M fcM d 18 “EXDUUM! T A N S Juki t e v l t ii At l> M n d r a n n t dbmfer ta iteti! Aacritu Mvics’ fo r $ AW Ywm m m w ► Wolff Tanning System ► Hcdr/Naüs ► M a s s a g e T h e ra p is t B R O A D H A R D Y P j X 1 E E R 1 C A 0 E D L E C M A O D M A M E 1 C S N T E F E: R R 1 P E A V E S l E E T P 0 L E L N D S C O o 0 R E E R S S E M 1 T E A S N Y 1 N A T T E T R O P A L E R A S E R S D A R T E R Arledge 1 H em ing39 G low ed 4 0 C ash way register nicknam e s com part­ 5 G uitarists’ A C E m ent aids R A B 41 Sm all 9 Carib­ G 1 O workers bean isle E R N DOWN 11 C ar type S O V 1 W alks 13 Quoted Yesterday’s Answer 14 Fluttery nervously 2 Com es up 12 School insects 26 Goof 15 Superm an 3 Asks fo r a 27 Pos­ paper loan symbol sesses 17 Blushing 4 Honest 16 Boutique 28 Sidewalk 19 Sardine Pres. stuff holders buys 5 Pinnacles 22 Barrister's 30 Mosquito 18 M akes a 6 Low home attacks needs 20 Singing sounds 31 C hal­ 24 MTV 7 Pressures syllable lenges airings 8 G lobe 21 Recoiled 2 5 M ystery33 Dwindle shape 22 Part of writing 3 7 "Caught 10 Confused award Miss you!" M uffet’s •1 V2 3 4 , • 6 1--- 8 m eat ta 5 1(5 9 Ï2^ 23 Term inus :• 24 C om pete 13 25 Declines 27 Scale i5 note 16 19 29 “— H ear a 18 ta W altz?* 22 30 1956 2ä thriller, with “The* J ; 24 28 W" 32 Sm art­ t a ened up 2tì 3^ 34 D r.’s org. ' 32 33 35 Som e­ thing to 34 i5 37^ miss or j w alk 38 3Ô 36 Horse j 41 40 opera ■ 38 ABC’s 1 -2 8 ■ I■ I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W _ ■ 9 6 6 -6 6 7 6 j trunewsikdumiitrenoua OCTOBER — RU*— OISaaOCIOeBtHLMS.MlIW 3HT5RESERVED Bring in your Studenf/Faculty ID for O ne le tte r stands fo r an o th e r. In th is sam ple A is used fo r th e th re e L’s, X fo r th e tw o O 's, etc. S ingle letters, apostrophes, th e le n g th an d fo rm a tio n o f th e w ords are a ll h in ts . Each d ay th e code letters are d iffe re n t. A H artem E xclusive! *299900J Showsae12.00. 2:30.300. 7.30.9*5 S 5 Ü BUNK A LLESÜ E 2JO,4:80. 7:20. MO, lTfOnT* I m u enm eofihehoher tz x id».4ioo. TOO.HkOOvia4S«mwA C S c o t t s d a l e ' s 9 \ f e z i £ tif * G ( M im e t * C o ffe e S f w f p e ‘Pastries ‘Drin/çs & Coffee Peans ^ M, 43ft 7A0. WaP, 12:S0ameoi __ 2:00.eW3 O F ■ R O A S W ■ C R YPTO Q U O TE 405,>306. Hh08m fcaftsaD.raB.M0w> T M D C Y L P T Q M G D W N T P Q Y L M X 1 W F T T30.936—I THEPIANO amrnmrm n m w 4:16.7:10,9:661 anatrai 2:30.7:48rw, S.tonano* offiaoMd mmuarnsaimam GOLDENGATE «»«, S P ; D W Q T N X L T R L C ' M D Q M G P C Y L P T Q Y l I 450.7!» OOPma Q T ----------------s I C M I I I Q NunlandUnbnb MMf* GOLDEN GATE 6oo.rA0.oeoma z ■.rmam E S Haoo. EAVENI BARTH 206.4:56, 7:45. 10:20. 12:50amrow_______ gflgi iifcn«|i|O nH|i i. TD7 1:10.4.10i7:06 1Ma. 0. imohw ranramni IfHI aafc4<$.f:w.«gs.inoan»wA 1 -2 8 MBand 1 » i aia 1BÉ • • A N C l r i M X I W F T . - ïîf’- - . — DM '' \ • - , , F L V Y T "V ZLSVMSDX Y esterday's C ryptoquotc: YOU CAN'T ESCAPE THE RESPONSIBILITY OFTOMORROW BY EVADING IT TODAY. — ABRAHAM LINCOLN F mEm I Em m T E ft S 491994 by K in g F e a tu re s Syndicate, Inc. # P age 7 Friday, January 28,1994 S tato P ress STATE PRESS Crosswords - G o a h e a d ...d o th em in ink. 30-person comm ittee formed to choose ASASU executive VP not follow the correct procedure were eliminated from consideration. Five candidates have met the selection crite­ State P ress ria. They are: ASASU Senator Sean Ebner, a In an unprecedented senior finance major; Andy Krawls, a senior actio n , A ssociated political science major; Honors College Senator Students o f ASU has John M alik, philosophy m ajor; Executive formed a 30-person com­ Assistant to the President Johnathan Scaggs, mittee to select the next senior political science major; and Mark Thorpe, executive vice president. a sophomore history major. The office was vacated TTie applicants will complete a “search pro­ mid-term by Caesar Tima, cess” on Saturday. A 16-person committee who resigned in T ima comprised of student leaders, ASASU execu­ D ecem ber, leaving the' tive officers, three administrators, and ASASU ASASU Senate without a Vice president. ASASU P resid en t R ossie Turm an led Adviser Rebecca Stout will spend the day inter­ Tuesday’s senate meeting, a move over which viewing the applicants. “At the end o f the day, hopefully they Will several senators come to a consenraised questions. su s,” said The ASASU . . ■ ■ ; B roaddus. “If bylaws do not direct-, th e re ’s a clear ly address1the issue ‘‘W e n e e d to c lo r if y ih e s e n a te b y la w s break between the of resignations from best and next-best elected offices mid­ m n c e r n in g th e re p la c e m e n t o f v a c a te d candidate, the com­ term. o ffic e s m id -y e a r. T h e b u c k sto p s m ittee w ill then Turm an said he make a recommen­ thinks he has done dation to President the senate a great ser­ -R o ssie Turm an, Turman.” vice by temporarily ASASU president The final candidate taking over Tim a’s duties. referring to developing new policies w ill be presented by Turm an to the . “We need to clar­ after uncertainties developed follow ing senate at their next ify the senate bylaws the resignation o f ASASU Executive meeting on Feb. 9. concerning the he senate m ust replacement of vacat­ Vice President Caesar Tima. Tconfirm the nomied offices mid-year,” nee by a two-thirds Turman said at last ; . ■. ■ ' vote. If the nom i-: T u esd ay ’s senate nee is confirmed, the new executive vice presi­ meeting. “The buck stops at the fop.” According to Turman’s assistant,: Jennifer dent will be sworn into office immediately. If Broaddus, nine people applied to take over the senate fails to Confirm the first candidate, •Tima’s position. Applicants were required to fill Turman plans to present the second most-pre­ out a job application, meet a minimum 2.0 grade ferred candidate to the senate immediately. If point average and write a cover letter stating this second nominee is not confirmed, the selecwhy they want the position. Applicants who did ' tion process will begin again at square one. By V ic k y Young ScHAUER M IC E I H ardw are I f w e d o n ' t h a v e it, w e ' l l g e t it f o r y o u . •Hardware «Housewares •Phone & TV Cable «Lumber •Paint «Plumbing Supplies •Tools •Balsa Wood •Model-making Supplies »Plus Special Orders 9 6 8 -4 5 4 4 Apache Broadway Rural Btenpre Whorehouse Record* U è M -F 7 :3 0 a .m . • 8p .n 9 2 9 E. Broadway _ 8 a .m . • 7p .m . (S.E. Comer of Rural « Broadway) 9 a-m- j Sp-m- Tempe AMPUS ORNER- . w; sun. • Beer & Soda •Photo Developing •H ealth & Beauty Aids •Compact Discs 712 S. College Ave. - Hext to College Street Deli • Phone: 967-4049 Mon.-Thur. 7:i0 am -1 0:30 pm ; f r i . 7:30am -M idnight; Sat. 9am -M idnight; Sun. 11am-10:30pm S U P E R S A V IN G S ! W it h FREE 32 -O z . D rink i-lh. burnt» filled with w d and B e e n chile. dimM e-wrappcd m frcili to rtili» . I tom ato & cheese. C hoice o f chicken o r beef. One coupon per customer per visit. ) I fxrmts 2-18-94 Tempe: 216 E. University - just east of Forest - 829-6026 I Phoenix Locations: 12th St. & Van Buren, 253-1511 «Central À Southern, 276-7531 | 32nd Ave. & Van Buren, 272-3239 • New Location: 59th Ave. & Bethany Home, 934-6635, n COWBOYS vs. BILLS Pre-game Show; 2 pm Kickoff: 4 pm IH|Mpi|M|ltol|pM 9 2sPitchers M O E )r y to Miller Lite BIG Screen w /7 monitors Pre-Pre-Game Line 10:30 a m Phoenix Suns POOL»DARTS»PINBALL t P age 8 State P ress Friday-, January 28,1994 P olice Report A SU police reported th e follow ing incidents Thursday: • Police responded to a juvenile male who is not affiliated with ASU in the northeast lot after he activated a 911'call box without having an emer­ gency. The subject was warned not to misuse a 911 phone and his mother was called. • A male who is not affiliated with ASU report­ ed that unknown persons, removed his backpack and its contents from the mens’ locker room at the Student Recreation Center (SRC) where it was left unattended. Estimated loss is $100. • A female student reported unknown persons removed her wallet from an unsecured locker in the women's locker room at the SRC. Estimated loss is $150. • Police responded to Manzanita Hall where a female not affiliated with ASU had requested an ambulance. She was warned about loitering and trespass and taken to detox by a member of the East Valley Alcoholism Council. • A male student was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at Sonora Center. • Unknown persons criminally damaged an ash­ tray by Palo Verde Main. Damage is estimated at $100. > The intrusion alarm was activated at the University Club by unknown persons. Police found the area secure and reset the alarm. