I t’s o ffic ia l S w im m in g & S p ik in g G overnor authorizes creation o f ASU East By Shawn Boyd State P ress Gov. Fife Sym ington signed a bill authorizing estab­ lishm ent of an ASU East branch during a ceremony at Williams A ir Force Base W ednesday, w hich ASU president Lattie Coor said will create a SYM IN G TO N synthesis of uses for the facility. Symington signed HB 2366 at the base, located in southeast Mesa. The base was vacated by the Air Force last year in a nation­ wide round of base closures. The Governor also cut a large red ribbon signaling the grand opening of W illiams Gateway Airport, a civilian field that will use the existing facilities built by the Air Force. About 200 spectators and people involved with the base attended the ceremony. ASU East will share the sprawling base w ith the new airp o rt, the M aricopa Community College system and various other private and public entities. “We are a hardy band of pioneers in this effort (to develop new uses for a closed b a se ),” Sym ington said. Coor said he is happy that education was emphasized as a part of the redevelopment plan from the beginning, which will allow the base to be a multi-purpose facility. “ASU is immensely proud to be a part of this historic moment,” Coor said, adding that the redeveloped base will shape the area in ways currently unimaginable — much in the same fashion that Luke Air Force Base has impacted the West Valley. At full capacity, ASU East is expected to handle 10,000 students. Among others attending the ceremony were Rep. Mark Killian, R-Mesa, speaker of the Arizona House of Representatives, and Mesa Mayor Willie Wong. Killian was an integral part of the effort to move the authorization through the Arizona Legislature. The original form of HB 2366 included a $2.1 million appropriation for start-up costs. That funding was made separately throiigh T u r n t o ASU E ast , page 2 . Candidate’s debate challenge refused in presidential race B y T o d d Kelly State P ress Associated Students of ASU presidential candidate Kurt Wilhelm drew a line in the sand Wednesday, but rival candidate Marci Hendrickson refused to cross it. “I challenged Marci H endrickson to a debate, but she declined,” said Wilhelm, the current ASASU activities vice president. Wilhelm and Hendrickson were both cam­ paigning on Cady Mall during the first day of run-off elections, which continue today. Wilhelm said he hoped to provide an open forum for students during the run-off elec- tions. He cited two other instances where the two were supposed to meet, but it did not work out. “He’s getting belligerent. He tried to get me to speak in his microphone, but I told stu­ dents to com e by my booth in stea d ,” Hendrickson said. Hendrickson and Wilhelm, the top votegetters in last w eek's ASASU presidential elections, were forced into a run-off election Wednesday an d T h u rsd a y ifecause neither candid ate won a m ajority o f the vote. H endrickson won 39 percent, 719 votes, while Wilhelm garnered 23 percent, or 421 votes. ASU sophomore Jon Marlinga battled the intense heat along with a tew friends Wednesday afternoon by playing water volleyball at the Student Recreation Complex. Wednesday’s high reached 99 degrees. A NIGHT TO REMEMBER First-time gay prom scheduled for Valley students in early summer B y M ika A kikuni State P ress a green sports coat and a “nice” pair of jeans is what / \ ASU student Mark Wendell will wear on the night of 1 K his prom in June. During that night of gala, Wendell and his male partner, a student at Mesa Community College, will walk side-by-side, enjoying the delicious food and the sweet fruit punch served in the Tempe Kiwanis Recreation Center. Wendell and his partner will not be the only gay couple at the prom, however. Two to three hundred other gays and les­ bians are also expected to come to the “Romance & Rainbows Prom ‘94,” a party organized by the Lesbian and Gay Community Switchboard and the Lesbian Resource Project, both of Phoenix. “This is the first year that we organized a gay and lesbian prom,” said Bonnie Benitez, an ASU senior resources and conservation major and executive director of the LGCS. “The purpose of this prom is to provide an alternative prom, much like a high school prom, to lesbians and gays. “We wanted to provide a prom where gays and lesbians S am antha F e ld m an/S tate Press Mark Wendell, an ASU student, says he’ll wear a green sports jacket and a “nice” pair of jeans to a gay prom scheduled for June. World/ Nation STA TE PRESS W eather Outlook Sunny and very warm. High around 100. President Clinton calls for more airstrikes against Bosnian Serbs after Gorazde offensive. Page 3 c t a '1 'e P r è s o feel welcome. When you are a gay or lesbian in high school you have no outlet.” Benitez said this prom will welcome gays and lesbians of all ages, mainly those “who didn’t have the opportunity to go to their high school prom.” The gathering will take place at the Kiwanis Recreation Center, 6111 S. All American Way, north of Guadalupe Road and west of Rural Road, June 18 from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Tickets will go on sale on mid-May and people interested should call the LGCS at (602) 234-2752. Tickets will cost $14.95 per person or $24.95 per couple. “The biggest difference between this prom and regular high school proms is that in this prom, you will see couples of the same gender,” said Barb Jones, director of LRP, a non­ profit agency that supports lesbians and gays. “We also wel­ come single people to the prom.” Jones said her group “will probably not” make political moves against high schools that do not allow gays and les­ bians in their proms. Wendell said this prom will be a good chance for “gays T urn t o G ay pr o m , page 2 . Sports The ASU gym­ nastics team begins its quest for its first-ever NCAA champi­ onship tonight in Salt Lake City. i C e n te r s e c tio n Page 11 W here To Find It Classifieds........................... 13 Comics..................................10 Crossword.............................. 7 Horoscopes ......................... 15 Opinion.................................. 4 Police Report.........................6 Sports....................................11 Today’s Activities................ 2 World/Nation........................ 3 S tate P ress Thursday, April 21, 1994 P age 2 ASU East T oday C o n t in u e d from page 1. The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU com­ munity. Requests are printed according to the space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f M atthews Center. Room 15. R equests w ill not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll address o f the loca­ tion. All requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. D eadline fo r entries is noon the day before publication. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Closed daily meeting, noon, basement of the old church at the Newman Center, northwest comer of College and University. • Beta Alpha Psi — Initiation banquet, dinner with the Accounting Circle, scholar­ ship presen tatio n s, R addison Tem pe Mission Palms, 6:30 to 9 p.m., initiates please arrive at 6 • Program for Southeast Asian Studies — Brown bag talk: “The spoils of Change: M aterial and Id eological A spects o f Islam ization on the Island o f Lam bok, Indonesia" presented by Jay Rague, o f the Department of Anthropology, LL C50, 12:40 p.m. • American Indian Council — Meeting. American Indian Institute C onference Room, 5 p.m. • University Toastmasters — Open meet­ ing, MU second floor, 6:30 p.m. • Arizona Media Action Committee — organizational meeting for a student media literacy and action group, MU Santa Cruz Room, 4 p.m., free movie, “Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media,” BAC 216, 6:30 p.m. • European Discussion Club — Talk by Professor Donald Abenheim of Stanford University, “Will NATO Die?” LL C57, 9:15 a.m. • S tudent A ffairs — NCAA A thletics Certification, open forum for discussion of ICA’s Self-Study Report, MU La Paz room 223,3 to 4 p.m. • Women’s Student Center — Practical tips for budgeting — taking care of your­ self, Women's Student Center, MU lower level, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.. followed by dis­ cussion group for women of color, 5 to 6 m. • C a n te rb u ry E piscopal C am pus Ministry — Eucharist, dinner, bible study and planning meeting, St. A ugustine’s Parish, 1735 S. College Ave.. 6:30 p.m. • Public Relations Student Society of America — Raffle for an autographed Phoenix Suns jersey, Cady Mall, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. • ASASU Elections Department — Run­ off elections, various locations around campus, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. • In te rfra te rn ity and P anhelienic C ouncils — F irst A nnual A ll-G reek Awards Ceremony, MU Arizona Ballroom, 7:30 p.m. • MUAB Special Events Committee — Open meeting, MU Conference Room 1A, 3 p.m. • All Saints Catholic Newman Center —Student association sponsors a tw ilight retrea t,” The E ucharist: M eaning and Tradition,” 2340 E. University Drive, 7:30 p.m. the budget process, allowing the strippeddown authorization version to glide through both chambers of the Legislature. Looking at the clear sky and hot sun, Killian said he could not understand why the Air Force would want to close a base in such a great location. “This is a family and community asset,” he said, adding that people of all ages will be able to use the base. Wong said things have been looking up for the base lately. “We are pleased with the increasing activ­ ity at the airport,” he said. “Since the closure of W illiam s Air Force Base, W e’ve been waiting for this positive step in the reuse of Gay prom C o n t in u ed from page 1. and lesbians to bring their partners and intro­ duce them to other people.” “It’s a prom that we never had,” Wendell said. “I didn’t go to my high school prom because there was no girl I wanted to go with. I didn’t feel comfortable at that time to go to the prom with my boyfriend.” Wendell said that when a gay person goes to a prom, chances are that he or she will be “ridiculed, laughed at, and in some cases, beaten up. That’s why most gays and les- • bians choose not to go.” Adam Leeds, a senior nursing major and member of Delta Lambda Phi, a gay fraternity on campus, said he thinks the prom is a good idea for people who have become comfort­ able with their identity. Leeds, who said he did not acknowledge his gay identity during high school, also said “once people become comfortable with their identity, they will regret that they did not go to their high school prom." • D epartm ent o f C om m unication Symposium: “Domestic Human Rights,” MU Cochise Room 212,2 p.m. ONA STATE NI VER S i ’AlnÈ JP:R]iSS • C am pus C rusade fo r C h rist :— Thursday Night Live, open meeting and bible teaching, PS H150, 7:30 p.m. • Vice President of Student Affairs —* Open forum for anyone interested in meet­ ing the two candidates for the position of D irecto r o f E ducation D evelopm ent, Administration Building Board Room, 2:30 to 3 p.m. You d o n ' t even 1î ave to t a k e n o t e s ! . SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU I.D.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL GET A DINNER in n m u Bistro the facility.” Mark Schneps, mayor of Queen Creek, a small town near the base, said the new utiliza­ tion of the facility is expected to create about 17,000 jobs for the area in 10 years. Coor said after the ceremony that the fed­ eral government still has not officially handed over the land for the ASU branch campus, but there should be no snags. “They have slipped their April decision date to July,” he said, adding that the com­ plexity of the plan is causing the delay. Coor also said two ASU officials will be traveling to Washington, D.C., to remain in contact with the federal government. N ife Club MAKES \0 & ? This year we're doing it again! Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), Mike Puios of The Spaghetti Company will give you one FREE dinner* for each dinner you order! It's our 2-for-1 SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL. And it's good for the whole year at our Tempe, Phoenix and Scottsdale locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Company is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices even better! Our dinners include a full-course meal with all the trim­ mings - from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you can't beat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 11 •But you MUST have your currant student I.D. card or fee receipt with you to take advantage of this offer. 