A SU student still m issin g ‘Say a prayer for my daughter’ B y D a v i d P r o f f it t S t a t e P ress Tempe and Scottsdale police still have no clues in the disappearance of ASU student Kimberly Nilson, a 24year-old senior exercise major reported missing Monday night. Donna Zíngaro, Nilson's roommate, was the last per­ son to see Nilson. She said Nilson was sleeping in her apartment when she left for work at 6:30 a.m. No one is sure of the exact time Nilson disappeared. “There are a thousand thoughts going through my m ind rig h t at this m inute,” said George N ilson, Kimberly’s father. “What 1 would like everyone to do maybe is say a prayer for my daughter.” He arrived in Phoenix from Wisconsin Tuesday night after learning of his daughter’s disappearance. After receiving a missing persons report, Scottsdale and Tempe police Monday night searched the desert sur­ rounding the Scottsdale neighborhood where Nilson’s car was found. A ccording to Tem pe police spokesm an Les Strickland, police used a helicopter equipped with an infrared search device when darkness became a problem. They found nothing. “We d o n ’t know why or how sh e ’s m issin g ,” Strickland said. Nilson’s abandoned black Volkswagen Rabbit was found about 9:30 a.m. Monday in an upscale neighborT urn to M issing , page Richard Kom urek/State Pre ss Sandra Nilson, 27, sits next to pictures of her sister, Kimberly, who was reported missing Monday night. Sandra recently moved to Arizona to attend ASU, but now she is reconsidering that decision. 2. Inventor cooks up instant Regents wrestle with program success in mini-microwave for expected enrollment boom h r is t in a B a il e y S t a t e P ress Who said homework doesn’t pay? Erin Grassie, a 22-year-old junior industrial design student, designed a new-age expand­ able mini-microwave, earning her first place in the 1994 National Student Design Competition and a $3,500 award. “We were pleased but not surprised that she won,” said William Sadler, assistant profes­ sor for the School of Design. “We usually know what are best entries are” The project was assigned and made to reflect the National Housewares Manufacturers Association’s contest rules and regulations, said Sadler, who wanted his students to look at the project as resolving a need, not just building an appliance. The project had to be functional and incorporate aesthetics, marketing, social issues, tech­ nology and human factors. “Our instructor wanted us to look around and find different problem areas in the home,’ Grassie said. “I looked in the kitchen and I saw something that was the biggest problem area to me and that was the microwave.” “Right now you have this giant microwave sucking up energy. It’s big enough to put a roast in but everyone uses it to heat up coffee,” Grassie said. “I wanted to take out all the things that are unnecessary. We don’t cook turkeys or roasts in the microwaves, even though they said you could when they first came out with diem,” The project took her three months to finish. The fust month was spent researching whore microwaves have been, where they sue now and where they me going. Grassie spent the second month toying with different drawings and shapes of the microwave, figuring out how to fit the mechanical “stuff” in while making enough room for food. “I went around to different grocery stores and measured nricrowaveable foods,” Grassie said. “Ninety-five percent of all microwaveable foods fit in there.” Tire neat part about this microwave is that it is expandable, she said. All its user has to do is pull a part of it out to allow larger items to fit After winning first place in the National Student Design competition, the promising inventor was flown to Chicago, where she and other winners participated in the International Housewares Show, where professionals and promising young talent show off new products. T urn to I nvention , IN S ID E STATE PR ESS Weather Outlook M o stly su n n y . H ig h 108. ^ Residence Life’s new program to give freshmen a helping hand is turning out to be a success. Page 7. Increasing numbers o f racially moti­ vated crimes have Londoners in dis­ tress. Page 17. page 2. World/ Nation Sports Guantanamo Bay becomes danger­ ously overcrowd­ ed as refugees flee the Castro regime. The Sun Devil football team is looking to hit full stride before its season opener against Oregon State. Page 3 Page 19 Where To Find It C lassifieds............................ 22 C om ics................................... 18 Crossword............................... 6 Horoscopes ..........................21 O pinion.................................... Police R ep o rt......................... Sports.....................................1 Today’s A ctivities................ W orld/Nation.......................... 3 N>VOON By C mate 55,000 new students by the year 2010. Do you think ASU can handle the load?” Although ASU is still 2,600 students said Regent Hank Amos. away from an enrollment cap of 39,000, the About 34,000 of those students would Arizona Board of Regents has taken mea­ have gone to ASU, but the cap means most sures to prevent turning students away will enter alternative programs. when the limit is reached. The ABOR’s goals are to: Regent Rudy Campbell said alternatives, • Expand evening and weekend pro­ rather than larger campuses, are the only grams way to combat the enrollment boom the • Encourage lower division courses at major universities must deal with over the community colleges next several years. • Develop ASU East at the former “Bigger is not better,” he said. William’s Air Force Base Alternatives, such as branch campuses • Open a new undergraduate college in and Saturday and night classes, are among the programs the board has proposed to Pima County ease the burden on Arizona’s three main • Use new technology in an effort to universities. reach out to students who cannot attend One essential alternative, according to classes in a traditional way. Campbell, is ASU East, which will help “The number of dollars from the state accommodate the state’s growing student Legislature is shrinking. It will cost $100 population. million to build a new campus and dollars ASU’s population was 36,400 in 1993, are harder to come by,” Amos said. “We based on a two-year traditional day students had two opportunities to accommodate this enrollment study. Board members are growth, William’s Air Force Base and a uncertain when ASU will reach the limit, new campus in Pima County at the newly but say immediate action is needed to pre­ acquired IBM facility.” pare for an enrollment boom. NAU is working to reach rural areas “We can only hold so many students, with a telecommunications network, he otherwise you have overcrowded class­ said. rooms and building deterioration. We esti­ B y L o r r ie C o h e n Sta te P ress P ag e 2 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 print­ ed on a space -available basis. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State 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 dis­ carded. Deadline for requests in noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. • Communication Students Association (CSA) — First general meeting, all com­ munication students welcome. Networking, socials, and volunteer work will be discussed. 3:00 p.m., MU Mohave, Room 222. • ASU DPS Crime Prevention Unit — Date rape prevention seminar. Will pro­ vide information on preventing sexual assaults, and discuss situations that lead to these crimes. 4:30 p.m., MU Room 215. » ASU Women’s Soccer Devils — Mandatory practice/meeting, 6:00 p.m., bandfieid. • Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual Academic Union — General meeting, 7:30 p.m., MU Mohave, Room 222. W ednesday, August 24, 1994 S t a t e P ress M issing__ C ontinued from page 1. hood o f northeast S cottsdale. Friends reported her missing Monday night. The woman living at the house where the car was found does not know Nilson and called police when she discovered the car in her driveway» Nilson’s car keys were in the ignition and her driver’s license and checkbook were on the seat. No articles were missing from her vehicle, Tempe police said. Police say there was no sign of struggle in the car or in her apartment. Tempe police said the only leads they have are from people who live in Nilson’s apartment complex at 1500 E. Broadway Road. Friends and family insist that it was not like Nilson to simply leave without telling anyone. “She wouldn’t do anything weird, like drive 35 miles to this obscure, country club subdivision and walk away from her car. ... At this point, we can’t think of anything besides som ething really b ad ,” said Nilson’s brother-in-law, Alan Miller. “She was just jazzing and loving life,” Miller said. “She has been really happy. She just found out she was going to gradu­ ate in December instead of next June. She was just happy.” Miller said he drove his car from Tempe to Scottsdale to look for possible clues. “I was just thinking ‘the time is now.’ If she was in tbe desert somewhere, hurt, it would be better to,find her then, When* it was cool,” Miller said. “I figure we’ve got till tomorrow at 5 to find her alive,” Miller said Tuesday night. M iller speculates that she may have come to campus and been abducted. George Nilson said that if his daughter was abducted, she would have had a good chance of escaping from her kidnapper because she was in top physical condition. Friends and family passed out flyers around campus Tuesday describing Nilson. They ask anyone who has a flyer to copy it and distribute it anywhere they can think of. A friend of Nilson’s, Bob Leet, spoke with her Sunday night. “Sunday night, I was talking to her on the phone and she was really distressed,” Leet said. “She had a bad dream, and she was really distressed about the dream.” He said she was ill and had vomited repeatedly that day. Leet said he lost his connection with her during their conversation when her cordless phone batteries died. When he tried to call her back minutes later, she did not answer the phone. W hile they w ere talk in g , L eet said Nilson told him she wanted to apologize to another friend for something she had said, and he dssurhedjshe Had gone to her friend’s apartment. Zingaro said Nilson left to visit this friend, but was unable to locate his apart­ ment and returned without seeing him. She also said Nilson was “a bit out of it” Sunday night, but thought it was because she was sick. “She wouldn’t just blow off her job, she wouldn’t just blow off her last semester of school,” Zingaro said. According to Leet, Nilson’s apartment door was locked with a deadbolt when he came to visit her at 9 a.m. Monday. But when Zingaro returned around 6 p.m., the door was unlocked. “The only time we wouldn’t lock the door is when we went to the mailbox, and even then, half the time we locked the door,” Zingaro said. “I came in and the door was unlocked and I thought that was strange. The note I left her on the table was still there, and I thought that was strange,” Zingaro said. Miller expressed his frustration Tuesday over the lack of information. “We are really in the dark,” he said. “W e’re just hoping for the best, but we won’t get much sleep tonight.” idea and they have the cash. We will both have 50 percent interest in the patent, so it comes out even.” The m ost exciting part about the microwave is that it is universal, Grassie said. “If it’s on the counter and you need space, you can put it underneath the counter,” Grassie said. “The round shape has ripples on the sides that facilitates easy lifting.” It also has large, round buttons that makes the appliance easy for the blind to use, unlike flat buttons on microwaves now. Add the color, and it makes it user-friend- In ven tion _ C ontinued from page 1. Grassie came into contact with officials from Royal Manufacturing, a company asso­ ciated with Red Dirt Devil vacuums. They were so impressed with her work that they offered to help patent her invention. “It costs $7,000 to $10,000 dollars to have an idea patented,” Grassie said. “I have the W o r ld /N a tio n Controversy M hits childrens shots program WASHINGTON (AP) — Doctors worried Tuesday that controversy swirling around a new immunization program could cost the nation more than anticipated and hurt their ability to vaccinate America’s children. “ Vaccine in bottles doesn’t help,” said. Dr. Ed Thompson, chief of Mississippi’s health department. “ It’s vaccine in children that helps. That’s what we like to spend our dollars for, not distributing vaccine.’ ’ At issue is how the government will get free vaccine to public clinics and private doctors for a new immu­ nization program starting Oct. 1. The federal C enters for D isease C ontrol and P revention w anted to use a central w arehouse in Burlington, N.J., but criticism from drug companies and Congress killed the plan. On Tuesday, lawmakers readied legislation allowing the government to pay drug companies to deliver vac­ cine to doctors’ doors. But that could cost more than the original Vaccines for Children plan, said the CDC’s Dr. Walter Orenstein. “ We won’t know for sure until we enter negotiations” with vaccine manufacturers, he said. And officials such as Thompson worried that if the CDC doesn’t make a deal fast, they’ll spend precious dollars they now use to track down unvaccinated chil­ dren to do that delivery themselves. “ We don’t have the money,” Thompson said. Under the Vaccines for Children program, clinics and certain private doctors will buy vaccine at low, federally set prices and give them free to any impoverished, unin­ sured or Indian or Eskimo child. In addition, any child whose insurance doesn’t cover vaccinations could get free shots at special clinics. Most states deliver their own vaccines. But 25 states asked the CDC to help, so die agency planned the $14 million federal warehouse. Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., called the system an unneeded bureaucracy that was risky because it would keep 30 percent of the nation’s vaccines in one spot He threatened last month to hold up the entire program’s funding unless die CDC changed plans. The agency acquiesced on Monday. Health officials emphasized Tuesday that the program still will start Oct. 1 — but that in 25 states, private doctors won’t give free shots until Congress figures out how they’ll receive vac­ cine. ‘‘Immunizations will be available to kids; it just may not be in their doctor’s offices in every state,” said Bill Core, an assistant secretary of health and human services. Bumpers said he was finishing work on legislation allowing the government to pay drug companies to deliver vaccine. The companies now charge from $2 a dose to $37 for mi entire delivery, on top of the vaccine's price. nl A sso c ia te d Press. Cuban refugees line the bow at U.S. Coast Guard cutter Courageous as it enters the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay Cuba Monday. The Courageous brought 267 Cubans into the already overcrowded base. Guantanamo base fills up W ASHINGTON (AP) — As thousands of Cuban refugees pour into Guantanamo naval base, U.S. officials charged with maintaining peace at the camps are concerned about a volatile mix of heat, boredom and frustrated flights for freedom. . . A Pentagon official said the military was considenng sending additional medical and security personnel to deal with the influx of refugees at the base, which normally houses about 5,000 military and civilian workers and their dependents. Defense Secretary William Perry, appearing Tuesday on several morning television shows, called the remote 45square-mile base “ basically a holding cam p” and an “ unattractive proposition” designed to discourage people from leaving Cuba. “ There’s nothing, really, for them to do at Guantanamo. It’ll be a boring and frustrating activity, which is again one of the reasons we’re urging the people not to leave,” Perry said. U.S. officials already have had to put down disturbances by frustrated Haitian refugees at Guantanamo. On Aug. 13, about 750 Haitians rioted, and 20 American military police and 45 Haitians were injured in the four-hour melee. Some Haitians also have staged brief hunger strikes and nonvio­ lent demonstrations. The U.S. manpower commitment could be expanded to include several dozen more Marines to secure the perimeter of the remote site, military police units to maintain order inside the camps, an additional 50-bed field hospital and about 125 support personnel to feed the refugees. A total of 2,548 Cubans were picked up by the Coast Guard on Monday and 5,883 since President Clinton last Friday announced that fleeing Cubans would no longer be admitted as political refugees. Cubans picked up at sea are being transported to the parched military site on Cuba’s southeastern coast, which currently houses some 14,000 Haitians in a makeshift tent citv ringed with barbed wire on an old airstrip. On two dusty fields several miles away across several steep ridges, the military is constructing a temporary home for up to 10,000 Cubans. At the State Department, officials said the Clinton administration was close to an agreement with a half-dozen countries to provide havens for fleeing Cubans. Those Cubans now at Guantanamo will be sent to the other countries when facilities are ready, the State Department said. “ We are moving everyone now to Guantanamo, and we are making every effort to offer them protection in safehaven facilities in third countries,” said David Johnson, a department spokesman. “ There’s no doubt people are hearing the message,” said Johnson. He said there were reports it was being broadcast by Cuban radio stations as well as by Radio Marti, a U.S.