Vol. 78 No. 42 An Independent Morning Dally_________________ Thursday, March 24,1994 AS A SU sends 3 regent selections to Sym ington B y G reg Z emeida S tate P ress The often turbulent student regent se lectio n process concluded Wednesday night when the Associated Students of ASU executive committee sent the names of three Candidates to Gov. Fife Symington for consideration. The three candidates are Shannan P aul, a sophom ore ju s tic e studies major; Kevin Myer, a junior philoso­ T ung phy major; and David Tung, a senior psychology and sociology major. Tung was the third and final candidate to be given the nod by the committee — Myer and Paul had been approved in a previous meeting. This action comes after the ASU West Student Forum sent its own three student regent candidates to the governor during Spring Break without ASASU approval. The final three candi­ dates were supposed to have been approved by both schools. ASASU President Rossie Turman said ASASU sent the three names to the governor without ASU West’s approval because the ASU West Student Forum had already broken from the agreed-upon selection process. "At the beginning of this year, several parties signed on to a process, voted on a process, and did everything officially to tie themselves to the process," Turman said. “At this point, it is my opinion that several parties have broken from the pro­ cess, thereby breaking their official agreement, breaking their personal word, and are nothing more and nothing less than liars.” ■■■ Turman went on to say that he was asked by the gover­ nor’s office to send three candidates by 5 p.m. Wednesday. He was not told if the governor would ignore the candi­ dates sent by ASU West. Attempts to reach Symington’s press secretary, Doug Cole, were unsuccessful. ASASU Campus Affairs Vice President Kurt Wilhelm said the committee had to take the action it did because of time constraints. ‘Today, it’s really our only choice,” he said. “We needed to send three (on Wednesday) if we wanted to have our voice heard in the selection process.” ASASU Executive Vice President John Malik said the T urn to ASASU, page 9. A S U w o u ld d od ge n ew b ill to reduce em p loyee travel Officials: ASU in com pliance w ith plarfs mandated reduction B y Sh a w n Boyd State P ress ASU’s efforts to reduce employee travel to campus would allow the University to duck a plan in the Arizona Legislature calling for employers to cut their employees’ vehicle use. The bill, which moved through the Senate easily, would amend the Arizona Air Quality Act, passed in 1993. It is scheduled to be heard in the House of R epresentatives’ Environment Committee today. V Under the bill, major employees would have to create a plan to reduce travel to work by either encouraging telecom­ muting or compressing the workweek. T urn to P ollution , page World/ Nation STA TE PR ESS W eather Outlook In crea sin g clo u d s and breezy. High 75. Mideast peace talks move for­ ward. but a 22hour siege in Hebron puts peace on shaky grounds. Page 3 2. Samantha Feldman/Stato Press Corwin Townsend, a second-year law student and president of the Black Law Students Association, participates In a demonstration Wednesday morning outside the ASU Law College. Members of the group were protesting the lack of black professors in the Law School: , Students picket law school Protesters: College lacking, in black, H ispanic faculty B y M ika A kikuni State P ress Multicolored placards proclaiming messages like “No more lies” and “Hire black professors now” swung high in the air Wednesday, as nearly 70 students avidly demon­ strated in front of the ASU College of Law to protest the lack of black and Hispanic law faculty members. Anglo and Hispanic students, led by members of the Black Law Students Association, picketed for almost five hours, chanting angry phrases at their professors as they passed by. “1 am here because we need black and Chicano profes­ sors,” said Javier Ramos, a second-year law student and member of the Chicano-Latino Law Students Association. “They (the law school) are practicing racist policies by not hiring minorities.” First year law student Tracy Stigler said the law school is not trying hard enough to bring diversity to the school’s faculty. “They (the law school) have said they’ll try to do some­ thing, but it’s the same lie every time,” she said. BLSA President Corwin Townsend said his organiza­ tion put together Wednesday’s demonstration after repeat­ ed and fruitless demands it made to the law school’s dean. Richard Morgan, to hire black professors. In its demand to Morgan, the BLSA asked the law school to allow the asso­ ciation’s inclusion in the screening process of prospective African American applicants, Townsend said. Townsend said a charge made by a former African American professor, John Morris, before he died, lit “a fire underneath BLSA” to start taking action against the institu­ tion. : • Morris, one of only two African American tenured pro­ fessors hired by the law school in 25 years, died last December. In a letter he wrote to the president of the Hayzel B. Daniels Bar Association, the professor stated that a majority of law school faculty members are opposed to affirmative recruitment because they feel minorities “do not have the intellectual ‘horsepower’ to perform up'to the standards that they believe they exemplify.” Morgan has denied those charges. Presently, the law school employs 27 faculty members with tenure. O f those, one is Mexican-American and another is Argentinean. There is no black faculty member with tenure. W ith picketing going on in full force behind him, Townsend said, “If after this protest, our demands are not met by the law school in a prompt fashion, the next step will be a lawsuit. And, we already know the outcome.” A fter the p ick etin g , M organ said the law school “has decided to continue our com m itm ent T urn to P rotest, page 2. $19 m illion law suit served to ASU B y G arin G roff State P ress A $19 million lawsuit filed by the former director of ASU student health was served to the University late Wednesday morning, an ASU general counsel spokesperson said. Mary Stevens, associate general counsel for ASU, said she expects a statement will be made today after the Office of General Counsel reads the 90-page complaint. “Because of the personnel aspect and because of the litiga­ tion aspect, we’re pretty limited on what we can say,” she said. The complaint was filed in Maricopa County Superior Court March 9. Dr. Lorrie Vollen, former director of student health, stated in the suit that she was forced to resign because she “blew the C -tA T E P R E azo 5PM ^ A g a Z Ï Î 4^ Center section whistle” on what she calls dangerous student athlete medical policy. Athletic director Charles Harris usurped her authority as student health director, Vollen states in her complaint, by making medical decisions and revamping the student athlete policy. Vollen said ASU administrators condoned Harris’ actions, allegedly telling her that “she should let Harris be and do what he wants’ and ‘that Harris has aright to be happy.’” The lawsuit was also served Wednesday to ASU’s outside attorney, Ronald Lebowitz, Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods and to state risk management (the state agency that would be forced to pay most of the damages in the suit if ASU were to lose), Stevens said. Sports W here T o Find It Page 15 Classifieds................ ...... 17 ....14 Comics............ ........6 ....... 19 Opinion..................... ........4 Police Report.......... ........7 Sports.................I...... ......15 ..... ...2 W o rld /N a tio n ....... ...... ........3 The Sun Devil men’s tennis team survived a scare from the 3-12 New Mexico State Aggies in a 4-3 victory Wednesday. S tate P ress Thursday, March 24,1994 P age 2 Protest T oday C ontinued The Today section is a daily calendar o f events print­ ed as a service to d ie ASU com m unity. Request? are printed according to ike space available each dap. Campus d ubs end organisations may submit written entries to the Shoe Press in the basement o f M atthews Center, Room 15. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r con­ tent, space and clarity. Deadline fo r entries is noon the day before publica­ tion. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Closed daily meeting, Boon, basement of the old church at the Newman Center, north­ west comer of College am) University. • Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) Program — IRS-trained volunteers will be providing free tax help to students, faculty and staff, 6 p.m., Armstrong Hall Room 114. • Hispanic Business Students Association — Academic luncheon, guest speak Paul Luna from Pepsi, 11:30 a.m., MU Alumni Lounge. • MUAB Special Events Committee — Open meeting; 3 p.m., MU Conference Room 1A. • Baptist Student Union — D iscussion: "Is There Historical Proof o f the Resurrection?” 7:30 p.m., LL C57. , • W om en’s S tu dent C enter — “T aking C are o f Yourself” series: “Sex Discrimination: The Truth About Women and Alcohol,” 3:40-4:30 p.m.; follow ed by women o f color discussion group, S p.m.. Women’s Student Center, MU lower level. • University Libraries — Class for English and foreign language faculty and graduate students to introduce the new format o f MLA on CD-ROM, 9:40-11:10 a.m., Hayden Library Room C6. • American Indian Institute — Pre-registration work­ shop, 1-2 p.m., American Indian Institute conference room, Engineering annex. • University Toastmasters — Open weekly meeting, 6:30 p.m., MU second floor. • Campus Crnsade for Christ — “Thursday Night Live:” open meeting, teaching and training, 7:30 p.m., Physical Science H-wing Room ISO. • C anterbury E p iscopal C am pus M inistry — Eucharist, dinner, Bible study and meeting, 6:30 p.m., St. Augustine’s Parish, 1723 S. College Ave. from page 1. to diversify the faculty. “The only action I have taken - two or three weeks ago was to appoint a faculty task force to try to figure out how we could improve our process of generating applications from minority faculty,” Morgan said. ‘T he law school has needs to diversify in the area of gender and race, and the faculty has been addressing those issues,” Morgan said. Gubernatorial candidate Terry Goddard, who visited the law school Wednesday to speak to a student law club, said, “I don’t doubt the law school’s effort to increase black faculty.” BLSA member Ken Countryman said many law school faculty members think affirmative action brings the quality of the law school down. “We're not just saying to hire black professors, we are also asking that the law school stick to its policy of diversity,” Countryman said. Law professor Laurence Weiner said that BLSA members are just “wrong” for picketing. “I think the law school should not hire by race,” he said. “We should make every effort to find the best qualified mem­ bers of faculty from all walks of life. “Race by itself is not diversity. I ’m interested in looking at diversity on an individual basis.” ■: Weiner also added that “It’s difficult to find highly quali­ fied members of different minority groups (for faculty).” Lance Venable, a second year law student, pointed to the 1991 hiring of faculty member Cynthia Ward — who is white — as evidence that the law school is not looking hard enough for minority faculty. “She (Ward) graduated from Yale Law School in 1991,” Venable said. “She had no practical experience in law, and the school hired her. If that’s considered qualified, there are other people who also meet this criteria.” The ASU Study o f Law Bulletin, an informational publica­ tion for students interested in the law school, confirms that Ward was hired to the law school faculty, upon her graduation from Yale Law School in 1991. Pollution C ontinued from page 1. ASU President Lattie Coor said ASU should have no prob­ lem if the bill becomes law. “We are currently on a mandated travel reduction plan that applies to all of Maricopa County, and over the past three to four years have actually been reducing the amount of travel to campus,” Coor said. “We are currently on a plan to reduce our base (travel) by 10 percent.” The bill states that officials would have to attempt a reduc­ tion of 5 percent of employees driving to work one day each week. Dan Shein, analyst for the Environment Committee, said the language in the bill requires that employers at least make a move towards the 5 percent figure. However, he said, there is an amendment floating around to make the level not mandatory. Jennus Burton, ASU chief administrative services officer, said the University looks to be in good shape if the language of the bill goes into law. T believe we are in compliance,” he said. One way the University is attempting to reduce air pollu­ tion is through compressing the work week, he said. . “I believe we are in compliance,” he said, adding the University is already compressing some staff work weeks to reduce travel and air pollutionSome University units choose to work 40 hours in four days, taking the fifth day off and avoiding the drive to work. “Some other units prefer to work on what is called a 9/80. so you put in 80 hours over a nine day work schedule and take the 10th day off,” Burton said. . Technology must improve, he said, before pollution prob­ lems disappear. “What’s fundamentally interesting with this bill is they’re trying to work with the existing technology until technology actually Solves the problem,” Burton said. “The real answer to clean air is non-polluting vehicles and non-polluting mass transit. That is really the only solution over the long term.” State P ress Sports - Rain or shine, cheer or whine, we're there! EVERYD A Y, EV ER Y H O U R > O f f ic ia l K ic k o f f : F R I D A Y , M A R C H 25™ 6:00 P M / M I D N I G H T • T H E B U D -M A N ! • G IV EA W A Y S! • G A LLO N S O F BEER! • P A T IO B A R ! » 10 Homemade Winger Sauces! ?? Do you have the guts to try our *911’ sauce?? » Reduced Take-out & delivery winger prices! PA T IO BAR • D A R T S • T U N E S 855 S. R U R A L R D . 