15% gratuity added to all discounted checks (except senior citizen discounts). Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed File of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala, Three Pasta Opera and orders to go ARE NOT included in the 2-fo M special. OPEN AT 11:00 A.M. TO 11:00 P.M. SUNDAYS! OPEN AT 10 A.M. ON GAME DAYS! E n jo y o u r n ig h t ly d r in k s p e c ia ls . ^ p a g l i e t t i G > n t p a i t ^ RESTAURANT PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Just North of Indian Bend 257-0380 483-5669 OLD TOWN TEMPE 4th St. & Mill 966-3848 W orld /N a t io n S ta te P ress _______________________________________________________Thursday, April 21, 1994____________________________ ;___________________________________ P age 3 A round rizona Judge declares mistrial in “urban survival” killing Arizona elderly population soon to be second largest PHOENIX (AP) — A rizona wifi have a larger percentage of people over age 65 than every state.but Florida by the year 2020, according to TJ.S. Census figures released Wednesday. The state also should have the largest Indian population after 2000, the figures show. The figures are part of a report that broke down population projections for states by age, sex, race and Hispanic origin for the first time, Census officials said. People 65 years and older account for 13.4 percent of the population, rank­ ing Arizona 18th. But the projections say that segment will more than double in number, growing to 19.6 percent by 2020, placing Arizona second behind Florida in percentage of elderly. “C ertainly there is some m erit in those fig u res,” said A rdell H aines, director o f the Arizona office o f the A m erican A ssociation o f R etired Persons. “1 could easily see that number double." Utility company announces universal rate reduction PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Public S erv ice Co. has agreed to the first across-the-board rate reduction in its history, the company and Corporation C o m m issio n o ffic ia ls announced Wednesday. Gary Yaquinto, manager of the com­ m ission’s utilities division, said the Phoenix-based utility would ask for approval of a 2.2 rate reduction, which would affect all classes of customers. In addition, Yaquinto stud APS had agreed to leave the lower rates in effect for a least three years and to spend $30 million over that period on cost-reduc­ tion and alternative-energy programs. “It is now time for APS to share with customers the savings firms incentives put is place in the 1991 rate-case settle­ ment,” Yaquinto said. “The staff review o f APS’ financial position shows thin the settlement we reached three years ago achieved the intended results, bring­ ing the company and customers savings from reduced costs and greater efficien­ cies.” A sso ciated Press President Clinton speaks on the telephone with Russian President Boris Yeltsin about the situation in Bosnia Wednesday. Clinton called for aggressive NATO air strikes to stop assaults on sake havens in the war-stricken country. U.S.: Serbs m ust pay Clinton calls for wider air strikes W A SHINGTON (A P) — P resid en t Clinton declared Wednesday that Serb forces responsible for the carnage in the Muslim enclave of Gorazde “must pay a higher price” for their unrelenting attacks. He called for more aggressive NATO air strikes to stop assaults on safe havens throughout Bosnia. A cknow ledging th at the situ atio n in Gorazde is increasingly grim, Clinton urged NATO to ban all heavy w eapons from Gorazde and other designated areas, as was done last m onth to break the siege o f Sarajevo. Clinton, at a White House news confer­ ence, said the Sarajevo approach was best despite apprehension among some allies. “Under the Sarajevo model you can say, ‘OK, h ere’s the safe zone, all the heavy weaponry has to be withdrawn or put under U.N. control and if there’s any violation by anybody, there can be air action,” the presi­ dent said. “It is a much clearer thing.” Clinton’s plan represents a shift in policy after months o f indecision and takes the U nited States and its allies deeper into Bosnia’s two-year civil war, which has left 200,000 people dead or missing. NATO signaled it was willing to go along with Clinton’s proposal but delayed final approval to give military advisers time to consider the best way to proceed. The president said the United States, Russia and European allies planned “a major diplomatic initiative” to end the strife in the form er Y ugoslavia. He did not provide details, saying they remain to be worked out. “Air power alone will not settle this con­ flict,” said Clinton. “This conflict will have to be settled through negotiations.” Before speaking, Clinton conferred by phone with Russian President Boris Yeltsin, French President Francois Mitterrand and Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien. Clinton said he personally favored drop­ ping the arms embargo that has prevented outgunned Muslim forcps from rearming. H ow ever, he said the allies continue to oppose him on that point. There are six safe havens designated by the United Nations, including Sarajevo and Gorazde. , Sarajevo was singled out by NATO when the capital was besieged by Bosnian Serb artillery. NATO threatened the Serbs with punitive ait' strikes unless they removed their heavy weapons from a “free zone” around the city or placed them under the control of U.N. troops. The Serbs generally com plied, no air strikes were undertaken and life in the city has been limping back to normal. However, the Serbs recently have seized or tried to reclaim some of their weapons by force. They have not been punished. FORT W ORTH. T exas (AP) — Prosecutors plan to retry a black teen­ ager w hose law yers won a m istrial Wednesday after arguing that “urban sur­ vival syndrome” forced him to gun down two blacks with whom he was feuding. After 2 1/2 days of deliberations, the jury of nine whites and three blacks dead­ locked 11-1 in favor o f convicting Daimion Osby, and District Judge Bill Burdock declared a mistrial. O sby, 18, was charged w ith two counts of murder in the fatal shootings of cousins Willie “Peanut” Brooks, 28, and Marcus Brooks, 19, during a confronta­ tion in a crowded parking lot last April. P ro secu to rs said the victim s were unarmed. Osby’s lawyers acknowledged that he k illed the men but said the tw o had threatened him with a shotgun the week before. Osby and the cousins were involved in an intensifying feud, defense lawyers said. The defense strategy centered on the claim that because Osby was raised in a poor, violent neighborhood, he suffered from “urban survival syndrom e” and believed he had no alternative but to kill the men. Defense lawyer Bill Lane said he was encouraged that one juror had accepted the argument, which he said he would expand on in O sby’s next trial. Prosecutors planned to retry Osby. Some of the 11 jurors who voted for conviction called the strategy far-fetched. One juror said the panel had a hard time believing that Osby thought his life was in jeopardy when he was the only one of the three who was armed. “I was bom and raised in New York City ... and I find it to be totally bunk,” said Paul, who spoke on condition that only his first name be used. “We went in the back and laughed about it. We thought it was all a big joke.” The lone holdout on the jury was fore­ man A rtis B arnett, who is black. A lthough he declined to talked with reporters, Barnett told the attorneys he believed Osby killed in self-defense. Prosecutors dism issed the defense arguments as a racist theory that could lead to unequal justice. Warrantless searches considered for safety in projects Residents stay inside, avoid socializing CHICAGO (AP) -— V ictoria B ennett moved into the Robert Taylor housing project 16 years ago with her mind made up: This was home. In the years since, she has lost a boyfriend to gunfire, seen bullets shatter her windows and struggled to steer her five children and three foster kids past the drugs and gangs waiting just outside her door. Still she stays. “When 1 decided to move here, I decided this was the last place," Ms. Bennett says. Now, she faces the possibility of police entering her home without warrants to hunt for guns. The Clinton administration proposes clauses in public housing leases to permit warrantless searches to crack down on crime. The White House pitched the plan as a compromise between the Chicago Housing Authority, which has ordered such “sweeps” in the past, and Chicago’s U.S. District Court, which last month ruled such searches violate the constitutional guarantee against unreason­ able search and seizure. Ms. Bennett, 40, doesn’t debate constitu­ tional principles. At Taylor, she has learned a sim ple, practical rule: Stay inside when they’re shooting. “Right now, everybody’s at peace,” she tells a visitor to her home, a cramped but clean three-bedroom apartment with cinderblock walls and steel-grated windows draped with sheets. “I don’t wake up in the morning and say, ‘Ooh, I wonder if they’re going to be gang­ banging today. I just keep the faith.” But late last month, the 92-acre complex was hostage to five days of gangbanging — shootouts among drug-dealing gangs. Police recorded more than 300 reports of gunfire. Three people were killed in the shadows of the 16-story buildings that stand like giant tombstones beside the Dan Ryan Expressway on Chicago’s South Side. Ms. Bennett still has two teen-age daugh­ ters and a 6-year-old son. Primes, at home, along with the foster children — Debra, 10, Michael, 7, and Laura, 3. Out of the nest are Tanya, 20, a college freshman, and Larry, 22, who lives in Waterloo, Iowa. She supports the weapons sweeps — ‘T oo many little kids getting shot,” she says — but believes the best way to avoid trouble is to “keep your business to yourself and don’t get in other people’s business.” She has never owned a gun but sympa­ thizes with those who feel threatened enough to use one. “1 don’t say it’s right — it’s not right — but you’ve got a right to protect yourself,” she says. Her apartment buzzed with activity after school one day last week as the kids rushed through their homework and 16-year-old Tiffany headed for her after-school job at a A s so cia ted Press Tiffany Funches, 16, irons in her fam ily’s apartment at the Robert Taylor Homes in Chicago. The public housing project has been called the nation’s largest and most crimeridden project. drycleaner. The children are forbidden to linger on the cracked concrete playground where gang members hang out, but they run errands, unaccompanied, to the nearest store, a bat­ tered grocery two blocks away. Ms. Bennett advises her children to run if they hear gunfire. If the shooting is near their building, they’re to go to their church and call home. “I try to teach them not to be afraid,” she adds. “You’ve got to go forward. You can’t just stop because gangbanging is going on.” Neither can you be careless. Little Laura knows to keep the front door locked, and Debra rollerskates only on the 100-foot-long communal balcony outside their fifth-floor apartment. O p in ion Page 4______________ State P ress Bditorial Kill or be killed? Live in a large city? Suffer from poverty, oppression, a bad work environment or some other source o f intense stress? Congratulations, you may suffer from “urban survival syndrom e.” And, y es, it could very well be a license to kill. The syndrome comes to us courtesy o f a court trial in Fort W orth, T exas, w here d efe n se law yers argued that a A frican American teen-ager who shot and killed two unarmed African American men was forced to do so because — due to a life lived in a poor, violent neighborhood — he simply did not believe he had any alternative. Q.E.D., if one has reason to believe that you have to kill someone, it’s perfectly fine. Although the defense strategy did not con­ vince the jury o f Daimion Osby’s innocence — the jury deadlocked at 11-1, and the pre­ siding judge ruled a mistrial, so the case will very likely go back to court — it provides a frightening possibility of future defenses to come. Is it legal to kill som eone if you ’re “convinced” that there is no alternative to killing them? Remember, the two men slain — W illie B rooks and M arcus B rooks — were not armed, although they had reportedly threat­ ened him with a gun the week before. And O sby adm ittedly sh ot both m en in co ld blood. There is no question that he took two lives. The defense’s argument is not that he didn't, it’s that he had to. Since there are so many more Hispanics and A frican A m erican s liv in g in urban poverty areas, is such a strategy racist? Are we, as Americans, being asked to agree