-financed anti-Castro service beamed to the island. White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said, “ Clearly, we’re concerned about the level of immigra­ tion.” But she continued to insist that the U.S. policy will work once Cubans realize they cannot get to the United States by taking to the sea. Myers said Panama has “ expressed some willingness to be helpful” in providing safe havens and that officials have talked with Suriname, St. Lucia and Dominica about hous­ ing Cubans. Nicaragua, Honduras, Costa Rica and El Salvador have said “ they will be willing to explore the possibility” of housing Cubans, she added. More than 40 babies have been bom to the migrants in Guantanamo in the two months since the Haitians arrived, but even their future is uncertain. Military officials say the babies received birth certificates, but not U.S. citizenship, since the base is only rented from the government of Cuba and is not U.S. territory. Perry noted the possibility exists for enlarging the num­ bers of refugees placed in Guantanamo. Other military offi­ cials — who spoke privately — cautioned that water and sanitation difficulties would ensue, given that Cuba’s Fidel Castro cut off the water supply in 1964 and the base must produce its own power and water. Too, all food and supplies must be flown or shipped in from the outside. And while Perry repeated earlier assertions the United States was willing to house the Cubans indefinitely, he hastily added that he would not recommend such a step, given the difficulties of life in camps. Russian nuclear institute admits lack o f security MOSCOW (AP) — Russia’s top nuclear research institute acknowledged Tuesday that security there needs improvement, but said no uranium or plutonium is missing. Western news reports have described lax security at the Kurchatov Institute, and there have been suggestions that some of the four shipments of contraband plutonium seized in Germany since May could have com e from the in stitu te in northw est Moscow. The 50-year-old institute has seven nuclear reactors, which are now shut down, and dozens of smaller research devices that use radioactive materials. The institute’s security chief, Nikolai Bondarev, said controls are outdated and inadequate. “ Before, we could not expect attacks by international terrorists. ... Now the conditions have changed,” he told a news conference at Kurchatov’s sprawling complex. The uranium and plutonium are protect­ ed by a four-level security system that includes a guarded perimeter, armed guards at the research compounds, rooms with alarm system s, and safes, said Nikolai Ponomarev-Stepnoi, institute vice president. But he added that the system was designed for Soviet times, when there was “ iron discipline and fear” in the nuclear establishment and little black market for radioactive materials. “ We need to improve the system. It has its faults,” he said. “ If I was standing out­ side, thinking about how to get the materi­ als, I would have found a way.” Since the Soviet collapse, there have been numerous reports that officials and workers in the defense, research and nuclear energy sectors have turned to theft and sm uggling to supplem ent their m eager salaries. Kurchatov is cooperating with Western research centers, including some in the United States, to improve security, said Ponomarev-Stepnoi. He said several hundred tons of uranium, including some enriched uranium, have passed through the complex. He would not disclose the am ount o f plutonium kept there, but said none of it was weaponsgrade. Ponomarev-Stepnoi said the institute checked its stockpiles after the German seizures were reported, and found nothing missing. German officials said the small amounts of seized plutonium almost certainly came from Russia. Top German intelligence officials came to Moscow for talks, and the sides signed an agreement Monday to cooperate in fighting nuclear smuggling. But Russia said there was no proof it was the source of the nucle­ ar materials intercepted in Germany. Ponomarev-Stepnoi said two Kurchatov experts’ business cards were found among thousands carried by the alleged smugglers detained in Germany, but he called the twc scientists “ beyond suspicion.” O p in io n S t a t e P ress W ednesday, August 24, 1994 P age 4 State P ress d ito r ia l B C u b a n c o lla p s e President Clinton’s domestic policies must be polarized. N o, not p o litic a lly — m a g n etically . Because it seems whenever a domestic politi­ cal battle emerges, a foreign policy crisis erupts at the same time. W hile he wrangled on allowing gays in the m ilitary, U.S. involvem ent in Bosnia proved an embarrassing distraction. While making his pitch on health care, the horrors o f the o n g o in g R w andan c iv il w ar and famine, and the continuing trouble in Haiti captured headlines and nightly newscasts. Pity the post-Cold War president. It seems like nothing’s stable anymore. Even as debate rages on die crime bill and C linton’s attention m ust be as focused as possible, the news turns to Cuba. The most notorious communist power in the Western hemisphere, Cuba has long had a hate-hate relationship with America. What other country in the 1950s and 1960s threw so much egg on the faces of American politi­ cians? The fall and demise o f the Soviet Union led to the suspension of Russian aid and sub­ sidies to Cuba. The Cuban economy is falter­ ing, causing a flood of 2,500 refugees cur­ rently housed at Guantanamo Naval Base — refugees from the last few weeks. Refugees were rescued from boats, rafts and even w hile sw im m ing as they fled tow ard perceived freedom in the U nited States as Fidel Castro’s regime continued to suffer under the weight of a U.S. economic embargo nearly 30 years old R efugees w ere p laced in cam p s, as C lin to n bow ed under p re ssu re from American groups outraged at the thought of m assive Cuban em igration to the United S tates — h a rd ly sa tisfy in g C lin to n ’s American critics, and alienating the refugees themselves. And as the threat of economic and politi­ cal collapse in C uba grow s, the flow of refugees can only increase. Without a viable, workable policy to prevent such an event, Clinton is bound to attract more derision and anger. But even if he does come up with such a policy — despite a dismal record on foreign policy in Bosnia, Rwanda and Haiti — it will distract Clinton from his battle for the crime bill and universal health coverage. Som etim es, it seems like C linton can ’t win. STATE PRESS TAFF VfHAT SHOULDWEDO?V v " ‘ 'T M H o T S U R t fBEING fkort TEXAS,I'VE I'M SCARED BEEN IN STAMPEDES OF SHEEPsH06S,AND cattle . Advice for young, incoming freshmen W hile toiling away in the labors of putting out a 44-page AVID paper last Sunday, a sudden STROW thought occurred to me. I turned to Jason Owsley, aware that I was Managing about to utter something earth- Editor shaking. “Tomorrow’s the first day of school, isn’t it?” I have always had a talent for grasping the obvious. Ü Jason m erely grunted and returned to his work. I learned that lesson pretty quickly — never bother the editor when he is buried underneath enough paperwork to document the entire federal debt. I suppose you could say I learned a lot of life’s little lessons that way — by screwing up, then vowing never to do something that stupid again. It dawned on me later that evening that maybe ASU’s brand-new freshmen — all four or five thousand of them — could benefit from my four years of experience at our love­ ly academic playground. So, freshmen, read this list carefully. Clip it. Save it. Stick it in your book bag. (I know better: by the end of today, at least 500 copies of this column will litter the bot­ toms of every bathroom stall on campus.) • Your dreams of graduating in four years are foolish, naive fantasies. You can, I suppose, provided that you give up all sleep until 1998. • Same goes for your belief that the major you start with will be the one you finish with. I began my college career in 1991. Since then, I have majored in engineering, pre-med, political science and, finally, journalism. Guess you could say I have diverse interests. • Classes that begin at 7:40 a.m. qualify as the lowest pit of hell. They may not seem quite so bad now, but wait until December, when you have to walk from Lot 59, across a cold, dark campus, to Business Administration for that early class. As your hands freeze and fall off, you’ll know what I mean. • Sleeping on campus is a favorite pastime, so make sure you do it in comfort. MU lounge sofas make excellent sub­ stitute beds, although people will curse you underneath their breath for hogging the whole damn thing. • While between classes, it is not considered good form to stand behind the people playing video games and stare for an hour. You might as well hang a sign saying “Freshman” on your chest. • Tired of trying to fight through the noon crowd on Cady Mall? Start screaming religious fundamentalism at the top of your lungs. The crowd will quickly clear a space for you. • In the same line of thinking, never argue with the mall preachers. They will forever after remember your face, and you will get a personal sermon every single time you pass the Cady Mall Fountain. Trust me on this one — I have been targeted for conversion by their leader. • Lunchtim e in the MU is about as much fun as the Superstition Freeway at 5 p.m. Better grab your munchies at 11 or 1. • Telephone registration is the greatest development in the history of mankind. Every day, while passing by the huge registrar's line in the Social Sciences Building, I take time to laugh at those who have not discovered this. (You, in the line reading this. I heard that comment, and it wasn’t nice.) • While traversing the campus, you will be approached by certain people asking you for your phone number. It would be in your best interest to avoid them. Last time I did that I had Mormon missionaries at my door for the next two months. • Walking on the bike paths is a good way to become a pedestrian pancake. Of course, walking down Forest Mall is a good way to get hit, too. • Changing the channel on the MU lounges big-screen TV during soap opera time will usually result in your immedi­ ate, bloody demise. • And finally, three things about the State Press... a) Yes, it is free. However, if you insist on paying for it, you can leave a quarter at the front desk for the David Strow scholarship fund. I will put your quarters to good use. b) Don’t have time to pick up a copy of the paper? Just reach underneath your desk. Should be one there from the previous occupant. c) No, all of those inserts lying on the ground are not a commentary on our lack of caring about campus ecology. They say that Sun Devils can be tremendous slobs in the morning. Enjoy the ASU experience — all five or six years of it. David Strow is a senior journalism major. JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor LaSpaluto, Lynn Readicker. KRIS FRIDRICH................... Night Editor P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Theresa Boettcher, Jim Poulin, GARIN GROFF.................................................................. CityEditor Scott Trimble. GREG ZEMEIDA................................. .......Asst. City Editor UNSIGNED EDITOR: James Frusetta DAVID LASPALUTO.....................................................NewsEditor C O LU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry A. MARJORY KAMINSKI........................................OpinionEditor Kelley, Diane Lopez, James Mahin, Bryce Morgan, Mike RICHARD KOMUREK...................................... Photo Editor Stevens, Chris Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. CRAIG MACNAUGHTON..................... Asst. Photo Editor CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. JEREMY STEIN JL.........................................................SportsEditor GRAPHIC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. DAWN WAGNEk .w .............................. Asst. Sports Editor PR O D U CTIO N : Aaron Bratcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth KEN CO LLIN S.........................................................MagazineEditor French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, ANNA ULINICH................................ Asst. Magazine Editor Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. R E P O R T E R S : M ika A k ik u n i, E lizab eth A ppelen, SA LES R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Em ily B erger, James C hristina Bailey, Jared Bennett, Sheryl Bottner, Lorrie Durocher, Dan Ellstrom, Adam Ezrilov, Jennifer Hughes, Cohen, Dawn DeChristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine A lisa Jellum , C hrista Justus, Jennifer Pittm an, Karyn Granados, Dave Proffitt, Karyn Riedell. Riedell, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. SPO R T S R EPO R TE R S: Todd Kelly, Dan Miller, Lee Newman. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, C O PY E D IT O R S : N ick B acon, Kim H erman, D avid decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion o f 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 atthew s Center, Room 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P h o n e N umbers Information............... 965-7572 Newsroom ................ 965-2292 Magazine...................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds..................965-6731 O p in io n State P ress______________________________________________________________ W ednesday, August 24, 1994__________________________________________________ ___________________ P a g e 5 Clinton, foreign affairs leave a lot to be desired In a world where the United States faces tremendous leader­ ship questions as well as chal­ lenges, one must be careful when tinkering with the foreign affairs of this nation. Alas, it is our president who has somehow suc­ cumbed to the dreadful act of waffling and the powerful vice of indecisiveness. It is this that is having a negative impact upon the im age and pow er of the United States abroad. It is apparent when observing U.S. foreign policy that something is askew ; something just doesn’t feel right. When Bill Clinton took office seemingly so long ago, I anticipated an administration that hopefully would end some of America’s relationships with some of the world’s shadier of characters or regimes whose only positive aspect was they shared with Washington’s disdain for commu­ nism. I hoped he would not get stuck in the quagmire of special interests that so dominates any relationship ques­ tions the United States has with other nations. I hoped he would actually bring in a new, dare I say, blue collar view­ point to the State Department. Call me naive. I didn’t mind, at first, when Clinton quite obviously put off dealing with the Balkans. The “Balkan Question’’ had come up yet again in European affairs, and it, yet again, befuddled all who dared to attempt to answer it. The citi­ zens of what was once Yugoslavia seemed bent on mas­ sacring each other. So would it really make a difference what the European Union, or for that matter, the United States, said on the matter? Obviously not. I couldn't blame Clinton for not getting deeply involved. Historically, anyone who ever has involved themselves in the messy affairs of the violent Balkans has been burned, so to speak. Additionally, I couldn’t help think what most other Americans thought, that the Balkan problem is the problem of the EU, and most definitely not ours. Whether we as a nation can live with ourselves after ‘C a m p u s watching thousands perish for a seemingly insane cause is not for me to answer. After all, I initially supported United States, or at least NATO, involvement, only to later become more jaded like the rest of us and eventually forget the whole thing. But Haiti is a different story. Haiti resides, to beat to death a cliché, in our backyard. By using the logic applied to the Balkans that they are legitim ately a European problem, then supposedly Haiti surely is ours. Unfortunately, Haiti just doesn’t constitute a problem solely for the United States. We, or at least the Clinton administration, objected to an authoritarian regime installing itself in that small nation. As it turned out, the former regime was not exactly a shining example of democracy, but at least it was civilian in nature, whereas the new one is primarily military controlled and bred. Haiti was, in short, a problem for the United States, and a thorn in the side of an administration already loaded with too many problems. President Clinton, for all he’s worth, caused this prob­ lem. I admit that Serbs and Moslems were blasting each other off the earth long before Clinton was elected and that North Korea was ruled by paranoid psychopaths almost before he was bom. Haiti, though, was a mess that was truly avoidable. The tragedy at work in Haiti is that the solution dreamed up by the administration to the problem of the new authori­ tarian regime is practically as harmful to the Haitian popu­ lace as the regime itself. The economic sanctions leveled upon Haiti have done little more than make life just a little more miserable for the poor of the island nation. One can bet that the military authorities, as well as the island’s eco­ nomic elites, have been buffered against the ill effects of these U.S. induced sanctions. Are these sanctions seemingly pointless, you ask? Certainly. Has the punishment eclipsed the crime as well as affect the wrong class of people? That’s for sure. As these sanctions take their economic toll on the poor citizens of Haiti and exact an almost ironic retribution upon M a ste r P la n ’ time while on campus; in a bicyclist/pedestrian accident, the pedestrian will generally come out only second best; for campus safety, security, and convenience, academic buildings in the campus core area have been designed and located so as to be within an approximate ten minute walking distance of each other; and, bicycling, along with other various campus transportation modes must be organized in a sensible, balanced system. In response, then, to the above men­ tioned major points, the University devel­ oped a circulation element as a part of a recently adopted Campus Master Plan. The circulation element emphasizes that campus entrances, destinations and intended vehicu­ lar tram, service, bus, pedestrian and bicy­ cle routes should be clearly defined, and travel to and from the various areas of cam­ State P ress t etters to the editor The State Press welcomes and encourage^ wnttèn response p o m our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, doublé* spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your lull name, class standing and. major Got any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. O nly signed letters will be considered fo r publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriates reason-. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page edi­ tor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo ID to the State Press front desk in the basement of the Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe Ariz., 85287-1502. E-mail address for ASU students is ICJBO® ASU ACAD. Internet address is ICJBO@ASUVM.lNREASU.EDU E-mail letters must include full name, class’ standin, major (or other affiliation with the University), phone number and student ID number. Christopher Stroud is a senior political science major. e x p la in e d p r o b le m a t ic fa c ilit ie s in c lu d in g This is in response to your Aug. 2 edito­ rial regarding bike paths on campus, past and present. I would therefore like to draw your attention to the following major points con­ cerning existing and proposed campus cir­ culation issues: Campus security, safety and convenience remain high campus priorities; ASU Main is an urban university largely built on a narrow grid of vacated residential lots and City of Tempe streets; ASU Main (which has added an additional 52 buildings to the campus’ central core area over the last 20 years) has grown as a direct offshoot of the growth in the Phoenix metropolitan region population (especially student popu­ lation); there are currently some 15,000 bicyclists coming to campus, all of whom will become pedestrians at some point in the powerless for allowing their leaders to cross an overly idealistic U.S. administration, Clinton drops upon us anoth­ er bad policy decision. For some time, there was actual serious talk of a U.S.-led invasion of Haiti to depose the military regime there which so flagrantly thumbed its nose at the United States. I wasn’t really sure if I was the only one who found this to be bordering on the insane. I suppose, time will tell. The very fact that this option was discussed seriously by the administration is indicative of a house very much not in order. Truly, someone in the hallowed government halls has run amok; surely no president can be this poorly advised. Sleep tight, fellow students, for apparently Clinton is. Hopefully, for the good of this nation and for the poor of Haiti, someone in Washington will come to his senses. I cannot believe that a disgrace as evidenced by this policy could go on indefinitely. It is true that I admire President Clinton’s courage when it comes to some of the domestic issues, but in the case of the state of U.S. foreign affairs, he is seriously running the risk of being seen as somehow more inept than one James Carter. This, ladies and gentlemen, is not good. And that is most assuredly an understatement. to h e lp s o lv e b ic y c lin g , p a r k in g pus should be efficient and convenient. The circulation element of the Campus Master Plan thus resulted in a three-tiered ‘ring’ system which will be constructed and maintained so as to have a bicycle free zone in the core area of the central campus while restricting all but emergency and service vehicular traffic to the perimeter zone of the campus. Most of the main campus parking, meanwhile, would be provided in the park­ ing structure within this perimeter zone. New campus entries on the east and west edges, coupled with connections to the regional transportation system, would redi­ rect traffic away from surrounding residen­ tial neighborhoods. In addition, pedestrian and bicycle underpasses are proposed on the major city thoroughfares to facilitate the safe and efficient linkage between the main campus and the campus’ outlying residen­ tial and recreational areas. In the interim, and while these master plan goals and objectives are being pursued, planping officials and administrators will continue to-study ways to phase in both short and long range bicycle facility plan­ ning and design solutions. A consultant, for example, will shortly be hired to review the Campus M aster Plan recom m endations regarding campus circulation and generally accepted bicycle facility design guidelines; inventory existing mall facility conditions including parking, pedestrian circulation, adjacent land uses, key intersections, cam­ pus entryways, ramps and curb cuts, sight distances, lighting, etc.; identify and priori­ tize problem atic bicycle facility areas; develop both short range and long range solutions to the aforementioned problematic areas; prepare a phasing plan which addresses the problematic facilities in a log­ ical fashion; develop cost estimates for the identified solutions (principally through the construction of signage, striping, pavement markings, installation of traffic control devices and landscaping) which help begin to implement the recommendations outlined in the Campus Master Plan. In conclusion, planning officials and •administrators will also continue working with all the various bicycle facility planning agencies (such as City p f Tempe, with whom we previously worked out bicycle facilities striping and signage plans along Terrace, Lemon and McAllister Avenues) to1facilitate bicycling accessibility ontd campus in a balanced and sensible fashion. \ Richard W. Collins Campus Planner Facilities Planning and Construction j P age 6 S t a t e P ress W ednesday, August 24, 1994 P o l ic e R e po r t A S V police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •A male student reported three books were stolen from an unlocked locker in the ASU Bookstore. •A female student reported her wallet was stolen from Parking Structure 5. •A female student reported her white 1990 Mitsubishi Gallant, Arizona license plate GRN366, was stolen from Lot 59. •A man unaffiliated with ASU reported persons unknown damaged the steering column on his vehicle at Sun Devil Stadium. •A male student was contacted at Manzanita Hall for possi­ bly smoking marijuana. •A female student reported receiving harassing phone calls at Palo Verde Main. •A female student reported her car stereo was stolen from her vehicle while it was parked in Parking Structure 5. •A female student reported that a window on her vehicle was criminally damaged while it was parked south of Sonora Center. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •A 31-year-old man was arrested for shoplifting a 12-pack of beer from the Circle K at 1401W. Broadway Road. •A 26-year-old man was arrested in the 1900 block of Apache Boulevard for possession of dangerous drugs and drug paraphernalia. •A 30-year-old Tempe man was arrested for domestic vio­ lence and assault after shoving his wife and knocking her backward onto the couch. •A 37-year-old Tempe man was arrested for disorderly con­ duct after yelling at his wife. He had been warned not to return to the house, but he did return and was heard yelling at his wife when police arrived. •A 20-year-old man was arrested for using false identifica­ tion to gain entry into Long Wong’s. •A 21-year-old man was arrested for giving false informa­ tion to police and for possession of a stolen truck. •A 45-year-old woman was arrested for domestic violence for assaulting her boyfriend by punching him in the nose with a closed fist. •Two men, both 18, were arrested for assault after punching their victim in the face at Sixth Street and Mill Avenue. One man held the victim down while the other one hit him. Compiled by State Press reporter Karyn Riedell I N F O R M A T I O N S E S S IO N Every Wed. & T hurs. 2-3 p.m . Student Services A m phitheater New Guidelines for Fall ’95 SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Round trip from Phoenix DENVER.................... 170 ORLANDO................ 358 ST. 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Try a TI-68 or TI-85 at your local TI retailer today, or for more informa­ 8-24 tion, call 1-800-TI-CARES. j i E XTENDI NG YOUR z CRYPTOQUOTE x j lit: J A C K HG REACH” z .! c i> t: G I S ti g x e-mail: ti-cares @ lobby.ti.com In Canada, call 1-800-661-2007. 019MTI. IH000182 m ig W (J M I Z P X J I M K J. t: <: ( , . — X l F. A J C Texas In s t r u m e n t s s i l til I WX . I L A C Y esterd ay ’s C ry p to q u o te : NO PLACE AFFORDS A MORE S TRIKING ( XINVICTION OF THE VANITY OF HUMAN HOPES, THAN A PUBLIC LIBRARY — SAMUEL IOHNSON © 1994 by King Fea tu res S yn dica te Inc Page_7 W ednesday, August 24,1994 S t a t e P re ss Freshman program praised State P ress P olice ReportsT oo b iz a rre to b e a n y th in g b u t real. N ew services available fo r d o rm resid en ts points to prospective students. “I was real nervous about coming here,” Residence Life has helped to relieve said John T hrasher, a freshm an from freshman of the normal fears of starting Pasadena, C alif., living in Palo Verde college by turning their new experiences West. “The program is one of the main rea­ into one of its best selling points. sons I chose ASU. I d id n ’t see other The Freshmen Year Experience, a pro­ schools with anything like it.” gram implemented last fall, brings campus Although ASU’s program is relatively services to new students in the hopes of new, Christianson said the idea of giving easing their transition into college life. freshmen a little extra help is not new. The program focuses on students living “I would say this is a national trend,” in M anzanita and Palo Verde East and she said. “Freshmen have specific needs W est H alls, which are trad itio n ally and schools need to meet them if they want reserved for freshmen. to stay competitive.” As part of the Freshm an Year Christianson said the first programs of Experience, tutors are available free of this kind were developed in 1989 in South charge on every floor. Residents have Carolina. access to a writing center in Manzanita and Although Residence Life has spent con­ computer labs in each hall were upgraded siderable reso u rces to develop the over the summer. There is an academic Freshman Year Experience, room rates adviser on staff and Career Services will were not increased to pay for the program, open a satellite office in M anzanita. she added. Students can even take UNI 100, a popular The program costs about $100,000, class for freshmen, in classrooms in the Christianson said, all of which comes out halls. of Residence Life’s budget. That money The idea has sold well to ASU newcom­ goes to pay the 100 students and staff who ers. There are students on waiting lists for work with the 1,780 freshman living in the spaces in the halls that offer the program, all of which are filled to capacity. This is a Freshman Year Experience halls. B esides all the academ ic services drastic change from just two years ago, offered to students, freshmen also find the when residence hall occupancy rates were support of being in like company. down to 63 percent, the lowest in recent “It was a shock when I first got here,” years. Laura Christianson, assistant director of said Ryan Kaplanek, a freshm an from operations for Residence Life, said most Arroyo Grande, Calif., who lives in Palo freshmen are able to adapt well socially, Verde West. “I didn’t even know about the program, but everyone here is in the same but sometimes need help academically. “Students are away from home for the boat so you get through this together.” Kelly Cleary, a communications major first time, and there is no one there to encourage them to do w ell,” she said. living in Palo Verde West, agreed. “It makes it a lot easier to be new here. “We’re trying to put everything as close to My friends going to other schools don’t them as possible.” These benefits have been big selling have anything like this. I feel lucky.” B y L isa G o n d e r in g e r State P ress Creative Ideas Materialized. Without the right help and supplies, your brightest creativ e id e a s m ight never m aterialize. Rax Company, Inc. under­ stands how important it is for an artist to have a reliable source for quality materials, where the service is courteous p / V and the staff knowledgable. Our everyday low prices and our back-to-school discounts* for students (up to 30%) mean savings everytime you shop at Flax. Let your creative ideas come to life—shop at Flax today. è O» • PAPER • K ' B O O K S * =j m ore S 36 i i co u p o n . V o id with other otters. Exp. 9/15/94. i Wheelers’;;] I & PARTS (E X C L U D E S B IK E S & L A BO R ) W ith cou po n . V o id with other öfters. 1 i W ith co u p o n V o ie « t i c t m j •Accusi B rakes & D©ritfl$ur$ •TfU Both Wheels I •Clean Bike •Adjust Heactee? •Adjust Catóos ¡ •»Adjust Hub Bearings Order your copy of The 1993-94 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook today! Matthews Center basement, Rm 50 965-6881 "Your collegiate bike shop" 968-8011 Open 7 days a week Layaway 2010 S. Rural Rd. Tempe, A Z Bottorn BiâCkierf •Clean & Lube Driva Must present coupon when Tune-Up order Is placed. Void vmth other offers. Exp. 9/15/94. N Rural R e g . P rice TUNEUP Apache Broadway ■ State P ress W ednesday, August 24, 1994 P a g e 10 Simpson attorneys accuse police of sloppiness with evidence LOS ANGELES (AP) — Defense lawyers attacked the reliability of DNA evidence in the O.J. Simpson case Tuesday, suggesting police bungled blood collection, mislabeled a sam­ ple and assigned inexperienced technicians to the case. Under defense questioning, one police crim inalist acknowledged mislabeling a blood sample and another said she was still a trainee when she collected evidence in the double-murder case. Superior Court Judge Lance Ito repeatedly tried to rein in the detailed questioning at a hearing that had been called only to consider whether the defense would be allowed to conduct its own tests on newly disclosed blood samples. “That is for another hearing,” Ito said of the broader line of questioning, and he sustained some objections by Deputy District Attorney Lisa Kahn. Simpson, 47, pleaded innocent to the June 12 killings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. His trial is scheduled Sept. 19. Police criminalist Collin Yamauchi told defense attorney Barry Scheck he mislabeled one blood sample. But Yamauchi insisted he took pains to protect evidence, even going so far as to avoid touching blood-soaked swatches with a ruler while measuring them. "I didn’t want to risk contamination so I made approxi­ mations,” he said. “I tried to avoid touching them as much as possible.” Yamauchi, who performed some of the earliest tests on the Simpson blood samples, also acknowledged his first experience in DNA testing was six months ago. A second criminalist, Andrea Mazzola, testified she was still a trainee when she was sent to collect evidence. "1 went out to the crime scenes with more experienced criminalists and assisted them,” said Mazzola, who was hired in January. Asked to detail the number of crime scenes in which she had primary responsibility for collecting evidence, she replied: “Zero.” Her testimony also suggested she began collecting blood samples from Simpson’s driveway hours before a search warrant was issued. She said she arrived at 7 a.m. on June 13, met with detectives who pointed out items of interest and “proceeded to have them photographed