Board affirms higher Scoring leap? admissions standards Basha, Bishop say they’d both prefer competency test to enter state universities By Shaw n B oyd State P ress TUCSON — Two ideologies about state university entrance standards clashed at the Arizona Board of Regents meeting Friday, with the notion of competency tests losing to a minimum required number of classes. The board, which met at UofA. voted unanimously to require completion of 16 high school classes for admission beginning in the fall of 1997. Currently, 11 classes are required to get into the universities. R egents Eddie B asha and C. D iane Bishop, superintendent of public instruction, argued for competency tests to gain admis­ sion. "Fattening a transcript with more course titles is not going to get you the needed com­ petency," Bishop said. Bishop said that in the fall of 1996 high schools will start awarding diplomas based on the successful completion of competency tests. B asha B is h o p “We think that by the year 2000 w e're going to be having a much better product coming out of the high schools,” she said. Regent Doug Wall said that might pose a problem. "Are we going to be having two different systems here?” he asked Bishop. Bishop responded that local school gov­ erning bodies would be able to keep a credit system in place, allowing the universities to T urn to A dmissions, page 2. Complaints against ICA backed by ex-team doctor B y G arin G roff State P ress ASU’s former director of student health was not alone in voicing problems with the departm ent of Intercollegiate A thletics, according to records obtained by the State Press. Dr. Steven Zonner, former team physician, wrote a memo detailing problems with ICA that he wrote made "the practice of quality medicine extremely difficult.” The Nov. 2, 1992. memo was sent to Laurie Vollen, former director of student health. Vollen filed a $19 million suit against ASU in March, stating she was forced to resign for "blowing the whistle” on what she calls a dangerous stu­ dent athlete medical policy and im proper actions by ICA o ffi­ cials. Zonner would not talk to the State Press about his relationship with the ICA because the matter is in litiga­ tion. He said his memo speaks for itself. ASU A thletic Director Charles Harris has deferred comT urn to Z onner , page Craig Macnaughton/State Press ASU split end Troy Rauer snags an apparent touchdown pass from quarterback Jake Plummer during Saturday’s sixth annual Maroon & Gold spring football scrim­ mage. The pass was later ruled incomplete. 2. ASU Pow Wow: ‘Pan-American Indian social event’ B y C hris D riscoll State P ress Dance costumes featuring more colors than a 64-piece box of crayons shimmered and undulated in the 100-degree heat on the ASU band practice field Friday through Sunday as an estimated 10,000 to 12.000 people turned out for the annual ASU Pow Wow. The pow wow is a "Pan-American Indian social event,” said Lee Williams, the chairman of the gathering. “The purpose is to promote cultural awareness,” Williams said. “We hope to get all nationalities to come.” Although the Pow wows started out as exhibitions, they have become com­ petitions. All the Indian nations in Arizona were represented by participants at the event, he said. Dances from many North American Indian nations were represented in the pow wow. During the dances there is a con­ stant, compelling beat of drums and ring of bells attached to the dancers brightly colored clothes. Along with the beat and jingling bell ringing, Native American singers chant songs that accompany the dances. The dancers also wore feathers, silver jewelry, beads and leather apparel with fringes. Williams, a Navajo microbiologist and ASU alumnus who does research in ASU’s cancer research institute, started working on the Pow wow seven years ago because he wanted to do something to help the Native American students at ASU get in touch with their heritage. The pow wow was intended to be the culmination of the American Indian Cultural Heritage Week, Williams said. “The ASU Pow wow is on the pow wow circuit for most dancers,” he said. Dancers from around the country and Canada participate in pow wows on a circuit that brings them far from home in a quest for prize money. “Good dancers can make money,” he said. The ASU Pow wow offered a total of $15,000 in prize money this year that was raised by the Pow wow Committee. Five judges evaluate each performance, he said. Jonas Yazzie, a 19-year-old Navajo from Lupton, Ariz., said he has been coming to the ASU Pow Wow since he was 7 or 8 years old. He participates in the Northern Traditional Men’s competition. He said he used to perform the Grass Dance, which comes from the Sioux Nation. The dance has its origin in a practical application, he said. When the Sioux were ready to set up camp in a new location they would send the grass dancers ahead of the main party to flatten the grass with their dance so INSIDE' ASASU announces elections results. Page 7 Ip Weather Outlook Sunny. High in the upper 90s. addressing a common sexually transmitted vims takes place in the Valley. Page 8 STATE PRESS > A statewide conference Sports W orld/ Nation Serbs invaded Gorazde just after the U.N. announced an agreement was reached. Page 3 that the ground would be ready for erection of teepees. His brother, Jonathan Yazzie, still dances in the Grass Dance competition, he said. Yazzie is a dancer on the circuit, traveling as far away as Canada to contend for prize money. Marion Louise Hudson, an Apache from the San Carlos Reservation who is a junior business administration major was chosen as Ms. ASU Indian the evening of Thursday April 14 and officiated at the Grand Entry, the opening ceremonies of the Pow wow. She was joined by Mr. ASU Indian, Dawa Taylor, a junior liberal arts major who was also chosen for a one-year term Thursday. Taylor is Hopi. The Mr. and Ms. Indian ASU pageant was sponsored by the Native American Student Association of ASU. Hudson and Taylor said they both committed themselves to promoting cultural preservation. Part of their duties in the coming year will be to recruit Native Americans to became students at ASU, Hudson said. Ms. UofA Indian, Veil Jean Joshvema, and Ms. Indian NAU, M onica Nuvumsa, also appeared during the pow wow. TTie pow wow is a gathering of all tribes and nations to cele­ brate life and togetherness, Hudson said. - * Ä WÉËF 1__________ 1 The ASU men’s golf team blew away the rest of the field to win the Tnunderbird Invitational by 15 strokes. Page 11 'r ' ■>- / t \w __________ I Where To Find It Classifieds........................14 Comics............................. 10 Crossword.......................... 6 Horoscopes ...................... 15 Opinion.............................. 4 Police Report......................6 Sports............................... 11 Today’s Activities.............. 2 World/Nation......................3 Page 2 Monday, April 18, 1994 T oday The Today section is a d a ily calendar o f events printed as a ser­ vice to the ASU commu­ nity. Requests are print­ ed according to the space a vailable each day. • A lcoholics Anonymous — Closed daily m eeting, noon, basem ent o f the old church at the Newman Center, northwest cor­ ner o f C ollege and University. • W o m en ’s S tu d e n t C e n te r — Discussion group for re-entry women, 4 to 5 p.m„ fol­ low ed by discussion group for lesbian and bisexual women, 5 to 6 p.m.. Women’s Student Center, MU, lower level • S ociety o f H um an Resource Management — Guest lecture by Pat Fulks of Basha’s: “The M ost D ifficult I n t e r v i e w i n g Questions,” MU Room 224, 4:30 p.m. • Students fo r Choice — Open meeting, MU Chrysicolla Room 206, 3 p.m. • S P IC M ACAY (S ociety fo r th e P ro m o tio n o f In d ian C la ssic a l M usic an d C u ltu re A m ongst Y outh) — G uitar per­ form ance by 1994 Grammy Award winner Vishwa Mohan Bhatt, BAC 116, H erberger A uditorium , 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. S tate P ress Admissions C ontinued from page 1. still determine admission with the system voted upon. UofA Provost Paul Sypherd defended the provi­ sions of the plan adopted by the board, saying this is just one more step toward strengthening admis­ sion standards. He said that just a couple of years ago, the board adopted the 11 -unit plan, and the require­ ments needed to rise again. “This is an evolutionary process," he said, adding that competency tests may be in the future for students trying to gain admission to a state uni­ versity. The course requirements chosen by the board are as follows: • Four years of English • Four years of math • Three years of science • Two years of social science • Two years of foreign language • One course in the arts. For admission purposes, the universities will calculate high school grade point averages based on the above classes. The arts course was an amendment by student Regent Spencer Insolia. The original proposal was an additional year of one of the courses above or a speech class. Regent Andy Hurwitz said classes in the arts do not predict success in a university setting like math or science classes would. Determining which students could graduate from a state university was one of the major con­ cerns of the task force which drafted the proposal. "One clear issue is that there is a continuing, critical relationship between academic achievement in the public schools and academic success at uni­ versity,” the plan states. Bishop said Hurwitz’ view of the benefits of arts classes is wrong. “I tend to disagree that the arts would not bene­ fit students coming into the university,” she said. "I think there is ample evidence that shows that experience in the arts helps students with their thinking processes.” Wall, the president of the board, said his major concern with the plan is that it might hurt students who do not have the chance to take the needed classes due to the small size of their school dis­ tricts. “I’m looking at it on the basis of opportunity,” he said. “I’m concerned about the students who are not going to be able to take (the required classes).” In a survey conducted by Bishop’s office, rural and small school districts generally indicated that the additional requirements might be hard to offer because of staff or financial problems. Last week, George Sisemore, superintendent of the Tolleson Unified High School District, said the requirement would force his district to hire two new teachers for $60,000. Sypherd said Wall need not worry because through outreach programs the universities can assist the smaller school districts. In addition, students without the needed courses could attend a community college and then transfer to a state university. department boosters, the memo states. The SMAT members are not accountable to anyone, Zonner wrote. The student athlete medical policy in 1992 required all referrals to a specialist or for diagnos­ tic tests to be approved by the head trainer, an employee of ICA, the memo states. “Not only is the additional paperwork extreme­ ly time consuming and patient confidentiality again at risk, my freedom to practice the best medicine is severely curtailed,” Zonner wrote. The policy previous to the rewrite by Harris in August, 1992 stated that referrals were to be autho­ rized by the team physician, an em ployee of Student Health. The policy was again rewritten in the fall of 1993. That version states that Student Health must coordinate authorizations and that “no coach or other ICA employee may refer a student athlete to any health professional other than the team physi­ cian or athletic trainer.” Zonner also criticized ICA’s interpretations of what procedures it could pay for. under National Collegiate Athletic Association guidelines. Zonner also objected to the policy prohibiting him from running on to the field when a player is injured unless he received a signal of approval from an athletic trainer. He followed it only to pre­ vent further difficulties with ICA, he wrote. Zonner did run onto the field on at least two separate occasions without receiving a signal, he wrote, but only because he saw the players were in suffering from persistent pain and could have seri­ ous injuries. In both instances, the head trainer, Perry Edinger, left Zonner on the field alone with the patient, Zonner writes. Edinger said he could not comment on the poli­ cy without the approval of Mark Brand, director of athletic media relations. Brand said Edinger could not comment on the athletic policy because he isn’t aware of what the policy was at the time. Zoimer___ u. C ontinued from page 1. ment on the law suit to the O ffice o f G eneral Counsel. ASU attorneys have denied Vollen's alle­ gations. In his memo, Zonner wrote he was reluctant to write a letter detailing problems with ICA because it might hurt his attempts to improve his relation­ ship with the department. “I am extremely concerned that a serious inci­ dent will be precipitated, and I hope to avert one by raising awareness,” the memo states. Zonner wrote that ICA officials had rewritten the student-athlete medical policy under the cover of cutting costs, but it actually “shackled the appro­ priate delivery of medical care.” “This kind of policy serves only to waste the student athlete’s time while it makes the team physician a puppet at the will of ICA and the refer­ ral specialists retained on the SMAT (Sports Medicine Advisory Team) potentially directly con­ trollable by ICA," the memo states. The SMAT faced a conflict of interest because some of its specialists were significant athletic Workshops, seminars highlight MEChA conference By M ika A kikuni State P ress Hundreds of proud Chicano students representing universi­ ties and high schools from more than 10 states filled ASU’s campus with music and seminars Friday through Sunday while attending the National MEChA (Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan) conference this weekend. The conference, which takes place in a different city every year, is designed to educate Chicano students about their indigenous heritage and issues that they face living in a European-based society. Participants attended nearly 90 dif­ ferent seminars and workshops that discussed topics such as revolution and violence and justice at the border. “To me, the Chicano movement means something different for everybody,” said Leonard Charley, member of the Mesa Community College MEChA chapter. “The one significant thing is that we all want something better for our people. The Chicano movement has been there since the Europeans came to this continent. People brand us, saying that we are Chícanos, that we are Native American because they want to separate us. And the thing is that we are all indigenous.”, “Chicano is a way of thinking,” Charley said. “This is our land, this is our own land, this, the Western Hemisphere, is the red continent. Chicano, to me, is someone who is concerned for the better of the indigenous people.” This year’s National MEChA conference began officially with the inauguration of the Chicano re sidence hall, El Zócalo, on Thursday. Prominent ChicSM ASU also contributed to the conference by urging students to form a See related story, p.6 plan of action in their schools so that they will be able to help more Chicanos graduate from college. Charley said more young people will maintain their Chicano identities because they now have role models. “Before, they didn’t have role models, and they had to look elsewhere,” Charley said. “But now, the college students are getting more involved with the barrios (neighborhoods), with the young people, and telling them, ‘you can do this, you can do that,’ stuff that they had never heard before. They never heard that they could succeed. They just heard that they were going to shoplift and gang bang. And that’s not true.” Charley said one of the positive aspects that Chicanos carry with themselves is that “we are very family-oriented, very culturally aware of who we are and we respect elders, and that’s all I can say because I don’t feel I need to justify ourselves. '$ e were here first.” Ed Delci, a College of Liberal Arts academic advisor and faculty advisor to the ASU MEChA, said the Chicano move­ ment began in the 1960s, “when the (Chicano) youth move­ ment received the encouragement to march with their own agenda.” “The movement