that the murder o f a minority gang member in a city should cany less penalty o f the murder o f a white m iddle-class man in a suburb? This seems to be giving de facto recognition to racial bias in the legal system; allowance that the protection o f a far-from-blind justice is based on one’s skin color. We have, legally, created a system where taking a life is not always murder — there are certainly situations where O sby could have done what h e did and not be found guilty o f murder. We can legally kill in the grip o f war; w e can kill in self-defense; we can kill unknowingly, doe to an accident; w e can kill if insane, due to the angst and irra­ tionality o f madness. But what a group o f lawyers has tried to do in Texas is create a legal precedent for legal murder on die basis o f “stress,” a loop­ hole which would give nominal recognition that A m erica’s slum s are essen tially warzones. A rizona Legislature ends term w ith a few last pieces o f business The Arizona Legislature has passed its final laws and closed its doors until next year, and its done it in typical Arizona style. The first o rder of business which Governor Fife Symington swiftly signed into law Tuesday is the tough crime bills. See my pre­ vious column for my thoughts on tough prison sentences as I don’t have room for that here because the Legislature was so busy. Besides lengthening prison sen­ tences and establishing a boot camp for ju v en iles (does hard labor rehabilitate people?), the legislature might also go as far as suspending their drivers licenses if the juvenile is caught with a weapon or is driving or riding in a car with a weapon. I’m not sure this really will ensure juveniles only legally carry their weapons with a note from Mommy or Daddy, but at least they didn’t pass caning. The problem with all of these laws aimed at juveniles is this: juveniles do not have the right to vote. This reminds me a bit of the American Revolution, when people were forced to pay taxes and abide by rules without any voice in their gov­ ernment. It seems, in the very least, unfair. However, the Legislature did pass some preventive mea­ sures like putting police in the schools. This is where the real focus should be. Hard labor and losing drivers license privi­ leges do not rehabilitate the juvenile who watches adults in Arizona behave in the same violent manner. If the state refuses to rehabilitate criminals, then it should be preventing the crimes from happening. The measures passed were mild prevention at best and the Legislature might consider making this a priority for next year. Yeah, right. And on another slightly positive note, parents of the juve­ niles will now be slightly legally responsible for the crimes their children do. They will be required to attend delinquency hearings for their children, som ething the L egislature shouldn’t have to make them do. However, they may also be liable for fines and serving jail time. Once again, if the parent is a bad parent, why do we put him or her in jail? Looks like to me the parent should be offered some help to make them better at their job like a parenting class. Additionally, not all blame may be placed on the parent. There is an age, and it’s an individual decision, where we all basically start to live for ourselves regardless of our parents’ opinions. Making them liable for something they cannot con­ trol may be dangerous. But overall, the Legislature did a good job with the parent aspect to at least include them in the pro­ ceedings. The biggest missing piece of legislative action was the “Success by Six” bill which died a slow death. The bill would give money for preschool programs for at-risk children and money for prenatal care, child-abuse prevention and parental literacy. I guess with the big tax refund and tax breaks for businesses the Legislature passed, it can't afford to prevent crime. Maybe when the governor calls the legislators into a special session they will see the light. Maybe, one day, they’ll realize that prevention is cheaper than prison. Maybe. The second big business in the Legislature this session was a bailout of a hurting business. Doesn’t sound new to Arizona as businesses generally get what they ask for. However, this tax break was ridiculous. The racetrack owners in Arizona are whining that they can’t make enough money because people would rather go play the big games on the reservations. Thus, they either want to be entitled to offer more gambling, or they need a tax break to stay in business. Not wanting to see such an important Arizona business that contributes so much to the state die, the Legislature agreed, to the tune of about $6 million over the next three years. Regardless of how we want to live , we do live in a capital­ ist economy, a make-it-or-break-it yourself, pull-yourself-upby-the-bootstraps society. It doesn’t sound like it makes good economical sense in this type of a society to give money to a business that can’t cut it because people don’t want to engage in it. The only investment that Arizona has in the racetracks is the revenue they bring from tax money. If no one wants to bet on the dogs, the state doesn’t get any money. Which makes me ask, why is the state paying to keep a business open when it won’t help the business bring more people to it? What does the state get out of all of this? A question I don’t think I’ll ever get an answer to. So what did we all learn from this session in Arizona Congress? Let’s see, if you’re a juvenile and can’t vote the politicians out of office, watch out! If you carry a weapon that could kill someone, you might lose your driver’s license. And most importantly, if you’re an at-risk business that can’t make it the Legislature cares, or if you’re an at-risk kid, whine to someone else. Melanie Selcho is a senior 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.............................................................-CityEditor 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. IEREMY 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, Garin Groff, Jason Hill, Paul Matthews, David Strow, Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Emil Petersen, Shane Siren. John Sullivan, Greg Zemeida. SPORTS REPORTERS: Elizabeth Appelen, Todd Kelly, Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, Julie Reuvers, Dawn Wagner. decided by a majority voted among its members. They do COPY ED ITO R S: Bob Felix, Kristine Holter-Sorensen, not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Dave Proffitt. Board members include: JAKE BATSELL JASON OWSLEY JAMES FRUSETTA KRIS FRIDRICH Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions 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. State P ress P hone N umbers Information ..965-7572 Newsroom ....965-2292 Magazine..... 965-1695 Advertising ...965-6555 Classifieds ....965-6731 O p in io n S tate P ress Thursday, Aprii 21, 1994 P age 5 O b s o l e t e c lic h é s n e e d u p d a t e s f o r 19 9 0 s • If Mohammed thinks the mountain is coming to him We w onder why boys have he should get off the drugs. problems with self-esteem, as we • Money talks quietly to psychopaths. tell them th e y ’re m ade from HAYNE • Music soothes the savage beast. But I don’t take snakes, snails, and puppy-dog WHITEHEAD ghetto blasters on safari. tails. Meanwhile, we say, dia­ • Cheaters never prosper. They’re elected. monds are a g irl's best friend. • You’re never too old to relearn what you’ve forgot­ Then, we wonder why relation­ ships collapse. ten. • Opposites attract, and commence fighting. We need to analyze which say­ ings aren’t appropriate in the 20th • The road to hell is paved with TV evangelists. century. Then, we need to update • For every man there is a woman, or a pay-per-view them. special. My favorite revised saying is, • Ignorance is bliss, so the joke is on the educated. “The weather is here, wish you • Chrysler killed the cat. were beautiful.” I like it so much, • Laughter is the best medicine for the hypochondriac. it’s the only bumper sticker I'll ever have. I've taken it upon • Lightning never strikes in the same place twice. But myself to update some others. people are mobile. • It’s a woman’s prerogative to change her mind, For • Like father, like son, or else inquire about your men it’s called lying. adoption. • The meek shall inherit the Earth, and then give it • Laugh and the shrinks will come and get you. Cry right back. about it and the courts will get you. • Ignorance is the mother of superstition, Practical • Let the buyer beware, unless the warranty covers jokes are the grandmother. parts and labor. • Death is permanent, except in sequels. • People who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw • Every man must sow his wild oats, until a woman stones, they should paint. comes along and rips out the stitches. • All’s fair in love and war. (Same difference.) • No man can serve two mistresses. • You are what you eat; you aren’t what you excrete. • You can fool some of the people all the time, and all • Dead men tell no tales. Some dead women could of the people some of the time. The rest don’t give a damn find a way. what you’re doing any of the time. • Hitch your wagon to a horse. • The Lord will provide, so why work? • Nothing is certain except taxes. • When it rains, it pours on a newly washed car. • Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame • A rolling stone gathers no moss, but most rocks are. =-bn me; fool me thrice, and I’ll kick your ass. stationary. • • Don’t bite the hand that feeds you. Apparently, it’s You can’t please everyone, so ta hell with ’em. OK for everyone else. The way to a man’s heart is with a knife and an atti• Don’t butter your bread on both sides, unless you’re tude. playing a joke. rs A SU yet to understand value, utility o f bicycles Bikes are a common and practical form of transportation, especially in a college town. Bikes are not only affordable and a good source of exercise, but they can cut down on traffic and pollution. Why, then, does ASU fail to recognize the amount of students using bicycles as transportation? The rea­ son why I ask this question is because as a pedestrian and a biker I can offer the typical scenario. It’s 10:25 and you leave to get to your 10:40 class. As you begin your journey to campus you are faced with having to challenge other bikes, pedestrians, and cars. Even on the big open roads, any student has to face mass pandemonium fight­ ing his way through ASU vehicles and the above-mentioned. To me it seems logical to create more bike lanes, especial­ ly in the areas where you are not to ride at all such as near the MU In order to get to the Farmer Building you have to get off your bike and walk about 10 minutes. If you fail to do so then you get scolded by these annoying little bike patrollers who are themselves on bikes. It does not make sense. ASU should make provisions that enable bike access to all campus build­ ings throughout the day. • I made your bed; can I lie in it with you? • Save your money for a rainy day, and then go buy an umbrella. • Speak well of the dead; they’ve suffered enough. • Deceive not yourself, or you’re really stupid. • The shortest distance between two points is a gas station. • Divide and conquer, then let the UN clean up the mess. • Love conquers all, including insanity. • To err is human, to forgive is divine, to forget is to ask for a replay. • A man who is his own doctor should file a malprac­ tice suit. Either way, he wins. • A sleeping dog never bites. It wakes up. • If you lie down with the dogs, then you’ll wake up with the fleas. Of course, if you’re sleeping with the dogs you probably don’t care who you wake up with. • A penny saved is a peso earned. • Early to bed and early to rise makes a man an insomniac who oversleeps his alarm clock. • A woman never forgets. • Imitation is the most sincere form of flattery, and a copyright violation. Some sayings were revised before I got to them. For instance, “Cleanliness is next to godliness, so why go to church?” Then,“ Love thy neighbor, but leave his wife alone,” and “ Familiarity breeds contempt, and children.” Others are so obvious, I wonder how they became clichés. For instance, “Bread always lands butter-side dow n.” Imagine that. “The heaviest side hits first.” Wait ‘til dice makers figure this out. By the way, I have one original saying that is not a cliché. But it should be: Love is a four-letter word. Shayne Whitehead is a senior journalism major. David Tung defends etters to the editor campaign for office State P ress The Slate Press welcomes and encourages written response from our read­ ers on any topic. All 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 