and collected.” The search war­ rant was issued at 10:45 a.m. Scheck and attorney Peter Neufeld, forensic specialists known throughout the country, led the defense attack against the DNA evidence, which is crucial to the case. On Monday, prosecutors said DNA tests found the genetic makeup of Simpson’s blood matched that of blood A sso c ia te d P re ss O.J. Simpson sits next to Peter Neufeld (left) during his pre-trial hearing in Los Angeles Tuesday. The defense escalated its attacks on the genetic evidence prosecutors are relying on to tie Simpson to the double murders of Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman. found near the bodies of Ms. Simpson and Goldman. On Tuesday, S im pson’s law yers asked G regory Matheson — Yamauchi’s supervisor — why some blood samples were withheld from testing, something that wasn’t originally revealed to the defense. Matheson said he couldn’t remember specific conversa­ tions about how much evidence could be shared with the defense. He suggested Yamauchi made the decision to hold back some samples when others were sent to a Maryland laboratory for testing. “I don’t specifically remember any discussions on this NEED A CLASS ? — 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 Education Course Equivalency Guide and an advisor for complete details. ASU ACC230» ACC240* A C C250 JUS to o JUS320 JU S 311 A RT214 ART231* ASB102 ASB335* ASM 101* A ST 111 AST125 B1O100 » B I0181 ZOL201 CHM 335 CIS200* CIS235 CSE201 COM 207 COM225 C O M 24I* COM 259 THP270 C O M 281 CSE100 CSE181 AH 100 ECE106* ECE210* ENC111 ENC112 SPF111 Elective* ENG101 ENG102 ENG200 ENG210 ENG222 ENG341 FRE101 GLG101* GLG102* GLG104* GLG110 SCC A C C230 A C C240 A C C250 AJS101 AJS118 AJS225 A R T I 16 A RT151 ASB102 ASB245 ASM 101 AST111 AST113 BIO 100 BIO 181 B IO 20I CHM 235 a s 105* a s 158 a s 162 CO M 207 COM225 C 0M 241* CO M 259 OOM271* COM281 CSC100 CSC181 DAH100 ECE106AA ECE211 EO N 111 ECN112 EDU221 ED U 250 ENG101 ENG102 EN G 200 EN G 210 ENH 222 ENH241 FRE101AA GLG101 GLG102 G LG 104 G LG 110 COURSE ASU SCC USES O F ACCT IN FO I USES O F A CCT INFO II IN TRO ACCOUNTING LAB INTRO CRIM INAL JUSTICE COM M UNITY RELATIONS C RIM E f t DELINQUENCY LIFE DRAW ING L II, IE , IV SCULPTURE I & H INTRCVCULTURL f t SOC A NTH S W ANTHROPOLOGY HUM AN ORGNS f t D EV O F C ULT INTRO TO A STRONOM Y I IN TRO T O ASTRO N O M Y I L ab BIOLOGY CONCEPTS G E N T BIO (M AJORS) I HU M A N A N A TO M Y /PH Y SIO LO G Y I GEN O R GA N IC CHM I f t Lab SURVEY CO M P IN FO SY STEM COBOL PROGRAM M ING I C PROGRAM M ING IN TRO T O COM M INQUIRY PU B LIC SPEAKING IN TRO T O O RAL INTERPRETATN COM IN BUS f t PROFESSIONS ELM NTS OF IN TERCU LTU RA L C O COM M U N ICATIO N A CTIV ITIES IN TRO COM P/SCIEN CE/PA SCAL A PPLIED PROB SO LV B A SIC INTRO T O D A N CE IN TRO C O M PU TER A ID ED EN G R EN GINEERING M ECH-STATICS M ACROECONOM IC PRINCIPLES M ICROECONOM IC PRINCIPLES SURVEY O F EDUCA TIO N OV RV IEW C O M M N TY COLLEG ES FRESHM AN E N G FRESHM AN E N G REA D N f t W RITN A B O U T LIT CREA TIV E W RITIN G SURVEY O F ENG L IT A FTER 1860 AM ER L IT BEFO RE 1860 ELEM FR EN CH I IN TRO TO G EO I/PH YSICL LEC/LAB IN TO T O G EO n/H IS T C L LEC/LAB IN TRO G EOLOGY H EN V IRO N M EN TA L G EOLOGY G L G lll GPH111 GPH212* GPH214* HES305 EPE283 HIS100* H IS 101* HIS102 m s 103* m s io 4 * HIS428* DEC/HIS HUM 103 THE300 r r A i o i/2 JPN101 JPN201 JRN201 DEC/JR N M AT106* M AT106 M AT 114 M AT117 M AT118* M AT119 M AT210 M AT270* M AT271* M AT242* M AT272* MCO120* MUS347* M US100E M UP350 EPE291 EPE291 P ffllO l* P m i0 3 * REL100 PHS100 PHY101 PHY111/2* S1-S2* POS110* PO S330 G L G lll GPH111 GPH212 GPH214 HES201 HES271 H IS 100 m s to i m s 102 m s io 3 m s 104 m s ms m S203 HUM 103 HUM 205 ITA101/2AA JPN101 JPN201 JRN201 JRN215 M AT124 M AT129 M AT150 MAT154/5 M A T 160 M AT179 M AT210 M AT223 M AT224 M AT225 M AT235 M CO 120 M HL145 M TC101 M UP150 PED 265BC PED 265FW PHI101 PHI103 Pm243* PHS110 PHY101 PH Y 111/2 PH Y 115 PO S110 POS115 topic,” Matheson said. “We may have had them. I don’t know.” Also Tuesday, a grand jury considering an indictment against A1 “A.C.” Cowlings called additional witnesses, including Cathy Randa, Simpson’s administrative assistant for 20 years. Attorneys for Robert Kardashian, a lawyer and friend of Simpson, sought to quash his grand jury subpoena. Simpson and Cowlings were at Kardashian’s house the morning Simpson was charged with two counts of murder. The two fled in Cowlings’ Ford Bronco, surrendering that night after a nationally televised freeway pursuit. SCOTTSDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE CLASSES START RUGUST 27 COURSE ENVIRO N M EN TA L G EO LO G Y LAB INTRO T O PH Y S G EO LEC/LAB IN TRO T O M ETEOROLOGY IN TRO T O M ETEOROLOGY LAB I SUBSTAN CE A BUSE/BEHAVOR PREV f t TR E A T /A TH L ETIC IN JU m S T O F W - CIV T O M ID AGES H IST O F W - C IV /M ID A G E S-1789 H IST O F w - a v / 1 7 8 9 T O PR ESEN T US fflS T O 1870 US HIS 1870 T O PRESNT ARIZO N A fflSTO R Y B LA CK AM ERICAN HISTO RY IDEAS f t VALUES IN H U M IN TRO T O C INEM A ELEM ITALIAN I & n ELEM JAPA N ESE I INTER JA PA N ESE I NEW SW RITING NEW SROOM A CTIVITY INTERM ED A LG E BR A W /REV IEW INTERM ED ALGEBRA C O LLEG E M ATHEM ATICS COLLEG E A LG EBRA/FUNCTIONS PLA N E TRIG O N O M ETRY FINITE M ATHEM ATICS BRIEF CALCULUS CA L W /A N ALY TIC G EO W M H CA LC W /A N ALY TIC G EO H ELEM EN T LIN EA R A LG EBRA CAL W /A N ALY TIC G EO III M EDIA f t SO CIETY A M JAZZ f t PO PU LA R M U SIC IN TRO T O M USIC TH EO RY COM M U N ITY CHORUS BA SEBA LL TH E O R Y O F C O ACH IN G FO O TB A LL M ETHODS O F C O ACH IN G IN TRO D U CTIO N T O PH ILO SO PH Y IN TRO T O LO G IC m s O F W O RLD RELIGIONS FU N D PH Y SICA L SCIEN CE IN TRO T O PHYSICS G EN ERA L PHYSICS I f t H U N IV ER SITY PH Y SICS I A M N A TIO N A L G O V ER N M EN T ISSUES IN A M E R PO LITICS - SM ALL CLASSES ■SIMPLE REGISTRATION- LOW TUITION- $32.00 - CREDIT HOUR fß law ^ ANNIVERSAR 1970-1995 “Aging with Class” ASU l POS160* POS311* PGS101 PSY230* PGS350* PGS222 PSY 290 REA2S1 RUS101 RUS201 SOC101 SOC315* SOC341 SPA101/2 SPA201/2 TCM 200 TCM 235* T H E 100* TH E300 THP101 SCC PO S120 POS221 PSY101 PSY 230 PSY 250 PSY277 PSY290AB REA 179 RUS101 RUS201 SOC101 SOC157 SOC251 SPA101/2AA SPA201/2 TCM 101 TCM 180 THE111 TH E205 THP112 COURSE W O RLD POLITICS A Z CO NSTITU TIO N IN TRO T O PSYCH O LO G Y IN TRO T O STATISTICS SOCIAL PSY CH O LO G Y PSY O F H U M A N SEX U A LITY RESEA RH M ETHODS REA L ESTA TE PR IN C IPLES I ELEM ENTARY R U SSIA N I INTERM EDIATE R U SSIA N INTRODUCTION T O SO CIOLOGY SO C O F M A R R IA G E f t FAM SOCIA L PROBLEM S ELEM ENTARY SPA N ISH I f t H INTERM ED SPA N ISH I f t H FUN D A O F R A D IO f t TV TELEV ISIO N TEC HN IQU ES IN TRO T O TH EA TR E IN TRO T O C IN EM A ACTIN G I State P P ageJT W ednesday, August 24, 1994 ress Wildfires slowed as Western weather becomes cooler MATTRESS agic Nite ONLY I 100» Set Guarantee each piece.. $ Full each piece.... 1298 S r . 100» Set Guarantee QUEEN SE T ___ KING SET_____ (AP) — Cooler, calmer weather slowed the spread of forest fires in parts of the Northwest on Tuesday, helping fire crews extend fire lines and easing the threat to houses. “We’re kind of leaning back and licking our wounds,” said Jim Mershon, fire information officer for the Kootenai National Forest in northwestern Montana. Across the West and the Plains, 30 major fires contin­ ued burning Tuesday after charring 494,000 acres in Washington, Idaho, Montana, California and Oklahoma, according to the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho. It said 19,300 firefighters were at work. Crews using bulldozers strengthened lines along the leading edge of the 14,500-acre Little Wolf fire southwest of Whitefish, Mont. It had been threatening 30 houses scat­ tered in the forest. The weather also helped firefighters working on blazes in Washington state, and crews said they were within a day of fully containing the month-old Tyee Creek fire, which had covered 127,500 acres. Crews had cut 88 miles of trail around the fire. The Tyee Creek and other fires have destroyed at least 37 houses or cabins in central and eastern Washington since July 24. Most were started by lightning. In the Sierra Nevada just west of the Califomia-Nevada state line, the Cottonwood fire was 80 percent contained Tuesday after burning 46,800 acres in one week. Weather conditions also helped in parts of Idaho, but in the southwestern part of the state, smoky temperature inversions prevented retardant drops. “The cooler temperatures keep the smoke in and hold down fire activity,” Boise National Forest spokesman Andrew Taylor said. “It preheats the fuels and dries them. When the smoke lifts, it’s off to the races. It’s like taking the lid off a pressure cooker.” The Oklahoma fire burned about 5,000 acres in the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge, home of hundreds of bison and Texas longhorns, before it was contained Tuesday. 69 $ 99 $248 $348 ONLY 10 yr 100» Sat Guarantee ONLY I | 89 Twin each piece.. $ 99 $119 Full each piece....$139 QUEEN SE T___ $298 QUEEN SE T____ $348 KING SET_____ $398 KING SET_____ $448 Twin each piece.. Full each piece.... 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College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C o lle g e S tre e t D eli jf> 4 $ 0T o> TEM PE BICYCLE Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. We will meet or beat any Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. advertised price on items Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. of comparable quality. University Dr. 3 3 0 W. University • 966-6896 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro s s fro m C o ffe e P lantation Everyday Low Price *4.99 2 4 exposure ASU 1 H I (Acton the raHroGdtrack, «vest of Gtnlte Strength CoGp) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 New Times B est Bike Shop DOUBLE PRINTS Color C-41 P ro c e ss' B e st P rice in Town S ta t e P ress W ednesday, August 24, 1994 Page 12 A id groups m ay shop black m ark et for H a itia n fuel 900,000 people. The fuel, financed by various nations and charities, including $1.8 million from the United States, is being dis­ tributed by the Pan American Health Organization. Although previous shipments were quickly distributed to aid groups, the July fuel load has been held up by the de facto government of President Emile Jonassaint, installed by the army in May. The international community refuses to recognize the Jonassaint government, making it difficult to negotiate the release of the fuel. Aid organizations meanwhile are rapidly running out of their reserves. PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — Aid groups may have to buy fuel on the black market if Haiti’s leaders refuse to release a fuel shipment needed to get food to starving Haitians. "We can’t let these people starve," U.S. Embassy spokesman Stanley Schrager said at a news conference Tuesday. "We can’t let this program fall down or collapse." The shipload of 450,000 gallons of diesel oil and gasoline has been sitting in port since its arrival July 21. Fuel is barred from entering Haiti under a world trade embargo aimed at pressuring the ruling military to step down. But in January, the first of five occasional special shipments was allowed to let aid organizations feed about The U.S. Embassy has had to purchase gasoline on the black market at prices sometimes topping $10 a gallon. "We’ve been buying it on the spot market like everyone else because it’s the only available source," Schrager said. He did not say who would finance the purchase of blackmarket fuel or where the fuel would come from, but said, "We’ll do whatever we have to do to maintain that program at at least the level it is now." Aid groups use the diesel oil and gasoline for transportation, generating electricity and cooking food State P ress O pinions- Welcome to Adventure Land, Tomorrow Land and Fantasy Land. N A IL S H A IR C U T NEW CLIENTS MEN & WOMEN M 9 .” So if you want your hair trimmed just one inch, we won't create just what you asked for. 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I « g a i H EW LETT PACKARD ____ 199 48G • View 3-D graphs. f |P 32KRAH • Perform algebra and calculus operations on equations before entering values. FORCES AND ENERGY $ C e n tr ip e ta l F o rc e H o o k e 's L ay R e la tio n ID E l a s t i c C o l l i s i o n s D ra g F o r c e Law o f G r a y i t a t i o n ___ • Enter and see equations like they appear on paper. • Work w ith different units o f measure. The HP 48G will convert them for you. So, enter inches, centim eters, yards, and feet, together in one equation — it’ll convert them. VARS I PIC |*STKIEXIT A ■m s HADPOUR CHARS • You’ll quickly learn to operate it! MB ÜÉÉ C MOOES MU 8 VAR CST PRG j 1 H e UP HOME OEF RCL ♦NUM UNDO PICTURE ASM a ' sto EVAL N ACOS Ï ATAN2 A x NXT V P 2 X.— *y to* l6g l K Q ' ► R e*LH 'V T TAN COS Vx SIN V W X u V r f s EQUATION MATRIX SOIT CMC 1 PURG ARG CLEAR DROP '+/- EN TER USER ENTRYfj sous 1*111,1 * a f r T iMIt ... 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Stat Ë P ress P a g e 13 W ednesday, August 24, 1994 S t a t e P ress KO REAN GARDEN *n iw?* *i *i ° C o m e e n jo y o u r s e le c tio n o f fine K o re a n C u is in e th a t is h e a lth y as w ell as e n jo y a b le . KOREAN GARDEN Arizona Republic Arizona's Best KOREAN RESTAURANT 1991 1992 1993 1324 S. Rural (SW of Rural & Apache) LUNCH Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.- 2:30 p.m. DINNER 7 Days a Week 5 p.m. -10 p.m. 967- 1133 Korean Garden Korean Garden 21 -oz. S o ft D rin k W ith c o u p o n and p u rch a se o f lu n ch sp ecia l Dine-in Only Expires 9-15-94 McCain extortion charge debated PHOENIX (AP) — The Maricopa County Attorney’s office had yet to decide Tuesday whether to prosecute a former official with Cindy McCain’s volunteer medical team alleged to have attempted to extort money from her by threatening to reveal her addiction to prescription drugs. The wife of U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., disclosed her addiction on Monday. Her attorney said Tuesday she will continue to undergo treatment and will perform com­ munity service as part of an agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office to avoid federal prosecution for stealing painkillers from the American Volunteer Medical Team she heads. The attorney, John Dowd, said Mrs. McCain could face prosecution if she fails to meet the conditions of the agree­ ment. “She’s got to toe the mark,” he said. A spokesman for the County Attorney’s Office, Bennett Lotstein, said the investigation of Thomas Gosinski, 35, begun at Down’s request is mostly complete. Gosinski, removed from the medical team on Jan. 14, 1993, filed a com plaint exactly one year later with M aricopa County Superior Court saying he was fired because he refused to lie in a court proceeding and because he knew Mrs. McCain was filling prescriptions using his name, said Stanley Lubin, his former attorney. Gosinski was die fund-raising director for the much-her­ alded medical team which provides health care in troubled countries around the world. Gosinski offered on Feb. 4 to settle his suit for $250,000 while promising “to keep the sensitive matters from expo­ sure.” Dowd said Gosinski was saying that in return for the money, he wouldn’t publicize Mrs. McCain’s drug addic­ tion or the allegation she asked Gosinski to lie in a court proceeding. That constitutes attempted extortion, Dowd said. But Lubin said Tuesday the settlement offer was routine. If Dowd calls it extortion, “that’s an absolutely patent lie,” Lubin said. Jay Smith, a close friend and political advisor to the McCains, said the couple will continue to fight Gosinski’s lawsuit. In her termination letter to Gosinski, Mrs. McCain said Gosinski was fired “due to the decline in contributions and our inability to continue to pay you at this time.” In in terview s p u b lish ed M onday, M rs. M cCain acknow ledged having been addicted to p rescrib ed painkillers such as Percocet and Vicodin. She said she went cold turkey in 1992, suffering a brief relapse after a hysterectomy in 1993. She said she entered a weeklong treatm ent program earlier this year at The Meadows in Wickenburg and attends twice-weekly meet­ ings of Narcotics Anonymous. V irginia M athis, chief assistant U.S. attorney for Arizona, would not confirm that Mrs. McCain was under investigation. Dowd said the agreement was signed by the U.S. A tto rn ey ’s O ffice and the Drug E nforcem ent Administration, which had been investigating Mrs. McCain since at least January. C hina steps up civil rights v io la tio n s BEIJING (AP) — The Chinese government has adopted a new tactic for punishing many political and labor activists, detaining them without trial and making them dis­ appear in the justice system, a U.S.