8 9 4 -2 1 1 2 * F re e D e liv e r y t il 2 a .m .* W orld/N ation S tate PRESS_______________ • Thursday, March 24, 1994 • A ro u n d PLO-Israeli negotiations forge ahead ^ A r iz o n a Blacks, Hispanics left out o f commercial for sports grill PHOENIX (AP) — The director of a television commercial for a radio station film e d at the b ar partly ow ned by Phoenix Suns star Dan Majerle is stand­ ing by his decision to leave out three Macks tod two Hispanics. The commercial was filmed Monday to Majerle’s Sports Grill for KKFR-FM, which recently switched from an "urban music” format to Top 40. Katherine Irvin said she showed up for the filming after hearing a call for ’volunteer extras on the station. But she says she, two other blacks and two Hispanics were escorted out of dm downtown bar. given a T-shirt and told to keep listening. Scott Johnson of Production Masters Inc., who wrote and directed the spot, toad he made the choice because of dress rather than race. “Ah, how can I say this,” Johnson said. ’‘They were dressed with a very casual look.” Irvin said casual dress seemed to be the order o f the day and Johnson stud most were given radio station T-shirts to wear. 9-year-old boy takes off on cross-country air adventure PHOENIX (AP) — A 9-year-old boy to o k o ff in a sin g le-en g in e plane Wednesday on a cross-country trip that won’t put him in toe record books. Mu promises to be toe adventure o f a life­ time. Aaron Wax. who took up flying in October, planned to hopscotch across the country in. toe Cessna 172 to Kitty Hawk, N.C., then back to San Diego before end­ ing up back at D eerV ailey Airport on Tuesday for a double cross-country trip. He is accompanied by his father, Sanford W ax, and flig h t in stru c to r Toby Ledbetter Aaron, a fourth-grader at Pioneer E lem entary School in P eoria, was inspired by Vicki Van Meter, an 11-yearold Pennsylvania girl who passed through Phoenix last year on her way to becom­ ing the youngest girl to fly across coun­ try. It was only later he discovered that Tony Aliengena of Costa Mesa, Calif., holds toe record for being youngest to fly across the country, said Aaron’s mother, Esther. Aliengena, who accomplished toe feat in 1988 at age 9, flew around the world to age 11. “At this point h e's the youngest in Arizona to do it,” said Mrs. Wax. River given Federal protection to aid four native Arizona fish PHOENIX (AP) — Federal wildlife officials have designed 1,724 miles of the C olorado River and its tributaries as "critical habitat,” extending a protection to four environmentally troubled native Arizona fish. Tuesday's designation by the„lLS. Fish and Wildlife Service limits water development. It also could change opera­ tion o f current developments, including the Central Arizona Project aqueduct sys­ tem that carryings toe river’s water to Phoenix and Tucson. It means federal agencies must ensure that development will not harm endan­ gered species anywhere within.the desig­ nated area. Page 3 Israeli medics tend to a soldier wounded during the 22-hour siege of an Islam ic m ilitant hideout in the Israeli occupied W est Bank Wednesday. M ilitary censors blocked reports of the battle for a day. Arabs incensed b y siege HEBRON, Occupied West Bank (AP) — As dawn broke Wednesday, the Muslim call to prayer competed with the staccato chatter of machine guns and explosions of rockets tearing apart a stone building suspected as a guerrilla hideout. W hen the 22-hour siege ended at midafteraoon, four Islamic militants and a woman bystander were dead, and Arabs opposed to the resumption of Middle East peace talks had a new rallying cry. The gunbattle came less than a month after a Jewish settler shot 30 Palestinian worshipers to death in Hebron’s ancient Tomb of the Patriarchs about a half-mile away. Palestinian leaders accused the army of endangering civilians with the siege. Palestinians were especially incensed the roof of a pediatric hospital holding 32 chil­ dren was used as a staging point by Israeli soldiers to pour fire at the holed-up guerril­ las. That move also drew protests from the International Red Cross and other human rights groups. Israeli military censors banned news media from reporting on the battle until after it ended, apparently hoping to hold down Palestinian protests in the occupied territories. But U.N. spokesman SamteM$hasha said 18 Palestinians were wouneeSLjn clashes with troops during protests ia Hebron and others towns in the West Bank.\ The army said the siege staitkg around 4 p.m, Tuesday, when an Israeli patrol was shot at from the building. An army spokesman, Capt. Ram Izrach, said the last shots heard from inside the building carné at around 2 p.m. Wednesday. “They were called on many times to sur­ render, but the answer was always gunfire,” he told an Associated Press reporter at the scene. Izrach said five soldiers suffered minor wounds, including the driver of an armored bulldozer who was wounded by glass frag­ ments when guerrillas fired as he battered the three-story building. CAIRO, Egypt (AP) — PLO and Israeli negotiators tried to wrap up an agreement Wednesday on protecting Palestinians in the occupied lands, and Israeli lawmakers said Israel was considering removing one of six Jewish settlements in the heart of Hebron. Negotiators in Cairo are trying to find a formula that would bring the PLO back to the bargaining table to finish plans for Palestinian self-rule in toe Gaza Strip and West Bank town of Jericho. Those talks were suspended after a Jewish settler massacred 30 worshipers at a mosque in the West Bank town of Hebron last month. Palestinians are demanding security guarantees before resuming the autonomy talks. “We have come here to prevent an o th er H ebron m assacre,” ch ief Palestinian delegate Nabil Shaath said. Shaath said negotiators were discussing an international security force in the occu­ pied territories and a Palestinian police force. As the delegates broke for dinner, Shaath said the talks were “going well.” Sources in Tunis, Tunisia, had said a tentative agreement was reached in talks there M onday and T uesday, but that Israel’s final decision was up to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. The tentative agreem ent reportedly called for putting some foreign troops in the occupied lands and moving Jewish set­ tlers put of Hebron to the nearby settlement of Kiryat Arba. Israel has long resisted both moves. In Jerusalem, lawmakers said Israel was considering closing down Tel Rumeida, one of six small settlements in the midst of Hebron’s 80,000 Palestinian residents. Tel Rumeida is home to only seven set­ tler fam ilies, but its residents include activists in the recently banned, anti-Arab Kach movement. Dr. Baruch Goldstein, the settler who carried out the Hebron mas­ sacre, was a Kach supporter from Kiryat Arba. South Korea puts troops on alert died, and Chinese and North Korean casual­ ties were estimated at 1.5 million. The 151-mile Korean border, the world’s most heavily armed, was calm Wednesday, tae told a parliamentary committee. Rhee said the high alert will remain in Rhee said. North Korea's military held a rou­ force at least until the president returns from tine winter field training exercise, he said. Rhee said South Korea has strengthened a weeklong trip to Japan and China next early warning systems along the border in Wednesday. Rhee said there are no signs of an impend­ cooperation with the 36,000 U.S. troops sta­ ing invasion, altoough North Korea’s 1.1 mil­ tioned in the country. North Korea, which is suspected of build­ lion-strong army has increased its land and ing nuclear weapons, refused to let inspectors aerial activity by 50 percent. In Beijing, North Korean Ambassador from the In tern atio n al A tom ic Energy Chu Chang Juq.said-war may break out if the - Agency ■fullyrinspect its nuclear sites earlier United States ships Patriot missiles to South this month, prompting a new standoff with Korea and goes ahead with joint military the United States. On Monday, North Korea threatened to pull out of the international exercises. ; .. >■ ‘T he American side should not forget the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. Rhee said Patriot missiles were being historical experience from the Korean War of the 1950s and should use it as a lesson,” Chu shipped from the United States for deploy­ ment in April. Discussion was underway to said. ' A bout 54.000 American soldiers were conduct ‘Team Spirit” military exercises with killed in the three-year Korean War, which the United States either in late spring or fall, ended in 1953. About 400.000 South Koreans he said. N orth Korea gets m ore belligerant SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Stepping up its rhetorical offensive, North Korea warned the United States on Wednesday not to forget the lessons of the Korean War. South Korea put its 650,000 troops on special alert. The South Korean military was ordered to cancel leaves and keep commanders at their posts. Land, .sea, and aerial patrols were increased, officials said. While the militaries of both Koreas are frequently put on alert, Wednesday’s order was a higher level than usual and took on special significance as North Korea grows increasingly belligerent over accusations it is developing nuclear weapons. The move expanded an alert ordered by President Kim Young-sam at an emergency national security meeting Monday. “We need watertight security. There must be no letup,” Defense Minister Rhee Byoung- House panel approves Democratic health insurance plan WASHINGTON (AP) — By the narrowest of margins, a House Ways and Means panel approved a com prom ise Democratic plan Wednesday night to guarantee health insur­ ance for all Americans by 1998. The measure passed the health subcommittee by a vote of 6-5, despite concerns voiced by some Democrats about the way it would be paid for. It would require all employers to pay for health insurance for their employees and impose a 1 percent payroll tax on large corporations that self-insure. Republicans attacked the plan as a bad bill that was worse than President Clinton’s health reform plan. The plan includes a $ 1 ,25-per-pack increase in the cigarette tax but does not include an acròss-the-board payroll tax. It would require only corporations with 1,000 or more employees that self-insure to pay a 1 percent payroll tax. All employers with more than 100 workers would have to provide health insurance as of Jan. 1, 1996. Those with 100 or fewer workers would get until Jan. 1,1998, to cover them. The program would expand Medicare to cover the unin­ sured, including those working for small businesses. It would add prescription drug coverage for all Medicare beneficiaries in 1998. The pact crafted by Rep. Pete Stark, D-Calif., makes the health subcommittee the first in Congress to approve a health reform plan. Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., said the Democrats had found other ways to raise the $24 billion a year that would have come from a 0.8 percent payroll tax in the original bill proposed by Stark, the panel’s chairman. The new funding mechanisms include: —The 1 percent payroll tax on big companies that selfinsure, raising $9 billion a year. —Requiring sttoes to keep making their share of payments for Medicaid patients who would switch to the new Medicare program. Total savings: $7 billion. —Requiring Medicare patients to pay 20 percent of the costs of home health services. Savings: $6 billion. —Requiring all state and local government workers to pay medicare taxes. Savings: $1 billion. . —Changing the self-employment tax for certain “S corpo­ ration shareholders.” Savings: $500 million. The panel earlier voted down several alternative health proposals, including Clinton’s original 1,342-page blueprint, which Republicans introduced for thé purposes of discrediting it. A managed competition bill and a Republican plan to require individuals — not their employers — to buy insurance were defeated by 6-5 margins, with Rep. Mike Andrews, DTexas, siding with the panel’s four Republicans. O pinion Page 4 S tate P ress Thursday» March 24, 1994 State P ress » d it o r ia l Legal problems Something smells at the ASU College of Law. And no, it’s not those take-out fish luaches front die University Club. ASU students are protesting die hiring policies of the law college, citing a lack of African-American and Hispanic faculty. , The recent upsurge in anger was sparked by the arguments and writings of recently-deceased Professor John Morris. Morris, a retired African-American pro­ fessor in the college., felt that the school made a delib­ erate policy of discouraging the hiring of AfricanAmerican and Hispanic faculty. Moms’ feelings were conveyed in a letter written VOU A L W AVS SVSP£.C Ti£P shortly before his death last December, in which he IT. wrote that his resignation from the school was primari­ ly due to racist attitudes — specifically, he complained that the law college has only employed a handful of black professors in its history. Since then, the school has scrambled to defend itself in an onslaught of negative public relations. Ironically, the law school student population is Composed of approximately one-third minority stu­ dents, but the faculty of some 27 members has no African-American professors on staff; two of the pro­ fessors; are Hispanic, and the most recently hired pro­ fessor is an American-Indian. Despite an effort to recruit and retain a diverse student body, there are seri­ ous questions about whether or not that same dedica­ tion exists in creating a diverse faculty. Granted, it's hard for outsiders to tell whether or not nebulous ideas like “commitment” and “dedica­ tion” —- or “racism,” for that matter — are present in the law school's administration. Even if the administra­ tion is biased, it seems to be a subtle prejudice at that —- after all, no one’s claiming that the faculty appoint­ ment committee attends Klah rallies. But there certainly seem to be suspicions in tie minds of law students themselves, as illustrated in tire protests at Morris’s memorial service and the demon­ stration in frdnt o f the C ollege o f Law building Wednesday. And hopefully, the protests may result in change: law school dean Richard Morgan has already created a task force to investigate methods in which to generate more minority faculty applications. The students involved (including the Black Law Students Associated) should 1% commended both for refusing to ignore the issue and for following up with protests, protests which not only bring the issue on the table but do so in a manner which does not disrupt the central purpose o f tire law school and ASU in a whole: Learning. P o o r fam ilies in A rizona sh o u ld expect n o help fro m L egislature The Arizona State Legislature is fighting a losing battle. It can­ not solve the problems it faces -E L A N IE because the solutions it believes in S E L C H O are not in its jurisdiction. The Legislature is attempting, rath er poorly, to decrease Arizona’s welfare burden. It is trying to do this by passing more rules and regulations, rather than aiming at the cause of the prob­ lem. See, thè Legislature believes, or is at least acting as if it believes, that the reason the wel­ fare costs to the state are so high is because most o f its sub sid ies go to greedy women. According to thè prevailing, societal myth, these women can’t get enough money for their cigarettes and booze Without hav­ ing more children, so they continue to have: them while on welfare to earn more money. Sorry to disappoint those of you who subscribe to this the­ ory, but parents who qualify for Aid to Fam ilies with Dependent Children get a whopping $71 a month for each child. That doesn’t even pay for an extra bedroom’s rent, let alone feed andclothe the child. It’s not big money waiting for these parents (after all, women aren’t having children asexualiy) But, in their infinite wisdom, our lawmakers decided that if they didn’t increase the payments for children parents get after they are already on welfare, then they will stop having those extra children. They passed a bill in the Senate that freezes benefits to children bom after the parents qualify for Aid to Families with Dependent Children. In a time of thinning government, the idea sounds logical enough. People should take responsibility for the children they choose to have. Even people not on welfare shouldn’t have children they can’t afford, and so it goes that those living on the state’s budget shouldn’t have children the state can’t afford, The big problem here is that these women don’t necessari­ ly choose to have the children, as their financial situation does not offer them the choice of not having them. A bill that would have provided poor women with more than $150,000 in educational and medical family planning ser­ vices was thwarted by conservative senators. When I heard the bill didn’t pass, I wondered what possible reason there was, as this sounds like the perfect solution. Women would have birth control options, which prevents both abortion and added chil­ dren the state must pay for. When I heard; the reason, all I could do was laugh. 1 laughed and laughed and laughed. I think it was my reflex response so I wouldn’t have to realize what mentality is being paid to make laws in this state. Some of these senators who didn’t vote: for the bill cited - that they thought it would lead to state-funded abortion. They said that the centers that would receive the money to treat poor women also perforin abortion and might not separate the funding. Thus, the state would be paying for abortion. This sounds a, lot like my financial situation. When I get money from ray parents, they like to have some control over what I do with it. So, if 1 give a dollar to a homeless person they think it’s really their, dollar and they tell me they don't give me money so I can give it away. Little do they realize that their money paid for my rent or food and it’s my hardearned money I “throw away.” Any way, only two weeks separated the ridiculous voting situations. I wish the senators who don’t want abortion, yet don’t want to fund extra children for poor parents would find a way to solve the problem, as they won’t vote for; the only option 1 can think of. What better way to stop people from having abortions than to prevent them from getting pregnant in the first place? There isn't one. As it stands now, poor women in Arizona are left without a choice. They don’t choose to keep having children. Many don’t have the education or resources to prevent them from getting prégnant. Once they are pregnant, most can’t afford the "choice” to have an abortion. And since the State would rather leave unwanted children in poverty than pay for some of their expenses or pay for an abortion, women won’t have a choice after they have the child; Many parents will have no choice but to resort to crime to feed their children. Maybe these senators think that people on AFDC shouldn ’t have sex. That Would really solve everything. No extra chil­ dren the state has to pay for and no abortion. What a wonder­ ful world that would be. Only one glitch, they can't (I hope) legislate sexual relations based on financial status. Melanie Selcho is a senior journalism major. STA TE PRESS TAFF JAKE BATSELL, Editor SHAUN RACHAU, Managing Editor CHRIS DRISCOLL...; . ; r.:.;.... . ..... .C ity Edilor MARY LEIGH SUMMERTON...... . . ...Asst. City Editor JASON OWSLEY............................. .................News Editor JAMES FRUSETTA.................... BRIAN FITZGERALD................ SAMANTHA FELDMAN........... MIKE BRANOM. ........ .............. JEREMY STEIN........................... DIANE BOUDREAU.............................Worid/Nation Editor TROY FUSS................................................ Magazine Editor BRITTON MAUCHL1NE..................Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Mika Akikuni, Shawn Boyd. Garin Groff, M axwell Higgins, Jason Hill, Paul Matthews, Joni Tait, Vicky Young Schauer, Greg Zemeida. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Todd Kelly. Julie Reuvers. Evelyn Sheinfcopf, Dawn Wagner. C O PY E D IT O R S : Bob Felix, K ris Fridrich, K ristine Hoi ter-Sorensen, Dave Proffitt. PH O TO G RA PH ERS: W illiam L ynam , C raig Macnaughton, Fredrick MedanichCOLUMNISTS: David Don, A. Marjory Kaminski, Barry Kelley, Diana Lopez, Maureen McCIarnon, Sean O’Neil, Melanie Selcho, Shayne Whitehead. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, George O’Connor, Mateo Willis. GRAPH IC ARTIST: Yaniini Prabhakara. ■ PR O D U C T IO N : Kenneth Collins, Stacey Devlin, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Britton Mauchline, Skip Schrader, Anna Uiinich, Dave Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S : S onia B enson, D an Ellstrom, Kim Foster, Brigid Franzen, Heidi Harris, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa JeUum, Emil Petersen, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect (be opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JAKEBATSELL SHAUN RACHAU JAMES FRUSETTA JASON OWSLEY 'E d ito r 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 atthews Center, Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. Dm State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily (hose of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. ;■ - i f '' '■ S tate P ress P h one N umbers In fo rm a tio n ..9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N e w s ro o m ... .9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M a g a z in e .... ..9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 A d v e rtisin g . ..9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 C la ssifie d s ....9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 O p in ion S ta t e P ress P a g €' Thursday, March 24,1994 5 A White House heading down Whitewater... WHVM£?? I ToiX> Wf CuN©n , i SMD.'jou WANT1b BE . f t a - S l O E N T O N E W W , R i 6 H T? vfouK6U6EKNMDRIM. CmaFKi&m IMS MEREWIU.Ú3NÉBACK Presidential office requires trust in those who hold it Beneath the heap of ev id en c e m ounting against the Clintons, 'b e n e a th the Republicans' ecstatic “ w e ’ve got Slick Willie now” sentiment and beneath the bick­ e rin g on w hether C ongressional hear­ ings should be held, a clear theme is: emerg­ ing in the Whitewater affair. Americans are wondering if they should trust their president. The C lin to n s' initial investm ent in the Whitewater Development Corp.. ties to a failed A rk an sas savings and loan and the hurried removal of Whitewater documents from the office of Clinton aide Vince Foster after his mysterious suicide are casting a jade of doubt on Americans’ presidential perceptions. Whitewater truly,has served as an exquisite example of how quickly the tables can turn against a public figure. During Clinton’s first year in office, the pas­ sage of NAFTA and Senate’s dramatic 51-50 approval of his budget plan conveyed an early message that this was an administration committed to getting things done. By the end of 1993. in the w ake of those accom plishm ents, the administration had all the makings o f an Arkansasstyle Camelot." : But that enthusiasm has since been washed away by Whitewater’s powerful flow. Most publié opinion polls indicate Clinton's approval ratings are sinking. While the scrutiny applied to the Clintons’ questionable financial connections certainly is jus! tillable, the Whitewater affair runs deeper than fis­ cal jargon. Public officials are being kept account­ able for their current and prior actions like never before, and Whitewater has surely served as a reflection of that frenzy. A nation once enamored with its leaders has become sharply cynical toward the establishment. The days of "I like Ike" have been replaced by another phrase — "question authority." The last true love affair between a president and the public came during the reign of John F. Kennedy. Kennedy, despite rumors of vice, was adored by mainstream America. ' Lyndon Johnson was plagued by Vietnam. Watergate planted a permanent seed of distrust within the public during the Nixon years. The Iran-Contra affair made Americans skeptical of Ronald Reagan, and George Bush fell victim to discontent over a sagging economy. ' But Whitewater has definitely reached a new level with respect to keeping public officials in check. ; "1 think we can all admit that there is no previ­ ous president who has been asked to undergo this level of scrutiny about something that happened so long before he became president in the absence of any credible evidence that any violation of the law . occurred.” Clinton told the Associated Press. Given Clinton’s fervent denials against any allegations of impropriety, his next step must be to clearly and publicly present his side of the story; The Whitewater hubbub is not going to die down, and remaining tight-lipped will only stir more sus­ picion. In order for attention to be drawn back to jobs and health care, the public first needs reassurance that their president has been ethical. The Clinton adm inistration can resume normalcy only after that trust has been established. ' OoNt LET W 0*CbW W evTE1& TO NMtNT You, ’ I W O ANOI WARNED«us, Vow* WIVE IS MSUEM0UM6 TW5> WHOU WUlfPWJEK now ,The ARMT G oæknwemt G rinds 1b WE HAVE TïiiÛoÜlKf RJNSATML KEKRIMGS W ® « M W W A UPTHEWEUbKHOWMVWITÊWMÏRCREEK.WtHOUTA?At>tRE. the Clinton Jake Batsell is a junior journalism major. VWfltVWEKI -THE RHUBUCAN PERsftOME. YEkH weu. 