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Thursday: • A Tempe woman was sexually assaulted in her trailer Saturday by two men who entered, through a door. While ohe man held her down, another dis­ abled her with an in jection containing an unknown substance. She was then raped and sodomized. The first suspect is described as a clean­ shaven black male, darker skin tone, 45 years old, medium length hair, large build. The second suspect is a black male, sm all, thin build, unknown age and he was wearing a multi-col­ ored dress shirt. • A 27-year-old Tem pe man was arrested Tuesday for domestic violence assault after he slapped his girlfriend in the face with an open hand while in his apartment at 1133 W. 5th St. • A 28-year-old Tempe woman was arrested for domestic violence aggravated assault after she chased her boyfriend around with a butcher knife at 1133 W. 5 th St. following a verbal argu­ ment. • A 35-year-old female transient was arrested for prostitution after she agreed to perform oral sex for $5. The woman was located by police in a parking lot at 2140 E. Broadway Road perform­ ing the sex act. • An 18-year-old M esa than was arrested for shoplifting a pair of shoes from Mervyn’s at 800 E. Southern Ave. He was observed by a store security guard putting on the shoes and then he left the store without paying for them, A records check revealed that the suspect had an outstand­ ing warrant in Mesa for shoplifting. • A 31-year-old Phoenix woman was arrested for shoplifting after an employee from Fry’s, 2700 E. Baseline Road, saw her put multiple packs of cigarettes and two tubes of super glue remover in her purse. • Between fylonday night and Tuesday morning, unknown suspects threw an object through the front door glass of Chiropractic for Life, 3330 S. Price Road, and stole a 14-inch computer moni­ tor and a dot matrix printer. Police were unable to find any evidence that might help them identi­ fy the suspects. • A Tempe man assaulted his 23-year-old girl­ friend Saturday by striking her in the face with a closed fist and kicking her in the stomach with his knee during an argument over their relation­ ship and a mutually owned vehicle, • A woman was arrested for shoplifting after she attempted to leave the Smitty’s at 3232 S. Mill Ave., after she took a box of condoms without paying for them. • A 24-year-old Tempe woman found a bag con­ taining a green leafy substance under the cush­ ion of her couch. She believes it to be marijuana and said it may have belonged to her sister’s ex­ boyfriend who has since moved out of the apart­ ment at 1133 W. 5th St. Police impounded the substance and it is scheduled for destruction. Compiled by State Press police reporter Paul Matthews. SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU 1.0/ or FEE RECEIPT^ YOU'LL GET A SATURDAY O N C H A N N EL 8 P led g e y o u r s u p p o rt fo r lo cal m usic p erfo rm an ces on K B A Q -FM 8 9 .5 ! From the concert hall to your living room, KBAQ-FM broadcasts the exceptional local performances of A SU 's acclaim ed pianist Eckhart Sellheim The Joseph W ytko Saxophone Quartet The Phoenix Bach Choir O rgan concerts by A SU 's Robert C lark on the renowned Fritts organ Full-length operas performed by the Arizona O pera ,V ASU Orchestra ASU Symphonic Band ASU Concert Choir Solo and cham ber music recitals by ASU artists Future productions will bring KBAQ listeners state-of-the-art recordings from Phoenix Symphony Hall Kerr Cultural Center Gam m age Auditorium Flagstaff Festival of the Arts This year w e're doing It again! Every Sunday (b u t ONLY on Sunday), Mike Pulos of The Spaghetti Com pany will give you o n e FREE dinner* for e ac h dinner you order! It's our 2-fof-1 SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL. And it's good for th e whole y e ar a t our Tem pe, Phoenix an d S cottsdale locations. Any d ay of the week, for lunch o r tfnner, The Spaghetti Com pany is known for a g re a t m eal a t a n affordable price. But th e SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL m akes our already terrific prices oven better! O ur dinners include a full-course m eal with all th e trim­ mings - from salad to d essert. So, dollar for dollar, w hen you're hungry and you n e ed a break, you c an 't b e a t T h e Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 1! "But you MUST Hava your curvai* etudent Lb. card o r Mo racolpt w ith you to ta te advantage o t th is o lia r. 1S% gratuity added to an cRaoountad checks (except senior citizen discounts). Chicken Cordon Bkia, Steak D lJon, Shifted FHet o l Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala, Three Paata Opera and orders to go ARE NOT Included In the M or-1 spedai. O PEN AT 1 0 A.M. ON GAME DAYS! (o n tp a ify * R ESTA U R A N T PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE South on Central J u st P a s ta McDowell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. J u s t North of Indian Bend 257-0 380 483-5 869 Watch Radiothon LIVE beginning a t 8 PM | E n j o y o u r n ig h t ly d r in k s p e c ia ls . p a r t i i Ying Quartet I M usici de Montréal The N ew York Cham ber Soloists St. O laf's Choir Menahem Pressler Saturday OPEN AT 11:00 A.M. TO 11:00 P.M. SUNDAYS! S featuring performances by OLD TOWN TEMPE 4th St. & Mill 96 6-3 848 Please call during the program , 9 6 5 -8 8 0 0 o r 1 -8 0 0 -2 6 6 -5 2 3 8 to pledge yo u r support! Part of Arizona State University KA ET S ta te P ress P age 9 Friday, January 28, 1994 Harkins Cornerstone now offers student discounts B y M axwell H iggins State P ress Moviêgoihg students’ wallets will be a little heavier from how on, after Harkins Theaters begins giving stu­ dent discounts at its Cornerstone location. Starting today, students can buy tickets to any show for $3 with student ID at the Cornerstone 6 theater, located behind the Cornerstone Shopping Center at Rural Road and University Drive. The new policy is a first for Harkins Theaters. AMC Theaters, with a $4.50 student price, is the only other major chain to offer stu­ dent discounts. The Cornerstone, formerly the Mann Sun Devil 6, has undergone approximately $275,000 worth of remod­ eling after Harkins bought all of Mann’s Valley theaters last May, making it die largest movie theater chain in the Valley. In all, Harkins has spent $2 million remodeling the seven theaters acquired in the takeover. In the process of being “Harkinized,” all the old seats were replaced with high-back rocking chairs, the snack bar was transformed into a gourmet snack bar offering Coffee Plantation coffee and healthy foods alongside the usual American grease products. The box office was also redesigned, digital sound was installed, and the trade­ mark neon lights were put up. “W e w ant to m ake it feel like a branch of C enterpoint,” said Dan Harkins, owner of Harkins Theaters. The newly remodeled building is the second Harkins theater to open within a stone’s throw of campus in 1993, and the two remain the only first-run theaters in the immediate area. Harkins said it just happened that way. “Centerpoint was being planned since 1988,” Harkins said. “We had no idea then that we would acquire the Mann chain.” Harkins said the two theaters complement each other nicely. While the Centerpoint Luxury' Theaters at Mill Avenue and University Drive show major first-run Hollywood movies, the Cornerstone 6 features art films such as “The Piano” and first-run Holly wood movies that have already played over at Centerpoint or that never play there. Students have reacted favorably to the idea of having student discounts at the Comérstone 6. “It’s a great idea. I think a lot of students are going to take advantage of it,” said Kevin Keturatana, a freshman mechanical engineering student. One student offered an alternate plan for seeing cheap movies. “You can go to the co-op down the road and get movie passes to Centerpoint for $3,” said Jason Stillman, a junior sculpture major. “You’re not supposed to use them for brand new movies, but you can always lie.” • F re d e rick M edanich/S tate Press This Harkins Theatre, located at The Cornerstone, 970 E. University Drive in Tempe, is now exclusively offering student discount tickets for $3. Residence Life targets new students for on-campus housing |Who lives In the dorm s??? F r e s h m e n |63.1%| Third in a series o f articles looking a t m ajor student housing options. By G reg Z emeida S tate P ress Residence Life officials hope the educational environment, the cost of living on campus, and campus community programs offered for on-campus residents will attract new students to resi­ dential halls and help curb the loss of second-year students to offcampus housing. “The residence experience is an educational one,” said James Rund, dean of Residence Life. “To me that’s the principal differ­ ence between living on or off campus.” According to Rund, 63.1 percent of students living in the dorms last fall were freshmen. The rate fell drastically for secondyear students, totaling only 13.4 percent. Juniors made up 11.9 percent and seniors 7.3 percent. Laura Christianson, assistant director for operations for Residence Life, said two ways to keep students living in the halls is to make sure the dorms stay in good shape and to maintaining competitive pricing. She also said the University is looking at a plan to wife up most o f the student rooms for computer hook-ups to the library and to software suitable to homework use. Casey Self, adviser to the Residence Hall Association, said the University offers campus community programs to help students get more out of college. N0W LSERVIfiG W INGS! FAST, FREE Pelivery 3 2 9 -0 0 6 4 1340 E. APACHE - TEMPE MtfcMy can I m i M r "TWENTY INCHER"!!! Any wayyouslice it i e F A - r G I N - G S T O R • Chains • Leather &color cases • Rent, Lease, purchase ■ ¡ J r j m / LIFESTYLE ! • Statewide coverage J • 6 number memory } • All colors ■ (reg. $75) i Exp.»