-based human rights group has charged. In an address Monday before a U.N. human rights con­ ference in Geneva, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press in Beijing, Xiao Qiang, chairman of Human Rights in China, said at least 17 Chinese dissidents had been arrested since March. The families of 16 have received no information on their whereabouts, Xiao said, in spite of a law requiring notifica­ tion of kin. One who disappeared this year is China’s most famous political prisoner, Wei Jingsheng, released last fall just months short of completing a 15-year sentence for advocat­ ing democracy. But police detained Wei in March for alleged violations of his parole, and officials have refused to reveal his legal status. Xiao said there are still 220 Beijing residents serving prison terms for crimes related to the 1989 Tiananmen Square democracy movement. He said they had been con­ victed of criminal offenses including stealing army supplies and arson and were being held in Beijing No. 2 Prison and at a labor farm in the nearby city of Tianjin. Xiao also accused China of lying to the United Nations about a detained political activist in hopes of dodging inter­ national condemnation. w in A FIESTA BOWL SCH OLARSH IP for a college-eligible Arizona Resident* 1st Prize - $3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize - $2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize - $1,000 Scholarship Three winners will be selected each week by random drawing. They will receive a pair of tickets to the next home game of A SU , U of A or NAU - depending on which post office box the winning entry is mailed to. Enter weekly contest of school of your choice. Winners of weekly drawings will also receive a pair of choice seats for the FIESTA BOW L Football Game New Year’s Day where 3 of the 33 finalists will win scholarships. Enter as often as you wish (no purchase necessary). One entry p er envelope. Each entry must include the name of an eligible scholarship recipient* and the nutrition information panel (or facsimile) from any size carton of milk. P L E A S E PR IN T N A M E , C O M P L E T E A D D R E S S , A N D T E L E ­ P H O N E N U M B E R ON P IEC E O F P A P E R A N D IN C L U D E WITH NUTRITION INFORMATION PANEL. ‘ Scholarship nominee must be an Arizona resident eligible for 1995 term or be currently enrolled with a minimum of 12 credits at any Arizona College or University. (Employees and family members of Arizona milk producers are not eligible.) Entries must be received by November 8,1994. U of A MAIL E N T R IE S TO: “ Fiesta Bowl Scholarship Sw eepstakes” to your choice of the following post office boxes: A SU - P.O. Box 520, Tempe, A Z 85280 NAU - P.O. Box 1448, Tempe, A Z 85280 U of A - P.O. Box 560, Tempe, A Z 85280. Sponsored by United Dairym en of Arizona P a g e 14 State P ress W ednesday, August 24, 1994 A B C juggles R oseanne, sends H om e Im provem ent to war NEW YORK (AP) — ABC pulled its aging hit Roseanne out of a fall schedule fight with the rising young sitcom Frasier, sending television’s top show, Home Improvement, to face the challenge instead. Home Improvement and its Wednesday night compan­ ion show, sixth-ranked Grace Under Fire, will swap places with Roseanne and its Tuesday night companion show, Ellen, beginning Sept. 20. Roseanne and Ellen will make their season debuts the following night, opposite Dateline NBC and CBS’ hourlong Touched by an Angel. “This change maximizes the strength of these assets by positioning them in a way that will keep ABC dominant in these time periods for many seasons to com e,” ABC State P r e ss S ports - We cover good sp o rts, bad sp o rts, r ic h sp o rts and poor sp o rts. Entertainment President Ted Harbert said Tuesday. Roseanne has been a Top Five hit on Tuesdays since it debuted Oct. 18, 1988, starring a standup comedian named Roseanne Barr, who since has shed her surnames. It was fourth last season, behind 60 Minutes and Seinfeld. “We think it is a very interesting move,” said Ed Harrison, a West Coast NBC Entertainment spokesman. “It certainly shows that ABC had tremendous respect for Frasier, as do audiences. “We believe that Frasier will perform well wherever it is on our schedule.” There was no immediate word on whether NBC contemplated any countermoves to ABC’s shuffle. Matt Williams said he and Home Improvement co-cre­ ators and executive producers David MacFadzean and Carmen Finestra were dismayed by the move. “With this move to Tuesday night, it’s highly unlikely we’re going to remain No. 1,” Williams said. “We’re prob­ ably going to bounce around, maybe even out of the Top Five. ... I understand Mr. Harbert wanting to protect his network and his schedule, but we’re disappointed.” ABC’s switch was a reaction to NBC’s moving the No. 7 Frasier, its highest-rated new show last year, to Tuesday nights opposite Roseanne. NBC’s move also offered a half-hour respite for The John Larroquette Show, which stars the multiple Emmy Award-winning Night Court actor, but which finished 94th opposite Roseanne. The perfect place for summerall 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 with a microwave, dishwasher and washer & dryer in each suite. There's a big huge volleyball-pool with jacuzzi, a regulation sand-volleyball court, sauna plus an inside racquetball court and weight room. There are also planned social activities, a roommate matching service and a great management team. Of course, the summer is prime-time to be living at The Commons, but it's great all year 'round. Don't wait until the last minute, you'll have enough to do. Make your fall reservations today! 2 blocks from campus THE COMMONS 1111E. Apache Blvd. - — Tempe, AZ r i MEMBERS ONLY f Call us today 829-0933 P a g e 15 W ednesday, August 2 4,1994 S t a te P ress No progress made in baseball strike talks NEW YORK (AP) — If progress is too much to hope for in the b aseball talks, mudslinging is always a fallback position. There was no progress Monday as the walkout by players completed its 11th day. But union head Donald Fehr called m anagem ent negotiator Richard Ravitch a “ hatchet man” for own­ ers who shed “ crocodile tears’’ for laid-off workers. F ederal m ediators announced talks will resume Wednesday in the first face-to-face meeting betw een the b argaining teams since players struck Aug. 12. Fehr said he saw no evidence that there could be pro g ress, and Boston Red Sox ch ief executive officer John Harrington said w hen ow ners get to the table they will be offering the same salary-cap propos­ al that caused b aseb all’s eighth work stoppage since 1972. Fehr, in his most testy demeanor since the strike began Aug. 12, launched into rep eated attacks on R av itch ’s credibility. He p red icted ow ners would sing the “ H allelujah Chorus” at the bargaining table. “ The ow ners w ant to d rastically low er player sa la rie s,’’ F ehr said. “ Dick’s the assigned hatch­ et man to go and get it done. Dick is not an inde­ pendent figure here.” Ravitch, in baseball talks for the first time, shrugged off Fehr’s comments. “ The last time I found name calling to be mean­ ingful was when I was in grade sc h o o l,” R avitch said. “ I don't think it helps the situation.” Ravitch has said repeat­ edly he feels for the tens of thousands of workers laid off because of the players’ strike, which has already forced cancellation of 141 games. Fehr, pointing out that Ravitch is getting paid his $750,000 annual salary dur­ ing the walkout while play­ ers and union officials are not getting paid, referred to “ the crocodile tears Dick cries once in awhile for the people at the stadiums.” Fehr said nothing the union does makes a differ­ ence in the talks and insist­ ed owners are on a preset schedule, believing that players w ill crack and accept a salary cap. M o v in ’ in The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook — An investment in your lifetime O rder yours today for $36.93, Matthews Center basement, rm 50, 965-6881 A sso c ia te d P re ss Sigma Phi Epsilon's members, (left to right) Aaron Giannini, Scott Paskoff and Mark Coleman, prepare their house for Rush Week. Get Jazzed For Back To School Free 30-day service. One year gear & brake adjustment. Lifetime frame & fork warranty. U-LOCK Prevent Flat Tires With w¡th S *1 1 95 b ra c k e x scoo/s:* •Jr / J P w tth bike purchase 11 S L IM E Student Discounts with I.D. DOM EN1C5 CYCLING 967-7700 1004 S. Mill Ave., Tempe Open 7 Days a Week Layaway • Financing University 5 r 10th Street N Apache W ednesday, August 24,1994 S ta t e P ress Chavis sues NAACP, claims bylaws violation BALTIMORE (AP) — The Rev. Benjamin Chavis is suing the NAACP to get his job back, saying the board of direc­ tors violated its own bylaws when it fired him. The lawsuit filed Monday contends that the board of the nation’s preeminent civil rights group didn’t grant him a proper hear­ ing or record its vote to oust him. •‘What I want the NAACP to do is prac­ tice the principles it preaches,” Chavis told ABC News. “I just want to be treated fairly by the NAACP.” A hearing on the lawsuit was held today in Superior Court in W ashington, D.C. Chavis is seeking a preliminary injunction that would prohibit the organization from removing him. Judge Herbert Dixon said he would rule on the matter Wednesday morn­ ing. Chavis argued that his removal was done in violation of the NAACP’s rules and could damage his reputation. “He has been accused ... of stealing from the NAACP," said Chavis’ attorney, Abbey Hairston. “The NAACP has a long history of survival. But what will Dr. Chavis do?” NAACP attorneys argued that Chavis had abandoned his responsibilities by agreeing to settle a sex-discrimination com­ plaint without telling the board of directors, and that restoring him to office could hurt the NAACP’s fund-raising efforts. “It is critical to the survival of the asso­ ciation to restore the confidence of contrib­ utors,” attorney Lawrence Greenwald said. C havis was fired Saturday from his $200,000-a-year job as executive director of the N ational A ssociation for the Advancement of Colored People. Board members complained that Chavis ran up a $2.7 million deficit, didn’t tell them that he had used NAACP money to settle the sexual discrimination claim, and established alliances with such controver­ sial figures as Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. About 250 supporters gave Chavis a standing ovation Monday as he walked into a high school auditorium for a “town meet­ ing,” part of a three-day summit of black leaders that concludes today. The NAACP had planned to sponsor the summit, but backed out after Chavis was fired. “Never again will we allow forces out­ side of our community to tell us who we can meet, when we can meet and what we can talk about," Chavis told the cheering crowd. Jewish leaders had said the NAACP should exclude Farrakhan because of his anti-Semitic remarks. A sso c ia te d P re ss Former NAACP executive Director Benjamin Chavis leaves Superior Court in Washington, DC Tuesday, after a hearing on his lawsuit against the civil rights group. Chavis claims the NAACP board did not grant him a proper hearing in its vote to oust him Farrakhan, who participated in the first day of the summit, did not attend Monday’s session. Earlier in the day, the NAACP formally introduced its new interim director, Earl Shinhoster. He announced a 30-day mem­ bership and fund-raising drive to help erase the NAACP’s deficit. “Those who believe in the cause of the NAACP will stick with the NAACP,” said Shinhoster, who spent 17 years as the orga­ nization’s southeast regional director and competed with Chavis for the top job. Board Chairman William F. Gibson said no timetable had been set for selecting a new executive director. He noted that it took the board a year to pick Chavis. “We should be just as deliberate this time as we were before,” Gibson said. The 85-year-old civil rights organization faces a deficit of nearly $3 million. Chavis blames most of the shortfall on his prede­ cessor, Benjamin Hooks, but Hooks says he left the group with a $600,000 surplus. State P ress O pinions - W e lc o m e to A d v en tu re L an d , T o m o rro w L an d a n d F a n ta sy L an d . Call 1-800-262-1282 and «ad aat whata fa hay oat. W ednesday, August 24, 1994 St a t e P r e s s P a g e 17 Racial hatred brews in London State P ress Crosswords - For the cruciverbalist in you. ■ unenc FdmiLY HOIR CUTTERS' F re e S h a m p o o w / C u t * 6 9S ONLY (Reg. $8.95) LONDON (AP) — Norman Everitt’s face is flushed red and puffy from a week’s open grief and restrained rage. He is in no mood to talk about racial tolerance, or seeing life in north London from a Bangladeshi’s point of view. “ I hate them,” he said, standing beside a carpet of bouquets that marks the spot where his 15-year-old son Richard bled to death weekend before last. A dozen Asian youths surrounded Richard and two friends Aug. 13 as he returned from the local Burger King with the Sunday papers under his arm. One attacker plunged a knife through his back and into his heart. Richard’s friends escaped and alerted his father, who reached his son’s side only to watch him die. The senseless killing has put the neighborhood on a knife-edge of racial hatred. *‘Relations have never been this polarized before around Somers Town,” said Jalal Uddin, coordinator of a center for the 10,000 Bangladeshis — also known as Bengalis — living in the grungy Camden borough. In London, where nearly half of Britain’s ethnic minorities live, the government last year recorded Associated Press more than 5,000 racial incidents ranging from mur­ squad of Guardian Angels, a volunteer security group, patrols in ders to hate mail and says the trend is on the rise. A London near the site where 15-year-old Richard Everitt was mur­ About half of victims were Asians — and community dered in a race attack Aug.13. In London, where nearly half of workers say the sons of Bangladeshi, Indian and Britain's minorities live, there where more than 5,000 racial inci­ dents last year, ranging from murder to hate mail. Pakistani immigrants are striking back. “ For years whites have attacked the Bengali commu­ nity in London, here and in the East End, but no white Caught in the middle are Asian shop owners, who rely has ever been killed by a Bengali before,” said Uddin, 34. on both communities for trade and are threatened by white “ Now the young generation of Bengalis is fighting back. extremists and Bangladeshi gangs. Revenge attacks will mean counter-revenge attacks. Next door to the Muslim meat and fish shop that white Nobody can control it.” youths burned down last week, Indian businessmen said Since Richard’s death, white gangs have robbed and they regretted starting up in London. burned down a shop, stoned a car and threatened people “ My father used to work in Uganda, but the blacks with knives. All the targets have been from the communi­ forced Asians to leave in 1972. Now the whites seem to be ty’s majority group — Bangladeshis and their British-born making scapegoats of us here too,” said 24-year-old children. Nelson Figueiredo, the son of Roman Catholic immigrants A first-time visitor might assume most Somers Town residents are white, because so many Bangladeshis are hid­ from Goa, India, who owns a liquor store. Indian entrepreneur Jay Patel, 29, continued a brisk ing inside their homes or staying away. Police recorded 147 race-motivated incidents in Somers business at his newspaper, candy and tobacco shop nearby. He dropped his voice to a whisper so his customers Town in 1993 and 117 this year, and Bangladeshis were couldn’t hear: “ I received a threat yesterday. A man came the victims in most cases. Whites complain that Bangladeshis file phony or exag­ in wearing a motorcycle helmet. He said, ‘We’re going to gerated complaints to pressure the council for more bene­ blow up your shop.’” The Everitts had been talking about leaving Somers fits and preferential access to housing, while intimidation Town even before Richard died. of whites often goes unreported. “ There have been seven white people stabbed by “ People phone up and say there’s gonna be a war over Bangladeshis on this street alone in the past year,” said my son’s murder,” said Everitt. “ They think it makes me Pat, the Irish owner of the Prince of Wales pub, next door feel better. It just makes matters worse.” to the Bangladeshi center. He didn’t want his last name But asked how he would solve the area’s tensions, used. Everitt snapped: “ Send the other lot in a boat into the mid­ “ When you see two white people, one of them lying dle of the Channel and sink them.” bleeding, and about 30 to 40 Bangladeshis across the road, A Bangladeshi family approached the bed of flowers, you know what happened,” he said. “ Maybe now that added a bouquet and quietly slipped away. Everitt looked they’ve actually killed someone they will stop.” on, but appeared unmoved. Exp. 9-14-94 ___ _________________________________________________________________I REDKEN H A IR C O L O R s 19 ONLY ■ ^ (Reg. $24.95) Includes: Blow Dry & Style S K H G 9 . Exp. 9-14-94 W arehouse Prices 1 0 % OFF ASASU Safety Escort Service A L L B R AN D N AM E P R O D U C T S Paul Mitchell S eb astian NEXUS REDKEN 'Ï5PP9!WKBC ■ «BIOLAGE S H fifil Exp. 9-14-94 D e s ig n e r P e r m $ 29 95 (Reg. $34.95) Shampoo, Perm, Cut & Style included. Long hair and specialty wraps extra. 