©Copyright, StatoProas. 1994 Tempe. Arizona Vol. 78 No. 66 Friday, April 29,1994 An Independent Morning Daily To our readers... G ran d m a o n the jo b Today marks this semester’s final edition o f the State Press. Congratulations to photo editor Brian Fitzgerald, sports editor Mike Branom, magazine editor Troy Fuss, assistant magazine editor Britton Mauchline, reporters Jason Hill and Paul Matthews, columnist Melanie Selcho and production assistant Ken Collins — our graduating staff members. Next semester, the State Press will be under the direction o f new editor Jason Owsley. Also look for the summer edition o f the State Press, which will be distributed on a weekly basis. Thank you for reading us each morning. A ffid a v it: P o lic e w e r e l e d t o b e l i e v e V o lle n w a s m e n t a l ly i l l B y C hris D riscoll and D avid Strow State P ress W illia m Lynam /S tate P ress Kay Dingman shows her granddaughter, Meagan Dingman, what she does at the U niversity Academ ic Advising Center. Meagan came with her grandm other Thursday as part of a program called “Take Our Young Women to Work Day.” Sherman to back Giuliano in Tempe mayoral election B y J ason H ill State P ress One Tempe mayoral candidate will find it hard to obtain the votes of former mayoral candidate Barbara Sherman supporters in the May general election. Sherman, who was ousted from the mayoral primary election on March 22, received 3,529 votes, or 28.4 percent. She levied her support to mayoral candidate Neil Giuliano, leaving Don Cassano to his own devices. “I believe an administration led by Neil Giuliano will be open and include all citi­ zens,” Sherman said. "Perhaps because of his youth and friendliness, Neil is willing to lis­ ten to new and different ideas.” “I encourage all citizens to vote on May 10 in Tempe’s general election,” Sherman said. Giuliano, who is 34 years old, works at ASU as a director for community relations. He also is Tempe’s vice mayor. “Hopefully this will motivate people to come and vote. The important thing is that people get involved,” Giuliano said. Giuliano said he is pleased by Sherman’s INSIDE STATE PRESS W eather Outlook Partly cloudy. High 78. support and will be anxious to see if her sup­ port is essential in the general election. Cassano is hopeful that Tempeans will remain “free thinkers” and not allow the endorsement to sway their decision. “I just don’t subscribe to the philosophy that voters will cast their votes because of the endorsement. They are voters, they are intel­ ligent, and they can make their own deci­ sions,” Cassano said. Recently Cassano, Giuliano and Sherman met at City Hall to discuss issues in an open forum. Cassano and Sherman clashed on the idea of allowing a citizen representative to sit in on discussion between Tempe officials and the Federal Aviation Administration. “He is simply uninterested in allowing cit­ izens to be represented in the airport issue,” Sherman said. Cassano disagreed with Sherman. “I wouldn’t compromise my feelings,” Cassano said. “If I’m elected mayor, I will not sit down and compromise citizens’ inter­ ests,” he said. Both Sherman and Giuliano support the idea. o p in io n Highlights and memorable quotes from a sem ester o f State Press Opinion columns and cartoons. Pages 4 and 5 Phoenix police were led to believe that the former director of ASU’s Department of S tudent H ealth was mentally ill with a his­ tory o f v iolence on A SU ’s cam pus, according to a M aricopa County V ollen M edical C enter psy­ chiatrist in an affidavit signed Thursday. The information led police on August 28, 1993, to detain Dr. Laurie Vollen, who had been the University’s top health official until being removed from office in March 1993. Police then took Vollen to the Maricopa County Medical Center psychiatric ward and petitioned to have her committed there. According to Dr. M. Caswell, the officers claimed Vollen “had a history of violence on the ASU campus” and that “Dr. Vollen was dangerous, not only to herself, but to the police and bystanders as well.” Caswell determined after six hours of examination that Vollen was mentally sound, and she was released. Two sources associated with the ASU Department of Public Safety, who asked that their names be withheld out of fear of retalia­ tion, confirmed that ASU police officers were briefed that Vollen was a “918,” a police code for a mentally ill person. Craig Emanuel, chief of ASU DPS, said that he could not recall whether the briefing took place. “I was briefed on this, but you can imag­ ine the number of briefings I get,” he said. “I just don’t feel like I can be accurate on this.” However, Emanuel said Vollen was not mentally ill. “Was she ‘918’? No, she wasn’t,” he said. “But we’re not qualified to make any deter­ mination of mental stability.” Mary Stevens, the ASU General Counsel attorney assigned to the Vollen case, denied the allegations. “It’s not my understanding that (that) hap­ pened,” Stevens said. “I don’t know. I’m not aw are that our DPS told that to the Phoenix Police Department.” Vollen filed a $19 m illion law suit in Maricopa County Superior Court on March 9. In her complaint, she accused ASU Athletic D irector C harles H arris of usurping her authority as student health director by making medical decisions and revamping the student athlete policy. V ollen had been detained previously under suspicion of the theft of a computer from the Student Health Center on July 10, 1993, according to police reports obtained by the State Press. The computer was not found in her vehicle, and she was released. Christine W ilkinson, vice president of Student Affairs, said Thursday that the com­ puter has not been recovered. She declined to comment on any other aspect of the case, including whether or not she had any knowl­ edge of the DPS’ labeling of Vollen as men­ tally ill. ASU officials that declined to comment were: Lattie Coor, ASU president; Bill Bess, director of ASU DPS; Milton Glick, ASU senior vice p resid en t and Provost of Academic A ffairs; and Paul W ard, ASU General Counsel. Cleanup event slated for today B y M ika A kikuni State P ress Stressed with all those class assign­ ments? Take a break and help clean cam­ pus. Members of the ASU community are urged to volunteer to participate in the first Campus Cleanup and Recycle Day today, said Val Peterson, director o f Facilities Management at ASU. The cleanup day, which will be coordi­ nated by the Grounds Department, will start at 7 a.m. at the Cady Mall fountain with faculty, staff and students coming together to clean. Inside they will clean cabinets and desk drawers of different campus offices. Garbage will also be collected outside the buildings. “We are having the first annual cleanup day in April because we wanted to tie it with environmental issues and the Earth Day,” Peterson said. “Some of us want an excuse to clean up our files, too.” > - A special 8-page pullout section featuring in-depth articles. C enter se ctio n Sports ASU golfer Wendy Ward provides the No. 1 Sun Devils with low scores and high enthusiasm. Page 15 Peterson said he does not know how many students will be attending the event. “Hopefully, as years go by, we will pick up more and more students.” ASU President Lattie Coor supports the event. “I am convinced this effort is a worth­ while investment of our time and will result in an enjoyable change of pace for all par­ ticipants,” Coor said. Coor also said he hopes the Campus Cleanup and Recycle Day will become an annual event. Peterson, who said that the cleanup will be done at 5 p.m. today, added that this is a good opportunity for offices to recycle their old furniture. Trash dumpsters, along with recycling containers, will be set up at six campus locations; between Stauffer Hall and Payne hall, near the fountain on Cady M all, outside the bookstore on Orange S treet, next to O ld M ain and next to Parking Structure 5. W here To Find It Classifieds........................18 Comics..............................14 Crossword.......................... 6 Horoscopes ...................... 19 Opinion.............................. 4 Police Report.................... 11 Sports............................... 15 Today’s Activities...............2 World/Nation......................3 I*. T o d ay The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU com m unity. R equests are p rin ted 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. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the full name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll address o f the location. All requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Deadline fo r entries is noon the day before publication. • A lcoholics A nonym ous — Closed daily meeting, noon, basement of the old church at the Newman Center, northwest corner of College and Uni versity. • American Marketing Association — Annual gelatin splash with the Leukemia Society, dunk Dr. Gourley into 300 gal­ lons of gelatin for $1, SRC lawn, 1 to 4 p.m. • K A SR 680 AM a n d ASU C ab le Channel 2 — Charity basketball chal­ lenge against the State P ress, Free admission with a can o f food or small donation to the Tempe Boys and Girls Club, University Activity Center, 4 p.m. • AIESEC —*Last general meeting, MU Mohave Room 222,4 p.m. This weekend: • Best Buddies — End-of-year picnic. Papago Park at C ollege and C urry, Saturday, 12:30 to 3 p.m. Kenneth Wedin, who wrote a letter to the editor in Monday’s State Press, identified himself as an ASU graduate student of Asian Studies. The Registrar's Office has no record of Wedin’s enrollment in ASU. I S tate P ress Friday, April 29, 1994 Page 2 Turman reflects as his term comes to a close Says A S A S U ’s p ro b le m s s te m f r o m p o litic ia n s , v o te rs a lik e B y G reg Z emeida State P ress Associated Students of ASU President Rossie Turman wants to make one thing crys­ tal clear — ASASU’s problems are every­ one's fault. Turman, whose term comes to an end on May 16, not only blamed AS ASU representa­ tives for tarnishing the association’s image by constantly bickering, but also blamed stu­ dents for letting them get away with it. “1 think we have a whole ideological prob­ lem on this campus,” Turman said. “What we (students) have done, and I was guilty of it too, is we marginalized ASASU, as like, we are not part of it, it’s some organization ... that sits over here on the third floor (of the Memorial Union) and that’s wrong, that’s untrue, that’s a misnomer. "ASASU is everyone o f us because ASASU comes out of every one of our pock­ ets every time we register.” Turm an said the real problem s with ASASU are the people that the students chose to represent them. He also blam ed students for the low turnout during this spring’s elections, with only about 2,000 students voting. He said it wasn't a sign of apathy, but a sign of “stupid­ ity.” “It really irks me that six candidates can run for president (and only) 2 percent of the people vote, and we have a potential to have people (in ASASU) who couldn’t even col­ lect 1,000 votes,” Turman said. “And guess what? They are going to be making decisions for each and every one of you next year. “It’s ignorant for us to write off an organi­ zation (like ASASU) which runs our lives. I say ‘runs our lives' because every single time (the administration) wants a student to give an opinion ... or give a blessing to something, they come to (ASASU). “if you as a student^..., feel very comfort- ANDERSON'S FIFTH ESTATE “I f you as a student ...feel very comfortable letting yahoos decide policy fo r your life as a student then fine.,y , — Rossie Turman, ASASU president able letting yahoos decide policy for your life as a student, then fine.” ASASU members that spend too much time on internal issues and not enough on stu­ dent issues that are at the root of the associa­ tion’s negative image, Turman said. “I had something written (on my wall) that said (ASASU’s power is) play power, but some people think it’s real power,” he said. “I think some people feel a need for power. “There’s another statement that’s made — ‘Adults take a job or position to do some­ thing; children take a job or position to be so m eb o d y .’ I think a lot o f people (in ASASU) want to be somebody; they don’t (join ASASU) to do something.” Turman has suggested a way to possibly reduce the power plays of some ASASU rep­ resentatives — videotape their meetings and broadcast them on campus and on a Tempe cable access channel. He said he hopes future ASASU members will go along with this idea and let people see what the group actually does. “When (ASASU members) have to be accountable for what they say and what they do, instead of just representing themselves, I think that’s going to change some things,” Turman said. Turman has witnessed numerous contro­ versies during his term as president that have added to ASASU’s negative image. There was the forced resignation of for­ mer ASASU Executive Vice President Caesar Tima, the difficulties surrounding the student regent selection process and, most recently, the improper campaign financial statements o f ASA SU P resid en t-E lect M arci Hendrickson. Turm an referred to the student regent bickering as absurd and ridiculous. “I expected it. W hen I sat down and designed the process, I knew that when some­ thing is important to a lot of people ... they will resort to a lot of different things,” he said. Turman himself lashed out at the ASU West student government, calling its mem­ bers liars for not sticking with the agreed upon selection process. He said he doesn’t regret that statement. “It was true. They had a reason, in their opinion, for breaking their word, and it’s open for debate and open for discussion as to whether those were viable reasons,” Turman explained. “My point is just to say (they) broke their word.” As for regrets, Turman said he wished he had more time to interact with students in the fall. He said that after the ASASU advisor left early last semester, he was doing two jobs at the same time and couldn’t do as much as he wanted to for students. He was pleased with all of the things he did this spring, which included his hamburger giveaway that exemplified how many burgers could be made for $250, the amount of an anticipated tuition increase. The tuition was later increased only $50. Turman will graduate this spring with a bachelor’s degree in political science and a minor in law. He plans to attend graduate school in the fall to work on a possible law degree. He has applied to many schools for his graduate studies, most notably Columbia and Harvard. Turman has one last piece of advice for students, which may also double as a warning to future ASASU representatives: “I think students should watch (ASASU) like a haw k. It has too m uch pow er to ignore.” SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU 1.0/ or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL GET A DINNER Friday, A pril 29 EDGE NIGHT Special Guest 106.3 DJ W illowbee CD, Tape, T-shirt Giveaways No Cover before 10pm 2 for 1 Any Drink 8-10pm $1 Draffs 10-Close Com e m eet Miller Lite Pro Beach Volleyball Players Saturday, A pril 30 This year we're doing it again! Every Sunday (but O N LY on Sunday), Mike Pulos 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. CLASSIC ALTERNATIVE NIGHT Classic Alternative Music o f the '80s 2 fo ri Any Drink 8- 10pm 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 current student I.D. card or fee receipt w ith you to take advantage of th is offer. 15% gratuity added to all discounted checks (except senior citizen discounts). Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Oi Jon, Stuffed File o f Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala, Three Pasta Opera and orders to go ARE NOT included in the 2-for-1 special. OPEN A T 11:00A.M. TO 11:00 P.M. SUNDAYS! _________________ O PEN A T 10 A.M . ON G A M E DAYS!____________________ Ü i n | o y o u r n i g h t l y d r i n k s p e c i a l s . ~j S p a g e tti ( o n i p a i u ^ RESTAURANT PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Just North of Indian Bend 2 5 7 -0 3 8 0 4 8 3 -5 6 6 9 OLD TOWN TEMPE 4th St. & Mill 9 6 6 -3 8 4 8 World/Nation S tate P ress_____________________________________________________ A- round rizona Arizona to sue government for alien incarceration costs PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona will sue the federal government in an effort to recover the cost of incarcerating illegal aliens in state prisons, a state official said Thursday. Rob Carey, first assistant attorney general, said the suit was still being drafted and could be filed in U.S. District Court in Phoenix as early as Friday. The action will parallel a suit to be filed in San Diego Friday by the state of California, Carey said. A similar suit already has been filed by Florida and Texas may sue as well, Carey said. He said the suits probably would be consolidated at some point. Arizona will seek reimbursement for the cost o f housing some 1,606 illegal aliens in die state’s prisons, which Carey said is nearly $25 million a year. In addi­ tion, the state wifi ask for more than $55 million, the cost of building a 1,600-bed prison, he said. Court worker accidentally shot by pistol In her purse GLENDALE K/> fJ T * 3 ì I O G oh, p f LyJ S tate Ni 5 , j i I, ¿Ti t /' ' Il : F ■ W 7------* y ‘ i ULTIMATE HOKKOK AUM£ fOK ARIZONA TAXPAYERS! P r e s s A. M arjory Kaminski Bi-weekly columnist MARJORY Senior, journalism “Now that the Olympic flame KAMINSKI has been doused, I have one thing to say to the media: I sure hope Columnist you’re proud of yourselves. You took an im age, a memory that means so much to the ones who participated in the gam es, and sum m ed it up in one horrible episode of Hard Copy" (3/1/94) ‘The one man who knows how to talk politics with sarcastic man­ ner is Rush Limbaugh. Because he is also very long winded with a three-hour radio show, I wouldn't subject you to that. So, you have to find a Rush addict. Luckily, since they’re everywhere and publicly let everyone know that, this won’t be a hard task. Listen closely to your Rush addict. Find out what’s the talk of the day, what’s funny about it and w hat’s so ridiculous.” (3/11/94) -, r 3f H p ^ l | l > ) k li IK ln iir II » I David Don Bi-weekly columnist Law student, second-year AVID “If campus rats have gourmet taste m em ories, perhaps th eir DON absence from the dining halls Columnist [while being spotted in 35 other places at ASU last year] can be explained without reference to the poison trap s we set for them . Perhaps we don’t have rats in the kitchens because of the function of a memorably unpleasant dining experience long ago, and the exer­ cise of their limited free will not to repeat it.” (2/8/94) “Critics with the Clint Eastwood/Dirty Harry mentality will always view legal technicalities as a waste of time. The uneducated will always fear lawyers. And movies like “The Firm” and “Jurassic Park” will cater to their facile tastes.” (3/8/94) Coati M '‘V Sean nO ’Noill ’Neill Bi-weekly columnist Senior, English EAN “F ratern ities and sororities have been on this campus since O'NEILL the 1940s, longer than anyone Columnist, who is part of ASU’s administra­ tion. There are at least 18,000 Greek alumni of Arizona State University, and most keep shaking their heads in disgust. It’s time for ASU to face the music — parties are part of college life.” (1/25/94) “[Farrakhan] labeled Judaism “a gutter religion,” Israel “an out­ law state” and Hitler “a very great man.” His remarks paid the consequences and his organization lost the chance to make money. Now, Farrakhan feels that he must convince the Black Muslims that the Jews are out to con­ spire against all of Black America, when in fact, they just dis­ like him.” (4/1/94) mm I THIS is: ») yutjo&AvW ^ BEIRUT 1 pv A SOMALIA 1 d>TtMFE n Civ yryV Melanie Selcho Weekly columnist ELANIE Senior, journalism "Let’s not bring another team SELCHO to Phoenix that we don’t have the patience or commitment to sup­ Columnist port. Let’s especially not raise our taxes so some citizens can go to the new stadium just to heckle the Phoenix baseball team or cheer for the opponent.” (1/19/94) “If 1 had an “A” for every time I’ve been asked about how I get enough calcium, I’d be in medical school. Calcium does not come from cows, it comes from miner­ als in the soil. The cow gets it from eating plants, we get it from drinking a cow’s milk. All I do is bypass the middle stages. I get calcium the same way a cow gets it, and if you wanted to pump me with hormones and drink my milk, you would get enough calcium.” (2/10/94) “Governor Fife Symington said that if being an environ­ mentalist puts the environment over property rights, he guess- “You can fool some of the people all the time, and all of the people some of the time. The rest don’t give a damn what you’re doing any of the time.” (4/21/94) es he isn’t an environmentalist any­ more. Well, I guess if being a fas­ cist precludes first amendment HAYNE rights, I’m not a fascist.” (3/3/94) “From the time women know WHITEHEAD what the word, “rap e,” means Columnist until the time they die, they will fear it, never knowing if they will be the one in four attacked during their lifetime.” (3/10/94) Shayne Whitehead Bi-weekly columnist Senior, journalism “It amused me when I boarded the tram and could still hear the [mall] preachers, who were stand­ ing several hundred yards away by the MU fountain. I can cope with their screams. I can cope with them singing “Amazing Grace” three steps out of key. And I can also cope with God never sending a lightning bolt when I ask for it.” (3/31/94) ¿SOARS TO IANA LOPEZ Columnist Diana Lopez Bi-weekly columnist Law student, second-year “I think of [prejudice] every time someone says to me: ‘You’re what? Oh, well, I don’t think of you as any different from m e.’ Often they say if proudly, as if it’s some kind of badge of honor, living proof that, oh no, they aren’t prejudiced.” (2/18/94) “As long as there are lawyers making jerks of themselves with their over-inflated egos and L.A. Law attitudes, the rest of us might just as well forget about convincing the public that the profession’s good deeds outweigh the bad.” (3/8/94) THE TUNE Y0VKfa\j*J } PKM, PLOW, BLOW THEIR DOUGH % ft? G U t M TAX ANP SP E N P J 7 IVA57E THEIR / W f i J TILL IT'S G0ME% STHEN RAISE ¿THE RATES AGAIN. BLOW, B W BLOW T H E I R D O u e fo ' $ pat fltf /few«*** savs *works for m e ! *the price is less than other statft 'IÌ but SO'S the quautk ^ BLOU, BL°W> BLOW THEIR DOUGH i THERE'S NOTHING THEV CAN DO. J7 , LET'S ffOy A PUNCH OF UGLV ART\ J. ANP CLOSE A SCHOOL OR TWO. [iairtSiEpr P a g:e 6 S tate P ress April 29, X994 is changing. A Day At The Beach p r o u d l y w e l c om e s t h e '94 Mi ll et Lite/AVP Pro Beach Vol l eybal l Phoeni x O p e n D r o p by A Dev A t The Beach, Sat urday May 14th, b e t w e e n S 30 and 8 00 p m. and m ee t t h e players Expected are, Smjm Smith, M i ke Dodd, Tim Hovi and, Scott (Ack) A y a k at u bb y , Brian Lewis, Team Club; Eric F o n o i m o a n a , M i k e W h i t m a r s h , Jose Loiola a nd Craig M o o t h a r t Come early and pre register tor our d r a w i n g of lots of g o o d s t u f f (must be present t o w i n ) and check o ut t ho latest m vol leygear and s w i m w e a r Mon-Fri 8 to 8 & Sat 9 to 5 NW Corner E. Ray Rd. & 1-10 (at Foothills Park Place) • 940-4SUN s A L o M E w A T S A P T R O W O L 1 M E s A R T CROSSWORD A G E E D A R L E E N V E A P C O A M A Z E C A R A T T E A R s by THOMAS JOSEPH P E C o V A N X E N O E R T R L T W 1 T W 1 S O O s E R T R N ELT A L i A D 1 E G o A S E 1 L S A N DOWN ACROSS A E 1 Printed 1 Les — N A goofs T R Unis 2 Factory S 6 Loses N Y equipper E charm R 3 Pulitzer11 Actress S winning O'Donnell O drama of 12 Lusitania S 1982 sinker 4 “— folly to 13 Perch Yesterday's Answer be wise' 14 ‘ Beau — " 10 Meat 28 Actress — 15 The works 5 Made a counter Sue home 16 Mao Martin buys 6 Sound of follower? 30 Near­ Washing­ 17 Without 18 Brewed homer setting a ton drink 31 Seasonal date 7 Presi­ 19 Bill’s pal store em­ 23 Cunning dential 20 Ignited ployees moniker 24 The 21 Squid's Matterhorn, 33 Right 8 Pulitzerdefense page for one winning 22 Up 39 Office­ drama of 26 Copy 24 Hill holders 27 Music 1991 builders 41 Siesta symbols 9 Hidden 25 Up in years 1 4 6 7 1 5 27 Nimble 1 11 29 Stations 32 Pos­ sesses 14 1 33 Tatter ,é 34 Gun grp. 1 35 Guitarist's aid ¿2 36 Slippery one 37 Cousins 30 31 27 36 Memento 40 Bumbling 42 Factory 35 43 Co-worker of Sam 39 38 and Woody 4 44 Authority 44 45 Cathedral 44 parts 4-29 SYMANTEC HAS A GREAT 1 è r ~ Ô F ~ ¿ là u $ » Ô » &“* i 1 ■1 d1 P ■ 1 1% 1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — H ere's how to w ork it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L I . O W O ne letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for th e tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation of the words are all hints. Each day th e code letters arc different. 4 -29 OEA HVVS ZT M AW REO WO VW A MGK W P IXOZIDEAS FOR YOU! Buyanyqualifying Symantec product andwe’ll giveyou a checkfor $10.00! Fill out a coupon and mail it to us with your receipt to daim your rebate!