©Copyright, State Press. 19 Tempe, Arizona administrators hope for $26 m illion from state surplus Cool runnings Salary increases top Coor s wish list B y L o r rie C ohen S ta te P ress ASU administrators hope that a $200 million surplus in Arizona’s general fund will pay off to the tune of $26 million in increased funding for the next fiscal year. According to ASU’s 1995-96 budget proposal, ASU will ask the Arizona Board of Regents for $210 m illion during the September ABOR meeting. The University received about $184 million from the state this fiscal year. Salary is the biggest issue. “What we are seeking is $9.9 million on the m ain cam pus for salarie s,” ASU President Lattie Coor said. “That is a con­ tinuation budget request and those are the things that are, by state budget policy, built in to the coming year.” The $9.9 million salary package includes librarians, academ ic professionals and administrative staff. One state legislator thinks ASU’s staff T u rn t o bu d g et, pa g e 2. M issing students family, friends continue search B y G reg Z em eida S ta t e P ress apsai yrr'Æâ hlrtf mÊmmïW Richard Komurek/State Press Freshman business student Dale Hersh, 18, cools off in the sprinklers as he jogs at the running track by the Student Recreation Complex. Hersh, who is from New Jersey, said he runs at the track every day and is enjoying the summer heat. Family and friends of missing ASU stu­ dent Kimberly Nilson are continuing their efforts to find her, even though police halt­ ed their own full-scale search Wednesday. Nilson, a senior exercise science major, was reported missing Monday night. She was last seen by her roommate sleeping in their apartment at 6:30 a.m. Monday. Police halted their search Wednesday in the Scottsdale neighborhood where her car was found abandoned. Tempe police spokesman Tom Ryff said police still have no solid leads on the case, but are following up on information the Nilson family gave them. “W e’ve developed no evidence, no leads; no friends have come forward,” Ryff said. “Basically we are at the mercy of the public to give us some leads.” The Nilson family has put out a $21,000 rew ard for inform ation leading to her whereabouts. Alan M illar, Nilson’s brother-in-law, said the family’s search for Kimberly will be expanded to California, where she had lived for several years. He plans to send out about 7,500 flyers to motels, fast food restaurants, conve­ nience stores and other businesses, hoping some information will surface there. Pastor Lee Meyer of ASU’s Alleluia Lutheran Student Ministry set up a fund to help the Nilson family with the expenses involved in their search. He said Kimberly regularly attended services at his church. Donations can be made to the Ministry’s fund at 1034 S. Mill Ave., or at any Bank One office under account number 46473436. Touch-tone parking system elim inates long lines _ . basis.Park-Smart Park-Smarthas hasbeen beenavailable availablesince sinceAug. Aug.15, 15,but but as loot lastfoil fall.wHon WhenctuHpntc studentsrail call071-PARK, 921-PARK,thev theycan canchoose choosea a basis. „ B y L isa G on de rin g er S ta t e P ress Students who put off purchasing a parking decal to avoid waiting in those Disneyland-like lines that snake around the Campus Inn no longer need to worry. ASU Parking Services has implemented Park-Smart, a touch-tone decal sale system similar to In-Touch, which allows students to purchase a decal without ever having to venture out into the August heat. “This is the biggest innovation we’ve ever made,” said Linda Riegel, assistant director of ASU Department of Public Safety. She said the system, which has 16 phone lines, is the product of suggestions from students at two open forums lot and pay over the phone or in person within 10 days of calling. Students still need to pick up the decal in person. Students who have been on waiting lists may also have noticed that their place in line has been eliminated. “We did away with the waiting lists because they were giving students a false impression of availability,” Reigel said. Last year, 1,500 people were on the waiting list for Parking Structure 3, which has only 500 spaces. “It would take three to four years for these people to get through the list,” she said. “They could graduate and never get into the lot they wanted.” Now all lots are available on a first come, first serve ASU President Lattie Coor was the IN S ID E first guest at ASASU’s new infor­ STATE PRESS Tempe City Council is again considering a Ian to make University Drive more pedes­ trian-friendly. Page 7. mation forum Thursday. Page 8. W orld/ Nation Mexico remains tense as the coun­ try awaits confir­ mation of a PRI victory. of Wednesday, the system had handled only 1,866 calls. As of Aug. 22,15,328 other decals had been sold in person. Mary Schuh, a senior political science major, said she is having a difficult time getting a decal this semester. “I still haven’t gotten one yet,” she said. “There are long lines and short hours. No one ever offered me the option of the phone system and if they had, it would have solved my problems.” Riegel said advertising for the system was kept low-key because they were a little unsure the system would be up and running for the fall semester. As with the In-Touch system, DPS has no plans to make T Sports J w Chris Hopkins, ASU tailback, is only one of the many inexperi­ enced players this year at the tail­ back position. P a c e 12 urn to P a r k in g , pa g e 2. Where To Find It Classifieds......................... 14 Comics...............................10 Crossword........................... 6 Horoscopes ....................... 15 Opinion............................... 4 Police Report.......................9 Sports.................................12 Today’s Activities...............2 World/Nation.......................3 Page 2 S ta t e P ress Friday, August 26, 1994 T oday The Today Section is a daily calen­ dar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis and are printed on a space -available basis. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f M atthews Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll address o f the location. All requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Illegible entries w ill not be printed. Deadline fo r requests in noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three work­ ing days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is per­ mitted. • N ativ e A m e ric a n B usiness Association — General meeting, 4:00 p.m ., A m erican Indian Institute Conference Room. • B a p tist S tu d e n t U nion — Beach party, free food offered. 