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JCPenney • Harkins Discount Theatres • W algreens • Foot Locker General Nutrition Center • A nd A Variety O f Other Shops Tri-City Mall Northeast comer of Dobson and Main (Apache Blvd) S p o r ts S t a t e P ress W ednesday, August 24, 1994 Pag'e 19 Suns’ suit sent to District Court A federal judge has forwarded the Phoenix S uns’ law suit against the NBA over A.C. Green’s contract to a U.S. District Court in New Jersey. U.S. District Judge Roger Strand signed the order Monday that, with agreement by attorneys for Green, the Suns and the NBA, asks Judge Dickinson Debevoise to hear the dispute. The disputants’ agreement on the New Jersey move was keyed to obtaining a hearing by Debevoise by Sept. 12. Debevoise, who returned from vacatio n on M onday, was expected to say shortly whether that could be arranged. If not, the suit is to return to Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix. Debevoise dealt with a similar suit filed a year ago by the Portland Trail Blazers and forward Chris Dudley. Green and the Suns filed suit Aug. 5 after the NBA voided a $27 million five-year contract Green signed on Jul. 26. The league said the contract circumvented the salary cap, because Green had signed a five-year, $15 mil­ lion contract a year earlier with an escape clause that allowed him to becom e an unrestricted free agent after the first year. W ildcats top SI poll Sports Illustrated released its annu­ al ranking of all 107 Division I-A col­ lege football teams, and as expected, the UofA Wildcats top the list. Two Big Eight teams follow UofA with the Colorado Buffaloes in second and the N ebraska C ornhuskers in th ird . M ichigan and N otre Dame round out the top five. Florida, which is No. 1 in both the USA Today/CNN Coaches Poll and the Associated Press Poll, only received a No. 8 ranking in ST %poll. The magazine ranked ASU No. 47, behind Pac-10 foes USC (No. 14), W ashington (21), C alifornia (23), UCLA (28), Stanford (39) and Oregon State (46). Along with receiving the first-place ranking, the Wildcats also adorn the cover of STs College Football Preview issue. The issue should he available at newstands on Monday, Aug. 29. R o se d o u b ts gam b lin g w ill h u r t re in s ta te m e n t Pete R ose doubts baseball will delve into his gambling past when he applies for reinstatement. Baseball’s main investigator believes it has to. Rose said Tuesday he doesn’t know when he might seek reinstatement so he can become eligible fen die Hall of Fam e. It was five years ago Wednesday that he agreed to a life­ time ban for gambling. Baseball’s all-time hits leader has admitted he bet illegally on sports, bid denies betting cm baseball. His banish­ m ent agreem ent makes no formal finding on the question. By reaching the agreement with for­ m er com m issioner B art Giamatti, Rose was able to sidestep evidence gathered by investigator John Dowd that suggested he bet on baseball gam es w hile he was with the Cincinnati Reds. Compiled from A P reports C raig M acnaughton/State Pre ss Kendall Rhyne and his Sun Devil teammates are preparing for their Oct. 3 showdown with Oregon State to kickoff a tough 1994 schedule. Sun D evil football prepares for Beaver hunt O regon State gives ASU 1st test o f 1994 season B y T o d d K elly S tate P ress The ASU football team opens the 1994 season on Sept. 3 against Oregon State. That gives the Sun Devils 10 days to pre­ pare for the season that will deliver six 1993 bowl teams, three of which come to Sun Devil Stadium. Coach Bruce Snyder’s team appears to need the 10 days of practice. “Oh, we got a long way to go, gosh-allmighty,” Snyder said. Pointing back to the practice field, he added, “That’s a slow moving team, and yet Sunday night we looked really fast.” In following Snyder’s motto, One at a Time, the Sun Devils are focused on OSU. Last year, the Beavers ran and ran some more over the Sun Devils, gamering over 400 yards on the ground. Heading into this game, the Beavers might have an advan­ tage. OSU is on the quarter system, which means that classes do not start for a couple of weeks yet. “They don’t start until September, so they have no distractions right up to our game,” Snyder said. The season doesn’t get any easier. The No. 6 Miami Hurricanes visit Sept. 10. This will be the first meeting between these two schools, yet Miami has never won in Sun Devil Stadium. The Hurricanes have lost three Fiesta Bowls there. ESPN will carry the game live. In fact, it is one of four ASU games already slated for television coverage this season. The OSU game is going to be televised by Prime Ticket. Prime Network will carry ASU’s third game of the year, also at home, against Louisville. ASU’s biggest game every year, versus the UofA Wildcats, will be broadcast on ABC the day after Thanksgiving. Louisville returns to Sun Devil Stadium after losing there 19-0 in 1992. Louisville finished 9-3 last year and defeated Michigan State in the Liberty Bowl. The Pac-10 schedule opens with a visit to California, Snyder’s coaching home prior to arriving in Tempe. Snyder’s ASU teams have beaten Cal twice in his two seasons here. Stanford, a disappointing 4-7 in 1993, return 50 letterm en and 19 starters. Quarterback Steve Stenstrom, a Heisman Trophy candidate, returns with eight other offensive players. On Oct. 15 they travel to Washington, followed by an Oct. 22 home game against Washington State. The Cougars have not visited Sun Devil Stadium since 1986. Three of the Sun Devil’s last four games are on the road: at BYU on Oct. 29, at Oregon on Nov. 5 and at UofA on Nov. 25. The season ending game against UofA could be very interesting if the in-staterival holds its preseason rankings. The Wildcats are No. 1 in Sports Illustrated, No. 8 in Associated Press and picked by the Pac-10 coaches to win the conference. Bonds: baseball’s poor million-dollar man Barry Bonds, as you probably know, is a professional baseball player for the San Francisco Giants. Bonds makes an awful lot of money too, which you probably also know. For almost two weeks now, Mr. Bonds has been out of work because the union he is a member of, the Major League B aseball Players Association, went on strike. As a result of this bold move by the MLBPA, Bonds w ill not draw a salary from the G iants for who knows how long. Nor will any other m ajor leaguers. Not until this strike thing ends. Not until the union and the owners can hammer out a deal that all sides can agree upon. And you know how long that might take. Barry Bonds has a six-year, $43.75 mil­ lion contract that will pay him $4.75 mil­ lion this year. Spread that over 162 games and Bonds makes (clicking of calculator buttons) $29,320.98 per game this season. In May o f this year, Bonds began divorce proceedings with his wife, Sun. Sun and her lawyers originally asked for $262,000 per month in spousal and child support but later lowered their request to $130,000 per month. Finally, a court set the amount at $15,000 per month (which, by the way, totals $180,000 per year). To Barry Bonds and others like him, $15,000 is a lot of money. However, at B arry ’s current rate o f $3,257.88 per inning, it takes Bonds about four and a half innings of one game of baseball to earn $15,000. But due to the baseball strike, Bonds will not make his $3,257.88 per inning, his $29,320.98 per game, or his $762,343.92 per month. Nor will he appar­ ently be able to keep up with his $15,000 per month payments to his wife and two children. A judge recently decided to reduce his support payments to $7,500 per month. It seems that B arry’s source of income has dried up. Granted, the stoke is keeping all major league baseball players from earning a paycheck, but how are guys like Barry Bonds supposed to keep up with $15,000 a month spousal and child support payments? Did you know that he must also continue to pay for the mortgage, taxes and insurance on a home in Atherton? How will Bonds ever survive? Well,.he does draw $75,000 annually from endorse­ ments and $8,000 to $10,000 from licens­ ing contracts. I don’t really blame Sun Bonds at all. She was Barry’s wife and must now raise their two children without him. And because Barry makes so much money, it is only sen­ sible that his wife and two kids would receive a fair percentage of his income, rel­ ative to the amount of his contract. Call that what you want, but it’s only fair. Sun’s lawyer, Lawrence Stotter, said, “This is big-time living. The numbers are there. Why should Barry continue to live like a prince and he wants us to live as if the money didn’t exist?” Why should Barry Bonds continue to live like a prince, with his baseball income dried up? He made $4 million last year and earned close to $3.4 m illion from the Giants this year. Four months and $60,000 into his divorce and he’s now short of cash? What do you do with $7 million dol­ lars? I’m sure we’ll hear more of this in the future, if not from Barry Bonds then cer­ tainly from som eone else. This whole strike, this whole ordeal about money and who has it and who wants it, it’s old. I don’t need to tell you that. You already know. I stil find the fact that the owners and the players let their disagreement lead to a strike difficult to believe. Baseball strikes occur about every three or four years nowa­ days, so I suppose I should get used to it. Somehow, I thought that this year would be different. Oh, no. It’s worse. Now Barry Bonds comes along, with more money than perhaps anybody could know what to do with, and he doesn’t know how he’s going to afford a $15,000 month­ ly tab? I know that he hasn’t had a paycheck for almost two weeks now, but he’s a T urn to K elly, page 21. Page 20 W ednesday, August 24, 1994 S t a t e P ress C ard in als lose 4, gain M o o re in day o f tra n sitio n s Hooks at the team’s Tempe training facility. He underwent a physical by team doctors and was scheduled for a tryout before any signing decision was made. “We’re negotiating with him,” said Ryan. “We’re going to give him a good look.” The Card’s claimed Hooks off waivers after his release from the New England Patriots. Former Denver Bronco third-string quarterback Shawn Moore, the Cardinal’s newest acquisition, made his practice debut Tuesday. Moore, who is in his third year out of Virginia, was not pleased with his previous role. “I never really got an opportunity with Denver,” said Moore. “They wanted a classy pocket style QB. Phillips was always looking at someone else.” Moore learned two offensive systems during his time with the Broncos and is confident he can pick up the Cardinal’s one-back offense quickly. “I can adapt to any style of offense, but it’s going to take some time,” he said. “Buddy wanted a guy who can move around as well as have poise in the pocket.” With the C ardinal’s next preseason test in Denver Thursday evening, Ryan has been finalizing some pivotal line-up decisions. Seven year NFL veteran defensive end A1 Noga has been making the most of his recent promotion to first-team defense, and he realizes the close scrutiny he is now under. “It’s where I belong, to be honest with you,” Noga said. W allerstedt sent packing as team cuts roster down to 60 players B y D M a n State P il le r ress As expected, the Arizona Cardinals released four more players, including form er ASU linebacker B rett Wallerstedt, Tuesday in an effort to reduce their roster to the 60-player maximum by the National Football League’s 1 p.m. deadline. Wallerstedt, the Cards’ sixth-round draft pick in 1993, played in the first seven games of his rookie season before suffering an injury to his right knee. After arthroscopic surgery in November of 1993. he appeared to be approaching old form before tearing the medial collateral ligament in his W a l l e r s t e d t left knee at this year’s training camp in Flagstaff. This setback put him out of commission for the remainder of the preseason and made him expendable with the new defensive acquisitions. Head coach and general manager Buddy Ryan con­ firmed the presence of former ASU linebacker Bryan “I’m in a position where he’s (Ryan) given me the job if I take advantage of it. I’ll take that challenge.” Ryan has already named rookie Brent Alexander as his starting free safety Thursday night. He added that he plans to give him a $20,000 “Buddy Bonus” for outstanding play. Alexander would be the second player to receive this honor; reserve linebacker Garth Jax received one earlier in the preseason. The Card’s safety tackled Lion’s superstar running back Barry Sanders twice in the open field last week in Detroit, which, according to Ryan, is a feat in itself. “I didn’t realize it was Barry Sanders until the next day when I watched the film s,” Alexander said of the take­ downs. “You just see a guy with the MOORE ball and you know you have to put him on the ground.” The other Cardinal cuts Tuesday were defensive end Bernard Basham, guard Brian Bollinger and center Gene McGuire. Strong safety Sean Wallace was placed on the injured reserve list. The final cut to 53 for the regular season is slated for Sunday, Aug. 28. S p o r t s . C o u p o n s . A S U n e w s . Crossword puzzles. W e e k l y m a g a z i n e . T h e a t e r a d s . P o l i c e R e p o r t . C o m i c DO YOUR PARENTS A BIG FAVOR. Send them the State Press every day. s tr ip s . O p in io n s. p u z z le s . I n - d e p t h f e a t u r e s . H e l p Let them know what's happening on your campus. w a n t e d a d s . L e t t e r s t h e to e d ito r. D aily h o ro s c o p e s . C ity SIGN UP NOW FOR YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO ASU'S MORNING DAILY NEWSPAPER (Talk about brownie points!) ■( IT'S YOUR NEWSPAPER M n e w s . 1 «RIZON. ST.TS U H tm ilT V i "% S tate P ress s u b s c r ip t io n ASU'S Morning Daily Newspaper Serving ASU since 1890 □ FALL SEMESTER bnly $35 (65 issues) O SPRING SEMESTER only $35 (67 issues) □ FALL, SPRING & SUM M ER $65 (142 issues) S p e c i a l advertising i n s e r t s . D a ily e v e n t s F o r first class m a il, a d d $ 3 0 p e r s e m e ste r t o a b o v e price s. □ CH feC K tN C LO S ED Charge m y O Visa O MasterCard O Am erican Express PARENT NAM E Address______ s c h e d u l e . Apartment rental ads. State P ress )■ Fill out this form and mail it with payment to: State Press Subscriptions, Box 871502, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 & c o u n t y DO IT N O W A N D SAVE! City__________ Phone (______) State Z¡P Card N u m b e r ________________________ Expiration. Date, _ Signature ___ _ NEED MORE INFO? CALL OUR SUBSCRIPTION DEPT. AT (602) 965-7572 S t a t e P r e ss Page^ W ednesday, August 24, 1994 N F L practices q u arterb ack shuffle By Barry W ilner AP Sports W riter Forget the Deion Strut and Givins Glide. The NFL dance craze of the ’90s is the Quarterback Shuffle. Just about everybody is doing it. Of the 28 NFL teams, just eight did not make any significant quarterback moves. The other 20 boogeyed through free agency and the advent of the salary cap in a head-spinning series of maneuvers that would do Michael Jackson proud. “Quarterback traditionally has been a position character­ ized by stability and longterm tenure,” says Leigh Steinberg, who represents many of the top quarterbacks in the game. ‘Traditional football wisdom dictates there be familiarity of a quarterback with playbook terminology, that he has inter­ action with the receivers and line, which comes over time. Each year of stability adds to a quarterback’s performance. “Along comes the salary cap and it turns traditional football wisdom on its head. We have seen the most stun­ ning shift of personnel in the modem history of the NFL, both at the starting and reserve quarterback levels.” That shift brought new starters in three of the five NFC Central cities and possibly a fourth if rookie Trent Dilfer takes the job at Tampa Bay. It meant a different No. 1 quar­ terback for each NFC West team except the 49ers, who mere­ ly lost their superb backup, Steve Bono, to Kansas City. It forced high-priced veterans such as Mark Rypien, Jim Harbaugh and Warren Moon to move elsewhere. The salary cap was a major factor in the premature retirement of Phil Simms from the Giants, who forced him off the field and into the ESPN booth. “Free agency can be a positive if the guys who have worked their butts off to become stars weren’t the ones suf­ fering,” says Moon, who was traded (or exiled) from Houston, where he guided the Oilers to seven straight play­ off berths, to Minnesota. “But guys who played a long time and are making good money are the first guys to go. It’s not a good thing. “The salary cap definitely was needed to keep salaries in control, but you don’t like what’s happening at the begin­ ning here, with some of the stars suffering the most.” Such as Simms, who was recovering from shoulder surgery when he was called into coach Dan Reeves’ office and told his 15-year career as the best quarterback in Giants history was over. “I was coming off a Pro Bowl year, I had a great season, but I had a high salary and then I was let go suddenly,” Simms says. “How can you say that it had nothing to do with the salary cap when it had everything to do with it. “The old guys with the big salaries have a bomb on our heads.” So those veterans — Rypien, Moon, Harbaugh, Dave Krieg, Bernie Kosar, Jim Everett, Chris M iller, Jim McMahon — become transients. And unproven youngsters such as Elvis Grbac (49ers), Dave Brown and Kent Graham (Giants), even rookies Heath Shuler (Redskins) and Trent Dilfer (Bucs), are placed in important spots they previously couldn’t have dreamed of so early in their careers. “The tutelage process that has been a tradition in foot­ ball for young, promising quarterbacks — where they spent several years on the sidelines and in the classroom learning — has gone out the window,” Steinberg says. “So the cap takes away the ability for a club to have two or three highly paid quarterbacks waiting in the wings to replace a starter. “The immediate effect of that is if a team like the 49ers loses Steve Young to injury, Grbac would replace him. The second quarterback position became the obvious and convenient way for a club to slash salaries, and the concept of a quarterback in waiting dissolves.” The upheaval stretched from teams at the top to those at the bottom. Every team in the NFC West made a change, with San Francisco losing Bono, the Rams signing Miller and letting Everett go to New Orleans and the Falcons trad­ ing for Jeff George. Simms and Rypien, major factors in their teams winning the Super Bowl in this decade, were unceremoniously dumped. K e lly ________ C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 19. member in a union that initiated a strike. As a member of the MLBPA, he is as much to blame as any other major leaguer for the lack of baseball this year. He is the reason for himself being out of work. He wasn’t cut from the team. He didn’t blow out his knee in some freak injury. He took himself out of his own profession. Now he not only has to answer to the fans of the San Francisco Giants and to the fans of baseball, Barry Bonds has to answer to his children. I may not ever know how hard that might be. Y our Individual H oroscope = = F rances D rake = For Wednesday, Aug. 24, 1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Place the accent on cooperation and diplom acy to d ay . L ittle th ings are likely now to interfere w ith getting your way. Be considerate with loving partners. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to M ay 20) Y o u r e ffo rts to re a d b e tw e e n the lines may lead to faulty assumptions. D o n ’t ju m p to the w ro n g c o n c lu ­ sions. It will take extra effort to be productive today. GEM INI (May 21 to June 20) A c lo se p a rtn e r is s e n sitiv e today and easily offended. Be careful o f ill considered rem arks that could give offense. Social life may take a back seat for now. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) N ot much will com e o f big talk you hear in business today. T ake w hat you hear with a grain o f salt. A fami­ ly m e m b e r m ay b e fe e lin g o u t o f sorts tonight. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) D o u b le -c h ec k c o sts in co n n ectio n w ith travel. S light strain m ay exist with an in-law. O thers’ sensitivities m ay g e t in th e w ay o f a c h ie v in g agreements today. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Extra expenses may arise in connec­ tio n w ith a n o th e r p erson today. A b u s in e s s p ro p o s itio n re q u ire s re visions. G uard against unnecessary extravagance when shopping. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) K eep the lin e s o f c o m m u n ic atio n open with close partners. D on’t put o th e rs in the p o s itio n w here they have to read your mind. A disagree ment may arise about shopping. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) D istra ctio n s and in te rru p tio n s are likely to interfere with your concen­ tration at w ork today. Y our accom ­ plish m en ts m ay fa ll sh o rt o f yo u r good intentions. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to D ec. 21) Y ou’ll need to be tactful in speech today. A loved one or friend could easily take offense at something you say. An evening entertainm ent m ay be costly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) U nexpected com pany dropping by could upset your domestic schedule. In business, a m oody higher-up or a sso c iate w ill have to be h an d led with kid gloves. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Don’t put m uch stock in what a per­ son who tends to exaggerate has to say now. It’s not the best day for get­ ting your ideas across to others. Mixups are likely. PISCES (Feb. 19 to M ar. 20) Judgment m ay be o ff today regarding sp en d in g . Y ou m ay be m ak in g a m a tte r m ore c o m p lic a te d th a n it needs to be. Tonight, you’re inclined to overspend on pleasure. Y O U B O R N T O D A Y h a v e an inquiring mind and a good sense o f re s p o n sib ility . T h o u g h so m ew h a t adventurous, a home is important to y o u r h a p p in e ss. Y ou have a good creative sense and often good critical faculties. Editorial work and inves­ tigative reporting are fields in which you can excel. D ram atic by nature, you’re likely to be drawn to theater. Y ou d islik e in d o len ce and lik e to keep busy. B irth d ate of: A ubrey Beardsley painter; M onty Hall, game show host, and Carl Ripken Jr., base­ ball star. C a n ’t get the c la s s you need? T h e solution Come to GateWay. We’re just minutes from ASU and there’s plenty of free parking close to class. Day or evening classes are easy to fit into your schedule. Courses are just $32 per credit hour for residents and most academic credits transfer to ASU. GateWay Course: //• r ' P / t '; ' STEP UP A N D STAND OUT. ASB 102 Be more than just another student cutting through the thicket searching for a degree. Join the staff of The Sun Devil Spark yearbook and help record ASU's history. Paid positions available while you gain invaluable career experience in writing, design, photography, computer work and leadership and business skills. •CHM 151 •COM 100 •ENG 101,102 HIS 102 HUM 103 MAT 155 MHL142 •P S Y 101 •PSY240 SOC 101 SPA 101,201 CIS 105 Positions available: •Pagination Editor »Marketing Manager •C op y Editor »Writers •Section Editors • Photographers Call or visit us in the basement of Matthews Center to pick up your application. Intro to Cultural and Social Anthropology General Chemistry Intro to Communication Freshman English Hist West Civilization General Humanities College Algebra Appr & Lit Music 1800s+ Intro to Psychology Dev Psychology Intro to Sociology Intermediate Spanish Survey Computer Information Systems Transfers to ASU as: ASB 102 CHM 113 COM 100 ENG 101,102 m s 102 HUM 301 MAT 117 MUS 340 PGS100 PGS341 SOC 101 SPA 101,201 CIS 200 This is a partial listing. Call for a complete class schedule. Class offerings subject to change. 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 If you sim ply w ant to view this year’s ASU history, call our office to order your 1995 yearbook. It's only $36.93 if you order before Dec. 31,1994. Description: m] S • New late-starting classes begin the week of 9-6-94. To r e g i s t e r , call 392-5000. Wednesday, August 24, 1994 P a g e 22 Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ANNOUNCE­ MENTS CASH FOR co lleg e. 900,000 grants available. No repayment ever. Qualify immediately. 1-800243-2435. He can be. Movie Poster Sale 8am-5pm MU Galery THRU AUG. 26 — ^ 'H air S h o w V . FREE perms, colors, styles PLUS free hair products. Ongoing shows & classes! RENTAL SHARING JJ i HOME SPEAKERS: Yamaha, 3way, 10" woofer, exc cond, sound great. $250 obo. 804-0300. A TTRACTIVE RESORT life­ style living. Master bedroom ad­ jacent bath, $275+ util. 351-8683. HP48G GREAT for engineering. Never opened, $240 obo ($280 new) 829-8056 btwn 7pm-10pm. CLEAN, QUIET, resp. n/s fe­ m ale room ate to share nicely furn. 2bd 2ba apt. near ASU. $294 + 1/2 utl. Call 921-8099. REFRIGERATOR, GE, 14 cu.ft. dorm size, $95. GE turntable mi­ crowave $85.967-7607. 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. HUGE 2BD very close to ASU. $299 includes utilities. 921-1068, ask for Lance. NICE 3BD home, female pref, no sm oking o r drugs, $200/mo + 1/3 util, east Phx. 955-8582, lv msg. SHARE LG apt. 2bd, 2ba in ups­ cale S.M tn area. Pool, tennis, gym. $330+ 1/2 util. 592-9058. ROOMS FOR RENT H a ir m o d e ls n e e d e d fo r local hair show . FREE ser­ vices such as: cuts, colors, perms, weaves. If interest­ ed, please a tte n d a p re ­ s c r e e n in g o n M o n d a y , August 29 at 7 p.m . at: M a k in g W a v e s S a lo n SE C o m e r D o bso n & G uadalupe (Mesa) Questions? Call Sandie, 968-3512. APARTMENTS 1 BD apt, $330, 1/2 mi E of ASU. Month/month. Covered parking, laundry, air cond. 967-3794. 1BD 1BA apts. We have 2 avail­ able. $260/month plus deposit. Lucia, 858-0526. 2BD 1BA 4-plex, refrigerated from $259. 345-8390. FIRST MONTH free! 2 bd, 1 ba, new appliances, $430. Call 7597104 or 921-0517. 2BD, 2BA, w/d hook-up, dish­ washer, disposal. $475/mo, $150 dep. 616 S. Hardy, 966-8597. ASU AREA 1 & 2 bedroom apartments from $310 & up per month not incl util. 966-8838. HOMES FOR RENT 4 BD 2 1/2 BA, 5 min. walk to ASU, pets ok, $900/mo. Avail, immed. 966-7061. TOWNHOMES/ CO 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. QUESTA VIDA t/h, pool, Jacuz­ zi, w/d, dishwasher, etc. Price/ Apache, $700.437-1048. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 4BD, 1-3/4BA house, 1500sf, 5 miles from ASU. W/d, a/c, cable. Fenced yard, bus line. Need 2-3 persons. $200/mo, $100 dep + 1/4 utils. 965-3653, Mark. 9/1. ROOMMATE NEEDED Sept. 1. M/F, n/s, in Questa Vida condo in Tempe. Jenna or Todd, 966-9074. Jo r injo: * 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. R ESPO N SIB LE FEM A LE roomate wanted. Lg private rm avail in 3bd 2ba condo. $325/mo. all util incl. Call 827-2627. q je a u ty System s 9 6 8 -7 9 8 0 WHY RENT? You can buy using FHA's student home loan pro­ gram . C all fo r d etails, Peggy Pearson, RE/MAX, 838-7772. POOL, TENNIS, 3 bd, 2 ba, fur­ nished, n/s, $300/mo. Rural/Ray, near park. 961-5145. ¿ H p d e f s M A fa n te if L TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bd. 2 ba apt. 1 mi/ASU. $275+ 1/2 util. Heidi, 968-2129. Is Richard Gere In your Bedroom? f— TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT FREE ROOM with own bath in Mesa, in exchange for light clean­ ing & 16 hrs babysitting (eves). Call for details 827-9499. LG. ROOMS for rent in private house, 1 1/2 blks. from ASU, $300/mo + 1 /4 util, laundry facil­ ities. 966-7061. Units for sale . RE/MAX Excal­ ibur, ask for G ary G reen-acre, 483-3333. 1989 K A W A SA K I EX 500, blk/red. Exc. cond., red hlm t, new battery, low insur. rates. M oving, m ust sell $1800 obo. 24K. Call Vik or Sid 902-0578. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTORS needed. Desert Devils, 941-3496. ADVERTISING INTERNS for State Press. Get hands on experi­ ence 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 and be excited about learning about the world of advertising and marketing. Call today. Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 for interview. 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. COUNTER HELP wanted. Parttim e w ith flexible hours. Call 460-2845. FURNITURE 87 YAMAHA motorscooter 125, xclt. cond. $600 obo. Call Andy at 786-4043. BUY A Maytag washer, get GE dryer free. Asking $250. Also a queen sz. waterbed w/6 drawers, only $85. Call 831-6905 Jason. 93 KAW ASAKI N inja ZX6 E model. Exc cond, low mi. $5000 obo. Patrick (lv msg) 219-5248. ARIZONA LEAGUE o f Con­ servative Voters hiring canvass­ ers. Learn about AZ environ­ mental issues. If you can walk the talk-w e want to talk to you. In­ ternships available. 966-5485. EARN XTRA Xmas $ now. P/t, f/t established co., start immed. $6-8/hr DOE. Cash pd wkly, lv. msg 235-9550________________ DOUBLE BED, including box spring & frame, for sale - $75. Call 967-3689. LIQUIDATORS Over 200 offices of furniture to sell: desks, chairs, files, bookcas­ es, computer tables & more. AZ Office Liquidators, 5064 S. 40th St., (1/2 mi S of Broadway), Phx. M-F 9-5, Sat 10-3.437-2224. LODGE POLE bed $159, twin mat & box $49, student desk $99, sofa & love seat $275. 841-0818. LOFT-FITS QUEEN size bed. Only used one sem ester $125. 921-8968. 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 386 SX IBM com patible, key­ board, MSDOS, Windows, $450. Sharp portable PC ,$200. Rick 351-1720 days, 837-6217 nights. HI-TECH AT LOWS PA C K A RD B EL L 486SX , 33mhz, 4 mos old, incl fax mo­ dem, monitor, mouse, HP520 ink je t printer. Software incl. New $2000, sac $1600. 395-0725. HAYDEN SQUARE M O TO RCYCLES" CASHIERS FT/PT. Apply in per­ son. China Express 1501 S. Rural Rd. Tempe. $5/hr to start. EARN $5/HR, flex hrs/days, se­ curity co needs men/women for p/t spec events duties. Lie req., paperwork avail at int. 731-4688. Q U IET H OM E, 5 m iles from cam pus, p re f serio u s fem ale, $200/mo + 1/2 util, 838-5797. 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.____________________ 92 VW Jetta GLi, mint condition, only 13K mil, sun roof. $14,300 obo. Call Rob, 839-3800. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office person. Will train. 4020 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd., Suite 108. APPOINTMENT SETTERS So. Scottsdale flex sched., salary & comm., part-time. 481-9200. M A C +, 2 hard d riv e s. Im age W riter II & lo ts o f softw are. $550 obo. John 596-1990. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 91 SUZUKI Sidekick, 4x4, con­ vertible, auto trans., a/c, $8100 obo. Randy 262-5330. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 85 YAMAHA Riva, new engine, r/tire, v-belt. Just tuned up, $900 obo. Mark, 968-5683. TREK 730 Hybrid bike, excllnt cond. $300 obo. Yamaha Scooter $200 obo. Call Lynn 921-7186. PAPAGO PARK I, ow n bed­ room & bath, all amenities, $350/ mo utilities included. 921-4308. W A L K T O A SU Cute 2 bd. 282' deep lot! $54,000 (approx $1400 dn + $441 /mo P&b* 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 yis) MUST QUALIFY Paul Pastore Realty Executives 963-6000 91 DODGE Shadow 2-dr, 5-spd, a/c, am/fm, ps, pb, low miles, exc cond. $5800 obo. 731-4838. HELP WANTEDGENERAL DELIVERY DRIVERS needed 1 lam-2pm wkdys. Apply/prsn, 25pm 528 W Broadway 894-6065 Let me custom-build a brand new computer suited to your needs 4 less than any store! I repair/upgrade system s too. C all M itch 602-731-9450. 3 HOMES: Super values! 2 & 3 bds, close to MCC & ASU. Quick possession. "SHAR", RE/MAX Anasazi Rlty, 838-7772 ext. 140. 86 NISSAN Sentra 2dr, 5spd, ac, Blue, very clean, runs well $2000 obo. 829-1996 or 264-0190. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ANIMAL HOSPITAL in Chan­ dler needs p/t clean-up, vet. asst., & receptionist. Eves. & wknds. Call for office mgr. 963-2340. N/S FEMALE pref, $300/mo util­ itie s in c lu d e d , p a rtia lly fu r­ nished, covered parking. McKellips/Scottsdale Rd. 941-5620. HOMES FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES S tate P ress REPLACEMENT BATTERIES, for laptop/notebook/PC's, cam­ corders, cellular. V isa/M C. 1800-544-8421. TRANSPORTATION I'LL PAY for gas! Commute to ASU? I live at 7th St. and Mc­ D owell. Call Jennifer today at 271-9384 to carpool. AUTOMOBILES $CASH TODAY!$ I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call Al, 994-4369. 73 SUPER Beetle, orange, new tires, new exhaust, needs genera­ tor, recent rebuilt engine. Good cond. Asking $1800. 395-9591. 80 A CCO R D 4 dsd, 5sp, ac, cass., pw r 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. 85 SEN TR A , 5-spd, a/c, t/w , 112K , runs w ell, $1500 obo. Evenings, 929-0128. FIND IT in the Classifieds! 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 lant shape, g re a t com m uter bikes, $150 ea. 481-9374. BRIDGESTONE T500 15-spd road bike, lg frame, center pull brakes, $138. 752-0071. GIANT BOULD ER mtn bike, 20" frame, $200 obo. Charley, 967-4582. MTN. BIKE 1988 Trek 830 in great shape, 18 inch frame. $250 obo. Call Erik 275-2748. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. ROCK CLIMBING, rappelling, guided trips. 209-4913. HELP WANTEDG jjN |R A L _ _ $30 HR min. Sell funny college Tshirts & profit $3-$9/shirt. Risk­ free prog. 19 diff designs. Free catalog. 1-800-700-6240. $6.50/HR+BONUS, FLEX hrs, p/t, setting appts. by phone. No selling! Qualified leads supplied. John Robberts 957-7155. ASSEMBLER JOBS Lighting company needs respon­ sible students for day assembly work. Electronics background desirable. $7/hr. Scottsdale Air­ park. Call between 10-2pm. 9980325._______________________ ATTENDENTS NEEDED to asst quadriplegic w/personal care in am, wkdys & wknds. $7/hr. 9662059. Must listen to Dave Pratt on 98KUPD. ATTENTION 15 retail openings. Start at $7.45. No exp req. Flex hrs. Scholar­ ships, cond exist. All majors. Will train. 404-6461. AZ REPUBLICAN Party needs telem arketers. $6+/hr. Contact Max Fose 957-7770. BECOME A mobile DJ weekends/part-time work. Depend­ able persons only. Reliable vehi­ cle a must. 820-8220. M-F. ATTENTION RocH -N-Roll Got your attention? A ir conditioned nffien needt help evenings, p/t, close to A S U . Construction supply company - se ll tools nationwide - w ill train. $ 5 .S Q /h r + 8 9 4 -1 1 7 6 e tm m ittiin t Joe (s a a ra n te e d ) 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. 