-Copyright, State Press, 1994 M o n d a y , A u g u s t 2 2 ,1 9 9 4 A n In d e p e n d e n t M o rn in g D a ily v o i.? ^ H O W PRIVATE IS Splashy tune E-MAIL? not all in one place,” he said of the policy. “There are some areas that are vague and need clarification, such as what is a reason­ able amount of time for an e-mail user to be notified of a search?” B y Sheryl B o ttn er Mark Royal, manager of Information S t a t e P ress University officials are attempting to Distribution and Electronic Messaging, said push through a draft policy that would all information the University has, includ­ allow them to monitor electronic mail with­ ing e-mail accounts, are open to the public, out the account holder’s prior knowledge. according to the Arizona Public Records The new policy would allow officials to Act. read the e-mail if they suspect the account Information Technology could search an holder of conducting illegal or inappropriate account if a user sent sexually harassing Eactivities. The University would notify mail and the recipient complains, said Larry users “within a reasonable period of time” Conrad, d irecto r of C om puting and after searching the account, according to the Network Consulting Services. Running a business on ASU computers draft. Robert Curry, president of the Classified is also illegal and could prompt a search. Staff Council, expressed surprise when he “We have found people doing that and read about the draft policy in a July State revoked their privileges,” Conrad said. “We Press article. T urn to E-M ail, page 6. “It appears a lot of it already existed, but Officials seeking access to suspicious accounts Battle to keep convicted felon from graduation could land ASU in court B y L isa G o n d e r in g e r S t a t e P r ess Craig M acnaughton/State Press Senior mechanical engineering student Jason Mclnturf plays a tune in the fountain out­ side of the Memorial Union. The tuba section of the ASU marching band gathers at the fountain every year in order to “baptize” its new members. After three years of paying tuition, writ­ ing papers and cramming for tests, one ASU law student may be told that all his tim e, effo rt and money w ill get him nowhere near a degree. Michael Davis completed graduation requirements for a law degree in May. He even took extra classes over the summer for his own interest. As of today, however, ASU officials are refusing to give Davis his diploma because he did not mention that he had previously attended Southwest Texas law school on his application. The case could wind up at the State Supreme Court or the Federal D istrict Court. Although University administrators say it is not the reason his diploma has been denied, ASU learned recently that Davis was convicted in 1979 for assisting in the murders of a Texas couple and their baby. The murders were described in a book by journalist Rick Nelson titled, “The Cop Who Wouldn’t Quit.” Davis was accused of hiring a hit man for Markham Duff-Smith, a Houston man who wanted his sister and her family dead in order to become the sole heir to a sizable inheritance. In 1979, Davis pleaded guilty for his involvem ent in the shooting deaths of T urn to Felon, page 2. Freshman newcom ers seek atm osphere, academics B y C h r is t in e G r a n a d o s S t a t e P ress They descended upon campus last Sunday, and most of them are here to stay for the next four, five or six years. They’re cocky, clueless and everything in between — they’re freshmen. But what brings most of these young students to ASU, to Tempe, to the desert in the middle of August? For the most part, believe it or not, it is for the atmo­ sphere and the academics. The class of ‘98 is ready and eager to work hard and play hard. Academics and the love of the theater is what brought Alison Doud from Lafayette, Calif. “They have a really great theater and music department here,” she said in her Palo Verde East room, surrounded by her roommates and her parents. She had looked at other schools in California, but they INSIDE STA TE PR ESS W e a th e r O u tlo o k M ostly sunny, dry and hot. H igh o f 106 degrees, low in the m id-80s. did not appeal to her as much as ASU did. “I just knew this is where I wanted to be,” Doud said. Her parents, Bob and Cheryl Doud, were still in town helping her move the few last things into her room, and they seemed to be handling the upcoming separation from their only child fairly well. “We’re still apprehensive about saying good-bye, but we are so comfortable with her roommates and their situation,” her mother said. “That makes it easier for us,” her father added. One of Alison’s suite mates, Jennifer Reithel, is from Memphis, Tenn. She also came to ASU for the reputation of the academics. “The main reason is that the music and theater depart­ ment have so much more to offer than most schools,” Reithel said. She cited the music department’s helpfulness without > - John M alik, A S A SU ’s form er executive vice president, was given his office back over the w eekend. Page 31. ^ A S U ’s replacem ent for the tram s, FLA SH , is already undergoing changes in its first few m onths o f service. Page 12. World/ Nation President Clinton places the blame for the growing U.S./Cuban crisis on Fidel Castro. Page 3 undue pressure to attend their program. “They (the music department staff) wanted you to make up your own mind where you wanted to go,” she said. “They definitely had your best interests in mind.” Reithel thought she would have a difficult time adjusting to life away from family and friends in Memphis, but she has adapted quickly. “This is a great place,” she said. For another room m ate, Sam antha W ise-D avis of Kingman, ASU was her only choice. “This was the only place I applied,” she said. Wise-Davis was bom in Australia, but her family moved to Phoenix in 1987. Her father pursued his graduate studies here, so she grew up watching the Phoenix Suns and ASU football. Lennie Okano, an engineering major from Hawaii, is the T urn Sports Baseball coach Pat Murphy hopes to keep ASU’s winning tradition alive after becom­ ing just the third skipper in Sun Devil history. Page 39 to Freshmen, page 2. Where To Find It Classifieds...........................41 Comics..... ........................... 38 Crossword............................ 12 Horoscopes .........................43 Opinion.................................. 4 Police Report.......... ............18 Sports................................. ..39 Today’s Activities................ 2 World/Nation.........................3 Page 2 S t a t e P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 T oday ____________ The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community’• Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis and are printed on a space -available basis. Campus chibs and organizations may submit writ­ ten entries to the Slate Press in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the full name o f the club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. All requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. Deadline fo r requests in noon the day before publi­ cation and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. F r e s h m e n _____ C ontinued from page 1. fourth person in this suite. She admits it has been difficult to adjust to life away from home and her old routine. “I used to hang out and go to the beach. You can’t do that here, so I’ve got to find new activities,” she said. Marc Maher, a business major also living in Palo Verde East, took a train from Wayne, N.J., to Tempe last week. Although he has only been here a week, he is tak­ ing the initiative to get involved. Maher is currently running for president of his residence hall. “I want to take advantage of everything,” he said. These next few months will be a difficult time for adjustment for Maher and the rest of the freshmen. “I feel like I don’t know who I am, and it scares the hell out of me,” he said, “but it’s going to drive me a little harder.” “The staff here is very helpful, almost over-helpful, which is good,” he added. But what’s the real reason Maher and many others came to ASU from the East? “I wanted to get away from the winter weather.” And into the desert? F e lo n C ontinued from page 1. Diana and John Wanstrath and their 14-month-old son tion, a student’s integrity comes into question, said Jim Rund, interim associate vice president for student affairs. Kevin. “When you sign your name there, if you have left some­ Duff-Smith was executed last year for his involvement in the murders. Davis was sentenced to 30 years in prison thing off, whether intentionally or not, you are misrepre­ senting yourself,” Rund said. “The value of everyone’s and was paroled after serving nine years. Davis is on vacation and could not be reached for com­ degree is compromised because everyone is not held up to the same standards. ASU has to keep its integrity.” ment. Hale said he suspects ASU found out about Davis’ omis­ Davis’ Phoenix attorney, Olin Hale, said ASU is being sion, along with his criminal record, when Davis applied to unreasonable. “I honestly believe Davis is being unfairly punished,” take the Arizona bar exam. After the law school learned of Davis’ violation, a Hale said. “The fact remains that he had an outstanding record and that would not have changed if the University University committee made up of faculty, staff and students saw he attended another school. He would have been held a hearing July 18. The committee could adm itted. It seems to be a have revoked Davis’ record minor, even irrelevant point.” so it would appear as though Hale said Davis was at the he never attended ASU; it top of his application pool instead kept D av is’ tra n ­ with a GPA of 3.98 and a B y L is a G o n d e r in g e r scripts on record but marked score in the 96th percentile S t a t e P r ess them “diploma denied.” on his LSAT. His scores were ASU’s law school has once again found itself in the The decision was then so high that he was a pre­ middle of the debate over a convicted murderer’s rights to sent to Christine Wilkinson, sumptive admit, which means work within the system that once found him guilty. that one person made the Michael Davis, a student of ASU’s College of Law for vice p resid en t of student affairs, who upheld the com­ decision to admit Davis after the past three years, pleaded guilty in 1979 to aiding in the mittee’s decision. seeing his GPA and test murder of a Texas couple and their child. He served nine D avis has appealed scores. Most applications also years in prison, was released, changed his name and went Wilkinson’s ruling. have to go through an admis­ to law school. Hale said if D av is’ sions committee. Now, after completing more than enough credits to appeal is denied, he has ASU officials cannot dis­ graduate from ASU, Davis is being denied his diploma exhausted all his options at cuss Davis’ case because of because he neglected to mention on his admission applica­ the u n iversity and would tion that he had attended another law school prior to attend­ the B uckley A m endm ent, most likely take the case'to t which guarantees privacy for ing ASU. Although ASU administrators say Davis’ criminal past court. students on everything from is not the reason they are withholding his diploma, it has “He’s got nothing to lose,” test scores to attendance Hale said. “It will be his only records to disciplinary deci­ rekindled arguments sparked last fall when James Hamm, a option.” sions, said Paul Ward, ASU convicted and paroled murderer, was admitted to toe law school Hale said there were very general counsel. Hamm’s admission prompted some vehement disap­ few precedents for this case in There did not appear to be proval Grom legal professionals around the state. Three bills Arizona, but he has seen simi­ any ASU bylaws discussing were introduced into the Arizona House of Representatives lar cases in other states. He the importance of disclosing in an attempt to limit convicted criminals’ access to predicts Davis will be success­ previous educational experi­ schools. ful if he takes the case to court ence. But admission applica­ Arizona Senate President John Greene is staunchly because other cases are “all tions have a space for appli­ opposed to allowing convicted felons to attend law school. very fact specific.” cants to sign, stating that all “It is morally reprehensible that people like Hamm and “The bottom line is, he has the information they provided Davis are sitting in a law school subsidized by taxpayers,” done the work, he has per­ is accurate and complete. Greene said. formed well, he has earned a By leaving a piece of degree,” Hale said. information off an applica­ ASU mired in debate — again SPECIALS W h ile S u p p lie s L a s t ! ASU BOOKSTORE LAM PS PA PER 8M A TE ^ S A N F O R D . • S w in g A rm MPERSMATE. •C lip -o n pihUHililiBr •D esk YOUR CHOICE Bic Pouched Stick Pen - Medium Pt. (10 Pack) Regular Back-To-School Special $2.29/pk. $ .9 9 BACK-TO-SCHOOL SAVINGS Buy M aster Lock at Special Back-To-School Prices. A Value You Can Count On. Reg. $4.25 $ 3.35 ¡M a s te r . L o c k Write Bros. Medium Pt. Ball Pen (10 Pack) Regular $2.29/pk Back-To-School Special «jj 9 9 Major Accent Highlighter 9 Colors Available Regular Back-To-School Special $.69/ea $.49 August 22-27 Open Extended Hours 965-5817 ______ W o r ld /N a tio n ______ STATE P r e s s M onday, A ugust 22, 1994............................................ .... ................... round rizona Battle for U-Haul underway; “outsiders” and “insiders” fight for $1.5 billion prize PHOENIX (AP) — With at least $1.5 billion at stake, the heirs to the U-Haul fortune begin their latest round in court this week for control over the country’s largest rental track company. The battle pits U-Haul “ out­ siders” against company “ insid­ ers’’ and stems from a lawsuit filed by Sam Shoen against his brother Edw ard “ Joe” Shoen. Opening statem ents are expected to begin M onday in M aricopa C ounty S u p erio r C ourt before Judge Thomas Dunevant III. Joe Shoen is chairman and chief executive of Amerco, the Nevada parent company of Phoenix-based U-Haul International Inc. He heads an investment group that controls 47.6 p ercent, the m ajority, of Americo stock. Sam Shoen and the “ outsiders” control 47.2 percent o f the stock. According to the lawsuit, they claim that in 1988 insiders illegally thwarted a deal that would have given them the m ajority and allowed them to sell Amerco. They claim the insiders quickly issued 8,099 shares of Amerco stock to five key U-Haul employees, tipping the stock balance back to Joe. Company bylaws state that the business has the right to match any offer to buy family stock that comes from outside the company. Joe Shoen, who took over Amerco from his brother in 1986, says the outsiders struck their deal so they could sell Amerco as soon as possible for the best price they could get. He says profits have soared since he took control over the rental company and company figures appear to prove lam light In fiscal 1994, Amerco reported a net income of $40.2 million, a 26 percent jump, and revenues of $1.14 billion, a 9 percent increase over the previous year. The Shoen family feud went pub­ lic shortly after U-Haul founder L.S. Shoen divided most of his company among his 12 children in 1986. A group of unidentified Cubans sets off for the United States on a makeshift raft from Cojimar Beach, east of Havana, on Sunday. President Clinton announced Friday that Cuban refugees would be detained at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, rather than being granted automatic asylum. C lin to n p u ts h e a t o n “The last thing in the world we want to WASHINGTON (AP) Confident the do is make life more miserable in Cuba exodus of Cuban refugees will ease, the White House turned its attention Sunday to than it already is,” he said on CBS’s Face Fidel Castro, pledging to maintain an eco­ the Nation. Since the president reversed course and nomic stranglehold on Cuba until the dicta­ closed U.S. borders to Cuban refugees last tor moves toward democracy. Raising the distant possibility of a naval week, the White House has been rebuked blockade, Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said for focusing too much on the exodus, and the administration no longer sees the migra­ not enough on pushing out Castro. Panetta tion of asylum-seeking Cubans as its only said Sunday the thrust of the new U.S. poli­ concern. “It’s the problem s within the cy is to “demagnetize” the border, keeping Cuban from fleeing. Castro regime,” he said. “At the same time, we’ve got to continue A day after President Clinton announced new measures to punish and further isolate to put pressure on Castro, because the prob­ C astro, the adm inistration came under lem here is not the problem of refugees, it’s attack from Republican and Democratic not the problem of migrants. It’s the prob­ lems within the Castro regime,” Panetta said lawmakers. House Minority Whip Newt Gingrich of on ABC’s This Week With David Brinkley. “We want to see Castro move toward a Georgia said the policy is a stop gap, aimed democratic form of government, and that at curing a momentary ill with no thought o f the next step. “The level of benign clearly is not happening.” Asked how much pressure a blockade neglect with Cuba has been clear,” he said would offer, he said, “That’s obviously one on NBC’s Meet the Press. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., of the options that we would look at in the criticized Clinton’s decision increase eco­ future as we see whether or not Castro nomic sanctions, particularly by forbidding begins to make some legitimate movement Cuban-Americans to send money home to toward democracy.” Administration officials, speaking on relatives. C a s tro condition of anonymity, said Panetta was referring to a blocking trade from other countries to Cuba. Although the idea is on a long list of options awaiting Clinton down the road, the officials said there was no active effort to implement a blockade. Clinton said Saturday he was barring cash payments by Cuban-Americans to rela­ tives in Cuba and putting new limits on flights between the United States and the island nation. He also pledged increased and amplified U.S. radio broadcasts into Cuba warning residents not to take to the seas. The tide of refugees appeared to slow early Sunday, with the Coast Guard rescu­ ing 280 by 12:45 p.m. EDT (9:45 a.m. Arizona time). A total of 1,189 refugees were rescued Saturday, 439 by 12:45 p.m. Florida Gov. Lawton Chiles, a Democrat who pressed Clinton to stem the tide of refugees, praised the measures Sunday. “I think the administration left it clear that these are the next steps. And if Castro continues to escalate, continues to push the rafters out, other steps could follow ,” Chiles told ABC. “I think the next one would be a block­ ade,” he said. Moderate Republicans spark crime bill WASHINGTON (AP) — With moderate Republicans providing the margin of victo­ ry, the House on Sunday night approved a $30 billion anti-crime package that would help put 100,000 more police on the streets and ban assault-style firearms. The vote gave President Clinton a sorely needed victory. Clinton said he was “ very grateful” to the Republicans who helped negotiate the package with Democrats after the House shelved an earlier, $33.5 billion version on Aug. 11. The vote was 235-195 for the new pack­ age, completed before dawn Sunday. It sur­ vived two votes that could have stopped it in its tracks. “ This is the way Washington should work, and I hope it works this way in the fu tu re ,” C linton said o f the bipartisan effort. Of the 235 votes in favor, 188 were Democrats, 46 were Republicans and one was independent. Voting against it were 131 Republicans and 64 Democrats. Clinton recognized that “this fight is far from over,” since conservative Republicans in the Senate have vowed to stall action because of crime-prevention spending in the bill that they have criticized as “pork.” Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he expected his chamber to begin debate on the bill Monday. Democrats will need Republican help to obtain the 60 votes needed to overcome procedural obstacles that most GOP sena­ tors are expected to support. Biden predict­ ed he will get the votes. “They’re going to do everything they can to stop it but it’s going to be awfully hard to stop,” Biden said. “Folks aren’t crazy about gridlock.” But the Senate Judiciary Committee’s ranking Republican, Orrin Hatch of Utah, said he will demand that even more funds be moved from prevention to punishment. “It still may collapse,” Hatch said. Nonetheless, the House vote was a victo­ ry for Clinton and for the moderate Repub­ licans, most of whom supported the fire­ arms ban, and who came to the bill’s rescue after Democratic gun-control opponents deserted Clinton. The president lobbied strenuously for the bill and dispatched several top Cabinet offi­ cials to Capitol Hill to lobby in person on Sunday. It was a defeat for the National Rifle Association, which lobbied hard to block the bill. But N R A ’s ch ief lo bbyist, Tanya Metaksa, chose not to see it that way, say­ ing, “It’s a defeat for the American peo­ ple.” “The American people in the polls and in calls to the Capitol wanted a no-frills crim e b ill, but the C ongress let them dow n,” she said, adding that the NRA would try to stop it in the Senate. C rim e-bill supporter Rep. C harles Schumer, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee’s crime panel, said of negotiations with the moderate Repub­ licans: “It was painful. Many of us had to give in ways we haven’t had to give before. But it will produce a bill and it is the way we should go in the future.” O p in io n Page 4 __________ D ip lo m a d e n ie d T h e A S U C o lle g e o f L aw , it se e m s, o n ly believes in the rehabilitation o f crim in als to a degree. And that degree is not a Law School diploma. ASU student M ichael Davis, despite com ple­ tion o f degree requirements, is being refused grad­ uation based on an application “m isrepresenta­ tio n :” he failed to m en tio n h e h ad p re v io u sly attended Southwest Texas law school. He had also failed to mention his felony con­ viction and 30-year sentence for helping a Texas man hire an assassin to m urder D iana and John Wanstrath and Kevin, their 14-month-old son. W h ich is, p resu m ab ly , w hat the flap is all about. How m any students have been refused a degree based on whether o r not inform ation was not included on their application? And have those students made the national news or threatened to take the m atter to court? Application aside, the debate is w hether or not the law school has the moral im perative to deny form er felons the right to pursue degrees. And rig h t it is, in the A rizo n a S tate C o n stitu tio n , A rticle X I, section 6: “ T he U niversity and all other state educational institutions shall be open to students o f both sexes, and the instruction fur­ nished shall be as nearly free as possible.” The law school is, for the second year in a row, pro v id in g state p o litician s w ith a cau se (in an election year, no less), aggrieved taxpayers with a rallying point and University adm inistrators with yet another em barrassm ent. A nd, one m ay sus­ pect, application errors are not fueling this debate. M any Arizonans do not want felons attending schools paid for by their tax dollars (indeed, many A rizonans d o n ’t want anyone attending schools p a id fo r b y th e ir tax d o lla rs .) A nd A SU has responded by saying, “Hey, look, see, w e’re not really gonna give him a diploma!” Davis should get his degree. Davis was admitted; ASU did not, at the time, req u ire him to m ention any p o ssib le crim in al background. A lthough ASU does now — as a direct result o f last year’s controversy over James Hamm — it is not a retroactive policy. It is cowardice to deny him a degree, instilled by the fear of what will result from granting a degree to a man who once was the middleman for an execu­ tion. But, in one respect, A SU s critics are right: there needs to be a re-examination of admission policies. C an J e f fe ry D a h m e r j o i n th e S c h o o l o f Nursing? Might Charles Manson pursue a degree in re lig io u s s tu d ie s? W hy n o t p e rh a p s b rin g Serbian President Slobodan M ilosevic here as a faculty lecturer in political science? Applications come on a case-by-case basis, and each school d ecides how m uch in fo rm atio n it n e e d s. In D a v is ’ c a s e , A SU w as a p p a re n tly unaware of his background. W ithout knowing the details of the case and of rehabilitation, it is hypocrisy for so many critics to convict him for life; his application was accepted, he has attended, he should graduate. But in the future, perhaps ASU should take bet­ ter precautions in assessing the character o f appli­ cants. Felons should not be rejected out o f hand or by a blanket policy, but it seems im portant that c rim in a l b a c k g ro u n d s be k n o w n i f a d e q u a te assessments o f character be made. STATE PRESS a I j A L' |q A letter to A S U s classified staff “W elcom e back! W elcom e back, welcome back, welcome .ATTHEW back.” Ah, those memorable final G . C orless lines from the opening theme of the 1970s classic sitcom Welcome G uest Colum nist Back Kotter. I’d love to hear those words this fall as I return to my relentless pursuit of educa­ tion. Yes, it’s fall again. A new semester for the non-faculty staff of Arizona State University. It’s back to the grind, the 9 to 5, the short lunch breaks, shorter smoke breaks, and (God forbid) the STUDENTS. Those young, ungrateful, smart-asses that are going to occupy your time, ask stupid questions and fill your office waiting to see you. The beginning of the semester is loathed by all of you, I’m sure. You’re overworked, asked to stay long hours and rarely given the thanks you deserve for per­ forming tasks efficiently and accurately. But let’s think about the students for a moment. Many of them are freshmen. This is not only their first semester at ASU, it is their first experience ever with the labyrinth of bureaucracy and paperwork that must be overcome to be a part of our university. Think of the young 18-year-old stu­ dent from Payson, Arizona. This may be someone who waited in line two minutes at the Department of Motor Vehicles, never thought about paying for parking and grad­ uated from a class of 37 people. This person came to the big city to get an education with illusions that there would be someone there to help, to show them the ropes, to, at least give them a smile and a hello. If the culture shock of the traffic, the heat and the acreage of campus isn’t enough, imagine the emotional trauma experienced by the young Paysonite who has to wait in line half an hour for a finan­ cial aid check. And then there are the transfer students constantly both­ ering you to see whether you have their transcripts, trying to weasel their way into resident status and harassing you for an appointment at advisement. But this is a trying time for them, too. They may have come to the campus expect­ ing the same personal touch offered at their community col­ M leges. Many of them may have just relocated their entire lives, finally giving up on that over-populated, crime-rid­ den, traffic-laden state to our west. Out-of-state residents are going to pay fees three times greater than those of Arizonans. It’s no surprise they already have a chip on their shoulder when they show up at the cashier’s office or try to make an appeal at residency classification. Combine com­ munity college experience, moving costs, tuition costs and add to that a six-hour day of bureaucratic bull at the campus and you may understand their attitudes. What about those students that have been here five or six years now, still haven’t graduated and still are asking those same dumb questions and making the same mistakes? Could it be that over the course of a semester many of the students are learning and consuming information they may consider much more important that the refund policy? Could it be that completing a paper or researching a mas­ ter’s thesis had priority over picking up their identification card? Could it be these people are serious students who understand and excel in their major but just can’t grasp the concept and memorize the university procedures with which you have become so familiar? Fall is here. The students are here. We are going to make mistakes, we are going to make many demands of you. Some of us are going to be impatient, some clueless, some unkind. We don’t work here, we pay to go here. Like any other customer, we demand respect and service. We want you to answer all our questions and we want the answers now. It’s a tough job. But how tough is it to smile? To say hello? To treat that frustrated, sweaty, lost person at the window with a little kindness and caring? The heat, the lines, the waiting and the crowds may bring out the worst in all of us, students and staff alike. But it doesn’t have to be that way, A simple smile can be the brightest part of a student’s day. We are people. We like to be treated well and when we are, I assure you we will reciprocate. Hey, staff of ASU: “WELCOME BACK!” Matthew G. Corless is a senior humanities major. JA SO N O W SL E Y , E ditor D A V ID STROW , M anaging E ditor KRIS FRIDRICH..................................................Night Editor GARIN GROFF....................................................... City Editor GREG ZEM EIDA........................................ Asst. City Editor DAVID LASPALUTO..........................................News Editor A. MARJORY KAMINSKI.............................Opinion Editor RICHARD KOMUREK....................................... Photo Editor CRAIG MACNAUGHTON...................... Asst. Photo Editor JEREMY STEIN .................................................Sports Editor DAWN WAGNER.................................... Asst. Sports Editor KEN CO LLIN S.............................................Magazine Editor ANNA ULINICH................................Asst. Magazine Editor R E P O R T E R S : M ika A k ikuni, E lizab eth A ppelen, Christina Bailey, Jared Bennett, Sheryl Bottner, Lorrie Cohen, Dawn DeChristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine Granados, Dave Proffitt, Karyn Riedell. SPORTS R EPO R TE R S: Todd Kelly, Dan Miller, Lee Newman. C O PY E D IT O R S : N ick B acon, Kim H erman, David LaSpaluto, Lynn Readicker. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Theresa Boettcher, Jim Poulin, Scott Trimble. UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta COLU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry Kelley, D iane Lopez, Jim M ahin, M ike Stevens, Chris Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. GRAPHIC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. PR O D U CTIO N : Aaron Brutcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. SA LES R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Em ily B erger, James Durocher, Dan Ellstrom, Adam Ezrilov, Jennifer Hughes, A lisa Jellum , C hrista Justus, Jennifer Pittm an, Karyn Riedell, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. ■ decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor . The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, A rizona State University* Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. ’ S P t a t e h o n e N P r e s s u m b e r s I n fo r m a tio n ...................9 6 5 - 7 5 7 2 N e w s r o o m ................... 9 6 5 - 2 2 9 2 M a g a z in e ...................... 9 6 5 - 1 6 9 5 A d v e r t is in g .................. 9 6 5 - 6 5 5 5 C l a s s if ie d s ....................9 6 5 - 6 7 3 1 Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, Ü O p in io n STATE P r e s s _______________________________ _____________ M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 _________________________ Broodstock: The Clinton Presidency Unraveled Over the Summer Months all of these new jobs, but the fact that 90 T h e re ’s a percent of those officers would have been famous maxim that stationed in and around Washington, D.C. B ill C linton is to prevent prostitution. (Who to arrest?) probably g etting The defeat of Clinton’s crime bill serves used to — crime is only to further damage his hopes for health like a box of care reform. The president has already c h o c ’lits; y o u ’re shown weakness to Republicans by backing bound to get a few down on his pledge of universal coverage. pim ples. W ell, it Now it is as if the sharks are circling. was something like Fearing filibusters from the opposition dur­ that. E ither way, ing health care debates, Dem. Thomas the saying accu ­ rately describes the Clinton administration’s Mitchell, Senate Majority Leader, warned current situation — things are about to go that hearings on the subject would continue 24 hours a day until a fair vote could be bust. Last week, Clinton suffered his most had. This lead C-Span to air re-runs of Mr. critica l defeat when his crime bill was shot down in the H ouse of Representatives. The bill, Clinton suffered his most critical defeat had it passed, would have when his crime bill was shot down in the called for a ban on various assault weapons believed to House o f Representatives. The bill', had it prom ote violence. passed, would have called fo r a ban on (C oincidentally, the ban­ ning of these types of guns various assault weapons believed to pro­ w ould g reatly increase mote violence. (Coincidentally, the ban­ Clinton’s chance of surviv­ ing his ‘96 re-election cam­ ning o f these types o f guns would greatly paign.) Im m ediately fo l­ increase Clinton’s chance of surviving low ing the news of the b ill’s failure, there was a his ‘96 re-election campaign.) co llec tiv e sigh of re lie f from rabbit hunters across the nation. There were other damaging aspects to Ed. Apparently, one talking horse is more Clinton’s crime bill. — no, I’m not speak­ interesting than 100 talking asses. The crime bill’s failure (and the possibil­ ing of the bill’s proposal to fund midnight sporting facilities where inner-city youths ity of the same with health care) has been a could shoot some hoops (and the opposing harsh, final blow for Clinton, who has suf­ team in the event of a close game), but fered a grueling summer of political and rather the plan to hire 100,000 new police legal embarrassment. Along with the sexual officers. What frightened our national lead­ harassment suit filed against the president ers the most wasn’t the cost of maintaining by Paula Jones, the Senate began hearings on the failed Whitewater project. Unable to afford PTUWlONiu. Setbr* W ellaleaderhe j "faíN,M owsW TTW 'HTH TV L_!(&. "H RRIN TrU EW O*aR CMD l>ER .i.L LT A r uH iIS x nO OPXW KA PIT tvEE âcr HE UAiSHO ' 'WKnt*-nex«tEs.H c's JC CX &C cmwcûtmoN? «AiNT S T R A J 6 H T D K A U S f legal defense, Clinton «.OUNGesMS AM PM OUTmV CO MltlDCVCKT nuirjMiiEf T DM 6ÉtC TA HW I4T&tAKT, HINOTE supporters began solicit­ H D-CTUftAN approver.-. \ ing the public for finan­ cial donations. The limit one individual could AAINP WOULD f -----donate was $1,000. The HfcCAUS AO M DO M A'S ®REAT N N LEVH TH CN TH m ost one individual 15 KallYus A6WNST ODER THAN JURASSIC -ERA REPU&UCAN4donated was one Canadian quarter. ■'--cast-' C linton’s prob­ lems weren’t limited to dte domestic and legal affairs, though. Just yesterday, Mexico held elections to find a new president. For the first time in years, certain California residents had the opportuni­ ty to vote for Mexico’s new leader. Incidentally, California was one of the few states where C linton still had voter support. There were more foreign disasters for Clinton this summer. In June, died. (R eportedly, he choked on some conflict with the rulers of Haiti forced the peanuts). Some guys just can’t cut a break. Just because a guy can’t cut a break, president to take a more offensive stance there is no law saying his wife can’t. The with the nation. He announced that Haitian fact that no laws were being broken didn’t refugees would be permitted to enter special prevent Hillary Clinton from hopping on a camps in both America and Panama. (Later, bus and touring the country. She made rou­ both nations retracted the offer.) The mili­ tine stops along the road to speak to people. tary strategy was clear, if a bit flawed. First, At each stop she was greeted by a few the United States would lure the Haitians fans, and thousands of angry Americans. out to sea, then, with the island vacant and After speaking to the crowd, she and the the natives drowned, the country would be rest of her caravan of health gurus would up for grabs. Unfortunately, there are only get back on the magic bus (wooh, wooh) so many boats in Haiti, none of which and head down the road. M eanwhile, in upstate New York, a belong to the military (which consists of rather large mud bath titled Woodstock II four men standing in a tent, all armed with was making deaf LSD addicts out of thou­ fully segmented slabs of stone). sands of concert goers. A coincidence? I Clinton’s plan failed, and the president think not. was bom barded with criticism from Now, with his crime bill devastated, Republicans, the media, and overweight health reform on shaky grounds, his moral talk show personalities. Soon, his ability to handle foreign affairs was in ques­ tion. M atters only grew Now, with his crime bill devastated, worse when Americans shift­ ed their attention from the health reform on shaky grounds, his Caribbean to Asia. moral and legal viability uncertain and North Korea, suspected of secretly building nuclear his wife’s comforting shoulder miles weapons, entered a military away, the president is losing the support standoff with America. Our nation waited in a numbing o f his Democratic friends. fear that, once again, it would be a hapless victim to a full-throttled assault of live war footage and legal viability uncertain, and his wife’s on CNN. This tragedy was adverted, com forting shoulder m iles away, the though. In an attempt to prove he wasn’t the P resid en t is losing the support of his Democratic friends. The upcoming elec­ worst commander in chief to grace the Oval tions in November promise to remove the O ffice, C linton sent form er President, Democratic majority from both the House Jimmy Carter, to North Korea. and Senate. If this occurs, Clinton’s admin­ Carter amazed everyone when he talked istration will be all but crippled. What will North Korea’s leader, Kim II Sung, into Clinton do next? halting production of n u clear-related Well, you know the famous saying: Clinton weapons. The crisis was over. America and is what Clinton does. North Korea would soon be sitting at the peace table and Clinton had his first diplo­ Mike Stevens is a sophomore journalism matic success overseas. Then Kim II Sung major. Heres one 30th anniversary to remember T his year when everyone w ants to celebrate the 25th ’ T ony anniversary o f W oodstock, I G R U N D O N would rather celebrate the 30th anniversary of Barry Goldwater’s G uest C olum nist nomination to presidency. Barry Goldwater was an amazing figure in American political life, Strong on principles, he led a conservative revolution that made him a senator and earned him the Republican presidential nomination in 1964. One thing about Goldwater makes him different from all other presidential candidates in the past century — unlike traditional politicians he did not base his platform or his views on polls, pressure groups, or insiders, but on his own clear thinking, which manifested itself in his ability to stand firm on the issues, despite wayward public sentiment. He has been a defender of individual rights on principle. Unlike President Clinton who pays lip service to individual rights, Goldwater holds firm that gays in the military is an issue of individual rights. He surprised a lot of non-think­ ing Republicans by coming out in favor of gays in the mili­ tary. Even when he was supposedly too old to be changing his views he had the courage to admit that the issue of abortion was a woman’s personal choice, not a fetus’ right to life. This is just one of many surprising stands he has taken. All his views, of course, go back to his unshakable belief in the rights of individuals. For many people the idea of a president capable of thinking in principles was too much of a threat — or because they lacked the ability to think in principles themselves, they couldn’t appreciate what an opportunity they had. I recall an interview once where Goldwater said he had no regrets about any of the political stands he had taken in his life. In this age of American decline, shrinking standard of living, rising taxation, increasing federal control vs. decreasing individual rights (just to name a few), I have one regret, but not about Senator Goldwater’s political views. I regret the public’s reaction to those views: They should have made him president. In today’s political climate such a man may not come again. Tony Grundon is a senior journalism major. Page 6 E - m a il__________________ C ontinued S t a t e P r ess M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 from page 1. try to keep a ‘probable cause’ mentality before opening an account. There are no fishing expeditions or voyeurism involved.” A ccording to Royal, Inform ation Technology must notify em ployers or Student Life if they receive a complaint. “Our role is to direct the complaint to the appropriate person to handle it,” he said. “The only tim e we look into an account is to resolve a problem.” General Counsel must be consulted and probable cause must exist before searching accounts, he said. “It’s important for people to realize the ability to monitor e-mail is restricted to a few technicians,” Conrad said. “No one will monitor e-mail traffic just for the heck of it. “It’s an exception kind of process, not business as usual,” he said. Conrad cites system crashes as another reason to examine e-mail. “We may have to look at certain transac­ tions from a technical standpoint because it’s not working,” he said. “The ability to look into e-mail is highly restricted. “What we’ve done in order to prevent enactment of the Public Records Act is change the model for electronic m ail,” Royal said. The old ASUNET system stored e-mail to disk and then transferred it to tape stor­ age for one year. Beginning this semester, all new e-mail accounts will use the Pine server. “Instead of back-up tape, information is stored on disks in the serv er,” Royal explained. “E-mail can be deleted and no backup copy exists. We no longer take requests for die Public Records Act.” In the past, Information Technology was required to provide any records students requested. “Everything had to be reviewed for con­ tent. The tapes prevent loss of information and protect the customer if the storage disk crashed,” Royal said. This means Inform ation Technology will no longer recover e-mail from tape. Users must download information and save it themselves. Excerpts from a draft of the "Electronic Information Access Policy" • "If there is a reasonable suspicion that an account or address is being used for illegal activities, the University may access the account or address. The Office of General Counsel and Department of Public Safety are to be informed of the access beforehand. The holder of the account is to be informed of the access within a reason­ able period of time after the examination is completed." • "The routine management and administration of university communi cation systems or computers may include the monitoring of any or all activity on these systems on a regular basis." • "Any message is permanent and may be read by persons other than the intended reader. Electronic messages may be subject to subpoena or public records requests. The sender should not assume a level of privacy which does or does not, in fact, exist." Visit Our New Expanded Showroom F r e e !!!! F ax/M odem W /S oftware with any CS&S System P entium 66/ 90 m h z Pentium CPU , V esa/PC I, 16 mb R am T eac 1.44 Floppy D ouble Spin CD ROM 545 mb H ard D rive V esa/PC I SV G A w / 2 mb 5" F/S C olor M onitor, K eyboard Logitech Mouse, MS DOS 6.22 MS Windows 3.11 486 *1895 *29957*3395 P riimters/ scanners I U S tudent S pecial ‘199 Panasonic 2023 SX-33 MHZ ‘269" Canon BJ 200e Intel C PU , V e s a L.B., 4 mb R am ‘325 Okidata 320 Teac 1.44 Floppy ‘445 Okidata 590 24 pin 2 1 3 mb H ard D rive ‘499 Okidata 400e Laser SV G A Video A dapter ‘995 HP Ilex Scanner SV GA C olor M onitor, Keyboard ‘1445 HP Laserjet 4 Plus Tl Microlaser PS23 M245" Mouse, MS DOS 6.22, MS Windows 3.11 ‘899 TI Microwriter ‘1469 NEC 1097 Laser Multimedia ‘49 Sound Blaster DoubleSpin cd- rom Discovery MM Kit 486 *1095 968-8585 M-F 9-6 DX2-66 MHZ Intel C PU , V e s a L .B ., 8 m b R a m Teac 1.44 Floppy M ultim edia C D R O M K it 4 2 0 mb H ard D rive VLB A ccelerator w / 1 mb SV G A C olor M onitor, Keyboan Logitech Mouse, MS DOS 6.22 MS Windows 3.11 pg ra d es H ard Drives 213 mb Hard Drive 345 mb Hard Drive 546 mb Hard Drive 1.06 gb Hard Drive *179 s229 s339 s669 386DX-40 M/B *119 486 SX-33VLB (Intel) ‘219 486 DX2-66VLB (Intel)*399 Pentium-60 M/B ‘795 Memory 1 mb SIMM ‘39.95 4 mb SIMM ‘ 149.95 4/8/16 mb 72 pin ‘call 1 5 0 5 W . University, # 1 03 , Tempe SAT 11-3 Tkm. •S m a ll C lasses, •B ig Scores. •U p -to -D a te M a te ria ls . •L iv e In s tru c tio n . •F ree E x tra H e lp . •G u a ra n te e d R e su lts. GRE 967-1480 Wed. Aug. We Score M ore! Oppcial sponosons of Phi Alpha Delia Pnelaw Tnaremny ar ASU. Princeton R eview is not a ffilia te d w ith Princeton U. W orld news. Classified ads. Sports. O p in io n s . Cryptoquote puzzles. In-depth features. Help w anted ads. Letters to the editor. Daily events schedule. Apartment rental ads. It's free. ‘S t a t e P ress Page 7 M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 St a t e P ress vf‘HI ■ ||1|Ì L * - ‘. : s , v. .y.1 BBI w M y... . : ■Is ISPfeW'Æ 'i>C? ¡a g ii i f I b f't, ¡9 >y „ « B M ' * ^ 4 Saturday, August27, 10a.m. Round upyourfriends and head outto Sun Devil Stadiumfor ASU Fan Photo Day. You’ll meet Sun Devil football stars andfellow studentsJake Plummer, Jeff Kysar, Parnell Charles as well as HeadCoach Bruce Snyder. Be one ofthefirst onethousand fans andyou’ll receiveafreeASU Football Fan Photo DayT-shirt! S ee y o u there! m HOME TOWN SCHEDULE SEPT. 3 SEPT. 1 0 SEPT. 17 O C T. 8 O C T. 2 2 NOV. 1 2 OREGON ST. MIAMI LOUISVILLE STANFORD WASHINGTON ST. UCLA Hear The Roar In'9 4 Hi i ■- , Page 8 State P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 Airport noise reduction proposal up for vote “Sky Harbor Airport is important to Tempe,” Gross said. “The airport is an important economic generator for the city. A lot of the businesses and industries that are in the