“ But hurry! This Spring Break ends June 30,1994. Featured products are: Norton Utilities 8.0 for Windows/DOS Symantec C++ for Macintosh The Norton Utilities for Macintosh Symantec C++ for Windows Fastback Plus for Mac Professional and Standard Version Fastback Plus 6.0 for DOS The Norton Antivirus The Norton DiskLock for Windows/DOS for Windows/DOS Symantec Antivirus for Macintosh Coupons available a t you r cam pus bookstore. CRYPTOQUOTE A GP WAP O PLANNED OZ RAO VAG UW X R ZX OEA l.V G O A . — G X Z X . Y e s te rd a y 's C r y p to q u o te : INTUITION: THAT STRANGE INSTINCT THAT TELLS A W OMAN SHF. IS RIGHT, WHETHER SHE IS OR NOT.—METHODIST READER © 1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Call (800 ) 272-0569 fo r the Symantec authorized reseller nearestyou. SYM A NTEC. *Rebate only good for products listed. Symantec, the Symantec logo, the Norton Utilities, the Norton Antivirus and SAM are U.S. registered trademarks of Symantec Corporation. FastBack and the Norton DiskLock are trademarks of Symantec Corporation. Other brands and products are trademarks of their respective holder/s. © 1994 Symantec Corporation. Ail rights reserved. 820-103-20 2/94 09-71-00019 Page 7 Friday, April 29, 1994 State P ress Dreamed of jumping into Jell-O? STATE P ress Crosswords - For the cruciverbalist in you. D o it today at the rec center to benefit leukemia W it h *3 FREE 32-Oz. D 29 r in k w ith ted and green chile._ douW «üw m a__ _ _ e-wrappwl „ _ h i fresh tortillas, lettuce, tom ato & cheese. Choice o f chicken o r beef. O ne coupon per custom er per w sH .) Tem po: 216 E. University - just east o f Forest - 829-6026 Phoenix Locations: 12th St. & Van Buren, 253-1511 • Central & Southern, 276-7531 32nd Ave. & Van Buren, 272-3239 • New Location: 59th Ave. & Bethany Home, 934-6635 B y C hristina B ailey S tate P ress Watch it wiggle. See it jiggle. Three hundred gallons of cool, slippery gelatin ready for students to take a sticky plunge into, all in the name of charity. Gelatin Splash ‘94 will be held today at the Student Recreation Center from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. For five dollars, students and fac­ ulty can “take the plunge,” and for those who are not that ambitious, they can try to dunk someone for a dollar. “It can be a lot of fu n ,” said Donald Campopiana, program coordinator for the Leukemia Society. “How many people have thought about jumping in a tub filled with Jell-O before? Now they will have the oppor­ tunity.” The ASU ch ap ter of the A m erican M arketing A ssociation is sponsoring the event and will award prizes to the top four fund-raisers. The plunger who raises the most money from getting people to pay to dunk them will win the grand prize, a weekend in San Diego, California, with VIP tickets to Sea World. All the money and proceeds will help to fight the number one disease killer of chil­ dren, leukemia. Over 80,000 Americans will be afflic ted w ith this disease, said Campopiana. The Leukemia Society currently supports over 200 researchers at universities and insti­ tutions throughout the United States and abroad. Two of them are at the University of Arizona. CASHFORBOOKS SELLYOURTEXTBOOKS BACKTOROTHER’S * HIGHESTPRICES PAID • FAST&FRIENDLYSERVICE Classifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or in v ested , you may w ish to investigate die company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the o ffers ad v ertised in our classified section. For more in fo rm a tio n and a ssistan c e regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 2641721. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS 1BD APT., fum., 2mi ASU, Re­ duced rent for yard & pool wile. $380 incl. util. 968-1309. ASU AREA 2bd lba avail. May 30. Take o v er lease fo r one month 858-9778 $516 + util. BIG 2BD, 2BA Share a beautiful apartment and keep your privacy. Everything new. $675 furnished. Closest to ASU. 910 E. Lemon (office 919 E. Lemon) 966-9000. APARTMENTS / tone MIWMII College is a place where pebbles are polished and diamonds are dimmed. -R o b e rt G . Ingersoll RENTAL S H A R IN G _ _ 2BD1BA Old Town across street from Gammage, $575/mo. Tim 894-0288. 3 MONTH summer vacation spot at Meridian Comers, overlooking pool and tennis courts, 2bd 2ba furnished. M/F $275/mo + util. Please call John 894-6671. C A M P U S CLO SE! Rent now or hold for Fall. 2bd lba, all new carpet, tile, cabinets, appliances. From $475. Great Lo­ cations Rental Services 968-8886. 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. 2 BD FROM $525 All utilities included, 2.5 miles to campus. Great Locations Rental Service 968-8886. 4 BD 2 BA, pool. 1702 S. LaRosa. W alk to ASU. $1150/ month. Tim 894-0288. 4BD 2BA, 2 lvng rms, pool, lg. yard, garage $850/mo. 833-2086 Felipe or Nelson. LARGE 5 bd, 3 ba hse, pool, w/d, dishw'r, etc. $1200,2nd 5 bd hse, $1000. Apache/Rural. 437-1048. RESORT CONDO Attractive master bedroom $250, loft $215 + util. ea. See! 3518683. lv msg. RMTE WANTED asap! To share 2bd twnhs. $325/mo. for April, May & June. Call 498-8040. OLD TOWN 3bd & 4bd. Beauti­ ful yard, walk to ASU. 3bd-$725; 4bd-$900. Tim, 894-0288. RMTE WANTED mid-Maythru Sept, nego. Mobile home on 5 acres nr. S. Mntn. 20 min. from ASU. $200/mo + util. 276-1860. Walk to ASU Quiet, spacious, 1 bedroom, furnished, A/C, poolside apartments TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT ROOMMATE WANTED 3bd house, close to campus, $220/mo + util. 966-7301. $280/m onth George Ann Apts. 8 94-2620 2BD 1 1/4BA, Pagago Paik Vil­ lage, pool, w/d, balcony, fum/unfum. $975/mo. 921-8860. ROOMMATE WANTED nice spacious apartment, large bed­ room , priv. bathroom , nice kitchen, dining room , living room $283 per mo. Call 899-4619 $ 2 0 0 OFF $100.00 OFF MOVE-IN* HOMES FOR RENT $ 2 0 0 OFF! FREE UTILITIES! Walk to ASU..: Spacious, 2 bedroom apartments. A/C, fur­ nished or unfurnished available. From $440/ month. Beautiful pool area, laundry facilities available FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1224 E. Lemon 894-2620 Dm ' n i» the Stitt Fini Editila ■ut Tiitliy! Prin 3 BD 1 1/2 BA clean. Pool. New appliances, $450/mo. 10 mins from ASU. 438-7141. 3 BD 2BA, washer/dryer, fire­ place, enclosed-patio, $750/mo. Yr. lease. Avail. 5/15.951-1589. 3BD 2BA TH, w/d, mjr app. S o u th ern /H ard y , A vail 6/1. $600/mo. + deposit. 814-8690. LOS PRADOS 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes, $600$850/month. Washer-dryer, ten­ nis, volleyball, pools. 784-2470. LUXURY 3BR 2ba condo. All appl., ASU area, $825/mo. Bill 966-7790, mb. 602-309-9312. RENTAL SHARING BEAUTIFUL S. Mtn, large 3 bd, 2ba furnished home w/pool, non­ smoking, all amen. 276-9445. NEAR ASU, nonsmk, 1700 sf hse,ac/evap, w/d,fp,clngfns $200 mo+l/4util Bob 990-2284 avS/10 SUM MER RMTE w anted to share 2 bd, 2 1/2 ba, apt. at Papago Peaks. Fum. $28Q/mo (neg) +1/2 util. Call 231-8826, Heinz. NEXT TUESDAY will be the final edition o f the State Press this semester. Don't miss our first summer issue June 1. RO O M S FOR RENT CH EA P SUMMER housing! $500 total. Utils incl! Call 4504757 for information. M/F QUESTA Vida 2 rooms for rent in big 3bd/3ba wash/dryer $295mo+1/3 utilities avail. 5/16. Kris 967-1871. QUESTA VIDA room, wash­ er/dryer, f/p, pool, spa, indoor raquetball. 968-7132. Avail 5/13. ROOMMATE FOR a 2bd 2ba ¿ondo at Hayden Square. Avail 8/1 .$350/mo+1/2 util. W/D, own room & bath. Call Jen 784-6014. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE $200 DN. + take over payment, lmi from ASU. 2bd 2 ba. 714582-9148.__________________ 2BD CONDO, mi. to ASU, new carpet & paint, pool. Russ Lyon Realty, Sally Devney, 991-2929. 2BD, 1BA, Papago Park Condo, near pool,ground level. $65,000. Gruender Properties 840-9518. 3 BD CO-OP apt, $21,450, vicin­ ity ASU, pets ok, bus on comer, parking covered. 945-9013. CONDO 2BD, 2ba, f/p, all major appl incl, $700/mo. Questa Vida, 7J4-582-9148. POOLSIDE TOWNHOUSE 2bd, 1.5 bath, neutral colors, park area, close to ASU $46,900. Century 21 AM (602) 831-1114. WHY RENT when you can own? 2bd, 2ba, sunny, airy, safe, f/p, com. pool. Low 40s. 833-4317. WHY RENT? When you can own! 2 bd, 2 ba condo. Refrig, d/w, r/o. W/D hookup. $44,900. 616 S. Hardy, #132. Call Diane Lain, C21 All-Star, 831-2221. B uy O f T he W eek Now that you've made it, make it at Papago Park Village: 2 bd condo poolside, $71,900; 2 master suites + loft, $85,000. B o b B u llo ck R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 G ARAGE SALES WISE MONKEY yard sale, Fri. & Sat. Music, clothes, art, junk. 1420 S. Jentilly, off Spence. MiSC F O R J A y i_ _ CONVOCATION ROBE and mortarboard, black. $30. Call 966-5093. M ISC. FOR SALE DISCONTINUED AND overstocked items, jewelry, hair accesories, bags, belts, and misc. items. Fri. May 6 ,9am-?, 1019 N. Stadem Dr. Tempe. I WANT to rent or buy a dorm frig. ;Also selling a 2 pc. oak wall unit, value $1000, asking $500. 759-8449, ext 7869. lv msg. M ISTRAL COM P TCS sail­ board. Great beg/int. $240. Pgr; 902-9634; 956-433 ilv . msg. TREADMILL- 2 yrs old. V. good condition. Still under warranty. DP Brand - $100.921-7108. FURNITURE ~~ 4 SALE. Couch, chair, bed, din­ ner table, and much more. Very cheap. Jason 731-6396. QN BED & drsr $125/set obo. Call Jen 947-4867. COMPUTERS POWERBOOK140,6 meg ram, 40 hd, all manuals and System 7 software. $910 obo. 990-2678. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu.: gold, ster., pearls, gems, an­ tiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921S. Mill Ave., Tempe Center 968-6074. TICKETS EAGLES, DEPECHE Mode, great seats for great prices. Steve, 921-7150 or 280-2881. JACKS TICKETS 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, $30/ea. Also available- Depeche Mode, Salt N Pepa, Meatloaf, Eagles, and more!! 254-3300. . Page 8 V - ‘ State P ress Friday, April 29, 1994 * rmt w * .. 't ! • « •« * •' ’ • -V. * 1 .- :v P f é . i t t a ÿ é à p f t^Ó d^E Ìì£fT ^M E ^*SüSkE^î^li^fV^i-' ". |;-| •e i ^ L M i ì ì ì ' i f x s ^ f ì y â t t ê (x to in e q ^ a sp E fie n fe r. i, H ardw are .th ^ ^ d a ^ g n e fc iqd^s -ffer ficuäarcls ppcusl^arfeìs^v If we d o n 't h a v e it, w e 'll g e t it fo r yo u. ^ ftc^pd t p a ^ è jÜ -9 rf\j.ç e ’p îb à fte t'fe ;c n fte qjttjiyng, ' ’ •Hardware »Housewares »Phone & TV Cable »Lumber »Paint »Plumbing Supplies •Tools »Balsa Wood »Model-making Supplies »Plus Special Orders 968-4544 Apache Broadway Rural 9 2 9 E. Broadway Blimpie PPRI Tempe Wherehouse Records (S.E. Corner of Rural & Broadway) M-F 7:30a.m . - 8p.n sat. •“ ¿ ¡"T 9a.m . - 5p.m . World news. F a r S id e c a r to o n s . State news. SALUTES M E N S I N T R A M U R A L EXCELLENCE C la ssifie d a d s . Sports. M EN 'S INTRAM URAL CHAMPIONS C o u p o n s. SAND VOLLEYBALL SAND VOLLEYBALL 4 on 4 D o u b les A Division - Espersen/Smith B Division - Finals: Elliott/Gandy Yeager/Jacobs A Division - SAE B Division - MBA Co-Rec Division - 4 Play POWERLIFTING SOFTBALL 149 lbs. 165 lbs. 182 lbs. 198 lbs. 220 lbs. A Division - Finals (Best of 3 Series) Sigma Phi Epsilon Rookies B Division - We Stink C Division - 12“ Balls Ian Gallicano Clay Fong Victor Felicion Jason Moody Jody Dutton ASU news. C rossw ord puzzles. Weekly magazine. T h e a te r a d s. Police Report. C o m ic strip s. Opinions. Cryptoquote puzzles. In-depth features. H e lp w a n te d a d s . Letters to the editor. Daily horoscopes. FORMULA has more f r t c t i ^ W M W W f i c a n t s than ever to protect you from nicies *n d cuts better than foams. For a closer, smoother shave, it'sjust in the nick of time. ; 1983SCJohnson&Sor.IncAltngMsreserved m H UUniM /UE CLOSENESS. ULTIMATE COMFORT. THAT'S THE EDGE. City & county news. advertising in s e r ts . ‘S tate P ress S ta te P ress Friday, April 29,1994 *high prices paid *fast and friendly service ASU BOOKSTORE 2 Convenient Campus Locations tiT rn a iiT ^ n No S t r i n g s A t t a c h e d . . . ASU Bookstore R e c e iv e y o u r A SU B o o k s t o r e BUYBACK DATES: M O N . T H U R S. FRI. SA T . ( 5 / 7 ) SAT. ( 5 / 1 4 ) M A Y 1 6 -1 8 8 6 8 5 9 -4 1 0 ;2 orange mall Bookstore Connection Byy Back bonus coupon w o r th orange mall ! M AY 4 14 Bookstore Connection MON. TU ES. W ED. 8 5 8 -5 8 5 20% OFF OUTSIDE MU ON SOUTHEAST PATIO w h e n y o u sell y o u r te x tb o o k s back! OTHER SURPRISES TOO!! BUYBACK DATES: MAY 9-13 MON.