not only meant that Chicanos assumed their identity, but also that they were establishing the factor of self-determination, and in that degree of confidence, that they were establishing their own path to fulfill things,” Delci said. “That path is to see our community as equal in this society, work toward the elimination of injustices, from the farm workers in the fields to the lack of Chicano studies in our edu­ cational system.” Delci said that ASU has a good selection of Chicano stud­ ies curriculum. “What is occurring now, that would only enhance that, is the creatio n o f the C hicano S tudies Department.” DID YOU KNOW? A t C h a n d le r-G ilb e rt C o m m u n ity C ollege, y o u can g e t th e lo w e r division classes yo u need w h ic h transfer to ASU. In a d d itio n , consider th e o th e r benefits o f a tte n d in g CGCC: • • • • • • Small class sizes O n e -o n -o n e w ith experience d fa c u lty Low tu itio n Excellent c o m p u te r facilities W eekend college Expanded dass o ffe rin g s % # CHANDLER-GILBERT COMMUNITY COLLEGE A Maricopa Community College Learn M ore About Radio! Saturday, April 23rd, 1994 8 AM - Noon if you're a student of Radio ... attend the first Greater Phoenix Radio Seminar ______ W o rld /N a tio n ______ St a t e P ___________________________________ Monday, April 18,1994______________________________ ress Päge 3 round tizona Legislative session a success despite failed education bill PHOENIX (AP) — Gov. Fife Symington characterizes the just-con­ cluded legislative session as “tremen­ dously productive,” despite the failure of a last-ditch effort to salvage an edu­ cation-reform package. The failure of the $38.8 million edu­ cation bill during the waning hours of th e session m arked the only m ajor defeat for Symington, whose other leg­ islative priorities passed with relative ease. Lawmakers approved a tough juve­ nile-crime bill he described as “one of the finest efforts w e’ve ever made in terms of strengthening our laws to pro­ tect the public.” They also gave Symington the $100 million income-tax cut that was his top legislative priority as well as a welfarereform package and the $1 million he sought to pay for state’s rights lawsuits against die federal government. The education bill fell victim to a session-long battle over school vouch­ ers. Symington and Republican legisla­ tive leaders had embraced a $3 million p lo t program that would have provided as many as 2,000 low-income students with state vouchers of up to $1,500 each to pay their public- or private-school tuition. B ut opposition to the plan from House and Senate Democrats, plus a handful of Republicans in each cham­ ber, produced a deadlock that voucher supporters were unable to break. A House-Senate conference commit­ tee produced a compromise bill, includ­ ing a revamped voucher plan, during the final week o f the session. B ut GOP leaders were unable to deli ver the votes to pass it. Symington blamed the defeat on the “incredibly entrenched interests of the education community.” 'They are very resistant to change,” he said. Four killed in motorcycle accidents around Arizona KINGMAN, Ariz. (AP) — Three Arizonans and a California man have been killed in separate motorcyle acci­ dents, authorities said. T he M ohave C ounty S h e riff’s Department said Alice Oparka, 45, of Ehrenberg, was killed Friday night after she lost control of her motorcycle on Route 66 and struck a reflector just north of Topock. She suffered a broken neck and was pronounced dead at a hospital in Needles, Calif. Meanwhile Friday night, a mother and daughter from Lake Havasu City and a San Diego man were killed in a collision outside Oatman. Mohave County Sheriff’s officials said 27-year-old Scott Seward of San Diego was passing in a no-passing zone when his motorcycle struck two oncom­ ing cycles. Associated Press A British U.N. soldier shelters himself for the rain while atop his armored vehicles in Sarajevo Sunday, while waiting for orders to move out the embattled Muslim enclave of Goradze. Se rb ta n k s in v a d e G o ra z d e Proceed undaunted by NATO strikes SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — Serb tanks ground into G orazde on Sunday, shortly after U.N. o fficials announced an agreement had been reached to end the siege of the long-suffering Muslim enclave. In a sense, much of Gorazde had already fallen to the Serbs though there were pockets of resistance around town Sunday, particular­ ly at the hospital, which remained in govern­ ment hands but under intense sniper fire. Elsewhere, Serbian forces appeared free to move about town. Tens of thousands of Gorazde residents, who have been under fire for most of the twoyear war, cowered in buildings or huddled fearfully in a drenching rain as the Serbs’ tanks lumbered down the streets Sunday. The official said 21 people had been killed and at least 55 wounded by Serb attacks that intensified in the afternoon and evening. The casualty report could not be independently confirmed. Later Sunday, a senior government offi­ cial in Gorazde told Sarajevo radio that 10-12 tanks were moving toward town from the direction of Ustipraca to the east. In New York, the U.N. Security Council began consultations Sunday night on Bosnia. Taking de facto control of Gorazde, 35 miles southeast of Sarajevo, is a substantial victory for the Bosnian Serbs. It allows them to improve the road links between land they have captured from Bosnian government forces to the east and the south. It also is another blow to efforts to end the war by the world community, often criticized as weak and unfocused. Despite Gorazde’s designation as a protected zone for Muslims last year by the United Nations, the Serbs continued their siege and were undeterred by NATO air missions in the past two weeks. Sylvana Foa, spokesw om an for the Geneva-based U.N. High Commissoner for Refugees, told of the fear and despair at the building housing U.N. staff in Gorazde. “Shells and sniper fire are shaking the building and it’s suicidal to step outside,” she said. “We’re now up to about 30,000 panick­ ing people who have moved into the center of town. Our building is full of people fleeing.” E arlie r Sunday, U.N. peacekeepers spokesman Maj. Dacre Holloway said an agreement had been reached at U.N.-Serb talks for the Serbs to end their advance on the city and to withdraw their heavy weapons from a 1.8-mile radius around the city. Minutes later, he reported the offensive was continuing. An official of the Bosnian army high com­ mand said the talks had been nothing but a “trick” allowing the Serbs to continue their move toward the city. Under the reported agreement, the Serbs were to end their siege, pull back th eir weapons, and allow a U.N. peacekeeping force of about 350 soldiers to enter the city of 65,000 civilians. Kevorkian on trial: emotion vs. facts DETROIT (AP) — Dr. Jack Kevorkian admitted it right on the evening news: He helped Thomas Hyde commit suicide. He lugged the canister of carbon monox­ ide out to his old Volkswagen van. He laid a mattress in the back to make Hyde, weak from the debilitating nerve disorder called Lou Gehrig’s disease, more comfortable. He delicately placed the clear plastic mask over Hyde’s nose and mouth. Parked in the van on D etroit’s scenic B elle Isle park last summ er, K evorkian watched the 30-year-oid man take his last breath. Kevorkian’s confession was on videotape. He gave prosecutors crucial evidence and practically begged to be arrested and charged. It sounds like an open-and-shut case when the so-called suicide doctor goes on trial Tuesday, charged with breaking Michigan’s law banning assisted suicide. It’s not. The trial pits the law against the emotions of all those who have ever watched a loved one die a slow, agonizing death or contem­ plated their own demise and who believe Kevorkian represents “ death with dignity.” ‘ ‘The jury can always choose, no matter how overwhelming the evidence is, to let a person go free,” said Stephen Safranek, a constitutional law professor at the University of Detroit Mercy. “ The jury in this case might do it.” A ssistan t W ayne County P rosecutor Timothy Kenny says he must persuade jurors to follow the law, not their emotions. “ It is not a trial that is a debate about whether or not people agree with the wisdom of the law,” Kenny said. “ The question is whether or not Jack Kevorkian is above the law.” If the 65-year-old retired pathologist loses, he could be sent to prison for four years and fined $2,000. “ To me it makes no difference if I’m con­ victed or acquitted, no difference whatsoever. I can take the four years in jail,” Kevorkian said last week. N ew doubts arise about Mexican candidate s murder TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) — Secret Service agents said they found a weapon used to kill Mexico’s leading presiden­ tial candidate after the alleged assassin had indicated another firearm, police documents show. The conflicting reports raised fresh doubts whether Luis Donaldo Colosio, killed at a March 23 campaign rally here, was slain by a lone gunman, as investigators currently main­ tain. M ario Aburto confessed to the crime and has been charged with the murder. Three men hired for crowd control at the rally have been charged with being co-participants in homicide. Authorities say the three men helped dear a path through a crowd for Aburto to shoot Colosio, the leading contender fo r the Aug. 21 election as candidate o f the ru lin g Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI. But doubts persist whether Aburto acted alone because no ballistics report has been made available and authorities say only one bullet was found, even though Colosio was hit twice. In a report of Aburto’s interrogation at the Attorney G eneral’s office here, A burto identified a Taurus .38 revolver as the weapon “he used to fire the shots” at Colosio. The revolver had two bullets missing and two in the car­ tridge. The weapon was in a bag during questioning and was identified by Aburto at about 7:30 p.m. on March 23, Jose Perez Canchola, the attorney general for human rights who was present during Aburto’s questioning, said Sunday. But in a police report read to an AP reporter and another foreign news correspondent by police director Federico Benitez, secret service agents returned to the hospital where Colosio was taken at 9:30 p.m. with a bag that they said con­ tained the murder weapon. It is not known what weapon, if any, was inside that bag. No comment was available from secret service authorities or the attorney general’s office. Canchola said the report, filed by David Rubi Gomez, a municipal police officer, “raises a lot of doubts about the one gun theory.” Miguel Montes, special prosecutor in the case, has said ballistics tests showed the bullet found matched the Taurus revolver, and that the two shots came from the same gun. The government has not made that report public. Colosio was shot in the head and in the abdomen. Only the bullet that pierced his stomach was found at the scene, officials say. O p in io n Page 4 State P ress Monday, April 18, 1994 State P ress ■ ditorial tSONG Serbs -1 , Clinton - 0 Poor President Clinton. Despite having been elected as the president who would address "the economy, stupid” and forgo international escapades, he has been forced to deal with the outside world. From Haiti to Iraq to Rwanda, Clinton has been faced w ith attem p ting to ignore headache a fte r headache — and the chief migraine has been Yugoslavia. The latest pangs began to throb Sunday, when Bosnian Serb tanks rolled through the streets of Gorazde, a Muslim enclave deep in the heart of the world’s most famous ongoing civil war ~ this, despite the fact that the United Nations had announced an end to the siege of the city. Oops. As if the, say, probable ethnic cleansing of 6 5 ,000 M uslim s w a sn ’t bad enough for Clinton’s prestige on the international circuit, the Serbs also delivered a bloody nose to NATO over the weekend, when they downed a British jet over the city. Gee. Looks like the ongoing effort to stop the war isn’t quite working, is it? Clinton even went so far as to thunder (well, strongly emphasize) that the United States will have to be “firm but not provocative” in the con­ flict. Well, Teddy Roosevelt he’s not. But it seems clear that if we wish to act to end the war, we will have to go beyond “restrict­ ed involvement” — which seems likely to ulti­ mately fail in making the various factions heed the will of the international community. The fall o f Gorazde will likely make the Serbs more reluctant to make peace; why make peace, if they can grab another piece of Bosnia in the east? The Croats — whose own land-grab­ bing activities in the war have not been treated to as much media coverage -— will continue to gobble up territory in the north and west. And, in the middle, the Muslims will continue to lose ground. But wait — that’s not all. After all, if it works in Bosnia, why shouldn’t (insert your favorite Balkan villain here) continue such tactics else­ where? In Kosovo, Macedonia, Vojvodine, the Banat, Transylvania, Moldavia, the Crimea — Bosnia is not the only land split between several ethnicities. And if the Serbs are successful in their land-grab, border revisions will be tempt­ ing indeed for Hungarians, Slovaks, Bulgarians, Greeks, Albanians, Ukrainians ... the list goes on. It doesn’t seem unreasonable to argue that Bosnia in the 1990s is perhaps as key as Munich was in the 1930s to stopping aggression (and we saw how then was fumbled). Yet nothing seems to be getting done about it. Blockades and embargoes aren’t being enforced; Serb troops, artillery and armor are not being targeted. Poor President Clinton. He doesn’t want a civil war in Yugoslavia. He doesn’t want deaths, rapes, massacres and genocide. He just doesn’t want to do anything about it. TO THE TUNE Of ''foy flo ty RfNj Your j > pi.cm, ßiLow, ßtPU their dough ip ^ G LM H TAX AHP SPEND J ! 1VA5TE THEIR /m & 1 'TILL IT'S GORE} J THEN RAISE j HE RATES AGAIN. Blow, £ PAT "^^7 B um , BLOW -rSTzwSW 5/1 VS *Ia/0RKS FDR ME1 n PRICE 15 LESS THAN OTHER STATF*? fw b u t s o 's t h e Q uality „ BLOW, BLOW, BLOW THEIR DOUGH <$** d p 5 THEBE'S NOTHING THEY CAN DO. j? J r LEVS BUY A BUNCH OF UGLY ARTH?'T O g c M I C io t ^ r J.AND CLOSE A SCHOOL OR TWO. Date for torture draws closer despite doubts if Fay is guilty and whipped with a stick. Wednesday will be a normal "I knew 1 would not last another full day of interrogation,” midweek day for most people. Fay wrote in a letter obtained by The Washington Post. "I had But not for Michael Fay. (had) about three hours of sleep. I thought about it and said, In Singapore on Wednesday, ‘OK, I admit to it.’ I had no idea what I was truly admitting to, the 18-year-old A m erican is but they became nice to me from that point on.” scheduled to receive a sentence Fay took the prosecution up on an offered plea bargain: in handed down by the government exchange for his pleading guilty to stealing the signs, all after Fay pleaded guilty to various charges of car vandalism would be dropped. But after the ver­ acts of vandalism. A martial arts bal agreement, prosecutors tacked on two charges of car van­ expert equipped with a rattan cane dalism and 16 other vandalism charges. will strike Fay with six skin-splitIn sentencing Fay, the judge leveled a punishment far ting blows. above what was expected: four months in jail, a $2,230 fine S u rp risin g ly , F ay ’s fellow and the caning. An appeal was dismissed. A m ericans d id n ’t show much When looking at the chronological succession of events, compassion when news of his sen­ tence first broke in the United States. Many likened Fay’s sen­ Michael Fay’s sentence has evolved into more than the cuttence to an old-fashioned spanking for an unruly child. The and-dried “lesson” many Americans say they want him to learn. Before Fay is flogged for his alleged misdeeds, it needs little brat was getting what he deserved, they said. Singapore has its own set of laws and punishments that to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt that he actually com­ may seem cruel or unusual to Americans, but are perfectly mitted them. At least three crucial questions remain unanswered: acceptable to Singaporeans. Fay knew about the conse­ • Was Fay’s confession coerced? quences, and he ignored them. Quite a few people, therefore, • Did Singaporean felt it wouldn’t be too bad of prosecutors renege on the an idea to allow the Singapore plea agreem ents they government to teach Fay a les­ As W ednesday’s clem ency deadline promised Fay? son. creeps closer, it’s becoming more diffi­ • Did the judge render But as W ed n esd ay ’s an unfairly severe sentence clem ency d ead lin e creeps cult to accept Fay’s sentence. What’s for Fay in order to make closer, i t ’s becom ing more m ost d istu rb in g is not th a t Fay is him an exam ple to the difficult to accept Fay’s sen­ world? tence. What’s most disturbing goin g to be caned — i t ’s th at h e ’s Fay’s father has been is not that Fay is going to be going to be caned when considerable asking these questions caned — it’s that he’s going to quite often in the media be caned when considerable doubt still lingers over the case. recently. The prosecution doubt still lingers over the has rep o rted ly becom e in fu riated at suggestions that case. What crimes Fay actually committed is uncertain. The only Singapore’s legal system is flawed. Unless Singapore’s President Ong can provide satisfactory evidence police have against him are confiscated flags and street signs from his family’s apartment (his stepfather works answers to these questions, he should step in by Wednesday and grant clemency to Fay. for Federal Express in Singapore). If that doesn’t happen, Fay could very well be subject to Still, the Singaporean government managed to get Fay to confess to spray-painting 53 cars. How so? According to a let­ unjust torture, all in the name of making a point to the interna­ ter written by Fay himself, investigators informed Fay that if tional community. he didn’t “cooperate” — translation: “confess” — he’d be subject to a bit less hospitable form of interrogation, as in being stripped to his underwear, placed under a cold shower Jake Baiseli is a junior journalism major. JAKE BATSELL, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor PH O TO G R A PH ER S: W illiam L ynam , C raig CHRIS DRISCOLL..............................................................City Editor Macnaughton, Fredrick Medanich. MARY LEIGH SUMMERTON.................. Asst. City Editor COLUMNISTS: David Don, A. Marjory Kaminski, Barry KRIS FRIDRICH................................................. News Editor Kelley, Diana Lopez, Maureen McClamon, Sean O ’Neill, JAMES FRUSETTA..................................................... Opinion Editor Melanie Selcho, Shayne Whitehead. BRIAN FITZGERALD..................................................... Photo Editor CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, George SAMANTHA FELDMAN..........................Asst. Photo Editor O’Connor, Mateo Willis. MIKE BRANOM..............................................................Sports Editor G R A PH IC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. JEREMY STEIN.........................................Asst. Sports Editor PR O D U C T IO N : Kenneth Collins, Stacey Devlin, Jodi DIANE BOUDREAU............................. World/Nation Editor Goldblatt, Amie M adden, Skip Schrader, Anna Ulinich, TROY FUSS................................................................MagazineEditor Dave Weber. BRITTON MAUCHLINE.................. Asst. Magazine Editor S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Sonia B enson, Dan R E PO R T E R S: Mika Akikuni, Christina Bailey, Shawn Ellstrom, Kim Foster, Brigid Franzen, Heidi Harris, Jennifer Boyd, Franchessca Dyer, Garin Groff, Jason Hill, Paul Matthews, David Strow, John Sullivan, Greg Zemeida. Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Emil Petersen, Shane Siren. SPORTS REPORTERS: Elizabeth Appelen, Todd Kelly, Julie Reuvers, Dawn Wagner. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do CO PY ED ITO RS: Bob Felix, Kristine Holter-Sorensen, Dave Proffitt. not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JAKE BATSELL JASON OWSLEY JAMES FRUSETTA KRIS FRIDRICH Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The 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 those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S t a t e■%. yP r e ss PHONE NUMBERS information ..965-7572 Newsroom ....965-2292 Magazine..... 965-1695 Advertising...965-6555 Classifieds ....965-6731 O p in io n State P ress Monday, April 18,1994 Page 5 Cobains death tragic end to dehumanized hero Rock stars are famous for self-inflicted deaths, and now, Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain is dead. He had everything a rock star could want: a new home, a new car. a new wife, a new child, tal­ ent, creativity, a drug addiction, and now a suicide. This appears to be perfect for a televi­ sion movie. Cobain has joined the likes of other fast rising stars who w ere signs o f th eir tim e. Marilyn Monroe. Elvis Presley, Jim i H endrix, and, recently, River Phoenix, had all overdosed themselves into death. Cobain had also come close to this in early March, only he overdosed into a coma, and he was given a second chance. Due to their talents, these stars tend to become legends of their time and dehumanized into heroes. Rather than just influences, they become heroes and idols. Their personal lives are assumed to become public because their talents are seen and/or heard by anyone who can afford to pay. The death of Cobain may make people wonder if it is worth being a star. Many of us say, "what an idiot. If I were he, I would have ... !” Oh, would you? Imagine the life of one of these people: always being questioned by reporters, having your artistic abilities put to deadlines, having to sing nightly while on tour, and, on top of this, add groupies and fans. True, these people get paid a lot of money to perform, but in the long run, they pay with their lives. Are today’s stars worth being idolized? Endorsements put people, like Michael Jordan, in front of our faces daily. Due to television over-exposure, billboard ads, and radio air-play, these people become part of our daily lives, consciously and subconsciously. It seems that just as we find one perfect human being, the stories begin to develop. Even Jordan has had his run of "bad press.” He was interrogated for months because he liked to Rolling Stone called Seattle “the new Liverpool.” Cobain’s frustration was drawn from the fact that his art gamble on the golf course. People thought that his waivers were a bit much, but when one is making as much as Jordan, was misinterpreted. In an interview he once stated that he was $100,000 is just a drop in the bucket. He proved on the bas­ beat up in high school by the “jock” crowd, and when his ketball court that he was competitive, so why not do the same music became popular, these same style “jocks” were attract­ on the golf course? ed to his music and missing the message. Of course, this is no Look at Michael Jackson. He was thought to be the All- reason for him to kill himself, but his art was his life and the American story of success, but then the dirt under his finger word he wanted to spread was being taken the wrong way. He nails was found in his child molestation charges. Oprah went was being forced to perform, like putting a blank canvas in to all that trouble for an interview to set everything straight front of a painter and saying “paint!" about the “sleep tank” and “skin pigmentation problem,” and The negative aspect to having a hero status is that when a Michael goes and does something like that. Oprah should hero goes down, so may his followers. This is probably a low have waited a few months for that interview. proportion in today’s world, yet it was evident earlier this The thing to remember here is that these “idols” are peo­ week when youngsters contemplated the idea of suicide in a “copy c a t” m anner after ple, too. They may be highly talented in their fields, but Cobain. The hero aspect is they still breathe the same air probably more associated we breathe. These highly tal­ the youth, but when we ented people also had their Due to their talents, these stars tend to with get older it is still with us. influences who helped them to reach th eir peak, but they becom e legends o f th eir tim e and We tend to pick heroes who didn't stop when they reached dehum anized into heroes. R ather are easier for us to relate to; stardom. for example, we may choose So why do these people than ju s t influences, they becom e our parents or some other who are highly talented kill heroes and idols. relative. themselves when they have so I d o n ’t think that much going for them? These being a hero is possible in the information society, but people are signing their lives away so a company can make influences are everywhere. multi-millions of dollars, and we can enjoy new music on a We may have musical influences from U2, architectural influ­ weekly basis. These pressures are seen again and again, but ences from Frank Lloyd Wright, leadership influences from our state senators, communication influences from Ronald we still support the cause because we want to be entertained. Kurt Cobain's death, for example, was from, what appears Reagan, and financial influences from Donald Trump. to be. frustration. He was marked the John Lennon of the And, all these people have (or had) their faults, as we do Northwest, and his band. Nirvana, the Beatles of the 90s. Not ours. It could be that these stars who tend to commit suicide so much for their "grunge sound,” but because they brought remember that they are people, but we tend to forget this fact. the “Seattle Sound” into the main stream, as The Beatles did with the “British Invasion.” The movement was so big that Sean O ’Neill is a senior journalism major. State P ress etters to the editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our read­ ers on any topic. Ail letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered fo r publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo LD. to the State Press front desk in the basement o f the Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe Ariz., 85287-1502 Cooperation between ASU, private sector benefits both After hearing about the rhetoric that occurred in the elec­ tion forums last week, I felt a little disillusioned about the can­ didates that are running for office this year. As a member of the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, I didn't hear anyone address many issues that could help me or my college. I’m not sure why I really care, because I will be grad­ uating soon. However, I did want to point out one thread of information that had some validity. Kurt Wilhelm stated that we should get some corporations, foundations, and research entities involved in monetarily supporting, and to some extent, shaping our education. His idea was to create a permanent tuition freeze, and then replace the students’ pocket with the corporate pocket. Sound crazy? Well, it’s not. The College of Engineering and Applied Sciences is already taking that approach. Have you ever won­ dered where we get the funding for all our high-tech equip­ ment, state-of-the-art facilities, and graduate research money? Believe it or not, we are not stealing it from the other colleges at ASU. We are getting it from interested corporations, and research foundations. Much of the Engineering College’s money comes from corporate donations. Boeing, Motorola, Honeywell, Intel, SRP, and many others invest in the engi­ neering college. In fact, Intel has just begun plans to start a school of their own. Why? Because they want to support edu­ cation, and educated Arizona students will benefit in the long run. One final thing, the job market for engineering students is not good right now, but our job placement rate is probably the best at ASU. Why is this? It is due to the fact that the people who do the hiring get to have a say in how we are educated. For example, there is a student-run, corporate supported com­ pany in the Engineering College, called MECO. This student company allows students to gain real corporate experience before we graduate. The engineering college is now graduat­ ing students trained in corporate practicality, trained with state of the art equipment, based on the cutting edge of research, and doing it on a low student/tax payer budget. The corpora­ tions are benefiting, and so are we. Why then, do we not implement these concepts on a universitywide level? Ray Rho G raduate student Chemical, biological and materials engineering Smokers must recognize non-smokers’ freedoms too This is in response to the opinion article by A. Marjory Kaminski entitled “Sin tax bill targets cigarette ’ills’ by sacri­ ficing smokers’ freedoms.” Although Kaminski titles her arti­ cle in this way she fails to address the issue of a tax on cigarettes in a direct manner. Therefore I will respond to this topic in the same manner she handled it. I definitely admire your ability to express your right to smoke throughout the article. However, what you fail to address is my right not to want you to smoke or anyone else for that manner because I also have the right to live, perhaps a “few months (or years)” longer than you. I also want to commend you for being polite around friends and even strangers for that manner. Blowing smoke above there head instead of in their face will save many lives and prevent quite a bit of lung cancer from second hand smoke. Please! This makes no sense what so ever. With all the scientific evidence to back up the fact that second hand smoke is harmful how can you still smoke around those of us who wish that you could not? I sincerely hope you would not deny the facts; avoid them I can understand because they hurt your case, but deny that this scientific evidence does not exist and that your smoke is slowly killing those around you — I think you are too smart and educated to do that. In addressing the whole tax issue I would like to relate it to another sin — drinking. Drinking, considered also to be a sin, has taken its numbers of lives also. However if I am drinking and you are not there is no effect brought upon you from my drinking. Yet if I drink and the drive you home get in an acci­ dent and you die there is an effect. Now how does this relate to smoking around those who don’t? Simple, we have laws against drinking and driving and although they do not solve the problem they definitely curtail it. Although, as you say this -sin tax may not stop smokers from smoking it will curtail it. If it saves just a few lives or perhaps just one has it not done its job? If it discourages a teenager to begin smoking in the first place and then saves him from having to go through the ordeal of lung cancer when he is older then the tax has done its job. And finally consider this if the tax keeps one teenager from smoking and in turn saves his life, think also about all the lives it will save by his not passing a second hand smoke off to innocent by standards. The results are amazing, especially when they are analyzed. Although I do respect your right to smoke I think you should also respect my right not to want to breath the same air with which you reside. You want to smoke and that is fine just be careful and considerate of those around you. If there are people you don’t know around then don’t smoke. But if you really must leave their presence until satisfied and then return. So little to ask for your little white paper, filter and leaf relaxer. And finally, if you plan to fight the cigarette tax I plan to support it. As for myself I am for saving a life than for losing many. Ryan McEachron Junior Communication State P ress Monday, April 18, 1994 P age 6 Visitors donate in first marrow drive Participants in M EChA conference volunteer B y M ik a A k ik u n i S t a t e P ress A bone marrow drive targeting Hispanic and Chicano donors was conducted for the first time at ASU Saturday. Viola Fuentes, vice president of the MU Activities Board, said that MUAB. the H ispanic-C hicano coalition (El Concilio) and the United Blood Services organized the bone marrow drive because of the National MEChA Conference. “We thought that with the MEChA conference, we could get a lot of people to donate their bone marrow,” Fuentes said. The bone marrow will be used for helping patients of any race or ethnic group. According to Fuentes, more students from out of town signed up Saturday than students from ASU. Minorities could donate their bone marrow for free. Fuentes said that while MEChA students advocate helping people of their community “from the stage, they can’t seem to make the translation from words to action. A lot of people have walked right by us saying, ‘no, we don't want to do (donate) it.’” “This is a great form of community service,” Fuentes said. “A lot of people paint other people’s houses and say, ‘this is a community service.’ but that's nothing compared to donating your bone marrow and saving lives.” Johannes Lauterbom, an ASU freshman political science major, said he came to sign up because “this is a great cause and it might save people’s lives.” David Carbajal, a sophomore physical therapy major from Saint Claude State University in Minnesota, said he signed up because “We came here to the conference to learn how we can benefit our people, the Chicano community, and this is one thing. All they are asking is for is a little time to donate some blood, and if we can do something to help people, we will do whatever it takes.” Carbajal said that a lot of minorities are hesitant to donate bone marrow because “they are unaware of it.” Jerry López, a senior education major from the same school as Carbajal, said he came to donate his bone marrow because “whenever people come and ask for bone marrow, we do everything to donate whatever we can. And it’s conve­ nient to do it today. In Saint Claude, we usually have to go to the city, and go out of our way to give what we have.” Del Lohr, Marrow Program Specialist at the United Blood Services, said that at this point, there are 64,000 Hispanics that are listed on the national registry as donators of bone marrow. “For African Americans, there’s about 56,000, and for Asians there’s about 46,000,” Lohr said. Lohr said that every year there are over 16,000 patients that are diagnosed with diseases that require bone marrow transplants. NOW SERVIN 6 WIN6S W» Accept MuterCerd & Vite on Delivery! Open Daily for Lanehl Opon llam-2tm Daily! FAST, FREE DELIVERY DAILY! 829-0064 CARDINAL'S PIZZA , MONDAY MADNESS , I 12"Pizzowith2 Toppings $d75 | Km mm mm mm mmmmm mm mm mm mm J m j TUES.-WEDS. SPECIAL1 WILD WEDNESDAY ! P o l ic e R epo r t ASU police reported the following incidents Sunday: • The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office recovered a Ford pick-up truck that ASU police had reported stolen. The truck was found at Jackrabbit Trail, south of Broadway Road, and was not drivable. • A bicycle that had been reported stolen by a male ASU stu­ dent was recovered by ASU police from the east bike racks at Physical Education West. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for reckless driving at M cAllister Avenue and Adelphi Drive. • A male ASU student reported his bicycle stolen from the bike racks on the north side of the Memorial Union where he had secured it with a chain lock. • A male ASU student reported that someone caused $600 damage to his Honda in Lot 59. • A female ASU student reported that someone caused $400 damage to her Toyota in Lot 59. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol at Gammage Parkway and Mill Avenue. Tempe police reported the following incidents Sunday : • About an hour after the Chandler Police Department notified surrounding police agencies of a stolen car last Thursday, a Tempe police officer saw the vehicle at Priest Drive and Broadway Road. The officer received backup support from both Tempe and Phoenix police and followed the vehicle to 28th Street and Broadway Road. The suspect, a 45-year-old Chandler man, tried to elude police but he ran into a Salt River Project water culvert and V o lunteers A N eeded ! dult volunteer camp counselors are needed to work with mentally disabled ^ ~ < campers at Camp Shadow Pines ^Aug. 1-5. Training provided! lease call 9 9 4 -2 4 5 3 to apply before June 1. W IT H T H IS C O U P O N A P R IL 18-22, 1994 CAFE' ISTANBUL fled on foot. Officers arrested him after a short chase and charged him with felony theft, felony fleeing and possession of marijuana. • Tempe officers served a search warrant at 2008 E. Howe Thursday after they acquired information that the a 36-yearold Tempe man and a 21-year-old Tempe woman were deal­ ing methamphetamines and stolen property from the resi­ dence. Officers seized methamphetamines. marijuana, scales and other paraphernalia from the house. Both people were arrest­ ed and charged with possession of dangerous drugs. • A suspect robbed a Circle K convenience store at 606 W. Broadway Road Thursday by pretending he had a gun. The man approached the clerk at the register with a six-pack of beer and demanded money. The clerk gave him $75 and the man fled northbound on Roosevelt Street. A canine search for the man was unsuccessful. • Two 21-year-old Tempe women were w alking along University Drive Tuesday when they noticed a man staring at them from behind some bushes at 1905 E. University. His sweat pants were pulled down to his knees and he was mas­ turbating. They continued walking eastbound on University and when they turned around, the man was standing directly behind them. They ran to their home at 850 S. River and the man followed them to the entrance of their complex. He was not located by police. Reports compiled by State Press reporter Paul Matthews / A TELL US 25 T H IN G S TH A T DRIVE YO U CRAZY A N D YO U C O ULD W IN $251! HERE'S WHAT TO DO: Just ty p e 25 th in g s th a t d riv e yo u crazy...you know , like a room m ate w ho n e v e r p u ts th e to ile t seat d o w n o r M adonna's lack of moral fiber, etc. Once you've numbered your 25 crazy things on a neat piece of paper, bring it to the info desk of the State Press in the north basement of Matthews Center. Be sure to include your name and phone number on your entry. MID-EASTERN HEALTHY FOOD S. R u ral R d ., # 1 0 7 , Tem pe 7 3 1 -9 4 9 9 LUNCH SPECIALS Chicken Kabob MARINATED CHICKEN BREAST skewered and broiled to perfection, served with red bell pepper and soup or salad. ASK ABOUT O U R C H EF'S D A ILY SPECIALS-served with soup or salad. MON-FRI l u a m - 2:30pm, 5pm - 10pm ONLY $4.95 $ / Q N LY Q C -*• • x ✓ SAT 12 Noon - 2:30pm, 5pm -10pm Closed ^ U N ^ Jj ALL entries w ill be published in the May 3 issue of the State Press. A team of very crazy judges will select the three best entries and w ill aw a rd th e fo llo w in g prizes: FIRST PLACE-$25, SECOND PLACE -$ 1 5 GIFT CERTIFICATE TO A LOCAL RESTAURANT and THIRD PLACE - STATE PRESS COFFEE MUG. Deadline is noon, April 22. (Only typewritten entries will be accepted!) QUESTIONS? CALL JACKIE ELDRIDGE State Press Advertising 965-6555 V_____________________ J ■ 16" 1-Item Pì2za I «5 « I 12" Unlimited Topping Pizza ■ i I CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH ACRO SS 1 Lucille's co-star 5 Canyon sound 9 Holyfield, for one 10 W eaving aids 12 Scent 13 Tourist’s stopover 14 Medium for debts 16 In the past 17 Flightless birds 18 Rodeo rope 21 Bro's sibling 22 Manias 23 Thurber’s daydream er 24 Ritzy 26 Kind of steer 29 Breathe with difficulty 30 Garden did 31 Um brella part 32 Tap 34 Steer d e a r of 37 W ed secretly 38 T h e Man Without a Country* 39 Change 40 Set of cards 41 Tatum O ’N eal’s dad DOW N 1 Moolah 2 Bible book 3 Trucker's rigs 4 Neighbor of Turkey 5 Shade tree 6 Dove's cry 7 Blather (si.) 8 Last letters 9 Uncovers 11 Coin opening 15 Bumblers 19 a W em ian T r~ r R E C A S T 1 L O 1 L O S c A M S A M U L E T E S T E E R 'b I L A R R Y M C M U R T R Y s\ S u R] B E F F E A R L E L E Saturday’s Answer capital 27 Noted tennis tourney 28 Gauge 29 Small songbird 30 Rolling, as terrain 33 Bose or Bartlett 35 Connie's co-anchor 36 Finale 7 s 20 Actor Scheider 22 Seltzer feature 23 W est of Hollywood 24 1862 battle site 25 Astro­ nomic “cloud" 26 Colom­ bia’s 6 - i“ l 7 ■ t1 12 It 14 1Ô 17 1 ¿1 20 " ■ ■ 24 25 28 ■ So " 31 ■ 1 34 1 U ST ” ■ • 4-18 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR i s LONGFELLOW O ne letter stands fo r an o ther. In th is sam ple A is used fo r th e th ree L's, X fo r th e tw o O 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and fo rm atio n o f th e words are a ll h in ts. Each day th e code letters are d iffe ren t. 4-16 B CRYPTOQUOTE PBG HE QG KRZ UNQOZNIHBXXC PZNSC KRZ ABFHGA QW KR Z EKBNE BK UTYYXZE NQBY. — BXZJBGYZN KRZ QG E P HKR F rid ay 's Cryptoquote: (REGARDING INCOME TAX) IT HAS MADE MORE LIARS OUT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE THAN GOLF. - WILL ROGERS C 1904 by King Fwuur»« Syndicate, Inc. Monday, April 18, 1994 State P ress Page_7 Hendrickson, Wilhelm set for ASASU runoff Presidential and VP candidates to meet in this week’s run-off B y G reg Z emeida State P ress M arci H endrickson and Kurt Wilhelm, the top vote-getters in last week’s Associated Students of ASU presidential elections, will face each other in a run-off election this week to determine who will be the next student body president. H endrickson, a form er ASASU Leadership Institute director, received 719 votes, or 39 percent of the vote. H e n d r ic k s o n Wilhelm, the ASASU campus affairs vice president, gained 421 votes, or 23 percent. A run-off election will be held since no candidate man­ ASASU election results OFFICE President WINNER(S)_______ Run-off none Marci Hendrickson Kurt Wilhelm Executive V.P. Alan Frost Campus Affairs V.P. Activities V.P. Brandy Aquilar Senators Architecture Business Education Engineering Fine Arts Graduate Honors Law Liberal Arts Nursing Public Programs Social Work David Tung Pat Baker none Andrew Blong John Vescova Bryan Hair Robert Wellman Natasa Christodoulidou Carol Peet Brian Lockwood Jon Bartlett Christine Cirillo Jeff Boynton Rich Bailen Todd Moravec Kim Demarchi Kevin Keturatana Sanjay Vidyadharan Andy Ortiz Rick Golden Randy Rodgers none Matthew C. Redding Allison Dunlap no candidates Irma Anaya Rachel Barron David M. Lewis aged to capture more than fifty percent of the total vote. Only 1,979 students voted in this year’s ASASU elections. ASASU president Rossie Turman attributed the low turnout to the poor quality of the campaigns that the candidates ran. The two candidates who will be in the run-off election dis­ agree. Hendrickson said meeting with students and listening to their concerns helped her in the polls. "We can all come up with any kind of platform in the world, but the students are the ones who tell us what they want and I have had a great time getting to know the students and actually talking to them about it,” she said. Wilhelm said his firm stance on tuition and his experience in ASASU gained him the needed votes to put him in the mn-off election. “When students had questions for me, I had the answers,” he said. “If not, then I was able to lead them to where to find those answers.” The other four presidential candi­ dates were Mark Macias, Bill Weston, Chad Wolett and Ross Bell. Macias W il h e l m received 280 votes, W eston 180, Wolett 132, and Bell 109. Wolett, who has proposed a controversial measure to change the names of ASU’s two largest sporting arenas, said student reaction to his proposal probably hurt his bid for the presidency. He went on to say that this defeat will not cause him to abandon his fight for the measure. “I believe in it and I ‘m still going to fight for it,” Wolett said. "It’s time for me to put up or shut up.” In the three vice presidential races, Alan Frost defeated Jason Rupp for the executive vice presidential office and Brandy Aguilar defeated Eddie Genna for the campus affairs vice presidential office. The office of activities vice president will be decided in a run-off election between David Tung and Pat Baker, the two top vote-getters in that race. Frost credits his victory to the overall low turnout at the polls and the support of the graduate college. "With such low numbers, that’s what helped me out,” he said. “That’s what I was relying on.” Aguilar said students voted for her because she cares about their needs and she is involved in various student orga­ nizations. “This is the kind of job I like to do,” she said. “I like to help people and make sure they get stuff that they want.” In the 12 senatorial elections, nine of the college’s repre­ sentatives were decided in last week's elections. Two of the college's senators will be decided in a run-off election this week. The College of Social Work had no candidates running for office. Students also voted on four propositions which would amend the ASASU constitution: • Proposition 100, which called for raising the minimum W rite-ins valid, commission concludes By G reg Z emeida State P ress The ASASU elections commission on Friday decided against a write-in candidate who was trying to get the AS ASU senatorial elections invalidated because of a mixup with write-in ballot forms. Rob Gresser, a write-in senatorial candidate from the College of Business, filed a complaint with the group last Wednesday stating that official write-in ballot sleeves were not used during all of last week’s election, causing confusion among many voters, This lead to many students not voting for the write-in candidates of their choice, he added. “I’m a little disappointed, but at the same time I’m not surprised (that the commission decided against me),” Gresser said. “It seems that it was a mock hearing, though, because they waited for the results (of the elections before making their decision).” ASASU Election Coordinator Jonell Lucca, against whom the complaint was filed, said substitute forms were used during the first few hours of the election because the official forms had not yet been delivered to her. When they did arrive, she distributed them to all of the voting sites and removed die substitute forms. Lucca said all the write-in votes from both forms were tabulated and the system was fair to all candidates. A statement issued by the commission stated that Lucca was at all times operating under the ASASU elec­ tions code and there was no wrongdoing on her part. “Although some confusion may have occurred, the elections commission has decided that Jonell Lucca did everything within her power to solve this matter," the elections commission release stated. “Beyond her actions, it is the voters' responsibility to make themselves aware of the correct procedure for voting for a write-in candidate." Gresser said he hopes in the future this type of confu­ sion doesn’t occur and that only official ballot forms are used. grade point average requirements for all ASASU candidates, passed. • Proposition 101, which would change ASASU elections from once to twice a year was approved. • Proposition 102, which also called for ASASU elections twice a year, in the fall and in the spring, failed. • Proposition 103, which called for renaming the ASASU vice presidential offices, failed. All the run-off elections will be held this Wednesday and Thursday and the results will be released on Friday.- MAKE AN INVESTMENT IN YOUR LIFETIME Order your copy of The 1993-94 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook today! Matthews Center basement, rm 50 965-6881 rCAMPUS-i LC o r n e r -! 