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. LIFE G U A R D , W EEK EN D S. Pool located at 7th St. & Thomas. Call Carl, 263-5208. ♦MARKET RESEARCH posi­ tions. Com puter assistants and phone interviewers. F/t, p/t, days or eves. Tempe. 967-4441. 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. 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. M A R K ET IN G SP E C IA L IST w anted. T heatre co. needs p/t asst. Great for mktng or theatre major. Contact Susan 894-6379. MARKETING/P.R. ASST, p/t, 12-15 hrs flexible, m ust have good comm skills, written & ver­ bal. IBM comp exp helpful. $5.50 DOE. Nancy, 381-1142. M ATH TU TORS w anted. $610/hr. Flexible hours. Will train. Math Masters 491-3363. EXPERIENCED TUTORS want­ ed! Earn $6-8/hr. Call Miracle Tutoring at 967-1236. M OVERS NEED ED fo r local moving co. Exp desired, exc pay incentives, close/ASU. 829-8888 GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. Exp, enthusiastic teacher for ages 5-12. 7th St./Glendale, $9-ll/hr, M-Th, 2:45-5pm. 955-7805. 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 Randy from 8-12 @ 966-1533. HIRING NOW! P/t data entry clerk , must be computer literate, M icrosoft Word, Desktop Pub­ lishing. Flex hrs, start at $6/hr. Call Ms. Bryant 922-9100. PA R T-TIM E W A REH O U SE clerk. $5/hr., exp. pref. 8am12noon, M-F. Call 268-4800. TUTOR NEEDED Vista del Camino Community Center is currently recruiting individuals looking for a challenging opportunity working with at risk Yaqui Indian and Hispanic teenagers in south Scottsdale. The ideal candidate will be bilingual, have previous tutoring and supervisory experience, and some experience working with teens/youth. Hours are from 3:306:00 pm. Monday through Thursday, with addi­ tional hours on Fridays working with school offi­ cials, parents, and teachers. Starting salary Is $7 per hour. Interested persons should contact: Erin McKallor or Ja son Lapointe a t 994-2330 *EARN $7/HR!* Setting free appointm ents for chiropractors. Fiesta Mall area. 470-1828 anytime. Customer Service Reps Part-time customer service positions available, flexible hours. Tempe location. 9 6 6 -0 7 0 9 $ 7 .0 0 PER H O U R - 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. 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 <*SSSS"r> Jew elers 9a.m. - 4 p.m., M-F T3 a K r Financial 1221 n . college Ave. #101 i r Services Tempe, AZ 829-5804 Equal Opportunity Employer State P ress Page 23 Wednesday, August 24,1994 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL PART TIME Accounts Payable C lerk needed for cam pus M c­ Donald's. Knowledge of Quicken and W indow s; plu s som e a c ­ counting background required. Flexible hours. $5 p e r'h o u r to start. Call Connie at 829-6604. Now hiring 6-8 individuals-for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start a t 15-30 flexible hrs/wk. Call Mike for int, 921-8282. PERSO NA L A SSISTA N T for male wheelchair user in Tempe. P/t, $7/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lift­ ing required. 804-0300. PRODUCT PROM OTION, p/t wknds in stores, trade shows & special events. Modeling training or exp preferred. 381-1142. PT W A R E H O U SE, flex hrs, good driving record, able to lift 50 lbs, near ASU. Apply in per­ son, 310 S. Clark, Tempe. R ESEA RCH ER/INTERN SH IP NEEDED for national commer­ cial real estate firm. Junior and sen io r business related majors p re fe rre d ; c o m p u te r lite ra te . Please call Luke or Michelle at 954-9000. SPARK YEARBOOK needs copy writers. $10 a story. Also pagi­ nation editor. Experience with AP style and JRN 201. Pagination Ed. m ust know Pagem aker. Apply at Student Publications in basement o f Matthews Center. SPIRIT OF the Desert Havurah Ruach Hamidbar seeks: Bar/Bat Mitzvah teacher-tutor and Gr. 4-6 Hebrew teacher. Contact Richard 996-4959. ST U D E N T S W A N TED 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. Must enjoy phones. Emily, 438-2800. SPORTS MINDED TELEMARKETERS WANTED $7/hr, p/t, M-Th 5:30-8:30. Con­ tact Jonathon Class, 706-0419. TEMP F/T office asst, 10/1-1/10. Process food drives, coord vol­ unteers, asst w/spec events. Rel trans a must. Resumes by 9/9 to: Comm Rel, 2841 N. 31st Ave. Phx, 85009. TEM PE A FTER School p ro ­ gram, K-6 needs enrichment in­ structors for com puter, music, art, story telling, languages, gym­ nastics, 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 TIME 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 resume. 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, llam -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. WANTED: P/T, detail conscious/ customer service person to fill or­ ders/ stock merchandise; answer phones. Computer knowledge & sales experience a plus. Call 8940055 for interview. Close to ASU. ^BROADWA^DISTRIBUTIO^CENTE^n^rin^^ motivated people for F T /P T positions in receiving and m erchandise processing for o u r com pressed 4 d ay -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. 14th Street, Tem pe, AZ. EOE. ASU DOWNTOWN 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. HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL A PEA in the Pod, B iltm ore Fashion Park, part-time sales as­ sociate Tues/Thurs/wknds, 9572414. , SECRETARY/REAL ESTATE, p/t, run Macintosh, type, book­ keeping. 5 days/wk. Call 5968878. ADVERTISING SALES rep for sports magazine. Strong market­ ing & sales skills. Curt, 991-1574. HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO is look­ ing for energetic, smiling indi­ viduals to cast as customer serv­ ice reps and entry level manag­ ers. F lexible hours & fun a t­ m osphere. Apply in person at your nearby Blockbuster Video. ACCEPTING APPS for: Driv­ ers, up to $8/hr incl tips; Counter help. Sammy B's Pizza, 945-8850. 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. NATIONAL WHOLESALE elec­ tronics company seeks campus sales reps; gain valuable experi­ ence plus substantial earning po­ tential. Call 1-800-345-CAVE. OUTSIDE SALES: Work eves, $5/hr + bonuses. Talk to people at their homes about the local news­ papers. No exp nec. 649-8130. PHONE CLERKS - no exp. Will train, flex shifts, hrly + bonus, benefits avail. Rural/Southem. 350-9336. STRUCTURE Scottsdale Fashion Square, p/t sales positions. Fun atmosphere, g enerous d iscount, exp pref. Apply in person 10-6 M-F. TELESCREEN ERS NEEDED by H arris, Kovacs, A lderman, one of nation's leading physician re c ru itin g firm s. P o sition in ­ cludes contacting physicians daily and assisting recruiters in licens­ ing and referencing physicians. Must be efficient in sales & tele­ phone skills. Must be dependable & professional. $5/hr + commis­ sions. M -Th, 3-8pm. C lose to ASU. Call Carla at 894-8440. Teichert Marketing is looking for 5 people to join our successful sales team. Re­ sponsibilities will include mar­ keting video rental packages to the general public; ou r pro­ gram co nsists of 78 m ovie rentals for $34.95, valid at 18 of the valley's largest video stores. Your compensation will include a salary + commission. Avg earnings of $250-5400/ wk. (2 sales people earned over $1000 last week!) Please call Tom at 921-7755 bet 1-4pm to set up a personal interview. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL GENERAL OFFICE help need­ ed, p/t M-Th 3-9pm, Scottsdale location. Susan, 438-2800. city of scottsdale recreation division COACHES & OFFICIALS Boys Girls Flag Football Volleyball $6.49 - $8.66 per hour For application information contact the Student Employment Office, Job referral #8144-J Applications will be accepted until Friday, September 9. 994-2408 P/T OFFICE help, filing, phones, know ledge o f v a lley a m ust. C lose to ASU. T ues/T hurs 27pm, alternating wknds, 8-4pm. City wide Plumbing, 966-9571. P/T OFFICE/PERSON AL 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. BLIM PIES SUBS and Salads. Apply in person. Brw y/Rural. Tempe. Help wanted p/t, wknds, nights, & afternoon shifts BOJO'S SUBS now hiring deliv­ ery d riv e rs. Earn $7-$12/hr. Apply in person, 829 S. Rural Rd. BROWN'S CAFE, ~n0 S. Col­ lege, Tempe is hirint .¿livery & counter help. Stop by to apply. CLUCK-U-CHICKEN NOW hir­ ing cooks, delivery drivers, & counter help. Earn to $$$. Apply in person, 855 S. Rural Rd., 1 blk S. of University. COSMIC PIZZA, is now hiring exp. pizza cooks & del. drivers. We offer flex. hrs. competitive wages, a fast track to manage­ ment & great w orking condi­ tions. Apply @ 1523 E Apache Blvd. (No phone calls please). CO UNTER/DELIVERY PER­ SON needed for lunch time, M-F. Apply at Kudos Cafe, 1725 W. University, 967-6610. COUNTRY GLAZED Ham now hiring ft/pt, flex schedule, morn­ ings & lunches. 2501 E. Camelback, Camelback Esplanade. In­ terviewing M-F. 955-8069. EARN $8-12/HR, delivery driv­ ers, flexible hours, great work at­ mosphere. Godfather's Pizza hir­ ing all positions, 1845 E. Guada­ lupe, Tempe; 3646 E. Ray Rd., Suite 20, Phoenix. EXP FOOD servers for our up­ coming busy season. Apply in person between 9-1 lam & 2-4pm M-F. M ajerle's Sports Grill, 24 N. 2nd St., Phx. 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. JOHNNY ROCKETS Now hiring cashiers, asst, mngrs, f/t & p/t. Fashion Square Mall. Apply in person. 423-1505. ON C A LL banquet servers. Apply at The Buttes Resort. 2000 Westcourt Way. Tempe. Human Resources Dept. Mon 10am-4pm, Wed & Thur 10am-lpm. POHLCAT GOLF course is now hiring kitchen personnel, bar­ tenders & beverage cart opera­ tors. Apply in person at 5740 W. Baseline, Phoenix. HELP WANTEDFOO D SERVICE SUNNY'S PIZZA Join the staff at Sunny's. Restau­ rant and delivery positions avail­ able: Flexible shifts. 1301 vE/ Uni­ versity, 968-6666. TACO JOHN'S hiring all shifts. Starting pay^$4.50/hr. Apply at 735 E. University..No phone calls WAIT STAFF, evenings/days, 4 shifts/week. Must be able to work weekends. Apply in person, 430 N. Dobson, Mesa. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE LEARN HOW to work out. For women and men. Best price, best quality. Bob 968-4416 PERSONAL TRA IN IN G - Let our personal trainers design a complete & individualized pro­ gram for you. From weight loss to serious body building-w e'll get you results! 250-6105. Get A Hard Sexy Body Lose Fat! G e t to n e d & s h a p e ly - M y w o rk o u ts are fu n & easy, g u a ra n ­ PERSONALS te e d resu lts. 12 years e x p e rie n ce . C e rtifie d . BABYSITTERS & NANNIES T H E LA D IES o f A lpha C hi Omega would like to welcome everyone back to school! S et y o u r o w n sch ed u le o f d a y s , e v e n in g s o r w eekends. $ 4 .2 5 -$ 6 .7 0 p er h o u r. M u st have reliable tran sp o rtatio n . C all Parent's Time Out (b u t o n ly if y ou tru ly love children) S. DUNLAP, did your Mom lose my phone #? Lets do Aerosmith. Please call Eddie 966-3913. HERPES DATING SVC Completely discreet! Call 9472047 for a recording. HOW ARE YOU paying for school? We can help you find educ. funding. Call 1800-836-0750. M assage & Rolfing JO B OPPORTUNITIES CRUISE SHIPS now hiring- Earn up to $2,000+/month working on cruise ships or land-tour compa­ nies. W orld travel. Seasonal & full time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206-6340468 ext. C59181. INTERNATIONAL EMPLOY­ M EN T- M ake up to $2000$4000+/mo teaching basic con­ versational English in Japan, Tai­ wan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For info call: (206) 6321146 ext. J59181. NOW HIRING 94-95 graduates. The country 's h ighest paying companies now interviewing. All majors available. Must call CareerLink today! (800) 655-3826. RESTAURANTS/ BARS BREWPUBl T h e R olfing Studio M ill Ave. N ear ASU Steve 966-1776 M ARK 'S TY PIN G Services. Fast, professional, affordable, laser printed. Tempe. 491-5931. 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. T o d a y '5 H oro scopes C a n B e Fo u n d O n R a g e 2.1. WANTED C an 't get T C M 2 0 1 ? JRN 212 at MCC is open with 2 sections: Sec. #3390 TR 1:30-4 p.m. Sec. #8136 MW 6:30-8:45 p.m. •TRANSFERABLE •CHEAPER •NO TYPING TEST R E G IST E R NOW! Deadline for R egistration is F riday, A ugust 26. TUTORS TODAY $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. L aser. F ast. Sam e day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. Student discounts available. 9 p.m.-1 a.m. •N O C O V ER* ÌBANDERSNATCH| TYPING/WORD P R O C | | | IN < ^ _ The best b od y therapy available for athletes and stressed students. IRISH M USIC 5th St. & Forest C a ll M r. A riz o n a 9 45 -0 71 2 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. SERVICES at 345-2433 TUTORS ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE E ver h ad a tu to r th a t d id n 't show up? N ev er h a p p e n a t M atrix. SANDWICH COOKS WAIT STAFF COUNTER HELP is now hiring friendly faces to work in fast paced enviro, at our campus loc. Flex, hrs, will work around school sched., empl. discounts, Reg. raises. Apply in person. 829-7213 4 E. 10th St. THE TEMPE YMCA is currently accepting registrations for. its Fall S o c c er and Sand V olleyball 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. AX£2 BORIN- Your roommate loves you! Nine days? Well, keep smiling anyway. Where A S U G oes for Pizza Swensen's Tempe has immed openings, days/nights, ft/pt, no exp nec. Apply M-F, 4-5pm, Price & Baseline. HEALTH & FITNESS 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. RED ROBIN Tempe has immed. openings for wait staff, bussers, & host/hostesses w/daytime avail­ ability. 1375 W. Elliott. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers and din­ ner bussers. Apply in person M-F 10am-5pm, 5001 E. Washington. SPORTS & RECREATION E v er h a d a tu to r th a t y o u felt y o u k n ew th e su b ject D RAFTS 14 oz. C oors Light Bud Bud Light 3 p.m .-C lose N o c a tc h . N o cover. N o k id d in g . 968-6666 1301 E. University SPORTS & RECREATION PLAY BALL! If interested in play in g b aseball in a Tem pe league, please call 852-8701, msg. WATER POLO- Open to every­ one! Practice held Tues & Thurs 6:30-8:30pm at Mona Plummer or call Drew at 966-4642. b e tte r th a n th ey did? N ev er h a p p e n a t M atrix . E ver h a d a tu to r th a t w a n te d to discuss y o u r personal life in stead o f tu to rin g you? N ev er h ap p e n a t M atrix. T h ese are ju st a few o f th e m an y legitim ate com plaints w e 'v e h e a rd . I f y o u 'r e lo o k in g fo r a n o n n o n se n se tu to r, give us a call. W e o ffer tu to rial fo r th e follow ing classes: MAT 106, MAT 114, MAT 117, MAT 170, MAT 119, MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271, PHY U 1, PHY 112, QBA 221, PSY 230, CHM lo t , CHM 113, CHM 115, CON 221, , CON 323 and many more! "It's not what we do, it's how we do it!" Fall registration is g oing o n now . C all us to d ay for o u r schedule: 968-4668 Matrix Education Center "Simon" Cornerstone Mall S t a t e P ress W e d n e s d a y , A u g u st 2 4, 1994 Page 24 MAKE AN INVESTMENT IN YOUR REPAIRS » ACCESSORIES • SERVICE - PARTS & SERVICE FOR ALL MOTORCYCLES SS r SPECIALIZING ES JAPANESE * AMERICAN ^USTOM ENGINE BUILDING • STREET • STRIP • HELJ-ARC WELDING t MACHINE SHOP TOWING SERVICE > CALLUS LIFETIME F0R Order your copy of The 1993-94 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook today! Matthews Center basement, rm 50 965-6881 HEY PUDE... I’m an interactive videotape tutorial... I make learning REAL EASY... I am a guaranteed “A+” in Photoshop... Illustrator... QuarkXPress... Dob Cringely of InfoWorld: “Photoshop, Illustrator, and Quark... this is incredibly complex software... but Mark Solomon with his calm assurance and Southern-boy manner really makes it look easy." TIRES -■ v^UZ p a p M - ig Save 25%... order by O c t. 15-$75 +S&H / program. Each program has two 90-m inute volumes, graphics and picture file on floppy disks and a booklet. We guarantee our products to be the very best Interactive to o ls available today... far superior to MacAcademy... If you don’t agree, we’ll refund your money and pay you $10 per volume returned. Check or M.O. payable (NY add tax) to VG5 Prod., 3 5 0 W. 71 St., #4D5, NYC 10023, 212-S02-D394. FREE Mounting A Balancing w/Purchaae (Off Bike) EASTSIDE PERFORMANCE TUES-FRI 8:30-6:00 C A Q a A A A f l SAT 8:30-4:00 ( J ^ V ^ T n i T l I E © 343 S. DAVIS, MESA (1 blk. E. of Alma School Rd. Off of Broadway) $10.00 Off Any Purchase o v e r $100.00 With This Ad (Sale Items Excluded) WHERE A S U G O E S F O R PIZZA Beer • W ine • Salad Bar • Sandwiches • Pasta • Appetizers til 1301 E. UNIVERSITY (BetweenRural & McClintock) ( P IZ Z A Curry IT Sunny's Broadway Delivery Area 2 0 1 P A ST A ) & Price Hardy University o o o 968-6666 FREE P IT C H E R ANY P IZ ZA w ith a n y 1 2 " o r 1 6 " p iz z a 12" or 16" Dine-ln or Delivery one coupon per pizza [® ] Dine in only. One coupon per pitcher S u n n y's P izza 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 S u n n y 's P izza 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED ON DELIVERY I_____________________ i--------------------- ¡K M Eg ^ .**, jSÆ 9r Ï 1C Drinks ft! o« sta r C o m fs io L M Teas Kor e&&tcM0Ke> ftor ¿ad/es SW Corner Scottsdale Rd. & McDowell ’tft10:30 4 2 3 -8 4 9 9