«_ LIFESTYLE or BRAVO PLUS ! BRAVO IXPRESijf • Statewide coverage • Statewide coverage • 16 number memory J • 10 number memory • 12 fit 24 hr. dock • Clock • Time code J • Automatic Y • Colors Motorola's newest! J • All colors CCQ (reg. $89») fW / 1515 W. University Dr. (just west of Priest) Ste. 105 • Tempe a a a QQA1 Demuro Corp. Square Ofc5J”O O U I $49 fM É R 1 SPECIAL ■ i ________ E • Statewide coverage • 6 number memory • Colors available (extra) ( ^ A while supplies last Al J (reg. $59) SÜN DEVIL K ¿ té“ t-M Ü v ;-’ S P E C IA L ' PIZZA&1 SODA PIZZA WITH s ilB p u 0 BRAVO • Voice Mail IH N fiH SPECIAL You Get Mm h r Yaw Pollarli ★ O nly $10 m onthly for a M otorola pager ★ Provide peace of m ind knowing you can be reached. ★ W hether you're in class or burning the m idnight oil studying, you're just a beep away. tr Ask a b o u t our stu d e n t d iscou n t. • Display At Palo Verde East and West halls, new students can join the freshman year experience program. This program helps them with career guidance, live-in tutors, and a special freshmen seminar class. Self also said that students can participate in one of the cultur­ al diversity programs on campus. There are the American Indian floor in Ocotillo Hall and the African American floors, also in Ocotillo. In addition, there is a Wellness floor in Manzanita.Hall. Students committed to healthier lifestyles can live there with no alcohol or smoking allowed on the floor. There is also exercise equipment on the floor for student use. Students have their own reasons for living on or off campus. Some students consider the closeness to campus, the social envi­ ronment and the cost to be the biggest advantages of living on campus. “I don’t have to worry about parking,” said Bridget Crawford. Sidd Negretti, who lives off campus, said, “(Living off cam­ pus) is more expensive, further away and not as convenient. You (also) don’t get a lot of social interaction.” Other students feel that quieter conditions, the freedom and the nicer rooms are the best reasons for living off campus. “The dorms were too loud, too restricting,” said Candy Carlson, a student who used to live in the dorms. “They were not homey enough.” 2 m *x» t ¡N ? O R M « t\o N , M iG M t C o W P R o M iS E d e e N ts By G A R Y LA RSO N iN ah e D oonesbury ou R F íe l a . BY G A R R Y T R U D E A U “Uh, let's s e e .... I'll try th e m am m oth.” PE O PL E NEW YORK (AP) — Sharon Stone is pained, yet enlightened, by the tag of homewrecker. In the Sunday issue of Parade magazine, die actress responds to that accusation by Naomi MacDonald, the wife of her fiancée, movie producer Bill MacDonald. “I never went on a date With Bill,” Stone said.' “We talked on the phone. I told him he'd haveto change his life if he wanted to see me. Which he did.” . . _ The MacDonald marriage is being annulled, she said. Stone said she’s living with MacDonald and they plan to marry. “But it was a bizarre episode. To have my life turned into a media event, to be painted to look like something I’m not, was very Hurtful,” Stone said. “Yet. in a strange way, it was like a spiritual renaissance for me, because I’ve had to really grow as a person hot to come out of this bitter and scarred.” BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — New Year’s in Lake Tahoe. Las Vegas in November. Ahhh. The life of a high-stakes gambler, who happens to be governor. Gov. Edwin Edwards won more than $200,000 gambling in 1993, according to an amended personal financial statement filed Wednesday with state ethics officials. The statement, required by state law, asks only for ranges of income derived from various sources, not specific amounts. Edwards, a high-stakes Craps player, put gambling winnings in the top category: $200,000 or more. Edwards visited Nevada gambling resorts at least twice in 1993:-He made a New Year’s trip to Lake Tahoe with his family and visited Las Vegas for a championship boxing match, courtesy of Caesar’s Palace. One more thing. The statement includes his annual governor’s salary: $73,440. WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP> — Someone broke into Dennis Hopper’s apartment and stole $2,600 worth of electronic equip­ ment. Between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, the thief made off with a stereo, compact disc player and a videocassette recorder, police said. The actor’s apartment is in a downtown building he bought in 1992. It has been undergoing extensive renovation since then. Jeanette Golder, a real estate agent who watches thè building for Hopper, said the alarm system must not have been working. A crew building a garage for Hopper arrived at the building early Wednesday and noticed the break-in through a basement window. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Vince Gill, Alan Jackson and Reba McEntire led nominations Thursday for thè TNN-Music City News Country Awards. Finalists for the 28th annual awards Were picked by readers of Music City News, a country music publication. Fans will pick the winners, too, for presentation June 6 on cable television’s The Nashyille NetWork. And Garth Brooks? Country music’s top seller received just one nomination: entertainer of the year. • Brooks, Gill, Jackson, McEntire and George Strait are compet­ ing for entertainer o f the year. McEntire, Lome Morgan, Tanya Tucker, Wynonna Judd and Trisha Yearwood were nominated for female artist of the year. For male artist, Billy Ray Cyrus, Gill, Jackson, Ricky Van Shelton and Strait were the finalists. Sta te P ress SPORTS-We cover good sports, bad sports, rich sports and poor sports Sports Page 11 Friday, January 28,1994 State P ress Stars shine in Sun D evils’ opener W illiamson gets 4 hits, 3 RBI’s; Ruskey wins debut in 11-2 rout W on fii’s in flfs b b teOSSU The ASU women’s basketball teas» opened its two-game road trip with a7 8 -?l toss to Oregon State in Corvallis, Ore. The Sun Devils (2-12 overall, 0-6 Pac-10) have now lost seven consecutive games. Senior Nikki Thompson and junior Tiffany Krahenbuhl each poured to 24 points in ASU’s foiled effort. Thompson also recorded three steals. Freshman MoHy Tuter collected 12 rebounds, m i sopho­ more Tamika Matlock dished off nine A SU sw im m ers m eet NAU, Texas this weekend at MPAC A rizona S ta te 's lOth-ranked m en’s swimming and diving team (4-3 overall, 13 Pac-10) wifi take on No.2 Texas today to lp .m . at th e M ona Plum m er A quatic “1 think we’ ll swim better than last weekend. Texas is a m y good team. It’S be good, it m il be a tough competition but ft will be very good,” said Assistant Coach ; Rick Graves. j On S a tu rd a y , bo th th e m en’s and women’s squads w in host in-stare rival NAU to I p.m. ASU’s women’s team is currently ranked 11th in the nation and has an overall record of 4-3 and 1-3 to die Pac10. ASU gymnasts take on Gophers The ninth-ranked ASU women’s gym­ nastics team travels to M innesota this w eekend fo r a dual m eet against the Minnesota Golden Gophers on Saturday at 7:30. The Sun Devils (3-0) are coming off of last Sunday’s hom e victory over N o .l Alabama and NoHS Stanford, and are led by junior Tina Brinkman. Brinkman has won the all-around competition at both of the Sun Devils first two meets. Saturday’s meet marks the first dual meet of the season fear the Golden Gophers (3-3). ASU to host alumni tennis match Several o f A SU ’s most outstanding m en’s tennis alum ni, including former W im bledon d oubles fin a list G ary DonneHy, return to Tempe Saturday for the annual alumni match, to be held at the Western Reserve Club at noon. Joining Donnelly in the alumni lineup is 1990 U .S. A m ateur cham pion Joel : Fmnigan, who played in three NCAA tour­ naments for ASU and was a U.S. Amateur doubles titilis t in 1989 w ith team m ate Dave Lomicky. NBA Roundup Washington 98, Dallas 95 Cleveland tOO. Chicago 84 Houston 113, Sacramento 97 Denver 113, Indiana 106 Seattle 102, Hew Jersey 92 New York 103, LA Clippers 101 NHL Roundup Pittsburgh 3, Quebec 0 Buffalo 7, Washington 2 Hartford t , Ottawa 1, fie Detroit 4, Chicago 3, OT Dallas 3, Vancouver 2, OT N.Y. Rangers 5, Los Angeles 4,O T . Compiled from sta ff and AP reports Sun Devil shortstop Randy Betten gets ready to fire the ball to first base to complete a 4-6-3 double play in the eighth inning of ASU’s 11-2 win over New Mexico State. Second baseman Joe Stoddard, the man who began the twin­ killing, is on the ground behind Batten.’ By M ike B ranom State P ress ASU’s 13th-ranked baseball team ushered in the 1994 season by showcasing a star of the present and unveiling a star of the future during its 11-2 thrashing of New Mexico State Thursday afternoon at Packard Stadium. An announced crowd of 790 watched preseason All-American third baseman Antone Williamson collect four hits in five to-bats, driving-in three runs and scoring once, starting pitcher Jason Ruskey struggled with his control in his Sun Devil debut, but still fanned nirie in five innings df shutout ball. “At this point in the season, 1-54 is now the worst we can do,” ASU coach Jim Brock quipped. Williamson wasn’t the only Sun Devil with a potent bat. All of ASU’s starters had at least one hit and four had at least two. In the Sun Devils’ eight-run sixth inning, ASU scored all but one of their runs before NMSU tallied an out. ASU started slow, collecting only three hits in the first three innings, a fact that both Brock and Williamson attributed to die team coming out a bit tight in its season opener. Williamson finally had the opportunity to test his new swing in something more than an intra-squad scrimmage and he had to have liked what he saw. “I’m usually a pretty slow starter, but 1 came out pretty hot today,” Williamson said. “It’s not like me to come out like that, so hopefully I can carry this through the year.” Williamson needed a home run in his final at-bat for the cycle, but a great diving catch by center fielder Kenny Canady ruined 1 0 X 3 = H edake Smith ties Pac-10 record, scores career-high 39 in ASU’s 88-82 win B y J u u e R eu v e r s S t a t e P r ess After allowing Oregon State to edge too close for comfort in the second half, the ASU men's basketball team — led by Stevin “Hedake” Smith’s career-high 39 points — hung on to defeat the Beavers 88-82 Thursday night at the University Activities Center. Smith drained 10 three-pointers to tie his own Pac-10 record, set last year at Oregon. The senior guard also bested his previous career-high, set Jan. 20 at USC, by four. “Smith is a tremendous competitor and great athlete,” OSU coach Jim Anderson said. “His shooting sometimes is just phe­ nomenal. I see why they call him Hedake, because I could use an aspirin about right now.” ASU (9-6 overall, 4-2 Pac-10) shot 76.9 percent in the first half to secure a 55-47 half-time lead. But the Beavers (5-10, 1-5) made the final 12 minutes of the game their wake-up call and tied the score at 66 with 11:48 remaining. The Sun Devils used two back-to-back defensive rebounds from Ron Riley and Fontana to take control. Smith sank a three pointer off Riley’s board to go up 75-71 with 7:12 remaining. James Bacon followed Fontana’s grab with a lay-in to stretch the lead to six •— the winning margin. Center Mario Bennett gave life to ASU’s inside game, pouring in 24 points and pulling down eight boards. “Thanks to Hedake outside and Mario inside, we got it done and made a couple good plays down the stretch when we let it get on the line,” ASU coach Bill Frieder said. It appeared to be all ASU early on, as the Sun Devils jumped out to a 13-point lead with 7:20 left in the first half. But the Beavers answered with a 10-0 run, spanning more than four min­ utes, to cut the lead to 44-37. OSU guard David Drakeford fueled the run with two three-pointers. However, Smith hit two treys before half-time to minimize the damage. “We’ll take it, but we’ll stop making excuses,” Frieder said. “We didn't play w ell.... We need to do a lot of correcting before Saturday night.” Sm ith led all scorers and recorded 4 steals. Kareem Anderson’s 24 points paced the Beavers. Fontana had a gamehigh 11 rebounds. W illia m Lynam /S tato Press Sun Devil guard Stevin “Hedake” Smith launches a three-pointer during ASU’s 88-82 victory over Oregon State Thursday iflghL Smith, who finished with a career-high 39 points, drained 10 threes' tying his own Pac-10 record to r threepointers made In a game. Womens tennis destroys SDSU, faces Pepperdine ! E velyn S heinkopf ate P ress The 8th-ranked ASU women’s tennis team imphed over 20th ranked San Diego State h an 8-1 victory Thursday. The Sun Devils clinched the victory after .2 Joelle Schad defeated the Aztecs’ Tanya ier 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, giving ASU its fifth of six isecutive singles victories. The results of the other five singles matches re: No. 1 Kori Davidson squashed lis a Alipaz , 6-2; N o.3 Merideth Geiger bested Shawn Egan 7-6 (5), 6-0; No 4 Page Bartelt crushed Jen Nyugen 6-3, 6-2; No.5 Kara Schertzer defeated Christy Popstra 6-3, 6-3; No.6 Julie Coppinger beat Emma Doyle 6-2,1-6, 5-4. In an exhibition match, No.7 Aimee Haas beat SDSU’s Tamara Bridges 5-7,6-1,6-0. After winning all singles matches the Sun Devils decided to continue with the doubles series, winning two and defaulting (Hie. “This was a very competitive match. The scores don’t show how close it was,” said head coach Sheila Mclnemey. Thursday’s match against San Diego State is just the beginning of a big weekend home-stand for the team . The Sun D evils w ill face Pepperdine at 1:30 p.m. Saturday and Miami at 11:00 ajn. Sunday. “Normally we don’t play three matches this close,” said Davidson. “But, we’re conditioned enough and we’ve played enough that we’re prepped.” Included in Pepperdine’s lineup are 18thranked first-year player Isabella Petrov from Mexico City and 25th-ranked third-year player M yriam Berthe from Dakar, Senegal, while Miami’s Úneup includes 27th-ranked first-year p lay er A lejan d ra V ento from C aracas, ■ Venezuela. According to Geiger, not only the rankings, but also the fact that the players who come from other countries are trained differently makes these upcoming games a challenge. “A different style of game is played in other countrieí” said Geiger. “Some use more slice and one-handed backhands. It adds surprise to the game.” S tate P ress Friday, January 28,1994 P a g e l2 Hockey club rivalry heats up Baseball__ ___ C ontinued ASU takes on UofA in 2 game series, Ice Devils 0-2 with Gats B y T odd K e l ly Sta te P ress The ASU - UofA sports rivalry surfaces once again this weekend with the ASU Ice Devils hosting the UofA Ice Cats. Two games are scheduled for the weekend, one at 7:30 Friday night and another at 1:15 on Saturday afternoon. Friday’s game will be held at Oceanside Icé Arena, while Saturday's game will be part the first game of a doubleheadér at the V eteran’s M em orial C oliseum , w ith the Phoenix Roadrunners taking on the San Diego Gulls in the second.game. The rivalry between these hockey teams “is pretty intense,” according to Ice Devil senior defenseman and team co-captain Dustin Duea. The two teams clashed twice this season, in Tucson; UofA won both games. However, the Ice Devils are Confident that they can even out. the season series with a weekend sweep. “Things are going better every day. Guys are working hard,” said ASU center Ernie Vogel. “This rivalry means everything.” Vogel thinks that the Ice Devils are beginning to close the gap between them and the Ice Cats. “The ASU program is catching up (to UofA). They’re a little further ahead; they’ve been running a little better organization for a while.” Sophomore Sean Eggert echoed Hoffarth’s sentiment of the intensity of the rivalry. According to Eggert, Oceanside Ice Arena, home of the Ice Devils, is a tightly packed arena with 900 seats at best, and “it gets pretty crazy. People are right up against the glass ... they get right in your face.” With ASU’s record of 7-6 all but knocking them out of con­ tention for qualifying for this year’s American Collegiate Hockey Association’s national tournament, the Ice Devils have their sights locked on defeating the Ice C ats.1 Their goail is “to beat UofA, of course,” said Eggert. from page The Sun D e vil Spark Yearbook Order yours today for $36.93 M atthews Center basement, Riff. 50 Spring Break ’94 South Padre Island, Texas Little Texas and Twister Alley will rock you till the sun goes dowr>. South Padre Island is convenient by car or by plane. You’ll find a flight to fit your schedule on Southwest, American or Continental Airlines via the Valley International Airport in Harlingen or, by Continental to Brownsville’s International Airport. Located on the tropical tip of Texas, South Padre Island is the hottest Spring Break destination. Literally! This year, Spring Break at SRI is hotter than ever with more music, more watersports and more legendary nightlife. Where can you be breakin' and get a spicy taste of Mexico to boot? Be a part of the College Beach Volleyball Championships, or build your part in a sand castle contest. The Country Music Association be sand-blastin’ on the beach with Confederate Railroad, the Gibson/Miller Band and Brother Phelps. But that’s not all. B a id a M a r R e s o rt 15 Acres Beachfront Special Rates for Spring Break '94 Starting at $89.00 1-800-292-7502 So what are you waiting for? Pick up your phone now and call 1-800-343-2368. Tell them you want your South Padre Island Spring Break *94 information the mail TODAY! p u z z le s . In-depth features. Help wanted ads. Letters to the editor. iMss«i[i®Knr D AILY A C T IV IT IE S & NIG H TLY DANCING Enlarged & improved with an abundance of bars Daily Promotions & Giveaway« Wave runner, Sailboat Lessons and Charters J D a ily ■Contests’ Cash & Prizes • Free Transportation l t t f h o ro sco p es. High Energy M ode Live Bands Drink Specials TBi 210-761-6406 Soudi PadreIsland, Texas Tbe Linest Spring Break CIA on the Planet _ . . »MY l k in d m */ •BEST PRICES •BEST LOCATIONS •5 4 7NIGHTTRIPSfrom' LIVE Concerts HOTTEST Dance Music R iS BUS SERVICE FREE T-SHIRTS Saudi M 1-800-SUNCHASE .INFORMATION »COLOR BROCHURE » RESERVATIONS AmericanAïfnes’ Somahmgspeckdinlheatr.' Radisson Resort Spring Break Party Headquarters Newlyrenovated, locatedon10acres of beachfront. For reservations call: 1 -6 0 0 -2 9 2 -7 7 0 4 1 -2 1 0 -7 6 1 -6 5 1 1 Continental just Planesmart: 1-800-l-FLY-SWA World news. Far Side cartoons. State news. Classified ads. Sports. Coupons. ASU news. Crossword puzzles. Weekly magazine. Theater ads. Police Report. Comic strips. Opinions. C ry p to q u o te BAHIA BEACH CLUB Hot!! Hew!! Club!! |M 