'AwL Look I ll/C T in V T.n V TirtV rtf | WHITE HOUSE,WHITE WATER . , C. W hitewater small potatoes compared to past goings-on Whitewater. Headache for the AM ES Clintons, window of FRUSETTA opportunity for the. R ep u b lican s and Opinioi bonus for political Editoi cartoonists every­ where, it is a con' fusing chaotic mix­ ture of known fiscal shenanigans and ' possibly, intentional w rong-doings by ’ the president. But even i f Whitewater turns out to be a scandal worthy of the suffix “-gate,” Clinton would hardly be alone in the ranks of presidents who have committed immoral or illegal acts or watched as their adm inistration committed those acts around them. H e’d be jo in in g an august com pany of American presidents who have committed ques­ tionable acts — the most successful of whom are now American heroes, while others have sunk into obscurity: • P resident Andrew Jackson (D). who refused to enforce the decisions of the Supreme Court in regard to the rights of the Cherokee nation, and thus probably set back Indian rights more than any other president; • President ACraham Lincoln (R), whose suspension of habeus corpus in Maryland dur­ ing the Civil War was an act of political bril­ liance and helped preserve the Union; but despite this, the act was of dubious legality. Of course, nothing works like success; • President Ulysses S. Grant (R), tarred by the Whiskey Ring scandal (embezzlement of tax revenue from the Treasury), illegal acts of Secretary of War Belknap (literally selling gov­ ernment jobs to the highest bidder) in one of the most corrupt administrations ever; • President Warren G. Harding (R), whose secretary of the interior Albert B. Fall sold naval oil reserves to industrialists (the great Tea Pot Dome scandal); • President Franklin D. Roosevelt (D), who encouraged American destroyers escorting British craft in the North Atlantic to attack German warcraft in Sept., 1941, before the United States entered World War II (effectively ordering hostilities without an act of war sup­ ported by Congress); • President John F. Kennedy (D), whose sex­ ual, ah. promiscuity during his time in office is still legendary among the Packwood set; • President Richard Nixon (R), whose reelection efforts during the 1972 campaign as assisted by the Republican Committee for the RE-Election of the President (CREEP) resulted in the well known Watergate break-in; • P resident Ronald Reagan (R), whose administration witnessed the Iran-Contra affair, in which government officials apparently traded military supplies to Iran, in return for money which was then transferred to the Nicaraguan rebel Contra movement despite the censure of Congress. • President George Bush (R), whose son Neil Bush was linked to the massive embezzle­ ment and defrauding which occurred during the mass failures of the Savings and Loans during the Bush administration. Clinton may not be the most ethical presi­ dent ever, but hey — when have our presidents (who are, after all. politicians) been ethical? James Frusetta is a graduate student in history. St a t e P ress Thursday, March 24,1994 Page6_ Students qualify Congress limits pell funding By G arin G roff' State P ress More students are eligible for financial aid under sweeping changes by Congress, but fewer grant dollars are being award­ ed, a spokeswoman with ASU’s financial assistance office said Wednesday; “They added a component to the program that allows any degree-seeking student enrolled at least half-time some kind of financial aid eligibility," said Kate Dosil, associate director of financial assistance. Although loans have increased. Pell Grant awards, which do not have to be repaid, have dropped $1.3 million for 199394. In 1992-93, S14 million in grants was awarded, she said. “In that respect, it has been a negative," she said. “It has not eliminated their need; but many of our independent stu­ dents are not qualifying for as much grants as they used to.” The same number of students is eligible for Pell Grants, but less money is available for each student, she said. Pell Grants, the mainstay of the grant program, are limited to $2,300 per student, Dosil said. Eligibility varies from student to student, she said, depend­ ing on income and how much money a student can offset from total adjusted income. Independent students must now put a greater amount of their income toward their education to be eligible. “Students are getting fewer dollars from Pell,” she said. Supplemental federal grants require the same eligibility requirements as Pell Grants, she said. The decrease could also hurt students if tuition goes up, Dosil said. “If the cost of attendance goes up and the grant dollars don’t go up, then the net effect is students don’t have as much money as they did the year before even if they got the same' dollar amount," she said. In contrast, the University grant program gave out $1.2 million more during the same time because of the tuition and fee increase last year, Dosil said. ASU students received $3.7 million for 1993-94. Loans to ASU students are projected to make a record jump from $47 million in 1992-93 to $80 million this fiscal year, she said. The Arizona Board of Regents .i§ slated to determine how much money will be allocated to students for the next fiscal year in its April meeting. Grants galore 9 2-93 M P ro g ra m 9 3-94 92-93 * ' * m illio n L o $ 4 7 93-94 m illio n a - ft- m i l l i o n ll s 1 9 9 3 Source: O ffice o f Financial Assistance 9 4 Yamini Prabhákara/State Press Before the change, loan eligibility was primarily based on need, she said. Now, upper-income families can get loans if they canta* pay up front. ‘ The parent-loan program, previously limited to $4,000, was expanded so that it now loans as much as the cost of attending a university for one year, Dosil said. Another change in methodology gives processors enough information to determine if students qualify based on need, she said. “It eliminated the use of the family home equity and there­ fore made many, many more middle-income families ’needy’ in terms of calculating financial aid needs,” she said. Dosil said university financial aid offices nationwide have been busy processing applications because more students are eligible for aid. Also, more students have applied for aid. Financial aid is distributed by ASU comptroller and trea­ surer Gerald Snyder, who said he expects aid will reach stu­ dents faster than in previous years. Snyder said the eligibility change already increased the volume of business in his office. “We had an increase by about one-third this year on bank loans,” he said. ; Aid should be available by the first day of school and more of it will be mailed to students, Snyder said. “We will be able to mail some of this out rather than have them come in and pick it up,” he said. While only grants were mailed before, he said loans will be mailed unless students opt to pick them up at the office. State P ress Sports - We w rite fro m th e fie ld , th e flo o r and th e locker room . CROSSWORD nOESQDEl HBiacil by THOMAS JOSEPH I—---- ---------------------- C a re e r O p p o rtu n itie s th e W o r l d ’s S y s te m s w ith P re m ie r C o n s u ltin g i F irm \ Andersen Consulting, a leader in systems development and integration, has exciting opportunities in its Systems Integration Service Arena in our Phoenix, San Francisco and Los Angeles offices. Our teams build custom solutions for America’s top organizations using leading edge technologies - that spells plenty of challenge and opportunity for qualified students interested in a career In Information Systems Consulting. Staff Consultant Includes involvement in a broad range of leading edge operations and information technology client engagements, including: • Complex systems integration projects • Systems design and installation, • Productivity improvement Qualifications • Preferred GPA of 3.0 with a major in Mathematics/Sciences, Computer Science, MIS. or any major with a Computer Science Minor • Desire to work with information systems 1 ' • Willingness to travel \ • Professionalism • Understanding of Andersen Consulting • Have not previously applied with Andersen Consulting • Must have legal authorization to work without a time limit in the U.S. If you possess these skills and want to join a premier international firm with leading edge professionals, we invite you to attend the Andersen Consulting Inform ation Presentation on Wednesday, March 30 from 5:00 to 7:00 pm in th e Alumni Lounge, Room 202, Memorial Union Building. We will be accepting your resume and a completed Andersen Consulting Personal Data Sheet (PDS). (Obtain PDS from Career Services.) * I Wm "'y» ' A- i4 f / A S , '? X'% ACROSS 1 “Vursus* poet 5 Spiked dubs 10 Mexican sendoft 12 Wed hastily 13 “Things Change* director 14 “C’est — !* 1 5 1strain 16 Bigoted bumpkin 18 Refusal to face facts 20 Regret 21 Like bad lettuce 23 Blunder 24 Electri­ cian's unit 26 Mine find 28 Corral 29 Box 31 Had a bite 32 Bouquets 36 Noose, in slang 39 Kimono fastener 40 Bowl 41 Yaz’s team 43 Lions’ prides 4 4 Sheepish 45 Starts a pot 4 6 Warring god DOW N 1 Chris­ tened Greg Robinson, Economics John Vekich, MSE JenniferWitter, Educational Psychology Matt Stultz, Finance Steve Wilson, Finance mÊÈÊÈÊÊÈÊÊÊËÊË V I I A n d er sen I IG o N S u q n N G i m Ê ARTHUR ANDERSEN A CO, S.C. : Andersen Consulting Is an Ek)ual Opportunity Employer. W M m J m i ■¡§¡1 ■ 1 E m m ena B ra n d 2 Saw 3 ‘ Plaza Suite* playwright 4 Garden­ ing aid 5 Pinochle score E JE 0 B H Q D D nC l IS 1 C IE 1 N |T |S ! 6 Robert Alda's son Yesterday’s Answer 7 Like nant "medica­ pioneer 33 Polite tion" wagons refusal 24 Ex-G .l. 8Food 34 Steak 25 Words expert choice under a 9 One on a picture of 35 Some hunt dice rolls Lincoln 11 Narrow Memorial 37 Patella’s passages place 27 Bauxite or 17 Shade magnetite 38 Old news tre e agency 28 Hat type 19 Badly 42 Caesar's 30 Greek 22 Harm­ eggs consoless r r r~ 8 9 T~5—3 4 1 7 10 il ■ ’4 i5 ■ ifi 1 ■ tt 2 T3 r1 9» ■ M ■ : i4 l » 33 3 ii ■37 » ■ 4< 5T ■ u :i 4é 3“ ■ 1 3 -2 4 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s b ow to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the two O'», etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3-24 The Phoenix office extends special congratulations to our Fall ‘93 and Summer ‘94 Arizona State University graduates who have accepted a staff consulting position with Andersen Consulting. U IP IE IC 1 A IN IS I CXO CRYPTOQUOTE QT ZX R R TKPYA KOZXRR A YE A A YXL A Y E O AY X L A Y X L QT EZZ VE O . — A Y T C E R V E J Z L Z X Yesterday's C ryptoquote: WHEN IT COMES TO EATING, YOU CAN SOMETIMES HELP YOURSELF MORE BY HELPING YOURSELF LESS.—RICHARD A D V irtlT V e 1904 by King Features Syndicat«. Inc. Thursday, March 24,1994 S t a t e P ress .•at \ n Y i t v « - '' C L A S S IC /A L T E R N A T IV E THURSDAY i ONLY $ 3 COVER Live Music 8pm - 12pm REFRESHMENTS p jC 2 Page_7 P olice R eport A S V police reported the follow ing incidents Wednesday: • A female ASU student reported that some­ one stole the rear lidense plate from her 1987 Toyota while it was parked in Area 8. • A male ASU student reported that someone stole his 10-speed b icy cle from the University Center Building where he had locked it. The student estimated the value of the bicycle at $213.35. • A female ASU student reported that some­ one stole a tire from her bicycle at Sahuaro Hall. The tire is valued at $50. • A fem ale ASU em ployee reported that 'som eone dam aged a gate arm in Parking . Structure 1 causing $25 in damage. • A male ASU employee reported that some­ one stole a Safety Escort Service cart from campus on Monday. The'cart was recovered Tuesday by a Mesa man who found it behind his home. • A female ASU em ployee reported that som eone stole S4 from her desk at the Faculty Administration Building. • A female ASU student was hit by a Ford pickup truck while she was riding her bike at McAllister Avenue and Terrace Road. She was treated by the Tempe Fire Department and released at the scene. • A man unaffiliated with ASU got locked inside Sun Devil Stadium and had to be let out by police. Tem pe.police reported the fo llo w in g inci­ dents Wednesday: » A 48-year-old woman was m aced and robbed T uesday w hile leaving BaskinR obbins ice cream p arlo r at 3108 S. McClintock Drive. The man who maced her knocked her to the ground and stole her purse in the attack. He then ran to a waiting car and left before police arrived. • Police arrested a 43-year-old Tempe man Tuesday at F ry’s grocery store, 3115 S. McClintock Drive. The man was charged with disorderly conduct after he offended customers by shouting obscenities at them in the parking lot. • An unidentified man robbed an ABCO gro­ cery store at 5120 S. Rural Road Monday by simulating that he had a weapon under his shirt. He took $584 from a reg ister and walked out of the store. • A 30-year-old Tempe woman investigating moaning noises found a man masturbating on her patio Tuesday at 1239 S. Dorsey Lane. She peeked out her blinds to see the man peeking in her window with his pants down. The responding police officer found a spot where the man apparently ejaculated on the deck. • A 33-year-old Phoenix woman and her 29year-old husband reportedly assaulted one another at 2125 S. Industrial Park in Tempe after getting into an argument over the man driving away from a party. The man reported­ ly bit her left breast and she allegedly poked him in the eye. Police were unable to deter­ mine who was at fault and neither one was arrested. • A 17-year-old high school student was arrested and charged with aggravated assault after he reportedly hit another student in the head w ith a b aseb all bat. The incident occurred at Marcos de Niza High School, 6000 S. Lakeshore Drive, after a softball gam e. The victim was tran sp o rted to Scottsdale Memorial Hospital-Osbom where he was listed in stable condition. • A Tempe woman was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and disorderly con­ duct after she rep o rted ly stabbed