-FRI. 9-4 Sta te P ress Friday, April 29, 1994 Page 10 if their luks to be som ething w rong w ith this sentance, its true we have a job for you The State Press is anticipating the fall semester, and the copy desk is soliciting applications for copy editors. Applicants must be students at ASU and have a good knowledge of Associated Press style, spelling and grammar. (Hopefully, in the English-language). To apply, pick up an application at the State Press offices, Room 15, Matthews Center basement. Applicants will be required to take the Associated Press copy test. Applications should be received by May 6. W edding F lowers Bring in this ad for 10% off an y w e d d in g flow er purchase ordered b y 5-31-94. Fresh Flowers • Silk Flowers Custom Packages • Balloons Ceremony/Reception Decoration G reat Prices Jill Clark P la y SPORTS* W in $25,000 Trade imaginary shares of major league baseball teams over the Internet using the exciting new * SPorts Online Remote Trading System Flowers for a ll aspects of wedding decorating Only $ 8 9 .0 0 for a S e a t on th e SPORTS'*' Exchange No Brokerage Fees Inside Crismon's • 55 E. Main • Mesa, Arizona 85201 $ $ $ Cash Prizes for 2 5 W inners !!! 834-8016 Please call for free information package. For more info send e-mail to: sports@panix.com and include "sports" in the body of the message. Hewlett-Packard Workstations for Arizona State University "HP" SERIOUS PERFORMANCE! SERIOUS PRICES! N ew If this looks out o f focus, you have som ething to aim for. 7 I Z / 6 O a n d 7 1 2 / 8 0 A v a ila b le N o w ! UTILIZE YOUR FREE- HP EDUCATION SOFTWARE SITE LICENSE! Hewlett-P«rkarri Series 700 Workstations: Technical Summary and Pricing 712/60 712/80 715/75 735/125 MFLOPS (DP) 12.8 30.6 31 57 SPEC INT92 58.1 84.3 80.3 135 SPEC FP92 79 122.3 126.8 201 128MB 128MB 256MB 400MB 5.9/1.1M 8.2/1.45M 7.7/1M 9.4/1.2M Performance: Memory Capacity Xmark/Xl 1 Special.................. Educational Pricing w/Color Monitor and Keyboard: Net Net Net Net 15", 260MB Disc, 16MB Ram $ 2,989 n/a n/a n/a 17", 260MB Disc, 16MB Ram $ 3,753 $ 5,735 n/a n/a 17", 1GB Disc, 32MB Ram $ 5,624 $ 7,607 n/a n/a 17" Hi-Res, 1GB Disc, 32MB Ram $ 5,885 $ 7,867 n/a nia 19", 1GB Disc, 32MB Ram $ 6,925 $ 8,907 $ 8,583 $19,552 Up to 20% additional discount with eligible trade-in. All prices subject to change. For ordering information, call Jason Haynes 1-800-742-6795, x3591 E-Mail: jason@I2426A.nsr.hp.com The State Press is anticipating the fall semester, and the photo desk is soliciting applica­ tions for photogra­ phers. Applicants must be students at ASU, own their own photo equip­ ment and be able to shoot and devel op photo assign­ ments for the State Press and State Press Magazine. To apply, pick up an application at the State Press offices, Room 15, Matthews Center basement. A port­ folio of pho­ tographs would be appreciated. Applications should be received by May 6. P a g e 11 F rid a y , A p r il 2 9 , 1 9 9 4 S tate P ress P olice Report Harbins lu x u ry theatres ■ ■ P b efo re ( P t t M Gourmet Snodi Bar • Stereo Surround Sound “ t d iwom s p u H n i i M i n n • “Best o f Phoenix" Snack Bars • Lowest Admission Prices • FKE Refill on Large Popcorn & Large Drink • Advance Ticket Sales P C U •wmngcnrn «W » o e m sm m a w r F W THX 1:00. 3:00. 5:00. 7:00. 9:00. 1 1 3 0 . 1 2 :4 6 H i m . S IR E N S nm wwnw nm m a r m i i r n p r 1 0 5 .3 :2 0 . 5 :3 5 .8 :0 0 . 10:15.12:20 am * E xd u slvl TEX TOUR WEDDINGS A A FUNERAL 12.-00. 2:2 5 .4 :6 5 . 7:25. 10:05. 12:30 am * THE PA PER * W M « * w .4 0imp.Cw 0 7 5 12.-05. 2:30. 5:05. 7:35. 10:06 * BRAINSCAN Smmnp Emm* Famng A Fmwtsngm. 12:45. 3.0 0. 5:15. 7 :40,9:50. 12:05 9m ba CH A SERS n u * OOUOU 1 1 5 .5 30 10:00 SURVIVING THE GAME 3 3 0 . 7:50.12:15 am C O P S A ROBBERSONS cnmw enema Jem amno 12:25. 2:40. 4 :55. 7 10 9:15, Midnight m __________ MAJORLEAOUS1 NAKED GUN 33 1/3 CHASERS r, 7:50. 1 0 :0 0 ** 12:10. 2:40. 5:10. 7:30. 9 :50. MMnwftt ». 3 SO. 7:20, Midnight m 2:40. 5:00. 9 30 _ NAKED GUN 33 1/3 130. 3 30- 5 30. 7.30.830 reo, 1:15. 3:15.5:15. 7:15.9:19 oo s ' , l „ w f a ilc e / W **8 « « ' $2.00 OFF YOUR FAVORITE MUSIC! IT2 :71 I I Rural & Broadway Location Only I I »’s i js c d ^ ’ This coupon is good for $$2.00 O FF any non-sale priced compact disc or cassette regularly priced at $7.99 or above. Only one coupon can be used per visit Excludes sale and used product. Coupon cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer. Not redeemable for cash. Offer expires 5-15-94. Tomorrow Only 11am - 6pm Rural & Broadway Location only At ©H J L 9 è 9 6 6 -4 0 0 4 937 E . B roadw ay R d. Tempe * ch e e se p a s s p o r t ToP H it s “'» a y s 0 0 s a le ! T he S ta te P ress is already anticipating the fall semester, and the city desk is soliciting applications for part-tim e and fu ll-tim e reporters. Applicants must be stu­ dents at ASU and have a good know ledge of Associated Press style, writ­ ing ability, an interest in ASU news and an ability to meet deadlines (that’s dead­ line: no p ro crastin ato rs, please.) Part-time reporters are responsible for three sto­ rie s a w eek; fu ll-tim e reporters for five. To apply, pick up an ap p licatio n at the State P ress o ffices. Room 15, Matthews Center basement. Applicants should enclose writing samples. Applications should be received by May 6. p h o t o s $ 7 . 9 5 lo r 2 F ull c o lo r P assport photos S u it a b le f o r U .S . p a s s p o r t s BROADW AY'S HOTTESTMl BCWRKTO THEVALLEY! H i* a lte rn a tiv e copy shop 9 1 5 South M ill A v e ., Tem pe, A Z Phone 8 2 9 - 7 9 9 2 i* c? ♦ 1 k •* MUSIC AND LYRICS BY MTf TOWNSH1ND BOOK BY MTf TOWNSHIND A DCS McANUFF LISTEN TO F R O M T HE K B A Q D I G I T A L P R O D U C T I O N C E N T E R P A R T O F K A E T . / A R I Z O N A STATE U N I V E R S I T Y KlBAQ-FM CLASSICAL 89.5 ♦ Thursday at 8:30 PM In C e le b r a tio n o f M u s ic in A riz o n a ASU Lyric O pera Theatre production of G ian Carlo M enotli's The Medium M entertabunent juggernaut that lifts the audienceright eat of its seats!' -Fraak Bica, Iht Mo vert Thaes OPENS TUESDAY! MAY 3 -8 • GAMMA6E AUDITORIUM Tickets on sale today at the Gammage Auditorium Box Office & all Dillard’s outlet^ Tickets subject to applicable service charge. CHARGE BY PHONE: Kf l S tt Gammage: 965-3434 or Dillard’s: 678-2222 N W W C H A N N & k) W k jg k P age 13 Friday, April 29,1994 S tate P ress Think you can write better than the columnists? Here’s your chance to prove it. 5 guys 4 legends 3 lovers 2 friends 1band The Stale Press is already anticipating the fall semester, and the Editorial Board is already accepting applications for columnists and cartoonists. Applicants must be'students at ASU and have opinions (the ability to describethem in print is highly desirable.) To apply, pick up an application at the State Press offices, Room 15, Matthews Center basement. The applications deadline is May 6. C O S T A R IC A Vacation while learning Spanish U, - W l '■ ISLS, the Institute for Spanish Language Studies represents five language schools in Costa Rica. You will learn Spanish in the * ' ' best known way, total immersion. Along with four hours of class a day you will also stay with a Costa Rican family. If • 4 \ you are looking for a new & unique experience, this may be it! Tsm m Don't let th e opportunity o f a -life tim e pass you by! # si FOR IN FO R M A TIO N CALL: (80 0 ) 765-0025 You know the m usic, but only h alf the story. J IlsBUSHIÜ« mil K in S I M ! "SUM BEH"“filliHIM* DID YOÜ KNOW? PolyGram ^ ^ o jawnwaianawtsá»miwswmi■; ; ' f thumm P M U « GRAM ERÇY T H E B E A T IS C O M IN G T O A T H E A T R E N E A R Y O U ! OPENS THIS FRIDAY Campus Corner (C ollege & University) 967-4049 2LOCATIONS At Chandler-Gilbert C om m unity College, you can get the lower division classes you need which transfer to ASU. In addition, consider the other benefits of attending CGCC: • • • • « • ^ «Beer & Soda •Photo Developing •Health & Beauty Aids •Compact Dises 712 S. C o lle g e IS L S We’re Understood Everywhere Small class sizes One-on-one with experienced faculty Low tuition Excellent com puter facilities W eekend college Expanded class offerings R & gister N ow fo r S um m er cm âW ÿÊ C la sses! Æ! 609 S. Mill Coll 732-7317 2626 E. Pecos Road (N.W. C om er of Pecos a n d Gilbert Roads) CHANDLER-GILBERT (Across from Coffee Plantation) 858-0567 C O M M U N IT Y COLLEGE A M aricopa C om m unity College ANY ASU SWEATSHIRT ^ I ■ [ I M 0 [ [ !■ M 0 f l f l -Nationall GreenMeans6a R egular$24.99 or more. if you are planning to drive East, pick up a National Car in Phoenix and deliver it to one of 34 cities. PAY ONLY FOR THE FUEL YOU USE! *2 OFF ANY T -SH IR T TOQUALIFY, CALL COLLECT (602) 573-8056 FOR INFO. Regular $9.99 or more. l^ jm it Cam pus Corner Expires 5/15/94 H ASU SOUVENIHS 2 BUY GET I FREE! j of eq u al or lesser value I Hats, coffee mugs, shot glasses, key chains, golf balls, sports bottles, & more! | |^ L im it2 Cam pus Corner Expires 5 /1 5 /9 ^ J s ILLINOIS Chicago Moline INDIANA Fort Wayne Indianapolis South Bend IOWA Cedar Rapids Des Moines Dubuque KANSAS Wichita KENTUCKY Lexington Louisville MICHIGAN Detroit Grand Rapids Lansing Muskegon Flint MINNESOTA Minneapolis Rochester Duluth MISSOURI Kansas City St. Louis OHIO Cincinatti Cleveland Toledo TENNESSEE Knoxville Nashville Memphis WISCONSIN Appleton EauClaire Green Bay LaCrosse Madison Milwaukee Mosinee Comics Page 14 Friday, April 29, 1994 Calvin and Hobbes DAD, Will TOU EXPLMM THE THEORY OF RELATWITT TOME’ I DOUX UNDERSTAND MU') , TIME GOES SLOWER AT GREAT SPEED. State P ress by Bill Watterson ITS BECAUSE TOV) KEEP CHANGING TIME ZONES. SEE, IF TOO FIT TO CALI­ FORNIA, TOO GAIN THREE HOURS ON A FWE-HCUR FLIGUT, RIGHT? GEE., THATS ^NELL, VIE MEN NOT INHAT ARE BETTERAT MOM SAID ABSTRACT AT A ll.' SHE REASONING. MUST BE GO TELL HER TOTALLY OFF THAT, y HER ROCKER SO IF TOO GO AT THE SPEED OF LIGHT, TOO GAIN MORE TIME, BECAUSE IT DCESHT TAKE AS LONG TO GET THERE. OF COURSE, THE THEORT OF RELATNITT ONLT WORKS IF TCWRE GCAN6 'NEST. THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON ) j l j ç t i D o o n e s b u ry PAPOS, ARE THEREKAIL'S 599 INOREPIENTEIN EVERS 06A- S f. . l L BY GARRY TRUDEAU SUP! THEMOST IMPORTANTOF WHICH15 OOP__ _ LES OF PRIPE! NOFUTURS? SWEETCAKES, THERESEASIA! THE MAIN ( ¿ T RRTTP? BURBANK, Calif. (AP) — Don Henley and the Eagles found they could split. They just couldn't stay apart. After going their own ways 14 years ago, Henley. Glenn Frey and other Eagles alumni are reuniting for a concert tour starting May 27. “We have grown up some,"Henley said Tuesday at the taping of an MTV special. “Doing the solo thing was nice, but there is som ething about being in a band that is magic.” F or the show , they sang “H otel California,’’“Life in the Fast Lane”and other 1970s Eagles hits. “Band m orale is h ig h ,’’Frey said. “Everybody is upbeat. We are having a good time. I couldn’t be happier.” EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — Giddy young girls by the hundreds stood in line for hours to meet Candace Cameron — a teen idol for the clean-cut set. The 18-year-old actress who plays D.J. Tanner in the sitcom “Full House”came to a downtown mall Wednesday. Adoring fans ate up her fresh-scrubbed image. W ith auto­ graphs clutched tightly, many walked away out of breath. “I think D.J. is really cool,"said Shannon Loutitt. 9, who traveled four hours to see her. “She’s smart, she’s a good girl and she’s not really wild.” C orinna C rockett, 13, T ikes “Full House”because it promotes family values. “They don’t send out bad ideas for drinking and sex,’’she said. Unlike earlier appearances in Canada, W ednesday’s visit was calm. The actress drew more than 10,000 fans at a Winnipeg mall last month. One girl suffered a seizure and others collapsed. A crowd of 2,000 teen-agers — worried they wouldn’t get a chance to meet Cameron — rushed the stage at a mall in Nova Scotia the same weekend. PORTLA N D , O re. (AP) — At 75, folksinger Pete Seeger concedes that much of his vocal strength is gone. “My voice is 75 percent gone,”he says, “I haven’t sung ‘If I Had a H am m er’ in 20 years. I just sing the first line and. shout out the words for the audience to sing.” Seeger started his career in 1940, sharing the stage with other folksingers Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly. He was in Portland to perform at a benefit Wednesday night for Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste — the Northwest treeplanters and farmworkers union. He also plans to help dedicate the union hall. BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Britain’s Prince Charles told Hungarian business lead­ ers they’re doing a bang-up job. “It is impressive to witness the progress you have made since my visit of four years ago,”he said Wednesday in the former com­ munist nation. Charles heads Business Leaders Forum Seminar, a group founded in February, 1990 as communist rule collapsed in Hungary. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A bad back sidelined singer Wynonna, who had to pass on appearances on the ‘Tonight Show”and a gospel music awards show. • She was hospitalized last week for a rup­ tured spinal disc and pinched nerve. Her doc­ tor advised her Wednesday to rest until at least May 4 and undergo physical therapy, spokeswoman Elizabeth Thiels said. 1 She canceled appearanceson the Gospel Music Association’s Dove Awards show, Jay L en o ’s talk show and the A cadem y of Country Music Awards show. Wynonna, 29, is known for her hit “No One Else on Earth.”With her mother, Naomi, she form ed the aw ard-w inning duet, the Judds. LOS A N GELES (A P) — L isa M arie Presley and her husband, musician Danny Keough, have separated and are planning to divorce. “Danny and I will always love each other. However, friendship was more suitable for us than marriage,’’the 26-year-old daughter of Elvis Presley said in a statement Thursday. Miss Presley and Keough, 30, were mar­ ried in 1988. They will seek joint custody of their chil­ dren, Danielle, 5, and Benjamin, 1. T W O L A R G E P E P P E R O N I P IZ Z A S FOR ONLY $ 10.99! 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. ADD AN ORDER OF TWISTY BREAD™ TO ANY PIZZA ORDER FOR ONLY $ 1 .0 0 ! Specials valid at this location only. sO äN o a Now Accepting: Discover Card, Master Card, Visa & Marriott Maroon & Gold*. Item substitions available where applicable. Not valid with any othercoupons, oilers or specials. Oilers expire 5-15-94. Customer pays aH sales tax where applicable. Limited delivery areas to ensure safety. Our drivers cany less than $20.00. "Adminitrative transaction fee is added to transactions paid tor with M & Q Card. Sports Friday, April 29 , 1994 ____________________________________________ __________________P a g e I S S tate P ress S ports Briefs A — ‘W a r d ’ N ations top-ranked golfer sparks ASU’s team unity W om an file s restra in in g order against Giants’ Bonds Alleging that Barry Bonds threatened her son’s life, a Riverside woman filed a petition for a restraining order against the San Francisco Giants star, a newspaper repotted. Shirley Lewis says in her petition that on April 7, “Barry Bonds came to my business and made threats on my scat's life,” the R iverside-Press Enterprise reported today. Lewis and her son, Sam Green, work at a Riverside hair salon. A message left with the team’s public relations department was passed on to Bonds, who was playing in Montreal last night He referred the matter to his agent, Dennis Gilbert. Stanley Cap Playoffs CONFERENCE QUARTERFINALS (Best-of-7) Late game not included Detroit 7, San lose 1 Series tied 3-3 Toronto I, Chicago 0 Toronto wins series 4-2 Calgary at Vancouver (n) NBA Playoffs FIRST ROUND (Best-of-5) Miami 93. M anta 88 Miami leads series i-0 Indiana 89, Orlando 88 Indiana leads series i-0 San Antonio 106, Utah 89 San Antonio leads series 1-0 Seattle 106, Denver 82 Seattle leads series 1-0 Baseball Roundup AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 4, Oakland 1 Chicago 5, Cleveland 3 Milwaukee 12, Minnesota 2 Kansas City 13, Detroit 4 Texas 1. Toronto 0 Baltimore 4, California 2 Seattle 6, New York 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE Florida 8, Colorado 7 Atlanta at S t Louis, ppd., rain Chicago 5, Houston 3,11 innings Cincinnati 19, Pittsburgh 7 Compiled from AP reports w in n e r C raig M acnaughton/S tate P ress ASU golfer Wendy Ward has provided the No. 1 Sun Devils with teamleadership in addition to her individual accomplishments. At a recent sports awards banquet, she received the Heather Farr Award, the CoStudent-Athlete of the Year Award and the team’s Most Valuable Player Award. B y J ulie R euvers State P ress With her team five strokes off the lead and with just three holes left to play in the 1994 Pac-10 Championships on Wednesday, it would have been easy for ASU golfer Wendy Ward to think only of herself. The top-ranked collegiate player on the nation’s No. 1 team, Ward was also fighting to defend her individual conference title. “I said, ‘There’s no way we’re going to lose this tour­ nament — We gotta go!”’ Ward said about her reaction at the 15th hole. “I was trying to look down all the remain­ ing fairways and trying to find my players and give them a pump of the fist and say, ‘Come on, let’s go.’” A member of one of the elite women’s lineups assem­ bled in college golf, Ward has helped provide the Sun Devils with a motivational team atmosphere as well as polishing off her own incredible record. In eight appearances this season, the native of San Antonio, Texas, has managed no less than eight top-10 finishes, having claimed medalist honors a total of four times. Ward’s season stroke average of 73.47 is the team low. “She’s a hard worker, and she’s also very dedicated and motivated,” ASU coach Linda Vollstedt said of Ward. “But she’s also very focused and she’s a very strong goalsetter. ... She is very much a team player and also an excellent team leader.” At the first annual W ings o f G old/H eather F arr Awards Banquet on April 18, Ward came away with the Heather Farr Award, the Co-Student-Athlete of the Year Award and the golf team’s Most Valuable Player. “She’s a good example and a really good student,” said teammate Kristel Mourgue d’Algue, a native of France. “She cares about everybody on the team. For me, it was my first year here even though I’m a junior, but she made me feel like part of the team the first day.” Turn to W ard, page 16. B aseball look s for w in over UCLA B y T o d d Kelly State P ress O f ASU baseball coach Jim B rock’s 1,055 career wins, 67 have come by defeat­ ing the UCLA Bruins. H e’d like to have three more over the Bruins this weekend to stay in the Pac-10 Southern Division race. “As far as any chance to win the confer­ ence championship, we’re going to have to play extremely well this weekend,” Brock said. “More than likely winning two of three would be minimal, but UCLA is a good enough ballclub where you never know. They do have three or four players that can hurt you.” The only school Brock’s ASU teams have beat more than UCLA is UofA, having done it 91 times, including four times this season. But the Bruins, themselves out of postseason play with a 14-28 record (7-14 Six-Pac), could spoil the Sun Devils chances of a sec­ ond-straight conference title. “I’m not sure it will have any material gain as far as we have a chance to have a regional anyway. I think w e’re already in postseason play,” Brock said. “(But) we won the Six-Pac championship last year and it’s a lot of fun.” The Sun Devils lead the Six-Pac in hitting with a .332 batting average, led by center fielder Jacob Cruz’s .407. Cruz also leads the conference in hits with 85. In fact, the top four players in hits in the Six-Pac are Sun Devils: Antone Williamson with 71, Damon Lembi with 66, and Scott Shores, who has 65. Shores also leads the Six-Pac in home runs with 18. Brock sounded satisfied with his team’s accomplishments this season, despite some adversity. “It’s been good,” he said. “Some ups and some downs but not too many. I think we’ve been able to fill in some areas where we were concerned, with Cody McKay not being able to play and seeing Jeff Rensmeyer come in and do as well as he has in that particular spot, and then of course Todd Cady. He’s catching very well, but he’s having trouble getting his timing back on his hitting. “There’s been the injury factors. But as it turns out, we’ve still won 35 and lost 14 and that’s not too bad.” Softball travels to California, FSU Banquet honors ASU looks to even 2 ASU athletes series, get revenge B ria n F itzg e ra ld /S ta te Press Freshman pitcher Carrie James joins the ASU softball team on the road this weekend. The Sun Devils travel to California on Saturday and Fresno State on Sunday. They will attempt to even out the series with both teams. B y T o d d K elly State P ress The ASU softball team, winner of three of its last four games, is on the road again, this time with thoughts of revenge. The Sun Devils (19-36 overall, 4-14 Pac10) Jjlay at No. 14 California Saturday and at No. 6 Fresno State Sunday, where they will attempt to even out the season series with both teams. “They’re obviously still tough games,” ASU head coach Linda Wells said. “Then w e’ll come home and play Oregon and Oregon State.” Earlier this season, the Golden Bears beat the Sun Devils 10-4 and 6-0 on March 12, on their way to a 37-17 overall record and an 8-10 conference record. Cal is fifth in the Pac-10, nine games behind first-place UofA. The Bulldogs, 37-10 overall and 16-1 in the W estern A thletic Conference, have defeated the Sun Devils two of three times Turn to Softball, page 16. F rom Staff R eports Senior basketball player Stevin “Hedake” Smith and senior golfer Tracy Cone were named the Sun Angel Foundation Athletes of the fc i Í V T Mm Year Thursday at the foundation’s banquet. Cone is having the best year of her career and was an AH-Pac-10 \ selection this season. She notched ■ Jl . medalist honors at the prestigious C one Jo sten s/S an Jose T ournam ent March 4-6, carding a low round of 71 while leading ASU to a first-place finish. She also finished in a ninth-place tie at the Pac-10 Championships. Smith, the school’s all-time leading scorer with 1,673 points, led the Sun Devils in points per game (18.5), min­ utes per game (38.5), assists (142), steals (70), field goals made (159), three-pointers made (96) and attempted (260) and free throws made (103) and attempted (133). Smith, who was named the team Most Valuable Player this sea­ son, is also the school leader in career steals with 246 and ranks third on the career assist chart at ASU with 416. NEW YORK (AP) — The 1994 NFL schedule is filled with firsts, from Fox Network's opening telecast featuring Super Bowl champion Dallas vs. Pittsburgh to the first matchup of fath er and son coaches — Mi a mi ’s Don Shula vs. Cincinnati’s David Shula. The Cowboys, under new coach Barry Switzer, begin their bid for an unprecedented third-straight Super Bowl title on Sunday, Sept. 4 when they visit Pittsburgh. It will be the first regular-season NFL game televised by Fox, which out­ bid CBS for rights to NFC games. “We are very pleased with our inaugural ‘NFL on FOX’ schedule," Fox Sports president David Hill said Thursday after the league released its ’94 regular-season schedule. “We’ve got the Super Bowl champion Cowboys 11 times and some great matchups, including (Joe) Montana’s first ever game against his old mates in San Francisco and a rematch of the NFC championship game.” The Buffalo Bills, who have lost the last four Super Bowls, open their season Sept. 4 against the New York Jets. The first Sunday night game on TNT will match San Diego at Denver. ABC’s Monday night series kicks off its 25th year with the Los Angeles Raiders at the San Francisco 49ers. San Francisco receiver Jerry Rice needs only three touchdowns to pass Jim Brown as the NFL’s all-time TD leader. The second week of the season will be highlighted by Montana’s matchup against the 49ers, the team he led to four Super Bowl championships. The 49ers visit Arrowhead Stadium on Sept. 11 to take on M ontana’s Kansas City Chiefs. Norv Turner, who left his offensive coordinator job in Dallas to become coach in Washington, will lead his new team against his old team twice, on Oct. 2 in Washington and Nov. 20 in Dallas. The battle of the Shulas will take place Oct. 2 in a Sunday night game in Cincinnati. Don Shula is the winningest coach in NFL history with a 309-143-6 mark, while son David is 824 in two years as the Bengals’ coach. Former Philadelphia coach Buddy Ryan and ex-Eagles Seth Joyner and Clyde Simmons return to the City of Brotherly Love on Nov. 6 with their new team, the Arizona Cardinals. The rematch will take place in Phoenix on Nov. from page 1994 A r iz o n a C a r d i n a l s (All times are EST) S chedule Sept. 4 at Los Angeles Rams, 4 p.m. Sept. 11 New York Giants, 8 p.m. Sept. 18 at Cleveland, 1 p.m. Sept. 25 Bye Oct. 2 Minnesota, 4 p.m. Oct. 9 at Dallas, 4 p.m. Oct. 16 at Washington, 1 p.m. Oct. 23 Dallas, 4 p.m. Oct. 30 Pittsburgh, 8 p.m. Nov. 6 at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Nov. 13 at New York Giants, 1 p.m. Nov. 20 Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Nov. 27 Chicago, 4 p.m. Dec. 4 at Houston, 4 p.m. Dec. 11 Washington, 4 p.m. Dec. 18 Cincinnati, 4 p.m. Dec. 24 at Atlanta, 1 p.m. 20. Ryan also will return to Houston, where he was the defensive coordinator last season and where he threw a punch at Oilers’ offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride during a game against the New York Jets. Ryan’s Cardinals play the Oilers in the Astrodome on Dec. 4. The regular season concludes on Dec. 26, and the play­ offs begin with wild-card games on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. The divisional playoffs take place on Jan. 7-8, followed by the AFC and NFC championship games on Jan. 15. The Super Bowl will be played two weeks later, on Jan. 29 at Miami’s Joe Robbie Stadium. The NFL returns to a single, bye-week schedule in 1994, with each team playing its 16-game schedule over 17 weeks. Softball Ward Continued State P ress Friday, April 29,1994 P age 16 Continued from page 15. 