11. Brock was impressed with the results of Williamson’s new swing, saying; “His hits were hard and in the right places. His short swing got even shorter. H e’s a better-looking hitter and that’s saying something.” Ruskey’s numbers were better than he pitched, but he looked impressive as he battled out of some nasty scrapes, including a men-on-second-and-third, no-out jam in the fifth. “He showed me a lot that inning,” Brock said. “I didn’t feel like I had my best stuff today and I was kind of spotty with my control,” said Ruskey, who allowed four hits and five walks in his outing. The series with the Aggies continues today at 2:30 p.m. with ASU’s Jason Bond and NMSU’s Jaime Mendes as the scheduled starters. First pitch for Saturday’s contest is scheduled at 1:00 p.m. 1-800-433-7300 14100-525-0280 International ^Airport City & county news. It's free. It's free. It's free. S t a t e P ress P age 13 Mda^Januai^28^994 St a t e P ress Swimmer feeds passion Bera excels in the sport he loves; ‘I can’t stay away from the pool’ E ditor’s note: Due to .a m isprint on Thursday, this article, is being run again today. B y D aw n J . W agner State P ress Richard Bera shifted around in the little booth at the deli as he humbly talked about his family, his team, and his aspirations. Bera, originally from Jakarta, Indonesia, grew up in a family where every child was encouraged to play a sport. Bera and his brother and two sisters all began to swim at an early age, but dropped out one by one until he was the only child still competing. ’ , ' ‘1 just can’t stay away from the pool,” said Bera, who admit­ ted that he quit swimming once, “I quit swimming one year and started to play badminton.” However, he decided to come back to swimming because, “I love the sport and I just couldn’t stay away from the pool.” Bera moved to California to attend Foothill College, where he was a two-year All-America and the national and California junior record holder in the men’s 100-meter and 200-meter freestyle. But Bera wasn’t satisfied. He wanted to swim for a NCAA Division I school. Bera first traveled to ASU for the junior national champi­ onships in 1988 and was impressed with the campus, “especially the pool,” and generally thought that ASU would be a great place to finish his college swimming career. The final thing that convinced Bera that ASU was the school for him was the acquisition of head coach Ernie Maglischo. “It was probably Ernie that made me decide to come here. I ’ve always wanted to swim with Ernie,” said Bera. Now that he is a member of ASU’s men’s swimming team, he feels there are a couple of things he wants to do and leam.’T just want to help the team. This is my first year in Division I, and I still don’t know a lot about it.” According to Maglischo, Bera has done .a lot to help the team. “Rich has a very excellent attitude about training. He is a good role model in that respect. Also, he is not temperamental at all in terms of getting along with other people.” Maglischo also said that he has never seen such a good swim­ mer, who trains so hard, and can still swim incredibly well dur­ ing a meet. Although he is still adjusting to the more competitive level of swimming this year, Bera has managed to set high goals for him­ self. In ASU meets this season, Bera has performed extremely well. During the past weekend’s meets against No.4 California and top-ranked Stanford, Bera placed first in the 100 and 200 freestyle, both the individual events he swam. Bera’s current goal is to make the 1996 Olympic swimming team. He plans to swim freestyle, and realizes that the Atlanta games will probably be his last year swimming. Bera was a member o f the 1992 Olympic team but stepped down after the death of his coach two months before the compe­ tition. In the future, Bera said he is looking forward to a career in finance and is majoring in that here at ASU. Although business will probably be in his future, he does leave the option open to become a coach someday. “The thought is. in my mind of coaching, b u t... yea, probably coaching,” ASU faces second-ranked Texas this Friday and NAU Saturday. Bera says that he is busy focusing on these upcoming meets. “These are going to be close meets because we were kind of tired last weekend, but we’re going to go back to where we were,” he said. “ Against Texas, my personal goal is to get close to swimming my best time. If I can get close to my best time anytime during the season then pretty much ... I can say that I really did my best.” W illia m Lynam /S tate P ra ia ASU freestyle swimmer Richard Bera takes a break from preparing fo r th is w eekend’s m eets against Texas and Northern Arizona. Track an d field starts stron g, a tten d s R eno in v ita tio n a l By E velyn S heinkopf State P ress Another season begins for ASU’s track and field squad this Saturday at the University of Nevada’s Invitational in Reno. “The Reno invitational is good because it is a full meet and every event participates,” said head coach Leonard Braxton. “We’re going to look and get an idea of where we are.” To our readers': Before responding to any ad requesting money be sent or invested* you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State P ress cannot assume responsibility for advertised offers. For m ore in fo an d assistan ce regarding the investigation o f an ad, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. AN N O U N CE­ MENTS The invitational will be one of three planned meets where all events will participate. Other events will be partial or single-event competi­ tions like last w eekend’s S ilv er State Invitational, in which ASU pole-vaulter Nick H ysong reco rd ed a vault o f 18 1/2 feet. Hysong’s mark is the best collegiate mark in the country this year “We want to get the first competition out of the way,” said assistant coach Steve Lernke. AN N O UN CE­ MENTS 2B D , 2B A close to A SU $495/month. Apartment Renters O R IG M O V IE p o sters sh o w / sale, M U G allery 8a-5p M on " 649-0077. 1/24-Fri 1/28. Spons by MUAB. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 1 & 2 bed­ rooms. Walk to ASU. Pool, laun­ W A NTED FO R research: dry room. On East 8th Street bet­ Healthy males 19-40yrs o f age, ween Rural & McClintock-Cape nonsmoking for clinical medical Cod Apartments, 968-5238. research. Compensation will be CUTE, CLEAN 1 bd, 5th & Har­ provided. Call 271-4232 for an dy, $295/month. Available now. ap p t 964-6437. APARTMENTS Admissions M an has y our k ey t o C o lle g e , MBA a n d Law S c h o o l a d m is s io n s . D esigned fo r so phom ores & juniors, b u t includes easy last m in u te tricks fo r seniors. Party an, know th e system and GET Ml Send S3 to: Admissions M an 4 4 0 0 N. Scottsdale Rd., Ste. 9-251 Scottsdale, AZ 85251 APARTMENTS 1BD $ 3 4 5 / m onth, 2bd $ 3 9 5 /m onth. C lo se to A SU. Apartment Renters 831-5900. 2 BDRM Apartment All new ap­ pliances $400 per month walking .distance to ASU. Call 759-7625 or 921-0517. 2BD POOL, $380/ month. Apart­ ment Renters 649-0077. 2BD, 2B A c lo se to ASU , w/d hook-up, $525/ month. A part­ ment Renters 649-0077. y VOM Ml IV »OSE ¡ ) 4 s r j g P True hum ility is contentm ent. -H e n ry F . Am iel “Practice gets boring after a while.” Lemke is one of three new assistant coaches on B raxton’s staff. In charge o f m en’s and women’s field events and multi- events, Lemke com es to ASU by way o f the U niversity of Texas-El Paso, where he served as head coach for four years. A lso added to B rax to n ’s s ta ff are Tom Doyle, previously of Ohio Sate, now coaching jumps, and Lynda Tolbert, a former Sun Devil APARTMENTS STUDIO, WALK to ASU, pool, $340/month. Apartment Renters 649-0077. APARTMENTS stand-out and 1992 Olympian, now working on sprints. “There weren’t too many plàcës I’d leave El Paso for,” said Lemke. “ASU has the potential to be one of the track programs to contend every year for championships. The academics and facilities for students were too good to pass up.” The Sun Devils are predicted to finish third in the nation this year according to Track and Field Magazine. APARTMENTS FtaJ it in the Classifieds! ASU/PAPAGO I, 2bd, 2ba, w/d, dishwasher, pool, cov'd prkng. A vail now: unfurn $750* furn $950. John, 829-7228/894-8440. RENTAL SH W W N <^___ 2BD 2B A apt. Coral Point, walkin closets both rooms & fireplace in living rm. Pref someone dean, n/s. $249/mo + util. No deposits req! Avail March 1.644-0567. STUDIO $370/ mo, $405/ mo, 2bd $520/mo, pool, tennis, ja cuzzi. A p t Renters 831-5900 $200 OFF! ATTRACTIVE RESORT condo, mstr bedroom $250, loft $195 + util ea. See! 351-8683 lv msg. FREE UTILITIES! Walk to ASU. Spacious, 2 bedroom apartments. A/C, fur-1 nished or unfurnished available. From $440/ month. Beautiful pool area, laundry facilities available. FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1224 E. Lem on 8 9 4 -2 6 2 0 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT FEMALE ROOMMATE needed. | W ill have own room in tow nhouse; 3 miles from ASU, washer/dry. Call Heather at 350-9470. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT 2B D , 2BA c o ndo n e a r A SU. Pool, w/d, yard, $535. 510 W. University, 966-0987. 3BD, 2BA, 1 m ile frond ASU, w/d, dishwasher, pool, available now, $595/month. 