city are here because it’s located close to the airport. The airport is also a convenience to our citizens. “But at the same token, one of the costs of living close to an airport is having aircraft noise. And while the eco­ nomics of the airport helps contribute to our quality of life, there’s nothing that can destroy our quality of life more than an airplane flying over your house.” Although noise will increase slightly in Tempe once the third runway starts operating, the proposed agreement requires half of the aircraft leaving Sky Harbor to take off over Tempe and the other half over Phoenix. “I am pleased that (the settlement) has been accepted,” Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano said. “It’s the basis for our future relationship with Phoenix and the FAA and gives the city of Tempe protection that we need. I would emphasize that it is not all the protection that we would have liked. In the proposed settlement, Phoenix agrees that it would never ask the FAA to change the flight procedures that require aircraft departing to the east over Tempe to fly within the airspace over the Salt River bottom. The settlement also includes an informal procedure designed to keep aircraft arriving from the east over Tempe aligned with the existing south runway for as long as possi­ ble during the aircraft’s final approach for landing. Under the proposed agreement, the City of Phoenix is required to develop and install a $1 million noise and flight track monitoring system capable of determining whether a specific aircraft complies with the procedures, as well as a system of measuring the precise noise impact of those a ir-. craft at certain specified points in Tempe. If the Phoenix City Council approves the proposed agreement on Aug. 31, Tempe will drop the two lawsuits filed against the FAA and the Environmental Protection Agency, Gross said. If not, Tempe could continue pursuing the lawsuits. By Mika Akikuni State Press The Phoenix City Council will vote on a proposed settle­ ment next week that will help clear the way for construc­ tion of a third runway at Sky Harbor International Airport. The proposed settlement, which the Tempe City Council accepted unanimously last Wednesday, is a result of a series of meetings that took place among the cities of Tempe and Phoenix, the Federal Aviation Administration, and a U.S. Circuit Court mediator. The meetings were held to regulate noise caused by aircraft flying over Tempe. “Tempe was very nervous that the third runway could impact where the planes would fly,” said Randy Gross, assistant to the mayor of Tempe. “Two lawsuits were filed against the construction of the third runway (in January), and our goal was to get a negotiated settlement, or to get something in writing that would state that the planes would continue to fly over the Salt River riverbed and not over residential Tempe.” ■ f i i m m i i i n i ACURAI C reative Id eas M a te ria lize d . CAR SPECIALISTS ^ ^ LELru<-£s / W ithout the right help and supplies, your brightest creative ideas m ight never m aterialize. Flax Company, Inc. under­ * 4O'L stands how important it is \ INDEPENDENT SERVICE and the staff knowledgable. \ P Our everyday low prices and our back-to-school ? £ discounts* for students (up to 30% ) mean savings everytime you shop at Flax. / for an artist to have a reliable source for quality materials, CD *PAPER • 3 where the service is courteous 3 -BOOKS" * %AND MORE O Let your creative ideas come to life—shop at Flax today. M ATTRESS VISA WERIOWl 4 5 (Includes up to 4 quarts) T W O L O C A T IO N S 968-5989 I F Y 1 - O U ' R E N 1M 1 A S H I R 954-7923 TO SER VE YO U One-way trips to ASU 1 8 2 0 E. A P A C H E B L V D . TEM PE T . 9 Check Our Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services VISA FLAX COMPANY, INC. 1 $ ( 'D iscounts apply to list prices only. Some restrictions apply. OIL CHANGE & OIL FILTER V tttafte P eople W ho K now U se V alvoline- 1001E. J e ffe r so n S t., P h x . 254-0840 M on.-Fri. 8:30-5:30, S a t. 9-5 •F R E E Estimates •F air Prices •O n e Day Service on Most Repairs 1Com plete Parts D epartm ent ■FactoryTrained Technicians T E 3 0 3 9 E. T H O M A S R D. P H O E N IX W . <3 S E & G I S F T S IS THE PLACE FOR YOU ! io% OFF FEATURING: E v ery W e d n e s d a y ! liEAK F O R C o m e in & s ig n u p fo r your S tu d e n t S P O R T S D is c o u n t C a rd Void on sale or promotional items M E H rilA M H .S K LARGEST SELECTION OF ASU MERCHANDISE r$ OFF 829-1743 • a $25 PURCHASE W NOT VAUD WITH ANy OTHER OFFER • EXPIRES 1-1-95 725 S. Rural Rd. Tempe, AZ. • Cornerstone • 602-829-1743 State P ress _Page_9 M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 a r e s ix r e a so n s to IM I ASU Bookstore today!! Most complete selection of used and newtextbooks & general interest books. 0 Thousands of titles of the textbooks you need now. When the semester is over we have the best buy-back around. 3 ART S U P P L IE S ! C H E C K U S O U T! •O IL PAINTS »BRUSHES •ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES •CANVAS BOARDS »PAPERS •TECHNICAL DRAWING PENS •MARKERS »CHALKS »BOOKS •DRAWING BOARDS »WATERCOLORS ORANGE CADY 5 z MU ■ ! 1 CL Conveniently located on campus •Parking •Friendly service ASU BOOKSTORE ■I» j E z n ^ B ^ B i i E ^r rrlil y ASU Bookstore m Open Extended Hours through August 27 Mon-Thurs 7:30am-9pm Friday 7:30am-5pm Saturday 10am-4pm ♦ 4 A lU 4 4 M im M im iA iiM i# M U W a V a V a W ^ V a W ' S t a t e P r ess M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 Page 10 Regents buy IBM ’s Tucson complex B y L o r r ie C o h e n S t a t e P ress Christmas came early this year to the Arizona Board of Regents and most taxpay­ ers as well. IBM, after six years of negotiations, sold its 2.2 million square foot, $114 million complex in Tucson this summer to ABOR for $98 million. The cost to the public appears to be nothing. Although negotiations are still in progress as to what to do with the structure, ABOR will probably use the site as a research park or a four-year undergraduate college. “It’s a sweetheart deal,” Regent Rudy Campbell said. “They have done this as a gift to the University and the state of Arizona.” Here’s how it works: The ABOR pays for the complex with $98 million worth of Industrial Bonds pur­ chased by IBM. Payments on the bonds are due each year. This is when the deal gets even sweeter. “We are going to lease the property back to IBM for enough money to pay the bond indem nity each year that com es due,” Campbell said. “They are furnishing the money to buy the bonds and then they are going to pay them off with rent ... by doing this, it's a bookkeeping transaction through internal revenue that affords them to ride off that gift each year for the next 10 or 12 years.” If IBM pulls out of the complex, located on Rita Road in southeast Tucson, the prop­ erty then remains in the hands of the ABOR free and clear. “If they (IBM) pull out and are not going to pay us anymore, the bonds are canceled, that’s part of their gift. The bonds are for­ given or canceled,” Campbell said. The only out-of-pocket expense, accord­ ing to Campbell, will be the closing costs for the transaction, estimated at about $600,000. IBM occupies 950,000 square feet of the facility, sharing it with Hughes Missile Systems and 3M Corp. 3M will continue to own a small part of the com plex after ABOR takes over, said Greg Coxon, senior vice president of CB Commercial, the com­ pany that handled the transaction. Although Coxon said he could not dis­ cuss the details of the deal, he described the complex as a “state-of-the-art” facility. It also has its own recycling and ground water system, Coxon said. Companies that locate in the facility and are in a partnership with the UofA likely will receive tax advantages, he said, However, an Aug. 4 report by Rauscher Pierce Refsnes shows taxes would increase slightly for Vail Elementary School and Pima Community College communities because of IBM’s assessed valuation from tax rolls. The increase is expected on a short-term basis only, according to Robert Davis of CB Commercial. The business and educa­ tional grow th w ill outw eigh the tax increase, Davis said. 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Push a button, select an entry from the pull-down menu, and fill in the blanks. • C heck it o u t a t your co lleg e b o o k sto re. The HP 48G graphic calculator gives you a whole lot more for a whole lot less than you think. Compare — the HP 48G fits your budget. Theater ads. Police Report. Com ic strips. O p in io n s . Cryptoquote puzzles. In-depth features. Help w anted ads. Letters to the editor. Daily horoscopes. C ity & county news. S pecial advertising inserts. Daily events schedule. A pa rtm e n t r e n t a l ads. C u ltu ra l a c tiv itie s . It's free. ¥h n % H E W LE TT® m LT ' M PACKARD S t a t e P ress P ag eJY St a t e P ress u J COLLEGE C O U N T D O W N ÉMiÉ f ir Ilf, .EST1971. I S E S T_r BOBBY McGEE'S MESA 1320 W. SOUTHERN AVE. 969-4600 % FEATURINGTHE BEST INALTERNATIVEAND HIGH ENERGY 4 0 $pp MUSIC 4om B E A T TH E C L O C K M M R M H 7 -8 2 5 i DRAFT BEER 8 -9 509 LONG ISLAND TEAS 9 - 10 75« WELL, WINE, DRAFT 1 0 - 11 $ 1 .5 0 U-CALL-IT 1 1 - 12 $ 2 .0 0 U-CALL-rr St a t e P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 Page 12 FLASH adds n ew sh u ttle Officials hope to ease concerns about Lot 59 B y S heryl B o ttn er S t a t e P ress ASU’s new Free Local Area Shuttle, or FLASH, has made some changes after its first month in operation. Originally, the FLASH Express, a city bus that seats 35, ran between Parking Lot 59 and the bookstore from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and from 7 a.m. until 6 p.m. on Friday. But beginning two weeks ago, a fifth regular FLASH bus was added to take students from Lot 59 to the book­ store, 9 to 11 a.m. daily. “We hope all our efforts will help ease concerns about getting from (Lot) 59 to the bookstore and back,” said Karen McNeil, a parking and transit coordinator with ASU Department of Public Safety. "Students can call me and I'll be glad to help them or pass their concerns to the vendor or to city of Tempe.” Students riding the FLASH expressed mixed feelings about the new system. "It works OK, but some stops are unclear from the brochure,” said Hal Core, a non-degree graduate in fine arts. “With all the construction downtown, it’s hard to tell where to catch the bus.” Mary Arroyo, a junior education major, worries she may NORWEST have to wait while full shuttles pass her by. “They don’t look like they hold as many people as the trams,” she said. “The trams were always full; I hope there are more of these buses.” Another student, however, likes the new system. “It’s much hotter here than at home, and I don’t have to walk in the heat,” said Stephanie Earl, a transfer architec­ ture student. Carlos deLeon, a transportation coordinator with the city of Tempe, said he knows students are unhappy that the trams were gone. “We have a partnership with ASU. and the idea was to provide better service to the public and students, and we were sensitive to the quality of service," he said. The city of Tempe handles all shuttle maintenance and splits the operating costs with ASU. The biggest problem deLeon faces is the air condition­ ing, which one driver complained about after seeing eight compressors replaced on one bus. “We’re trying to overcome the problems, but buying a bus fleet isn’t like buying an automobile — the bus indus­ try doesn’t have the quality of the automobile industry,” deLeon said. DeLeon said experts have inspected the buses and expect to have the air conditioning working soon. The city plans to extend routes in the future so shuttles run between downtown Tempe and the Salt River Project headquarters on the Tempe/Phoenix border. The change would not affect ASU’s bus routes. STUDENT LOAN CENTER COMBO Piç&r-Hut. Pizza, 24oz. Soda, 3 .4 9 Small Tossed Salad Pizza, 24oz. Soda, 4 .4 9 Small Chef Salad. Bread Stick, 24oz. Soda, ry a ç \ Large Tossed Salad. The second floor restaurant in the Memorial Union building. Com bo selection change daily. 0 w \, Q .o # d b c4 The Memorial Union Food Court W indy CHy Foods. M U M arket. Pizza H ut. Coffee Shoppe. O n The G o, W oks, C hick-fil-A , Subcity, Sizzling Salads, Pasta Express, Taco Bell, M aricopa Room. eJ R A C R O S S W O R D by T H O M A S JO S E P H A C R O SS Uncom plicated. Student loans shouldn’t be complicated. From Federal Stafford Student Loans (subsidized and unsubsidized) to Federal Parent Loans (PLUS), Norwest has the answers. Just call one of the numbers below, or visit any Norwest Bank. Student Loans F in d O u t H o w . F in d O u t N o w . 1-800-658-3567 Norwest Bank Arizona, N.A. Downtown Tempe 64 East Broadway 644-8361 1 Bill of DO W N “Maude” 1 Breath 5 Israel's freshen­ Moshe ers 10 Not busy 2 Idolize 11 Game 3 Tidy up settings 13 Christmas 4 Ha­ rangued song 5 J.R.'s 14 Soup home legume 15 Refrain bit 6 Scopes 7 Longing 17 Historic 8 Starts a time hand 18 Iroquois 9 Kenyan Indians city 19 Drunkard 20 — Moines 12 On the agenda 21 Cartoonist Goldberg 16 Good server 22 “Aladdin” villain 1 3 25 Swift 10 26 Assist in crime 13 27 Blubber 28 Last 15 year’s jrs. 18 29 Place to jot 33 Butter serving 22 23 24 34 Wolf's 26 comment 35 Menlo 28 Park inventor 33 37 N. Mex. 35 neighbor 38 Change 36 copy 39 Phrase of 40 under­ ■ standing A B4 Ö|Mj N F [Q 0 I a1~N Is T S a tu rd a y 's A n sw er 21 French satirist 22 Reddish quartz 23 Rubbed 24 Like a gala 25 “Goodbye Colum­ bus” author 7 6 n 27 Oklahoma native 29 Hang- && man’s need 30 Analyze sentences 31 UFO user 32 Stunned 36 Use a stool 8 ■ L J ■ 12 I h 1 ■■ 14 1 16 17 ■ 21 20 ■ J , ■ ■ 29 9 1 30 31 32 ■ 1 36 “ ■ 37 39 ■ 1 L One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 8-22 RNPT CRYPTOQUOTES YTNYCT TWYTIM SNNJ FOMB XD RNKJ I T KDHDNFD MN NYYNJ- ET N Y T D T S TCTI MJOI © 1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. M em ber FD IC • Equal O pportunity Lender m DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W MKDOMG'R N O RW EST BANKS s| Af 40 Hamper 41 Broadcast Op Mo 1T NE lo N U_r T G T . — P a g e l3 M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 S t a t e P r ess Regents deem proposal for 4th university infeasible By Lorrie Cohen State Press An advisory committee’s visions of a new university in Pima County appear to be pipe dreams to some Arizona Board of Regents members at this time. A recent report prepared by the Community Advisory Committee called for an undergraduate, four-year universi­ ty in Tucson that would be independent from the city’s UofA. The campus would have its own president, who would be named immediately, and have a permanent loca­ tion for a projected fall, 1996 opening, according to the plan. The report, prepared for UofA President Manuel T. Pacheco, left out one thing—cost. “I believe further research when it comes to numbers is nec­ essary and a budget needs to be presented or at least looked at,” said student Regent David Tung. Regent Rudy Campbell voiced reservations about the high cost of creating a new university because it would require its own president, provost, deans and administration. “My feeling is that it should be a branch campus of ¿>iödenf* ¿Book? G e n iS r * UofA, not a separate institution, because we can’t afford to hire a president and all his staff to start another institution right now when we’re having to cut back at our current institutions,” Campbell said. He explained that the ABOR was able to save money by authorizing ASU East and West campuses, rather than making separate institutions in the Valley. However, Campbell said the new campus could become Arizona’s fourth university years from now when it grows to serve 10,000 to 15,000 students. Donald G. Shropshire, community advisory board chair­ man, disagrees with Campbell, saying a new university would provide a rare opportunity to plan something with a new philosophy. He said an independent university would better focus on undergraduates and build a sense of community. “That’s what we have in mind and it’s hard to do that and be successful if it’s just made another part of an exist­ ing system,” Shropshire said. A projected enrollment boom of 55,000 students by 2010 has raised concerns for additional university facilities in the state. The campus is located in southeast Tucson on the newly acquired IBM complex on Rita Road. The site, which has 2.2 million square feet of buildings, would be relatively inexpensive to start up because the campus only needs fur­ niture. The campus was in essence a gift from IBM because the $98 million price tag was picked up by IBM, which pur­ chased industrial bonds. Whether the Tucson site becomes a branch or indepen­ dent campus, it is at least ready to become a temporary campus, said Celestino Fernandez, UofA’s vice president for academic research and international affairs. The site’s future will be addressed in further studies. During the next year, the ABOR will develop master, academic, financial and m arketing/recruitm ent plans. Mission and guiding principles will be discussed at the September Regents meeting in Tucson, Fernandez said. “I think we’re going to do everything we can to make it a successful temporary basis and if it is permanent, we will deal with that,” Fernandez said. •LARGEST SELECTION OF NEW & USED BOOKS •PERSONAL, FRIENDLY ASSISTANCE •TOP QUALITY SUPPLIES BACK ! TO ! SCHOOL! SPECIAL! Ib r a y o BR A V OPLUS*59.9S : »N O •N O l »N O •N O Activation Fee j Credit Checks \ One Time Fees 1 Contracts I Pens, Paper, Binders, Notebooks, etc. I 704 S. College Ave. O ne B lock N o rth o f ASU SAME LO CA TIO N 28 YEARS 279-2944 I | PAGE-COM | | 3625 N. 16th St. Ste. 102 1 | ‘While supplies last j | ‘A ctivation required \ 1 HOUR FREE PARKING i________ with minimum purchase - located behind the store W e l c o m e to Arizona State University. rSffldenC C B ook* GentSr* O A BA SEM EN T FULL O F B O O K S M O N&TUES W ED & THURS FRI 8:00am - 9:00pm 8:00am - 8:30pm 8:00am - 6:00pm SAT 9:00am - 5:00pm SUN 11:00am - 5:00pm The State Press is one of the top five co lle g e new spapers in the country. Look fo r us at d is trib u tio n p o in ts all over cam pus, in clu d in g p a rkin g s tru c tu re s , the MU# the B ookstore and many o th e r s tra te g ic p o in ts on and o ff cam pus. W e ' r e F r e e! S t a t e P ress i M onday, A ugust 2 2 ,1 9 9 4 P age 14 Sta te P ress N e w insurance plan cornes to A S U B y E l iz a b e t h A p p e l e n S t a t e P ress ASU’s new health insurance plan is more affordable than the previous one, but students may end up-paying more if they choose their own doctors. ASU Director o f Student Health Dale Bowen said the new Samaritan Campus C are plan, w hich replaces the Blue Cross/Blue Shield plan, has maximum ben­ efits at a minimum price. “It is about a $100 less a year and you get m ore b en e fits,” Bowen said. “Hospitalization, for example, is complete­ ly paid for in this plan.” Other treatments that are completely covered in the plan are chemotherapy, radi­ ation treatment, transfusions, short-term rehabilitation and medical emergency trans- L o o k in g f o r A JOB? W a n t t o b u il d E X P E R IE N C E IN — W R ITIN G — — D E S IG N — — PH O TO G RA PHY— — M A R K E T IN G — The Sun Devil Spark. C a ll W e're lo o k in g fo r a few ta le n te d , h u n g r y -to -a c h ie v e p e o p le . 965-6881 A s k fo r B ill L yn am E d ito r in c h ie f portation. The Samaritan plan offers other benefits. Many other treatments, such as maternity care, well baby care, outpatient diagnostic, mammograms and physical therapy are also covered, but there is a $10 copayment. One downside to the Samaritan Campus Point of Service (POS) plan involves stu­ dent access to certain doctors. Under the new plan, the Student Health Center must refer students to one of the nearly 1,800 innetwork providers included in the plan if students want the in-network plan benefits. If students want to use a physician who is not in the POS Samaritan network, they must switch to a doctor who is part of POS in-network plan or pay the $500 deductible for out-of-network physicians. Another potential problem involves the plan’s costs to special need students. If such students want to see a specialist who is not a part of the plan, they will also have to pay the $500 deductible. “I don’t think it’s fair to all of the stu­ dents, especially the students with special needs who have a particular doctor they need to see,” said Leslie Waxman, an ASU Japanese major. “Also, a lot of younger stu­ dents have their family doctors and now they can’t afford to go to them because of the $500 deductible.” According to Steven Gutmore, associate director of student health, no plan will suit everyone, but it is important to try and sat­ isfy as many people as possible. “We have selected a plan we thought was good for most students,” Gutmore said. “We believe managed care is the way to go.” If ASU would have stayed with Blue Cross/Blue Shield this year, students would have faced a 12-percent increase in the pre­ mium rate, said Anna-Marie Shivers, ASU insurance specialist. The fall semester Samaritan Campus Care plan will cover students from Aug. 16 through Jan. 15 at a cost of $247. The spring and summer plans cover stu­ dents from Jan. 16 through Aug. 15 at a cost of $346. The additional premium in the fall plan for a spouse is $556. For one or more chil­ dren, the cost is $429, and for a spouse and children the cost is $743. In the spring and summer plan, the addi­ tional premium for a spouse costs $778. For one or more children, the cost is $600, and for a spouse and children the cost is $1,040. St a t e P ress M onday, A ugust 2 2 ,1 9 9 4 _____________________________ P a g g j j i Tempe police arrest suspected impersonator B y K a r y n R ie d e l l S ta te P ress A 45-year-old man was arrested Aug. 17 by Tempe police on for impersonating a member of the sheriff’s department. According to witnesses, a man identifying himself as Gregory Fees entered Pima Plastics at 828 W. 24th St. and said he was a member of the Sheriffs Posse. Police later determined that Fees has no affiliation with the sheriffs department. He was arrested for aggravated driving under the influ­ ence and impersonating a public servant. He was transport­ ed to the Tempe City Jail, and held to see a magistrate. Two employees of Pima Plastics, Bonnie C. Schmelzer and James J. Moore, said that Fees, dressed in Western clothing, came into the store carrying a gun and wearing a pair of handcuffs on a belt holder. They said that he asked for information about an employee who supposedly owed him money. He claimed to know the employee from the county facility where prisoners are housed. The two witnesses believed Fees was an employee of the sheriffs department until they realized that he appeared to be intoxicated. They gave police a description of his car and his license plate number. Police officers arrested Fees as he was about to make a left turn into a shopping center near Broadway Road and Hardy Drive. Sgt. Tom Ryff, Tempe police spokesman, said that impersonation of a public servant is not common. “But we have no way of knowing for sure about how many times this happens because we may never find out about some cases,” he said. Ryff referred to one impersonation case in which a man identified himself as a city water employee. He would tell the victim to turn the water on, then go inside the house and steal jewelry. “He was going to various cities and using this same ploy,” Ryff said. According to Officer Thomas Anderson of the Phoenix Police Department, there is one good way to determine if someone is impersonating a public official—ask for identi­ fication. “If you have any doubt, ask to see a picture ID ,” Anderson said. “All public employees, even military, have a picture ID and are required to show them if asked. In addition, police officers also have badges.” ROTHER's BOOKSTORE SAVE M O NEY. . .B U Y USED. LO O K FO R M O N E Y-SA VIN G C O U P O N S ON PAGE 25. 