her boyfriend in the hand with a knife. The inci­ dent occurred at their apartment at 720 E. McKellips Road. Reports com piled by State Press reporter Paul M atthews The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook ¿¡m ép?Lz1pmf c ■ COMPLIMENTARY FOOD BUFFET 4 pvi-11p 2 FOR 1 $ 3 ° ° P IT C H E R S $ 6 ° ° 8p m - 12pm MORNINGSTAR O F BEER P IT C H E R S O F T E A S JR kO j viA O An investment in your lifetime O rder yours today for $36.93 Matthews Center basement, Rm. 50, 965-6881 BEST MEAL DEAL IN TOWN! Monti’s Special Coupon See Page 9 in the regular news section *GOOD TODAY ONLY* C Lu l LA D IES N IG H T NO COVER FOR LADIES ALL NIGHT KAPL AN and Golden Key National Honor Society present an Inform ational Seminar on Graduate Testing Thur. March 24 at 3 pm in the MU AZ Room A Free Food & Refreshments Everyone Welcome! Page 8 Sta te P ress Thursday, March 24, 1994 M e x ic a n p r e s id e n tia l c a n d id a te a s s a s s in a te d TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) — The man expected to become Mexico’s next president, Luis Donaldo Colosio, was shot to ' death Wednesday during a campaign appearance in the border city of Tijuana, the Mexican office of the presidency said. Colosio. the candidate of Mexico's governing party, was rushed to Tijuana General Hospital with gunshot wounds to the head and upper body, A hospital spokeswoman said doc­ tors had operated on the abdominal wound and had started a second operation on the more serious head wound. An unidentified surgeon, interviewed on the Televisa net­ work. said Colosio’S wife, Diana, and a Roman Catholic cler­ gyman had been summoned into the operating room. Mexican TV reported two people were involved in the shooting and that both were arrested. Their identities were not immediately known. The assassination was sure to only add to the nation’s sense of crisis following an armed New Year’s .uprising by Indian peasants in the south. The rebels were seeking improved living conditions and reforms to clean up Mexico’s fraud-ridden electoral system. Colosio. 44. has been under attack by political opponents since Salinas named him Nov. 28 as standard-bearer for the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). which has won every presidential election for the past 65 years. Critics complained his free-mafket economic policies were too close to those of the Salinas administration, which so far have brought little improvement to Mexico’s poor. Colosio had stressed the social programs and environmental protection he would implement. Colosio had just finished speaking to approximately 3,000 people in a canyon area in Çolonia Loma Taurinas. near Tijuana’s international airport, when shots rang out. He was bleeding profusely from the head when he was put into a campaign car and rushed to the hospital, witnesses said. Saenz said one bullet went in and out of Colosio’s head, but he had no details of the second bullet. Conflicting reports said the second bullet hit either the chest or abdomen. The crowd jumped on the assailant, who appeared to be in his mid-20s, and beat him. "His shirt was ripped off,” said Gregory Gross, a reporter for The San Diego Union-Tribune who was following Colosio on the campaign swing, “There was blood on him, but I couldn't tell if it was his or Colosio’s. It was chaos.” At least one handgun was reported used. Television showed Colosio, dressed casually in an openneck white shirt and slacks, being picked up off the ground by a group of aides and hustled through a milling, shouting crowd near a stage where his name was printed in large black and white letters. Blood dripped from his forehead and his eyes were open but unfocused. He appeared in shock. The aides struggled through the crowd to get Colosio to a car. Other footage showed another group, which appeared to include police, some of them waving pistols, clutching a dark­ haired young man. Around them, other people surged for­ ward, snatching at the man’s hair, throwing punches and screaming. His death plunged the PRI leadership into a quandary over its political future. The party leadership will have to go through the process of selecting another candidate, but how exactly it would do that was not immediately clear. A visibly enraged Manuel Camacho Solis, who only a day earlier had taken himself out of the presidential race, lamented the attack. “This is an attempt against peace and democracy in this country,” he said in a statement to reporters. Camacho is the government’s representative in talks with the rebels in Chiapas state. His withdrawal Tuesday doused fears of a split in the party that has ruled for 65-years. Colosio’s campaign had long languished in shadow of Camacho’s negotiations with the masked guerrilla leader, Subcomandante Marcos, in San Cristobal de las Casas. The rebels have made democracy a central demand for lay­ ing down their weapons and it was not immediately clear how Wednesday’s shooting will impact the negotiations. The talks have not yielded an accord. Colosio’s main rival was Cuauhtemoc Cardenas of the left-leaning Democratic Revolutionary Party. As soon as he heard news of the attack, Cardenas announced he was stop­ ping his campaign until further notice. The assassination carné against a backdrop of growing public discontent with the ruling party. On Wednesday, 1,400 M exico City residents were blocked from marching to Congress to demand.even greater electoral reforms than those currently being debated. Protesters complained at least 10 marchers were beaten by riot police. In Washington, State Department spokesman Michael McCurry said the United States was “horrified by this brutal assassination attempt.” “We very much hope that he is able to recover fully from this attack and resume his distinguished career.” W orld news. Far Side cartoons. YOU sWi State news. Classified ads. Sports. Coupons. ASU news. Crossword puzzles. W eekly magazine. Theater ads. Police Report. Comic strips. O pinions. Cryptoquote puzzles. In-depth features. ■■«BfflfMWWMI M i l people incili UP t o 4 4 % ISE IT EVERYTIME TOOMAKEALONSDISTANCECOLLECTCALL, Help wanted ads. Letters to the editor. Daily horoscopes. pate P ress Thursday, March 24,1994 S tate P ress State Press Classifieds - we're always in the back. ASASU C ontinued J oe Pesci • Christian Slater One thing stands between Jimmyand stardom. P age 9 from page 1. governor may not choose one of ASASU’s candidates because of the conflicting manner in which the student regents were ultimately / chosen. “Whether it is right for him to act that way or not is an entirely separate issue,” Malik said. “I don’t think he should act that way. I think he has an obligation to take into account the candidates (ASASU) sends to him.” The student regent will represent nearly 100,000 Arizona students as a full-voting member on the Arizona Board of Regents. The student regent will serve a one-year term beginning on June 1. The ASU West Student Forum sent the governor the names o f both Myer and Paul. Their list also included Tom Hubbard, a junior accounting major. Both ASU and ASU West had agreed on both Myer and Paul during a joint meeting before Spring Break. They were split on Hubbard. ASU West Student Forum Vice-President Chris Stallings on Monday defended ASU W est's action, stating that the candidates' names were sent during Spring Break to give the governor enough time to review the candidates before he makes his final decision on the top selection. ASASU members did not attend the meeting in which ASU West approved the candidates because they were under an ASASU ■ Supreme Court temporary restraining order prohibiting “any and all activities” involving the student regent selection process. Although the order also included the ASU West student government, ASU West Student Forum P resident V alerie Jones said the ASASU Supreme Court had no jurisdiction over ASU West and her group went along with the selection process, All of the candidates received by the govemor originally came from a list of six cornpiled by an ASASU initial selection committee in February, The governor may choose a student regent candidate from any of the names he was sent by either school. He may also pick someone not approved by any of the student govemments, The Arizona Legislature must approve the governor’s final choice. mmimmmämmsmmmm gommar mmrnsmKsmmmmsams,àimuitomm -**■- f ü ia i i m i S S S É CO U PO N G O O D T O D A Y O N LY ★ TH U RSD AY M ARCH 2 4 ^ SHOW YOUR CLASS AT GLAMOUR SHOTS® T H E R E 'S N E V E R A N Y ONLY Served All Pay Thursday H O M EW O R K AFTER A GLAM OUR SHO TS® P H O T O S E S S IO N .* Y O U 'L L E N J O Y Served with Our Special’Hot Roman Bread and Tossed Salad • Garlic, 1000 Island, Rancbjarfrench Dressing « Extra Charge for Roquefort • Raked Potato, French Fries, Spaghetti or Rice * Extra Charge for Sour Cream and Chives • An exciting complimentary makeover • Four choices from our extensive wardrobe and accessory collection • A fun 16 pose high fashion photography session • Instant viewing of your color proofs PERFECT FOR T H E JOB H U N T • PR O FESSIO N A L W ARDROBE AVAILABLE Plus, you can order on the spot and you'll have beautiful finished portraits to share \ Serving Today's fin e st F oodijn th e Rom antic Atm osphere o f the Old W est „ ‘ - < 3 West first Street, Tempe (at first & Mill) *' r - 967-7594 ONLY $4 PER PERSON with all your friends in about a week We Ship Anywhere in the U.S. SENIORS 50% OFF «-g? ONLY SI4.95 THIS WEEK Call for your appointment today! SCOTTSDALEFASHIONSQUARE• WESTRIDGl PARADISEVALLEYMALL*ARROWHEADT0WNE SUPERSTITIONSPRINGSMALL(OPENINGSUMMER’94) 1-800-GLAMOUR •With portrait package. $69 Value. Portrait! additional. Under 18 must be accompanied by adult Purchases require placing order at the-time o f aeaaion. Not good with any oher offa. Bspjret 3/30/94. pi Ground Sirloin SPECIAL AT MONTI'S THURSDAY ONLY 1 p .m w ith COUPON a State P ress Thursday, March 24,1994 e l O ASASU to discuss possible changes to ASA structure “Individually, they are very responsive, but when they get together as a group they feel like, ‘our group was attacked and we are not going to budge.’” ASASU Senator G ena L oPresto said ASA’s response will be guided by the content of the structural requests. "1 think that if we come up with some thoughtful proposals that are beneficial to everyone; that are aimed at improving ASA as a whole, not just aimed at making ASU’s piece of the pie bigger, I think everyone will agree with it,” she said. ASA Executive Director Pat McWhortor said ASA board members probably, will have a problem with accepting additional ASU voting members on ASA. “I don’t think that’s going to go over very well,” he said. “It’s, not in keeping with the spirit of what ASA is all about.” Valerie Jones, ASU West Student Forum president and ASA member, said she doesn’t think ASU needs any more representatives in ASA. “I think its a power move,” she said. “The present system, as far as I’m concerned, is working fine.” Amy Pizzutillo, assistant d irecto r o f A S A S U State Relations and a.fnem ber of ASA, said there is no guarantee Wilhelm’s proposals will be accepted by ASA. “I don’t think (Wilhelm’s) ideas ... are a shoe-in,” she said. “We need to talk about the problems and the feasibility of the remedies (he proposed).” According to Wilhelm, there is no definite timeline for ASA to put any changes into effect. . ; ' jHe said a bill being drawn up by ASASU President Rossie Turman to withdraw from ASA may have a deadline included in it. A meeting will'be held to discuss possible restructuring changes to ASA this Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in the McClintock H al lounge. B y G reg Z emeida State P ress The Associated Students of ASU will take the next step in th e ir dealings w ith the A rizona S tudents’ A ssociation, meeting tonight to discuss possible ways to restructure the lobbying group. Before spring break' the ASASU Senate passed Senate Petition 6. which calls for ASA to make changes to their organization or face a possible withdrawal by ASASU. ASA is a lobbying group made up of rep­ resentatives from the three state universities and their branch campuses. It was created to lobby the Arizona Board of Regents, the Arizona Legislature, and the U.S. Congress on behalf of Arizona students. According to ASASU Campus Affairs Vice-President Kurt Wilhelm, the three major requests from ASASU to ASA will be: • C hanging to a “H ouse of Representatives” style of representation. This would give ASU the most votes of any uni­ versity in ASA. • Changing the way the ASA executive director is chosen. Instead of just the current ASA board members choosing a director, both the current and the on-coming board will decide on one. • Joining with the Arizona Community Colleges Students’ Association. This would effectively double the number of students ASA represents. AS ASU Campus Affairs Vice-President Kurt Wilhelm, who is co-author of Senate Petition 6. said the hardest thing for ASA to accept will be the “House of Representati ves” style of representation. ’' jo in in g w ith local community colleges and changing the way the ASA executive director is chosen Should not be very difficult for the ASA to accept, Wilhelm said. ■He said, overall, ASA may be leery of the changes he has proposed. , “Honestly, ¡ don’t think (ASA is) going to respond very w ell,” W ilhelm said. W h e n d is a