921-0279 FEM A LE, 2B D , 2ba 2-story apart overlooks city, w/d, 5 min from ASU, m ove-in imoied or Mar l,$315/mo. Julie, 273-4634. FEM A LE- 3BD 2ba hom e w / pool, must be clean/reliable. 68thSt/Thom as. $ 193/mo. 1/3 utili­ ties. JiU-990-2292. M /F ROOM M ATE needed by Feb. 1, Cameron Creek 2bd, 2ba, $300 mo. Call Mike, 731-4899. RENTAL SHARING M/F SHARE 3bdr.Tempe house. Clean/reliable, nonsmoker. Pets ok. Randy-941-8389. F ONLY, priv fum bd & share ba w/1 pers, 3bd, 2ba hse, w/d, pool. Brdwy/McCln. $285/mo incl util exc phone. Heather, 968-6918. RMMTE NEEDED 2/1, $300+ utils, w/d, pool, crprt, else 2 ASU. 3bd hse. Call immddy 784-4578 R O OM M A TE N EED ED to share 2 bd12 ba condo in Scot^ tsdale. Call Eric:, 946-5203. YOUNG, PROF, female to share 2bdr condo.Hayden & McDon­ ald. $325 + 172 util. 947-3327. ROOM S FOR RENT FEM A LE N O N SM OKER to share lovely, tow nhouse near ASU. Laundry, pool, includes electric, $255- Call 962-8409. Fe m a l e n o n s m o k e r , r u ral/Guadalupe. $200 plus utilities. 897-7382, leave message; HAYDEN SQUARE room avail­ able in furnished 3bed2bath con­ do. $350. contact Mike 921-3651. JEWELRY PT SALES, retail jew elry exp pref. Flex hrs. Semi-retired fe­ males encouraged to apply. Mad­ eline for appt, 968-5967. Mill Ave Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, #101. TICKETS RUSH TICKETS 2/1, sold-out show, four near stage, lower lev­ el. $5Q/ea obo. Steven, 941-1755. W ANTED: SUNS tic k e ts fo r Feb 6. Will pay top dollar! 9682767. AUTOMOBILES 1982 N ISSA N Seiitra, $500, needs work, Dagmar, 968-4733 (after 8 pjn.); 965-9081 (work). 86 CHEVY Spectrum 2-dr, am/ fm cass, a/c, custom w h eels/ tires, car runs/looks exc. Must sell, $1700 obo. Jim, 789-8714 or 531-2895. 86 SAAB 900S-ac, pow locks, sr It teal tan int, Kenwood st. Looks, runs exit. $4500.839-1508. 88 MAZDA 323-2dr, 4spd, a/c runs excellent lodes great $3550 obo. Call 858-9798. M O TO RCYCLES" TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE 89 YAMAHA F J1200, new in 91, tank bag clutch-lock radar 5G00K, like new, $4500 obo. Joe, 921-9185. $43,900. BRIGHT, clean, 2bd. 2ba U niversity Shadows Unit. Pool; tennis, clubhouse. Pat Dommer, RE/MAX Anasazi Rlty, 8387772 HONDA 150 Elite scooter, good condition, must sell. $500 obo. Leslie, 966-4047 or 898-6547. 3BD, 2BA, 1150sq ft, w/d, refrig incl, near Univ, Call Duane W . at 831-1114 or 389-7160, Century 21 AM Realty. BICYCLE BILL'S new & used ATB's, 10 spds, all under $129. $3 flat repair. 1908 E Apache. HAYDEN SQUARE LADIES 24" 10-spd bike, black , w/blue, excellent condition. Sher­ ri, 858-9616, leave message. Units for sale & lease. RE/MAX Excalibur, ask fo r Gary Greenacre, 483-3333. B ik e to ASU Q u iet subdivision 2b d , 1 -1 /2 b a, m ulti-level tow nhouse, com m . pool. M .J ., 7 3 0 - 1 7 1 2 C -21 A ll S ta r 8 3 1 -2 2 2 1 M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE SAVE BIG $$ At die grocery stCMreH 1-800-4609222 ext. 1400 FURNITURE FURNITURE FQR sale-cheap!! Roommate bailed out to NJ. AH h is s tu ff m u st go! C ouches, dressers. Call to see what else. Scott, 968-4883 or Brian, 2754626. FUTON FAVORITE All styles, all sizes. We deliver. 222-9825. LOFT- SOLID Wood, exlnt cond. holds 2 beds across, removable ladder, shelves underneath! Call 784-9043 o r 956-9666. Hurry$200 obo! SOFA SET, dinette, bed, futon, day bed, entertainm ent center, dresser. Cheap. 352-7249. COMPUTERS BICYCLES MTN. BIKE, '93 G ary Fisher, shocks Manitou II. Brian, 7849921. TRAVEL 2 MARDI GRAS tickets from Phx, leave 2-11, return late 2-15. $800 obo. Jake, 995-2026. CRUISE SPRING b re a k from LA to Mexico on Princess from $516 4 days all inclusive. Call Judy 967-7855 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost placés world­ wide. I also buy transferable-coupons/awards. 968-7283. FLY FREE! (Almost) London $99 r/t; Sydney $250 r/t; any U.S. o r ini’!. Free information: 1-800-745-0364. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED* SALES HELP WANTED* F O O D S JR V T C I^ A M ED ICA L o ffice in S c o t­ tsdale needs fulltime permanent front & back office person. Typ­ ing & com puter know ledge a m ust. W ill train. G r e a t ad ­ vancement potential- Apply in person 9-5 M-F, 4020 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd, Suite 108. FIDDLESTICKS FAMILY Fun Park requires P/T evening/weekend help. Have fun, make mon­ ey- Apply in person 1155 W. El­ liot , Tempe TEICHERT MARKETING is hir­ ing individuals interested in run­ ning prom otions fo r P h oenix area businesses. Excellent com­ pensation pkg.Great exp for those interested in sales/mktg careers. Flexible schedules. Please call 921-7755 between l-4pm. A ccepting cocktail sérv ers & lunch food servers, w ill train, pt/ft. concern w/appearance, re­ liability & personality are im ­ portant Apply in person M-F 25pm, 5101 N 44th S t (44th S t & Camelback) 952-0585. AFTER SCHOOL activity lead­ ers p/t. Must be 18, self-directed, and enthusiastic. Apply Tempe YMCA, 7070 S. Rural Rd. A R E YOU a good com m uni­ cator? Would you enjoy talking with prospective students about ASU? If so* you may have what it takes to join the Student Tele­ counseling Outreach Program in U ndergraduate A dm issions. Earn $5/hr w orking Sunday 37pm and M onday-Thursday 59pm. Pick up your jo b referral form today at the Student Em­ ploym ent O ffice: Job #5499H. Minimum 2.5 GPA required. ARE YOU trying to pay off your credit Card bills? The ASU Tele­ fund is hiring p/t employees $5/hr + incentives to start. Call now, 965-6754 for an interview. BOOKKEEPER; PT w/consulfing firm . Interm ed acctng re­ quired. Develop financial stnuits & spreadsht acctng clata-entry. Send resume, transcripts to: Til­ ton & Go. CPAs, 2659 W; Guad­ alupe, #D104, Mesa, AZ 85202. CHESS COACH to teach ele­ mentary students after school 3 days a week at Tempe schools. 730-7245. C O LLE G E STU D EN TS and teach ers! C h ild re n 's sum m er camp in Oracle, AZ is looking for program leaders, counselors, life­ guards, w ranglers, cooks, & a reg. nurse to work June 1-Aug. 13. Good salary, jo b exp., plus room and board. W rite YMCA Camp, POBox 111 1 ,Tucson, AZ 85702 or call 602-884-0987. COMPUTER PROGRAMMER Great opportunity fo r a Borland & Pascal DOS programmer with experience. Jim, 897-9434. COSMIC PIZZA now hiring de­ livery drivers $6-10/hr, flyer dis­ tributers $5-7/ttr; experienced p izza cooks, pay neg o tiab le. Work custom made sched. Fast track to management. Meet fab­ ulous babes. Apply 1523 £ . Ap­ ache Blvd. No phone calls please. CRUISE LINE, entry level on board positions available, great benefits.' (714)549-1569. IMMED OPENINGS-Eam extra income w/ environmental co.Pt/ft great attitudes only.840r5980. : MARC CENTER Serving people with disabilities since 1957. Call our job hotline: 962-4838. P/T W A RR A N TY w ork for window, door manu. Statewide. M ust have truck be clean-cut, personable. 2 person team pre­ ferred. 998-9696. PART TIM E people needed to pose as custom ers to critiq u e sales people. Must have exc writ­ ing skills. See Ten Fri., 10am2pm at Student Svc Bldg, in p/t emp office. 602-296-3000. PART TIME. Retail sales posi­ tion. $8.20 to s tart. F lexible hours. Evenings/weekends avail­ able. Scholarhips awarded. No experience required. 968-1840. PROBATE RESEARCH assistant needed in Phoenix area. Flexible hours. No experience necessary. $7/hr. Call 803-722-0118. PT, APPROX 20 hrs/wk. 2 posi­ tions open immed. Flex sched. $5/hr. Near campus. Quality con­ trol for nationwide book d ist CaU 921-7670, ask for Alii or Jay. RESPON INDIV for gen cleanup/maint at various houses near ASU. Trans a plus. 437-1048. SHOE SHINERS $8-10/hr, even­ ings ft/pt. Will train. Ladies en­ couraged. 894-8759. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. The Big B ear Tennis Ranch in the Southern California Mountains is hiring live-in counselors for the summer. We are looking for Ten­ nis Instructors, Jet Ski & Water Ski Instructors, Recreation Coun­ selors & Office Counselors. Con­ tact Bob at 909*585-3133 for in­ formation & an application. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! HELP WANTEDSALES NEED A JOB? We need 5-10 people fo r part time work from 3-7pm. We sell tools nationwide & well pay. you $7/hr to start. No weekends & no exp nec. Call Alex 820-8408 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ASU SUMMER SCHOOL In BERMUDA CARIBBEAN Earn up to 6 ASU cred its. Inform ational m e e tin g on Thursday, February 3, 1994 in MU Room 219 (Navajo) from 2-3 p.m . if unable to attd n d , call 965-4630 for information packet. I SPRING BREA K | TRAVELMORE (9 6 7 -0 5 7 5 ) S tu d e n t tr a v e l s p e c ia lis ts ! s e r v in g ASU f o r o v e r 12 years. M a za tla n fro m $ 3 3 6 in c lu d in g a ir & h o te l, cru is ­ es f r o m $ 3 5 7 . L o ca te d in th e C o rn e rsto n e M all. HELP WANTEDCLERICA L PT OR F T service shifts avail from 1 lam-7pm M-F. Must be at least 19 yrs old and enjoy work­ ing in a casual atmosphere. Apply in person. Pete's 19th Hole, Ken MacDonald Golf Course, just off Rural, 1/2 mile south of Guada­ lupe Rd., by YMCA. RED ROBIN WORLD GYM Scottsdale needs pt/ft counter help. Apply 1465 N. Hayden, Scottsdale. No calls. Tëmpe has immediate openings for experienced wait staff w/daytime availability. Apply in person, 1375 W. Elliot. DATA EN TR Y RED ROBIN G reat opportunity to use your 10-key & data entry skills. T em porary assign­ m e n ts w ith p e rm a n e n t p o te n tia l. E x p e rie n c e required. Never a fee. Tempe- Cooks earn top .wages, bonuses & paid vacations. Apply today, 1375 W. Elliot. Call Stivers 9 6 6 -1 1 0 0 EOE M /F /D /V HELP WANTEDF O O D S |R V IC g _ A BITE of NY- hiring exp cock­ tail servers, bartenders and door­ man. Apply in person Mon 1/31, Tues, W ed, 1 lam -4pm , 640 S. Mill, Suite 101.967-4448ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for drivers & counter help. Earn up to $8/hr. Sammy B's Pizza. 