15. Although Ward has enjoyed success in close to three years of collegiate golf, she hasn’t always had it so easy. She said she experienced frustrations with the sport when she began competing nationally at the junior level. At first, she wondered if having her parents yell at her would improve things. “A lot of the parents would say, ‘How could you shoot 85? T hat’s ridiculous,” ’ Ward said about players on the junior circuit. “I thought gosh, I could shoot 100 and my parents would still have their arms open. T hat’s how they’d greet me. They’d say, ‘Don’t worry about it, you can work on it. It’s not a problem, we still love you.’ “At first I thought maybe I do need them to jump on my case. But I look back now and it was probably the best thing. If I would have had that on top of playing poorly and me myself saying, ‘How could you have done that,’ then that would have added to it.” A finance m ajor, W ard spends many hours outside of golf on homework. She is on track to graduate in four years, something Vollstedt said happens rarely with golfers due to time constraints. “There’s no question she’s going to grad­ uate,” Vollstedt said. “She figured out how to do that in four years, whereas most of my players just can’t get it done in four years.” Although she would like to turn profes­ sional after she graduates, Ward said it is not something she thinks about every day. If she becomes an LPGA Tour member, Ward said she will definitely miss the team-atmosphere of collegiate golf. “You compete on an individual level but when you add up all the scores and say, ‘Hey, we won,’ that’s better than saying, ‘I won a tournament,’” Ward said. “That’s what I’ll miss about collegiate golf.” this season. “I want us to beat Cal,” Lisa Dacquisto said. “I want to beat Fresno in the worst way. We have to beat them. Those girls are very cocky, snobby, and they’re not very friendly. You want to beat teams like that because they deserve to get their butts kicked.” Leading the Sun Devils this season in hit­ ting is sophomore A lyssa Johnson. Last week, Johnson lifted her batting average to .361 after an 8-for-21 burst. She hit two dou­ bles and six RBIs, pushing her team-leading RBI total to 25. “We’re playing right along, doing well,” W ells said. “I plan on playing Jeanne Redondo at shortstop. She’s played better at shortstop and we’ve had more success with her.” Redondo, who normally plays first base, is just one Sun Devil finishing the season in unfamiliar territory. Tammy Lohmann, who started the season at shortstop, has watched the second half of the season from the side­ lines due to injury. Catcher Wendy Johnson is expected to finish her ASU career playing first base. UNIVERSITY PACK Apartments (Formerly The Millstone) ONE BLOCK TO A6U, 1005 E. University 42-Year U.S. Summer offers Flexible O ptions Requirements and 'A • / Price Dent for June & Julv J with J 1year lease • COME TO MEXICO FOR 6 Weeks (July 1-Aug. 10) o f Intensive Spanish - Earn 6-8 Credits! or 3 Weeks (Julyll-July 30) o f Intensive Spanish - Earn 4 Credits! or 5 Weeks (July 11-Aug. 10) o f Upper-Division Spanish, Literature, Anthropology, Political Science & Bilingual Education. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: Guadalajara Summer School • Mexican American Studies & Research Center Douglass Bldg., Room 315 • The University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 (602)621-7551 • • • • 2 bdr/2 bath Swimming pool Jacuzzi Unfurnished, furnished Barbecues • • • • • • Frost-free refrigerators Dishwasher Garbage disposal Vertical blinds C overed parking Water included Limited Spaces! Now D enting for August! NURSES: $ 9 ,5 2 8 a year to train. 227 W. University Terree 968-2557 724 E. Glendale Phoefix £§0-1507 Nurse anesthesia or operating room training can get you a $9,528 annual stipend with the Army Reserves New Specialized Training Assistance Program (STRAP). STRAP can also help you complete your B.S.N. - or earn a masters degree. T h in k about it. T hen th in k abou t us. T hen call us to STRAP yourself in: 1-800-235-2769 ext.321 B E A L L Y O U C A N BE.” ARMY RESERVE— S ta te P ress PageJ_7 Friday, April 29, 1994 STATE P ress Crosswords - For the cruciverbalist in you. Watch the birdie JO E BRENDAN FRASER• M O IR A KELLY P A T R IC K DEMPSEY J O S H HAMILTON I f you want a degree go to Harvard. If you want an education g oto Simon Wilder. a KK KLSHftOli\NflLM JOE PESCI BRENDAN FKASF.K mmm ftmwsiT mww® -w jm m m LEONARD *<» ;< A B t H M » J O N PETERS .vs PETER O T AE **WÊKR&VS WAMÏ RoBINNA .*«?> IW itw ... :~:t . Ny ' . ' S, — -■._________________________ F re d e rick M edanich/S tate P ress Senior Chris Stutts will be one of six Sun Devils com peting at the Pac-10 Championships May 1-4 at the UofA. No. 2 ASU will also be represented by Todd Demsey, Christopher Hanell, Scott Johnson, Larry Barber and Cade Stone. NOW PLAYING Classifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or in v ested , you may w ish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more in fo rm atio n and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 2641721. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS 1BD APT., film., 2mi ASU, Re­ duced rent for yard & pool wrk. $380 incl. util. 968-1309. ASU AREA 2bd lba avail. May 30. Take over lease for one month 858-9778 $516 + util. BIG 2BD, 2BA Share a beautiful apartment and keep your privacy. Everything new. $675 furnished. Closest to ASU. 910 E. Lemon (office 919 E. Lemon) 966-9000. Casa Grande J APARTMENTS — $100.00 OFF MOVE-IN* - ........*f HOMES FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING 2BD 1BA Old Town across street from Gammage, $575/mo. Tim 894-0288. 3 MONTH summer vacation spot at Meridian Comers, overlooking pool and tennis courts, 2bd 2ba furnished. M/F $275/mo + util. Please call John 894-6671. CAMPUS CLOSE! Rent now or hold for Fall. 2bd lba, all new carpet, tile, cabinets, appliances. From $475. Great Lo­ cations Rental Services 968-8886. 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. 2 BD FROM $525 All utilities included, 2.5 miles to campus. Great Locations Rental Service 968-8886. 4 BD 2 BA, pool. 1702 S. LaRosa. W alk to ASU. $1150/ month. Tim 894-0288. 4BD 2BA, 2 lvng rms, pool, lg. yard, garage $850/mo. 833-2086 Felipe or Nelson. LARGE 5 bd, 3 ba hse, pool, w/d, dishw’r, etc. $1200; 2nd 5 bd hse, $1000. Apache/Rural. 437-1048. . „„, • 1 Mock to ASU PHONE TODAY! A+ Management & Investment *CaU for details ROOMMATE WANTED 3bd house, close to campus, $220/mo + util. 966-7301. 2BD 1 1/4BA, Pagago Park Vil­ lage, pool, w/d, balcony, fum/unfum. $975/mo. 921-8860. ROOMMATE WANTED nice spacious apartment, large bed­ room , priv. bathroom , nice kitchen, dining room, living room $283 per mo. Call 899-4619 3 BD 1 1/2 BA clean. Pool. New appliances, $450/mo. 10 mins from ASU. 438-7141. LOS PRADOS LUXURY 3BR 2ba condo. All appl., ASU area, $825/mo. Bill 966-7790, mb. 602-309-9312. RENTAL |H A R IN ^ _ _ Y0ÜR DAILY DOSE College is a place where pebbles are polished and diamonds are dimmed. -Robert G. Ingersoll RMTE WANTED asap! To share 2bd twnhs. $325/mo. for April, May & June. Call 498-8040. TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes, $600$850/month, Washer-dryer, ten­ nis, volleyball, pools. 784-2470. 1855 E. Don Garios Attractive master bedroom $250, loft $215 + util. ea. See! 3518683. lv msg. RMTE WANTED mid-May thru Sept, nego. Mobile home on 5 acres nr. S. Mntn. 20 min. from ASU. $200/mo + util. 276-1860. 3BD 2BA TH, w/d, mjr app. Southern/H ardy, A vail 6/1. $600/mo. + deposit. 814-8690. .... RESORT CONDO OLD TOWN 3bd & 4bd. Beauti­ ful yard, walk to ASU. 3bd-$725; 4bd-$900. Tim, 894-0288. 3 BD 2BA, washer/dryer, fire­ place, enclosed-patio, $750/mo. Yr. lease. Avail. 5/15.951-1589. V— a n «•cm»! APARTMENTS BEAUTIFUL S. Mtn, large 3 bd, 2ba furnished home w/pool, non­ smoking, all amen. 276-9445. NEAR ASU, nonsmk, 1700 sf hse,ac/evap,w/d,fjp,clngfhs $200 mo+l/4util Bob 990-2284 av5/10 SUMMER RMTE wanted to share 2 bd, 2 1/2 ba, apt. at Papago Peaks. Fum. $280/mo (neg) + 1/2 util. Call 231-8826, Heinz. NEXT TUESDAY will be the final edition of the State Press this semester. Don't miss our first summer issue June 1. ROOM S FOR RENT CHEAP SUMMER housing! $500 total. Utils incl! Call 4504757 for information. M/F QUESTA Vida 2 rooms for rent in big 3bd/3ba wash/dryer $295mo+l/3 utilities avail. 5/16. Kris 967-1871. QUESTA VIDA room, wash­ er/dryer, f/p, pool, spa, indoor raquetball. 968-7132.Avail 5/13. ROOMMATE FOR a 2bd 2ba condo at Hayden Square. Avail 8/l.$350/mo+l/2 util. W/D, own room & bath. Call Jen 784-6014. TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE $200 DN. + take over payment, lmi from ASU. 2bd 2 ba. 714582-9148. 2BD CONDO, mi. to ASU, new carpet & paint, pool. Russ Lyon Realty, Sally Devney, 991-2929. 2BD, 1BA, Papago Park Condo, near pool,ground level. $65,000. Gruender Properties 840-9518. 3 BD CO-OP apt, $21,450, vicin­ ity ASU, pets ok, bus on comer, parking covered. 945-9013. CONDO 2BD, 2ba, f/p, all major appl incl, $700/mo. Questa Vida, 714-582-9148. POOLSIDE TOWNHOUSE 2bd, 1.5 bath, neutral colors, park area, close to ASU $46,900. Cen­ tury 21 AM (602) 831-1114. WHY RENT when you can own? 2bd, 2ba, sunny, airy, safe, f/p, com. pool. Low 40s. 833-4317. WHY RENT? When you can own! 2 bd, 2 ba condo. Refrig, d/w, r/o. W/D hookup. $44,900. 616 S. Hardy, #132. Call Diane Lain, C21 All-Star, 831-2221, B uy O f T he W eek Now that you've made it, make it at Papago Park Village: 2 bd condo poolside, $71,900; 2 m aster suites + loft, $85,000. B ob B ullo ck R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 GARAGE SALES WISE MONKEY yard sale, Fri. & Sat. Music, clothes, art, junk. 1420 S. Jentilly, off Spence. M ÎS C FOR SALE CONVOCATION ROBE and mortarboard, black. $30. Call 966-5093. M ISC. FOR SALE DISCONTINUED AND over­ stocked items, jewelry, hair accesories, bags, belts, and misc. items. Fri. May 6 ,9am-?, 1019 N. Stadem Dr. Tempe. I WANT to rent or buy a dorm frig. ;Also selling a 2 pc. oak wall unit, value $1000, asking $500. 759-8449, ext 7869. lv msg. M ISTRAL COMP TCS sail­ board. Great beg/int. $240. Pgr; 902-9634; 956-4331 lv. msg. TREADMILL- 2 yrs old. V. good condition. Still under warranty. DP Brand-$100.921-7108. FURNITURE 4 SALE. Couch, chair, bed, din­ ner table, and much more. Very cheap. Jason 731-6396. QN BED & drsr $125/set obo. Call Jen 947-4867. COMPUTERS POWERBOOK 140,6 meg ram, 40 hd, all manuals and System 7 software. $910 obo. 990-2678. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu.: gold, ster., pearls, gems, an­ tiques, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave., Tempe Center 968-6074. TICKETS EAGLES, DEPECHE Mode, great seats for great prices. Steve, 921-7150 or 280-2881. JACKS TICKETS 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, $30/ea. Also available- Depeche Mode, Salt N Pepa, Meatloaf, Eagles, and more!! 254-3300. Friday, April 29,1994 Page 18 TICKETS________ TRAVEL________ N IN E INCH N ails M ay 1 at Mesa Centennial Hall, $30/ea. or 2 for $50. Jason, 835-9021. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. SUNS PLA YO FFS. Suns vs Golden State tonight & Sun. Af­ fordable prices. Steve 678-0316. AUTOMOBILES PLA N E TIC K E T , one-w ay Phoenix-New York City. Expires 5/24/94. 949-2812. $ CASH TODAY! $ I Buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call A1994-4369. 1985 WHITE Ford Escort, runs well, am/fm stereo & cassette. AC works but needs freon $1500 obo. Call now- It won't last! 9211213.__________ ___________ 1991 OLDS Cutlass Sup SL, 4dr, wht/gray int, loaded, looks/runs great, $8750. Russ, 585-6401. 85 HONDA Accord 4dr, 5spd, ac. ps, pb. am/fm cass, 95 tags, 88K mi, $3200 obo. Call 9213128 86 TOYOTA C elica GT, car . alarm, good condition! Maroon, call Jay at 730-0128. 