s t e r d r o p s i n ; w e ' l l h e l p p i c k u p t h e p ie c e s . V; ■ -•I m ‘“ ¡I ! r k ? sä j s . V / v # î f V \ ■ 1■/ / \ \ F S j . i •• Lì T > \ v\ \ _\ i "A S U students were the foundation o f The Honda Doctor. W e 'll stop at n oth ing to keep yo ur lo ya lty." "Since I started The Honda Doctor 7 years ago, I've always strived for highest quality service, with completely honest and straightforward dealings with bur customers. You and many other East Valley Honda and Acura owners have rewarded us with their loyalty and referrals; and we've grown to two shops, 12 technicians, and over $2 million a year in honest'business.In fact, many times we've become too busy to schedule you in as quickly as you - and we would like. So here's w hat I'm doing about it. First, after numerous delays by land developers, our third East Valley location is finally near opening. This will immediately relieve scheduling problems at our Tempe shop because over 1,000 of our regular customers there will shift to the new shop because it will be more convenient for them. Second, we've expanded our Tempe shop again, and created a brand new service: So if all you need is your allimportant regular 3,000 mile oil change, we can accommodate you quickly. And if you have other maintenance or service needs, w e’ll be able to Schedule you in sooner for that, too. I extend my heaijfelt personal thanks to the students of ASU for reinforcing for m ebver the years m at our Blue Ribbon Service Policy of Quality, Integrity arid Fair Prices Everyday is the way you really like to be treated.You have my promise that The Honda Doctor will continue to do whatever it takes to service you best. So now there's no reason to be lured to other shops for the promise of low prices, only to discover that not all promises are created equal." ~ i k 'k ' K '- R Rick i c k Hall, Owner THE H O N D A DOCTOR The H onda Doctor's Fast Lube-Oil-Filter, a new lift 100% dedicated for 10 daily appointm ents for our Original $15.95 Casirol Oil Change only. 20 90 E . U n iv e rs ity , S u ite 115 967-7 282 Monday-Friday 7:30 AM -6 :0 0 PM Thursday N ights i l l 8:00 PM 7333 E. B u th eru s, S u ite 100C 998-5 966 Monday - Friday 7:30 AM - 5:30 PM Wednesday N ights i l l 8:00 PM Now accepting the an Expre American Express Card SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU I.D.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL GET A DINNER 1 ¿5 j7 ^ A Special M essage to ASU S tudents: Á;& ÿ - y / ii f\ ü l o sí Nobody wants to deal with insurance companies until something goes wrong. To make it as painless as possible, we've added a lot of conveniences to our full range of Auto Insurance plans. Just call California Casualty and let us impress you with our coverage and our reputation. For over 75 years, we've been there for the simplest questions as well as when disaster drops in. Auto Insurance from ♦ California Casualty This year we're doing it again! Every Sunday (but O N LY on Sunday), Mike Pulos of Thf, Spaghetti Company win give you one FREE dinner* for each dinner you order! It's our 2-for-1 SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL. Arid it’s good for the whole year at our Tempe, Phoenix and Scottsdale locations. Any day of the week, for funch or dinner, The Spaghetti Company is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices even bettor! Our dinners include a full-course meal with all the trim­ mings - from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you c an t beat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY O N SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 1! ; / •But you MUST tu rn your currant student I.D. card or fee receipt with you to take advantage of this offar. 15% gratuity addad to ad discounted chocks (except senior citizen discounts). ’ i ■r v ( Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Ot Jon. Shifted Filet of Soto, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Vast Marsala, Three Paste Opera and orders to go ARE NOT included In the 2-for-1 special. O P E N A T 11:0 0 A .M . T O 1 1 :0 0 P .M . S U N D A Y S ! ___________ O PEN A T 10 A .M . O N G A M E PA YS! You'll love us when you need us. - ^ I E n jo y o u r n ig h tly d r in k s p e c ia ls . Phoenix Toll Free 1(602) 861-2220 1(800) 841-4736 For Faculty and Staff Only Auto Insurance Only T ie » $ p a g lt f it t i (o n (|» a q j" RESTAURANT PHOENIX S C O TTS D A LE South on Central Just Pasta M cDowell 7373 N . Scottsdale Rd. Just North of Indian Bern) 257-0380 48 3-5 669 OLD TOWN TEMPE 4th S t. & Mill 966-3848 Page 11 Thursday, March 24,1994 S t a te P ress Rollover! photo by Craig Macnaughton ASU wrestler Jeff Theiler, (rig h t) ta lk s w ith Iow a resident Bo Young after he escapes in ju ry in a tw o -c a r c o llis io n inP arkin g Lot 59 W ednesday. Theiler was d riv in g a re n te d w h ite P o n tiac S u n b ird w es t­ bound from W hitem an T en n is C e n te r w hen it c o llid e d w ith a blue Cam aro driven by ASU senior Tom McGimpsey. T here w ere no in ju ries, o th e r th an m in or scrapes. STATE P ress SPORTS-We cover good sports, bad sports, rich sports and poor sports. A N e w C o m e d y F r o m T h e D ir e c t o r O f “Ba c k d r a f t ” A n d “Pa r e n t h o o d .” MICHAEL GLENN MARISA RANDY ROBERT KEATON CLOSE TOMB QUAID«>DU\ALL Campus Corner. •Beer & Soda •Photo Developing •Health & Beauty Aids •Compact Discs 712 S. C o lle g e (C olleg e & University) 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 A behindthe-lines look a t work, m arriage other of com bat. EB 9 609 S. Mill (Across from C offee Plantation) 858-0567 J O B S A N D IN T E R N S H IP S F O R A L L M A JO R S Hispanic Business Students Association presents THE 12TH A N N U A L FIRMS NtôHT An everyday adventure. Ä I ENTEKIAINM BÍ1preseneaBRIANGRAZERproduction^ » TODDHALLOW Eli,\iDYLANSELLERSmM tilE im ilM 'D turo _ wK ihbWWWÍh R «ira1 it. IRIANGRAZERandFREDQK1Œ ZOLLO■HU IW6S!H|‘ halJSggJE l HST iKAOncaosn^l W KB MKlMUfJj rnmimMltti h r im ù r AUNIVERSALHCME1 Opens Frid^At Theatres Everywhere. THURSDAY MARCH 24, 5-8pm at HOLIDAY INN Rural And A p a c h e 915 E. A p a ch e , Tem pe Professional A ttire R equired ADMISSION IS FREE Page 12 State Press Thursday, March 24, 1994 A n n i v e r s a r y c e le b r a t io n Frederick M edanich/State Press S tu d e n ts tra n s fo rm in g co n ­ crete into canvas with chalk, steel drums singing in the background and in s tru cto rs fin g e r p ain tin g were among the activities during Design Madness Week, a celebra­ tio n of th e C o lle g e of A rch itectu re’s 30fh ann iversary and Environm ental Design’s 25th anniversary. • Bill Brauckmen, right, a drawing/painting m ajor puts finishing to u c h e s on h is aw a rd -w in n in g c h a lk d ra w in g . T he D esign Excellence Com petition displays the best work of the Industrial and Interior Design disciplines, includ­ ing the Hammerhead Vacuum, left, by Jeff Harris. Instructors, bottom left, paint the architecture building with finger paints. BEST MEAL DEAL IN T O W N ! Monti’s Special Coupon See P age 9 . ★ GOOD TODAY ONLY^ ASIANCUTIRE WEEK "D v4£O t/«*/{/K £ t h e M y td U March21-25,1994 Thursday, March 24 Friday^. M arck 25 11:30 to 1:30 pm • MU Second Floor • Slide Presentation on Mongolia & China -• “Hate Crimes Against Asians in America" • “Immigration Laws” Noon to 1:30 pnj »Hayden Lawn • Chinese Calligraphy. » Asian Ethnic Fashion Show 5:30 pm • Neeb Hall • Movie: “The Joy Luck Club”' 10:00 am to 2 pm • Hayden Lawn • Malaysian Cultural Presentations: Traditional Malay Wedding Ceremony and Morel • Laotian Dance • Vietnamese Dance ' Campus Environment Team ' Office of the Vice-President for Student Affairs • ASASU ■Office of the Provost ' Chinese American Citizens Alliance Center for Asian Studies State P ress Classifieds - we're always in the back. SUN SENSE Before you fry . . . turn down the heat. P artners In Health Smart Moves: • D rink lots o f w a te r, ju ic e , p u n c h o r s o d a b e fo re a n d a fte r yo u fe e l thirsty. •A v o id c a ffe in e a n d a lc o h o l - th e y d ry yocp o u t. •C a rry e x tra w a te r fo r e m e rg e n c ie s . • W e a r p ro te c tiv e sunglasses. •W e a r a h a t. • Use su nscree n w ith a Sun P ro te c tio n F a c to r (SPF) o f 15 o r m o re .* •A p p ly su nscree n lib e ra lly a t le a s t 15 m in u te s b e fo re g o in g in th e sun. •A v o id sun e xp o su re fro m 10AM -3PM , w h e n th e sun's rays a re th e stron g est. S tu d e n t H e a lth C a re s A b o u t You. HOURS: MON-W ÉD.-FR1 6 5 TUES.-THURS. 9-5 INFORMATION LINE: 965-3346 Cultural Diversity Committee Chinese Restaurants Association Japanese American Citizens League Program for Southeast Asian Studies Memorial Union Activities Board ASIA N co a litio n For n o n information call 965-9754 ‘ A v a ila b le a t o u r p h a rm a c y ASU Student Health Just south o f th e University Bridge on Palm Walk Page 13 Thursday, March 24, 1994 S ta te P ress m The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook — An investment in your lifetime O rd e r yo u rs to d a y fo r $ 3 6 .9 3 , M a tth e w s C e n te r b asem ent, rm 5 0 , 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 3 m J j . I ■ ■ . ! [ Tempe, AZ 85281 tJu« Fasr nf Roosevelt on Broadway, Behind the Lillie Kings Subsl ■ M L ^ - *lee *5 *4 , Italian Home o f the 'K iller' Calzone sum v* SOMICS Forest College W 8 9 4 -M A M A 106 E . U n iv e r s ity D r . a tc h i t h e r e f H O U R j 968-8060 Bring this coupon in for a 10% discount!!! j check out the latest involleygear M o w n M O -30 PM MUMS I RED BUD& BÜDU6HT e s s i- 1 New and Old Sport« and Non-Sports Cards, Cornice, Colne, Video Game Rentals &Morel I 524 W. Broadway M il re d sa n d , s id e o u t, v.b. rags, d u b , p e rn ic c i, p rim itiv e p rin ts , s a n d m a n & m a n y m o re ... PITCHERS IIM — Mon-Fri 8-10, Sat 9-5 & Sun 10-3 TOC Wings during game NWCorner E Ray Rd &I 10 (¿it Foothills P¿irk Place) • 940-4SUN ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE We*re more than a bookstore. r ju . • G reek Ite m s • S w e a tsh ir ts T -S h irts C ap s S h o r ts S tu d y A id s Lab B o o k s B ack p ack s S c h o o l S u p p lie s J a c k e ts & C h ild ren 's W ear Open ? days a w eek , 6 2 5 E. A p ech e 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 SAVE 100s on AUTO INSURANCE Unique Risk Replacement Program • Quality Companies • Professional Agents • Low Down Payments • • Monthly Payments • We Also Offer Mexican Trip Insurance • Students, faculty and Staff Welcome Clean Driving Record or Slightly SoiledI Call for a furo Free Quote IDVfMnocA U R A 9 9 6 -7 7 0 0 N R H A -A S U 965-5809 SUPPORT HALL COUNCILS! RHA M eeting s: W ed n esd ays @ 5 p .m . in th e M .U. 9 6 5 -5 8 0 9 “The Unified Voice of the Residence Halls” [ S ó r b a n "gardbñ "1 ■ .S I fie id th y • T a sty • ¿ a ffo rd a b le M O N -SA T 3 1 -2 :3 0 PM LARGERSERVINGS NOWAVAILABLE! $¿¿95 I 1324 S. Rural ,' fGarden ~~■ 7 I! ii • JU S T SOUTH O F APACHE - • . . . />:; ■ ; - ; t ~ ^^breon Garden! BRINGTHISAO!NFJ)RA FREE 21 -oz. Soft Drink Mdih coupon and purchase of lunch special § Ií DIne-inOnly I II ii J ' W ÊSÊ Expires - «J 3 30-94 ss C o m ic s . S tate P ress Thursday, March 24, 1994 P a g e 14 Calvin a n d Hobbes EV4WVJ7 WHM'S THIS, SOMETHING SCRNPED OFF THE BOTTOM OF BOOTS ?P I'M NOT EATVÑ6 VT/ b y B ill W a t t e r s o n T H E F A R S ID E By GARY LARSON NEER m> ’©V) SMO VT WAS YCUR FAVORITE MEN. OF AU. TVME AHO YOU V4VSWED NE COUL0 HAVE VT EVERT WW FOR THE REST OF TOUR UFE/ 1994 Wawerscn D■ Board Certified M.D. Gynecologist 25 Years Experience in Pregnancy Termination • • • • Procedure while asleep (a t your option) Pregnancy testing (im m ediate results) Gynecological ultrasound and Infection exams Birth control. M orning-after pill. 1 0 % DISCOUNT 5 5 3 -0 4 4 0 Major Credit Cards Accepted T F M P F 2525 S. Rural Rd. #4C . D I I A F M I Y 3143 N..32nd St. . ■ “ ■ Between Broadway fit Southern r n y i l '* * * Just North of. Loop 202 ' JO IN O U R CRAP CLUB Every copy that you make at the Alternative Copy Shop will earn you 1/2c credit. This credit is to be used toward the final copy of your thesis or dissertation on 100% cotton paper. You will be surprised ho\N quickly your Grad Club account will add up. Come in and sign up for the Alternative Grad Club today! ' Like You've Never Seen It. Craig M acnaughton/State Press Distance runner Erin Scroggins and his Sun Devil teammates host the Sun Devil Invitational Track and Field Meet begin­ ning today at 3 p.m. at Sun Angel Stadium. ASU CRAP STUDENTS ECONOMICS! Is There Historical Proof of the Resurrection? Come listen and enjoy talking with noted theologian and communicator to college students Dr. Barry Strieker, Ph.D. Historical Theology Pastor of Tiburón Baptist Church, Tiburón, C A Former Assistant Professor of Theology ánd Christian Philosophy, Golden Gate Baptist Seminary Not For Economics Majors | Current Issues In Economics | E C N 304 - S L N 81730 M W F 8:40-9:30 D r. Roberts Economics applied to the "war on drugs,'1the health care crisis, 7:30 p.m., Thursday, March 24 Language and Literature Building Room C57 pollution, the environment, etc. International Economics E C N 306 - S L N 30 3 3410:40-11:30 D r. Gooding Understanding current trade Issues such as the North American *£3L>. the alternative Free Trade Agreement etc. Sponsored B y A SU -B dptist Student U nion 968-0223 International Business/1st Summer Session te m p e c o p y s h o p E C N 394 - SSI 5 5 7 8 1T T H 11:0 0 -12:30 Daily D r. Gooding 915 S. Mill A ven ue Call 829-7992 Survey of international economics and business topics. Admission is FREE! ^ Prerequisites: EC N 111 gr EC N 112, Junior standing, 2.0 G P A j Page 17 Thursday, Match 24, 1994 S tate P ress Tennis______________ Shores C ontinued from page C ontinued 15. singles match between Brunner and Inigo O jer, Brunner pulled off a 6-1, 6-3 win, despite playing with a pulled chest muscle. “I really had no idea how good this team would be,” said Brunner: “We underestimat­ ed them a little bit since they won the dou­ bles. That surprised us hut we came back and won. “I played OK 1 guess. It (the pulled mus­ clé) only affected my serve. It was pretty relaxed. Obviously, I wanted to win but he (Ojer) didn’t seem too into it." In the No. 2 singles matchup. Jeschke defeated Bull 6-2,6-2. Jeschke said that ASU had to come back for the win after a poor showing in doubles play. “It’s never good to underestimate a team, because anything can happen,” Jeschke said. “It was a windy day, and we lost doubles due to just a lackluster effort on everybody’s part. But I came out strong, and Eric (Brunner) played strong, and W olf (van Lindenau) especially came out strong.” Von Lindenau. a freshman doubles player, completed his first singles- match Of the sea­ son by defeating the Aggies’ Liyao. 