7:00 p.m., 1322 S. Mill Ave. • Vital Im pact — Back to School bash, live bands, free food, giveaways and a comedian. 7:30 p.m., Palo Verde Beach. • Role P laying G am e C lub — First weekly meeting, new members wel­ come. 5:00 p.m., MU Room 208D. For more information call 967-0963. • American Indian G raduate Student Association — General meeting, 10:30 a.m., American Indian Institute. Budget C o n t in u e d fr o m pa g e 1. got a big enough raise last year. “We gave them a sizable amount last year,” said Rep. Jeff Groscost, R-District 30. “I don’t have a problem paying profes­ sors more, but maybe they could reduce class sizes or have a professor teach a class and not a TA.” Groscost said ASU should be careful and not waste its money. “M aybe they are not utilizin g their resources. Some, including me, think that the universities are flat-out wasteful,” he said. But ASU faculty earn less than 83 per­ cent of their peers at other institutions, said Jim Silwicki, associate director of ASU’s fiscal planning and analysis. “That is why we asked for (this budget),” Silwicki said. “In order to recruit good fac­ ulty and retain them, we have to do some­ thing about salary before we lose more fac­ ulty than we’ve already lost.” Regents David Tung and Rudy Campell agree the Legislature should provide money for higher salaries. “It’s about time we concentrated on salaries,” said Campbell, who has not yet seen the proposal. The budget is slated to be discussed at the Sept. 8-9 ABOR meeting in Tucson. O ther program s in the $210 m illion request, according to Coor, are $2.8 million for undergraduate education, $1.1 million for an engineering excellence program, $1.5 million for professional graduate programs and $3.1 million for research and economic development. Since the state has more money this year, it might kick in an additional $3 mil­ lion for salaries, Coor said. ABOR, how ever, may change the request before taking it to the Legislature for approval. “It is A B O R ’s p ractice to lim it the requests and it will depend on how they feel the University should submit the budget,” Coor said. Although the Joint Legislative Budget Committee confirmed it has a surplus of $210 million for 1995, only $50 million of that has not been spent, said Ted Ferris, director of the JLBC. “All this can change in January when the Legislature meets,” he said. For 1993-94, ABOR requested $204.4 million for ASU Main and got $184.3 mil­ lion. Money from other sources brought the U n iv ersity ’s total approved budget to $242.8 million. In 1992-93 ABOR requested $218 mil­ lion for ASU main and received $181.7 mil­ lion. Money from other sources brought the University’s total approved budget to 232.6 million. The 16 phone lines alone costs $14,000 a year to operate. The rest of the revenue goes to pay off a $2.4 million, 20-year bond debt incurred when the parking structures were built. Riegel said another advantage to the new system is that spaces will not be oversold because the technology makes it easier to track sales. S taff m em bers have noticed quite a change in their workload. “Lines used to go all the way around the building and take two hours to get through,” said Darla Jones, a cashier for parking services. Parking C o n t in u e d fr o m pa g e 1. the decal-buying system fully-automated because too many situations require a per­ son. Riegel said DPS takes in about $2 mil­ lion annually in decal sales revenue. This helps cover the costs of implementing the roughly $150,000 Park-Smart system. State P ress Classifieds - we're always in the back. m m $I Saturday, August 27, 10a.m . Round up yourfriends and head outto Sun Devil Stadiumfor ASU Fan Photo Day. You’ll meet Sun Devil football stars and fellow students Jake Rummer, Jeff Kysar, Parnell Charlesas well as Head Coach Bruce Snyder. Be one ofthefirst onethousand fans and you’ll receiveafreeASU Football Fan Photo DayT-shirt! Seeyouthere! HO M ETO W N SC HED U LE SEPT. 3 SE PT . 10 SEPT. 17 O CT. 8 O CT. 22 N OV . 1 2 OREGON ST. MIAMI LOUISVILLE STANFORD WASHINGTON ST. UCLA Hear T h e Roar In *94 ARIZONA STATE U niversity SUN DEVIL ^ tadic/w World/Nation S ta te P ress ______ Friday, August 26, 1994 __________________________________ P age 3 Sim pson defense attacks police techs LOS ANGELES (AP) — Police lab technician Andrea M azzola’s third crime scene was a big one: the O.J. Simpson double-murder case. Blood sam ples she soaked up may play a big role in Simpson’s trial, and the Sim pson cam p is doing everything it can to show rookies like Mazzola had no busi­ ness being involved. Defense attorney Robert Shapiro told The Associated Press that DNA tests show ing a genetic m atch betw een crim e-scene blood and Sim pson’s blood may be flawed because the original samples were im properly handled by inexperi­ enced police technicians. M azzola w asn’t the only one whose credentials were challenged. Another technician has only been doing DNA testing for six months and acknowledged he mislabeled a blood sam ple. Also, the AP has reported the victims’ bodies were picked up by a temporary coroner’s em ployee in a governm ent work program. The defense this week pounced on the experience of the technicians in a hearing that actually had noth­ ing to do with the subject. Superior Court Judge Lance Ito was annoyed at the defense line of questioning, and a prosecutor said the whole thing was a “ red hening.” M azzola testified she started working in the police crime lab in January. Before the Simpson case, she had co llected blood at two crim e scenes and said she had “ zero” experience at scenes where she had primary responsibility for evidence gathering. She said she got a call at home the morning of June 13 and arrived at Simpson’s Brentwood mansion at about 7 a.m., roughly eight hours after prosecutors said Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were murdered. Assiciated Press Mexican army troops guard the offices of the Federal Electoral Institute in Zacapu, 150 miles west of Mexico City. The area is a stronghold for the Revolutionary Democratic Party (PRD), which claimed fraud in last Sunday's elections. M exico tense as votes counted MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexicans were still waiting Thursday, four days after the election, for final results expected to con­ firm the victory of President-elect Ernesto Zedillo of the ruling party. Officials were investigating complaints that delayed results from 11,000 polling places, ranging from simple counting errors to allegations of multiple voting and the names of dead people on voting rolls. But the complaints were not expected to affect the victory of Zedillo, who election officials said Thursday had 50.03 percent of the vote with nearly 