89 FIREBIRD red with grey in­ terior. T-top, power everything V-8 350. Must see $5400. Lv msg 91 TOYOTA Celica, 5 speed, fully loaded, great condition, 28000 miles, $12800 obo. Call 784-9044. MUST SELL. 1970 VW Bug in great condition with many ex­ tras. Rebuilt engine, stereo, etc. Make offer 946-5985. RECENT GRADUATE? Need a car? Diploma=good credit. Call Mark 966-7983. MOTORCYCLES" 81 YAMAHA Virago, low miles, clean, runs perfect, needs minor elec, work $825 obo. Chris 8948707. Lv msg. v 86 HONDA Elite 150, red, very dependable, $675. Call 941-2217 lv msg. 89 HONDA ELITE 80, great condition, re-built engine, $600. Pete 897-0425. YAMAHA VIRAGO 920,1986, mint cond., has been garaged, was selling for $1600, now $1200, must sell. 732-9392. BICYCLES MEN'S SCHWINN great cond. with ulock, cheap. 966-3777. Graduating, must sell!! MOUNTAIN BIKE 1994 Trek 930. Like new, 16.5" made in USA, extras. $425obo 829-8178. WOMEN'S MTN. bike. Good cond. $120 obo. Cara 968-1398. TRAVEL ^ 2 ONE-W AY tickets. Phx to Newark. Female only. May 16 & 27th. $150 each. Cara 9681398. ASU BERMUDA and Caribbean Summer Programs for up to 6 credits. Limited space available. Call 965-4630. CATCH A JET! < Europe - $269: New York - $129 Call for program description! Airhitch (R) 1-800-397-1098. So u th w est T ra vel S ystem s Discount airline tickets to most destinations, domestic and international. Open 7 Days 6 0 2 -2 5 5 -0 2 3 4 HELP WANTEDGENERAL $6/HR GUAR. Diversified Telemarketing is hir­ ing f/t and p/t eve. positions. Set own sched, casual dress, relaxed envim., get paid every week. Call Mike 921-2342._____________ ♦EARN $7.00/hr* Guar, hourly, setting free appts for established chiropractors, close to ASU. 470-1828 anytime. ♦MARKET RESEARCH phone interviewers, no sales, Tempe. Eves/wknds. Susan 967-4441. A ASU leasing agent pos., flex hrs. Career opp., real estate lie. req. Call Ed 992-1300. 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. ACCOUNTING CLERK, p/t, 20 hrs/wk, respon. incl: data input, bank acct reconciliation, general ledger analysis and filing. Exp req.- spreadsheet software (Excel o r L otus), W ordPerfect, ac­ counting software preferred by not required. $5.5Q/hr. Contact Cathy Lang at Arizona Hospital Association, (602) 968-1083. AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS YMCA is currently acc. apps. for summer camp positions. 3233 E. Chandler Blvd, 8:30-6pm MF. Questions? Jennifer 759-6762. APPT. SETTERS- Have excel­ lent phone voice & communicate well. Earns you 50% o f com­ pleted sales. Call now 650-4093. ATTN - $7/HR Tempe business now hiring warehouse/manufacturers rep /sales help, 3-7pm, no exp nec. Call Jim, 820-8408. BECAUSE OF your unparalleled coolness, you have been picked from the masses with great scru­ tiny to earn excellent $$$. Pro­ fessional massage establishment needs additional massage thera­ pists. Full time position available. Call for details. 947-2221. BETTER THAN a summer job! A uto o r cy cle m echanics or sales wanted 861-2381,957-8211 TRAVEL R ound T rip fro m P h o en ix ! ? London.........................$669 Frankfurt..................... $789 Paris............................. $809 Amsterdam.................$655 Call for other cities/discounted fares. Restrictions apply. Subject to availability. I HELP W ANTEDGENERAL SUMMER JOBS W e are hiring 100 s tu ­ dents & te ac h e rs for 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 »48-2225 STIVERS TEMPORARY PERSONNEL ' IN C . HELP WANTEDGENERAL T ~iu HELP WANTEDGENERAL SU M M ER W O RK $10.15/Start; Scholarships avail. All majors apply; No exp req. Phoenix: (602)968-1840 S. Orange Cnty: (714)851-4738 N. Orange Cnty: (714)449-2469 Long Beach: (310)799-1661 Riverside: (909)686-5410 San Diego: (619)455-9433 Oxnard: (805) 382-8391 Upland: (909)985-5079 Burbank: (818)240-6866 Arcadia: (818) 293-8665 Tucson: (602)798-7378 ♦Call now-stait after finals. ♦Conditions exist. HELP WANTEDGENERAL JOBS JOBS JOBS CHAMPIONS SPORTS Bar look­ ing for f/t & p/t bartenders. 9662896, 1825 E. A pache Blvd. Apply after 6pm. FA and pA jobs avail. Start now, choose sched., circulate petitions, no exp. nec. Paid 3 times per wk. Avg $8-$12/hr. 952-9971. C O LLEG E STUDENTS and Teachers! Children's Summer Camp in Oracle, AZ is looking for Program Leaders, C oun­ selors, Lifeguards, Camp Nurse, and Cooks to work June 1 - Aug 13.Good salary, job experience, plus Room/Board. Write YMCA Camp, P.O. Box 1111, Tucson, AZ 85702 or call 1-602-8840987. LOOKING FOR summer day­ time job? Love children? Flex hrs, pA or f/t, some req. apply, call for more info. 254-3909. LOO K IN G TO m ake a d if­ ference? Rapidly expanding en­ vironmental co. has openings for energetic people. No sales exp. nec. Immed. earnings. P/t, f/t avail. Call for appt. 202-6240. COMMISSION PHONE sales rep. w anted. No commission cap. Hours nego. Great p/t job for energetic, personable college student. 730-9405. Asian Travel 894-4033 Tokyo.......................$609 Osaka.......................$669 Hong K ong.............$699 Bangkok.................. $779 HELP WANTEDGENERAL MARC CENTER Looking for dedicated caring people to work with individuals who are DD in home setting. For more info call 962-4838. CRUISE LINE, entry level on board positions avail, great bene­ fits. (714) 549-1569. MEMBERSHIP SERVICE rep. Possess good telephone skills, ability to understand computers, handling money. Must have CPR training, includes free member­ ship. Apply in person at Tempe YMCA, 7070 S. Rural Rd. Tem­ pe.________________________ CURRICULUM EDITOR. Local private university seeks a sea­ soned editor for its curriculum department Duties include: editing and revising curriculum, program maintenance, formatting, proof­ ing, and inputting curriculum ma­ terial for graduate and under­ graduate degree programs. De­ gree in English, Journalism, Ed­ ucation, or Communications re­ quired. Curriculum experience prefered. Salary low 20's. Send resume to: Curriculum Editor, P.O. Box 60515, Phoenix, AZ 85082. EOE. TEACH ENGLISH in Japan B.A. required. 1 year contract, starts July 1. Call 968-1976. TELEMARKETERS Schedule appointments for Sears. Tempe office. Flexible hours. $6/hr + bonuses. Call 968-5266. 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. DRAFTS PERSON for dimen­ sion drawings and flow charts. Send letter size sample of work to BioScientiflc. 4405 S. Litchfield Rd., Avondale, AZ 85323. WE’LL GET you thru the sum­ mer...and beyond! $8 to $12/hr, pt, long term year 'round empl. I mm. openings at Tempe branch. Flex p/t hrs. No cold calls. Week­ ly paychecks. Pleasant work envir. Fully-automated. No typing. Pro, paid training, $7.5Q/hr guar, min. Dialamerica Marketing 8940264. WALK FROM ASU! MODELS/ACTORS - Calif, ad agency seeks M/F, all types/ages, for summer catalog. No exp. nec. 266-6224. No Selling Telephone survey research, flexible hours available mornings, afternoons, even­ ings, weekends. Start at $5.50/hour. Weekly pay. Frequent raise reviews. MOTIVATED? Local environmental co. is look­ ing for 5 sales people and 2 man­ agers for summer. P/t and f/t avail. Poss. permanent pos. For appt 784-4748._____________ EXEC DIRECTOR NOW ACCEPTING apps. for 94-95 elementary after school activity staff. Apply at Tempe YMCA, 7070 S. Rural Rd. Arizona Students' Assoc, seeks full-time professional to manage Tempe office, work with Student Board and lobby- $23,000- good job for grads. Send letter, re­ sume, refs and 2 ltrs of rec. by 5pm. May 6 to: ED Search, ASA, 511 W. University #4, Tempe, AZ 85281. Call 965-1717 for info. OFFICE MANAGER, national collection agency. Ground floor opportunity in AZ, salary plus incentives, call 602-504-0345. PfY ASSISTANT needed to re­ build and assemble components. Must have own tools, general mechanical & plumbing exp help­ ful. Call 829-6851. EX PER IEN C ED , PR O F E S ­ SIONAL telemarketers to set up appts. w/attomeys. Flex day hrs. Good pay. Call 964-9762(8am5pm) lv msg. GOING TO be here this sum­ mer? Disabled woman in Quadm agles. Ins. requires female driver for van. Must be over 21 w/clean driving record. Some personal care involved. Start end o f May thru June. Fee and hrs discussed. Call 968-6284. G Y M N A STICS TEA CH ER, preschool, p/t afternoons. Apply at Tempe YMCA, 7070 S. Rural. HAIR STYLIST wanted, booth rental. Great loc. at 5th & Mill. 968-9539.__________________ PHOENIX COBRAS, prof roller hockey, needs outgoing sales staff for group sales/season tickets. Call Steve, 256-2722; 280-2881. PROFESSIONAL OFFICE, fun atmosphere. Resort advertising, near F iesta M all p t/ft, min. $200/wk. 897-1676Cindy Brady. SUMMER JOBS! Need resp. students for 10-wk in­ ternships at national newspaper. Duties: editorial page makeup, filing, billing, tracking ads, data entry. Mac/IBM knowledge. 40 hrs/wk. Dominic 468-6552. SUMMER JOBS HARKINS FASHION Square Cinema is now hiring for all posi­ tions. Perfect summer job. Apply at our box office, 7014 E. Camelback Rd. Now hiring for p/t summer em­ ployment, earn $200-$500 work­ ing 20-30 hrs/wk. Flex hrs. Call for interview, 921-8282. 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. National firm has retail openings valleyw ide. 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.___________ IN T ELL EG E N C E W ITH a smile!! Arizona M ist, a local manufacturer of outdoor misting systems, is looking for a few good people. $8/hr, writ wknds only, must have-transp. Call Jack at 966-MIST. INTERNSHIP- EITHER hope you find a job when graduating, or build a documentable resume with experience. 3 College cred­ its, develop communication skills, relocate. Average intern last summer earned $4725. Call 8945283 for 10 minute overview in MU. Leave m essage for Mr. Seville. S tate P ress Higginbotham Associate« 829-3141 HELP WANTEDSALES ATTENTION COLLEGE Students: National corp. hiring 20 col­ lege students for summer em­ ployment. Earnings opp up to $1000/wk plus qualify fix' college cash award prog up to $2000. For interview call 644-1862. EOE. EXEC TRAINEES F/T, P/T, cashiers and cooks, for Teriyaki of Japan I (Apache & Dorsey) 894-6883 and Teriyaki of Japan II, 112 E. University 968-6708.__________________ JOHNNY ROCKETS is now tak­ ing applications for cashiers-food servers. Fashion Square Mall, apply in person. 423-1505. LITTLE CEASARS Pizza now hiring delivery drivers f/t, p/t. Make great money, need own car & ins. Apply 960 W. University or call 966-3181. NEIMAN MARCUS NMCafe/great opportunity to work for the best. Hiring ft/pt wait staff, primarily days. Gen­ erous benefit package + 30% dis­ count offered. Apply in person 6900 E. Camelback, Scottsdale. Human Resource office. Pn MARKETING/CLERICAL, $5-6/hr, 10-20 his/wk., 8-5. Call 894-2226. PART TIME Clerical help need­ ed. Days. Ask for Tammy 4372224. Support Specialist: Bright efficient organized individual to support training staff, update man­ uals, coordinate classes/ seminars. Excellent oppor­ tunity for experience in a training environment. Thorough knowledge of Windows, Word and Excel are required. Salary $7-$9 per hour, dependent on skills. For immediate considera­ tion, forward your resume to: PO Box 29620, Phoenix, AZ 85038 or fax to 350-7943, attention; Terry A., or call 350-7620. JOB OPPORTyNm|S HELP W ANTEDF O O D J E £ V jC |_ S750/WK. ALASKA fisheries this summer. Maritime Services 1-208-860-0219. TAKING APPS now for summer help. Tele-sales & cust service reps (existing & new accts). Earn $6-$6.75/hr. Call Jon Evans, 9672678 ext. 129, Mon-Fri. TEICHERT MARKETING needs 4 sales people for spring & sum­ mer promotions. Earn $200-400 per week. Good experience for business/communication majors. Flex sched. Please call 921-7755, l-4p.m. AA CRUISE and travel employ­ ment guide. $$$ + free world­ wide travel! (Caribbean, Europe, etc!) Summer/permanent avail­ able. Guaranteed success!! (919) 929-4398 ext. C145. CRUISE SHIPS now hiring Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour companies. World travel. Sum­ m er & full time employment available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C5918. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Sales Full Time Temporary Position, Monday-Friday, 8am-5pm SELL COMPUTER optic stor­ age equip. Only need basic com­ puter knowledge. IMG 967-4148. CORK N CLEAVER 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. HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL DOWNTOWN PHX area, ur­ gently need a reliable babysitter. If you love children please call Kym 253-6387. 