o tte r affiliation with the University) and phone number. O nly signed letters wifi 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 In no way did I attack the practices of the University Archives, as claimed in the April 7 issue of the State Press. Reporter Jason Hill never asked for my opinion o f the University Archives. He asked me about the Tempe Historical Museum’s Oral History Project, and I took more than half an hour to explain about our program and answer his questions. I was shocked to read how some of my comments had been taken out of context. I did point out that ASU had under­ taken several oral history projects over the years. He seemed unimpressed that the University had the foresight long ago to interview adm inistrators and departm ent heads. I also observed that neither the Tempe Historical Museum nor, to my knowledge, the University had done oral history inter­ views with students relating to student life. However, when put in perspective, that is not an indication that ASU is not preserving its history. Manuscripts, documents, photographs and many other resources in the Archives provide a very com­ plete record of ASU’s history. Arizona State University and the city of Tempe share a lot of common history, and the University Archives and the Tempe Historical Museum work together to document and preserve that tradition. I resent implication that I attacked my friends and colleagues at the University Archives, and I am amazed that Mr. Hill could show such careless disregard for my reputation on campus. This letter is in regard to violence in video games. I’d like to show people who think we game players are mindless zom­ bies that yes, we can think for ourselves. I also want to let people who don’t know what’s going on what the game play­ ers’ fight is about. When I say fight, I mean fight. People on Capitol Hill, namely Sen. Joseph Lieberman and Sen. Herb Kohl, are want­ ing violence in video games removed. What about we adult players? People may say that adults don’t play video games — well, they’re wrong. About 40 percent of Sega Genesis play­ ers are over eighteen. If I want to play a game with blood, guts and gruesome fatalities, that is my prerogative — the game in question being Mortal Kombat. Or maybe I would like to play a game with almost naked women being killed by vampire wannabes, the game being Night Trap. I do agree with the senators on one point, however; little children should not be learning from and watching live action women being killed, although this is at the parents’ discretion. Both games I have referred to have (or, in the case of Night Trap, had) ratings on them for parents to look at and consider. Apparently these parents did not care about the ratings, or did not take them seriously. Parents started getting scared that their children would attack their friends. But if these parents did not want their children to play these games, they should not have bought them. Parents should not blame the game makers because they did not take the time to see if the materi­ al was suitable for their children. Most game makers are putting disclaimers and ratings on their software. Parents should pay attention to them. Adult players have the right to choose what they want to play, and the gamers have the right to make what will sell. Will adult game players eventually have to go to game pornography stores to buy or rent “X” rated software? In a way, that is sad, but it will also be helpful for us adult players and the game makers. Draws an interesting parallel to the movie industry, doesn’t it? In order to clarify the confusion surrounding my candida­ cy, I am writing this to present my reasoning for running for the office of ASASU Activities Vice President. Presently, I serve as president of the Memorial Union Activities Board. As president of MUAB, I oversee an execu­ tive budget of $20,000+ and am responsible for the leadership of MUAB membership. While serving in MUAB, I gained the vision of serving the ASU community through quality pro­ gramming as a volunteer. While my opponent speaks of co­ sponsorship and reaching out to other campus organizations. In addition, I also serve as the co-chair of the Asian Coalition. I am also a representative on both the Cultural D iversity Com m ittee and Campus E nvironm ent Team. Besides all activities I am involved in, I am also an honor stu­ dent who works part time. I possess good time management skills in balancing my work loads and campus involvement. During the fall semester, I will no longer be holding any of my current positions. I will only focus on the Activities Vice Presidency and Student Regency. Some of the students have expressed concern over my dual positions. As a student regent, my duties and role are to repre­ sent Arizona students regarding educational issues, such as tuition, student services, etc. As the ASU Activities Vice President, my primary role is to oversee the activities and pro­ grams that ASASU will provide for the students. My depart­ m ents w ill include L ecture S eries, E n tertain m en t, Environmental issues which are very different from tuition and educational issues. I don’t see the conflict between the two positions. My vision for the office of Activities Vice President cen­ ters on co-sponsoring programs with other student groups. By combining human and financial resources with ASASU with other student organizations, we can bring quality programs that benefit all students, not special interest groups. I plan to bring nationally known speakers, writers, and lecturers such as Sandra Day O’Conner and George Bush. I also plan to con­ tinue to expand the successful Sneak Preview Program for ASU students. Furthermore, the State Press editorial staff and reporters only interviewed people who gave unqualified opinions, such as my opponents Pat Baker and Mark Wendell, concerning my ability to hold two high-profile positions. Uneducated opin­ ions from people such as Michael Chu can only bring one side of the story. They have not bothered to interview any of the people that I currently work with on MUAB or any of the activities with which I am involved. I think the focus of the campaign has gone off-track. ASU students need to look at all candidates’ qualifications in order to cast an informed vote. The candidates need to focus on issues, not on negative rhetoric to win students’ votes. I have the ability and dedication to serve the ASU student community while being Arizona Student Regent and ASASU Activities Vice President. I am committed to serving the com­ munity that has supported me in my personal development. I hope the students will listen to both sides of the issues and make an informed decision when they vote. Scott Solliday Alumnus Tempe Historical Museum Erick Rule Freshman Computer science David Tung Senior Marketing Julie Aldie Freshman Undecided C om m ents about University Archives taken o u t o f context Video gamers must fight congressional censorship State P ress Thursday, April 21, 1994 P age 6 P olice R eport ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday. • A female ASU student reported she lost nine keys belonging to ASU in the Business Administration Building. • A female ASU employee reported she lost two keys in Phoenix belonging to ASU. • A female ASU student reported her $250 bike stolen from the bike racks at Cholla Hall where it was secured with a U-lock. • A male ASU employee reported he found a bike in Area 58. Police impounded the bicy­ cle for safekeeping. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Wednesday: • A man on a work furlough program was robbed Tuesday at gunpoint by a stranger who asked for a ride. The victim had stopped at the Circle K at I-10 and Baseline Road on his way back to the Estrella Jail tent city. While walking back to his car, a man he had seen inside the store asked him for a ride to another Circle K where he said his car had broken down. The victim drove down Baseline to 40th Street where the man asked him to turn right. When the victim turned, the man reportedly pulled a gun and demanded his money. The victim escaped with $135. • A 19-year-old Phoenix man was arrested Tuesday after leading police on a high speed car chase after an officer attempted to pull him over speeding. Police clocked the man going 61 mph in a 35 mph zone in the 1700 block of north College Ave. At one point, the chase reached speeds in excess of 85 mph. Police were able to corner the man and charged him with felony fleeing. • Police are investigating a fire they believe was intentionally set Saturday to a Tempe man’s recreation vehicle in an alley behind 7703 S. Heather. A police officer on patrol noticed the fire and called the fire depart­ ment. • Three reported gang members allegedly assaulted a 14-year-old girl and her mother at 1559 W. Seventh PI., after the girl and her sister asked them to leave. The three youths are acquaintances o f one of the girls and when it started getting late she asked them to leave. The youths became belligerent and began shouting obscenities from the lawn. One youth punched the 14-year-old girl and her mother who had come outside to help. All three youths left before police arrived. Reports compiled by State Press reporter Paul Matthews St a t e P ress Classifieds - we're always in the back. G iv e T hat Mom A G if t W il l M a k e You Look Go o d ! 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Serving Todoy's Finest Foods In the Rom ontic Atmosphere of the O ld West 3 W est First Street, T em p e (a t First & Mill) 967-7594 O p e n S u n d a y th r o u g h T h u rsd a y 11 a .m . t o 11 p .m . • F rid ay a n d S a tu r d a y 1 l a m . t o M id n ig h t Page 8 State P ress Thursday, April 21, 1994 Students say auto theft prevention program infeasible Sticker w ould identify stolen cars d u rin g late nig h t hours By J ason H ill State P ress A program to be used by the Tempe Police Department to prevent auto theft will be ‘ineffective’ and ‘not worth trying' , according to ASU students interviewed Wednesday. The C.A.T. (Combat Auto Theft) program requires regis­ tered car owners of vehicles to sign a waiver stating that their vehicle is not usually driven between the hours of 1 and 5 a.m. After ownership of the vehicle is verified, a sticker is placed in the left rear window of the vehicle. The sticker gives police officers the permission to stop the vehicle between these hours. “I think students who tried the program would realize the T oo M u c h S t u f f t o H a u l H o m e ? S h ip I t ! mistake they made afterwards,” said McKinley Sydnor, a junior economics major who felt it would cramp students’ lifestyles if they joined the program. Rick Young, a junior nutrition major, agreed with Sydnor saying, “this (program) will be very ineffective.” “I don’t think that’s going to work. No way, what if you had to go out at 5 a.m.,” said Mario Wemick, a senior sociolo­ gy major. Mario Sebens, a senior justice major said that the program simply isn’t worth trying. A C.A.T. decal user disagreed with those opposed to the use of the sticker. “If it just stops one car from being stopped then it’s effec­ tive,” said Patricia Wagner, who has been using the sticker for nine months. She got a sticker after several of the family’s cars were stolen over a period of two years. 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It does not cost any money to register for the C.A.T. pro­ gram. Students interested in signing up need to bring their vehicles to the White Glove Car Wash at McClintock and Guadalupe, from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. this Saturday. c la ssifie d s e c tio n . THE J PRINCETON i d p j s REVIEW Æ Ê WeScoreMore!' JWmÊ 967-1480 Classes start April 23! Princeton Review is affiliated with neither Princeton U. nor LSAS. The dictionary has at least three definitions for “value” So do we. Macmtosb" 1C475 4/80, AppBT ColorPlus 14'Display, AppleExtended KeyboardBm d mouse. Macintosh Gotor dass*? 4/80, A pplf KeyboardBand mouse. Only $799.00. Only $1,275.00. Macmtosb' LC475 8/160, AppW ColorPlus 14"Display, AppleExtended KeyboardBand mouse. Only $1,477.00. available within your budget. Meaning you get it all. Power. Quality. And afford­ ability. It’s that simple. 