945-8850. : y AZ COUNTRY Club hiring p.m. food & cocktail servers. No exp. nec. Must be able to work wee­ kends. Apply at 5668 E. Orange Blossom (56th St/Thomas). BROWN'S CAFE; 570 S. Col­ lege, Tempe, is hiring delivery & counter help. Stop by to apply. COCKTÀIL/ BAR maid needed pt dayis for neighborhood pub in S. Tempe. Dependable; friendly & enthusiastic a must. Accepting applications Mon 1-31 & Toe 21 ,8am-11am only. 6322 S. Price, 831*0564. TONY ROMAN'S in Scottsdale-pm line cook. Must1have experience. CaU Flavio, 949-8900. TONY ROMA'S in ScottsdaleD elivery driver w anted. M ust have clean mvr+neat appearance. We supply vehicle. Call Brian, 949-8900. HELP WANTEDC H Ig C A M ^ CHILD DEVELOPMENT inajor preferred. PT as needed, af­ ternoons only. Call 345-6341. .$700/ WK Canneries; $4500/mo deckhands. Alaska summer fish­ eries now hiring. Em ployment Alaska, 1-206-323*2672. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES A G G R E SSIV E SE LF-M O T I­ VATED salés person needed to market defense pepper spray. No experience necessary. Transpor­ tation needed. Smiting fee $65. Call 548-1222. Hrs; noon-mid­ night. Become a d ealer o r dis­ tributor, $500 investment. MAKE BIG $$ selling America's hottest defense products (sprays, alarms, more). (602) 368-6642. Free whlsle catalog. Say it witli t Classifiai! RESTAURANTS/ BARS C a llin g a ll A S U SP O R T S FA N S!! Z d r a f t s .......... $2 I m p o r t B tls....$ 2 1/2 P ric e A p p e tiz e rs • 4 S a te llite s • i s S c re e n s "W e s h o w a ll S u n s & Io w a G am es!" W O O DSHED II NW C o rn e r D obson & U n iv e rs ity 844-SHED NANNY'S P/T days evenings or weekend hrs. Must have reliable transportation.Call 345-2433. WANTED: CHILD care & light housekeeping, S. Tempe, approx. 12 hrs7wk. Must have car. Salary neg. +$.25/mi mileage. 820-2335. JO B OPPORTUNITIES AA CRUISE and travel employ­ ment guide. Earn big $$$ + travel the world free (Caribbean, Eu­ rope, Hawaii, and more!) Hurry! Busy spring and summer seasons rapidly approaching. Free stud­ e nt tra v e l club m em bership! (919) 929-4398 ext. C145. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers. Apply in person M-F 10am-5pm, 5001 E Washington. CRUISE SHIPS hiring - Earn up to $2,000+/mo. on Cruse ships or L and-T our com panies. W orld travel. Summer & full-time em­ ployment available; No exp nec­ essary. For info, call 1-206-634-: 0468 e x t C5918 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Friday VMMI with Zen Lunatics Drink Specials Bpnt-lam _____ S a tu rd a y |B e d a p in s | Iw ith Dead Animal Pickup ■ $1.50 Margaritas ■ 11am-9pm JUikkiity Stempia® A busi 8pm-iipm 2 to ri FajHas Fu- a Good Time call 966-1300 HELP WANTEDGENERAL C A M P S E Q U O IA SU M M ER JO B S a co ed cam p in the Catskill Mtns. of NY has openings for co ach es, instructors & counselors in land & water sports, theater, arts, adventure program s and more! Ju n e 17-August 19. O utstanding facilities with travel allowance, competitive salary, room, board and laundry. Contact; C ounselors, support staff - children's cam ps/N ortheast. Top salary, rm/bd/laundry, travel allow ance. M ust h av e skills In o n e of the following activities: Archery, a rts & crafts, b a s e ­ ball, basketball, d a n ce (jazz, tap, ballet), dram a, drum s, field hockey, football, golf, guitar, gym nastics, ice hockey, horse­ back riding-hunt sea t, karate, lacrosse, nature, photography, p ia n o , p ioneering, rocketry, rolierblading, ro p e s, sailing, scuba, soccer, swim team , tennis, th e a ter technicians, track, video, waterski, W.S.I., windsurfing, wood. Kitchen stew ard, cooks, bus drivers, m aintenance, nurses, secretaries. SEQUOIA Box 1045 Woodstock, NY 12498 Men call o r write: Camp W iriadu fo r Boys 2 2 5 5 G lades Rd., Suite 406E, B oca Raton, FL 33431 (407) 994-5500 Women call o r write: Camp Vega or Girls PO Box 1771, Duxbury, MA 02332 - (617) 934-6536 ' W e w ill be on campus in the Student Union from 11am4pm on February 8th, room 206A & E. or by calling Interviews on campus in late February. LAPTOPS AY TO S MAC SE 4/20 FDHD, mouse & KB, softw are, trav el case, exc cond, $500 obo. 968-9213. JC C E S S MACINTOSH COMPUTER for sale. Complete system including printer Only $500. Call Chris 1800-289-5685 We need highly motivated people for one of the fastest growing telemarketing companies in the United States. We offer: $6/hour guaranteed paid weekly * Commissions up to an additional $8/hour * Paid holidays * Health and dental insurance » Career Opportunities. WORD PROCESSOR-CANON Starwriter60 w/ bubble je t print­ er & auto paper feed. $400/obo. Bryan or Dawn, 461-8065. 965-6755 ASU needs your help! The ASU Telefund is hiring p/t employees to call alumni & parents. Flexible hours & relaxed environm ent. Call now! 965-6754. CORK'N CLEAVER JO B OPPORTUNITIES (914) 679-5291 Guaranteed lowest prices. IBM Thinkpads & Toshiba Porteges & Satellites. Call The Educational Solutions C a . At 1-800-469-0060 or Pat Becker at 205-8202. State Prati Cianitia it URGENT PT LIFEGUARD wanted asap. Paradise Valley Country Club. Call Joe Phillips, 840-8100. FOR SALE: Mac SE, $200 If in­ terested call Robyn, 968-8381. W ORD PR O C ESSOR : Tandy 1000 w/printer. Like new. $200. Hurry, at this price it w ill sell quickly! Call today, 820-8258. Sta te P ress Friday, January 28,1994 P ag e 14 HELP WANTEDGENERAL APPT. SETTERS needed parttime. Flexible schedules, $5/hr. + commissions, 481-9200. 96 PART-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY - P r o M a r k f i yrr^ fJL ProMark O n* Marketing Services, Inc. RESERVATION SALES REPRESENTATIVES Alamo is the perfect place to begin and further a rewarding career in the travel industry. W e're looking fo r sharp, quick thinking students w ith high energy and an enthusiasm fo r people. We offer: •Paid comprehensive training •Convenient Scottsdale location •O pportunities for career advancement •Full and part-tim e positions •Evening, weekend schedules available Openings require good keyboard skills (35-40 W P M ) and an e x c e lle n t te le p h o n e m ann er. Please a p p ly in person fro m 9a m to 7pm Monday to Saturday at 8655 E. Via de Ventura, Suite F300, Scottsdale, or send a resume to: Director of Reservations Alamo Rent A Car, Inc. Suite F300 8655 E. Via de Ventura Scottsdale, AZ 85258 An Equal Opportunity Employer 1232.T e m ^ way 7 8 4 -1 5 9 9 S tate P ress RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS S u p e rb o w l S u nd ay UVE MUSIC! MARCONIS « 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. -N O c o v e r - ^ S BANDERSNATCH . 5th St. &Forest BREWPUB @AR & ÜRILL Buffet New York During th e Game PIZZA! 99 < leaf seeks During 1st Half During 2nd Half I posfPAm — I $t In the House (A ll Night) NO COVER Before 9 p.m. •Reserve Your O w n Table* Ask your b arten d er for details 9 6 6 -2 0 2 0 ÿ lf f lY ’C PIZ Z A & PASTA Where ASU Goes for Pizza SUNNY'S DELIVERS. $1 12 " o r 16" D in e -ln , P ic k -U p , D e liv e ry 968-6666 1301 E. University REWARD: MAJOR Lingo show at Austin's on 1-;21 94, lost fa­ vorite black coat. Please call if you have i t 965-7665.' FUNDRAISING ) $ 9 9 9 GET EXCITED, for sorority rush Feb. 2-7! Get your applications to the Greek Life office today ! SORORITY RUSH is coming! , G et yo u r ap p licatio n s at the Greek Life office in Student ServSPRING BREAK trips to Maza­ tlan starting a f $199 (bus) and $309 (air). For more info call Col­ lege Tours at 1-800-395-4896 or evenings, 829-1319. PERSONALS A DOZEN roses delivered. Best deal in tow n! C all A fterhours Flowers. 894-3419. TH IG H CREA M . It re a lly works!! Get rid of ugly cellulite. Lose inches. Call 784^8767. ASU F R A T E R N IT IE S -^G et ready for AXO Rodeo D ays!!! Checks are due Monday . PEN PALS ATTN, ALL Greeks: All Greek Spring Break hip to Cabo. Party with Greeks from UofA, NAU, ASUv T ex as T ech, C o lo rado State, UNLV & San Diego. More info, call College Tours at 1-800395-4896! Evenings, 829-1319. SEEKING FEMALE friend via correspondence. WM inm ate. 30% tall, sincere, positive and ASU educated. Fm not into headgames but would like a thoughtful relationship. All answered. Terry Christensen,' Box 2799776020« Globe, AZ 85502. $$C O LLE G E M ÔNE Y$$. S ch o larsh ip m atching g u a r­ anteed! Free info booklet. 