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 next to College S tre e t Deli SUMMER SCHOOL FOR PEOPLE ONTHEIRWAYTO THE TOP. 6 0 9 S . M ill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 across from C offee Plantation Everyday Low Price IIyou didn't *ign up for Army ROTC as a freshman or sophomora, you «•»" still catch up to your classm ates by attending Army ROTC Caxqp C hallenge, a paid six-w eek summer course in leadership training. By the tim e you graduate from college, you’ll have the credentials of an Army officer.You’11also have the self-confidence and discipline it takes to succe ed in co lleg e and beyond. Find out mare. Call Captain Charles Fhielriger at (602) 968-3318 or 1-800-888-ROTC. 2 4 exposure ARM Y ROTC T U SMARTEST COLLEGE COURSE TOO CAN T A IL DOUBLE PRINTS Color C-41 Process Best Price in Town P a »;e 8 Monday, April 18, 1994 S tate P ress (Left): Dancer Julia Wycoll, a graduate student dance major, rehearses her part In “Women Song.” Wyncoll and her fellow dancers put in hundreds of hours of practice during the semester preparing for the dance concert. (Below): “Women Song” was a dance performance put on as part of a program put on by ASU’s School of Dance. The routine was choreographed by Cliff Keuter, a professor in the School of Dance. Photos by William Lynam/State Press Experts agree condoms ineffective against some diseases Angelique M edo w S pecial to State P ress The most common sexually transmitted disease in the country cannot be avoided by using condoms, said three of the nation's forem ost experts in a conference at the Scottsdale City Hall on Saturday. The genital warts virus, also called the human papilloma virus, affects 15 to 20 percent of the U.S. population within each person's lifetime, experts said. The fourth annual, statewide human papil­ loma virus conference, instituted by the Share the Health Foundation, featured speakers Dr. Ralph Richart, Dr. Duane Townsend and Dr. Hank Hallum, discussed the latest discoveries concerning the genital warts virus. Townsend, who is currently in private practice, said that “The virus goes through condoms. They are a psychological benefit” and simply provide mental reassurance rather than physical protection. Richart, professor of obstetrics and gyne­ cology at Columbia University, said “There is no evidence that says condoms help.” H allum , researcher o f gynecological oncology said that he agreed with his col­ leagues. Researchers are concerned about the inef­ fectiveness of condoms in providing protec­ tion of genital warts because five of the seven strains, (types 16, 18, 31, 33, and 35), have been shown to increase the chance of cervical and penile cancer within their hosts. The other two types, (6 and 11), are benign, or non-cancerous, warts. Tom Brookshire, associate medical direc­ tor for Planned Parenthood said that he believes the percentage of lifetime transmis­ sion is higher than suggested by doctors at the conference and is closer to “40 percent of the population” but agreed that “using condoms to protect against infection is not a proven method. “The genital warts virus is present in the vaginal secretions of women and can often spread to the scrotum in men. A condom cannot protect you from coming in contact with these things during sex, and that’s how many people become infected,” he said. Richart advised people to “choose your partners carefully” because that is the only possible protection. However, “many students with the virus have not yet shown symptoms or have not been diagnosed,” said Leanne Gallagher, an assistant in ASASU’s Care Program for STD (sexually transmitted disease) education. “Genital warts is a virus which can lie dormant within a person's system. A person can contract the virus while showing no visi­ ble warts. This is called a sub-clinical infec­ tion, and can persist for as many as three years,” Gallagher said. Brookshire said that the virus could be ter­ minally sub-clinical and never progress into visible warts. “During this time, (when the virus is subclinical), the virus can be passed on to a sexu­ al partner,” he said. Richart and Townsend disagreed, saying that skin-to -skin contact with the genital region of a person who has warts present is the only way that the genital warts virus is spread. Gallagher said, “The virus can be trans­ m itted from a person with a sub-clinical infection, but risk of contraction is increased when genital warts are present.” All featured doctors agreed th at the chance of transmission is increased when warts are present since there is a greater con­ centration of the virus on the genital region, where a sexual partner would come in con­ tact. Three Valley gynecologists suggested ways other than skin-to-skin contact to get the virus. They listed sharing of such intima­ cies as tanning booths, towels, underwear, swimming suits and sitting on public toilet seats as possible methods of infection. None of these suggestions have been proven. A physician who attended the conference suggested that oral warts could be contracted by having oral sex with an infected partner. Richart said it is not possible. “There has never been a documented case of anyone getting warts from oral sex,” he said, adding that 95 percent of couples par­ ticipate in oral sex and doctors would see sig­ nificant number of oral warts cases if that was a method of transmission. Brookshire said, “The methods of (geni­ tal) transm ission of this virus are almost unknown. Every year more possibilities are suggested.” Not only are doctors and researchers uncertain of exactly how the virus is contract­ ed, most students are almost totally unaware that the virus even exists. A survey of uninfected East Carolina University students showed that 229 of 263 sexually active, first-year college women had either never heard of genital warts or were not sure whether they had heard of it. Of the remaining 34 respondents, 21, or 8 percent of the total sample, knew about geni­ tal warts. The other 13 students had previously been infected with the virus and all 13 said that they had never heard of genital warts before they became infected. This is true o f C heryl, a 22-year-old Tempe female, who has genital warts and “always used condoms.” She did not know about the virus until she started noticing, “a few tiny bumps on the inside of my labia that slowly got bigger.” P age 9 Monday, April 18, 1994 S tate P ress Blanchard voices support for bipartisan cooperation Only Democrat in senatorial race focuses on crime, deficit J o h n S u l l iv a n S t a t e P ress Chuck Blanchard likes to build bridges. Blanchard (Sen-D Phoenix), the sole Democratic con­ tender for the 1st Congressional District, said he isn’t afraid to cross party lines to work for a consensus among legislators. Blanchard, 34, a first-term state senator, said he would like to start developing bipartisan support on several issues, specifically the federal deficit and crime reduction. Blanchard said the deficit is a top priority, because the federal government is taking money from businesses that would otherwise be spent on expansion of operations. This translates into growth — and jobs. Blanchard said he favors som ething sim ilar to the Republican “A to Z" sessions, in which Congress would examine federal programs in orde. cut spending. He said he would instead want to appoint an independent commission to study various programs. Blanchard said this would eliminate partisan politics going into the decision-making process. “All (program) spend­ ing would be up for grabs,” Blanchard said. Although Blanchard said he does not favor any current health care pro­ gram being proposed in Congress, he said there is need for reform. He said that there will probably be an am algam ation of both D em ocratic and Republican health care plans. Blanchard also said he is concerned about reducing crime. He said he favors “sensible, but tough and smart” measures for the reduction of crime. He said he sponsored legislation into the Arizona Senate for “truth in sentencing,” victim’s rights in “driving under the influence" cases and increasing penalties for those abusing the elderly. B lanchard, a form er federal p ro secu to r, said although he believes crime is best fought at the local level, the federal government should provide financial assistance to the effort. Blanchard added that he is also interested in reforming the way higher education is funded. “I think we should take a long, hard look at the federal loan programs and see whether they are up to task of helping students finance their education,” Blanchard said. Melody Jackson, thé Executive Director of the Arizona Democratic Party, said Blanchard would be a “voice of rea­ son” in the U.S. Congress. “We are offering a candidate with a proven track record of solving problems,” said Jackson. Jackson also said that although the district has a high num­ ber of Republicans registered, voters have also supported Democrats such as U.S. Senator Deconcini, D-Ariz, and for­ mer Governor Bruce Babbit. Dr. Merrill of the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism agreed that it is possible for Blanchard to beat the Republican nominee. Merrill said this is mainly due to Blanchard being perceived as politically moderate. Blanchard said he would rather not emphasize a party label. He said what is important is solving problems and to stop worrying about whether a congressman is Democratic or Republican. The primary election will be held Sept. 13, and will deter­ mine the Republican and Democratic candidates for the 1st Congressional D istrict seat being vacated by Rep. Sam Coppersmith, D-Ariz., who is running for U.S. Senate. Branch Davidians hold gathering in Waco to mourn deceased 200 attend, including former members, memorabilia vendors, news reporters WACO. Texas (AP) — Branch Davidians who survived the fire that destroyed their compound last year gathered with supporters Sunday to tell their story and mourn for those who died. About 200 people attended the one-day outdoor event held 100 yards from what was once the cu lt's sprawling complex called Mount Carmel. They were joined by vendors hawking videos. T-shirts, hats, books and other items. Speakers blamed the federal government for the deaths of cult leader David Koresh and 78 of his followers in the fire on April 19. 1993. The blaze ended a 51-day standoff between the Davidians and federal agents. “They murdered those people. The gov­ ernment came in here and burned them to death,” said a crying John Borgman, a sup­ porter who knew nothing of the cult until the siege began on Feb. 28, 1993. The fire began after FBI armored vehicles pumped tear gas into the compound. The gov­ ernment has said the Davidians set the fire and that those who died chose to remain inside the burning compound. The su rv iv o rs adam antly deny such claims. Several Koresh followers, including at least two who escaped from the fire, told their story to an overwhelmingly pro-Davidian crowd. “This is the first time I’ve been back out at this place since I left on the 19th,” said sur­ vivor Clive Doyle. “I’m kind of numb. ... I miss it." “Basically, we’re trying to keep this alive in the minds of America," he said, explaining why the survivors and their supporters held the event. Survivors have maintained that the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms unlawfully attacked the compound and that those inside were only trying to protect them­ selves when they fired back, killing four agents and wounding several others. ATF officials have said they were trying to serve search warrants and arrest Koresh on weapons charges. In February, 11 Davidians were acquitted of murder and conspiracy charges stemming from the botched raid. “I don’t want people to forget what hap­ pened here,” Doyle said. “The government would like them to.’ ’ San Antonio resident Don Rex, an artist, wore a sandwich board that compared the standoff to the battle at the Alamo. “It was a massacre,” he said. Like those who died at the Alamo fighting for Texas’ independence, Rex said, Koresh and the others died “for standing up for what they believed in.” The sand-colored com pound is gone. Now, there are only mounds of debris and dirt sitting amid blooming bluebonnets and other wildflowers. Part of the area is sur­ rounded by a chain-link fence. “This used to be a place where people could go to liv e ,” said su rvivor D avid T hibodeau, a drum m er who played in Koresh’s band. “T hat fire sh o u ld n ’t have happened. People couldn’t get out,” he said. “It was ter­ rifying, you thought you were going to die any minute.” Only nine people survived the blaze. Other Branch Davidians at Sunday’s gather­ ing had left the compound during the siege. “I feel cheated, left behind in an evil and deceitful world,” Thibodeau said of his life now. S tate Press The o n ly free th in g a t ASU. STOP BY TODAY O N LY TO O pm AND GET 6 pm COMPLIMENTARY ADMIT 2 TO AN ADVANCED SCREENING OF “B a c k B ea t” FOR TOMORROWNIGHT Offer good while supply lasts. Also register to win Ba ck Beat T-shirts, guitar pins &posters! PU .YG R AMFILM EDEI1TAINNBII«tiSDHAPliOiSmsiuSCAU/W OQilfVPffl^^ amFOm QNM Entowici »[fi mm miwwyiiiiMsffiiiOiiiifffliiasmM « J B IB B ^ iila lH IW Iin n iB im iJ M M n N IIIIIM fla B a PotyQram nwis iin m m u m m m 1994PilyGramFilnfioduktianGaftH.AilRightsfleseiwd AGiameicyPicturesRelease O GRAMERCY CONGO JAVA * BAR • GRILL WE WANT TO BE YOUR BOOKSTORE 2515 N. SCOTTSDALE RD. WILSHIRE PLAZA • 945-3778 ¡ 5 5 6 2 5 e . Apache • 967-5445 a m _____________ Comics S tate P ress Monday, April 18, 1994 Page 10 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson „.STUPENDOUS Y MAH.' CHAMPION OF LIBERTI ! FOE OF TIRANNI' THIS IS AWFUL.' IF WE STEP OUT OF LIME ONCI TONIGHT, 80SM.HN Wla WU. US, AMO THEN MfM AND DAD WIU. KILL US AGAIN WHEN L THEMGET HONE. Calvin and T H E F A R S ID E I'M GOING TO GET IN BEDNOW AND AVOID THE RUSH. By GARY LARSON 3% "1 Hobbes by Bill Watterson THINK TILA GOOD. 1U TEU. SIT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE FLOOR AND LOOK AT THE WAIL TONIGHT. OK, WE'RE GOING.\ ..AND CALVIN? “Criminy! Talk about overstaying your w elcom e!. . . John, open the door and turn the porch light on — see if that gets rid of them.” BY GARRY TRUDEAU Doonesbury IPX WERE YOU, IV STUPY THE TAPES ON THAT ONE VERY CAREFULLY. /. / A ¿ fll delegation ELECTRIFY v ie FENCE^ 1 I T H E F A R S ID E By GARY LARSON k lip Doonesbury WERE BACK WITHOUR OLPFR/ENPPR. 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SAVE c r io / up to T v f /O on your HEALTH INSURANCE NOW YOU CAN HAVE PEACE OF MIND! •Designed for Students-Faculty-Staff-Dependents •One Million in Comprehensive Benefits •Benefits at Student Health Center will be reimbursed •Worldwide Coverage at any Medical Provider •Very Affordable to fit your budget •Your Choice of any Doctor or Hospital •Top Rated "A" Excellent • Since 1938 SUMMER SPRING FALL EXAMPLES: $ 93 $186 $124 18-24 MALE $120 $240 FEMALE $160 $108 $216 $144 25-29 MALE $129 $258 FEMALE $172 Call for Quotes on Other Ages and Dependents YEAR $372 $480 $432 $516 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 966-3544 BURAIlPASSeS issued on-the-spot 2121 South Mill Ave.. Suite 206 • Tempe, Arizona 85282 -I -BOO-769-1 6 9 9 I_________________________________________________ S p o rts S tate P ress s Monday, April 18,1994 ports Briefs Jordan reaches .300 M ichael Iordan has reached that magic baseball num b» — .300. The former NBA star extended his hitting streak to five games Sunday night, going 2-for-4 to raise his average to .304 in his return to his home state as a professional baseball player. ‘‘Right now I feel comfortable at the plate,” Jordan said. “I’m seeing die ball well and trying to react to it. “I believe in myself,” he added. “That’s why I’m here. I could care less what everybody else writes." Jord an has gone 7-for-23 after seven games and is now the leading hitter for the Double A Birmingham Barons. He also picked up his fourth stolen base during a 4-3 loss to the Carolina Mudcats. After taking the day off Saturday night, Jordan was back in the lineup hading seventh and playing right field, drawing an overflow crowd of 8,045 to Five County Stadium. __________________________ Gymnasts take title in Texas Devils hit season high to win club crown B y D a w n W agner S t a t e P ress They w ent to Texas looking to win their first national title as a club sport. The ASU m en’s gym nastics club w ound up doing much more. “We had one of the best meets of our Kja r liv e s,” said Brian Jasper, who finished eighth in the pommel horse. They certainly did, winning not only the club national cham pionship at the USA G ym nastics N ational C o lleg iate Championships, but topping the score of NCAA Division I and II champion William and Mary as well. The Sun D evils scored a season-high team to tal o f 273.1, handily d efeatin g defending n ational club cham pion Washington, which turned in a second-place team score o f 258.7. ASU also took three of the top five spots in the club all-around competition. Junior Kirk Johnson placed second with a score of 54.45, senior Marty Larsen placed third with 54.20, and sophomore Kyle Johnson placed fifth with 53.45. In individual competition, held Sunday at the University of North Texas Coliseum in Denton, Texas, the Sun Devils qualified seven gymnasts for the event finals. Rob Kjar captured the national title in the pommel horse, with a score of 9.70, besting No. 5 ASU, Barber enjoy home’s friendly confines Washington 142, Boston 100 Indiana 104, Detroit 99 Charlotte 107, New