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MM«Ì 1 Pag;e 9 Thursday, April 21,1994 State P ress ASU to host job fair Saturday 100 p o t e n t i a l e m p lo y e r s to By C hristina Bailey State P ress Supply and demand in the job market can mean the difference between flipping ham­ burgers and working in the field of choice. On Saturday, April 23, ASU will host the Arizona Collegiate Job Fair ‘94 from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. on the second floor of the MU. Representatives from about 100 compa­ nies with available job openings will be on campus to do on-the-spot interviews for grad­ uating seniors and alumni only. Jim Clayton, a career specialist senior for ASU Career Services, said that while an ASU education is “second to none,” the activities that students decide to join while in college determine how far they advance in the job be on cam pus market. With companies doing on-the-spot inter­ viewing, it is imperative that students prepare themselves beforehand, said Linda Nessam, a career sp ecialist senior for ASU Career Services. ASU Career Services released a list of “to do’s" to help prepare students for Saturday’s Job Fair. • Research the specific companies coming to the job fair. • Dress for success: conservative attire. • Have resumes for all the employers plus additional copies. • Carry a list of references and any other additional credentials for your field. • Be prepared to ask job-related questions. RUN-OFF ELECTIONS! President and Activities Vice President M.U. 9a.m. - 9p.m. Cady/Tyler Mall 9a.m. - 2p.m. Rec Center 9a.m. - 9p.m. Tyler Mall/Palm Walk 9a.m. - 2p.m. BAC 9a.m. - 6:30p.m. Farmer 9a.m. - 2p.m. COB 9a.m. - 2p.m. Forest Mall/Tyler Mall 9a.m. - 2p.m. ! VOTE TODAY ! m .SCO!ilA A 1 M T - S H I R T 1E S G S & G I F T S It's sprir^time again, and time to restock the wardrobe. At Arizona Images we cany the latgot selection of ASU apparel and souvenirs. From Ts for sunny spring days to sweatshirts for cool spring nights, we're sure to have what your looking for. One lucky winner wilt be able to ride into spring on a brand new mountain bike. Stop by Arizona images at the Conerstone and register for LADIES ' NIGHT 6 t - j ^ ( 3 ‘ ) April 30, 1994. ^ \ 7j 7 |j i n ~ llp r n L I w e ll, u i n e 5 Drawing to be held Saturday , ( NO COVER FOR LADIES ALL NIGHT our mountain bike giveaway. \^ o w . d raft .• > AFTER HOURS \_ ) ' ' III 2 a m tut th o se 21A Oktet /•-— ^ , ~ \ ^ \ V — at SPRINGTIME A H IO N A IM A G E S B ■ W T W I C o rn e rsto n e M o ll U n iv a n ity A pacha 1 Bikes Provided by Sports Authority. 3 HIM MM E lay's1USi C L U B R JO 1 E3 r __I.VMefe'iSr’llwf.Or. ■»a»» ÉÉP: C om ics P age 10 State P ress T h u r s d a y , A p rii 2 1 , 1 9 9 4 Calvin and Hobbes OK CALVIN, VOU WANT TO PLAV ROUGH, HUH? ------GREAT NOONS OF NEPTUNE S N t MUSI UAVE superpowers by Bill Watterson 1 tOUVE GOT THO SECONDS TO GET fOOR CAPED BUTT IN BED, OR l ’UL PUT IT THERE FOR GOOD.' OH NO .' THE EVIL ANAloN IS USING GONE PSKWO BEAM TO WEAKEN Ml STUPEN­ DOUS WILL! ■ *\ THE F A R S ID E By G AR Y LARSON VIA COUNTING f . ONNNNE Doonesbury BY G A R R Y T R U D E A U “Well, Red Cloud, it just so happens I d id go ask the chief!... A bear claw necklace is a symbol of honor — a Grizzly Adams fingernail necklace is not!” STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — How does the suprem e spiritual leader of T ibetan Buddhists relax? He watches “M-A-S-H.” The Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in D harm asala, India, arrived in the San Francisco Bay area Tuesday as part of a twoweek American tour. He touched on topics ranging from U.S. economic policy toward China to “M-A-SH." his favorite TV show before evening prayers. "It comes on at 5:30 p.m., in time for my evening tea," he said, laughing. “So my office does not start my evening prayers until the appropriate time.” MKUELS MUSIC The Nobel Peace Prize winner said he feels defeated at the prospect of freeing Tibet from the Chinese, who have controlled the region since 1950. He has failed to get the Chinese government to negotiate the future of the Himalayan kingdom. world champion calf roper. “I tell about a fourth -r- and explain about a fourth — of what I’m wanting to say,” McEntire told The Tennessean in a story Wednesday. “I got that from Daddy.” Bantam Books just published her autobi­ ography, Reba: My Story. N A SH V ILLE. Tenn. (AP) — Reba McEntire considers herself a bad communica­ tor. “I have a lot of my daddy in me,” the country star said. “I have a lot of his drive and his determination, and his eagerness to succeed, but also. I’m a terrible communica­ tor.” Her father, Clark McEntire, is a three-time CINCINNATI (AP) — Marge Schott the chain-smoker will do her puffing in private when she watches her Cincinnati Reds play. Schott was photographed violating a cityordinance by smoking in her box seat behind the team’s dugout. First, she said she didn’t care if anyone complained, then she said she aíra»! ►METRONOMES • ACCESSORIES • ETC. ►ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS ►AMPS • ELECTRIC EFFECTS • SHEET MUSIC ►LESSONS i FAM ILY P L A N N IN G A S S O C IA TE S M E D IC A L G R O W B oard C e rtifie d M .D . G y n e c o lo g is t 2 5 Years E xperience in P re g n a n cy T e rm in a tio n Procedure while asleep (a t your option} • Pregnancy testing (im m ediate results) • Gynecological ultrasound and infection exam s • Birth control. M orning-after pill. • (R ock • C ontem porary • Folk • Classic G uitar) ►REPAIRS »■ On All Instruments! * ...and m uch MORE! i n b 130 E. University Dr. 968-2310 O / A I U 70 Next to Ozzie's Warehouse In The Arches Shopping Center STU DEN T D IS C O U N T 5 5 3 -0 4 4 0 M ajor Credit Cards A ccepted J TEMPE 2525 S. Rural Rd. M C Between Broadway & Southern P H O E N IX " " 3143 N. 32nd St. just N orth o f Loop 202 would stop. “I’ve never broken the rules in my life,” she told the Dayton D aily News in a story Wednesday. “This country has turned into wimps. I think a lot of people see more im portant things to focus on to help this country.” City officials said Schott would be cited for violating the law if she smoked in'her usual front-row seat at Riverfront Stadium. On Tuesday, she stayed in her skybox, where she is permitted to smoke, during a game against Pittsburgh. 'ASU Earth Day' Theme: Hands on Earth Respect & Protect Friday, April22 Startsat 10:30am C ady M all & S tudent Services Lawn MEGA THURSDAY _ Only $8 Unlim ited top p in gs on a Large P izza. Build your ow n M ega Pizza! 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 903 S. Rural Rd. Specials Valid at this location only. No double portions, please. Use your Marriott Maroon & Gold Card Here. (Special prices apply). Domino's Original Hot Wings A Dozen Wings...$3.99! 25 Wings...$6 .99! 50 Wings...$11.99l Not valid «nth any other coupons, otfsrs or specials. Custom« pays al s * s tax whs» applicabls. UmtoddsllswyawAStoWtoursiAtoW. Our driv«sc«ry Issa tosn *20.00. I S p orts Thursday, April 21, 1994______________________________ St a t e P ress ports Briefs S G y m n a stic s lo o k s fo r 1 st c r o w n ASU seeks elusive title, long-deserved respect Olympic women’s hoops trials coming to ASU USA Basketball will hold the 1994 US Olympic Festival women’s basket­ ball West Regional trials at ASU’s U niversity A ctivity C enter Friday through Sunday. 259 collegiate and high school athletes from the women’s ranks will vie for 12 spots on the 1994 US Olympic Festival West team. T he U SO F W est team w ill be coached by Marsha Sharp, head coach at Texas Tech. Sharp’s Lady Raiders won the 1993 NCAA national champi­ onship. Action begins Friday night at 6:30 p.m ., Saturday at 9:00 a.m ., and Sunday at 9:00 a.m ., w ith the announcement of Team Finalists and Alternates Sunday afternoon. By J eremy Stein State P ress Stanley Cup Playoffs CONFERENCE QUARTERFINALS (Best-of-7) Late Games Not Included WESTERN CONFERENCE Detroit 4, San Jose 0 Series tied 1-1 Toronto 1, Chicago 0, OT Toronto leads series 2-0 Dallas 4, St. Louis 2 Stars lead series 2-0 Vancouver at Calgary, (n) Canucks lead series 1-0 NBA Roundup Orlando 121, Minnesota 101 Charlotte 117, Washington 111 Indiana 109. Cleveland 98 Milwaukee 103, Detroit 78 Denver 100, L.A. Clippers 85 Seattle 112, L.A. Lakers 90 Baseball Roundup AMERICAN LEAGUE Kansas City 11, Detroit 6 New York 7, Seattle 4 Boston 2, Oakland 0 California 8, Baltimore 2 Minnesota 6, Cleveland 5 Toronto 4, Texas 3,11 innings Chicago 8, Milwaukee 6, 12 inn. NATIONAL LEAGUE Late Game Not Included Houston 7, Chicago 5 San Francisco 5, Philadelphia 4 Colorado 16, Florida 6 Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 4 St. Louis 8, Atlanta 3 Montreal 4, San Diego 2 New York at Los Angeles (n) Compiled from sta ff and AP reports P age 11 Senior Chris Jantz will help lead the sixth-ranked ASU women’s gymnastics team in its quest for its first national title at the NCAA Women’s Gymnastics Championships in Salt Lake City. The Championships begin today and continue through Saturday. When the sixth-ranked Sun Devils take the floor tonight at the NCAA Women’s Gymnastics Championships in Salt Lake City, they will not only be looking for their first team title ever, but they will also seek some respect. Since its initiation in 1975, the ASU women’s gymnastics team has man­ aged three second-place finishes at the NCAAs (1983, ’85 and ’86) and had eight individual national titles, all under current coach John Spini. Yet, the team national title has remained elusive. “I’ve been here 14 years, and we’ve been runner-up three times and we’ve been in the top 10 several tim es. W inning a n ational cham pionship would be nice,” Spini said. “It would mean everything to me if all the kids w alk away healthy and we win the national championship.” In the quest for their first national title, the Sun Devils will also be look­ ing to prove that they are among the nation’s best. ASU enters the 12-team championships as the No. 11 seed, and is coming off a 12th-place finish at last year’s NCAAs. “We want to do better this year. We want to show them who we are and that last year was ju s t a flu k e,” ju n io r Michele Naia said. Although the team had a less-thanT u rn t o G ym nastics , pa g e 12. N o . 1 U o fA em b a rra sses s o ftb a ll Sun Devils out-hit 32-5 in 18-0, 8-0 waxings By T odd Kelly State P ress The U ofA softball team cam e to Tempe W ednesday night and lived up to its No. 1 ranking with a doubleheader sweep of ASU (lb33 overall, 1-11 Pac10) by scores of 18-0 and 8-0 in front of P a r r a 571 fans at Sun Devil Club Stadium. The attendance marked the largest crowd of the year. "It’s hard to say if we had played better, we would have won,” said ASU coach Linda Wells. “I don’t know if I think that. We get into a little combination of they get a hit and we don’t make the plays we need to make.” Susie P arra led the charge for the Wildcats (44-2, 12-0) by throwing a two-hit shutout in the first game. The only two ASU hits were singles by Lisa D acquisto and Jeanne Redondo. She also batted three-forfour including a three-run home run in the fourth inning. Parra continued her hot hitting in the sec­ ond game, with a triple in the fourth inning and another three-run homer in the fifth, giv­ ing her seven RBIs on the night. She now has 11 homers on the season. Also, Parra is now 20-1 for the season in the circle. UofA scored of every inning of the open­ er, hastening the arrival of the 10-run mercy rule. The W ildcats pounded out 18 hits, including a double, two triples and Parra’s homer. In the second game, W ells mixed up ASU’s defense, playing six players out of their normal positions. Only third baseman Alyssa Johnson, catcher Juliane Castro and pitcher Mona Nard could be found in their usual positions. “W hat you m ostly say to yourself is ‘What can happen?”’ Wells said. Laura Espinoza, the nation’s home run and RBI leader, had only a single in the first game, but hit a two-run blast in the second, her 24th four-bagger of the year. ASU now hits the road for a six-game trip beginning Friday, trav elin g to No. 11 Washington, No. 15 Oregon and Oregon State. As for the 12-game losing streak, Tina Ruff said: “We’re gonna do it this weekend. We’re gonna sweep Washington and we’re gonna end our streak.” S truggling ASU travels to P ac-10 C h am p io n sh ip By D awn W agner State P ress After suffering a regular-season Pac-10 South record of 0-10, the 27th-ranked ASU men’s tennis team looks to gain its first con­ ference victory this weekend at the Pac-10 Conference Championships. The Sun Devils (8-12 overall) travel to Ojai, Calif, where they will participate in the 95th annual Ojai Valley Tennis Tournament. The competition which begins today, contin­ ues through Sunday. The Pac-lO’s six Southern Division tennis programs, plus representatives from the three N orthern D ivision schools (W ashington, Oregon and Oregon State), will be competing in the individual competition. The men’s competition, which will take place at O jai’s Libbey Park, begins today with two rounds of singles play. Top contenders for ASU include Sargis Sargsian, the No ^-sin g les player in d h e nation. Sargsian holds a record of 31-7 over the regular season. In doubles play, Sargsian and P eter Jeschke hold a record of 13-3 over the regular season. They were ranked No. 2 in the latest ITA poll. A ccording to Pac-10 m edia relations spokesm an D anette M acri, the Southern Division Team champion will be determined by round robin play. By this format, top-ranked USC is the front-runner for the 1994 Southern Division Pac-10 C onference C ham pionship. The Northern Division determined its champion by a combination of individual and team play earlier this month, with Washington sweep­ ing both titles. Competition is expected to be anything but easy. The Pac-10 has 17 men individually ranked among the top 95 in the country and eight men’s doubles teams among the top 40 » — •... •• - T t * N t o Pise-1Os, * a g e L2-. C raig M acnau g h to n /S tate P ress Junior Sargis Sargsian, who is currently ranked No.4 in singles play, joins the rest of the Sun Devils this weekend at the Pac-10 championships. ASU is looking for their first con­ ference win. ;- - : . - «MK.ViMSIi, *8Wr - State P ress Thursday, April 21, 1994 P age 12 P a c - lO s G y m n a s tic s . C o n t in u ed from page 11. C o n t in u ed from page 1 1 . meet of the season. On beam, junior Danna Lister will be a strong force. Lister, who is a two-time AllPac-10 performer, has recorded two perfect 10s on beam this season, giving her four in her collegiate career. Seniors Debbi Bryan, Chris Jantz, Mindi Jones, Stephanie Klein and Suzy Person will also be important for ASU’s success. Not only will they all be called upon to turn in great performances, but they will also pro­ vide leadership in their final collegiate gym­ nastics meet. The cham pionships will run for three day’s, April 21-23. at Utah's Jon H Huntsman Center. The team competition lasts two days and is divided into two sessions, while the individual competition takes place on the fin&l dsv im pressive third -p lace show ing at the Midwest Regional April 9, the Sun Devils enter the NCAAs with a 13-4 dual meet record and high expectations. “I expect the team to do very well,” ASU assistant coach Tracy Moser said. “Their mental attitude is real strong and they have the potential to do very well.” While it will take a complete team effort for ASU to bring home a national champi­ onship trophy, several gymnasts will play a key role in the team’s success. Junior Tina Brinkman, an All-America on floor her freshman year, will be vying for her first NCAA individual cham pionship. Brinkman, a three-time Pac-10 floor champi­ on, is a threat to take first in the floor, vault and all-around competitions, having posted a perfect 10 on vault and an ASU record 39.475 in the all-around in ASU's final dual in the nation. During play this weekend, the top singles and doubles players will be crowned. “It’s an individual tournament,” ASU’s Paul Reber said. A ccording to M acri, the Pac-10 Championships are used strictly for this pur­ pose. “If you want to determine how a team championship is made, it’s based upon their win-loss percentage and how well they do at the Pac-lO’s as a team,” Macri said. “That will all go into their win-loss percentage. You know, who they beat and so forth. This will all affect the matches that still have to played after the Pac-10s.“Whoever has the highest win-loss percentage will be the Pac-10 cham­ pion and those people, depending on how many spots we get, will all go on to the NCAA.” The NCAA championships are scheduled for May 20-29 in South Bend, Indiana. Computer Books 4 Less OVER 1 ,5 0 0 TITLES! r L Ü 6 E * "OIL FIL T E R m $ IE 1 i 10-80% Off List automotive FREE BOOK with $50+ Purchase 3 0 W * 1 0 W 3 0 * 10W 40 • Tires • Alignments FREE Delivery To Your _ W ork or • B ra k e s Lubricate your vehicle & chassis, drain old oil, add up to 5 qts. of new oil and install a new oil filter. Diesel extra. Most cars and light trucks. Includes a 17 pt. vehicle maintenance inspection. Pius $1.50 oil disposal charge. Expires 5-21-94. 50 HD DISKS $20 Home. • Shocks/Struts • Custom Wheels C O M P U f ERfZED WHEEL BALANCE & 4 TIRE ROTATION 2033 W. University ■ Check inflation on all tires • Computerized balance on 4 tires • Four tire rotation • Most cars and light trucks 644-1201 (D o b so n & U n ive rsity) W h ile S u p p ly Lasts *4088 I ■ W e’re C lose to C am pus in T em pe a t th e C om er of Lem on & Terrace ¡ ■ Not to be combined with another offer on same product/service or used to reduce outstanding debt. Expires 5-21-94. m M , < N LEM O N m k \ APACH E I Professional A Ruedink> forcement S Ê 1 HERE 1 1 a .m .-7 p .m ., M o n .-S a t. -W e M ail O rder(60 2 ) 9 6 7-9490 coupon m \ D X WITH ■ TEM PE , x1iT = - rI?„ ov — = 1j |jss j | afinaqrapniiiBgaSMUANO B O O G I E M U S IC ■ n MUSIC "ASU*New Music Some«* Proudly Present: W hen disaster drops in, we'll help pick up the pieces. O P U S 2 Jr . Ä »Mi ItM b m f * ,, ! ■ / / J Ù \ \ \ Ji ■i ^ F ) . <( i i i \ \ V 1 \Y ! Special comedy performance from The Farce Side Karaoke contest, great prizes and MORE!! Don't miss it! \\ä h k { V/ fc ,--- ’MSI/ ÍM ». ¿¿. SAT. APRIL 23 U rŸ M Ê 'jin n / Nobody wants to deal with insurance companies until something goes wrong. To make it as painless as possible, we've added a lot of conveniences to our full range of Auto Insurance plans. Just call California Casualty and let us impress you with our coverage and our reputation. For over 75 years, we've been there for the simplest questions as well as when disaster drops in. Auto Insurance from 11:00 am - 7:00 pm Palo Verde Beach A.S.U. k California Casualty You'll love us when you need us. Phoenix 1(602)861-2220 Toll Free 1(800)8414736 For Faculty and Staff Only Auto Insurance Only k T he S econd A n n u a l O p u s 2 A m a te u r Band C o m p e titio n fea­ tures selected a m a te u r (unsigned) bands c o m p e tin g fo r cash prizes, g ift ce rtifica te s fro m M ila n o M u sic, a ir tim e on 106.3 FM "T h e Edge", tim e in A AZTE C R e co rd in g S tudio, and th e h o n o r o f be in g nam ed ASU 's fa v o rtie new band o f 1994. BAND FINALISTS P ageJ3 Thursday, April 21, 1994 S tate P ress T ennis in clear, o n road t o O jai Graduation Announcements, Caps & Gowns B y E lizabeth A . A ppelen S ta te P ress A lot more than just books! 966-6226 704 S. College ìd en r look? »enfer* IO University r A T U N G rustworthy. The NCAA’s new interpretation of Bylaw 12.1.2 spread mass confusion throughout the collegiate tennis world last week, threatening the ineligibility of ASU’s top five women’s tennis players. However, the five Sun Devils are now in the clear and are all eligible to compete in the 1994 Pac-10 Championships in Ojai, Calif, which begins today and continues through Sunday. The bylaw formerly stated if an amateur tennis player competed at summer tournaments, he or she can’t receive prize money above and beyond travel expenses. Last week, the interpretation of the bylaw changed. After much confusion, the NCAA’s interpretation of the bylaw is that the amateur who competes at summer tournaments must have filled out an Amateur Reimbursement Form to show they did not receive more money than expenses. “The rule was very ambiguous. On Friday there is one NCAA interpretation and on Monday there is another,” ASU Coach Sheila Mclnemey said. Unfortunately, No. 2 player Joelle Schad did not have a reimbursement form to show her innocence because she com­ peted in foreign competitions where they do not have USTA (United States Tennis Association) reimbursement forms. “Technically, she (Schad) is in the same boat as all these other kids because she hasn’t received more than her expens­ es,” Mclnemy said. “In my opinion, they’re (the NCAA) sort nderstanding. ot for Sale. Paris Brussels Londoa Amsterdam Madrid Frankfurt enuine. $379* $993* $335* $353* $365* $401* •Fares arc e ach w a y from Phoem x b a se d o n a ro u n d trip p u rch ase a n d are su b je ct to chan ge R estriction s a p p ly a n d stu de n t sta­ tu s m ay b e re q u ire d C all fo r other w o rld ­ w id e d estin ation s. “A leader in Action” Council Travel Located at Forest and University, directly across from A.S.U. Activities V.P. MAKE AN INVEST­ MENT IN YOUR LIFE­ TIME New and Old Sports and Non-Sports Cards, Comics, Coins, Video Game Reniais & More! 10% O F F w /t h is ad! 3422 S. Mill (S. of Southern next to Dairy Queen) O rd e r y o u r c o p y o f The 1993-94 Sun D e v il Spark Yearbook to d a y ! W hen it s tim e to pack up and go hom e... - -j • *• W C S p C C ta il ZC in p a c k in g » ® s h ip p in g «1 | , s m a l l lO a C I S « a n d M a tth e w s C e n te r 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 966-3544 V of picking on the foreign athlete a little bit.” Even though all of the Sun Devils are eligible to compete, Schad and Julie C oppinger w on’t be making the trip. Coppinger has a shoulder injury and Schad has academic responsibilities to attend to. 1lth-ranked Davidson is expected to blow away her oppo­ nents in both the singles and the doubles along with her part­ ner Meredith Geiger. The duo is ninth-ranked and has only lost two matches this season. Geiger, the squad’s only senior, will be competing in her last Pac-10 Championship. She has compiled a 9-10 dual match record playing the No. 3 and No. 4 positions. “I am expecting to do well,” Geiger said. “I am gonna go out there with the attitude that I am gonna take it one match at a time and go after it.” The tournament team champion will be determined by double round-robin play, which has already been played dur­ ing the season. The team with the highest win-loss percentage will be the conference champion. W om en’s play will be at the Ojai Valley Inn'T ennis Center. Matches begin at 8 a.m. with two rounds of singles on opening day. One round of singles and two rounds of doubles will be played on Friday. All semi-final and final matches will be played on Saturday and Sunday at Ojai’s Libbey Park. After the Pac-10 Championships, the Sun Devil team wil start preparing for the NCAA Championships held May 13-2 in Athens, Ga. basem ent, rm 50 965-6881 [ ■ Custom crating and packaging. ■ Shipping from 1 to 1,000 pounds , includin? °cv“ n^ ' t dcliver>'■ Insurance to $50,000. ■ Pick-up service. ■ Packaging supplies - boxes, tape, foam, ■ 7 to 10 day delivery. We rent Ryder trucks & equipment ~~~| 1418 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale SW corner of Scottsdale Rd. & McDowell 990-2552 fax 941-1300 OB 9 EURAILPASSES issued on-the-spot paid political advertisement C lassified s ^ V0URPfUtVROSE The pig, if I am not mistaken, Supplies us sausage, ham, and bacon. Let others say his heart is big -1 call it stupid of the pig. -O g d e n Nash APARTMENTS APARTMENTS ASU AREA, studios, 1 & 2 bed­ room apts. from $280-$360/mo not including utilities. 966-8187 966-8838. BIG 2BD, 2BA LUXURY 3BR 2ba condo. All appl., ASU area, $825/mo. Bill 966-7790, mb. 602-309-9312. EARLY BIRD Special on 2 bd Call for summer prices, short leases accept. Walk to ASU. On 8th S t btwn Rural & McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments 968-5238. Snare a beautiful apartment and keep your privacy. Everything new. $675 furnished. Closest to ASU. 910 E. Lemon (office 919 E. Lemon) 966-9000. PAPAGO PARK II, 2bd, 2ba, w/d, unfurn, pool, $585/m o, avail June 1. Plan for the fall se­ mester now. 494-9105. SUMMER SUB-LET: Master bd/ba, beaut 4bd hse, pets ok, price nego. Stephanie, 964-6623. CONDO 2BD, 2ba, f/p, all major appi incl, $700/mo. Questa Vida, 714-582-9148. RENTAL S H A R IN G _ _ _ HOMES FOR SALE F/M RMTE, wanted to share Ig. house in Scottsdale. Approx. 3 mi. from ASU. $225/mo. + 1/4 util. 946-0001. QUESTA VIDA never rented, 2 master suites, assumable loan. West USA, Betty A. 820-3333. NICE 3BD, 2-l/2ba TH, 1/2 mi. to ASU, all amen. $72,500 or lease opt., $800/mo. Call Elise, 966-7789. SUBLET MY studio apart, for the summer, 10 min from ASU, furnished. $333/mo. 969-6417. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HAYDEN SQ U A RE, 3 bed­ room s. A v a ila b le June 1st. Please call John 829-8160. I Pool/Spas I C lu b h o u se I B ay W in d o w s 1 Br from $400 2 Brs from $515 Rancho Las Palmas One Mile From ASU 1249 East Spence • Tempe 8 2 9 -9 6 0 7 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 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. FURNISHED 2BD 2ba, 1 mi from ASU (Worthington Place), pool, volleyball, clubhouse, sum­ mer & or fall occupancy. Enrico 966-0789. I C eilin g Fans R O O M S FOR RENT APARTMENTS Some Things You Shouldn't Have To Share With Your Roommate. I G as B arbecues I S R P U tility H o o k -u p I B u ilt-in M icrow aves I V au lted C eilings TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT APARTMENTS I L au n d ry I E x ercise I L ig h ted , C o v ered R oom S tudio A ssig n ed P arking NEAR ASU, nonsmk, 1700 sf hse,ac/evap,w/d,fp,c!ngfns $200 mo+l/4util Bob 990-2284 av5/10 RMTE WANTED to share 3bd hse in Lakes. $212 rent + utl. Avail now. Call Laura, 225-9766. ROOMATE WANTED for 3 bd. condo in quiet area, 2 mi. from ASU. $20Q/mo496-8930 a ft 5pm FEMALE/ NON-SMOKER, 4 bd/2ba/pool/home/fumished. S of Southern, E. of Price, $250/mo., 1/3 util. Kris 831-5099 Apache R O O M S FOR RENT Broadway M -F 9-6; Sat 10-3 CH EA P SUM M ER housing! Coed. $500. Utils included. Call 450-4757 for information 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. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE $200 DN. + take over payment, lm i from ASU. 2bd 2 ba. 714582-9148. 2BD 2-1/2BA townhome close to ASU, upgraded linoleum, fire­ place, organizers in cists, fnsd patio, 2 comm pools, 63,000 ask. Call John 649-9404 appts. B uy O f T he W eek You deserve Itl Papago Park I Village, 3 bd, tile floors. $98,500. 3B ED R O O M C O -O P TH, $21,450, pool-near ASU; shop­ ping, bus on comer-pets ok. 9459013. WHY RENT when you can own? 2bd, 2ba, sunny, airy, safe, f/p, com. pool. Low 40s. 833-4317. GARAGE SALES TEMPE HIGH community ga­ rage sale, April 30,8-3pm, space avail. For info or donation 9671661, ext 279 or 963-0582. M IS C 8 85 KAW 550 JS w/trail, prop, paint, plate, pad, bars, grate 2100, Todd 451-7370, w350-3573 H om e Brewing S upplies Brewers Connection 839-1171 1847 E. Baseline Rd. B ob B ullock R ealty Executives (SE Corner of Baseline/McClincock Behind Baseline Pub) T-F 4-9pm, Sat 10-6pm, Sun l-5pm 998-2992 Starter Kits for $38.99 State P ress Thursday, April 21, 1994 P age 14 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDFO OD SERVICE JOB OPPORTUNITIES MODELS/ACTORS - Calif, ad agency seeks M/F, all types/ages, for summer catalog. No exp. nec. 266-6224.__________________ ART GALLERY/ frame shop, p/t sales, wknds, eves, 15-18 hrs/ wk. Apply: Art Market. 951 8907. Art background pref. DELIVERY DRIVERS for nights & wknds. Counter help for nights & wknds. Apply in person at Blimpie, 911 E. Broadway. ♦MARKET RESEARCH phone interviewers, no sales, Tempe. Eves/wknds. Susan 967-4441. NANNIES WANTED: Positions nationw ide, sum m er or yr.round. Exp not req. Great pay & ben. Free travel. (612) 643-4399. LADIES BOUTIQUE, Scot­ tsdale, p/t sales, days/evenings/wknds. Call Kim 941-8629. JOHNNY ROCKETS is now tak­ ing applications for cashiers-food servers. Fashion Square Mall, apply in person. 423-1505. AA CRUISE and travel employ­ ment guide. $$$ + free world­ wide travel! (Caribbean, Europe, etc!) Summer/permanent avail­ able. Guaranteed success!! (919) 929-4398 ext. C l45._________ 2 POSITIONS: Staff hide and tu­ tor. Work with teen-age male cli­ ents 15-20 hrs/wk, $7/hr. Must be 21 yrs+. Joyce, 866-8226. OFFICE MANAGER, national collection agency. Ground floor opportunity in AZ, salary plus incentives, call 602-504-0345. HELP WANTEDGENERAL M ISC. FOR SALE TICKETS M ISTRAL COM P TCS sail­ board. Great beg/int. $240. Pgr; 902-9634; 956-4331 lv. msg. 2 VIP Sec. B2, row 8, 3 main floor. Sec. A2, row 2. Make an offer. Call 897-2066._________ FURNITURE PINK FLOYD Pink F lo y d .' Excellent ticket. Field seat. Section C 4.784-9232 Scott. $ 100 or best offer by 4/22. PIN K FLOYD 2 TWIN beds for sale. $50 ea obo. M ust sell by 4/27. Call Tammy 966-8112. FURNITURE FOR cheap! Grad­ uating. Beds.desks.chairs. futon, bikes.TV,dresser.bar stools. Free table,more. Mark 858-9558. SEVERAL DESKS & chairs, $50ea. David 438-7448. COMPUTERS PINK FLOYD. Eagles. Depeche Mode, all great seats, all great prices. Steve. 921-7150. PINK FLOYD, good lower deck & field $60 & up. Call Steve 678-0932. AUTOMOBILES" $ CASH TODAY! $ I Buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call A1 944-4369. LAPTOPS IBM Thinkpads, Toshiba porteges & satellites, NEC Versas. Call Laptops + at 602-322-5258. MAC SE with image writer, LQ printer includes software $400, David 438-7448. MS FORTRAN 5.0. Viva 2400 modem, TKSolver Plus (col­ lege), $ 15ea., 834-3088. lv msg. 92 UNISYS PC. 14" SVGA clr. mon., 50mb. SCSI HD, 4mb ram.,31/2" disk drive, kybdand mse. Installed 5.0 W indows, Louis 967-7786. M-F, 8-5pm. $725. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu.: gold, ster., pearls, gems, an­ tiques, etc. Rare Lion. 921 S. Mill Ave., Tempe Center 968-6074. MILL AVENUE JEWELERS 414 S. Mill, Suite 101 Tempe, 968-5967 •FULL SERVICE JEWELERS* Custom Design & Remounts Jewelry & Watch Repair Gold/Diamonds/Silver Pulsar Watches/Pearls TICKETS FLOYD ON the floor. $200pr obo. Call Doug after 6pm, 8089420. FLOYD TICKETS VIP 4 in a row, sect.31 $200ea. 4 for $750. Call David 956-3025 pg 5900434______________________ JA C K S T IC K E T S Depeche Mode, Eagles, Pink Floyd, Traffic, Meat Loaf, Jerry Garcia, Salt n Pepa, Yanni. Nine Inch Nails($27.50). 968-3939. NINE INCH Nails tickets May 1, $3Q/ea. Also available- Depeche Mode, Salt N Pepa, Meatloaf, Eagles, and more!! 254-3300. PINK FLOYD tickets!! Sec-10, row-5, $200 obo. Call Bob or leave message, 967-9269. PINK FLOYD, 2 loge seats, call 820-6348 after 6pm. 1976 TOYOTA Corolla, runs good, automatic, cheap transp. $600 obo. Call 947-1628. 1981 VW JETT A, Automatic, a/c. am/fm, runs well! $ 1250 obo. Call 964-3480.______________ 1991 JETT A, white, auto, 48K. air, radio/cass, excel cond $7800. Call Helen 940-7438. 1992 JEEP Wrangler 5sp., 4 cyl., 10500 miles, excel cond, $9200 obo. Call 391-1711. 79 DATSUN B210, $500, good local transp.. 5 spd, call 784-9805. 91 CAMERO RS 5-spd, loaded low miles. $8900. Call after 6:30, 838-4038. MOTORCYCLES 87 HONDA Elite 150, looks and runs like new, $999, 784-8136. YAMAHA VIRAGO 920,1986, mint cond., has been garaged, was selling for $1600, now $1200, must sell. 732-9392. TRAVEL ASU BERMUDA and Caribbean Summer Programs for up to 6 credits. Limited space available. Call 965-4630.______________ C A TC H A JE T ! Europe - $269; New York - $129 Call for program description! Airhitch (R) 1-800-397-1098. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. FLY CHEAP, $150-100 or less anywhere in US, depending on destination. Val 966-6601. So T Guar, hourly, setting free appts for established chiropractors, close to ASU. 470-1828 anytime. 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. AAAA MALE/FEMALE coun­ selors needed Camp Tatiyee. F/t handicapped. June 19/July 25. White Mountains near Showlow. Call Margaret White 275-2604 for interviews/applications at Ca­ reer Services 2nd floor. 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 environ­ ment. Call 965-6754. CRUISE LINE, entry level on board positions avail, great benefits. (714) 549-1569._________ LEA D ERSH IP Will train motivated, quality peo­ ple. 3 m grs & various reps. 3K/mo. possible. Serious in­ quires . For appt, 829-8105. EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Service needs p/t operator, Mon. 3:30- 10:30pm, Tues 4- 10pm, Fri & Sat 1lpm-7am. Must type 45 wpm, have computer and 10 key exp. Call 264-4000 for appt. FRIENDLY PEOPLE person w/ office skills to work 10+ hrs weekly on long-term project 9686754.______________________ HELP W ANTED w ait staff, cooks, outside help, summer or full time. Salary, housing, bene­ fits. Apply at Apache Lake Re­ sort, 467-2511.______________ LO O K IN G FO R c e rtifie d lifeguards, babysitters, and a tennis court w asher for f/t summer employ. Ahwatukee Community Center 4700 E Warner Rd. 8931942. M AIDS Needed, exp. preferred must have transp. Connie 438-7448. uth w est ravel System s Discount airline tickets to most destinations, domestic and international. Open 7 Days 602-255-0234 TRAVEL ♦EARN $7.50/hr.* Asian Travel M ARC CEN TER Looking for dedicated caring people to work with individuals who are DD in home setting. For more info call 962-4838. Adventure Employment Colorado Ski resorts, rafting companies, camps & parks hiring in beautiful Rockies. (3 0 3 ) 2 8 2 -8 7 8 0 24 hrs. 894-4033 Round Trip from Phoenix . ...$609 $669 Hong Kong..... ...... $699 Bangkok.......... ...... $779 ....... $658 ....... $638 Paris................. ....... $658 Amsterdam..... ....... $655 Call for other cities/discounted fares. Restrictions apply. Subject to availability. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL WALK FROM ASU! No Selling T elephone survey research, fle x ib le h o u rs a v ailab le mornings, afternoons, even­ in g s , w e e k e n d s . S ta rt a t $ 5 .5 0 /h o u r. W eekly pay. Frequent raise reviews. H igginbotham Associates 829-3141 PRODUCT PROMOTION of beverages on May 5, Cinco de Mayo. Must be outgoing, have de-pendable transportation, be 21 or over and wear size 6 or 8. Inter­ views April 22 & 25. Call for appt. 381-1142._____________ PROFESSIONAL OFFICE, fun atmosphere. Resort advertising, near F iesta M all p t/ft, min. $200/wk. 897-1676 Cindy Brady. RESIDENT SUMMER camp in Prescott looking for male coun­ selors, specialists and kitchen support. Call 254-1571 for an ap­ plication. O U TSIDE SALES P/T sales reps needed for nat'l m arketing firm . $8 /h r gu ar­ anteed to start. Flexible hrs. Call for interview, 921-8282. SU M M ER W O R K National firm has retail openings v a lle y w id e. S ta rtin g pay is $ 10.15. No experience required. All majors welcome. Scholar­ ships awarded. Apply now — start after finals. East Valley, 968-1840; Northwest Phoenix, 240-6792; North Valley/Scottsdale, 244-8424. SWIM INSTRUCTORS-AT cli­ ent's homes in your area. Flex sched. $12-15/hr+ bonuses. WSI + strong exp. 998-9633. TAKING APPS now for summer help. Tele-sales & cust service reps (existing & new accts). Earn $6-$6.75/hr. Call Jot Evans, 9672678 e x t 129, Mon-Fri. TELEMARKETERS Schedule appointments for Sears. Tempe office. Flexible hours. $6/hr + bonuses. Call 968-5266. THERAPEUTIC WORK, excel­ lent pay, flexible hours, will train. Call 844-9000 or 377-7283. 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. WANTED: DRIVER, afternoons $5.25/hr+ mileage. Immed open­ ings. Call Shelly now, 246-7702. GET THAT SUMMER JOB NOW •P/T Flexible Hours •Persons w/Special Needs •Home Environments, I 1-to-l . •Locations Close to You Call M-F 8-5 Only. Ask for Jo b H o tlin e 494-1234 P/T SPORTS Marketing position, hourly pay, 20-30 hrs/wk. Fire­ bird International Raceway. Con­ tact John 268-0200. The Broadway Los Arcos W aiters, W aitresses, W aiters A ssistants & C ocktail Servers Great income for friendly, enthusiastic people. All shifts. Apply in person to We are now accepting appli­ cations for part & full time sales associate positions in: • Mens & Women’s Apparel • Accessories • Juniors/Intimate Apparel • Housewares/China i • Elizabeth Arden, Clinique or Estee Lauder Cosmetics • Mens & Women's Shoes 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/ T he Sports C lub R estaurant at P ointe H ilto n S outh M ountain Apply during store hours. Monday-Friday 9-11:30 or 2-5:30. Equal Opportunity Employer HELP WANTEDCLERICAL BOOKKEEPER/RECPT, FLEX hrs, $6/hr, exp req, approx 25 hrs/wk bet 9am-5pm. 968-5002. CUSTOMER SERVICE Reps. We represent a major employer in the E. Phx/Tempe area who is actively seeking a large number of prof. CSR’s for a Jong term project. This program offers ex­ cellent weekly pay and benefits that most employers can’t match. Please don't delay in contacting us for an appt. to apply. Tempo­ raries, Inc. 955-2900. EOE. PAT 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 IIV IC !, BARTENDER WANTED, male /female, for fun bar $7-$12/hr, 24-32 hrs /wk. Sports knowledge a must. Apply The Woodshed I 19 W. Baseline aft. 5pm Exp. only HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE BABYSITTER NEEDED for ac­ tive 2-1/2 yr old & 8 mo old. 36 pm w/some early afternoons. Call 8-noon/after 6pm, 947-9180. PT, 44TH St./Osborn, full day needed(flexible), car/references req. $5+/hr. 840-5926. « JOB OPPORTUNITIES $750/WK. ALASKA fisheries this summer. Maritime Services 1-208-860-0219.____________ PERSONALS 10% OFF Kaplan! It’s in your Grad Pack. Your Alumni Asso­ ciation has compiled what you need for a successful graduation in the 1994 G rad Pack. D is­ counts, benefits and the official GRDU8 T-Shirt. On Cady Mai daily! 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.A145. A DOZEN Roses $20. Balloons & Delivery available. Call After Hours Flowers 894-3419. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ASASU RUNOFF elections!! Vote today for president and ac­ tivities vice president! 