92 percent of the ballots counted. Final results were expected Sunday. The voting was the m ost closely watched in Mexico’s history. Mexican and foreign election monitors said they saw irregularities, but said they probably did not affect the outcome. Zedillo was already receiving congratu­ lations from leaders of other countries, including Chile, Japan, and South Africa, the Foreign Ministry said. President Clinton on W ednesday congratulated President Carlos Salinas de Gortari on holding peace­ ful elections with a high voter turnout. Zedillo, a 42-year-old economist, is to succeed Salinas on Dec. 1. Diego Fernandez de Cevallos of the con­ servative National Action Party was in second place with 26.85 percent. Cuauhtemoc Cardenas of the leftist Democratic Revolution Party was third with 17.03 percent. Returns also showed the ruling party win­ ning an overwhelming congressional majori­ ty, ending opposition hopes to hold the rul­ ing Institutional Revolutionary Party — or PRI — below 50 percent in Congress for the first time since the party’s founding in 1929. The PRI was leading in 278 of 300 con­ gressional races and in virtually all 64 Senate races, the Federal Electoral Institute said Wednesday. Another 200 seats in Congress and 32 in the Senate will be divided accord­ ing to vote percentages for the nine parties. Under new election reforms, no party will be allowed the two-thirds majority needed to modify the constitution, but the PRI is likely to come just short of that. Tensions were high Thursday in the southern state of Chiapas, where Indian guerrillas staged a surprise uprising on New Year’s Day. Police were posted around City Hall in San Cristobal to prevent violence. Official results showed ruling party can­ didate Eduardo Robledo Rincon the winner, but backers of challenger Amado Avendano were claiming fraud. Pakistani atom bomb? Senate stalemate on Leader denies existence of secret nuclear weapon launch attacks into the part of the Kashmir territory controlled by Pakistan. The disput­ ed Himalayan state is divided into Pakistani ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) — A for­ and Indian sectors. “By bringing facts on the record, I have mer prime minister defended his claim that ... pre-empted the Indian aggression against Pakistan has a nuclear bomb, and said he Kashmir and the (Pakistan) government’s announced it to stop Prim e M inister planned rollback,” Sharif said. Benazir Bhutto from rolling back the coun­ Sharif’s comments are widely seen as try’s nuclear program. The claim by form er Prime M inister part o f his cam paign to weaken Ms. Nawaz Sharif, now leader of the main Bhutto’s government, and not as a change opposition party, has been criticized by in Pakistan’s nuclear policy. “It is unlikely that Mr. S harif has government officials who say Pakistan can rethought his view on Pakistan’s strategic make a bomb but doesn’t plan to do so. “I dismiss this as a very irresponsible doctrine,” commented The News, a leading statement,” Ms. Bhutto said Wednesday English-language newspaper. “He is a man night in the southern port of Karachi. She of few thoughts and not given to cerebral said Pakistan has no plans to alter its nucle­ labors of this sort.” The United States cut off aid to Pakistan ar program, which is popular with the pub­ in 1990 when it declared that the country lic and military leaders. In comments published Thursday in sev­ had crossed the “nuclear threshold.” U.S. officials believe the country has eral newspapers, Sharif defended his state­ enough enriched uranium to make several ment and said he wanted to stop Ms. Bhutto from making concessions to archrival India, nuclear weapons that could be assembled which is considered capable of making within days or even hours. India has an even larger nuclear pro­ atomic bombs. gram, and could make perhaps a few dozen “Prime M inister Benazir Bhutto was about to compromise on the nuclear pro­ bombs with its stocks of weapons-grade gram ,” S harif told a sm all group of plutonium, sources say. Pakistan and India have fought three Pakistani journalists. * Sharif gave repeated assurances during wars since they both won independence in his 1990-93 tenure as prime minister than 1947, and many fear a future conflict could Pakistan had no nuclear arms. He has not ■lead to a nuclear exchange. Both countries said when Pakistan built the weapon. ■»* h«ve refused to sign the Nuclear NonHe also claimed India was preparing to Proliferation Treaty. crim e b ill broken WASHINGTON (AP) — It w asn’t retary. Tower was not confirmed. Coming under intense pressure from easy for Sen. Nancy Kassebaum to vote against most Republicans on the crime bill, Kansas colleague Bob Dole and other particularly with fellow Kansan Bob Dole GOP leaders, Kassebaum reluctantly joined 39 other Republicans who signed exerting political pressure as GOP leader. But Kassebaum, who has demonstrat­ a letter asking Dole to pursue additional ed an independent streak during her 16 spending cuts and stronger law enforce­ years in the S enate, and five other ment measures in the crime bill. But she said earlier this week her sig­ Republicans bucked the party leadership Thursday in voting to move the bill nature did not guarantee her vote if it m eant stopping the crim e bill in its toward final approval. In a statement, Kassebaum said her tracks. party should have accepted a Democratic “That may well be a delaying tactic on offer to vote at a later date on cutting $5 the part of some,” she said. “I hope not.” Dole was disappointed at the defection billion in prevention programs from the of Kassebaum and five other senators. $30.2 billion bill. “I regret that I failed as the leader to “I believe a vote on social spending in the crime bill would have clearly delin­ keep our people, together on this side of eated the differences in the two parties,” the aisle,” he said. “We tried. We made Kassebaum said. “I think it is unfortu­ every effort. I think wp could have saved * nate that my R epublican colleagues several billion dollars in spending.” Republicans needed 41 votes to win chose not to accept this offer.” It was a difficult balancing act this the procedural motion but got only 39, week for Kassebaum, who initially said including Democrat Richard Shelby of she supported most of the crime bill Alabama. K assebaum was jo in ed by passed by the House and was unhappy Republicans John Danforth of Missouri, with Republican-led delays in the Senate. She has stood against her party before, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, James ' including a 1989 vote in which she was Jeffords of Vermont, William Roth of the only Republican to vote against con­ Delaware and John Chafee of Rhode j fu tatio n of John Tower as defense sec­ . Island ip voting against a procedural rule. > Opinion _________________________________________________________ Friday, August 26, 1994_____________ Page 4 State P ress ■ STATE PRESS W Boos & JDravos BRAVO — To the Computing Commons. The commons now offers a long-overdue waiting line to queue up for computers; Pine, a new e-mail system with some features that existing services d id n ’t have; and h efty m em ory a llo ca tio n s (w here schoolw ork can be saved during the semester) for students who don’t always remem­ ber to bring a diskette along. The changes have elim inated the more annoying aspects o f the facility, and it looks to be a true joy working there this semester. B O O — to the apathetic students o f ASU. For all those that didn’t know or didn’t care, ASU President Lattie Coor was available yesterday to answer student questions. O f course, out o f the fe w hundred stu d en ts in the program m ing lounge, only a few listened and a handful asked questions. A nyone with concerns about A SU might want to pop by next time. Oh, yes, it was part o f an A SASU forum that Alan Frost hosts, so you can go to that if you want, too. B O O —- To A S U ’s policy regarding e-m ail accounts. Whether or not e-mail is private, and despite the fact that A SU ’s policy o f investigat­ ing e-mail is nothing new, it is aggravating that ASU prohibits using the system to its full capaci­ ty the Internet is a social environment, too. The danger here is not that ASU can look in your files — it’s the myriad o f things that ASU forbids students, faculty mid employees to do on e-mail. Write a letter to a friend, and lose your computer access. A big thank you to the administration — students sure feel welcome using the computer system now. B O O — To President Clinton’s “Crime Bill,” also known as the “Porkmania Project.” Aside from the outraged screams about the numerous social programs that were stuffed into the bill and the poorly defined and poorly thought-out assault gun ban promoted by pro-gun control Democrats, we once again see the difficulties Bill Clinton is h aving in d ealin g with the o ffic e he h old s. Between Clinton’s waffling and the bipartisan warfare in Congress, who knows what will hap­ pen if a real crisis breaks out. BRAVO — To A SU ’s policy regarding hate speech. In a time when far too many universities are enforcing “liberal” lockstep politics with the force o f censorship, ASU’s policy — held up as a national model by the ACLU in retaining com ­ munity m embers’ right to free speech — is a refreshing change. Although we might violently disagree with some o f the things we hear on cam­ pus on a daily basis (particularly when passing through Cady Mall), it’s good to know that we have freedom o f speech, too. B O O — To W oodstock II, an over hyped media extravaganza whose frolicking fans left 2 ,8 0 0 ,0 0 0 p oun d s o f garb age b eh in d in Saugerties, N.Y. In the spirit o f peace and love, m usic fans showed their love for their fellow man by contemptuously leaving others to pick up after them. Next time, take along some trash bags in addition to the Birkenstocks, beer and bongs. STATE . PRESS _ _ l I A L |h It s true, I confess, I love talk shows There is no doubt in my mind that truth is stranger than fiction. And nothing proves my point bet­ ter than the much maligned, but strangely alluring ... tabloid talk shows. Let me offer the following true story. Once upon a time I worked for Mr. X. Mr. X was a prominent man about our small town, and he had a Mercedes Benz and a pretty, young wife to prove it. But one day, the pretty, young wife took her best friend (the wife of yet another prominent, but hap­ less, businessman) and ran away to California in pursuit of singing stardom. Shortly thereafter, the pretty young wife (and her friend) showed up on Oprah, speaking, shall we say, of carnal things and less-than-domestic-bliss. In light of all this, you might think I’ve sworn off such low-life pursuits. But you’d be dead wrong. Oprah, Geraldo, Donahue, Maury Povich, Ricki Lake, Jenny Jones, Bertice Berry, Montel Williams, you name it ... I’ve seen them. And loved nearly every single minute. Contrary to popular opinion, this stuff isn’t trash, it’s treasure and it plays a valuable role in our society. American culture has undergone fundamental changes in the past 35 years. The nuclear family is a thing of the past; the neighborhood cop, the evening walk around the block, the friendly comer market are gone, all gone. Our metropolitan paradise has become an insular night­ mare. It is entirely possible to avoid any form of communi­ ty interaction, and still function successfully in our daily lives. We may offer a perfunctory “Hi, how’s it going?” at the checkout stand, but does it mean anything? Can we consider it a meaningful exchange in the context of a larger community? In this isolated, alienated world, talk shows function as our community. We might not know these people, but they are our neighbors. We invite them into the house when we’re feeling lonely or friendly or bored or gossipy — what else are neighbors for? And even though the shows are widely reviled for their campy ways, their outrageous themes (Paternity Suits! Blood tests don’t help when the father is an identical twin — and either twin might be the father!), annoying hosts and guests who seem to be below average intelligence ... this all serves a higher purpose. First, because talk shows need a such wide range of opin­ ions, producers lobby for the most diverse audiences imag­ inable. Such an artificial environment boosts ratings, but it also creates a valid forum for legitimately diverse opinions. Sure, some people just want to spout off, but the majority are from the heart. Secondly, most talk show audiences embrace bright line forms of morality. All too often, the featured guests are totally unaware of their actions; some people even believe that the studio audience will applaud them for their choices. It comes as a real surprise to them when an audience decries their behavior. If the talk show serves no other purpose but to call peo­ ple’s attention to what is socially unacceptable behavior, then it serves a legitimate and valuable purpose in our cul­ ture. Far from “normalizing” aberrant behavior, it solidi­ fies our collective sense of right and wrong, and challenges those of us on the fence to think about the moral issues involved. Finally, the talk shows offer a sense of community. People do have questions and problems and a studio audi­ ence can provide them with answers. Granted, a lot of peo­ ple are going to ignore the good sense and