625 E. Apache Open late this week (Just west of Rural) 967-5445 Plenty of FREE Parking Get Jazzed For Back To School TREK 800 M ountain Bike C ro-M oly Frame Free 30-day service. One year gear & brake adjustment. Lifetime frame & fork warranty. Student Discounts w ith I.D. DOMENICS CYCLING University 9 6 7 -7 7 0 0 1004 S. Mill Ave., Tempe Open 7 Days a Week Layaway • Financing I 10th Street t N ■ Apache Page 16 S t a t e P r ess M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 E le p h a n t g o es w ild HONOLULU (AP) — A rampaging cir­ cus elephant killed a trainer and injured another before it was shot down in the streets. It was the second elephant attack in a week at Circus International. The 21-year-old African elephant named Tyk went berserk just before she was to perform with four other elephants in Saturday’s matinee. “ All of a sudden, the elephant kicked the trainer into the arena,” said Ann-Marie Pesa, who was in the audience. “ Nobody knew if it was true or just faked.” Tyk picked up the apprentice trainer and threw him down, then tried to stomp his head. Another trainer was crushed by the animal as he tried to help the first man. The medical examiner would not release the vic­ tim’s name Sunday. “ All of a sudden people started running away, children were screaming and we saw the blood,” Pesa said. A dozen people were injured as they fled. The elephant broke through the main exit and led authorities on a chase of several blocks. She was cornered in a light industri­ al area and shot repeatedly until she crum­ pled to the ground. W orkers from the Honolulu Zoo gave her a lethal injection at the scene. On Monday night, an elephant rammed a fence around the ring, knocking Sean Floyd into the next row and pinning his wife and eight children under the fence, Floyd said. None of the Floyds required hospitalization. It wasn’t clear whether Tyk was the ele­ phant involved in Monday’s attack. Calls to a circus spokesman weren’t returned on Sunday. Nickel Palace 1110 S. Alm a School Road, M esa 461-8590 3725 E. Southern, M esa 985-4950 3 5 5 8 W. G lendale, Phoenix 841-4450 New location! 3140 E. Indian School, M esa 955-7544 10 Nickels Free v with $1.75 admission . _ ,, , , , Sun-Thurs 10 a m - m idn ight Games on McfoCs The rest are FREE Frl-Sat 10 a m -1 a m Expires 9-4-94 N ot va lid w ith a n y o th e r discount solutions from your branch office... kin ko ’S. take Kaplan and get a steve Is ■é b f ■ ,, J * ,- . * S ta c e y 's S 0 8 P I& f j pre-lâW, jjj i alan 's business p, I engineering, _ administration, 1 m i l a n d ca ro l is 3Tt. More students take Kaplan's courses every year than any other test prep company's. Call us today to find out why. -------------- Come to a FREE Seminar!--------------DATE: Thursday, August 25 TIM E: 7-8:30 p.m. Space is limited! Cali by Aug. 24 to reserve your seat. 1-800-KAP-TEST Com ing Soon: A h w atu kee • Ray & 48th St. 893-0700 (SPONSORED BY ASASU) AUG. 22-26,1994, 9am-1pm - aug. Your branch office 22,23,25,26 BETWEEN MU & SSV AUG. ACC394 PERSONALINCOMETAXPLANNING SL N 3 5 5 3 9 M O N D A Y % W ED N ESD A Y 3 : 1 5 P .M .- 4 : 3 0 P.M . COMMUTER EXPO w e s t law n vary, but they all depend o n k in k o ’S Open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Call I -800-743-COPY for the Kinko’s nearest you. SERVICES W HERE: Bring this ad into Kinko’s and get copies at 1/2 the regular price. Offer limited to self-serve copies on standard 8.5x11 paper. One coupon per customer per visit. Not valid with other offers. Offer expires 9/5/94. Now Open: S cottsdale • Scottsdale Rd. & 1st Ave. 946-0500 OFF CAM PUS STUDENT W HEN: half-off COPYsale 10 valley locations including: T em p e • Rural & Univeristy 894-1797 KAPLA W HAT: ~ interests 24 THIS C O U R SE IS D E SIG N E D T O GIVE ST U D E N T S A SO ILD F O U N D A T IO N IN THE PRINCIPALS O F TAXATION A N D T O PR O V ID E PRACTICE TAX P L A N N IN G STRATEGIES. IT WILL COVER: W H Y : Stop by and receive information: Student government, Off-campus Student Services, ASASU student services, apartment locating, newspaper sign up, phone services, hotels, bookstores, furniture rental, airlines, • C O N C E P T S O F IN C O M E , D E D U C T IO N S , A N D CREDITS • C O M PU T E R A ID E D RETURN PREPARATION • CAPITAL G A IN S A N D LOSSES • SMALL BU SINESS T R A N SA C T IO N S • THE O R G A N IZ A T IO N A N D F U N C T IO N O F THE 1RS • THE 1RS A U D IT PROCESS N O PRIOR FAMILIARITY W ITH A C C O U N T IN G O R TAXATION IS REQUIRED, A N D THE C O U R SE IS O P E N T O ST U D E N T S O F ALL COLLEGES. water services, banks and credit unions, and much, much more! FOR M ORE INFORM ATION CON TACT: PROFESSOR CHARLES CHRISTIAN SCH O O L O F A CCO U N TA N CY C O LLEG E O F BUSINESS S t a t e P ress f P age 17 M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 Grand Canyon Camping Trip "" («ra n n I / in v n n A E R O B IC S Fall features more than 68 classes per week. All Semester Aug. 29-Dec. 7 Finals Week Dec. 7 - Dec. 18 Free Week Aug. 22-28 Session I Aug. 29-Oct. 16 Cost: Students pay only $15.00 for 7 weeks or $25.00 for the whole semester. S eptem ber 3-5 The group w ill have a day hike into the canyon or individuals may hike the perim eter of the canyon. Cost: $75.00 per person Introduction to Rock Climbing at Camelback M ountain, Echo Canyon Park Sept. 24 (9am -4pm ) Course covers outdoor safety principles and basics o f rappelling. Designed fo r those w ith o u t any previous experience. Cost: $50.00 per person W E IG H T T R A IN IN G W OM EN O N W EIGHTS SEPT. 6 - OCT. 20 T, T H @ 5:15 pm Try this 7-week introductory class to weight training. I W T R A 1K E U R A L S Sport Entrv Dates Softball Tourney Aug. 15-24 Badminton Singles Aug. 15-30 Flag Football Aug. 15-31 Volleyball Doubles Aug. 15-Sept. Swim Meet Aug. 15-Sept. Racquetball Singles Aug. 29-Sept. Tennis Singles Aug. 29-Sept. 3 on 3 Basketball Sept. 19-Oct. Volleyball Sept. 19-Oct. Free Agent/Player Pool List Available C hildren & Family F u n & F itn ess S a tu rd a ys Each FUNTASTIC Saturday will include activities such as basketball, tennis, volleyball, swimming, racquetball, aerobic activities, movies campus walks, snacks and new games. The activities are held from 9am-Noon for 10 weeks, every Saturday. Sign up at the SRC 2nd floor Administrative Office. 6 16 16 23 6 6 Session: September 12-October 28 Cost: $20.00 for 7 weeks Classes are: Monday & Wednesday 5:30-6:30pm - Beginners 6:30-7:30pm - Intermediate Tuesday & Thursday 5:30-6:30pm - Beginners Meet with an exercise specialist in our Well-S.T.A.R.T. Center to evaluate your fitness level and design an exercise program to meet your individual goals. Services are free. Call now for an appointment at 965-3090. Session: Sept. 12 - Oct. 28 Cost: $20.00 for 7 weeks Classes Meet: Tues. & Thurs.: 12:15 - 1:15pm 5:30 - 6:30pm C holesterol S creen in g Wednesday, September 28 10am - 1pm Fee: $15.00 For further information please call 965-8908 SRC HOURS B uilding Hours: Adult Beginning Adult Intermediate I Lifeguard Training Water Safety Instructor 9/12-10/12 M &W 9/13 - 10/13 T>& Th 9/13 - 10/11 T & Th 9/26 - 10/25 M,T, & F 4:30-5:30pm $30 5:30-6:30pm $30 4:00-7:00pm $55 4:00-7:00pm $95 Page 18 S t a t e P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 P olice R eport ASV police reported the following incidents Sunday: • A male student reported that his red 1987 Nissan was stolen while it was parked in Area 63. • A man unaffiliated with ASU reported that his gray Nissan was stolen from Parking Lot 3. • A female student reported that her license plate was lost or stolen in Parking Structure 4. • A female student reported that four hubcaps were removed from her vehicle while it was parked by Parking Structure 4. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was arrested, cited, and released for criminal trespass at the Student Services Building. •Two male students were contacted at ManzanitaHall after the smell of marijuana was noticed in the area of their room. They were warned of drug and alcohol laws. • A man unaffiliated with ASU was contacted at Cholla Apartments while he was sleeping in the grass. He was warned of trespass and loitering, and he subsequently left the area. Tempe police reported the following incidents Sunday: driving a stolen Honda Civic. After a foot pursuit, he ran to an alley and got into a Mercury Lynx that was also reported stolen, and drove off. He was taken into custody and admit­ ted to stealing both vehicles. • A 20-year-old man was arrested for motor vehicle theft and resisting arrest. The man had been observed driving a vehicle at a high speed through the apartment complex at 1330 W. Broadway Road. A records check revealed that the vehicle had been stolen. When placed under arrest, the man struggled and was able to break free. He was taken into custody after a foot chase. • A 32-year-old intoxicated woman was arrested for assault and disorderly conduct after biting her husband on the arm. She also broke the front and back windows of a nearby apartment with a metal chair. • A 24-year-old man was arrested for allowing an underage person on the premises of the Mill Avenue Brewing Company. • A 20-year-old woman was arrested for underage posses­ sion of alcohol, use of a false ID to enter a bar, and giving false information to police. • A 23-year-old man was arrested for theft and for threaten­ ing and intimidating behavior when he failed to return a video to Star Video. The man told a store clerk, “I’ll blow you away” and “I’m not bringing your videos back.” • A 37-year-old man was arrested for disorderly conduct after yelling in indecipherable speech to patrons at Aunt Chilada’s Restaurant and at Incredible Universe. • A 22-year-old man was arrested for giving false informa­ tion when identifying himself and for violating park cur­ few. He and three other people were stopped while sitting at a table at Meyer Park after the park had closed. A small amount of a green, leafy substance, believed to be marijua­ na, and drug paraphernalia were sitting on the table. When asked to identify himself, the man gave a false name. • A 27-year-old man was arrested for assaulting his girl­ friend’s roommate. The assault followed a verbal argument between the two men. • A 23-year-old woman was arrested for assault after slap­ ping another driver following an accident. • A 26-year-old man was arrested for possession of two stolen vehicles. He was stopped at 1635 N. Scottsdale Road M A T T R ES S ES QUEEN DELUXE FIRM T W IN DELUXE FIRM $ s a each piece DOUBLE DELUXE FIRM $ 44 each piece $ 7 « each piece ✓ YES w e h a v e fra m e s ✓ YES w e d e liv e r ✓ YES w e b e a t a n y p ric e in to w n ✓ YES w e ta k e p h o n e o rd e rs NEED A C LA SS ? FALL S.C.C. Courses Equivalent to ASU Courses * Im portant: The following represents a partial listing of ASU and equivalent SCC Fall 94 class offerings. See the 1994-95 Arizona Commission for Postsecondary SCOTTSDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE CLASSES START Education Course Equivalency Guide and an advisor for complete details. ASU ACC230* ACC240* ACC250 JUS 100 JUS320 JUS311 ART214 ART231* ASB102 ASB335* ASM101* AST111 AST 125 BIO100 • BI0181 ZOL201 CHM335 CIS200* aS235 CSE201 COM207 COM225 COM24I* COM259 THP270 COM281 CSE100 CSE181 AH 100 ECE106* ECE210* ENC111 ENC112 SPF111 Elective* ENG101 ENG102 ENG200 ENG210 ENG222 ENG341 FRE101 GLG101* GLG102* GLG104* GLG110 SCC ACC230 ACC240 ACC250 AJS101 AJS118 AJS225 ART116 ART151 ASB102 ASB245 ASM101 AST111 AST113 BIO100 BI0181 BIO201 CHM235 a s 105* aS 158 CIS 162 COM207 COM225 COM241* COM259 COM271* COM281 CSC100 CSC181 DAH100 ECE106AA ECE211 ECN111 ECN112 EDU221 EDU250 ENG101 ENG102 ENG200 ENG210 ENH222 ENH241 FRE101AA GLG101 GLG102 GLG104 GLG110 COURSE USES OF ACCT INFO I USES OF ACCT INFO II INTRO ACCOUNTING LAB INTRO CRIMINAL JUSTICE COMMUNITY RELATIONS CRIME* DELINQUENCY LIFE DRAWING I, II, III, IV SCULPTURE I & II INTRO/CULTURL & SOC ANTH SW ANTHROPOLOGY HUMAN ORGNS & DEV OF CULT INTRO TO ASTRONOMY I INTRO TO ASTRONOMY I Lab BIOLOGY CONCEPTS GEN'L BIO (MAJORS) I HUMAN ANATOMY/PHYSIOLOGYI GEN ORGANIC CHMI & Lab SURVEY COMP INFO SYSTEM COBOL PROGRAMMING I C PROGRAMMING INTRO TO COMM INQUIRY PUBLIC SPEAKING INTRO TO ORAL INTERPRETATN COM IN BUS & PROFESSIONS ELMNTS OF INTERCULTURAL CO COMMUNICATION ACTIVITIES INTRO COMP/SCIENCE/PASCAL APPLIED PROB SOLV BASIC INTRO TO DANCE INTRO COMPUTER AIDED ENGR ENGINEERING MECH-STATICS MACROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES MICROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES SURVEY OF EDUCATION OVRVIEW COMMNTY COLLEGES FRESHMAN ENG FRESHMAN ENG READN & WRITN ABOUT LIT CREATIVE WRITING SURVEY OF ENG LIT AFTER 1860 AMER LIT BEFORE 1860 ELEM FRENCH I INTRO TO GEO I/PHYSICL LEC/LAB INTO TO GEO II/HISTCL LEC/LAB INTRO GEOLOGY H ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY ASU SCC GLG111 GLG111 GPH111 GPH111 GPH212* GPH212 GPH214* GPH214 HES305 HES201 EPE283 HES271 HIS 100* HIS 100 HIS101* HIS101 HIS 102 HIS 102 HIS103* HIS103 HIS104* HIS104 HIS428* HIS105 DEC/HIS HIS203 HUM103 HUM103 THE300 HUM205 rTAlOl/2 ITA101/2AA JPN101 JPN101 JPN201 JPN201 JRN201 JRN201 DEC/JRN JRN215 MAT106* MAT124 MAT106 MAT129 MAT114 MAT150 MAT117 MAT154/5 MAT118* MAT160 MAT119 MAT179 MAT210 MAT210 MAT223 MAT270* MAT224 MAT271* MAT242* MAT225 MAT235 MAT272* MCO120* MCO120 , MHL145 MUS347* MTC101 MUS100E MUP350 MUP150 PED265BC EPE291 PED265FW EPE291 PHI101 PHI101* PHI103* PHI103 REL100 PHI243* PHS100 . PHS110 PHY101 PHY101 PHY111/2* PHY111/2 S1-S2* PHY 115 POS110* POS110 POS330 POS115 RUGUST 2 7 COURSE ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY LAB INTRO TO PHYS GEO LEC/LAB INTRO TO METEOROLOGY INTRO TO METEOROLOGY LAB I SUBSTANCE ABUSE/BEHAVOR PREV & TREAT/ATHLETICINJU HIST OF W- CIV TO MID AGES HIST OF W- CIV/MID AGES-1789 HIST OF W-CIV/1789 TO PRESENT US HIS TO 1870 US HIS 1870 TO PRESNT ARIZONA HISTORY BLACK AMERICAN HISTORY IDEAS & VALUES IN HUM INTRO TO CINEMA ELEM ITALIAN I & II ELEM JAPANESE I INTER JAPANESE I NEWSWRITING NEWSROOM ACTIVITY INTER MED ALGEBRA W/REVIEW INTERMED ALGEBRA COLLEGE MATHEMATICS COLLEGE ALGEBRA/FUNCTIONS PLANE TRIGONOMETRY FINITE MATHEMATICS BRIEF CALCULUS CAL W/ANALYTIC GEO I/II/III CALC W/ANALYTIC GEO II ELEMENT LINEAR ALGEBRA CAL W/ANALYTIC GEO III MEDIA & SOCIETY AM JAZZ & POPULAR MUSIC INTRO TO MUSIC THEORY COMMUNITY CHORUS BASEBALL THEORY OF COACHING FOOTBALL METHODS OF COACHING INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY INTRO TO LOGIC HIS OF WORLD RELIGIONS FUND PHYSICAL SCIENCE INTRO TO PHYSICS GENERAL PHYSICS I & U UNIVERSITY PHYSICS I AM NATIONAL GOVERNMENT ISSUES IN AMER POLITICS - SMALL CLASSES ■SIMPLE REGISTRATION - LOW TUITION- $32.00 - CREDIT HOUR ^ANNIVERSARY “Aging with Class” ASU POSI 60* POS311* PGS101 PSY230* PGS350* PGS222 PSY290 REA251 RUS101 RUS201 SOC101 SOC315* SOC341 SPA 101/2 SPA201/2 TCM200 TCM235* THE 100* THE300 THP101 SCC POS120 POS221 PSY101 PSY230 PSY250 PSY277 PSY290AB REA179 RUS101 RUS201 SOC101 SOC157 SOC251 SPA101/2AA SPA201/2 TCM101 TCM180 THE111 THE205 THP112 COURSE WORLD POLITICS AZ CONSTITUnON INTRO TO PSYCHOLOGY INTRO TO STATISTICS SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY PSY OF HUMAN SEXUALITY RESEARH METHODS REAL ESTATE PRINCIPLES I ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN I INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY SOC OF MARRIAGE & FAM SOCIAL PROBLEMS ELEMENTARY SPANISH I & II INTERMED SPANISH I & II FUNDA OF RADIO & TV TELEVISION TECHNIQUES INTRO TO THEATRE INTRO TO CINEMA ACTING I „ ................... w State P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 P age 19 Savings on Electronics Right Here on Campus! HP calculators for business and finance. Get Hewlett Packard Com e try one today. H P Calculators - the best for your success. HP-48G Scientific Calculator 19B $140.99 17B $ 89.99 •3D gaphics, polynom ials, enhanced m atrice s • G raphics w ith stora ge and recall «Essential $119.99 w ith Algebraic input $255.99 H E W LE TT H EW LETT PA C K A R D 4 Te x a s ^ In s t r u m e n t s PA C K A R D Don’t miss a NOTE.' And with one of these Recorders you won’t! TI-82 GRAPHICS CALCULATOR • Defines, saves and graphs 10 rectangular functions, M-425 Pressman Pocket Size Microcassette Recorder 6 param etric equations, 6 polar equations, and 2 recur­ •Cue and review •O ne touch recording sively defined sequences • S uperior interactive graphing TCM-S63 Pressman Portable Cassette Recorder tools allow exploration of functions and th e ir roots, •O n e to u c h re cording • B u ilt in m icrophon e . W l- x x $ 2 9 .9 9 S O N Y minim ums, m axim ums, integrals, and derivitives. A SU BO O KSTO RE O 3 3 ~cTj ORANGE MALL CED ■ ASUMAIN BOOKSTORE OPEN EXTENDED HOURS THIS WEEK Mon.-Thurs. 7:30am-9:00pm Friday 7:30am-5:00pm Saturday 10am-4pm rtoM Page 20 State P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 Information Technology announces changes for fall B y Sheryl B o ttn er S t a t e P ress Nothing endures but change. With those words in mind, the folks at Information Technology want students and staff to know about changes to the computing sites. Starting this fall, students cannot use ASU computers without first registering an ID and passw ord at the Computing Commons. Until today, anyone could walk into a computing site and use computers intended for students. “R egistration will help to make sure com puting resources are reserved for people who are paying tuition,” said Larry Conrad, director of Computing and Network Consulting Services. When students register, they get a Pine electronic mail account and access to Gopher and Netnews. Gopher is a popular tool for finding information from thousands of other Gopher servers on the Internet. It also allows users to send and receive mail on the Internet. Users can also use their post office address for e-mail, said Mark Royal, Manager of Information Distribution and Electronic Messaging. Other changes include the addition of a student comput- W E L C O M E !... W h e th e r re tu r n in g to A S U , o r c o m in g h e re for th e first tim e, TRI C IT Y MOBIL w ish e s y o u a great, sa fe-d rivin g fall s e m e s te r . #1 in se rv ic e for A S U stu d e n ts, faculty, a n d s taf f — y o u c a n d e p e n d o n TRI C I T Y MOBIL to fix yo u r B ooks, e tc . Inside Tempe Center ASU's GENERAL BOOKSTORE- M abil INCLUDING COMPUTER, BUSINESS, MYSTERY, AND MUSIC BOOKS SPECIAL ORDERS PHONE ORDERS Tri City Mobil Justafew 967-1111 901 S. M ill A ve .SW corner M ill &. University, Tempe McKellips fflilllltCS S c o tts d a le R d. & M cK e llip s Tri City.. Mobil (Southeast Corner) 947-9655 fromASU! WERBfllil W e accept: BRAKE SERVICE $ 6 9 r| 9FRO5NT $ 5 9 |9RE5AR UPS SERVICECENTER ALL MAJORCREDITCARDS I Listed on. nternet as AZ Best SF Bookstore IN C L U D E S : ■ R e-pack W h e e l B e a rin g s a n d P ad s ■ Sem i-m etallic E xtra ■ M ost D o m e stic a n d Im p o rt C ars a n d Trucks ■T u rn R o to rs o r D ru m s ■ C h e c k S y stem O p e r a tio n er lab at Goldwater building Room 185 with DOS, main­ frame and UNIX access. Another site in the Engineering Center G-Wing will reopen at an undetermined date as a Macintosh lab with an 85-computer network and entry to the Internet. The additional computing sites and a better e-mail sys­ tem will allow more students to take advantage of comput­ er technology. “Students should be able to receive and submit home­ work assignments through e-mail,” Conrad said. “By get­ ting the student body electronically available, more options become possible down the road.” SHOW YOUR ASU I.D.— GET AN EXTRA 10% OFF i 95 IN C L U D E S : ■ System P e rfo rm a n c e Test ■ In sp e c t H o ses, Belts & Pulleys ■ C h eck F o r Leaks ■ Freon and Parts Extra Most Cars & Light Trucks Valid w ith Coupon thru 9/ 22/94 TRI CITY MOBIL E N G IN E $29” IN C L U D E S : ■ New Spark Plugs ■ Scope Adjustment ■ Check Starting and ^ Charging Systems $49” • Inspect Filters, Belts, Wires & PCV • Additional Parts Extra :- u p $39” Most Cars & Light Trucks Valid w ith Coupon thru 9/ 22/94 TRI CITY M O BIL COOLING SYSTEM FLUSH $ 2 9 ** ™ 1 Plus S5.00 $5.00 EPA Disc Disposal Fee Valid w ith Coupon thru 9/ 22/94 Most Cars & Light Trucks Valid w ith Coupon thru 9/ 22/94 TRI CITY MOBIL TRI c m r M O RIL IN C L U D E S : ■ C h em ically Back F lush C o o lin g S ystem U n d e r P re ssu re ■ C h eck H o ses, T h e rm o s ta t & R a d ia to r C a p ■ P re ss u re T est H o s e F or Leaks ■ C o o la n t, P arts Extra ■ Install R ust In h ib ito r & W a te r P u m p L u b ric a n t J Classes Closed?! C LA S S E S A R E AVAILABLE AT CHANDLER-GILBERT COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND THE BEST PART IS ... C LA S S E S START A U G U ST 29! “It’s Tim e For A New Way To Go To College” • Four-day Class Schedule • Morning, Afternoon & Evening Classes • W eekend College • Small Business Workshops • Financial Aid Available • Aviation Training • Convenient, Free Parking • Fitness Center • Com puter Lab • Off-site Classes Available At Highland High School (o n G u ad alu p e e a s t o f R ecker R oad) THERE'S STILL TIME! • Easy Registration - W alk or Phone-In (O U R S C H E D U L E F IT S Y O U R S C H E D U L E ) “A UNIT OF THE MARICOPA COMMUNITY COLLEGES M onday, A ugust 2 2 ,1 9 9 4 S t a t e P r ess State P ress Classifieds - we're always in the back. WHY STRUGGLE??? OUR INTERACTIVE VIDEO TUTORIALS MAKE IT EASY! YOU HAVE PROBABLY HEARD ABOUT MARK, SOLOMON’S COURSES ON PHOTOSHOP ILLUSTRATOR, or QuarkXPress, ta u g h t a t NY’s New School for Social Research... so pop­ ular they are sold o u t weeks in advance. NOW THESE COURSES HAVE BEEN REPLI­ CATED on VIDEOTAPE IN MARK’S energetic and stim ulating style. Bob Cringely o f InfoW orld h as said a b o u t th e s e ta p e s : “Photoshop, Illu strator, and Q uark... th is is incredibly complex so ftw are... b u t M ark Solomon w ith his calm a s s u r­ ance and S o u th ern -b o y m an n er really m akes i t look easy.” Each program... Photoshop, Illustrator, and QuarkXPress, contains tw o 90 -m in u te tap es (Vols. I & II), graphics and picture file on floppy disks, and a “program outline booklet”... priced a t $ 4 9 .9 5 per vol. (NY add tax) + S /H , (1 tap e $4, 2 /$ 6 , 4/$fi>, €>/$9) Save 25%... order before O ct. 15 - $7 5 + S&H / program G u a ra n te e... o u r p ro du cts are th e very b e s t interactive training to o ls available to d a y... f a r superior t o MacAcadem y... if you don’t agree, we’ll refund your money and pay you $10 per volume returned (subject to prior approval by VGS). C h eck or m.o. VGS p a y a b le t o : P ro d u c tio n s , 3 5 0 W. 71 S t ., # 4 3 5 , NYC 1 0 0 2 3 , 2 1 2 - 3 0 2 - 5 3 9 4 . P a g e 21 A S U P u b lic E v e n ts joins to help Rwandans B y C hristina Bailey State P ress ASU has joined in the effort to help bring relief to the thousands of orphans in Rwanda. ASU Public Events, which collected more than 50 hope kits that will be deliv­ ered to the orphans, was one of the drop­ off points for the Scottsdale-based Food for the Hungry organization. Overall, the organization has collected more than 12,000 hope kits during the past month. The hope kits, which cost about $25 each, included vitamins, a child’s t-shirt, an emergency camping blanket, a cereal bowl, a bar of Ivory soap, bandages, cortisonefree antibiotic cream and a donation of $5 for shipping. The response from people wanting to volunteer, send money or drop off the hope kits was overwhelming, said Wendie Marlais, group sales coordinator for ASU Public Events. Marlais said the pictures of disaster and devastation in Rwanda really hit her hard. “It was important for me to be able to help in any way I could,” said Marlais, who used her office as the drop-off point. About 8,200 hope kits were sent to staff workers in Uganda for distribution earlier this month; the rest were shipped out Saturday evening. “We had a goal to collect 10,000 hope kits this month and we more than surpassed that goal,” said Amy Sampson, public rela­ tions assistant for Food for the Hungry. People all over the country have been calling the Food for the Hungry organiza­ tion to find out how they can help the Rwandan Orphans, said Lesa Caban, direc­ tor of the Food for the Hungry’s National f Church and Volunteer Network. “I get the sense that people are over­ whelmed with the pictures they see in news reports. They want to do whatever they can to help,” Caban said. “Since most can’t jump on an airplane and go to Rwanda, they’re either sending money or putting together hope kits, or both. Some are start­ ing hope kit drives in their own cities.” Gary Paisley, vice president of finance and administration, said he was amazed by the effort people put forth to_hejjr_ “This shows that there isn’t the apathy in the U.S. that many people think there is,” Paisley said. “People just need a way to respond.” Food for the Hungry was founded in 1971 by Larry Ward, Ph.D., in southern California. The offices were then moved to Arizona because the climate and landscape, similar to many of the countries in which the organization works, was more suitable for training volunteers and staff. The organization, which has been active in Rwanda refugee relief since May, pro­ vides aid to more than 20 of the world’s poorest countries and staffs about 700 peo­ ple around the wprld. Right now, Food for the Hungry plans to provide $2 million worth of aid to Rwanda. And even though they may reaich their goals, said Sampson, Food for the Hungry does not leave until the people can basical­ ly fend for themselves. “We don’t just leave,” Sampson said. “We teach them how to farm, how to take care of themselves; basically we help them to start over.” For more information about the Food for the Hungry organization, call 1-800-2HUNGER. I KNOW WHAT I KNOW. WE COME & WE GO. IT’S IN THE BACK OF MY EYES ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS H W iiij'uL l>\ (lii of UiiU'i I I r ts -vi. I J i J J( y j \ l \( LARGEST TRAVELING MOVIE POSTER SHOW ON T H E PLANET I W M W I < 6!