6-2,6-2. “That was basically his first Singles match and he did a great job,” Jeschke said. from page 15. “I was in the zone that day. It was like it wasn’t really happening to me,” When this June’s draft tolls around, it’s a safe bet that Shores will be selected higher than the 30th round. However, he said he’s not thinking about the draft right now. He’s too busy thinking about what he can do for the Sun Devils this season. “I’m really thankful for the opportunity this School has given me. I’d love to leave it on a good note.” year happen.” Last season hasn’t reared its ugly head in 1994. Shores is among the leaders in the SixPac in a fistful of offensive categories. He is first in home runs (13) and runs scored (36), second in slugging percentage (.731) and triples (4) and third in RBIs (32). “He’s a five-tool talent,” coach Brock said. “He can’t possibly do anything but get better.” IBs best game of the season came against Southern Utah. He battered the Thunderbirds for a double, a triple, two homers and nine RBIs. Jim C lassifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement ', requesting money be Sent or invested ,^y o u -m ay w ish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press: cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the o ffers advertised in our classified section For more inform ation and assistan ce regarding the investigation o f an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 2641721. RENTAL SHARING ROOMAfE NEEDED for 3bd house n/s. m/f, upper classmen, needed 4/26 or sooner 423-1738 ROOM ATE WANTED for 3 bd. condo in quiet area, 2 mi. from ASU. $2CKVmo496-8930 aft. 5pm ROOM ATE WANTED to share lg. 3 bd. w/1 per. Garage, 2 blks from ASU off College. $350/mo.. + 1/2 util; Tom 902-0876 aft 5:30, ANNOUNCEMENTS ROOM ATE WANTED: F. n/s, grad./re-erttry student 2bd., 2ba.. $247.50 + 1/2 Util. 831-3869. Baseline & Dobson. . DOOR PRIZE $500; Tuition scholarship at "Peace & Recon­ ciliation” Program. Mon. Mar. -2.8,7pra. Ml): Ventana Rm. RO O M S FOR RENT F R E E TA X H E L P FEMALE NEEDED to rent rm. in house close to ASU,. $235 + 173 util. Avail. 1st Wk of April. Call 92 f-1796. Wednesdays & Thursdays fc9pm, and Saturdays 9am-noon. Room Í 14. Armstrong Hall. INTERESTED IN Buddhism? Jodo Shu Dbarma Center, Call 545 7684.; ■ P H O N E B IL L S Too high? Cali for up to 1 hr anyr timé, aiiy state-just $2.60/caIl. Recmsg: 8Ó0-382-QJ83 éxt. 566. FEMALE STUDENT wantedto share 3 b d hom e near; ASU.. $300/mo, 1/3 util. Call 894-9786. M A LE/FEMALE ROOM ATE wanted to share 3Bd 1Ba house 3 blocks from. ASU *$217 + 1/3 util. Phil 894-4693. APARTMENTSASU AREA, Sthdio, t, 2, &.3 bedroom apts, from $280$425/rao,. not inch útil., Ask for Dina 829-1963 ór Tere 9668838. ; BIG 2BD, 2BA Share a beautiful apartment and keep your privacy. Everything new. $675 furnished. Closest to ASU. 91 0 6 . Lemon (office 919 E. Lemon) 966-9000. k>yer DISCOUNT STOCKBROKERS M em ber NYSE and SIPC SfATE P ress Thursday, March 24, 1994 P a g e l8 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL C O U N SELO R S FO R boys' camp, Maine. Openings: WSI, sailing, windsurfing, tennis, waterskiing, soccer, lacrosse, hockey(street), crafts, baseball, rockclimbing, drama, basketball, riflery, archery, etc. Terrific work­ ing conditions, exciting, fun sum­ mer! Write: Camp Cedar, 1758 Beacoh Street, Brookline, MA 02146, Call 617-277-8080. JOIN THE fun working with girls age 6-14 this summer in the cool pines o f Mt. Lemmon, AZ. Op­ portunities for unit leaders, coun­ selors, cooks, and nurses. Quali­ fied individuals of diverse popu­ lations are encouraged to apply. EOE-AA. Call JUlia at 602-3272288. ext. 138 for more informa­ tion or apply to Camp Director, P.O. Box 12866, Tucson, A Z 85732 NATIONAL ANSWERING serv­ ice needs open-minded personnel. 3 shifts. 352-4220, Roxy. DID SPRING Break leave you broke? The ASU Telefund has the job for you! Flexible hours, great pay, call 965-6754 to apply. M ARKETING M AJOR needed to assist president o f Tempe M anufacturing Co. Flex hrs. $6/hr to start. 829-4969. EASY COMPUTERIZED phone work,$7/hr, set appointments, no selling. ,3-8 M-F. Sat 9-2. Incentives-trips & dinners; Start now. Call Roger, 423-9333. EXECUTIVE ANSEWERING sevice has immediate opening for p/t operator, hrs TWTH 3-7pm Sat/Sun 3:30-10:30pm. Call 2644000 for appointment. EXPERIENCED BICYCLE tech­ nician needed for Bob's Bicycle Barn. 920 E. U niversity Ste .D 103. Cornerstone Shopping Mall. No phone calls please. EXPERIENCED SYNCHRON­ IZED swimmer to coach Scot­ tsdale synchro team. Call Ten Lundquest 970-8162. GRAPHIC LAYOUT artist, ex­ cellent design sense & adver­ tising background pref. --PC en­ vironment, please send resume & salary requirements to LeMarche, 7550 E, McDonald Dr. Ste. G., Scottsdale, AZ 85250. GREAT P/T job with national automotive disi. 10-30 hours/ week. Apply in person or send resum e to A PS, In c., 2324 E.University Dr., Phoenix, AZ 85034. EOE, M/F/V/H. Starting pay $5,75/hr. HELP WANTED p/t. Apply in person ©W orld's Gym. 1465 N, Hayden, Scottsdale, MICROAGE O ffice A ssistant. M icroA ge Iiic., one o f the largest marketers and distributors of information technology products and servic­ es in the world, has an immediate opening for a part time office as­ sistant in our Investor Relations department This position will be responsible for tracking competi­ tive information, preparing earn­ ings releases and preparing in­ formation for the annual report. The ideal candidate will have good written and yerbal com­ munication skills, working knowl­ edge o f Lotus or Excël, Word­ Perfect or Word. For immediate consideration call Sara at 9683168, ext. 2214 or send resume and salary history to: MicroAge, Attn: HR/Office Assistant P.O. Box 1920, Tempe, AZ 852801920 EOE: . MODELS/ACT0RS.M-F, ALL types, fra*inti music videos, natl commercials & local print work. No exp, nec. 266-6271. MOTIVATED INDIV. needed for sales oriented pos. Hrly + commis. Exclut, opportunity. Apply at 222 S. 52nd St. between 9 3 ; 3/22-3/30 MUSIC INDUSTRY Spring-Fall Internship. National Concert Promotion/Marketing Co. based in L.A. seeks responsible, outgoing, Music/Marketing Intern based in Phx! Soph, or above. Know your market well, be Very into music. Call Mary a.s.a.p. 213-368-4738. NEW ENGLAND brother/sister camps-Massachusetts. Mah-KeeNac for boys/Danbee for girls. Counselor positions for Program Specialists: All team sports, espe­ cially baseball, basketball, Eeld hockey, roller hockey, soccer, volleyball; 25 tennis openings; also archery, riflery, weights/fitness and biking;other openings include preforming arts, fine arts, newspaper, photography, radio station, cooking, sewing, rollerskating, rocketry, ropes & climbing and camp craft; all water font activities (swimming, skiing, sailing, windsurfing, canoeing/kayaking). Inquire: Mah-KeeNac (boys) 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, N X 07028. Call; 1800-753-9118. Danbee (girls) 17 Westminster Drive. Montville, N J. 07045. (M l 1-800-392-3752: P/T EMPLOYMENT approx. 20 hrs/wk setting up advertising inflatables for radio stations. $57/hr. Must have p/u truck. Happy Day Promotions, 946-4136. P/T OFFICE messenger needed to run errands & perform general office duties. Jill 468-8900. PROGRAMMER NEEDED for Visual Basic for Windows app. develop. Add. bk. type data base programm ing w /print merge. W ork & pay by the project. Homework! Software, 890-0416. PT AVG S8-10/HR 36 year old company and we're growing again. Close to campus. Flexible schedule. Perfect for students. Call today for an inter­ view; Dial America Marketing, 894-0264; PUBLIC RELATIONS Growing company seeks posi­ tive, people oriented individuals ‘ to helpexpand our office. Train­ ing & travel available. 967-7344. REPUBLICAN PARTY wants you to work the phone banks MTh, 5-9pm, S6/hr. Contact Max Fose at 957-7770. HELP WANTEDGENERAL SPORTS MINDED Hiring immediately 6-8 individ­ uals for Teihpe office. Flex p/t hrs avail, $8/hr guar to start. Call Mike for interview, 921-8282. SURVEYS, N?)T sales. Market­ ing research co. looking for p/t phone recruiters. All shifts open, 9-1,1-5,5-9. Must enjoy phone. C ustom er; service skills nec. $5/hr. 110 & Baseline. Call Emily 438-2800. TELEMARKETING If yoU are not making $250-$300 a week working 30 hours call American Security & Protection. This is not a selling call but set­ ting appointments for customers. You. will be paid $6-$7/hr plus $50-$200 a wk. in bonuses. We also have dly. & ninthly, contests for addtl. income. Relaxed at­ mosphere f/t pay/ p/t work. 2 shifts avail, call Tony at 9210345. TELEM A R K ETIN G , $5 per hour to start. Flexible schedule. 967-5747 THERAPEUTIC WORK, excel­ lent pay, flexible hours, will train. Call 844-9000 or 377-7283. WILL TRAIN; real estate agent needs dependable helper. Com­ puter skills helpful. M-F, 9-1, $6/hr. Fax resume 951-5209. WRESTLING Perfect p/t job. Need athletically inclined people to work as pro­ style wrestling partners. No ex­ perience necessary, must be at least 18 yis old, 110-160Tbs, $8/hr. to start. Send name, ad­ dress, phone, age, height, weight & experience to: W. Dunn, 4409 N. 16th St,, A -130, Phoenix, AZ 85016. YOUTH ADVISOR needed for young Judaea Youth Group in Phx area beginning Aug. Must have some exp. w/ kids, knowl­ edge of Isreal + Judism, p/t flex his: Call Simon 966-3384. HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDF O O D S E R V IC ^ HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE FAST GROW ING T elecom ­ m unications Co. looking for sharp inside sales person. 10-20 hrs/wk., hrly + Comm. 838-1088 or 708-4249. EARN MONEY to get thru the semester! Hiring waitstaff and bussers on ASU cam pus for Marriott Catering. Apply in per­ son between 9-4 in Memorial Union Room #138. P/T NANNY, aft sch care, 2:456:30 M-F, 3 girls 8-11 yrs. Must have car. ASU area. Christy 3818999 ext 292,921-7032 hm eves. HIGHEST PAY in valley selling pest control. Great p/t job. No exp. nec, Call 437-4346. LADIES BO UTIQUE, Scot­ tsdale, p/t sales, days/evenings/wknds. Call Kim 941-8629. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL S5/HOÜR TO start. Fulltime po­ sition, 968-6600, CLERICAL Pi f thru Memorial Day, then f/t. Flexible hours and work schedule. Typing, filing, heavy phones. Start immediately. Apply in person, Big Surf, 1500 N. McClintock, Tempe. P/T OFFICE asst. Scottsdale wknds. + heavy phones 423-8737. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE FT/PT COOKS, flex hrs, full bnfts. Apply M-F, btwn 2-4pm. TGI Fridays, 1310 S. Longmore. GARCIAS REST, now inter­ viewing for cocktailer & hostess positions. Must be able to work Fri-Sun evenings. Apply in per­ son between 2-5 Mon-Fri., 2394 N. Alma School Rd.. LOOKING FOR a counter per­ son, days. 5012 E: Van Buren, Honey Bears Barbeque 273-9148 NOW ACCEPTING Lapps. for night sh ift Starting $4.50/hr w/quick advancement- Apply @ Taco Johns, 735 E. University. No phone calls. THE CHUCKBOX Restaurant across from ASU needs cus­ tomer serving line help, full or p/t. 202 E. University 968-4712. PIZZA PRETZEL BROWN'S CAFE, 570 S. Col­ lege, Tempe is hiring delivery & counter help. Stop by to apply . 525 S. Forest (the Towers) hiring P/T days prep cook/delivery stop in to apply. ; - CHUY'S COMING soon. 4623 E. Elliot Rd. Need Cooks, prep., counter people. Apply in person. WAITRESSES FOR high energy sports bar. Apply in person 10-5. Philly's Sports Bar + Grill 1826 N Scottsdale Rd. ÇLUCK-U- CHICKEN Rest. Now hiring Delivery Drivers. PT/FT. Apply in person, 855 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, 894-2112. COSMIC PIZZA, is now hiririg exp. pizza cooks & del. drivers. We offer flex. hrs;. competative wages, a fast track to manage­ ment & great working condi­ tions. Apply N Is» HAPpyHOUR M# 10*7 FREE IQ S T/FO U N D FOUND: YELLOW Lab puppy 3- 4 months old, vicinity of S. Dorsey & Apache. 