sound advice they hear from a studio audience ... but if they are aware of other choices (dumping the boyfriend, removing the tattoo, etc.), their lives can only be made better. With a little arti­ ficial support and encouragement, those small, logical life steps become a whole lot easier. Which is exactly the func­ tion the “neighborhood” used to serve — a community of people who’d tell your mama on you ...w h o ’d make you think twice about a questionable course of action ... who wouldn’t hesitate to call a spade a spade. I watch these shows. I see a lot of prejudice, fear, pride, anger and plain old donkey’s ass stubbornness. I also see asking questions, fearing the answers, but above all, strug­ gling to survive in any twisted little niche they can find. And in this, I think, is all of life — pain and pride, fear and prejudice, faith and hope and love. Sometimes it’s down­ right humorous. Who ever said the neighborhood was gonna be perfect, anyway? Diana Lopez is a third-year law student u c n w m c i c v JASON nOWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor KRIS FRIDRICH...................................................... Night Editor GARIN GROFF............................................................ City Editor GREG ZEM EID A ............................................Asst. City Editor D AVID LASPALUTO............................................. News Editor A. MARJORY K A M IN SK I............................... Opinion Editor RICHARD KOMUREK........................................... Photo Editor CRAIG MACNAUGHTON........................ Asst. Photo Editor JEREMY STEIN ..................................................... Sports Editor DAW N W AGNER....................................... Asst. Sports Editor KEN C O L L IN S................................................ Magazine Editor A N N A U LIN IC H ...................................Asst. Magazine Editor R E P Ô R T E R S : M ika A k ik u n i, E liza b eth A p p elen , C hristina B ailey. Jared Bennett, Sheryl Bottner, Lorrie C ohen, D awn D eC hristina, Lisa Gonderinger, Christine Granados, Dave Proffitt, Karyn Riedell. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S: Todd Kelly, Dan Miller, Lee Newman. C O P Y E D IT O R S : N ick B acon , Kim H erm an, D avid LaSpaluto, Lynn Readicker. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : T heresa B oettcher, Jim Poulin, Scott Trimble. U N SIG N ED EDITO R: James Frusetta C O L U M N IST S: Brian Anderson, James Frusetta, Barry K elley, Diane Lopez, James Mahin, M ike Stevens, Chris Stroud, Bill Tierney, David Whitlach. C ARTOO NISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. G R A PH IC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. PR O D U C T IO N : Aaron Brutcher, Stacey D evlin, Beth French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Christian Lenz, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : E m ily B erger, Jam es Durocher, Dan Eilstrom, Adam Ezrilov, Jennifer Hughes, A lisa Jellum , Christa Justus, Jennifer Pittm an, Karyn Riedell, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. 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 atthews Center, R oom 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the A SU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State Press P hone N umbers Information............... 965-7572 Newsroom ................ 965-2292 Magazine...................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds................. 965-6731 Opinion S t a t e P ress ______________________________________________________ Friday, August 26,19 9 4 _______________________________________________________ P age 5 Last generation to lack in ‘convenience’ One sunny day, while strolling down the w alk in front of my ALEXANDER apartment building, I happened to W y l ie glance into my neighbor, “HamGuest Columnist bone’s”, open door. I did a double take and stopped cold. His imposing half-naked figure was sprawled out on the divan and he was making some sort of grunt. Intrigued, I poked my head inside the door to investi­ gate. My neighbor was holding a golf club by the head and pointing it at his TV set. Copious amounts of masking tape held a golf tee to the end of the club. I stood fascinated as he stretched his left arm over his body and carefully used the point of the tee to punch in channel ten. He mumbled something about Alex Trebeck and quaffed the reminder of his can of beer. “Hey, Hey, Wy-lie Coy-ote!” He sputtered at me. “Want a Meister Chow?” “H ow ’s it going Hambone, you know I only drink Milwaukee’s Beast.” Hambone laughed and offered me a seat. As I sat down I was taken by Hambone’s remote con­ trol and an odd thought struck me. Generation X-ers’ repu­ tation for untowardness. Notwithstanding, I’d bet we are the last generation of mainstream American kids who can reminisce about a time when one had to touch the TV to change the channel or raise the volume. For better or for worse, Hambone’s was a dying breed. As I pondered this, the soundtrack from 2001: A Space Odyssey began playing in my head. Was Ham­ bone like a dinosaur ordering Hooked on Phonics? His fee­ ble attempt at keeping up with technology and convenience was somewhat laughable, but was there a downside to all of this so-called improvement? I should say here that I, too, curse when I misplace the remote. Even so, I wonder if the human race’s own inces­ sant drive for convenience hasn’t led us to-become to as the kids last year will have better scores.” unsuspecting of dubious advancements. “I failed the SAT’s ‘cause I forgot my calculator.” Come to think of it, many government programs past and present have been sold on the promise of simplicity or Hambone then crumpled another can. I frowned. “Nobody seems to want to do anything for security. The problem arises when we run out to greet these themselves anymore, is anything wrong with that?” My modem-day Trojan Horses. It may be that were we not the habitual improvers we namesake was spouting the answer for the Final Jeopardy are, we might not have made it past the hunter gatherer question, but I was lost in thought. There is a point at stage. Even before the Neolithic period, humans have which our obsession with progress reaches a peril. This sought to shape and to facilitate a more user-friendly envi­ point is most obviously reached when we become to expect ronment. The parallel marches of science and convenience the same convenience from government that we do from have over flowed to encompass all aspects of our lives. The Sony. If we continue on the same path, we may find our­ explosion of nuclear weapons destined to kill more faster, selves dealing with an