<> ('. >iU;) 1, MiLM' KvHBBl «Mi m i «6V6VI,6k>lW, (i'*Vo í l:<:, ili ili: I k 'JiU'Tíi l ibK- tf'fe i’liii'J 107 l i ! * UÄ 10 6 Mn l'/-6 A State P ress Monday, August 22, 1994 Page 22 SA LE EN D S ÆM ichaels *7 ^ e arts a n d crafts sto r e SCHOOLSUPPLYSALE! HUGESELECTION!GREATPRICES! Best Selection of Supplies Under One Roof! Handy tins with sets including studio pencils, watercolors, artist pencils, pastels and more. Drawing pads, watercolor paper, newsprint and more, all in the most popular sizes. Student Kits Includes MiTientes sheets, Arches Cold & Hot Press, Strathmore GeminîT illustration board & more. Variety of lettering guides, math kits, drafting sets, rulers and more Individual tools & combination kits available. 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State P ress Monday, August 22, 1994 Page 23 ASU Graduate College to be awarded $170,000 grant M oney to go toward doctoral student training By Lisa G onderinger State P ress ASU is one of five research universities in the country that will be awarded $170,000 over the next two years to develop programs designed to better prepare doctoral students for careers in higher education. Starting this fall, doctoral students will be able to apply for a new program called Preparing Future Faculty. Pew Charitable Tmsts, a private founda­ tion working to improve education, funds the program . It put the A ssociation of American Colleges and Universities and the Council of Graduate Schools in charge of finding five institutions to award. O f the 70 institutions, Howard and Northwestern universities, the universities of Minnesota and Washington and ASU received grants. “ASU is in very good company,” said Jerry Thomas, associate dean of ASU’s G raduate C ollege. “Ten years ago we would not have even been considered for this. It is pretty significant.” ASU Provost Milton Glick agrees that receiving the grant is a major step forward for ASU. “ASU’s being chosen for this grant shows how much of a major player we have become among graduate schools,” Glick said. In order to apply for the grant, colleges had to prepare a short proposal on how they would work with other institutions in their region to improve training for doctoral students. ASU’s proposal, authored by Thomas, outlined a plan to work with ASU West, the Maricopa County Community Colleges and Grand Canyon University. The five areas of emphasis will be English, music, psycholo­ gy, zoology, and curriculum/instruction. Elizabeth McNeil is working toward her doctorate in English and is one of the 25 students who will be participating in the program this semester. “I was scared to sign up for this program at first because I figured we would be used as PR tools for the people giving the grant,” McNeil said. “But this is really geared toward helping us. It will let me make a more realistic, educated decision about what I want to do with my degree and we don’t get a lot of help in that area.” Thomas said he hopes that through this program, permanent models for preparing doctoral students can be developed that em phasize teaching and research more equally. Jay Braun, professor of psychology at ASU, is also involved with the program and feels the benefits will be invaluable to doc­ toral students. “When I was a grad student, they told me I was going to teach a class,” Braun said. “They told me what room I was sup­ posed to go to and that was it. I was scared to death. I wrote down exact notes of every­ thing I was going to say during the whole class. It was not good.” Some experience and knowing what to expect are very important factors in being a successful college teacher, Braun said. He said students in the program will also get the chance to rub elbows and network with prominent Phoenix educators. ROTHER's BOOKSTORE YOUR COMPLETE COLLEGE SUPPLY PREREQUISITE LO O K FOR M O N EY-SA VIN G C O U P O N S ON PAGE 25. Open late this week 625 E. Apache (Just west of Rural) TÆS4 967-5445 Plenty of FREE Parking L e g i s l a t i v e a n d I n t e r n s h i p A isuaf atmosphere, and tradì: G o v e r n m e n t A p p l i c a t i o n s : pplications for the 1995 Legislative and Government Internship Program are now available in the OFFICE of the Senior Vice President and Provost, ADMINISTRATION BUILD ING, ROOM 211. This program is coordinated through the Arizona Legislature and the Arizona Supreme Court in conjuction with ASU and other Arizona colleges and universities. b e st drink sp e c ia li o be eligible, students must have achieved at least the FIRST SEMESTER SENIOR STATUS BY JANUARY AND A GPA OF 3.0 OR BETTER. Interns will receive academic credit and stipend from the agency they serve during the semester. Students from a wide variety of academic and technical disci­ plines are encouraged to apply. ■ » Williill m ill > 4 1 S h o ts • $2 C u e rv o G o ld j $ 2 P re m iu m L o n g > $ la n d ic e É y ^ P o rn estic V in e s te in s A tl $ 3 ?sP jt c h e r s o f M it f e r L it e lc pproximately 23 students will be selected for the 1995 program. Interns will report to various government offices for a full spring term’s work with state legislators, committees, leader­ ship officials, judges and other elected officials. The work includes speechwriting, bill drafting, research, attending meet­ ings and hearings, working on constituent problems, and addressing agency issues. or information and applications, ASU students should contact Norma Talamante, Office of the Senior Vice President and Provost, 965-8380. Applications are due by noon Monday, Sept. 26, 1994. Applicants for the internships will be screened and then recommended by the ASU Screening Committee to the legisla­ tive selection committee. Names of those selected will be announced the third week of November. B Li A aw students interested in applying as law interns with the 1995 Legislature should contact the Office of the Dean, College of Law. SU faculty and staff are encouraged to recommend students to apply. State P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 P a ge 2 4 The perfect place for s u m m e r all year 'round. The Commons is the perfect place to live while going to ASU. It's only 2 blocks from campus and 20 steps to the pool. All the suites are large, • 2 bedroom, 2 full baths, completely furnished w ith a microwave, dishwasher and washer & dryer in each suite. There's a big huge volley­ ball-pool w ith jacuzzi, a regulation sand -volleyball court, sauna plus an inside racquetball court and w eight room. There are also planned social activities, a roommate matching service and a great management team. Of course, the summer is prime-tim e to be living at The Commons, but it's great all year 'round. Don't w ait until the last minute, you'll have enough to do. Make your fall reservations today! 2 blocks from campus l l l l E . Apache Tempe, AZ OCMMCNS f r MEMBERS ONLY Call us today 8294)933 Pag';e 2 5 ROTHER' BO O KSTO RE ALL Y O U N EED FO R FALL IN O N E EASY STO P Plenty of Used and New Books •Study Aids, Lab Books •A Complete Line of Backpacks & School Supplies •Two Full Weeks for Book Refunds •Open Late First Week of Classes N 6 2 5 E. A p a c h e B lv d . 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 t UNIVERSITY DRIVE 0) CD JD O 1) "D ASU Ctl ■ 1 APACHE BLVD. 15 Urn D ec LO TS O F F R E E P A R K IN G W h ile y o u s h o p . - - — ------------------------- P age 2 6 State P ress Monday, August 22, 1994 D PS ch ief denies fault in search com plaint Says departm ent plans to handle search-and-seizures differently By Karyn Riedell State Press The chief of ASU Department of Public Safety main­ tains he did nothing wrong after his departm ent was accused of an illegal search and seizure last spring, even though he said the department will now handle searches differently. Craig Emanuel, ASU DPS chief of police, said late last week that an illegal search-and-seizure complaint filed by 19-year-old David Gunter was unfounded and that DPS conducted its search legally. On April 1, Gunter was arrested during an investigation of a stolen car. According to a police report of the incident, Gunter gave DPS officers permission to search his room, at which time they reported finding guns and knives. These weapons are illegal according to ASU’s Student Code of Conduct. The police also found containers of alcohol on the premises. He pleaded guilty May 18 to underage possession of alcohol. A charge of interference with the peaceful conduct of an educational institution was dismissed. Gunter was ordered by the court to take drug and alcohol rehabilitation classes. On April 22, Gunter filed an illegal search complaint against ASU DPS. Graham Firestone, a third-year law stu­ dent who represented Gunter, said that ASU police officers Keith Richerson and Michael Roper conducted an illegal search and seizure of Gunter’s dorm apartment. Even though Emanuel defended the manner in which Gunter’s room was searched, he said ASU police would do a better job the next time out. “We’ve considered Mr. Gunter’s and Mr. Firestone’s concerns, and we feel better prepared to respond,” he said. plus deposit Coors Light ICEHOUSE M iller Lite Genuine Draft can 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 to reserve yours now Film Developing FREE CINNAM O N TREE CENTER, TEM PE 9 6 7 - 1 4 1 4 MBE M A IL BOXES ETC." We're The Biggest Because We Do It Right! An Independently Owned and Operated Franchise © 1991 Mail Box Etc. EVERYDAY! Pag;e 2 7 M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 P r ess NAACP leaders react to downfall o f Chavis ; WASHINGTON (AP) — The NAACP began looking Sunday for a new leader and tried to measure how much damage Benjamin Chavis’ painful ouster had caused its reputation in the world of civil rights. The NAACP turned to its interim admin­ istrator, Earl Shinhoster, 42, who had com­ peted against Chavis for the executive director post. Shinhoster, NAACP national field secretary, met Sunday with a boardappointed committee to come up with a short-term plan for handling day-to-day operations until a new executive director is hired. "What I am trying to do is get all the parameters together, and resolve them in my own mind," Shinhoster said before the meeting. He declined further comment. Meanwhile, a worn but defiant Chavis picked up the remnants of a black leader­ ship summit that was to start Sunday in Baltimore but was postponed by the Largest among them was Chavis’ alliance with controversial Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, which many NAACP officials took as a sign that Chavis was moving the NAACP into a separatist posture. Saturday night, Gibson said he intends to return the group’s focus to the mainstream, moderate agenda it has had throughout its 85-year history. He deflected questions on whether the NAACP would continue its relationship with the Nation of Islam. Gibson also said he had invited Chavis to meet with him to discuss a severance agree­ ment. Chavis said he was open to such negotiation. "I support the NAACP. I love the NAACP," he said Sunday. "I just want to be treated fairly.” Yet within hours of Chavis’ firing, his awards, records and other belongings were packed into boxes and carted from NAACP headquarters. Some Chavis supporters said NAACP. He pledged not to “ let the lynch­ ing that took place here stop us.” "This is not in response to my firing. Everybody’s in town, ready to go forward," he told NBC-TV’s "Sunday Today." Instead of meeting at NAACP headquarters in Baltimore, the gathering was shifted to two nearby churches. Chavis, 46, was fired Saturday for con­ duct that the board of directors said was hostile to the survival of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The group’s board of directors hopes to find a successor within 30 to 90 days. While Chavis’ dismissal was triggered by his decision to settle a former employee’s sex discrimination claims for $332,400, board Chairman William Gibson said Chavis was removed because of "an accu­ mulation of things" that occurred during his combative 16-month tenure. he was ordered to leave immediately; board members said it was Chavis’ choice to do so. The departure of Chavis deflated the hopes of younger NAACP members who were buoyed by Chavis’ attempts to empower young people within the NAACP at a time when it had been seen as out-of­ touch with their concerns. Several who rallied outside NAACP headquarters Saturday confronted board members inside the building and held an impromptu sit-in in the lobby when they learned Chavis had been fired. "We are outraged. Dr. Chavis was the best that came to us in the last 12 years," said Darnell Armstrong, a New York NAACP youth representative and former youth board member." We’re going to clean house. All those individuals that made that decision will have to live by that deci­ sion." ART POSTER SALE BACK TO SCHOOL i SALE SUPERIOR QUALITY BIKES AT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD a* GIANT "Attraction" AUGUST 22-26 All terrain bike with index shifting Reg. $229.95 FREE W ITH EVERY NEW BIKE PURCHASE M O N -F R I 9-5 CADYMALL•OUTSIDEMU GREAT SELECTION •Water Bottle & Cage or Fanny Pack ($10 Value) •1 Year Brake & Gear Adjustment •Lifetime Warranty on Giant Bike Anywhere in USA •Installation of All Parts & Accessories •Person to Person Clinic •Bike Route Map Great masters of art and photography, top musicians and personalities. Nature, contemporary and more! LOWPRICES GIANT "Sedona" 21 Speed, STX Full, oversized, Cro-Moly frame and fork, Araya alloy wheels. Reg. $499.95 U-LOCKS Ì ¡ ¡ M i r ■ L T .r Ì ACCESSORIES *6 °°OFF • * pariT I Reg. Price with carrying bracket & $1.00 Guarantee 894-5570 1126 N. SCOTTSDALE RD. (N. W. com er o f Scottsdale & Curry) — ■ UGI HEAD & I S $ g o o {EXCLUDES BIKES & LABOR) I Regular Price I HÜ • v 'C ab in 1 : 1 ' v*4«0K*wtat* in emolovine«or!n tw **dca»on, admiaaion, paridpaton, acceaa and M am ara ol panana ki inatuctonal programa and acrMfaa. El Distila da Colegios Comunitarios dal Condado de Martoopa no acriminan ilegalmente en al empleo o en la soitcMud de empleo, admisión, participación, acceso y talo de personas en programas instuocionales y actividades debido a rasa. odor, reigion, origen nacional, genero, ktcapadlactorV desvarada »sica, edad, o por set veterano de la era Vietnamita o vetersnojnhstojMtada___________________ A & . ék P age 3 0 Monday, August 22,1994 High hopes for democracy as Mexico holds elections MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexicans lined up to vote Sunday, wary about fraud but with high hopes of choosing a new president and lawmakers in clean elections. In the south, Mayan Indians trekked through mountains to reach the polls. The elections come during a tumultuous year that began New Year’s Day with an Indian rebellion that still smol­ ders, and saw popular presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio assassinated in Tijuana four months later. The vote — which could be Mexico’s most competitive ever — has become a test of the country’s resolve to match the bold economic reforms of this year’s North American Free Trade Agreement with political reform. Three candidates were leading in the race for the presi­ dency. Ernesto Z edillo represents the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, which has ruled Mexico for 65 years. He is strongly challenged by Diego Fernandez de Cevallos of the conservative National Action Party and Cuauhtemoc Cardenas of the leftist Democratic Revolution Party. President Carlos Salinas de Gortari, who is credited with raising Mexico’s international stature and reducing its foreign debt, is constitutionally barred from seeking a sec­ ond consecutive six-year term. Fed up with corruption and election fraud, Mexicans are scrutinizing the election of their next leadership. The United States, Canada, W estern Europe and Mexico’s other new free-trade partners also are watching, along with 82,000 Mexican and foreign observers. Some polling stations in the capital opened late. But no incidents were reported. Some places had lines a block long outside. Part of the reason for the long lines was the process of checking and marking the new Mexican voter identifica­ tion cards, issued to prevent fraud. Also, each voter’s fin­ ger was marked with an indelible yellow ink. “ I don’t like the ink. It’ll last for five days,” com­ plained Consuelo Gonzalez. “ But it does show I’m a com­ plete citizen.” “ The polls opened a little late, and not all the observers are here, but otherwise everything is alright,” said Antonio Navarro Medina, a poll watcher for one of the contending parties. About 45.7 million people were registered to vote. A total of nine presidential candidates, including two women, were in the race to replace Salinas on Dec. 1. Mexicans also were electing a 500-member Chamber of Deputies and two-thirds of a 128-seat Senate. The southern state of Chiapas, where an Indian rebel­ lion smolders, was electing a governor, legislator and local authorities. Salinas promised the cleanest vote ever in a country with a tradition of fraud-marred elections, and $730 mil­ lion was spent to overhaul voter rolls and issue voter iden­ tification cards with photographs. A special deputy attor­ ney general was named to prosecute election-related fraud. Homero Aridjis, head of the ecological Group of 100 artists, writers and intellectuals, said this was the first time he voted. “ The government used to do it for me,” he said refer­ ring to elections when the ruling party used the names of non-voters to cast fraudulent ballots. “ This is the first time that I consider that citizens’ votes can bring effective democracy,” Aridjis added. Despite the precautions, Cardenas remained skeptical the election would be squeaky clean. State P ress Sta te P ress L etters t o t h e E d it o r Diversity o f opinion and response. DO YOU WANT A POSITION WITH THE BIG 6? If yo u w a n t y o u r job search to e n d in success, start it w ith in fo rm atio n available from form er Big 6 recruiters. W e will prepare yo u for th e n ew interview process w ith personalized, tailorized packaging to show case y o u r ed u catio n & experience designed specifically for yo u based o n in fo rm atio n y o u provide. 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C a ll W e're lo o k in g fo r a few ta le n te d , h u n g r y -to -a c h ie v e p e o p le . 965-6881 Ask for Bill Lynam Editor in chief Page_31 M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 St a t e P ress New ASASU VP sw orn in Malik said. He said he did not run for the position in the late spring because of concerns about the term-length and uncertainty about the executive board. “I did not know who I would be working with. You can only get things done (with ASASU) if you’re working with the right people,” Malik said. “I am confident that (the executive officers) are capable of fulfilling their jobs, and two, that they are populists.” “The executive officers (in ASASU) are one of the most diverse and open groups of people that I think have ever been here,” Frost said, adding that he is excited to begin working with Malik. Senate members hope for a smooth transition within the group. “In my opinion, he’s great for the senate because he keeps everything running smoothly and maintains an unbi­ ased stand,” said Matt Bare, senator from the college of nursing. B y D a v id P r o f f it t S t a t e P ress In the recent merry-go-round of replacement officers in ASASU, John Malik is in a familiar position. He was sworn in Saturday as the new executive vice president of ASU’s student government. Malik is replacing Alan Frost, who left the position to assume the presidency after Marci Hendrickson was dis­ qualified this spring. “I’m excited to hang out with people who think along the same lines I do, that are populists,” Malik said. This is the second time that Malik has taken the helm of executive vice president in as many semesters. He was appointed to the same post this spring after then-Vice President Caesar Tima resigned following impeachment attempts. “It’s not that I’m exceptionally qualified, it’s just that I’ve been here before. It’s going to sharply decrease the amount of lay-time required to get used to the position,” Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week "G O O D NEWS" Your Body W ill Thank You COMING SOON TO ROSITA'S - WATCH OUR AD FOR DETAILS. » 1/2 PRICE DINNER With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 9-15-94. M esa 2023 W. G uadalupe (Southwest Comer Dobson & Guadalupe) 897-9411 $ H ap p y H ou r Buffet Tem pe 960 W. University 4-7 p.m . 