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) JOB OPPORTUNITIES STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers. Apply in person M-F 10am-5pm, 5001 E Washington. Start your career now with Ari­ zona's fastest growing computer company. Insight Direct Inc. is seeking indivs. for acct. exec, trainees th at are aggressive, positive and willing to learn. Full training is provided in die follow­ ing areas; sales, computers, gen­ eral business. This a 12 to 18 mo. prog, designed to take you from an inside sales rep. to a fully trained acct. exec. Guaranteed 20K(annualized) for the first 90 days o f emply., base + comm, thereafter. Bring resume to the M U , N avajo Room , M ay 5, 10am-2pm or mail to 1912 W. 4th St. Tempe, AZ 85281. SUMMER WORK HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE HELP WANTEDGENERAL F o r a h o t jo b , y o u d o n 't hav e to m ak e co ld calls. At Neodata, you can enjoy suc­ cess w ith one o f the fastest growing leaders in the direct marketing fulfillment industry. And you won't have to make cold calls to do it. If you would like to be part of our hot future, consider the following full and part time opportunities: OUTBOUND SALES REPRESENTATIVES •Guaranteed wages plus bonus incentives! •Should be committed to pro­ viding quality custom er ser­ vice by making outbound calls to current customers •Previous telephone experience a plus •NO COLD CALLING! F or fu ll tim e p o sitio n s, N eodata offers an excellent benefits package that includes medical, dental, short term dis­ ability, life insurance, AD&D, long term disability, matching 401(k) plan, tuition reimburse­ ment, vacation, and potential for advancement. Apply in person: NEODATA, 10230 S. 50th Place, Phoenix, located at Elliot Rd. and I-10. O r call our Job Line at 5984520. Neodata promotes a drug free work environment. AA/ EOE. NEODATA COSMIC PIZZA, is now hiring exp. pizza cooks & del. drivers. We offer flex. hrs. competative wages, a fast track to manage­ ment & great working condi­ tions. Apply @ 1523 E Apache Blvd. (no phone calls please). DELIVERY DRIVERS for nights & wknds. Counter help for nights & wknds. Apply in person at Blimpie, 911 E. Broadway. HELP WANTEDGENERAL SUMMER WORK Advertising Sales $ 3 0 0 to $ 4 0 0 a W eek - C om m ission s The Publisher o f the Arizona State University F ac u lty / S ta ff / S tu d e n t T ele p h o n e D irecto ry N eed s S ales P eo p le. E x p e rie n c e N o t N ecessary . W ill T rain . M u s t H a v e SELF-DISCIPLINE A n d TRANSPORTATION l* i i GxrPxubiicaoons HELP W ANTEDFO O D SERVICE 1-800-288-3044 Ask for Gary 1409 19th St., Ste. 101 • Lubbock, TX 79401 INTERESTED IN SECURING A SUMMER JO B BACK HOME? Universal Studios H ollyw ood is now hiring for the summer season. We understand how busy you are w ith finals and w inding up the school year, so w e’re making it easy for you to apply for a part-time or full-time summer job. Just call Tracy (818) 622-3863 (Monday-Friday from 9AM to 5PM) to schedule an appointment and you’ll be ready to interview when you get home. EOE V________________ , JOB OPPORTUNITIES RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS JOBS IN Alaskas commercial fishing/seafood industry. The most comprehensive guide avail­ able. Over 200 listings, 25 maps, where to go and when to get there. Summer salmon, halibut and crab. Send $24.95 to Artie Daze, P.O. Box 743, Whittier, AK 99693. Next day mailing. PERSONALS 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! GRAD PACK-YOUR ticket outta’ here! Your Alumni Associa­ tion has compi led 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. A DOZEN Roses $20. Balloons & Delivery available. Call After Hours Flowers 894-3419. ATTENTION GREEKS! Relive feelings of Brotherhood & Sistehood with a video yearbook! Use your favorite photos, music, cam­ corder footage, memories! See them forever on a professionally produced video! 839-3063. Great for rush too! AXO'S LOVE their seniors!!! RESTAURANTS/ BARS CAP & GOWN Discount! It's in your Grad Pack! Save over $300 on the goods and services you need as a new graduate! Call your Alumni Association at 9653566 or 1-800-alumnus for fur­ ther information. LIVE MUSIC! by MARCONIS M USIC 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. -N O C O V E R - ACAPPELLA ENTHUSIAST interested in forming Doo-Wop & Barbershop Quartet Good ear & music reading helpful. Jamey 837-2296. ! BANDERSNATCH Sth St. & Forest Page 19 Friday, April 29,1994 S tate P ress BREWPUB ÜAR & 1RILL CELEBRATION SAT. A pril 30th! Sigma Kappa Sorority is celebrating our 5th year anni­ versary at ASU! Come celebrate with us in PV Main Courtyard at noon this Saturday. All are wel­ come. For info call Crista, 7849187. CHI-O BERIT: Be ready and ex­ cited for 2morrow! You're final­ ly gonna be active! VCJ. CHI O S B.D., J.G., S.G., C.H., S.M., S.R., C.S., S.S. AND K.S.Get ready for Initiation - Only one more day! CONGRATULATIONS TO all o f the AXO graduates! Your sisters are proud of you!!! 1024 E. Broadway Tamp« • 967-8875 XQ KRISTEN Steele- Only one more day! Get excited! You are the best HI sis! -Amy. CRAZY CLUCKIN' HAPPY HOUR! EVERY DAY: 4-9 p.m. “C a n y o u s a y ... P A T IO B A R !” A \I LADIES NIGHT new and used cds| tapes! v in y l singles; imports independents! 8 9 7 -7 1 0 9 dobson and baseline • mesa A A N Y DRINK IN THE HOUSE i ( W e ll, V 5 V Wine & D raft • 8-10 p.m . FOR EVERYONE 4-10p.m.. Complimentary Buffet $1 W ell, Wine & Draft Pizza, Wings, Subs, Veggies 6-8 p.m . A ll Night fo r the Ladies NO COYER Before 10 p.m. for the Ladies B-4 8 p.m . 411 S. Mill Ave. 966-2020 No Cover 411 S. Mill Ave. ■ ■ ’ 966-2020 FREE LOST/FOUND POUND: 6 MO. old Lah/German Shepard mix, tan w/black muzzle. Purple collar. 2nd/Hardy. 9020883. LOST CAT, black haired male, neutered & declawed. Lost 4/20. Reward 838-1568. LOST: PAPERBACK copies of Invisible Man and Ghost Writer Thursday and Tuesday in Lan­ guage and Literature Bldg. Bad week. 784-9109. LOST:COMPUTER CASE with 10 3.5" Macintosh disks on Tues­ day morning in BAC computer lab. Priceless data. Sizable re­ ward! 784-9109. KAPPA KAPPA Gamma! Seniors-Greatjob! We will miss you. Love-KKT! WRITE STUFF. Fast, profes­ sional, reasonable word process­ ing. Term papers, resumes, etc. APA/MLA. Beth, 963-3537. KIM-I'VE HAD a blast this semester-Lets keep in touch-ok? That's fine-Love Michelle. WHY TYPE IT YOURSELF? KIM-WHAT ARE we going to do w/o our third musketeer? Love Mush and Lelend. TOB-DEANNA you are the best little sis ever! I am going to miss you! Love, Andrea. rd>B-KRISTEN H., Have a great senior week! Luv, your secret sis. I'll miss you. GPHIB JJ-UR an awesome sis! Thx 4 everything! I'll miss U tonz! VPKE ur secret sis. CH EAP DATE Students admitted free to all ASU sporting events with valid ASU ID (except Football & Men's Basketball). SUCH A DEAL! DONORS NEEDED for Desert Cryobank Sperm D onor Pro­ gram. All medical expenses paid. Fee paid to donors meeting strict medical criteria. Call 957-1879 for complete information. WANTED PHYSIOLOGY of Exercise EPE 340 Spring 94 Notebook and handouts. Will buy for $50. Call Between 5pm and 7pm. 940-9734. Next Tuesday w ill be the FINAL EDITION o f the State Press th is semester! The lin e r deadline fo r th a t issue w ill be NOON today! SERVICES SERVICES * * • PAY DAY Man- Tally up another perfect month! A fter 8 more maybe this won't seem like such a big deal. I love you! -Amy (so I'm not anonymous) IMMIGRATION V IS A LOTTERY C a ll A tto rn ey Don F. Dodge 443-3100 Sunday m>B CHRISTI, do you know who I am yet? Enjoy the rest of senior week! See you Saturday. Love, your secret sis. ARTIST/ PROF seeks house and/or studio 6-15 to 8-15. Hof­ mann, Box 195, Ghent, NY 12075 Theresa • 924-1976 MY DARLING cumquat covered in honey, one down & an atemity to go! Happy Ann. Lv Sheena. ADO PTIO N TO WENDY M.-Have a wonder­ ful senior week! Gamma Phi loves you! Love, Your secret sis. WANTED If you'd rather spend your time doing something besides typing, let an ASU graduate help you make the best impression possible. APA/MLA expert, laser printer, rush jobs no problem! Mon.-Sat. Pf> LYNNE Files, congratula­ tions on being alum! We love you!! Can't wait til Sat. See you soon! Love in 1TKE, Ur S. Sis! stinkweeds I WANT IT NOW! FLIGHT INSTRUCTION- Get your private license the afford­ able way! Page Terry @209-3988 Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966-1984. TIFFANY JONAS-THIS weeks for you-I can t believe you're leaving us-IT miss you tons. Love, your secret sis!! GAMMA PHI Staci, we'll miss you. Happy Senior Week! Luv?? j FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. ERIN (CHICKEN Little)-W e made it! Only 1 yr to go! HCar the wedding bells? Love, TL GAMMA PHI seniors- We will miss you sooo much! Best of luck—in PKE, Your sisters. SATURDAYS ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transerptn, WordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime S U S IE .L E T ’S M EET at the Alumni Ice Cream Social today btwn 1lam - lpm, in front of Old Main. We must talk. Joe. Every D ay, All Day! 8 5 5 S . R ural Rd. ( I blk S . o f Univ. Dr.) APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typ­ ing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. DERBY DAYS coaches-Brian, Blake, Bo, Brian & James-We couldn't have done it without you!! Thanks, the ladies of G Phi B!! P.S. Shoot the moon. m rake JQ B U LATE NIGHT WE DELIVER! Broadway & Rural For Friday, April 29, 1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Talks with those in high places are favored today. You'll either meet with a raise in salary or an important new business oppor­ tunity. I t's full speed ahead now. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You’ll have a productive meet­ ing w ith an adviser. M ental interests and travel are also favored. Couples share good times, visitors with old friends are rewarding. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Y ou’ll be doing fu rth er research about your investment options today. An im portant new business opportunity that com es now may have you working overtime. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You’ll be enjoying meaningful dialogues with both friends and loved ones today. Tonight may find you stepping out for good times. Affectional bonds grow stronger. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) A slightly miffed friend needs reassurances. It’s a wonderful day for presenting your ideas to h ig h er-u p s. T o n ig h t favors home entertaining and family life. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Y o u 'll en jo y an esp e c ia lly favorable rapport with a child today. Plans for pleasure may include travel. Evening hours w ill find you buoyant about romance and life in general. LIBRA (S ept 23 to Oct. 22) It’s an ideal day for those seek­ ing a new place to live. Meetings with bankers and real estate agents are favored. You STUDY SNACKS 921 -9222 may be making a major pur­ chase for the home. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) It’s a good day for reaching ag reem en ts w ith others. Partners are on the same wave­ length. Welcome news comes by phone or le tte r. E njoy a favorite pastime. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) T o d ay ’s fin a n c ia l d e v elo p ­ m ents are in y o u r favor. A business meeting produces the results you desire. Some o f you w ill receive recognition for your achievements. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Be careful not to let things slide on the job. Otherwise, things will go very much your way. Romance is a plus, and a nice opportunity comes through a friend. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Y ou’ll m ake headw ay now with an unfinished project. The pieces o f yo u r puzzle are beginning to fit, as you’ll tie up m any loose ends today. Tonight is quiet. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Some of you will be traveling to visit with friends. A relative, though, may need an extra hug. An invitation comes to a spe­ cial social event. Enjoy your popularity. YOU BORN TODAY are more idealistic and future-oriented than the ty p ic a l m em ber o f your sign. You work best when inspired, and you are capable of work that’s ahead of the times. You may have an outstanding ability for music. You are often inclined to be hum anitarian. You have a good sense o f resp o n sib ility and are often charismatic. 0 1 9 9 4 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Page 20 Friday, April 29,1994 S tate P ress ‘Bittiards • Dancing ANY DRINK until 10:30 p.m. $ HOUSE 1 Goldschlager Before COVER w/COLLEGE TUESDAY SATURDAY ‘ALL NEW!” “ LADIES NIGHT” m LONG ISLAND ICE TEAS 'til 10 p.m. $i DRINKS ALL NIGHT LONG! $ 1 W ELL, WINE, DRAFT AH Night NO COVER til 10 p.m. • • NO COVER • • Proper Dress Required • SW Corner of Scottsdale Rd. & McDowell