unheard-of pinnacle of perfidy. Increasingly it seems to re­ and the similar explosion of quire much effort to throw fast-food restaurants are just o ff the inbred urge to say an example of how the pop­ A s ¡pondered this, the soundtrackfrom 2001: A Space Odyssey began playing in my head. Was “do it for me.” ulace craves a bigger, bet­ “How am I supposed to ter, faster everything. This Hambone like a dinosaim ordering H ocked m know which state capital is migration has, not surpris­ Thanks? on the Salt River?” Ham­ ingly, developed the differ­ bone whined. After cracking ent ways we now look at governments. We have gone from the survival of the fittest open one more can of beer Hambone made a sorry revela­ in our own race to virtually freezing evolution in its tracks. tion. “You know what dude? I just hope we they get that It follows that the powers that be might seek to exploit our free health care before I need that liver transplant I know weakness of desiring as much as possible as a gravy-train- I’m gonna.” Hambone chuckled and I cringed. Our society is so built upon an obsession with conve­ on-demand. “Hey Hambone, you know I heard on the news the other nience that on balance seem beneficial. However when we day that people don’t go to psychologists as much as they fail to look the large institutional gift horse of government used to. It seems the insurance companies want them to in the mouth, we are setting ourselves up for defeat. It skip the costly therapy and just go to a psychiatrist who will behooves us to resist the overwhelming temptation to take what seems to be the easiest path. When confronted with just pump them full of Prozac.” “My mom’s on Prozac, says it works good.” What does these issues it is important to think critically and ask our­ selves if the founders really were being remiss when they Hambone stand for? I bet his mother calls him Hamilton. “You know what else? I heard that because kids have left things like the right to cheap health care out of the been doing worse on the SAT’s they just gave them all Constitution. Alexander Wylie is a junior justice studies major. more points so that this year, the kids who did just as well E-mail policy fine if rules defined accurately sense since I am training to be a historian. Although the material is fictional and not actually “history,” it does allow me to think about historical trends and ask the big “what i f ’ questions. Is that just entertainment or is it a learning tool. To really know if people are using the netnews “appropriately” in this sense, the university wouid have to know intimate details about each student’s major, minor, and research interests as well as those of each facu­ lty memher. What may be entertainment for one person may be a valuable learning tool for another. I doubt Arizona State University has the time, resources, or staff to tell every one of the tens of thousands of ASU students and faculty what is okay to look at and what isn’t. Personally, I would like the university to come out with a statement of what will be considered “inappropri­ ate behavior” and what is acceptable. However, even as it stands, I’m not sure if ASU’s proposed policy is going to be as drastic as the State Press editors make it out to be. I always reserve the right to be wrong but the Aug. 22 arti­ cle struck me as being more of a piece of sensationalist, unsubstantiated hype than a statement of concern. Jay M. Price Ph.D. student History A I wanted to comment on the editor’s column of Aug. 22 regarding the university’s computer policy. The article implied that everything not specifically linked to academ­ ic study or university business was taboo. I want to know from those making the policy if that is really the case or whether the editor is jumping to conclusions and blow­ ing things all out of proportion. I have no problem with occasional m onitoring of accounts. As long as we are at a public institution, that institution does, legally, have the right to inspect our email files just as it has the right to inspect our dorm rooms if there is warranted suspicion. I have always used the email with the assumption that other people may be look­ ing at it. In fact, I was surprised such an official policy did not already exist. From what I understand, the policy allows the univer­ sity to go after “inappropriate behavior.” The editor seems to assume that this will result in a massive inquisi­ tion. So far, I have not heard much about what the uni­ versity considers inappropriate behavior so I think it is a bit early to jump to conclusions about what will be forbid­ den and what will not. Some things are obviously inappro­ priate. Sending ohscene messages via e-mail? Of course, crack down on it. Using university systems to hack one’s way into secret Pentayo II files? I think we can live with­ out that. But, really, a person sending a letter to a parent (who may be helping finance the student’s education, thus contributing to the university’s coffers) is considered inappropriate behavior? Somehow I doubt it. The editor implied that the university will crack down on anyone using the system for personal use. From my limit­ ed knowledge of the proposed guidelines, the policy says nothing of the sort. In addition, I think this would unlikely because it can be very difficult to distinguish between personal business and professional or university business. Is a professor sending a friendly “hello” to a col­ league across the country personal or professional in nature? As for netnews readings, things get even stickier. I love reading the “History-What I f ’ list, which makes Mall preachers just exercising their rights This letter is in response to the article in the State Press on Aug. 23, regarding the mall preachers and hate speech. First of all, the mall preachers are not motivated by hate, as are most Skinheads, Aryans, Muslims, and other similar religious(?) groups. Those of you like Jeremy Groves, who are offended by the preachers, would do well to understand that most of the mall preachers are doing what God has called them to do (without physically harming anyone). Not everyone is called to preach from a pulpit or just on a one-to-one basis; many have a different m inistry. However, by “name-calling,” I believe Jeremy was refer­ ring to the preachers shouting out things like: “whoremon­ gers,” “stiff neck unbelievers,” and “repent, you sinners.” The preachers are not addressing these comments, or State P ress etters to the editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. A ll letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include yqur full name, class standing and major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publication. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by die opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. I-etters con­ taining obvious, factual errors w ill be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement o f the M atthews Center, or addressed to State Press , B ox 871 5 0 2 , A rizona State U niversity, Tem pe A riz., 852 8 7 -1 5 0 2 . E-m ail address for A SU students is ICJBO @ ASU AC A D. Internet address is JOBO @ ASUVM .INRE.ASU.EDU. Emat! letters must include full name, class standing, major, (or other affiliation with die University), phone number and student ID number._____________________ even references to Bible scripture, to any specific individu­ al. God is. So, there is no need to take it personally and become offended, unless the shoe fits. Sometimes what we feel is conviction in our own conscience. We all know when we have done wrong and when we haven’t. No one likes correction, rebuke, or chastening. The mall preachers do not hate any person. What they hate is sin, that is, what the person does. John the Baptist, Jesus Christ and others were also “mall” preachers. And there are times when we all have been or must, out of necessity, become “mall” preachers. For example, if a group of people were about to go into a building, and you knew with all of your heart, with all of your mind, and with all of your soul that once they entered, the doors would be shut forever, that there would be no way out, and that inevitably a bomb would go off and destroy all those inside the building— tell me, would you ignore the situation? Would you shout, yell, plead, entreat — do everything in your power (short of tackling and physically restraining or harming them) to save them from destruction? The latter is exactly the motivation of the mall preachers. If you don’t want to be saved, then don’t listen. But at the same time, don’t hinder others who do. I am a firm believer that if something is not of God, it will eventually come to naught. If it is of God, it will (as history attests) endure gen­ erations and generations of persecution, and we would do well to leave it alone, lest we find ourselves fighting against God. Lorraine Juniel Senior English State P p ss Friday, August ¡26, 1994 Page 6 A co m e d y ch o ru s lin e Tw enty eight aspiring actors and actresses converged on the MU Cinema Thursday night to compete for eight position on the Farce Side. ASU's touring comedy troupe. (Left) Carlos Fletcher and Dana M illican are "frozen" awaiting other actors to continue the improvisational drill. (Bottom ) Karen Boehmer. Matt Ruble, Carlos Fletcher, and Eric Corcoran ham it up for Farce Side director Buddy Early, winners w ill be posted Friday at the MU Cinema. Craig Macnaughton/State Press C RO SSW O RD by TH O M A S JO SEPH 46 Monarch DOWN 1 Sky1 Dog doc walker’s 2 Bunyan foe tool 6 Road Y’s 3 Family 11 Banish reunion 12 Bowl guest 13 Finals, 4 Singer eg. John 14 Common 5 Remain­ paper situation 18 Headliner der name 34 Funda­ 19 Saga­ 6 Jack 15 Kids mentals cious Sprat’s 17 Leaves 21 Building 35 Island taboo 18 Graceful east of wings 7 Folding bird 23 Army Java art 20 Race 8 TV 37 Place to 24 Ike’s ex division accessory 25 Dance love from 22 Badge 39 Middling part 9 Patella’s metal 27 Talking grade place 23 Grid 41 Exist crazily wear 10 Pertness 42 German 30 Pull 16 Haggard 26 George 33 Muddied novel article and Jane’s 4 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 6 dog ■ 5 12 28 Permitted 11 ■ 29 Chooses 14 13 new 1 17 15 actors ■ 31 Low bill 20 21 18 19 32 Aware of ■ _ 33 Child's 24 25 22 play (si.) ■ I 1 27 26 28 34 Neighbor ■ — 36 Long for 29 30 3, 38 Funda­ ■ mental 32 33 40 Capaci­ ■ 34 35 36 37 tance ■ unit 41 42 38 40 39 43 Singer ■ 43 44 Patsy ■ 44 Previously 45 46 45 Burn 1 I___ ___ I___ lightly 8-26 ACROSS B E $ T B U Y S ...6 5 0 TOKYO............................ ...5 7 9 CHICAGO.............. ........20 8 FRANKFURT................. ...765 TAIPEI................................ ...650 MINNEAPOLIS...... ........31 8 SFOIII /H O N G KONG LONDON 775 ATLANTA................ ........2 6 7 BANGKOK /SINGAPORE. 869 NEWARK............... ........32 8 1595 DALLAS................... ........182 ATHENS/PRAGUE...... ..875 TELAVIV/CAIR0............ ...995 HOUSTON............. ........184 R0ME/MILAN ..775 KARACHI/DELHI........... 1115 HONOLULU........... ........3 5 9 WARSAW/BUDAPEST.. ...820 B0MBAY/MADRAS..... .1100 MEXICO CITY........ ........2 7 2 PARIS/MUNICH 765 ..795 MADRID SHANNON/DUBUN 785 J0H A N S/L A G 0S ....... BRUSSELS/ZURICH..... .7 7 5 S K C IA L FAKES TO S . AMERICA A N D MIDDLE EAST Restrictions A pply • O ther Lo w Fares A vailable FALCON W IN G S FOR TRAVEL •H arkins Luxury Theatres Show» before 6PM 0 Gourmet Snack Bar • Stereo Surround Sound a denotes Special Engagement • “Best o f P hoenix” Snack Bars • Lowes! Adm ission Prices fREE Refill o n L o r^ e P o p c o r n & L a rg e Drink « C h o le s te ro l f r e e P o p c o r n J ÌP & V » T o r f* iV to fT * frith t ) l f M idnight m ovies are a bargain o r o n ly 1 NATURALBORNKILLERS Corrina, Corrina 966 61 » (Fé Sun) 11:45, 2:25.5:05, uerr/u (F»&H>11:45.2:30, 5:10, 7:40,10:10 7:45,10:25, (12:50 am Fri. Sal) « near ANDRE ,fc, (FéSun) 12:00,2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20 WoodyHanelson. Juliette beam, Tommy beeJanet THE UTTLE RASCALS .poi ow h ere (Fri. 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(Fri- Sun) 12:10,2:40,5:10,7:40,10:10 % (Fri-Sun) 8:00,10:15, (12:20 am Fn, Sat)_________ THE LITTLE RASCALS ipoi (Fri-Sm)12:40, 2:50, 5:00, IT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU (Fn. Sun) 12:30,2:45, 5:00.7:20.9:50; ¡/SaB12:30. 2:45. 5:00.9:50______ j DON KING . BEVERLYHILLSCOP3iRi12 15.2:30,4:50.7 40.(950 pm Fn&Sal) f é S u i f o 10.2:15,4:30,7D0,9:30 lpgo ANDRE n-c. (Fri-SUn)11:55,2:10.4:20,7:10,9:40 flO, 425,720, (9:55pmFeiSN) IN THE ARMY NOW :1S, 4:10,730, (10:05pmFriksi) fif-Sun) 12:20,2:20, 5:15, 7:50,10:00 MILK MONEY (PGt3) Sneak Preview! Sal 7:20 pm. .THEFUHTSTOWESipg, 1230,2:45,5:10.7:10. (9:15 pmFniSafl W J A U W P H QYK SY UWP WS M . (Fri-Sun) 12:10, 2.40. 5:00, 7:20, 9:40, (12:00 am f ri. Sat) Q YKF FHMJSWYRP J R A L F W H RAP ZKS QYK “■kit-kirk" BobF*am,Aznep ■ ^ ILJ. 'N M i . L 'l à . f iff BLANKMAN(rowi tu u is a -k iio T W YATTEARP ) 1200.4:00.756 W MWUH J AUWPH ,SY Y RYS SY RHJ F S Y SG H B. — A F. SGYBJP LKMMHE Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te: TO TEACH RICH MEN TO ENJOY LIFE WOULD MEAN TO ASK THEM TO GIVE MONEY AWAY, WHICH IS DIFFICULT, TO SAY THE LEAST.