York 91 Denver 99, Minnesota 88 New Jersey 110, Miami 103 Orlando 118, Chicago 101 Houston 119, Portland 110 B y J u l ie R eu v e r s St a t e P ress Baseball Roundup AMERICAN LEAGUE Kansas City 8, Cleveland 3 Chicago 7, Boston 4 New York 8, Detroit 6 Oakland 5. Minnesota 1 Toronto 5, California 4, 10 innings Seattle 8. Milwaukee 3 Baltimore 16, Texas 5 NATIONAL LEAGUE San Francisco 9, Florida 8 Cincinnati 7, Philadelphia 0 Los Angeles 19, Pittsburgh 2 New York 4, Houston 2 St. Louis 5, San Diego 0 Atlanta 4, Chicago 2 Colorado 6, Montreal 5,10 innings Stanley Cup Playoffs Compiledfrom AP reports Frederick Medanich/State Press ASU junior Larry Barber takes a swing during the weekend’s Thunderbird Invitational at the Karsten Golf Course. Barber carded an 11-under 205 in the three rounds to earn medalist honors as ASU won its home tournament. ASU falters in Los Angeles 1/2 gam es behind the Trojans. The seventh-ranked ASU S IX -P A C S T A N D IN G S USC used five hits, a baseball te am ’s hopes of PCT w L GB walk and a stolen base — all winning back-to-back Six.667 1. USC 16 8 coming with two outs — to Pac title s took a .667 7 Stanford 14 -.5 2. turn a 3-2 deficit into an 8-3 Sunday afternoon when .619 8 -1.5 3. ASU 13 lead. The Sun Devils rallied USC’s six-run sixth inning 4. .429 California 12 -5.5 9 for four runs in the seventh proved to be the w inning -7 .333 5. UCLA 6 12 on four w alks and three margin in the No. 3 Trojans' .238 6. UofA 5 16 -9.5 basehits, but could not do 8-7 victory at Dedeaux Field any more damage in the last in Los Angeles. two frames. The win gave the series D esignated h itter victory to USC two games to Sean Tyler was the offensive one. The Trojans won 9-0 Friday night behind Randy Flores’ shutout before ASU (31-14 star for ASU, going three-for-five with a stolen base, two overall, 13-8 Six-Pac) came back with a 12-5 victory Saturday RBIs and a run scored. Jacob Cruz hit a two-run homer, his 10th of the season, in the first inning. afternoon. The Sun Devils go back into action Tuesday night when USC (30-12, 16-8) leads the conference by a half-game over Stanford, which won two games of its three-game series they host Grand Canyon at Packard Stadium. Their next con­ with Bay Area rival California over the weekend. ASU is 1 ference series begins Friday at Cal. F r o m Staff R epo rts Larsen, who tied for second with a score of 9.40. In the floor exercise, Larsen placed sec­ ond with a score of 9.50, while brothers Kirk and Kyle Johnson finished sixth and eighth, respectively. Kirk Johnson finished second in the vault with a score of 9.15, and placed fifth in the parallel bars with a 9.00. In the men’s horizontal bar competition, Garon Rowland, a sophomore, tied for third place with a 9.25. Joe Durante, who finished fourth in the rings, missed out on the second-place spot by only .05. Durante scored a 9.50. ASU also had 10 all-Americas in the six events. The Sun Devils gymnasts w eren’t the only people from ASU to come away with top recognition. Coach Scott Barclay was chosen as the Men’s Club Coach of the Year. Men s golf cruises at Karsten NBA Roundup CONFERENCE QUARTERFINALS (Best-of-7) EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Rangers 6, N.Y. Islanders 0 Rangers lead series i -0 Washington 5, Pittsburgh 3 Washington leads series 1-0 Buffalo 2, New Jersey 0 Buffalo leads series 1-0 WESTERN CONFERENCE Dallas 5, St. Louis 3 Dallas leads series 1-0 P a g e 11 ASU golfer Larry Barber started last weekend’s Thunderbird Invitational as the team’s No. 5 player — on the edge of a talent-packed lineup with NCAA Championship hopes. But his 11-under 209 finish Saturday at Karsten Golf Course did more than pace the fifth-ranked Sun Devils in their 15-stroke win. The feat earned B arber m edalist honors and established him as one of the squad’s top weapons, behind Todd Demsey and Chris Stutts. “The victory was good for us and especially good for Larry,” ASU coach Randy Lein said. “He definitely solidi­ fied his position on this team.” The Sun Devils’ Gold Team finished with a 23-under 841, well ahead of No. 1 Oklahoma State and No. 7 Texas, who tied for second at 856. The win came as Barber’s second, after a first-place finish last month at the Oregon Invitational. “This is a big step for me,” said Barber, a junior. “The win in Oregon was nice, but it’s not even close to this.” Barber opened play Saturday with a four-stroke lead and posted five birdies despite bogeying three tim es. After carding a two-under 70 in Friday’s first round, he blistered ASU’s home course with a seven-under 65 in the second round. “This is just a steppingstone to the national championships,” Barber said. “It was a great team win for us and it’s a T urn to G olf, page 13. Volleyball falls to Golden Bears F rom S taff R eports The second-ranked Sun Devils had a good showing at the National Men’s Collegiate Volleyball Championships held over the weekend at various sites around ASU. No. 2-seeded ASU looked impressive during the 48team Division I pool play, posting a 4-1 record after the first two days of the three-day event, qualifying for the 16team Championship Flight. ASU defeated Buffalo State, Georgetown and No. 23 Notre Dame on Thursday and Kentucky on Friday, with its only loss coming Friday at the hands of No. 10 Florida. “We choked against Florida,” said ASU’s Mike Todd, w ho w as a second team A ll-A m erica in the 1993 Championships. However, in the single-elim ination Championship Flight, the Sun Devils made an early exit. ASU bowed out in the first round to top-seeded California in two sets 15-5, 15-12. “We played well against Cal,” Todd said. “Overall, we had a good tournament.” St a t e P ress Monday, April 18, 1994 P age^2 Scimmage highlights changes in air attack By J ulie R euvers State P ress ASU football coach Bruce Snyder never intended to place much stock in the team's spring performance in Saturday’s annual Maroon and Gold scrimmage. With key players out for academic rea­ sons or recovering from injuries, Snyder hesitated to generalize about the squad but said it possesses a quality needed for suc­ cess. “It’s really difficult to make a judgment on (this) type of practice about the team and team concepts,” Snyder said, "just because of the lack of depth. But I think we’ll find in watching the game (film) that we're an aggressive group. “I think they like playing football. It's important to them ... You have to have a team that thinks football is very important. This team has the chance to be that way." The approximately 80-play scrimmage gave starting quarterback Jake Plummer and backup Jason V erdugo plenty of attem pts at ASU’s restructured passing game. The new style is faster-developing plays, with quarterbacks and receivers working on tightly-timed patterns. The alteration makes sense since the squad starts three new players in the middle offensive line. The lack of depth at these positions has the potential to create incon­ sistencies in both pass protection and run­ blocking. “We started down a road a year ago where we wanted to throw the deeper ball,” Snyder said. "In part. I think what happened was our percentage completion went down, which would have been fine with me had our point production gone up. But that didn't quite happen.” Plum m er com pleted 4 of 14 passes Saturday for 54 yards and threw one inter­ ception to cornerback Craig Newsome. Verdugo was 6 of 12 for 64 yards and struggled with a few passes falling low. "He's (Verdugo) like a young colt that has so much em otion and adrenaline," Snyder said. "He had veins sticking out of his neck and forehead. He wasn’t playing quarterback. Once he calmed down he start­ ed throwing better. That's why these scrim­ mages are so important. The more scrim­ mages you can get for these young guys, the better.” No. 2 tailback Michael Martin carried 11 times for 63 yards, scoring on a 24-yard run. Starting tailback Chris Hopkins rushed for only 24 yards in nine tries, but Snyder pointed to a tired offensive line. “I think we played 80 or 90 plays with about eight linemen rotating through,” Snyder said, emphasizing the three interior positions. "If you do that, consistency just isn’t going to be there. You can't be a unit. And if they're not a unit, it’s really difficult to show what you can do as a running back.” The role of the flyback will become more important, along the same lines of the variance in the passing gam e. Parnell Charles, who made one reception for 22 yards, will be counted on even more fre­ quently as a receiver this fall. He caught 26 passes for 291 yards in 1993. "1 would like to say that his number of catches will go up by a third over a year ago,” Snyder said of Charles. “I think he’s one of the best in the Pac-10 coming out of the backfield.” Snyder named flyback Ryan Wood, left guard Juan Roque, cornerback M arcus Soward and inside linebacker Dan Lucas as players he has been exceptionally pleased with in spring drills. “Those are the guys that really stand out,” he said. Craig Macnaughton/State Press Center Kyle Murphy (left) congratulates Troy Rauer after Rauer’s 27-yard apparent touchdown reception Saturday in the Maroon and Gold scrimmage at Sun Devil Stadium. The pass was later ruled incomplete by ASU coach Bruce Snyder. Softball continues struggle Sun Devils fall to 49ers; losing streak stands at 10 B y T o d d K elly State P ress The path has been anything but straight for the 1994 ASU softball team. The season veered off course early and has yet to right itself. The toughest schedule in the nation has worn down the Sun Devils, a young team still searching for answers. Youth provides building blocks for the future, but little consolation for the mounting losses of the present. No. 19 Long Beach State (23-17 overall, 8-8 Big West) added to the woes of the season by winning a doubleheader over the Sun Devils last Friday. By los­ ing 7-5 and 3-0 to the 49ers, the ASU losing streak stands at 10. ‘T o come into ASU and to win two I think is a nice acco m p lish m en t,” CSU -LB coach Pete Manarino said. Both games were close and ASU had its chances, but many of the small things that have plagued the team this season worked against them again. “It’s sym ptom atic. W e’re playing right with everybody,” ASU coach Linda Wells said. “We don’t get the out at second enough on the bunt; we get sur­ prised too much on the bunt; we get the first runner on too much on a ground ball in the infield; we have too much scoring on a short base hit.” In the first game, ASU (16-31 overall, 1-9 Pac-10) fell behind early. Starter Mona Nard got knocked out after four batters, two outs and three earned runs. Carrie James came in to finish the inning and the game. In the bottom of the second, however, the Sun Devils answered. Juliane C astro’s triple scored Jayme Jenkins and Amy Day. Castro then scored on Shanen Kreipl’s single. CSU-LB picked up a run in the fourth and another in the fifth inning, but ASU answered in the bottom of the fifth inning as senior Wendy Johnson’s triple Craig Macnaughton/State Press ASU shortstop Amy Day prepares to sling the ball to first base during the first game of the Sun Devils' doubleheader loss to Cal-State Long Beach. Day committed two errors in her 12 fielding chances in the twinbill. STATE P ress scored Lisa Dacquisto and Alyssa Johnson to tie the score at 5-5. “I spanked that one out,” Wendy Johnson said. “It was kind of like anger and frustration and everything let loose on that one.” The seventh inning proved to be the difference for the 49ers. They scored two runs on three hits. Stacy Van Essen, who pitched a complete game, went 2 for 4 to help her cause and scored the go-ahead run on a passed ball. The 49ers started Christy Tucker in the circle in the second game, but she left after 15 batters. Van Essen, playing first base, switched positions with Tucker and finished the game. Van Essen entered in the fourth inning to face a two-out, bases-loaded situation, but pulled out of it without allowing a run. In the fifth inning with one out, ASU loaded the bases again, but Jeanne Redondo popped out and Alyssa Johnson struck out on a 3-2 pitch from Van Essen. That proved to be ASU’s last real threat. “In that situation, we had to come with her (Van Essen) because she has the experience and she got out of it,” Manarino said. “She did a real nice job of mixing up her pitches. Those were two big innings.” The Sun Devils had 14 hits in the twin bill, com­ pared to 17 for the 49ers, but committed six errors while the 49ers committed none. W ith to p-ranked U ofA slated for next W ednesday’s doubleheader, the Sun D evils are searching for direction. “Today was better as a team ,” Jenkins said. “We’re more talkative, more supportive, but it’s hard to say. Something is not falling together.” “It’s just one thing or another, you know,” Wendy Johnson said. “If one thing is off, it can snowball throughout the game.” The only free thing at ASU. Page_13^ Monday, April 18, 1994 S tate P ress NCAA violations take toll on w om ens tennis B y E lizabeth A. A ppelen State P ress The ASU w om en's tennis team was left all dressed up with no place to go Saturday. Its home match against UCSD was canceled because five of the seven members of the team were declared ineligible for competition by the NCAA. The athletes were suspended Friday afternoon because they received money to compete at national tourna­ ments. The NCAA changed the inter­ pretation of Bylaw 12.1.2, which suspended many of the best collegiate women's tennis players in the nation. The bylaw formerly meant women collegiate tennis play­ ers who competed in tournaments such as the U.S. Open were allowed to receive reimbursements for their expenses — such as hotel costs or airplane costs — but not any money exceed­ ing their expenses. These suspensions are closely related to the 60 suspen­ sions which struck the men's collegiate tennis world earlier last week. Two members of the ASU men's tennis squad. Sargis Sargsian and Eric Brunner, were declared ineligible for two matches. Friday, the NCAA changed their interpretation of that bylaw. Presently, any woman collegiate tennis player who received money for competing at such tournaments is consid­ ered ineligible and must be suspended for 10 percent of the matches remaining in the season. “The (NCAA rule) book says ‘actual and necessary expenses' can be reimbursed to the athlete,” ASU coach Shelia Mclnemey said. “The most shocking thing is the new interpretation of the rule.” The NCAA ruling will suspend about 60 to 70 percent of the players in the top 20 women collegiate tennis teams in the U.S., according to Mclnemey. “A lot of innocent kids are hooked up in this,” Mclnemey said. “It’s a mess.” The top five members of the team — Kori Davidson, Joelle Schad. M eredith G eiger, Page B artelt and Kara Schertzer — are suspended until the NCAA decides what to do about this widespread problem. No one knows for sure if ASU will be able to play at the Pac-10 Championships this weekend. “People play those tournaments (summer tournaments) to get better, and not for the money,” Schad said. “And if they (NCAA) start saying that you can’t play, then tennis is going to go way down when we just play in them to get better. I don’t play in them to make money when I lost about $5,000.” Schad, who was suspended Thursday, played in three tour­ naments over three years, receiving about $1,800 and spend­ ing about $6,700. Mclnemey said the NCAA ruling is ironic. For example, ASU tennis athletes Davidson and Schertzer are suspended because they com peted to qualify for the U.S. Open. However, they were given a wild card to compete in this tour­ nament by the NCAA who now says it is illegal for them to have participated. Any tennis player who wins the United States Tennis Association Amateur Circuit is given a wild card by the NCAA to compete in the U.S. Open. Davidson and Schertzer won the USTA Amateur Circuit in 1991 and 1993, respective­ lyAccording to Mclnemey, the USTA and the NCAA have different standards for amateur status, which makes interpre­ tation of the rules confusing. “The Pac-10 aggressively pursued this ... (and) realized the NCAA and the USTA are not on the same page,” Mclnemey said. Cardinals sign Joyner B a ttlin g B e n n y TEMPE (AP) — Outside linebacker Seth Joyner rejoined teammate Clyde Simmons and coach Buddy Ryan on