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) 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 S T IV E R S TEMPORARY PERSONNEL IN C . . We'll get you through the Summer... ...and beyond! Earn *8to *12 an hour with part-time long term year 'round employment. We have immediate openings in our Tempe branch for flexible part-time hours. • No cold calls! - Weekly paychecks you to work for US, • Pleasant work enviroment §o we work hard for you. • Fully automated (no typing required) • Professional paid training s7.50/hr. guaranteed minimum i W DIAL AMERICA MARKETING, INC. Call Dial America Marketing 894- 0! IS M Á PERSONALS AXO IS psyched for LX Derby Days!!! SIGMA PHI Epsilon Pre Rush Dinner April 21, 1994 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. CLASS RING Discount! Your Art Carved coupon is in your G rad Pack! Stop by the Grad Pack table on Cady mall to see all that your Alumni Association has compiled for a successful graduation. 1-800-alumnus for details! CP. 3 months down, only 100 years to go! Time flys when you're in love! I love U! MB. 21 1 8 2 0 8 5 2 5 19 20 too!! RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS Calling all ASU SPORTS FANS!! » Mon. "W e s h o w a ll S uns & Io w a Games!' NW C o rn e r D o b s o n & U n i v e r s i t y 844 -S H E D LX JUDGES- hold on to your derbies-Gamm a Phi is on the prowl ! ! LX JUDGES-Are you ready to go south of the border ??? G-PhiB is...5:30 sharp!!! ( LAT MARGARET congrats. I’m so proud o f you! Love ya, LAT Charity. VOTE TODAY for your new ASASU Pres. & activities VP! Vote today!!! VOTE TODAY for your new ASASU Pres. & activities VP! Vote today!!! M ÏS C $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian. 967-5987. J 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. Balboa Cafe V 404 S. MWAvo., Suite 101/ APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. smzs FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. PIZZA & PASTA Where ASU Goes fo r Pizza WORD PROCESSING, secre­ tarial services, fax. 28yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W comer, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. THIRSTY THURSDAY WRITE STUFF. Fast, profes­ sional, reasonable word process­ ing. Term papers, resumes, etc. APA/MLA. Beth, 963-3537. All 12 oz. B ottles 25 SERVICES Tim e's running out! There are only 6 more issues of the State Press this semester! SERVICES B A R B E R Bud • Amstel Sam Adams St. Pauli Heineken • Becks Coors Light Molson Bart les & Jay mes 3 Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Regular Cuts $7 • Bowls & Flat Tops $8 2048 E. Southern (between McClintock & Price) Tempe, AZ 85282*730-5013 Broadway & Rural For Thursday, April 21, 1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Mixed trends affect your work picture now. Though yo u ’ll meet with new opportunities for career progress, you could fall behind on a current assign­ ment. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) A disappointment in a friend could dampen your enthusiasm for socializing, but you're still advised to take advantage of today’s opportunities for fun outings. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Family life is highlighted now, but i t ’s not the best tim e to have friends drop by. Today brings business pressures, as well as good opportunities for advancement. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Slight aggravations could arise now in connection with work. Though not everyone gives you feedback today, you’ll be on the same w avelength w ith a loving tie. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) It’s one of those days when just as yo u r fin a n c ia l p rospects begin to pick up, you may meet with some extra expenses as w ell. T onight brin g s jo y through domesticity. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Though you’re in good spirits today, a partner may be selfabsorbed and may not give you as much attention as you’d like. Tonight finds you eloquent and persuasive. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) B ehin d -th e-scen e d ev elo p ­ ments are in your favor finan­ cially today. H ow ever, you may be slightly aggrieved with a close tie. A w ork m atter remains on hold. UTE n ,cht stu d y SNACKS 921 -9222 SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Y ou’ll be experiencing both highs and lows in your social life today. Some friends will upset you, w hile others will inspire you. Tonight, though, should be fun! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) T here may be som e m inor aggravations to contend with in business, but still it will be a productive day. An opportunity com es from as unexpected source. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Strain may exist with your rela­ tionship w ith an in-law and there may be some revisions in your travel plans now. Social life tonight provides a welcome lift. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Reaching financial agreements w ith others may be difficult today and you may be asked to pay an overdue bill. Family life and career interests though will prosper. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Be careful not to dampen the enthusiasm o f a close tie. A partner has a wonderful sugges­ tion which you should listen to. Others lead the way to happy times now. YOU BORN TODAY are gre­ garious but you have a private side as well. Though you have a friendly manner, you may be slow in taking others into your confidence. Often, you have an outstanding talent for art. Both reflective and self-expressive, you also may have a talent for writing. You must be careful, however, not to rest on your laurels when you achieve suc­ cess. B irthdate of: A nthony Quinn, actor; Iggy Pop. singer; and Charlotte Bronte, writer. ©1994 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. S t a t e P r e s s Classified Ad Order Form 1 3 0 1 E. University T onight SIG M A CH I - G am m a PhiSigma Chi - Gamma Phi - Sigma Chi - Gamma Phi ! SIGMA PHI Epsilon Pre Rush Dinner April 21, 1994 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.___________________ DONORS NEEDED for Desert Cryobank Sperm Donor Pro­ gram. All medical expenses paid. Fee paid to donors meeting strict medical criteria. Call 957-1879 for complete information. TYPING /W ORD PROCESSING for a Good Time call 966-1300 $1 ARTIST/ PROF seeks house and/or studio 6-15 to 8-15. Hof­ mann, Box 195, Ghent, NY 12075 WANTED: BALDING men and women, 30 day gaurantee or your money back, 345-0073. 9 9 0 ....S V JAGERS W E DELIVER! 3-4 BED, furnished home to rent for 1 or 2 wks beginning May 10. Call Alicia 491-3592. MAGIC DIET, lose up to 301bs. in 30 days. $34 + S.&H. / V/M accep. 1-800-884-0208 or 1-800327-1458.____________ . 9pm -1am Mon.-Sat. a fS S ra & S E R £ 9 t 8am-12am Ë H A M D / S j Sunday " f^ U ffS S m S S S B m 9am-9pm WANTED STATE PRESS back issues may be picked up at the basement of Matthews Center. zx PRE Rush dinner Fri. Apr. 22. 1-6. come hangout by the pool and meet the brothers o f Sigma Chi. all welcome! Tutoring available. Call Gary at 994-0960. HEALTH & FITNESS /STEPHAN'S) SATELLITE F rances D rake MATH PROBLEMS? STAT PRO - Statistical analysis, consulting, research help. Call 837-1999.__________________ W O O D SH ED « Y our In d ivid u a l H oroscope TUTORS Full set sculptured or tips, Wizzards Hair Studio, 967-2360. Ask for Debbie. GAMMA PHI'S-GET ready for Yacht Club *94-Canyon Lake will never be the same! HEY LAT Laura, get ready to part)' your balls off at Jungle Fev­ er! Simba is calling us! Love.KL Bill._______________________ FLIGHT INSTRUCTION- Get your private license the afford­ able way! Page Terry @209-3988 NAILS $19.99 T O N IG H T ! 30 million Americans infected no cure. Syphilis -highest level in 40 years. Chlamydia- 4 million in­ fected. Reports, diagnosis, treat­ ment. prevention. $5 ea. JMJ Medical Services. PO Box 1267, E. Lansing. MI 48826- _ PREGNANT? LOVING family looking to adopt. 602-282-6510. Mobile- We come to you! Low rates, work guaranteed 839-5398 EASY HOOTCHIEÜ Saturday is almost here and it will be well worth the wait. Until then. Simba awaits!! Love, ??? H ER PES INSTRUCTION CAR REPA IR 4-7P*« X d rafts Im port Btls....$X 1 / 2 Price A pp etizers • 4 S atellites • I S Screens D ER B Y D A D D IES-T1M & Scott: Watch out-Gamma Phi is ready to chase you down! GRADUATING? W E'VE got what you need! Grad Pack 1994 offers discounts for the goods and services you need as a gaduating student and young alum! Come see what we have to offer. Cady Mall daily, or call 1-800alumnus or 965-3566 for further information. A D O P TIO N ____ SERVICES AAA V s o u r LX co ach esAdam. Steve & Ryan. We are psyched for Derby Days! GRAD PACK-YOUR ticket outta' here! Your Alumni Associa­ tion has compiled what you need to graduate- discounts, benefits and the official GRDU8 T-shirt! Stop by the Grad Pack table on Cady Mall or call 965-3566 or 1-800-alumnus for further infor­ mation. Page 15 Thursday, April 21,1994 State P ress $ 2° ° Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. S4or. V ine Stein aU dom estics 9IVV*Karaoke Cri* T l I* S I Lemon I Drops Boysenberries, CHEAP DATE & Kamis Students a d m itte d fre e to a ll ASU s p o r tin g e v e n ts w ith va lid ASU ID (except Football & Men's Basketball). D on't miss the SUCH A D EAL! Why drive? Ride our bus to the show! FYI Pink Floyd Party! Sunday P lease be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you wish it to a ppea r in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it a ppears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit m ay be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for m ake-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. •* A T s 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5.9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day i oay »¿.u , 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Moosehead freebies! $1 Shots RESTAURANTS/ BARS You can place your ad by phone using Visa, MasterCard or American Express NO*COVER Rural & Apache 894-2662 965-6735 State P ress Thursday, April 21, 1994 Page 16 STUDENT OPINION POLL HELP US TO HELP YOU BY flU IN G OUT AND RETUNNING THIS QUESTIONNAIRE TO ASASU How often have you used or been involved with these ASASU departments? Often □ Bike Co-op Repair Services □ Safety Escort Service □ Student Legal Assistance OfT-Campus Student Services □ □ Lecture Series □ College Councils Multi-Cultural Awareness Board (MCAB) □ □ Community Involvement Program (CIP) Volunteer Student Network (VISION) □ Graduate Research Support Office □ □ Environmental Issues Counseling and Health Advisory Committee □ FestDevil / Homecoming □ □ Sneak Previews Never □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Seldom □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Sometimes □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Never heard of □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ „ C om m en ts a b c ^ g m y o f these departm ents that cou ld help us in any way. Please describe your experiences with the following departments o f ASU and add possible improvements for them to better serve you A S A S U Student G overnm ent _____________________________________ „ ..... ------ ——,------------------ ------- Financial A id ____________ ___________________________________________ _______ - --------------------------------------------------------------- ■ — —— Parking and Transit --------------------—---------------— ___________________________________________________ ______ ______________ -— -------------------------------- — — a -------------------- w----------------------------------------------------- n p f — * j: . "'"m111 *■■■■ R esidence L ife _______1_____ _______________________________________ _____________________________ ----------------- -— .------ -— ——— ■ — A cadem ic A dvising ________________________ State P re ss___ __________________________ Q u a lity o f T eaching ____— .— _ _ — _ _ ------------- — — --------- . ------ ------- ——----- _____________________ _— ........ .......... .— ----------------------------—— _______________________________ ____________ _____ _______ _ — ,----- -------- -- ------- -— H ow are you inform ed about th e services that A SA SU has to offer? (i.e. m ovies, lectures, sneak previews) Optional Information Age 18-25 □ 26-35 □ 36-45 □ Gender Male □ FemaleD Ethnicity White* □ Black* □ Hispanic □ Major ___________________________ Check all that apply Transfer □ Graduate □ * not Hispanic 45+ □ Asian or Pacific Islander □ International □ American Indian □ other □ Re-entry □ Please drop off at the ASASU office on the 3rdfloor o f the Memorial Union by A p r i l 3 0 th. Thank you for your time. ASASU hopes to use this survey to consider your needs more directly.