24hr message: 800-434-6015 exf280. CHI OMEGA pledges-thank you for a great semester-we are so proud o f you! Jen, Aimee & Lau­ ren. C O LLEG E SCH O LA RSH IPS available! Free message gives details: 561 r5739 é x t 112; PRE-MED? LET us help you get accepted to medical school. Call for information. GSA Consult­ ants. 800-825-9850. C H i-6 JEN G : Saturday I can hardly w ait Saturday can you wait Saturday Saturday v Me. RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800-‘ 351-0222. . C H I-0 TRACI- Only one more day. Tin so proud of you! Love, Big Sis. ST A TISTIC A L A N A LY SIS, dissertations; research projects, etc. $40/hr, 1-hr min. 837-1999. RUSH ALPHA KAPPA PSI Professional Business Fraternity A ll p o te n tia l b u sin e ss m a jo rs w e lco m e. V isit our booths in front o f the B A C b u ild in g a n d o n Cady Mall. . Funded by ASASU C all th e G r ee k Záfe o ffice a t 9 6 5 -3 8 0 6 Y our In d iv id u a l H oroscope = TERM PAPERS, resumes, cover letters on the Macintosh. Call 2664940 for information: For Friday, January 28,1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You are quite aggressive today and must be careful not to ride roughshod over the feelings of others. Career gains come now through intuition and creativity. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You will have to deal with sensi­ tive types on the job today. D on’t let a minor matter escalate into a resentm ent; Evening hours are perfect for leisure and romance. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) A m ore re a lis tic a p p ro a ch is needed in romance. An eye for luxury could cause you to over­ spend. Home-based activities are favored over outside entertain­ ment tonight. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) A family member may need spe­ cial consideration now. It is best not to bring weak problems home from the office. Partnership rap­ port is excellent though tonight. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) The wrong tone of voice could upset the apple1cart in dealings w ith o th e rs. A ccent ta c t and diplomacy. Special luck comes now to those engaged in artistic work. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) A small thing, like who picks up the lunch tab, coiild cause hurt feelings now. Try not to get upset ab o u t fin a n c ia l c oncerns; Romance is highlighted tonight. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Try not to let a minor concern escalate into a war of words with a close tie. Others may tend to be pushy. You will enjoy creative and domestic interests after dark. TUTORS COMPUTER HELP-CUSTOM­ IZED solutions to computer pro­ gram m ing and hom ew ork a s­ signments. 649-8703 WANTED DONORS NEEDED for Desert Cryobank sperm donor program. All medical expenses paid. Fee paid to donors .m eeting strict medical criteria. C all 957-1879 for complete information. I NEED a room! Close to cam­ pus, Not fancy. C heap or w ill work for rent. 993-4301, leave message, Lyn. Volunteer Egg Donor Needed Professional couple requires die services o f a female to act as an oocyte donor. A ll medical expenses paid plus fee paid to donon ■Donor must be from East Indian Subcontinent •20-32 years o f age •In good health, with no hereditary disease factors. N eed a back issue o f the State Press? For mòre information, please cali Weyland at (602)956-7481 M ISCELLANEOUS Double Header Hockey: ASU vs UofA & Roadrunner vs. San Diego. Saturday, 1-29 Call 967-6507 Fr a n c k D rake = You can pick it up at the inform ation desk in the basem ent o f M atthews Center from 8am -5pm M onday-Friday. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 tpN ov.21) M orning hours could rind you nursing a real or imagined slight. Don’t let tem peram ent under­ mine productivity on the job . You will meet someone interest­ ing tonight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) M oney could com e in and go right out today unless you are careful. You will be pleased .with today’s developments on the job. Pleasure pursuits may be costly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Plans for a trip should fall nicely into place. You may be fascinat­ ed by a new in te re s t today. Diplomacy is needed on the job and with family members. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You will talk up a storm now, but try to sec the other fellow’s point of view. Friction could arise over ideological matters. Money mat­ ters should improve. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mär. 20) You and a loving tie get along in many ways today, hut you may disagree about a money matter now . S o cial life is favored. Welcome new friendships. YOU BORN TODAY are both idealistic and practical, but some­ times have difficulty reconciling these qualities. You are usuälly found in an intellectual or artistic career rather than business. At times, you can be fixed in your ideas, yet you are also inventive. You are cap ab le o f a rtistic achievements that are ahead of the times. You may be especially drawn to music, drama and art. Birthdate of: Artur Rubinstein, pianist; Colette, writer, and Alan Alda, actor. ©1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. S t a t £ p r £ s s V a le n tin e 'S e c tio n F e b r u a r y 1 4 ,1 9 9 4 ’ Liners are only $1.75 for the first 3 lines, $1 each additional line. Deadline is February 10 before noon. A unique boxed ad is only $7. Deadline is February 9 before noon. State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement HEALTH & FITNESS EAT FOOD you like and lose weight amazingly. Free recorded message: 561-5739 e x t 114. TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G $2/PG, $15' resumes. Proofed. L aser. F ast. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. STATE P r e s s C la ssified Ad O rder Form Name Hom e Phone B usiness Phone A ddress C ity, S tate Z ip P le a se print o ne letter p er box, leave a blank box betw een words. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. ASU AJREA typing, w/p, editing« transerptn, W ordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime FAST TURNAROUND- Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. FREE 1ST pg w/min 5 pgs, new clients. Term papers, resumes, thesis, letters. Gail, 481-9427. SO R O R ITY R U SH QUESTIONS? M ISCELLANEOUS LET ME do your typing. Steele S e c re ta ria l S ervice. D ebbie Steele, 438-8856. EL EC TR O LY SIS BY D egna Perm: results, the blend method. Rural/Southem area 921-1146 CHI OMEGA Traci- you are an awesome addition to the fam! One more day! Love« Grandsis. X Q G REAT- Great grand sis, Kim B.- Good luck tomorrow! Luv, Arti. TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G SERVICES CHI OMEGA Brandi-The big 21 is just a day away ! Welcome to . the suite and its y our tu rn to scryb-Ha! Jen. Where ASU Goes for Pizza SUPER BOWL SPECIAL C O LLEG E TOURS has your ticket to die hottest Spring Break destinations. Trips to Caiicun, Mazatlan and Cabo at the best prices arid the most for your $. For more info call 1-800-3954896 or evenings, 829-1319. SUBMIT YOUR fiction, non-fic­ tion, poetry, and artwork to the 1994 edition o f Between Palm and Forest Bring submissions to McClintock Hall box #32 by 1/31 or call 784-9001. CHI OMEGA Cris: Tomorrow's : it so if you’re not psyched, just wait!!! Chi-Q Love, Bran. PIZ Z A & PASTA ; XQ LIL sis Jordan- O nly one more day! Get excited fo r to ­ morrow! Luv, your Big Sis. GO GREEK! Don't miss out on sorority fun! Application dead­ line is January 31. CHI OMEGA Roomie-Here’s to dis, a new hat collection & out dew bud Roy. Go skeletpns-win. 1 C o u p o n P e r P iz z a XQ KIM B.: Tomorrow is the big day!! I love ya pnd am so excited far you to go active! Love, Court­ ney. (B4E BRAN: Is the answer 8? C. OFF ANY PIZZA XQ KERRY- Congratulations, you are almost there! I am very ’proud of you. VSuzi. DEANNA- HAPPY B-Day Chica! Can’t W8 2 Celebra8. vKristi. MONEY MAKER fo r groups, clubs, frat o r sor. No up-front costs, no inventory. High quality products, 9674)016. 41 1 S. M ill A v e . PERSONALS 12" for $4.50 16" for $6.50 E v e ry d a y! toppings extra FREE ^ g /F o y N r v _ _ ANY DRINK ( Page 15 Friday, January 28,1994 1 WANT IT NOW! Desktop Publishing: Typing, re -; sume service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966r1984. Why Type it Yourself? Prof. Secretary, A SU grad. A PA /M L A experience. L aser, delivery, fax, rush orders o k f Theresa >924-1276 Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility of the State Prase shad not exoeed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the firs t insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify fo r make-goods. No refunds wM be given, but H you need to can­ cel your ad a credit w ill be held on account tor future advertising. 3 C heck# . . □ h b □! Bank Card Number O rM rie koense * □ I P Private-Party J 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day A I s Com m ercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.00 per line, per day 3 line m inimum . Add a bold headline fo r the co st o f 2- lines. D ales you wish your ad to ru n :_____ Price par Day $ _____________ Sol Days X __________ Total State P ress Friday, January 28,1994 , / ì ills 1 f i / l i L i lL L La :/ 1 — _ ^ . L L L L,. l ' L L L U ! : : f i \ ' I \ l i ' ** , i - Hj*1 club Sup er Bowl Party Complimentary Buffet Gam e starts at 4 p m Doors open at 3 p m Pizza, Wings, Subs, Veggies Duringthe Game w Longnccks During 151Half During 2nd Half I ■ ---------------------------------Ü1. r a in ? W?S. ff? W Ü »A Post-Party < IÜ » ANY DRINK INTHE HOUSE ALL NIGHT! D JOE p p : / spins your favorite A lternative, Disco and Techno Musi; No Cover Before 9