Sunday by signing with the Arizona Cardinals. By signing the five-year, $14 million con­ tract, including bonuses, Joyner is reunited with Ryan, his former coach, and Simmons, his former roommate with the Philadelphia Eagles. "C lyde and I are p retty much best friends," Joyner said. “When we sat down early in the season, we pretty much knew what the situation was going to be. Clyde and I and Jim. We talked about different scenar­ ios Clyde and I being together, Clyde and I being separated. It was always a high priori­ ty for us to be together.” Joyner also said the Cardinals’ training facility is the best in the NFL and added that he wanted to finish his career playing and practicing on grass. His admiration for Ryan was another selling point. “What he tells you, you can take to the bank,” Joyner said. Ryan, hired in February to replace Joe Bugel as coach and Larry Wilson as general manager of a team that finished 7-9 last sea­ son, was a rookie head coach with the Eagles in 1986 when he drafted Joyner in the eighth round and Simmons in the ninth. Before he became a Pro Bowl selectee in 1991 and 1993, Joyner had a shaky begin­ ning. Ryan released him before the 1986 sea­ son began and didn’t rehire him for two games. But in 120 games since, Joyner has had 875 tackles and 37.5 sacks. G olf_______ C ontinued Associated Press San Francisco Giants pitcher Kevin Rogers takes down Florida Marlins catcher Benito Santiago in the bottom of the eighth inning of Sunday’s 9-8 Giants’ victory. Santiago charged the mound after Rogers hit him with a pitch. ASU CABLE CHANNEL 2 Here's w h a t you can g e t on Channel 2 RHA & Hall Council Events Cam pus D ining Hours C oncert Schedules RHA Personals ASU A thletic Schedules Library Hours Free M ovie info KASR Radio SRC Hours ASU Events Contests Giveaways jokes State Press info For Information, Call The Residence Hall Association at ASU from page 11. great win for myself. But we’ve got to keep going. This doesn't mean it’s time to stop practicing or playing. We need to put this one behind us and go on.” Although Barber feels that ASU is the best team in college golf right now, he said his win and the team’s are really a small part of the bigger picture the Sun Devils have in mind. “I’ll enjoy this for a day or so and then it’s time to get back to work,” he said. “It’s just a small part of the hill we’re trying to get up to. And it’s nice to start up it and get up to another level.” Barber said he learned the importance of There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Check out the comics. FAMILY PLANNING ASSOCIATES MEDICAL GROUP • Procedure while asleep (a t your option) • Pregnancy testing (im m ediate results) • Gynecological ultrasound and infection exams • Birth control. M orning-after p ill. 10% DISCOUNTE 5 5 3 -0 4 4 0 M ajor Credit Cards Accepted ABSOLUTELY TCMDC 2525 S. Rural Rd. #4C PHACMI ¥ 3143 N- 32nd st * ■ Between Broadway&Southern ' ^**^"*^"^^_just_Northof_U>og_202_ “SMOKERS WANTED” MALES WHO SMOKE CIGARETTES WITH YOUR V A L ID ASU TO ALL ASU SPO R TIN G EVENTS! ^EX C EPTFO O TBA LLLM EN ^A SK ETBA l^^^^ The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Order yours today! Board Certified M.D. Gynecologist 25 Years Experience in Pregnancy Termination (6 0 2 ) 9 6 5 -5 8 0 9 STUDENTS ADMITTED hard work from his father, Senior PGA Tour star Miller Barber. “He’ll be pleased, but he'll tell me the same thing, ‘Get back to work,’" Barber said of his 63-year-old father who often spends five to six hours each day practicing. “That’s what it’s all about. It’s a lot of hard work, and my father’s a great example of that.” Barber, Demsey and Stutts ended tourna­ ment play in the top four spots. Demsey (7169-69), the 1993 NCAA champion, tied for second with Oklahoma State’s Kris Cox at 7under 209. ages 18-54, if you buy pipe tobacco or tobacco to roll your own cigarettes, to participate in a Market Research Study in LSAT Would 7.5 m ore poin ts on yo u r LSAT score im prove yo u r chances o f getting into L aw School? — You bet it would! Princeton Review students see an average score improvement of 7.5 points on the LSAT (verified by a Big Six accounting firm). To find out why, call for details. the East Valley area. Please call (602) 438-2800 & ask for Sally between 9:30am & 8:30pm, Monday through Thursday THE J P R IN C E T O N ^ REVIEW ^ ■ We Score More! ' 9 6 7 -1 4 8 0 C lasses s ta r t A p ril 23! Princeton Review is affiliated with neither Princeton U. nor LSAS. C lassifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or in v ested , you may 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 in fo rm atio n and assistan ce regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 2641721. APARTMENTS ASU AREA, 1 & 2 bedroom apts. from $310-$360/mo not includ­ ing utilities. Ask for Dina 8291963 or Tere 966-8838. ASU AREA, 1 & 2 bedroom apts. from $310-$360/mo not includ­ ing utilities. Ask for Dina 8291963 or Tere 966-8838. ATTENTION ASU Students: Summer rent $ 180/month and up. Some furnished- VBall. BBall. pool. 1 bed. 1 bath, kitchen, w/ appl. Call 858-0558 for appt. BIG 2BD, 2BA RENTAL SHARING COMPUTERS RMTE WANTED to share 3bd hse in Lakes. $212 rent + utl: Avail now. Call Laura, 225-9766. IBM Thinkpads, Toshiba porteges & satellites, NEC Versas. Call Laptops+ at 602-322-5258. ROOM ATE NEEDED asap! 15 min 2 ASU.M/F,ns own room nice 2bd 2story twnhs 325mo for A,M&J Must love animals 4988040. LASERWRITER SELECT for sale $800,call 259-5704. ROOM ATE WANTED for 3 bd. condo in quiet area, 2 mi. from ASU. $200/mo 496-8930 aft. 5pm RO O M S FOR RENT M/F. WALK to ASU! Beautiful, rem odled hom e. $250 or $225/mo. + 1/4 utilities. Mo. to mo. O.K. avail.4/15. Kim, 8373713 or Cathryn. 840-7256. QUESTA VIDA room, washer/dryer, f/p, pool, spa, indoor raquetball. 968-7132. Avail 5/13. ROOM FOR Rent, $250/mo + 1/3 electric; cable & local phone included. Southem/Hardy. John 968-6911 LAPTOPS MAC SE with image writer, LQ printer includes software $400. David 438-7448. 92 UNISYS PC. 14" SVGA clr. mon.. 50mb. SCSI HD. 4mb ram.,31/2" disk drive, kybd and mse. Installed 5.0 W indows, Louis 967-7786, M-F, 8-5pm. $725. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. In­ du.: gold, ster., pearls, gems, an­ tiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave., Tempe Center 968-6074. TICKETS FLOYD TICKET, great seat, sec 10, row 38, $ 100 obo, call Joelle 829-7198. HOMES FOR SALE FLOYD TICKETS VIP 4 in a row, sect.31 $200ea. 4 for $750. Call David 956-3025 pg 5900434______________________ CAMPUS CLOSE! QUESTA VIDA never rented, 2 master suites, assumable loan. West USA, Betty A. 820-3333. JANET JACKSON April 18, great seats, very affordable. Call Steve, 678-0316.____________ Rent now or hold for Fall. 2bd Iba, all new carpet, tile, cabinets, appliances. From $475. Great Lo­ cations Rental Services 968-8886. Wheelchair Adapted Close to ASU! Share a beautiful apartment and keep your privacy. Everything new. $675 furnished. Closest to ASU. 910 E. Lemon (office 919 E. Lemon) 966-9000. EARLY BIRD Special on 2 bd Call for summer prices, short leases accept. Walk to ASU. On 8th St. btwn Rural & McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments 968-5238. FOR LEASE: 2bd, 2ba gmd level apt, w/d hk-up, lg storage, close to ASU. $475 + elec. 957-4999. TOWNHOUSE 2bd 2ba. utilities paid. All new in­ teriors. fum or unfum. Walk to Campus. Avail now from $635! Great Locations Rental Services 968-8886 HOMES FOR RENT 3-4 BED. furnished home to rent for 1 or 2 wks beginning May 10. Call Alicia 491-3592. OLD TOWN 3bd & 4bd. Beauti­ ful yard, walk to ASU. 3bd-$725; 4bd-$900. Tim, 894-0288. TOW NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3BD 1 1/2 BA. pool. Clean. New appliances & paint. Close to ASU. $450/mo. 438-7141. LUXURY 3BR 2ba condo. All appl., ASU area, $825/mo. Bill 966-7790, mb. 602-309-9312. PAP AGO PARK II, 2bd, 2ba, w /d, unfum , pool, $585/mo. avail June 1. Plan for the fall se­ mester now. 494-9105. State P ress Monday, April 18,1994 Page 14 2900+ sq. ft. hom e has: O ak floors, modern kitchen, 4 bdrms/2 full baths (Master has roll-in shower & raised tub), 2 car garage, security & fire system. Upgrades galore! $194,900 201 E. 14th St. Tempe Noreen Bettigole, GRI Coldwell Banker Success Realty 955-0390 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE LOOKING TO purchase 2 Pink Floyd tickets. Must be sections B l, B2, or B3, rows 1, 2, or 3. $150ea obo. Please call Chris an­ ytime, in Tucson at 602-6240014, lv. msg. NINE INCH Nails tickets May 1, $30/ea. Also available- Depeche Mode, Salt N Pepa, Meatloaf, Eagles, and more!! 254-3300. PINK FLOYD tickets on field, section D2, row 2, 1 pair. Call 899-5087 9am-10pm. PINK FLOYD tickets, 5 seats, sec 10, reasonable prices, call anytime. 965-7406. PINK FLOYD Tickets, call after 8:00pm. Eric 835-6017.__________________ $200 DN. + take over payment. Imi from ASU. 2bd 2 ba. 714582-9148. PINK FLOYD, good upper deck, $45, good lower deck & field $60 & up. Steve 678-0932. 2BD, 2BA, 1,100 sf condo, 400 yds from ASU. Lvg rm, ktchn, f/p, all appi, assum loan, $55K. Pg 205-3063 or 206-568-7237. AU TO M O B ILE S " CONDO 2BD, 2ba, f/p, all major appi incl, $700/mo. Questa Vida, 714-582-9148. NICE 3BD, 2-l/2ba TH, 1/2 mi. to ASU. all amen. $72,500 or lease opt., $800/mo. Call Elise, 966-7789.__________________ WHY RENT when you can own? 2bd, 2ba, sunny, airy, safe, f/p, com. pool. Low 40s. 833-4317. B uy O f T he W eek You deserve it! Papago Park II Village, 3 bedroom, tile floors. B o b B u ll o c k R e a l t y E x ec u tive s 998-2992 MISC. FOR SALE 85 KAW 550 JS w/trail, prop, paint, plate, pad, bars, grate 2100, Todd 451 -7370, w350-3573 FURNITURE RENTAL SHARING 2 TWIN beds for sale, $50 ea obo. M ust sell by 4/27. Call Tammy 966-8112. M/F RMTE needed 4/20 for 4bd 4ba hse. $205+l/4utilities. Pets ok, call Becky 921-9522. FOR SA L E- 2 couches $150ea.,love seat $100, desk & hutch $150. Need to sell. Kim 839-4728. NEAR ASU, nonsmk, 1700 sf hse,ac/evap,w/d,fp,clngfns $200 mo+1/4util Bob 990-2284 av5/10 SEVERAL DESKS & chairs, $50ea. David 438-7448. 1979 CHEVY Nova, good condi­ tion, air needs repair, $975 obo. Call 786-3809.______________ 1981 VW JETTA, Automatic, a/c, am/fm. runs well! $1250 obo. Call 964-3480. 1991 JETTA, white, auto, 48K, air, radio/cass, excel cond $7800. Call Helen 940-7438. HELP WANTEDSALES JOB DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. NANNIES WANTED: Positions nationw ide, sum m er or yr.round. Exp not req. Great pay & ben. Free travel. (612) 643-4399. ART GALLERY/ frame shop, p/t sales, wknds, eves, 15-18 hrs/ wk. Apply: Art Market, 951 8907. Art background pref. $750/WK. ALASKA fisheries this summer. Maritime Services 1-208-860-0219.____________ NEED A JOB? P/T SPORTS Marketing position, hourly pay, 20-30 hrs/wk. Fire­ bird International Raceway. Con­ tact John 268-0200. FLY CHEAP, $150-100 or less anywhere in US, depending on destination. Val 966-6601. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ♦EARN $7.50/hr.* Guar, hourly, setting free appts for established chiropractors, close to ASU. 470-1828 anytime. 2 POSITIONS: Staff aide and tu­ tor. Work with teen-age male cli­ ents 15-20 hrs/wk, $7/hr. Must be 21 yrs+. Joyce, 866-8226. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale seeks fulltime permanent front & back office help. Must type and have computer knowledge. Will train.. Apply in person. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd, Suite 108. A PPO IN TM EN T SETTERS needed, flex schedule, salary & comm., part-time. 481-9200. ARE YOU looking for a great opportunity that will last through summer? Set your own schedule & work in a fun work environment. Call 965-6754._________ ATTN - &7/HR Tem pe business now hiring w arehouse/manufacturers rep /sales help, 3-7pm, no exp nec. Call Jim, 820-8408.__________ CRUISE LINE, entry level on board positions avail, great bene­ fits. (714) 549-1569. DELIVERY DRIVER needed, must have a/c vehicle. Florist 968-0389, ask for Tina. DESK HOLDERS needed. Nat l co is expanding in the Valley. Will train motivated, quality peo­ ple. 3 m grs & various reps. $3000-$5000/mo. Serious in­ quires only. For appt, 829-8105. EXECUTIVE ANSW ERING Service needs p/t operator, Mon. 3:30- 10:30pm, Tues 4- 10pm, Fri & Sat 1 lpm-7am. Must type 45 wpm, have computer and 10 key exp. Call 264-4000 for appt. GREAT P/T job with national automotive dist. 10-30 hours/ week. Apply in person or send resume to APS, Inc., 2324 E. U niversity Dr., Phoenix, AZ 85034. EOE, M/F/V/H. Starting pay $5.75/hr. HELP W ANTED w aitresses, cooks, outside help, summer or full time. Salary, housing, bene­ fits. Apply at Apache Lake Re­ sort, 467-2511. 1992 JEEP Wrangler 5sp., 4 cyl., KENNEL W ORKER needed Must be dependable. South Scot10500 miles, excel cond, $9200 tsdale. 945-7692.____________ obo. Call 391-1711. 91 CAMERO RS 5-spd, loaded low miles, $8900. Call after 6:30, 838-4038. LIFEGUARDS, PART & full time starting now and in May. Arizona Country Club, 947-7666, ask for swim pool. MOTORCYCLES" LO O K IN G FOR c ertifie d 1993 NINJA 250cc, great condi­ lifeguards, babysitters, and a tennis court w asher for f/t summer tion. 2100 mis. $3000 obo. Call employ. Ahwatukee Community Aron 921-2097. Center 4700 E. Warner Rd. 89387 HONDA Elite 150, looks and 1942. runs like new, $999, 784-8136. MAIDS HONDA 200-VERY reliable, cheap transportation, moving, must sell $250 Mike 894-0262. Needed, exp. preferred must have transp. Connie 438-7448. YAMAHA VIRAGO 920,1986, mint cond., has been garaged, was selling for $1600, now $1200, must sell. 732-9392. P/T, aft. & Sat. ASAP, 998-5580 TRAVEL ASU BERMUDA and Caribbean Summer Programs for up to 6 credits. Limited space available. Call 965-4630.______________ CATCH A JET! Europe - $269: New York - $129 Call for program description! Airhitch (R) 1-800-397-1098. S America is a civilization that operates its economy and government, and satisfies most of its cultural needs without the aid of the typical intellectual. -E ric Hoffer TRAVEL_________ HELP WANTEDGENERAL t u d e n t 1 800 - - MAKE UP/SALES MARC CENTER Looking for dedicated caring people to work with individuals who are DD in home setting. For more info call 962-4838. MODELS/ACTORS,M-F, ALL types, for int'l music videos, nat'l commercials & local print work. No exp. nec. 266-6271. TRAVEL T r a v e l 7 7 7 -0 1 1 2 STA TRAVEL Th«-world«Urçcit atudant 6 youth travel organisation Get a head start on job hunting by attending The Arizona Colle­ giate Job Fair on Saturday April 23 from 9 to 4 in the MU Ventana and Arizona Ballrooms. Please, graduating students and alumni of ASU, U of A, NAU, Grand Canyon College, Embry-Riddle and DeVry only! Bring you re­ sume! For more info call Career Services at 965-2350. See the sp ecial C aree r issue in the Thursday, April 21 State Press for all the details and lists of the 100+ recruiters who will be on campus. PERSONAL ASST for male wheelchair user in Tempe. Start mid-May, p/t, $6/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting req. 319-354-5292. PROFESSIONAL OFFICE, fun atmosphere. Resort advertising, near F iesta M all p t/ft, min. $200/wk. 897-1676 Cindy Brady. SHOE SHINERS wanted, $8$10/hr, f/t, p/t, will train, C/W Bar Ladies/Men 955-7369. SPORTS MINDED Hiring immediately 6-8 individ­ uals for Tempe office. Flex p/t hrs avail, $8/hr guar to start. Call Mike for interview, 921-8282. SUM MER CAMP Positions: Easter Seals of NM is hiring male and female counselors to work with persons with disabili­ ties in a summer camp setting; canoeing, swimming, camp-outs, arts & crafts, singing and laugh­ ter. Camp is located just south of Gallup, NM. Call Mark for ap­ plications; 800-279-5261 Easter Easter Seal Society o f New Mexico. SWIM INSTRUCTORS-AT cli­ ent's homes in your area. Flex sched. $ 12-15/hr+ bonuses. WSI + strong exp. 998-9633. TEICHERT MARKETING needs 4 sales people for spring & sum­ mer promotions. Earn $200-400 per week. Good experience for business/communication majors. Flex sched. Please call 921-7755, l-4p.m. ULTIMATE LAWN Care is hir­ ing p/t employees. $5/hr to start. Exp nec; own trans req. Early mornings, flex 20-40 hrs M-F (days can vary). Call Marlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. WE'LL GET you thru the sum­ mer...and beyond! $8 to $12/hr, pt, long term year 'round empl. Imm. openings at Tempe branch. Flex p/t hrs. No cold calls. Week­ ly paychecks. Pleasant work envir. Fully-automated. No typing. Pro, paid training, $7.50/hr guar, min. Dialamerica Marketing 8940264. PARTS DEPARTMENT, part time now, full time summer, must work Saturday, have computer exp. Apply Kay's Lawnmower 1427 W. Broadway. Mesa HELP WANTEDC L |R IC A L _ _ _ P/T HELP. Phones, filing, dis­ patch. Close to ASU. T-Th, 2-7p & every other wknd 8am-4pm. 966-9571. City-Wide Plumbing. HELP WANTEDF O O D J |R V jC |^ BARTENDER W ANTED for fun neighborhood bar $7-$ 12/hr, 24-32 hrs /wk. Sports knowledge a must. Apply The Woodshed I 19 W. Baseline aft. 5pm Exp. only OPPORTUNm|^ AA ALASKA summer employ­ ment. Earn up to $15,000 this summer in canneries, processors, etc. M or female. No exp neces­ sary. Room/board/travel often provided! Guaranteed success! (919)929-4398 ext. A 145. AA CRUISE and travel employ­ ment guide. $$$ + free world­ wide travel! (Caribbean, Europe, etc!) Summer/permanent avail­ able. Guaranteed success!! (919) 929-4398 ext. C145._________ CRUISE SHIPS now hiring Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour companies. World travel. Sum­ mer & full time employment available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C5918. SUMMER JOBS-Directory of resorts, amusement & nat'l parks now hiring nationwide. Send $2 and SASE to: WRE, Box 2704, White City, OR 97503._______ CORK N CLEAVER Accepting apps for lunch food servers. Will train, p/t. Fun at­ mosphere,. fast pace. Concern w/appearance, reliability & per­ sonality important. Apply in per­ son M-F 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. (44th/Camelback) JOHNNY ROCKETS is now tak­ ing applications for cashiers-food servers. Fashion Square Mall, apply in person. 