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D eliveries made next business day. Page 32 S t a t e P r ess M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 European refugee count growing SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — Thousands of panicked residents fled their homes and flooded the roads of northwest Bosnia on Sunday after government troops captured the stronghold of a rebel Muslim leader. United Nations officials cited unconfirmed reports that 20,000 people were on the run, and said the number was growing. Many streamed northward into Serb-held areas of neigh­ boring Croatia. By Sunday afternoon, thousands were trapped without shelter in no-man’s land between Croatian troops and rebel Serb soldiers, with neither side wanting them. Some of the refugees were wounded in the fighting in Velika Kladusa, headquarters of rebel Muslim leader Fikret Abdic, or by land mines, said Peter Kessler, a spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. They had a "desperate need for water," he said in Sarajevo. While fighting continued in and around Velika Kladusa, U.N. officials said the town had apparently already fallen to Bosnian army forces who have been fighting for months to defeat the Serb-backed Abdic rebels. Government troops entered Velika Kladusa before day­ break, said Maj. Jean Francois Philippe, spokesman for French U.N. peacekeepers a the Bihac area. Some small arms fire continued in the town, meaning probable street fighting, he told The Associated Press in Zagreb. Capture of Velika Kladusa would effectively crush Abdic’s nearly yearlong rebellion against the Bosnian gov­ ernment and allow the government to concentrate on fight­ ing its main enemies, the Serbs. The Bihac pocket has been a thorn in the government's side since last fall, when Abdic, a wealthy local business­ man, proclaimed independence from Sarajevo and cut his own deal with the Serbs. Fighters loyal to Abdic have clashed frequently with government troops in recent months, sometimes backed by artillery of Serb forces who surround the Bihac area. The Bosnian government in Sarajevo extended an amnesty for Abdic soldiers until Wednesday and urged all who have fled to return. A bdic’s w hereabouts were unknown, Bosnian radio said. Olivier Mouqet, a U.N. aid agency official in a Serbheld section of northern Croatia, said that up to 10,000 peo­ ple had fled across the border from Velika Kladusa since Sunday morning. “ People are still coming and some of them are in really bad condition,” he told the AP. Several thousand people fled Velika Kladusa on Saturday in cars, buses, trucks and tractors as the Bosnian army advanced. “ It is a total m ess,’’ said K essler, adding that it appeared rebel Serbs holding a third of Croatia were push­ ing the refugees northward into the no-man’s land, whose borders were mined. Polish U.N. peacekeepers were attempting to seal off the mined sections. A nother UNHCR spokesperson, Slobodanka Bogdanovic, said about 15,000 refugees already were scat­ tered in the Serb-controlled sector along the Bosnian bor­ der, with more coming by the minute. “ There are women and children wounded, because they flee even across mine fields,” she told the AP. On Sunday, Croatian authorities at Turanj, 25 miles northwest of the border and Velika Kladusa, permitted a bus with 50 refugees with the proper documents to enter. Croatian radio said there was a 10-mile line of people and cars at Turanj. FO R U SED CASH L E V I’S! *1 8 ® ® Perfect Original WE BEAT THE COMPETITION’S PRICES WITH FRIENDLY SERVICE... WE GUARANTEE IT!! PRICES LISTED & GOOD AT TEMPE LOCATION ONLY 1711E, APACHE[ s a n TEMPE- 280-2274 4620 E . M'D oweU Rd. Send them the State Press every day. DO IT NOW AND SÀVE! )■ Fill out this form and mail it with payment to: State Press Subscriptions, Box 871502, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 subscription □ FALL SEMESTER o nly $ 3 5 (6 5 issues) O SPRING SEMESTER only $ 3 5 (6 7 issues) O FALL, SPRING & S U M M E R $6 5 (1 4 2 issues) For first class mail, add $30 per sem ester to above prices. O CHECK ENCLOSED PARENT NAME C h arg e m y I Phone (_____ ) □ Visa □ M asterC ard O A m erican Express Address______ I City---------------- State C ard N u m b e r ______ ;____________________ Zip. If you didn’t get a “recycled” S tate Press in one of your classes, you can pick your copy up at: LawUbrary (Talk about brownie points!) ASU'S Morning Daily Newspaper Serving ASU since 1890 Where can you pick up a State P re ss? 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M ail Services M anzanita Hall M anzanita kiosk M ariposa Hall M em orial Union Info D esk M urdock Hall Nobel Ubrary N orth C ady M all N orth C ady M all kiosk N orth Forest Mall O cotillo Hall O range M all (by MU) O range Mall kiosk (by fountain) O range Mall kiosk (by MU) Palo Verde: east, w est, and main Palo Verde kiosk (betw een PV east & PV west) Physical Plant PS 3 ,4 Sonora Hall South Cady M all kiosk (by Business building) South Cady M all a t Lem on South Forest Mall (by Farm er) Sun Devil Stadium S tudent Health S tudent Publications S tudent Recreation C enter S tudent Services Building Tyler M all, Cady M all kiosk Tyler M all, east Tyler M all, Forest Mall Tyler M all, Palm W alk kiosk U niversity A ctivity C enter U niversity Club U niversity Relations W e are o n th e A S U G o p h e r se r v e r to o . J u s t p o in t t o w a r d A S U C a m p u s - W id e an d lo o k fo r u s! S ig n a tu re _____ NEED MORE INFO? CALL OUR SUBSCRIPTION DEPT. AT (602) 965-7572 S ta te P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 St a t e P ress $800,000 Irish Hall renovation completed The Sun D e v il Spark Yearbook Order yours today for $36.93 Matthews Center basement, rm 50 B y D a w n D e C h r is t in a S t a t e P ress ALLCYCLESALES CO INCEDO HUGE PARTS & RVICE iTERS S0RY SHOWROOM 731-9003 .2 All Cycle CD X ■ University O ne block East of Hayden 1 8 5 0 E. University Dr. After an $800,000 makeover this summer, Irish Hall is once again housing ASU students. There are still a few touch-ups being done, but the renovation pro­ ject on the residence hall in the southwest part of campus is basically complete. The need for Irish Hall renovation was initiated following high student admissions the last few years. “We didn’t have the need for the space in previous years, but we anticipated the students needing the occupancy,” said James Rund, dean ofRresidenceLife, regarding Irish Hall. He said 95 percent of the resi­ dence halls are occupied this semester and 45 of the 50 rooms in Irish Hall are reserved. The renovation for Irish Hall “B” and “C” buildings included: • Remodeling the courtyards • Repainting walls • Adding new light fixtures • Re-carpeting rooms • Adding new public bathrooms • Refurbishing furniture • Making two suites for disabled students. • Upgrading air conditioning and electrical system • Improving mailboxes Renovation of Irish Hall was approved in January and work began last May. “We literally had 60 days to do all this,” said David MacMurtrie, assis­ tant director of ResidenceLlife. He said the University rarely has the Jim Poulin/State Press Sophom ore architecture student Christoph Kaiser, 19, is the resident assistant at the newly renovated Irish Hall. opportunity to renovate a whole building. Architecture students have worked closely with the renovation project and selected the color schemes. Irish Hall will eventually be occupied by architecture students only. After being painted what MacMurtrie called an ugly brownyellow color, the walls are now mauve and an extremely light laven­ der. “It doesn’t stick out like a sore thumb anymore,” MacMurtrie said. In addition to repainting Irish Hall, bathrooms were installed with gray tile. Palm trees and fountains are being added to the courtyards.' Also, two community student lounges were created and white shower curtains were installed in the rooms as drapes. “The idea is a resident can come in and do what they want with the room,” said MacMurtrie. For instance, if a resident likes black, he or she could put a black curtain over the “drape” so it would be black on the inside, but the white curtains could still be seen from the outside. Christopher Kiser, an architecture student who also is a residence assis­ tant at Irish Hall, cited one disadvan­ tage—nail holes will stick out because the walls have been freshly painted. The advantages, Kiser said, are that the hall is clean and tidy and other architecture students live near­ by. “I really like it here,” he said. Come to a fre e Kaplan GMAT se m in a r S tate P ress And learn about •the new GMAT writing requirements •the inside story on admissions •how to target your study needs Something to read without using a highlighter. Date: Thursday, August 25 Time: 8-9 p.m. Space is limited! Call by Aug. 24 to reserve your seat. k r GMAT TARGETED T R A I N 1N G T a r g e t e d T r a in in g is th e m o st cu sto m ize d , fle xib le a p proa ch to G M A T s tu d y ever. Find out about Targeted T raining, and Get a Higher Score! 1-800-K A P -TE S T KAPLAN & ROTHER's BOOKSTORE A L L Y O U N E E D IN O N E E A S Y S T O P . LOOK FOR MONEY-SAVING COUPONS ON PAGE 25. 625 E. Apache (Just west of Rural) Open late this week 967-5445 Plenty of FREE Parking Page 34 STATE PRESS M onday, A ugust 22, iyV4 Save money all over town with Devil Deals. The official c o u p o n b o o k a t ASU. produced by Student Publications Arizona State University Matthews Center, South Basement Questions? Comments? Call Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 Page^áS M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 State P ress Feeling sort of "far out"? Read the Far Side cartoon on today's comic page. O o z in f o r a b r u is in ’ LEFT - Freshman Lea Arnott, 18, listens to the strategy of her team, the Mighty Picos. LISTEN T O RIGHT - Sophom ore Doug Kloke, 19, gets an informal shower after a gam e of oozeball. T h e S tu d e n t A lu m n i A s s o c ia tio n h o s te d th e 6th A n n u a l Oozeball com petition on Saturday afternoon near Sixth Street and Alpha Drive. Between 300 and 400 students, mostly fresh­ men, played volleyball in the mud as part of orientation week at ASU. KBAQ-FM CLASSICAL 89.5 T o n ig h t a t 7 SUMMER SEASON TICKET The Southwest's best! Outstanding concerts from around the Valley a n d across Arizona. Jeffrey Swann, piano M usic b y B e e th o v e n a n d C hopin; a n d six g r e a t c o m p o s e rs in terp re t S h a k e s p e a re R e c o r d e d a t th e S c o ttsd a le C e n te r for th e Arts T h u rs d a y a t 7 PM ASU in C o n c e rt Warren Hoffer, tenor; and guests Richard Komurek/State Press T w en tieth -century English so n g s by Britten, V a u g h a n Williams, a n d o th ers Feeling sort of "far out"? Read the Far Side cartoon on today's comic page. FROM THE KBAQ DIGITAL PRODUCTION CENTER PART OF KAET/ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Richard Komurak/State Press Free Membership! L S P E C IA L S M U S IC A L GUESTS FRENCH DIP FRA NK M A CK EY (O p e n M íe ) BURGER HERO CARVIN JONES BAND TUNA SALAD i f e t i m e When you join Arizona State Savings & Credit Union, you become a member. Your membership is for life, regardless of where life takes you. Take advantage of a wide range of financial services including checking, savings, personal loans, auto loans, ATMs, VISA, mortgages and more. Stop by or call. Membership open to state employees and ASU faculty, staff, students and alumni. JAKE THE SNAKE "FILL'Y CHEESESTEAK BRIAN O'CARROL FISH-N-CHIPS EASY HOLSTEIN T i ! l / é \ State Savings I W / Vv. & Credit Union A S U M em o ria l U nion - 9 6 5 -4 4 2 6 N o r th w e s t V a lle y /A S U W e s t - 5 4 3 -5 6 2 6 CHEESEBURG ER STOM A F R IE S , M ED. SO D A C orporate C en ter - 5 4 8 -4 8 8 8 M esa - 9 2 6 -0 5 7 7 / -Phoenix - 2 5 5 -4 4 2 6 1 0 -2 P M $ 3 .0 5 O ffices in: T ucson, F la g sta ff, Prescott, P rescott V alley a n d Stafford KARAOKE C O R N E R O F UNIVERSITY & FOREST 9 6 6 -7 7 8 8 Each member account insured to $100,000 by an agency o f the Federal Government. Page 36 St a t e P ress M onday, A ugust 2 2 ,1 9 9 4 S to rm w a rn in g s were on the m o n ey WASHINGTON (AP) — The National Weather Service has given itself good marks for the way it handled the east­ ern blizzard of 1993, even though nearly 200 people died as a result of the storm. The tempest of March 12-14, 1993, exploded into the Gulf of Mexico, battered Florida with tornadoes and galeforce w inds, then moved north, burying areas from Alabama to New England beneath record snowfalls. East Coast storms have surprised residents and forecast­ ers alike in the past. But not this time. “ This was one of those storms where everything went right, the computer models agreed and the forecasters agreed and the atmosphere agreed,” said Kevin McCarthy of the National Weather Service. The Weather Service began reporting the potential for a significant late-winter storm four days before it developed. “ First, you started hearing it might be a big storm, then it would probably be a big storm, then it will be a big storm, then a bigger storm, then the storm of the century,” McCarthy said. “ It was difficult not to get carried away with it.” Forecasters were nervous about the prediction. “ At first we thought we had a mistake ... because it was showing a storm of relatively unprecedented proportions,” National Weather Service Director Elbert W. Friday said at the time. But it was no mistake. They said it was coming, and they were right. Major storms in the Southeast — outside of hurricane season — meant many people weren’t prepared, especially in Florida, the Weather Service said in its Natural Disaster Survey Report on the storm. “ It must be noted that a winter storm of this ferocity was simply beyond the scope of experience of anything the southeastern part of the country had faced in recent memo­ ry,’’ said the report, obtained by The Associated Press. The agency prepares these reports after major weather events to assess how its staff performed. Because the storm developed suddenly, some parts of Florida had only a few hours’ warning, and the forecast underestimated the coastal flooding. It was different in the Northeast. “ The possibility of a blizzard got the public’s attention, was understood, and resulted in appropriate reaction by the population,” the report said. Deaths bear out the comparison. Florida suffered the most, with 28 people killed directly by the storm. That was more than one-third of the 79 direct storm fatalities. And including 15 fatalities in Georgia and 14 in Alabama, those three states had nearly three-quarters of all direct storm deaths. Of 118 indirect deaths, Pennsylvania had the most — 48, prim arily heart attacks as people shoveled snow. Florida was second with 22 indirect deaths. Weather Service offices to the north issued warnings well in advance of the storm, particularly Raleigh, N.C., which gave residents 72 hours’ notice of potential danger and 24 hours’ advance notice of the winter storm. “ North Carolina experienced the widest variety of weather extremes of any state affected” the report said. M AKE AN IN V E S T M E N T T ru e M ath . IN Y O U R L IF E T IM E O rd e r you r copy The 1993-94 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook of t o d a y f o r $ 3 6 .9 3 ! 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It is also a story of a nation’s consciousness, or, perhaps, cognizance. The printer, 74-year-old Kurt Klein, unwittingly ensured Oskar Schindler’s passage to safety in the uncertain days following the fall of the Third Reich. Klein says it was a quirk, a brush with the historical fig­ ure made legendary by Steven Spielberg’s film, Schindler’s List, about a German industrialist who saved more than 1,000 Polish Jews from the death camps by bribing officials to let them work in his factory. “ I really didn’t do anything,” said Klein, who has a slight German accent. He prefers to keep the story quiet. He has a much more epic — and tragic — tale to tell. In the spring Spielberg won seven Oscars for the film, including best picture and best director. Schindler’s List, despite its disturbing subject, ultimately is an uplifting tale of heroism during modem Europe’s darkest period. In the spring documentary filmmaker Martin Ostrow also told a story. It is also about the Holocaust. But it is not a story about Europeans. It is a story about Americans. It is an indictment not of Nazi Germany, but of the U.S. govern­ ment and by extension, American society. It is about Kurt Klein, and through him, about countless others who were prevented from saving Jews. Klein left his hometown outside Heidelberg, Germany, in 1937 at age 17 to escape the growing specter of Naziism. Following in the footsteps of his sister, he settled in Buffalo, N.Y. His brother came the next year. Their parents planned to follow later. A few years ago Ostrow began researching a historical film on the Jewish experience in America before and dur­ ing World War II for PBS’s American Experience series. He was surprised to find that Americans seemed barely aware of the Nazi persecution of Jews, beginning in the ’30s and culminating the death camps during World War II. “ I learned the story was very different than I thought was the truth. I found people didn’t know very much until after the war,” he said. He ended up making a very different film than he’d planned, one that explored why Americans knew so little about the Holocaust while it was happening. What he found through research and interviews with his­ torians some Americans might find unsettling. Kurt Klein had firsthand knowledge. Soon after arriving in Buffalo, Klein and his siblings tried to get their parents safe passage to America. But he ran into bureaucratic roadblocks. He corresponded with his parents, who were first in Germany, later in France. They described Kristallnacht, the “ night of the broken glass” Nov. 9, 1938, when Nazi stormtroopers, SS and Hitler Youth destroyed Jewish prop­ erties. “ We never intended they would come immediately,” Klein said from his desert home. “ But K ristallnacht changed all that. 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Item substitutions available where explicable Not valid w ith any other coupons, offers or specials Custom er pays a il sales tax where applicable Lim ited delivery areas to ensure safety O ur drivers carry less than $20.00 O ur drivers are never penalized fo r late deliveries Sports STATE P r e s s ______ M onday, A ugust 22, 1 9 9 4 _ ^ ports Briefs Becker takes hom e third title this year at International No. 3 seed Boris Becker, on top of his game all week, completed his sweep through the Volvo International on Sunday by beating seventh-seeded Marc Rosset 6-3,7-5 in the final. Becker, seeded third, didn’t drop a set in the tournament on his way to his 41st career title and third this year. He also won at Milan in February and at the Los Angeles Open earlier this month. Becker, ranked eighth in the world by the ATP, would have moved up to No. 7 regardless of the outcome. He collects $152,000 for the victory, which improved his match record on hardcourt to 11-4 this year and 11-1 since Wimbledon. Baseball strike at a gance Craig Macnaugntorv State Press Sunday, Aug. 21 Day 10 Games lost: 14. Total games lost: 131. Games remaining: 538. Money lost by New York Mets third baseman Bobby Bonilla, who has die highest salary this season at $5.7 mil­ lion: $311,475. Money lost by player at the major league minimum of $109,000: $5,956. Total income lost by players: $44.2 mil­ lion. Estimated revenue lost by owners: $85 million. Negotiating session held Sunday: No. Next negotiating session: Wednesday. Key development: None Key quote: “We’vereally never had collective bargaining with the ability to negotiate evenly across the table. That’s why there is no commissioner now. This is our one chance. We’ve got to get it right” — Atlanta Braves presi­ dent Stan Kasten. Compiled from AP reports New ASU baseball coach Pat Murphy looks to continue the Sun Devils' winning tradition in his own fashion. “I don't aim to fill shoes. I aim to carry on an unbelievable tra d itio n ...” I t 's P a t ! M urphy to bring ow n style to ASU By Lee Newman State Press As Pat Murphy was given his Arizona State baseball jersey by athletic director Charles Harris on Aug. 17, Harris said with a smile, “I hope you make the team.” Murphy looked at his jersey, No. 95, laughed and said, “Usually, ninety-five is contributed to someone who’s not going to be around too long.” With ASU’s past suc­ cess in picking head baseball coaches, that shouldn’t be the case. M urphy becam e only the third Sun Devil’s baseball coach since the program began in 1959. He replaces ASU’s head coach of 23 years, Jim Brock, who passed away Jun. 12 after a long battle with liver reached the finals of an NCAA’regional cancer. Murphy and Harris were both quick •tournament the last three years. Murphy to point out that Murphy is not here to take took, over a team that was 15-29 in 1987, and led them to a 39-22 record in his first Brock’s place. T don’t aim to fill shoes,” said the new season. “I ’d like to thank Notre Dame,” he coach. “I aim to carry on an unbelievable tradition, and I look at that as a tremendous said. “It was tough to leave, but I believe responsibility.” in ASU baseball. I’m really honored to be Harris was very specific in his feelings part of the finest college baseball program about the situation. “There is no replace­ in the nation.” ment for Jim Brock. There is no replace­ ASU player Travis Rowers and the rest ment for the kind of contribution he made of the team are looking forward to getting to this University and this program.” Although there is no replacement for the season started under Murphy, but he Brock, everyone involved feels that the per­ knows it is going to be hard without Brock. “It’s a disappointment that Coach Brock fect choice was made to begin a new era. Murphy spent the past seven seasons as isn’t here anymore, but it’s something we the head baseball coach at the University of all have to deal with,” Flowers said. “I’ve Notre Dame, where he posted a record of heard good things about Coach Murphy. 