858-9761. HEALTH & FITNESS TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING WANTED 100 students to try new fat busting tabs Sc theigh creme. I lost 15 lbs in 2 wks & 4 pant sizes! Gauranteed, Dr rec­ ommended. Send $35 each or $68 both to P.O Box 505, Louisville, CO 80027 or 303-666-7831. Visa, Master card or discovery acc. Distributors also wanted. PAPERS EDITED/ critiqued /typed by exp'd writer. Rsnble rates. Scottsdale, 945-7739. TYPING /W O RD P R O C ||S IN G _ $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP. NearASU. Brian, 967-5987. 1 DAY Turnaround- Most pa­ pers. Professional word processing/papers/resumes. Laser, Resonable. Caroline 892-7022. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ASU. Diane 829-1602. AAA QUALITY w/p, laserjxinter. $2/double spaced page. Quick service. Sandy, 9024)549. 2 for 1 College Night A DOZEN Roses $20. Balloons & Delivery available. Calf After Hours Flowers 894-3419. AAA- KINKO’S Copy Center makes the grade! Get reports, resumes, Sc flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & much more '. O pen 24 hours! Rural Sc University, 966-2035. a m iti) » Anything on Menu 60-oz. pitchers S3.75 4pm-close Thursdays FRL MAR. 25 J-IFC 4 man v-b all at Phi Kappa Psi 3:00 then a Fiji blowout (1403 E. 8th). ACCURATE, EXPERIENCED word processor. Apa/Mla $2/pg. WordPerfect. Laura 820-0305. O u ts id e 6-ft Big Screen INFANT JESUS- Much thanks for answering my prayer- N.S. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. K j PRANKSTERS 6-10 p.m. Live music tonight with Mushroom Sundae "PSYCH ZO M B IES ' 5iw« ttii# üg-i s* muwnwy . from Colorado I Tempé:* IÍN < Ü In sid e 10 p.m .-l a.m. For a Good Time ça« 966-1300 B a h a a Cafa r M USIC NEVER A COVER * H H SMBHMLL ■ T í « *7em ¿6 40« S. V » A v e , S u i» 101 l/H IP K O V WELCOMES C I T O Y ’J P IZ Z A & PASTA W here ASU Goes fo r Pizza THIRSTY THURSDAY $ i 25 Q UESTS ¿ H O í l X YEARS o í i PERSONALS LOOKING FOR fall 1993 ac­ counting 240 midterm Sc final. Call 966-8460. SDMB HORNS Amber A nna Becca Darrick J e ff Jen Kelda K arisa M arian M arcus Mark Mark Mary Ryan Stacy-W e are having a reunion Saturday night ait Pop's. Call Anna or Stacy for details. I K JEN- Happy 20th B-day ! . Only one more to go. Love Brent ST. JUDE- Thank you for an­ swering my prayer.- M.B. ¡ * I U OLDER n EVERY MONDAY ST. JUDE- Thank you for an­ swering my prayer; N.S. ; ■ 1Admission S4.00 ! ST. THERESA- TTiank you for answering my prayer. N.S. CA LL 92 1-9 877 WANTED-GOOD USED tread­ mill, pay up to $250, good used portable stereo, must have dual cass/cd, pay up to $100.229-8559 AD O PTIO N B u d • A m s te l FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. S t. P a u li H e in e k e n • B e c k s C o o r s L ig h t M o ls o n B a r tle s & J a y m e s All 12 o z . B o ttle s 968-6666 mill avenue 1301 E. University "W ' A lte rn a tiv e Thursdays WINGS ; Monday-Fridày 4 p m -& p m Saturday & Sunday I1am-4pm \- y V 701 South Mill Avenue 966-3147 V SPORTS & 7 RECREATION GOLF CLASSES wfll begin at the Karsten GC at ASU the Week alter Spring Break. The 6-week course will include all areas ofthe game. Discounts for ASU facul­ ty/staff/students. 921-8070. HAPPILY MARRIED profes­ sional couple desire to provide loving Christian home for white newborn. Financially secure, of­ fering love, happines & educa­ tion. Expenses paid. Legal &confidential. Call Pat anytime, 1800-237-0058. M IS C . RESUMES $15 w Don't miss the new issue of Devil Deals. Look for It on campus or pick up your free copy in the base­ ment o f Matthews Center. H igh Success rate! R eports $2.00/pg., same day. A Perfect Image, near ASU 967-0907. THE WRITER Experienced ASU grad and long­ time resident prepares papers, re­ ports, ect. Resumes only $ 10.00. Fast and reliable. Call or fax: Larry 838-3471- Theresa • 9 2 4 -19 76 For further inform ation, call the Arizona Institute o f Reproductive M edicine at 468-3840 Financial compensation. Y our Individual H oroscope WORD PROCESSING, secre­ tarial services, fax. 28yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W comer, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. = INSTRUCTION Frances D rake b For Thursday, M arch 24,1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) T h e w ee sm all ho u rs fav o r romance. Later in the day, you’11 be en grossed in a study or research project. You’ll also receive good news about a financial matter. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You may volunteer few a club assignm ent Talks with friends are serious and down to earth. Evening hours bring a wealth of happy social opportunities. GEMINI (May "21 to June 20) You’ll tackle a business problem h ead -o n to d a y . T a lk s . w ith higherups are productive. You may be in line fo ra promotion, prestige and a raise in salary. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Your social graces are an asset in business today. Partners may n o t ag ree about a shopping concent. You’ll be invited on a trip or to a gala social affair. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) T ra v e l to d a y h a s ro m a n tic overtones. You may be busy with heavy-duty recordkeeping. Work may be uneventful, but to n ig h t b rin g s happy hom e developments. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You’ll feel like a lawyer today as you review the difficult wording o f a contract. Be sure to take advantage o f wonderful social opportunities that arise. LIBRA (Sept, 23 to Oct. 22) It’s not the best time for home entertaining; but partners are as one today. A d ifficu lt w ork assignment is soon followed by a superb career offer, SCORPIO (O c t 23 to Nov. 21) INTERIOR DESIGN Becom e a designer in ju s t 6 months. American Institute of Inlerior Design. Classes now form­ ing. 946-9601. MiSCT POWERB ALL- RECEIVE win­ ning numbers power & sequence charts; Free info. 561-5739 X 125 State Press back issues can be picked up at the Information Desk in the Basement o f Matthews Center SIMPLY THE BEST! Help is available in over 30 sub­ jects. Private ($ 10-$ 15) and small groups ($5) hourly sessions form­ ing now. Miracle Tutoring, 9671236. ‘TUTOR NEEDED for Mat 129. Mar 22-May 12. One night/wk. in ASO Ubraiy. Call $teve464-1989 TUTORS Thousands o f women cannot conceive and bear children due to their husband's lack o f normal sperm: . T h e y n e e d y o u r helpD o n a te y o u r sperm . WORD PROC.: Resumes, re­ ports, theses, etc. We take pride in our work! 955-4285 8am-8pm. TUTORS If you'd rather spend your time doing something besides typing, let an ASU graduate help you make the best impression possible. APA/MLA expert, laser printer, rush jobs no problem! WANTED BE A SPERM DONOR W H Y T Y P E I T Y O U R S ELF? ALL TUTORS ARE NO T ALIKE S u m m e r S c h o o l B lu e s ...If y o u need tu to rin g w e 'll b e o p e n d u rin g b o th su m m e r sessions. Classes are s m a lle r- rates are lo w e r. W e also have a fe w seats le ft fo r th is sem ester; call fo r details. W e o ffe r tu to ria l fo r th e fo llo w in g su m m e r classes: M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117, M A T 119, M A T 210, . ADOPT- YOUNG loving family wants to provide stable home for your baby. Call ourattny:, Suzi, 4800r845-0242, anytime. A299. Sam A dam s AH Night with college id Page 19 Thursday, March 24,1994 S tate P ress PSY2 3 0 , QBA 22 1, PHY 111, PHY 112. MATRIX Education Center ("Simon") Cornerstone Mall 968-4668 i---------------------------------- --------------------- - “ - “ You may be having a serious talk with a child today. You may not be pleased with changes in b u sin ess p lans now , b u t be flexible. Tonight brings glorious fun! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) ; Happy romantic times are likely. Serious talks pertain to family concerns. Travel plans may be up in the air. Tonight brings benefits from an unexpected party. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) : Serious in tellectual w ork is favored. You may not b e ready to make up your mind about a financial matter. Through friends you’ll m eet w ith new social opportunities. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Couples will enjpy a warm rapport today. An overdue account should be paid now. Today’s business developments will put you in a better position financially . PISCES (Feb. 19 to M ar. 20) You’ll have new insights about yourself today; A t work, you may run into a few stumbling blocks. Tonight brings happy travel developments and a surge in self-confidence, i Y O U B O R N T O D A Y are community-minded and are often drawn to a political career. You dislike being in a subordinate position and thrive best in a position of leadership. Y ou are resilient in crisis situations and are perhaps more persistent than the typical member o f your sign. Y ou h av e a good sense o f responsibility and are a comfort to th o se dependent o n you, Birihdate of: Steve McQueen, actor* Harry Houdini, magician; and Lawrence Ferlinghetti, poet. ©1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. - - - - - q g ------------ — n STATE P ress Classified Ad Order Form HAVE YOU considered open adoption? We're a Phoenix cou­ ple who very much want to raise a child and believe openness is b e st Call us at 602-404-9566 or our adoption counselor at 602706-0151. Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip F’tease print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. SERVICES CAR REPAIR Mobile- We come to you! Low rates, work guaranteed 839-5398 COLLEGE SCHOLORSHIPS available $59.95. Matching fee guaranted from 150,000 sources. Free info. 561-5739. X I12. NOTICEABLE NAILS. Pedi­ cures $30, fills $20, sets $40. 20% off 1st time clients 829-6799 RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800351-0222. Please be aura to check your ad. Make auto it made exactly as you wish it to appear in the Stale Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the Bret day it appear« the liability oI the State Frees ahaEnot exceed the coat of the ad and credit may be given for the Bret kiaertion only. Mtoor spading errors do not qualify for make-goods.No refunde wM be given, b u tif you need to cancal your ad a ctedMwN be held on account for future advertieing. a S I E 3 Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1,25 par line, per day 104- days, $1.15 per line, per day Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line £ 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 minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. RID HAIR now, stud, discount, blend method 4 high kill rate. Terrace/Southern 921-1146. PUMP UP your party with live DJ $150 or rent premixed music $19.05. Iv. msg, 929-8606. Well, Wine, Draft 8-11 p.m. 4 1 1 S. M ill A v e . 9 6 6 -2 0 2 0 SINGER WANTED for grunge, funk, blues band. Call Dan 921-8921 or John 451-9759. PROLIFIC SONGWRITER Seeks charism atic, young fem ale singer with dance & m odeling experience to sing HouseTTechno tracks. Call 407-8976. SCULPTURED NAILS $20. Ash + University. H iar extensions also. 829-8483. STAT PRO - Statistical analysts, consulting, research help. Call 837-1999. TAX HELP Fed. & Stale Easy $25. Fed. & Stale 1040A $30. Extra $5 per form. KE Tax 926-4807. 098 065 064 077 054 086 063 062 000 064 110 097 047 036 080 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Paia Photography Pragnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing RaatayranEVBars Rooms for Rant 100 061 058 031 041 060 067 106 106 115 Services Sporta 6 Recreation Ticket* Townhomea/CondoaforRsnt Townhomee/Condoe for Sala TtanapprtaBOn Travai Tutori TypingW ord Processing Wanted J Page 20 State P ress Thursday, March 24,1994 **2 . TtQo j pn “sstw f é 'iA n ij eowssüi ( ____ i "N IMHNRyMN M t M M ÇornerstohE ] HOMI OF Ì I H I I Ì V fà S iS I Performing tonight thru March 27th HE’S EDGY, HE‘S HIP, HE’S M TV* l j u l g j ONE MONTH Unlim ited Tanning $ 3 4 ,9 5 ! ! A PR IL FOOLS DAY FRIDAY, A PR IL 1ST lt4s Tim & M ark’s 5th anniversary show! 99.$ KDKB will broadcast live from 6:0010.00 am from the improv. $1.93 breakfast, drink specials. Door prizes, FR EE mugs w hile supplies last and a g reat show! ALSO, tfcSOPtlt m EVERY MONDAY IS 18 YEARS AND OLDER NIGHT ADMISSION MOO! Have a fundraiser at the IM PR O V to benefit your Fraternity or Sorority CALL 921-9877 a |T o a n y F SERVICE! This offer n ot to be co m b in e d with any other offers or coupons. — O PEN SUNDAYS— I I a m. to 5 p.m. $5 - $ 7 P er Hour IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR STUDENTS COME BE A PART OF THE M.P.I. WINNING TEAM 968-4457 ■1 /2 PRICE I Ray-Ban Sunglasses Office Located at Rural & University Call Now for Info— Bring a Friend for Cash Bonus 1 /2 PRICE T-Shirts pacific £yes & Ts C M X 9 0 6 -0 8 0 7 ^ M R. SH IP N ’ C H E K ^ All P a ckin g M a te ria l a n d Boxes w h e n sh ip p in g w ith us SHIP Y O U R BIKE SHIP Y O U R STUFF H O M E $50 W e 'll D isassem ble— M a k e A p p o in tm e n t fo r FREE PICK-UP C all 968-6656 5 asu ORIG. $15 O ffer good with coupon only Expires 3/31/94 —A n y th in g — E verything —A n y w h e re EXPIRES 6/1/94 OFF A N Y $25 PURCHASE ASU T-SH IR TS & GIFTS • Nails » Haircuts » Perms • Colors Full Time 9 a.m.-5:45 p.m. Part Time 6 p.m.-9:30 p.m Indoor Tannins 8c Sw im w ear 50% O F F YS.S3.06 Look good. Feel good. Tan L m e The Largest Selection of . Arizona State University | Clothing & Souvenirs I 829-1743 M ON-SAT 10-9 • SUN 11-6 • I GMKOm\ H l ì V I EXPIRES 4/15/94