423-1505. Waiters, Waitresses, Waiters Assistants & Cocktail Servers Great income for friendly, enthusiastic people. All shifts. Apply in person to The Sports Club Restaurant at Pointe Hilton South Mountain Monday-Friday 9-11:30 or 2-5:30. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE AGES 9 & 5, live in/out, 11:30 am-6pm now; all day this sum­ mer. Ahwatukee area. Only sum­ mer? Please call too. 893-2599. NANNY- SUMMER, for 2 kids, f/t, must have car. References req. Call evenings, 596-8268. Earn up to $8,000+ in 2 months. Room + Board! Transportation! Male/Female. No experience necessary! (206) 545-4155 ext A 5918 BUSINESS O PPO RTU N m H , A WIN-WIN opprtnty! Immed cash flow , entry level $200400/day. Free info 602-483-6265. PETS FREE CAT, loving white Persian male. Reason: Extended absenses. 970-4788. FREE L O ^F O U N D ^ FOUND: CARTE France Tele­ com card in case, w/name im­ printed M. Hamelain Jean Claude. Call 829-0294.______________ LOST: WOMANS watch, black w/diamond in center. Hayden Li­ brary. Extremely important-My Mom will kill me!!! 491-8870. PT, 44TH St./Osbom, full day needed(flexible), car/references req. $5+/hr. 840-5926. LOST: SUNGLASSES IN ladies restroom @ Computer commons. "R ay-Ban" look w ith brown frames & prescription lenses. Please contact Julie, 894-6418. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL SUMMER JOBS We are hiring 100 stu ­ dents & teachers fo r a variety of temporary cleri­ cal positions. If you have office skills such as typing, reception, clerical, WPO, secretary, etc., please call for appointment: Tempe 966-1100 Phoenix 264-4537 Scottsdale 948-2225 T urn Y o u r S pare T im e Into _______ C ash _______ F il l o u t a n a p p l ic a t io n a n d STIVERS I BE INTERVIEWED THE SAME DAY! I INC Come to the M em orial Union Room 206A (The Plata Room) M onday, April 18th 9 a.m.-2 p.m. or eall Higginbotham Associates at 829-3141. Ask for Georgia. TEM PORARY PERSO NN EL GET THAT SUMMER JOB NOW •P /T Flexible Hours •Persons w/Special Needs •Hom e Environments, 1-to-l •Locations Close to You Call M-F 8-5 Only. . Ask for Job Hotline 494-1234 Telephone survey interviewing. Start at S5.5()/hr, first raise review after 30 days. Relaxed atmosphere • No selling of any kind f lexible scheduling • Walk from ASU Page 15 Monday, April 18, 1994 S tate P ress RESTAURANTS/ BARS Find Fun in the Classifieds! RESTAURANTS/ BARS 100 WINGS » DRAFTS 75C ■ M ■ Bud, Bud Light Mon-Thur 3-7 p.m. Sat 11 a.m.-5p.m. Sun 12-9 p.m. B BANDERSNATCH PRA NKSTERS 5th St. &Forest BREWPUB SER V IC ES STUDENT LOANS No u p -fro n t fees. A pply by phone, lowest interest rates avail­ able. Special offer, limited time. Please call 230-5237. TA X HELP FUNDRAISING 3 full Satellites 10 Televisions 6 F o o t B ig Screen 1Q24Ë. Broadway Tampa » 967-8875 CONTINUING YOUR STUDIES IN COUNSELING, PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL WORK OR RELATED AREAS? MAKE UP to $2000 in one week! Motivated student organizations, (fraternities, sororities, etc.) needed for marketing project. Call Larry at 1-800-756-6662. PERSONALS A DOZEN Roses $20. Balloons & Delivery available. Call After Hours Flowers 894-3419. AZ GET ready fo r AF golf. From Kim, Sara, Andrea. Katie. AZd> MIKE and Gabe-Great job on the course. I had a blast. Hope you did too. See ya soon! AO Katie. OZK-THANKS for a great time at Luau! We had a blast!!! Love the ladies of AXO. GOLDEN KEY members! Gen­ eral meeting today!!! Get in­ volved! Be there! See Today Sec­ tion for info. AT HOME MAC typing & graph­ ic services; term papers, reports; A pro. 10 yrs exp! 993-8297. FLIGHT INSTRUCTION- Get your private license the afford­ able way! Page Terry @209-3988 M iS C WRITE STUFF. Fast, profes­ sional, reasonable word process­ ing. Term papers, resumes, etc. APA/MLA. Beth, 963-3537. FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. D on't miss the current issue of Devil Deals! TUTORS I W A N T IT NOW ! Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966-1984. Pick up your FREE copy in the basement of Matthews Center. NATIVE AMERICAN & For­ eign students. I will tutor you in Social Sciences, assist with and proofread term papers, help pre­ pare resumes. Reasonable rates. Steve 756-6651. R ESUM ES $15 H igh S uccess rate! R eports $2.00/pg., same day. Near ASU, A Perfect Image 967-0907. TUTORS ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE COMING THURSDAY... Summer School Blues...If you need tutoring we'll CAREER GUIDE be open during both summer sessions. Classes are smaller-- rates are lower. We also have a few seats left for this semester; call for details. We offer tutorial for the following summer classes: MAT 106, MAT 114, MAT 117, MAT 119, MAT 210, PSY 230, QBA 221, PHY 111, PHY 112. Spring '94 Don't miss it! MATRIX Education Center ("Simon") C ornerstone M ail u Literature and application materials for more than 300 credentialling programs 968-4668 F or m ore info rm a tio n , w rite o r c a ll us today! Y o u r In d iv id u a l H o r o s c o p e Career Network Associates 2210 Mt. Carmel Avenue Suite 110 - Dept. A Glenside, Pennsylvania 19038 = = = = = F rances D r ake For Monday, April 18, 1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You'll enjoy shopping for home and family, but you may have trouble completing an unfinished task. In business, some matters remain unclear. Tonight favors domesticity. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You're charming today and you’ll put your best foot forward. However, others may be slow to reveal their intentions. You’re in sync, though, with a partner. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Though it's a good day for making money, deceptive trends do not favor financial dealings. Be wary of those who would take advantage. Social life is iffy tonight. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Keep your ego out of business dealings today. Socially, you’ll make a grand impression on others. Singles will attract romance. Tonight favors having fun! LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Someone puts in a good word for you in business today. Unexpected developments at work may alter your schedule. Tonight favors private and family interests. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Make plans to visit friends at a distance. Singles may be uncertain of their feelings in romance. It’s a good day for participating in a group activity. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) A relative may need your help in some way. A home delivery may be ' late in arriving. Your charm is an asset in business dealings. Progress on the job is assured. (215) 572-7670 TYPING/W ORD P R O C ESS IN G WHY TYPE IT YOURSELF? 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! THINKING ABOUT rushing? How about the best house on campus. AZd>. Come by Wed. April 20th at 5:00 pm for a pre­ rush dinner. Call Andrew at 7840669 for details. T onight WORD PROCESSING, secre­ tarial services, fax. 28yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W comer, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. Si Literature/catalogs describing over 4,000 graduate study programs ZX-GAMMA Phi is ready to take Derby Days '94!!!! S tudents a d m itte d fre e t o a ll ASU s p o r tin g e v e n ts w ith v a lid ASU ID (except Football & Men's Basketball). AAA- KINKO'S Copy Center makes the grade! Get reports, resumes, & flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & much more! Open 24 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. We eliminate the hours spent researching graduate programs and the time consuming effort of contacting graduate schools for more information. We can provide: N EED A JOB? CHEAP DATE $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. ASU AREA typing, w/p. editing, transerptn, WordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime Our educational database con­ tains information on more than 4,000 graduate concentration areas, representing over 1,000 schools. This makes it easy to find the program that's right for you. LE SL IE . LET'S get naked again! How about dinner? Dan. Get a head start on job hunting by attending The Arizona Colle­ giate Job Fair on Saturday April 23 from 9 to 4 in the MU Ventana and Arizona Ballrooms. Please, graduating students and alumni of ASU, U o f A, NAU, Grand Canyon College. Embry-Riddle and DeVry only! Bring you re­ sume! For more info call Career Services at 965-2350. See the sp ecial C aree r issu e in the Thursday. April 21 State Press for all the details and lists of the 100+ recruiters who will be on campus. TYPING/W ORD P R O C ESSIN G APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. É A R & D R IL L Tempe's Best Sports Bar TYPING/W ORD P R O C ESSIN G 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. Fed. & State Easy $25. Fed. & State 1040A $30. Extra $5 per form. KE Tax 926-4807. INSTRUCTION TYPING/W ORD P R O C ESSIN G Theresa • 924-1976 = SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You're on the same loving wavelength with a partner today, but you’ll receive mixed messages from some you deal with. Guard against becoming overtired. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Your friendly manner opens doors for you in business. Some money you thought was forthcoming may be delayed. Enjoying time for your­ self is favored over dating tonight. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) A refusal to be pinned down may make you a bit difficult to deal with. However, you should take advantage of today’s lovely vibrations for socializing. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Despite delays and unexpected happenings, you will make progress on the job today. You may be socializing with people from work. Home entertaining is favored. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) It’s a better day for romance and creative interests than for getting together with friends. Someone could keep you waiting. Watch spend­ ing after dark. YOU BORN TODAY have administrative talents and are motivated by a high sense of idealism. You may be somewhat nervous and highstrung and need periods by yourself to replenish you energies. You’re likely to be interested in both the arts and sciences. You’re sometimes visionary in outlook and usually feel limited in a routine job. Birthdate of: Clarence Darrow, lawyer; James Woods, actor; and Hayley Mills, actress. ©1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. ;---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------« ! St a t e P r ess Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. SUCH A DEAL! ADOPTION HAPPILY MARRIED couple want to give your newborn love & security while easing your de­ cision. Expenses paid. Jean & Steve, 1-800-362-8856. PREGNANT? LOVING family looking to adopt. 602-282-6510. all dom estics NOCOVER SERVICES C AR REPA IR D on't miss the Pink Floyd Preparties! Wed's PF Party 8-11pm Win FREE Concert tickets & CD's. Sun's PF Party Moosehead freebies! Why drive? Ride our bus to the show! Rural Si Arac« 894-2662 Mobile- We come to you! Low rates, work guaranteed 839-5398 GRADUATING??? ANNOUN­ CEMENTS addressed - Callig­ raphy with Class! Call today! 277-4217. RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects. Catalog $2. 1-800351-0222. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS; DV-1 G r e e n c a r d P ro ­ gram. Sponsored b y U.S. Immigration. Greencards provide U.S. p erm anent resident status. Citizens o f a lm o st all c o u n trie s are allowed. For info & forms: New Era Legal Services 20231 Stagg S t Canoga Park, CA 91306 Tel: (818) 772-7168; (818) 998-4425 Mon-Sun: lOam-1 lp m Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. n „ a g o private Kartv 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 1 days, $ 1. 5 per line, per day T o+ s co m m erciai 1 day $ 2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1.00 per line, per day 1 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Please include Q H Q WM Price per Day $ Bank Card Number # of Days X Total = $ Classification Name/Numben Name on Card Expiration Date 098 Adoption 065 Airplanes 010 Announcements 020 Apartments 061 Automobiles 064 Bicycles 051 Books 077 Business Opportunities 054 Computers 086 Free Lost/Found _ ■J A Sony, we cannot accept personal ads through the mail. 088 052 049 101 074 072 073 070 071 030 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help Wanted-Child Care Help Wanted-Clerical Help Wanted-Food Service Help Wanted-General Help Wanted-Sales Homes for Rent 040 Homes for Sale 102 Housecleaning 107 Instruction 103 Insurance 056 Jewelry 076 Job Opportunities 015 Legal Notices 120 Miscellaneous 050 Miscellaneous for Sale 045 Mobile Homes 063 Motorcycles 082 Music 090 Personals 084 Pets 110 Photography 097 Pregnancy Counseling 047 Real Estate 035 Rental Sharing 080 Restaurants/Bars 037 Rooms for Rent 100 081 058 031 041 060 067 108 105 115 Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condos for Rent Townhomes/Condos for Sale Transportation Travel Tutors Typing/Word Processing Wanted L _____________________________________________________________________________ I St a t e P r e ss Monday, April 18, 1994 Page 16 W8BLIN TYOULIVE TOHAVEA ES3E3E3ID A College Graduate New Car Program no previous credit - low payments - immediate approval contact Richard McClain or Linder Stanley at At Student Prices. -*i53BG3E O *" Get 25% off tefcor or a free box of SA LES • PARTS • SERVICE diskettes on your first v is it (602) 274-3800 • 1400 E. Camelback Road, Phoenix L BringIn tWs ad for a special offer A On topHiotch Mac cr PC service H k from your local SERVICenter. On ycur fis t visit, get 25% off labor— or a free box of ■ W diskettes— on anythin from repairs to a system weilcheck to a memory E upgrade, it’s all backed by ^ ^ ^ H D ig ita L with fast turnaround E for att tenete and brands of PC products, printers, and related peripherals. So bring in your eqwpment to us for arepar, a wedcheck, or even just a question. What could tie smarter than great servie* atgreatpriees? Italian lee Home of the 'Killer' Calzone ---------------------------- INTRODUCES------------------------------- I Ns---------- ASU CAMPUS • GREEKS • DORMS-----------* fi l i l i 894-MAMA 106 E. University Drive • 1 Block East o f M ill • J7°° M in. O rd e r $2°° O FF * Any Large 16" N.Y.-Style Pizza To W o r k aM.MOCITAL.Ugs Buy 2 calzones at regular price ami pet 3rd calzone F i l l i of equal o r lesser value N a l valid with other offers. Expire* 5 / 2 / 9 4 . __mama; s PI^ERJA_8?4-MAMA, Ify<)u’re grac luatin ig ana nee