318-116-1. Over his seven year span, the I’m excited and most of the guys I talked to Irish averaged over 45 wins a season, and are excited to get started.” Violence steals spotlight in sports V iolence. I t’s as American as hot dogs and apple pie. Acts of aggres­ sion are a popular way to solve problems in our soci­ ety. It knows no bounds and is not lim ited to ju st the evening news. The de-sensitization process started eons ago. Our wonderful world of sports is no stranger to bru­ tal physical confrontations. When it’s a matter of win­ ning or losing, we inherit animal instincts. We are vicious, unrelenting, and will stop at nothing to smother our opponents. The winner-take-all mentality is fine with m ost athletes. They don’t get to the pro­ fessional ranks by being dignified losers and living by the motto, “It’s only a game,” because it’s not. In fact, it’s far from it. Only the best competitors make the big money. And when salaries come into play, so do egos. A fter all, these people are professionals. They wouldn’t be out there for your entertainment plea­ sure if it weren’t for the fact that a handsome check is waiting for them tomorrow. It’s no longer innocent fun. It’s a business. These are business people. Business is war. And playing fields have long been considered a b a t t l e ground. AN Let’s take the National M IL L E R Football Sports League, our Columnist m odern-day g la d ia to r s . Buddy Ryan has already said he doesn’t mind fighting in his training camp. It shows him that a player really wants to make the team. Poor Chuck Cecil made the cover of Sports Illustrated last fall because of his bone-crunching hits. SI speculated that he was too m ean to play in the NFL. Since then, Chuck hasn’t shown the same fire that made him the bad boy o f the gridiron, and now he’s out of a job. Anyone who follows the National Hockey League knows there are two or three players dressed for every game who are only in uni­ form to protect the m arquee players. These men have been labeled things like “en fo rcers” , “goons” and “role players”. But usu­ ally, the tough guys fight the other tough guys and it evens itse lf out. The second biggest roar of the crowd at a hockey gam e, aside from the home team scoring, is when players square-off and “drop the gloves” for a round of fisticuffs. Hockey officials argue feverishly that they don’t advocate fighting because players are penal­ ized for doing so. But still many are against fighting in the NHL because they think it takes away from the game. But it’s a parti of the game. If they didn’t fight, the am ount of stickw ork would rise, and getting a hockey blade in the eye or the gut is much worse than bruised knuckles. ‘Take me out to the ball­ park,” you say? Where the fists fly freely and the benches empty more often than in any other sport? Now more paranoid than ever that an opposing pitch­ er is throwing at them, bat­ ters don’t even flinch when considering charging the m ound to pum m el th eir assailant. L et’s not slight the pitchers. Now that most of them pack 90 mph fastballs, they understand the power of suggestion, or the bean-ball factor. But is this stuff all bad? Do we really mind seeing this? Besides, after witnessT u r n t o M i i l e r p a g e 4 0 . ing Coach Ryan ponders Cardinals hit list By Dan M iller State Press Arizona Cardinals head coach and general manager Buddy Ryan held an informal press conference Sunday evening and openly discussed some weighty personnel issues that will be addressed in the near future. Ryan will be cutting approximately 18 players by the next roster deadline on Tuesday. After a lackluster 24-16 loss to the defending NFC Central Champion Detroit Lions on Aug. 19, the writing is now on the wall for some of the Cardinal hopefuls. Ryan said the decisions will not be easy due to an over­ abundance of talent at certain positions, namely the offen sive line. “We have a lot of quality players in one position,” said Ryan. “We’re going to have to let some guys go that have been playing really hard.” The battle for third-string quarterback is still up for grabs, with Will Furrer and Chris Swartz vying for the spot. But Ryan isn’t ruling out going elsewhere to find help. “The third (quarterback) might be here or might be coming here,” he said. “We just need to find somebody who we feel can come in and move the football and do something.” Ryan said that with many of the starting spots nearly secured, the task is now to find quality back-ups at each position. He isn’t done molding his defense yet, mention ing the Cardinals are tentatively looking at former ASU linebacker Bryan Hooks. The 6-foot-4 inch, 270-pound Hooks began his NFL career with the Minnesota Vikings and was traded to the New England Patriots, last fall. Page 4 0 St a t e P ress M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 Cowboys, Cardinals top NFC East under new head coaches By Dave Goldberg AP Football Writer By the end of the first week of training camp, the Dallas Cowboys had issued nearly 400 media credentials, and it seemed as if every TV station in Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas had a mini-cam there. The Cowboys are trying to become the first team to win three straight Super Bowls, but that was only a part of the reason for so much attention. The other reason was the tiff between Jerry Jones and Jimmy Johnson that brought in Barry Switzer, Johnson’s archenemy, as the coach. “Jimmy and I had our run. We just got to the point we c o u ld n ’t work together any m ore,” said Jones, the Cowboys’ owner, general manager and would-be coach. “Barry will do just what we hired him to do—win.” At least in the division. Sw itzer inherited Johnson’s staff and most of the Cowboys’ front-line talent, although three starters were lost to free agency, including Pro Bowl middle linebacker Ken Norton. He’s also in a division that has slipped markedly in the last few years, so much so that the main threat may come from the Arizona Cardinals, a doormat for a decade. The reason for the Cardinals’ resurgence is the advent of Buddy Ryan as head coach. If nothing else, he’s doubled season ticket sales from 24,000 to close to 50,000. But oth­ ers are rebuilding or retooling. The New York Giants, who went 11-5 last season and took the Cowboys into overtime of the final game before conceding the division title, are taking a step backward in hopes of going two steps forward in the salary cap era. After cutting Phil Simms, who quarterbacked them in two Super Bowl seasons, they’ll go with Dave Brown, who’s been brilliant in preseason but untested in real games. Philadelphia, 8-8 last year, lost two more defensive cogs in Seth Joyner and Clyde Simmons, who joined Ryan in Arizona. Washington, which plummeted to 4-12 in Joe Gibbs’ first year away, is rebuilding under Norv Turner, the Cowboys’ former offensive coordinator. So look to the Cowboys. “I’m amazed at the talent we have here,” said Switzer, who was out of coaching for five years after leaving the University of Oklahoma. He’s so amazed that he’s basically become an adminis­ trator, turning the coaching over to assistants, including Ernie Zampese, the new offensive coordinator. That’s not much of a change—Turner, who Troy Aikman credits with turning around his career—is Zampese’s disciple. What makes the Cowboys odds-on favorites in the divi­ sion are three all-stars: Emmitt Smith, the league and Super Bowl MVP at running back, Aikman at quarterback, and wide receiver Michael Irvin. Erik Williams, one of the NFL’s best offensive lineman, and Mark Stepnoski are anchors up front. Daryl Johnston’s a major contributor at fullback. Dallas’ weakness on offense is depth, particularly on the offensive line, where Stepnoski is recovering from knee surgery, and Kevin Gogan and John Gesek were lost to free agency. Depth also is a problem up front on a defense that alter­ nated seven defensive linemen the past two years, keeping all fresh. Jimmie Jones and Tony Casillas were lost to free agency, but one o f the spots w ill be taken by Chad Hennings, who sat most of last year but could have started on some teams. The big problem is replacing Norton at middle lineback­ er. Robert Jones, who Norton replaced, has first shot at the job and Godfrey Myles gets it if Jones doesn’t work out. The best part of the defense is the secondary, which goes eight deep and starts Kevin Smith and Larry Brown at the comers, and Darren Woodson and Super Bowl hero James Washington at safety. Washington, a part-timer last year, is a Switzer fan. “He doesn’t play favorites like Jimmy did,” Washington says. Ryan brings to Arizona the same “my-way-or-the-high- way” approach he had in Philadelphia. Most of his players love it his way, and so do the fans, who have responded to “Buddyball” billboards at the ticket windows. Ryan has Steve Beuerlein at quarterback and last year’s rookie surprise, Ron Moore, behind a big offensive line at running back. Moore is good enough that if Garrison Hearst, last year’s No. 1, recovers from a knee injury, he’ll simply be insurance. But defense will be its forte when it learns Ryan’s “46” defense. Joyner, Simmons and newly signed Wilber Marshall are there to help teach it, although Simmons is coming off an injury-beset season in which the absence of Reggie White hurt his performance. Ryan inherits talent, too—middle linebacker Eric Hill and defensive tackle Eric Swann, apparently recovered from knee surgery, are the best. “Maybe we’ll sneak up on people now that nobody expects us to win,” says general manager George Young of the Giants, who has decided this is the year to see if Brown is the quarterback of the future. He has been impressive in exhibitions, but will have to go through rough spots before becoming the quarterback the Giants hoped he was when they used a first-round pick on him in the 1992 supplemen­ tal draft. The Giants also lost three-fourths of last year’s sec­ ondary to free agency but believe they have the young legs back there to recover. On defense they’re moving to a 4-3 and hope they have two bookend pass rushers in Keith Hamilton and Michael Strahan. Offensively, New York will depend on the legs of Rodney Hampton, seeking to become the first Giant to rash for 1,000 yards in four straight seasons. The line is solid but not deep. Prediction: 1. Cowboys (11-5); 2. Cardinals (9-7); 3. Giants (8-8); 4. Redskins (6-10); 5. Eagles (6-10). M ille r __________ C ontinued from page 39. a wild melee at a sporting event, isn’t it a great story to tell friends? Don’t we feel like we debris that makes up daytime talk-shows. Violence in sports isn’t going away. All the rales and fines in the world will not take it got our money’s worth? As sick as this may sound, I think so. It is a gruesome reality that we crave human confrontation. That is-there is something away. Poor sportsmanship is running rampant. Nice guys really do finish last. There are no intriguing about watching people openly disagree with one another. From the third party’s points for second place. After all, at this level, winning is everything. The end always justiperspective, it makes for real-life entertainment. Look at the endless parade of human ? fies the means. But hey, it’s all mindless entertainment. Don’t like it? Don’t watch. cprisciffa the Q u een of the , l colors, s ty le s PLUS I tree hair products. Ongoing s-how6 &cla£$e&! C all M A IL A Beauty System s- for info: Nv 9 6 & -7 9 8 0 -John H olm es Members of ANNOUNCE­ MENTS C A S H FO R c o lle g e. 9 0 0 ,000 grants available. No repayment ever. Qualify immediately. 1-800243-2435. F ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTER SALE CONOGRAPHICS NO W THRU AUG . ASASU get one free Personal this Meek! S tate P ress Classifieds 26 8AM -5PM APARTMENTS 1 BD GUEST house, newly re­ modeled. $450/mo. All utils, incl. Prvt entrance & prkng. 968-5658. Hair m odels needed for local hair show. FREE ser­ vices such as: cuts, colors, perms, weaves. If interest­ ed, please attend a pre­ screening on M onday, August 29 at 7 p.m. at: 1BD 1BA apts. We have 2 avail­ able. $260/month plus deposit. Lucia, 858-0526. 2BD 1BA 4-plex, refrigerated from $259. 345-8390. Making Waves Salon FIRST MONTH free! 2 bd, 1 ba, new appliances, $430. Call 7597104 or 921-0517._____________ SE Comer Dobson & Guadalupe (Mesa) Questions? Call Sandie, 968-3512. 2BD, 2BA, w/d hook-up, dish­ washer, disposal. $475/mo, $150 dep. 616 S. Hardy, 966-8597. APARTMENTS ASU AREA 1 & 2 bedroom apartments from $310 & up per month not incl util. 966-8838. HOMES FOR RENT LG. 2BD home next to ASU. 2000+ s.f. w/cathedral ceilings in upstairs master bd. Irrigated lot. V ery unique hom e! A sking $1200/mo. Jennifer or Richard, Weary Realty 968-3414. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3BD 2BA dw, w/d, ac, pool, ten­ nis, 714-499-4065 or 602-9668187. HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd, 2ba, w/d, pool, fans, park light. $585, 510 W. Univ. 966-0987. WHY RENT? You can buy using FHA's student home loan pro­ gram . C all for details, Peggy Pearson, RE/MAX, 838-7772. RENTAL SHARING FEMALE ROOMMATE to share fully furnished house in Tempe w/pool, w/d, etc. Lg private bed­ room, share bath. Must love my small dog. Prefer upper classmn/ grad. $300/mo (incl pool/lawn svc) + 1/4 util. 838-0296. FEMALE TO share 3 bd, 2 ba t/h, Tempe, $350 + 1/2 util. No smoking. 345-7124. NICE 3BD home, female pref, no sm oking or drugs, $200/m o + 1/3 util, east Phx. 955-8582, lv msg. QUIET, RESPONSIBLE m /f to share lg. 2bd 2ba apt near MCC. Fall sem only. Fum ., w/d, cbl. No drugs. $350/m o. incl util. Call 9-5, 829-8000 Monica. ROOM IN q u iet hom e 3 mi/ASU. Mature grad student pre­ ferred. No smoking. $235 incl util, w/d. 752-1959, Joseph. ROOMMATE WANTED. $235/ mo + 1 /2 utilities. Furnished 2 bd, 2 ba. 966-7792. RENTAL SHARING R O O M S FOR RENT 2BD 2BA condo. $250 + 1/2 util. No smoking. Must be neat. 8447808. Univ. Dr & Stapley. Q U IET H O M E, 5 m iles from cam pus, p re f serious fem ale, $200/mo + 1/2 util, 838-5797. ATTRACTIVE RESORT life­ style living. Master bedroom ad­ jacent bath, $275+ util. 351-8683. QUIET F, 30+, n/s, share my 2bd 2ba house. H ayden/R oosevelt, $325/mo incl util. 994-4526. CLEAN, QUIET, resp. n/s fe­ male room ate to share nicely fum . 2bd 2ba apt. near ASU. $294 + 1/2 ud. Call 921-8099. W ALK TO ASU , unfurnished room fo r re n t; p o o l, p riv a te phone line, laundry facilities, pri­ vate en tran ce. $300/m o. 9675427. CONDO ON Point S. Mountain Golf Course needs m/f, roomate , ns. 2bd, lb a , w /d, free cable, large yard. $275/mo + 1/2 util. Call Marc 438-4584. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bd, 2 ba apt. 1 mi/ASU. $275+ 1/2 util. Heidi, 968-2129. HOMES FOR SALE 3 HOMES: Super values! 2 & 3 bds, close to MCC & ASU. Quick possession. "SHAR", RE/MAX Anasazi Rlty, 838-7772 ext. 140. Stats Fresa Classifieds • 965-6735 HOMES FOR SALE W A L K T O A SU Cute 2 bd. 282' deep lot! $54,000 (approx $1400 dn + $441 /mo P&I)* B IK E T O A SU Sharp block 3 bd, remodeled interior. $64,950 (approx $1800 dn + $520/mo P&I)* *(9% APR - 30 yrs) MUST QUALIFY Paul Pastore Realty Executives 963-6000 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE IM M ACULATE 1 bd, Papago Park Village upstairs condo. Ask­ ing $59,000.968-0305. CONDO FOR sale by original owner/occupant. Papago Park II-1 mi. east o f ASU; 2bd 2ba; fridge, dishwasher, compacter, new w/d; pre-wired for fans. Great cond. Qualified, assumable. Mid $70's. 829-0160. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT CONDO, 1BD, I-10/B aseline, gar, pool, spa, f/p, w/d, $450 dn, asm w/qual, $387/mo. 431-9325. ENJOY THE life style at Hayden Square. Fabulous 2bd 2ba condo, f/p, pool, spa, excellent condi­ tion, $93,000, orig. owner.Call Karen at Karen Bolwar Realty, 951-8578. HAYDEN SQUARE Units for sale . RE/MAX Excalibur, ask for Gary G reen-acre, 483-3333.___________________ HUD SALE! E ast V alley , ASU area HUD hom es o nly 3% dn. C all T .J. Carty Realty Exec. 831-0322. MISCELLANEOUS FO RSAL^___ TANDY FAX machine, excellent condition, $200. 921-1207. TREK 730 Hybrid bike, excllnt cond. $300 obo. Yamaha Scooter $200 obo. Call Lynn 921-7186. CUTE 2BD. townhouse. Approx. 2 mi. from campus. Lg.master bd upstairs. Shows great! Asking $39,500. Anxious! Jennifer 4130361. Weary Realty 968-3414. FURNITURE BOOKS BOOKS BEAUTIFUL TWIN mattress set w /fram e $79. C all Todd 4939948. Considering career possibilities? Recent, accurate satary/earnings survey for 200 jobs/professions, plus revealing new report "Tom orrow 's Jobs" f a m nation's most anrhonrarivr career sourer, describing jfutute outlook (through 2005) fo r various jobs/ proteieiniui & industries basedon im p o rn n t trends 5 6 (include)! postage) to- Specialty Publications, Inc., 6065 Roswell Rd. N .E #1996 Atlanta, GA 30328 FURNITURE FULL SIZE bed, wooden headboard/footboard, $50; also, full size mattress set, $50. 940-9588. LODGE POLE bed $159, twin mat & box $49, student desk $99, sofa & love seat $275. 841-0818. NICE FUTON, cool print $75, c o lo r 24" tv $75, 2 lam ps $20ea., desk $75. Call Dave 9214308.________________________ State Press Classifieds Matthews Center Basement FURNITURE SALE •M attress Sets Twins $49 Fulls $59 Queens $89 Kings $119 •Sofia Sets from $199 •7-Piece Bedroom Sets from $199 •5-Piece D inettes from $119 •5-Drawer Chests from $39 •Day Beds (Complete) from $117 Plus M uch Morel! F u r n itu r e D ep o t 3332 W. McDowell 233-2236 In Mesa 4434 E. University 830-5708 / V Page 42 FURNITURE HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL THE FUTON FAVE Our futons are terribly comfort­ able. awfully practical, wonder­ fully inexpensive. 222-9825. WE BUY & sell good clean used furniture and household items. Used Furniture & More. 2829 E. University. 924-8448. COMPUTERS 486 LAPTO P com puter, IBM compat Word Perfect, 60mb hard drive, 3-1/2" disk drive, mouse, battery pack. $998.921-1207. H I-T E C H A T L O W $ Let me custom-build a brand new computer suited to your needs 4 less than any store! I repair/upgrade systems too. Call M itch 602-731-9450. M AC+, 2 hard d riv es. Im age W riter II & lo ts o f softw are. $550 obo. John 596-1990. PA C K A RD BELL 486SX , 33mhz, 4 mos old, incl fax mo­ dem, monitor, mouse, HP520 ink jet printer. Software incl. New $2000, sac $1600. 395-0725. TICKETS LALLA TIX, 2nd section, center. 4 tix, $50 each. W ill sell in pairs. 921-1297. LOLLAPALOOZA SEC. 201 row BB & other reserved seats. $40 678-0316. AUTOMOBILES" $CASH TODAY!$ I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call Al, 994-4369. 1985 FORD Mustang conv. 79K mi. G araged, very good cond, cold air, am/fm cass. new top & Michelin tires. 1 owner (female, ret. teacher).-S4950. 829-1008. 73 SUPER Beetle, orange, new tires, new exhaust, needs genera­ tor, recent rebuilt engine. Good cond. Asking $1800. 395-9591. 80 ACCO RD 4dsd, 5sp, ac. cass., pwr steer/bk. tint, great cond. 100K, $1450,894-1653 81 MAROON Honda Civic, htch bk, 100K mi.,but still very good clean student car. Needs a little work $599. 954-0098. * 84 DODGE Aries, gray with maroon interior, $500 or best offer. 481-9447. MOTORCYCLES 1989 KA W A SA KI EX 500, blk/red. Exc. cond., red hlmt, new battery, low insur. rates. Moving, m ust sell $1800 obo. 24K. Call Vik or Sid 902-0578. 87 YAMAHA motorscooter 125, xclt. cond. $600 obo. Call Andy at 786-4043. FOR SALE, red 88 Honda Elite 80, good cond. 12,000mi. $850 obo. 829-9533. HONDA SCOOTERS & Yama­ ha Seca 550. Good running con­ dition. Phone 443-7610. BICYCLES BIKES 22"X24" hybrids,excel­ lan t sh ap e, great com m uter bikes, $150 ea. 481-9374. BRID GESTON E T500 15-spd road bike, lg frame, center pull brakes, $138. 752-0071. GIANT BOULDER m tn bike, 20" frame, $200 obo. Charley, 967-4582. TRAVEL ROCK CLIMBING, rappelling, guided tours. 209-4913. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ATTENTION $30 HR min. Sell funny college Tshirts & profit $3-$9/shirt. Risk­ free prog. 19 diff designs. Free catalog. 1-800-700-6240. 15 retail openings. Start at $7.45. No exp req. Flex hrs. Scholar­ ships, cond exist. All majors. Will train. 404-6461. ♦EARN $7/HR!* S etting free appointm ents for chiropractors. Fiesta Mall area. 470-1828 anytime. A SCO TTSD A LE based fra ­ grance packer/distributor hiring a graduate student in graphic art and design to create/produce nec­ essary art work for boxes/labels for fragrance bottles. 951-9354. ADVERTISING INTERNS for State Press. Get hands on exp before you graduate. Paid on a commission basis. Complete, professional training. You must be able to commit for one year, be taking 13 credit hours or less, have a vehicle & be excited about learning about the world of advertising & marketing. Call today. Jackie Eldridge 965-6555. APPOINTMENT SETTERS So. Scottsdale flex sched., salary & comm., part-time. 481-9200. ARIZONA LEAGUE o f Con­ servative Voters hiring canvass­ ers. Learn about AZ environ­ mental issues. If you can walk the talk-we want to talk to you. In­ ternships available. 966-5485. A S S E M B L E R JO B S Lighting company needs respon­ sible students for day assembly work. Electronics background desirable. $7/hr. Scottsdale Air­ park. Call between 10-2pm. 9980325. NOW H IRIN G 94-95 before & after school activities lead­ ers. Hrs for the following p/t positions are: 6:45-8:15 am or 2-6pm, M-F. Counselor: Must be 18 yrs, enthusiastic & self directed. Site Director: Must be 21 and possess related exp + education. Apply at: Tempe YMCA 7070 S. Rural Rd. Y ATTENTION Roch-N-Roll Got your attention? A ir conditioned office needs Kelp evenings, p/t, close to A S U . Construction supply company - so il tools nationwide - w ill trein. SS.SO/hr + <94-1176 commissions Joe (jNoraatooJ) NO SELLIN G Telephone Research Survey Flex hours available Tues-Fri 2-9:30pm & Sat. 9-5 Start @ $6/hour Higginbotham Associates 829*73*6 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL COUNTER HELP wanted. Parttim e w ith flexible hours. Call 460-2845. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. Exp, enthusiastic teacher for ages 5-12. 7th St./Glendale, $9-11/hr, M-Th, 2:45-5pm. 955-7805. ♦MARKET RESEARCH posi­ tions. Computer assistants and phone interviewers. F/t, p/t, days or eves. Tempe. 967-4441. PA R T-TIM E W A REH O U SE clerk. $5/hr., exp. pref. 8am12noon, M-F. Call 268-4800. IN T ER -C U LTU R A L A FTER school program now hiring for teacher assistant and recreation leader positions. $6.50 per hour 2pm-6pm, M-F. The Gingerbread House, Scottsdale. Linda 4235922 or 941-1630. M A R K ETIN G SP E C IA LIST w anted. Theatre co. needs p/t asst. Great for mktng or theatre major. Contact Susan 894-6379. Secure a top position in a grow­ ing company. We just expanded into Phoenix to capitalize on a booming market. Call now! 8298105. AZ REPUBLICAN Party needs telem arketers. $6+/hr. Contact Max Fose 957-7770. DELIVERY DRIVERS needed 1 lam-2pm wkdys. Apply/prsn, 25pm 528 W Broadway 894-6065 BECOME A mobile DJ weekends/part-time work. Depend­ able persons only. Reliable vehi­ cle a must. 820-8220. M-F. ENERGETIC PEOPLE needed to supervise middle school students at Kyrene Middle School from 11:30 to 1:30 daily. The rate of pay is $8 per hour. Please call Theresa or Nancy at 496-4666 to schedule an interview. CHEVRON STATION, p/t island attnd/ maint. 2:30-8pm & wee­ kends. Call Mr. Martin 941-8899. ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan­ dler needs p/t clean-up, vet. asst., & receptionist. Eves. & wknds. Call for office mgr. 963-2340. HELP WANTEDGENERAL DELIVERY DRIVER- Shipping co needs p/t driver for Tempe area. M ust have ow n truck or van w /insurance & be frien d ly & dependable. M-F starting 1pm, 2025 hrs/wk. $5/hr+ 290/mile. Stop by Total Fulfillment at 2125 E. 5th St. #106,1 blk N of University, W of Price, this M-W, noon-4pm. AZ EXPLOSION! A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office person. Will train. 4020 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd., Suite 108. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CLUB LEADER 15-19 hrs, col­ lege course work preferred, 1 yr exp. in after school or pre-k pro­ gram. Various positions, 6:45am6:15 pm. $6.34/hr. Apply in per­ son Kyrene School Dist., 8700 S. Kyrene Rd. Tempe, AZ. M-F 7:30am-4:30pm. Application re­ quires resume and 3 reference let­ ters._______________________ _ ASU A lu m n i looking for juniors, seniors, or continuing students for p/t security work. Starting wage based on experi­ ence. M ust have phone and reliable transportation. Hours available 24-hr basis including weekends. One location 2 miles from campus. Call 961-1161 ext. 394, ask for Greg Claus, 7am-5pm, M-F or leave mes­ sage at 420-1193 anytime. EXC OPP avail for students with good writing skills and those who enjoy using computers. If you're a person who works well without supervision, this is an excellent opportunity to earn up to $8/hr. Call 460-2845 for more info. EXPERIENCED TUTORS want­ ed! Earn $6-8/hr. Call Miracle Tutoring at 967-1236. •*' Part-time customer service positions available, flexible hours. Tempe location. 9 6 6 -0 7 0 9 MASSAGE THERAPIST Needed for ft/pt position. Flexible hours, training provided. 'College students welcome to apply. Call 655-9480. KINKO’S COPIES Kinko's copies is now accepting applications for f/t & p/t posi­ tions. Please apply at 933 E. Uni­ versity Dr. Tempe. LANDSCAPE ASST Install plant & rock material. F/t, p/t $5/hr to start, Chuck 945-1015 MARKETING ASSO Successful m arketing firm ex­ panding into Tempe. We are cur­ rently hiring bright, self-m oti­ vated people for appt setting po­ sitions. Pt/ft, am/pm shifts avail. ♦Guaranteed hrly rate + wkly bo­ nuses *M edical/dental benefits avail *Paid vacation, sick & per­ sonal time. You'll call on pre-se­ lected leads to set appts. No sell­ ing involved. For m ore info please call Michelle, 277-1392. DISCOVER! Take & make calls set­ tin g reserv a tio n s for resorts. Complete train­ ing. $ 2 0 0-$500/w eek . 8 :3 0 -1 :3 0 /3 :3 0 -9 :0 0 . Start immediately! Call if you're committed to being part of the best. Call Amy, 897-1676 M OVERS NEEDED for local moving co. Exp desired, exc pay incentives, close/ASU. 829-8888 PACKAGING PERSON- Tempe shipping co needs f/t person for light pkging. Must be high-energy, dependable & have good math skills. M-F, 8am-4:30pm. Starting $5/hr. Stop by Total Fulfillment at 2125 E. 5th S t #106,1 blk N of University, W of Price, this M-W, noon-4pm. P/T 15-30 hrs, $5 & up/hr. M -f 7am-5pm. Male/female to apply for warehouse packing and sta­ pling job. Located near Univers­ ity & H ohokam . C all R andy from 8-12 @ 966-1533. PART TIME Accounts Payable C lerk needed for cam pus Mc­ Donald's. Knowledge of Quicken and W indow s; plus som e ac­ counting background required. Flexible hours. $5 per hour to start. Call Connie at 829-6604. B R O A D W A Y D IS T R IB U T IO N C E N T E R is hiring motivated people for F T /P T positions in receiving and m erchandise processing fo r o u r com pressed 4 day-10 hour shifts starting at $ 5 .0 0 /h r + bonus. We offer flexible schedules, discounts, benefits, and a friendly work envi­ ronm ent. Please apply from 7 a.m .-4 p.m. at 1524 W. ¡ Retail A b e rc r o m b ie & F itc h is one of the AF 1892 Great New Sunday Hours! Beginning July 17th, the valleys best plasma donation centers will begin opening Sundays from 10am - 3pm! This is your perfect opportunity to perform a great sendee and earn some extra cash to treat yourself to a fun-filled summer! You can earn 5150 - 5185 per month! It couldn't be easier! We have a critical need for human plasma NOW to enable the manufacture of many life-saving products. New Donors earn $25 CASH theirfirst donation! Open 7 days a week for your convenience! % Call right away to find out how we can help each other! ~ * * # * » * » ! ►# # * » * v-v.--y.;u&Sa«e^ newest growth divisions of The Limited, Inc., and we are continuing our growth locally with our new store opening this September in S c o tts d a le at F a s h io n S q u a re M a ll. Last year we doubled our size, and our growth has only just begun. A & F is known for creating lifestyle clothing with great attitude, a com­ fortable fit, and the best quality. Our growth has created openings within our store operations organization for cre­ ative, high energy, team-oriented individuals in the follow­ ing positions: _____ „..iJ • MANAGEMENT TRAINEES • SALES ASSOCIATES ......... i Our pay, benefits, working environment, and career growth opportunities are the best around. ASU DOWNTOW N CENTER has openings for 2-3 student workers beginning mid-August. Needed: Physically fit students with good customer service skills able to lift 50 plus pounds to assist Facility Coordinator with Conference & Meeting center operations and classroom setups, located in Phoenix across from the Arizona Center. Hotel/Restaurant experience a plus but not required. Hours: MonFri, various shifts available. $5.50 hr. Ask for Cheryl, 965-3046. TUTOR NEEDED V ista del C am ino C o m m u n ity C e n te r Is c u rre n tly r e c r u itin g in d iv id u a ls lo o k in g for a c h a lle n g in g o p p o rtu n ity w orking w ith a t risk Y aqui In d ian a n d H ispanic tee n a g e rs in s o u th S co ttsd ale. T h e ideal c an d id ate will b e bilingual, h ave previous tu to rin g a n d su p erv iso ry experience, a n d som e experience w ork in g w ith te e n s /y o u th . H o u rs a re from 3:306 :0 0 p m . M onday th ro u g h T h u rs d a y , w ith a d d i­ tio n a l h o u rs o n F rid ay s w orking w ith school offi­ cials, p a re n ts, a n d tea ch e rs. S ta rtin g sa lary is $7 p e r h o u r. In tere sted p e rso n s sh o u ld contact: Erin McKaUor or Jason Lapointe a t 9 9 4 -2 3 3 0 $ 7 .0 0 PER HOUR - FULL BENEFITS Zales Regional Credit Center is seeking motivated individuals for: P /T COLLECTORS HOURS: M-F 5-9 p.m.& 2 Saturdays per month 9-lp.m. Customer Service Reps S t a t e P ress M onday, August 22, 1994 ALL POSITIONS offer excellent paid training and a competitive salary and benefits package through: ZALE CORPORATION the world's largest jewelry retailer. If you would like to become part of our success, we invite you to find out more about these opportunities. Apply in Person Jew elers 9a.m. - 4 p.m., M-F Financial 1221 N. College Ave. #101 ■"??r Services Tempe, AZ 829-5804 Equal Opportunity Employer PERSONAL A SSISTA N T for male wheelchair user in Tempe. P/t, $7/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lift­ ing required. 804-0300. PT W A REH O U SE, flex hrs, good driving record, able to lift 50 lbs, near ASU. Apply in per­ son, 310 S. Clark, Tempe. RESEARCHER/INTERNSHIP NEEDED for national commer­ cial real estate firm. Junior and senior business related m ajors p re fe rred ; com puter lite ra te . Please call Luke or Michelle at 954-9000. SM OKERS HAVE rights too. Highly motivated indiv. for non­ profit smokers rights org. Very high ine. pot. Must be 21. Start now. 530-8841._______________ SPIRIT OF the Desert Havurah Ruach Hamidbar seeks: Bar/Bat Mitzvah teacher-tutor and Gr. 4-6 Hebrew teacher. Contact Richard 996-4959.__________________ _ SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flexible hrs/wk. Call Mike for int, 921-8282. THE P O IN T E H IL T O N RESORT O N S O U T H M O U N T A IN GRANDE BALLROOM We're searching for energetic, professional individuals to join the Team at our newly ren­ ovated Ballroom! The following positions are available: BANQUET SERVERS Full and Part-Time CONVENTION SET-UP Full and Part-Time Please apply In person Mon-Thurs 8am-Noon Clock Towers 7776 S. Pointe Parkway #138 If this sounds like it's for you, then talk to us! F o r Im m e d ia te c o n s id e ra tio n , c a ll (BOO) 307-2560, e x te n s io n 5086, o r y o u m a y fa x y o u r re s u m e to (314) 727-3613. Abercrombie &Fitch Co. 1892 We support a drug-free work environment thru pre-employment drug testing. We are proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer. EOE M/F/V/H 0 1 I I i i i I Ii I i I i1 0 D IA L A M E R IC A M A R K E T IN G , IN C . Across From D ia la in erica M ark etin g , a 36 y e a r old telephone m arketing c o m p a n y , is g ro w in g again! W e're contin u ally looking for bright, e n e rg e tic peo p le to jo in o u r sta ff and w e will be hiring a n u m b e r o f stu d en ts d u rin g the acad em ic year. V Flexible Schedules, A Short (4.5) Shift O f Choice: E arly AM , M id-A M , Early A ft, M id-Aft, Early Eve, & W eekends. V E xcellent E arning Potential— Average $8— $10/Hr. $10— $20/Hr. For O ur T op Producers. V P aid. C om plete T raining ($7.50/H r. M inim um G uarantee) V N ice O ffices. Fully Autom ated: Reps C all Prequalified Leads N ationw ide From A Com puter-D ialed D ata Base. ¥ Invaluable E xperience In Sales & Com m unications. V A Short W alk From A SU Campus. P lease C all (602) I I I I I I I i i I 894-0264 For A Confidential Interview Ii Page 4 3 M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 St a t e P ress HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES ST U D E N TS W A N T ED w ith good verbal & writing skills for Weekly publication staff. Pt/ft po­ sitions available. Pay ranges from $5.25-$10/hr. Flex hrs around your schedule available. Call 4602845 for more information. SURVEYS, NOT sales, p/t even­ ings & Saturdays. $5/hr. M ust enjoy phones. Emily, 438-2800. TELEMARKETERS WANTED $7/hr, p/t, M-Th 5:30-8:30. Con­ tact Jonathon Class, 706-0419. T E M P E A FTER S ch o ol p ro ­ gram, K-6 needs enrichment in­ structors for com puter, music, art, story telling, languages, gym­ n a stics, etc. Pay ranges from $7.84-$12/hr. No degree or cer­ tification required. Apply in per­ son at 3205 S. Rural, Commun­ ity Education Office. THE TIM E is now! ASU Tele­ fund has a few positions left to fill. This position offers a flex, sched, $5/hr + bonus to start and looks great on a resumo. Call 9656754. LAWN CARE Ultimate Lawn Care is hiring f/t & p/t, $5.50/hr to start. Exp nec: own trans req. Early moms., flex 20-40 hrs M-F. C all M arlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. VALET PARKING, 3-4 nights/ wk or lunches, 1lam-3pm M-F, avg. $6-$7/hr (tips incl in avg). No more than 1 traffic ticket in past 3 yrs. M ust be w illing to drive to Scotts, Phx. etc. Apply at 34 W. Dunlap (Central/Dunlap), Phx bet 1-4:30 M-F. 861-9182. CSR NEEDED for local moving co. People personality a must. Close to campus. Hrly + comm. 829-8888. INTERNSHIPS - SALES. Pro­ gressive Scotts. insurance agency. Diversified Concepts, 945-5444. NAT'L PROMO CO. has immediate openings for en­ ergetic, money-motivated sales people to sell concert tickets over the phone. M ust be reliab le w/good comm skills. Perm ft/pt avail. $7/hr + exc. bonus. Call now for int, 248-9444, Jeff. NATIONAL WHOLESALE elec­ tronics company seeks campus sales reps: gain valuable experi­ ence plus substantial earning poteittial. Call 1-800-345-CAVE. PHONE CLERKS - no exp. Will train, flex shifts, hrly + bonus, benefits avail. Rural/Southern. 350-9336. STRUCTURE Scottsdale Fashion Square, p/t sales positions. Fun atmosphere, gen ero u s d isco u n t, exp pref. Apply in person 10-6 M-F. STUD EN TS W ANTED New Sales Co. in Phx. has imme­ d iate op en in g s fo r sales reps/mgmt. positions. No exp. nec. - train, avail. l-5K/mo. pot. 732-9704. Teichert Marketing is looking fo r 5 people to join o u r successful sales team . Re­ sponsibilities w ill include mar­ keting video rental packages to th e gen era l p u b lic ; o u r p ro ­ g ra m c o n s is ts o f 78 m o v ie rentals fo r $34.95, valid at 18 o f th e v a lle y 's la rg e s t v id e o stores. Your com pensation w ill include a salary + commission. Avg earnings o f $250-5400/ wk. (2 sales people earned over $10 00 last w e ek!) Please call Tom at 921-7755 bet 1-4pm to set up a personal interview. WANTED Energetic, personally motivated student wanted to publish INsider magazine on campus. Great ex­ perience for m arketing major. Earning potential ranges from $5$30 per hr w /flexible hrs. We finance start up costs. Please call 805-836-3094, ask for Sal. HELP WANTEDSALES ADVERTISING SALES rep for sports magazine. Strong market­ ing & sales skills. Curt, 991-1574. BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO is look­ ing for energetic, smiling indi­ viduals to cast as customer serv­ ice reps and entry level manag­ e rs. F le x ib le h o u rs & fun a t­ m osphere. A pply in person at your nearby Blockbuster Video. CAMPUS REPS needed p/t for 126 year old company. For pro­ ducts that every student needs. 951-2939. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL GENERAL OFFICE help need­ ed, p/t M-Th 3-9pm, Scottsdale location. Susan, 438-2800. P/T OFF1CE/PERSONAL asst, to help busy writer. Typing, filing, computers, near ASU. Must have transp, 15-20 hrs/w k. $5-6/hr. Call 894-2226 for appt. SECRETARY/REAL ESTATE, p/t, run Macintosh, type, book­ keeping. 5 days/wk. Call 5968878._________________ CLASSIFIEDS WORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL city o f scottsdale recreation division WANTED: HELP WANTEDCLERICAL Receptionist Needed Tuesday & Thursday 12:30-8:30 p.m. for a Scottsdale education center. Education major preferred. Call 953-3070 Monday-Thursday between 1:30-9:30 p.m. for an interview. Attention Students Part-tim e tem p to staff p o s itio n s N o o n -5 p m . M ust be com puter liter­ ate. Clerical duties. N o fee. Call Stivers 966-1100 STIVERS TE M P O R A R Y PER SO N N EL HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE ACCEPTING APPS for: Driv­ ers, up to $8/hr incl tips: Counter help. Sammy B's Pizza, 945-8850. BROWN S CAFE, 570 S. C ol­ lege, Tempe is hiring delivery & counter help. Stop by to apply. CLUCK-U-CHICKEN NOW hir­ ing delivery drivers, earn $710/hr. Also hiring for counter help. Apply in person. 1 blk. so. of University. 855 S. Rural Rd. GREAT P/T job /great hrs. Three sources of income. The Energy Bar inside Southwestern D/Hockey. 968-5201. 1040 E. Apache. HUNAN EXPRESS part-tim e lunch & dinner. Apply M -F 45pm, 818 W. Broadway, Tempe. ON CALL banquet servers. Apply at The Buttes Resort. 2000 Westeourt Way, Tempe, Human Resources Dept, Mon. 10am-4pm; Wed &Thur 10am-lpm JOHNNY ROCKETS Now hiring cashiers, asst, mngrs, f/t & p/t. Fashion Square Mall. Apply in person. 423-1505. SUNNY’S PIZZA Join the staff at Sunny's. Restau­ rant and delivery positions avail­ able. Flexible shifts. 1301 E. Uni­ versity, 968-6666. B oys F la g F o o tb a ll G irls V olleyball 994-2408 J Graduate Students! E x c e lle n t o p p o rtu n ity T e a c h s m a ll g r o u p s o f h ig h s c h o o l s t u d e n t s C h e m is try , Physics, M a th e m a tic s , a n d SAT a n d A C T p r e p a r a tio n . T h e id e a l c a n d id a te w ill b e p r o f ic ie n t in a ll th e s e areas, b u t w ill c o n s id e r p ro fic ie n c y in a c o m b in a t io n o f th e s e a rea s. N e c e s s a ry f o r f o r m a l in te r v ie w : T w o w r it t e n re fe re n c e s , e v id e n c e o f C P A a n d SAT sco res. P a r t- tim e h o u r s b e t w e e n 1 -9 p .m . t w o t o f o u r THE TEMPE YMCA is currently accepting registrations for its Fall S o ccer and Sand V o lleyball leagues. Soccer league is open to all children age 4 through 8th grade, Sand Volleyball to child­ ren in grades 6 through 12. Prac­ tices begin in Septem ber and games run on Saturdays, Octo­ ber 1 through December 3, 1994. Coaches are still needed for both sports. For more information on playing or coaching, please call the Tempe YMCA at 730-0240 or stop by at 7070 South Rural Road. Completely discreet! Call 9472047 for a recording. WATER POLO- Open to every­ one! Practice held Tues & Thurs 6:30-8:30pm at Mona Plummer or call Drew at 966-4642. PERSONAL TR A IN IN G - Let our personal trainers design a complete & individualized pro­ gram for you. From weight loss to serious body building-we'U get you results! 250-6105. HERPES DATING SVC MUSIC LOOKING FOR a housesitter while on sabatical? I will keep your home clean and safe until you return. Diane 821-6885. HEALTH & FITNESS CERTIFIED PERSONAL Train­ er w ill get you in shape fast. G uaranteed. 10 yrs experience Cybergenics Spokesmodel. Harry Thanos 858-9709. ACOUSTIC GUITAR for sale, new strings, great sound, like new. $190obo. Harold, 391-2953. TYPING /W ORD PROCESSING SERVICES $2/PG, $15 resum es. Proofed. L aser. Fast. Sam e day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. M assage & R olfing The b est b od y therap y availab le fo r ath letes and stressed stud en ts. Student discounts available. The Rolfing Studio Mill Ave. Near ASU Steve 966-1776 WANTED. COMPANION for 12 year old girl when parents are away on business. Will occur ir­ regularly during the school year. Please call for interview. Refer­ ences required. 998-7194. a b le t o w o r k 9 m o n t h s f r o m S e p te m b e r , 1 9 9 4 Pay ra n g e s f r o m $ 8 - $ 1 5 / h r , D O E . V e ry s te a d y h o u rs a re g u a ra n te e d . L o c a te d in S c o tts d a le . M u s t h a v e re lia b le tr a n s p o r t a t io n . Call 953-3070 M onday-Thursday betw een 1 :3 0 -8 :3 0 p.m . fo r an inte rvie w . DEEP THINKER: It's great to have you here! We hope everything goes well for you. B&B.________ ___ WANTED FEMALE MODELS for photog­ raphy work. Earn up to $150 for 4 hrs work. Legitimate. Must be 18 or older. Call Arizona Photo Shoots at 981-1889. PERSONALS BILL: HOPE you got some sleep over the weekend. This is going to be a busy week for you! ?? S tate press C L A S S IF IE D S V G r e e k s Monday Night BACK-TO-SCHOOL Budweiser L o n g n eck s Meet the Bud Girisi SIMPLY THE BEST! E A R N B E T T E R G R A D E S W IT H MIRACLE TUTORING TEST PREP & LEARNING CENTER 414 S. MILL AVENUE, SUITE 206 Q (CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN DOWNTOWN TEMPE) O U R M A N Y S E R V IC E S IN C L U D E : •Private & Small Group Tutoring •Longer Business Hours •Open Seven Days A Week •All Grade Levels (K-College) •Up-to-Date Sample Math Tests WE HAVE OVER A DOZEN TUTORS IN MATH (077,106,114,117,119,210,270+) AND OTHERS FOR THE FOLLOWING SUBJECTS: GERMAN ACCOUNTING HISTORY ARCHITECTURE PHYSICS ART HISTORY PHILOSOPHY BIOLOGY POLITICAL SCIENCE CHEMISTRY COMPUTER SCIENCE RUSSIAN SPANISH ENGLISH WESTERN CIVILIZATION FRENCH •IF YOU NEED HELP IN AN AREA NOT LISTED, CALL US ANYWAY. WE FREQUENTLY HIRE NEW TUTORS 9 6 7 -1 2 3 6 A LL T U T O R S A R E N O T A L IK E Ever had a tutor that d id n 't show up? Never happen at Matrix. Ever had a tu to r th a t you felt you knew the subject better than they did? Never happen at Matrix. Ever had a tutor that w anted to discuss your personal life instead o f tutoring you? N ever happen at Matrix. These are just a few o f the m any legitimate complaints w e've heard. I f y o u 're looking for a n o n nonsense tutor, give us a call. W e offer tutorial for the following classes: MAT 106, MAT 114, MAT 117, MAT 170, MAT 119, MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271, PHY 111, PHY 112, QBA 221, PSY 230, CHM 101, CHM 113, CHM 115, CON 221, CON 323 and many more! "It's not what we do, it's how we do it!" d a y s /w e e k , M o n d a y t h r o u g h T h u r s d a y . M u s t b e th r o u g h M a y , 1 9 9 5 . S u m m e r h o u rs p o s s ib le . C O ST A CCO U N TIN G tutor needed to solve sample problems no teaching involved $10/hr. Call Adam 841-9060. TUTORS TUTORS Register by August 26th for a 20% discount! HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE PERSONALS FIND IT in the Classifieds! THE PICNIC Company, Gour­ met Cafe now hiring counter help mom & aft shifts. Apply 1415 E. University. 3 blks W of Rural. Swensen's Tempe has immed openings, days/nights, ft/pt, no exp nec. Apply M-F, 4-5pm, Price & Baseline. TUTORS M ARK S TY PIN G S ervices. Fast, professional, affordable, laser printed. Tempe. 491-5931. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: $6.49 - $8.66 per hour For application inform ation contact the Student E m ploym ent O ffice, Job referral #8144-J A pplications w ill be accepted until Friday, Septem ber 9. SERVICES TACO JOHN'S hiring all shifts. Starting pay $4.50/hr. Apply at 735 E. University. No phone calls SANDWICH COOKS W AIT STAFF COUNTER HELP COACHES & OFFICIALS SPORTS & RECREATION Fall registration is going on now. Call us today for our schedule: 968-4668 Matrix Education Center Il M bimon Cornerstone Mall C " Y our H In d i v i d u a l oroscope : F ranc es D r a k e : “THE INFORMANT LINE” For the latest information on W H IC H BAR IS HO T, A N D W H EN IT S NOT (FREE CALL) Daily updated drink specials, reviews, after hours, raves, outdoor activities For Monday, August 22,1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Y our ju d g m e n t is on ta rg e t regarding career interests today. Keep the lines of communication open with a close partner. Avoid worry and second-guessing your­ self tonight. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Mix-ups could occur concerning news from a distance. Couples make happy plans together today. A problem may arise after dark in connection with a friendship. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) O pportunities arise in business today. F ree -la n c e rs receive assignments. Major shopping for the home is favored. A family matter may concern you tonight. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) ESP is strong between couples today. You’ll have luck with a creative endeavor. A child has good news to share with you. A travel plan may be changed. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) A b u sin ess hunch is on the money. A talk with a relative is rewarding. Mixed trends affect your financial picture. One door may open while another closes. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Though you’ll awake in a chip­ per mood, tact and diplom acy will be needed in your dealings with a close partner. Accent what you have in common. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) A private talk today relates to a financial opportunity. Homebased activities are especially rew arding, but a m atter from work may be troubling you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You may be asked to assume a leadership role in connection with a group activity. Today’s inspiration may be tomorrow’s creative accomplishment. Social life is iffy. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Today brings positive business and financial development, but you may also have your hands full with a domestic concern. An appliance could break down. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You’ll be invited to visit friends at a distance. Business and plea­ sure do not com bine advanta­ geously Rely on intuition to give you answers tonight. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Though long-range prospects look good, there’s an immediate money situation that could give you cause fo r concern today. Talks w h higher-ups are a plus. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Today brings you social opportu­ nities that you should take advan­ tage of. A tendency to withdraw into yourself could impair rela­ tions with a close partner tonight. YOU BORN TODAY are vision­ ary in o u tlo o k w ith strong humanitarian inclinations. You can succeed in both the arts and sciences are are happiest in work that measures up to your ideals. At times you are high-strung, and you need periodic times by your­ self to keep in touch with your inner center. Usually, you have a talen t for self-e x p re ssio n . In artistic efforts, your efforts are usually marked by originality. B irthdate of: D orothy Parker, writer; Carl Yastrzemski, base­ ball star; and Claude Debussy, composer. M onday, A ugust 22, 1994 "Big City S t a t e P ress B ig City ... b lu C THE LOLLAPALOOZA EXPERIENCE BEGINS TUESDAY AT 9 2 C DRINKS TICKET A N D PASS GIVEAWAYS BY PO W ER 9 2 "BUD LITE SPOTLIGHT" 4 1 1 S. M ill Ave. THE SPOTLIGHT'S ON YOU