—LI LIWENG © 1994 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Page 7 Friday, August 26,1994 S t a t e P ress Students brave registrars’ lines despite In-Touch B y L isa G o n d e r in g e r S tate P ress Lines are something that most people try to avoid, yet after two years of access to a computerized phone registra­ tion system, ASU students are still showing up at the regis­ trar’s sites to talk to a real person. On Monday, In-Touch, ASU’s touch-tone phone regis­ tration system, logged 17,887 calls. But the three registrar sites still processed 2,358 forms. “I am on campus during the day, and it is easier to just take care of this while I’m here,” said Kevin Caudill, a junior justice studies major waiting in line at the Social Services site to add a class. He had been waiting about 20 minutes in line. There are only a few transactions that can’t be taken care of with In-Touch, including overrides into full classes, change of major and complete withdrawal from ASU. These require signatures and must be done in person. Other schools that have used systems like In-Touch have completely computerized their registration processes and done away with sites manned by people, said Janice Garcia, student systems analyst for the registrar’s office. She said ASU never had any plans to completely do away with reg­ istrar’s sites. “We want to give students options,” she said. “Some are not comfortable using the phone system; they just like to be served by someone individually.” Though the more than 2,000 forms processed Monday may sound like a lot, it is quite an improvement from the 6,914 forms that were processed on the first day of classes in the fall of 1991, before In-Touch was available. Linda Jark, office supervisor for records and registra­ tion, said that though there are still lines at the registrar’s sites, the wait for students is much shorter than in the days before In-Touch. Before the phone system was in place, students would flood registration sites on the “purge day” when those who had not paid were dropped from their classes. “Students used to camp out the night before so they could be the first in line to get those classes,” she said. In-Touch has eliminated this. “But students were great,” Jark said. “They expected to have to wait in line and were really patient. Some would even bring us doughnuts.” She said one of the biggest reasons students still like to go to registrar’s sites is because if a section of a popular class like English 101 is full, registrars can pull up a list of all the sections of English 101 that has open seats. She said she is looking into ways to expand In-Touch and may add this feature to the system if it is feasible. Tempe City Council to vote on changes to University Drive B y M ika S u san a A kikuni S ta te P ress Picture ASU students strolling University Drive as sure as hell that a monster truck passing by will not suck them into the street. This scene could become a reality if the Tempe City Council approves recommend­ ed changes to the heavily traveled street. The D ow ntow n Tem pe Com munity (DTC), a private non-profit management group that represents 250 downtown Tempe businesses, suggested widening sidewalks, adding a canopy of shade, having longer “walk” signals and other improvements for the street to the council. T his w ould help U niversity Drive become more pedestrian-oriented and expe­ rience less traffic flow in the future, said Rodney Keeling, DTC executive director. Other recom m endations made to the council include: wide shaded sidewalks, full intersection pedestrian crosswalks, and pedestrian cross-walk cycles equal in tim­ ing to vehicular cycles in intersections on both University Drive and Mill Avenue within the downtown/ASU district. Streetscape improvem ents including landscaping, benches, lighting and signs are also suggested. “The majority of time is dedicated to traffic and a minimum to pedestrian cross­ ing,” Keeling said. “We want to create a more unified pedestrian d istrict that includes both downtown and campus.” The council will vote on the plan during its Sept. 1 meeting. If approved, the DTC, together with ASU and Tempe, will begin research to find out the specifics of the construction, said Jim Jones, director of Public Works for the City of Tempe. Even if the council agrees with the rec­ ommendations, construction to upgrade University Drive will not begin until a bud­ get for the project is approved. It is still unknown which year’s budget the project will be included in, Jones said, adding that he thinks the City Council is supportive of the improvement idea, which w ill focus on upgrading betw een the Southern Pacific R ailroad tracks and College Avenue. H icnara rvomureit/aiaie r r e s s Students head to and from classes across University Drive on Thursday afternoon. If construction is approved, University Drive might one day resemble Mill Avenue, Keeling said. “But we don’t know yet, because we might decide to give University Drive a character of its own,” he said, adding that the present flow of traffic on the street, 40,000 cars daily, sepa­ rates downtown Tempe from ASU. Get Jazzed For Back To School Free 30-day service. One year gear & brake adjustment. Lifetime frame & fork warranty. vent Flat Tires SLIM E I with bike purchase Student Discounts with I.D. D O M E N 1CS CYCLIN G 967-7700 1004 S. Mill Ave., Tempe O pen 7 Days a Week Layaway • Financing Page 8 Friday, August 26, 1994 S t a t e P ress Coor kicks o ff ASASU’s first information forum Low turnout dampens IN F O A S U B y D a v i d P r o f f it t S t a t e P ress A SU P re s id e n t L a ttie C o o r w as th e firs t g u e st T hursday at IN FO A SU , a program desig n ed by the Associated Students o f ASU to be an information forum for students. ASASU President Alan Frost said he wanted Coor to speak at the first program because it would provide an opportunity for Coor to explain his goals and answer stu­ dent questions at the beginning of the year. After speaking with Coor about his background issues at ASU, Frost opened the floor to questions from stu­ dents. “If you look into the audience here today, I think I saw 10 people really p ay in g a tte n tio n ,” said A licia Whitaker, a senior political science major. “I was w on­ dering how this affects what your plans as far as wanting to outreach to students and finding that they’re not very interested." C oor answ ered by saying he did not see a lack of attention as a lack of interest. “Students are very busy. People are very busy,” Coor said. Jay E ller, a sen io r m echanical en g in ee rin g major, asked C oor whether he saw the low graduation rate of athletes as a failure. Coor said he was proud o f the graduation rate, noting A SU's graduation rates moved up to the middle of Pac-10 after being at the bottom just one year ago. INFOASU is scheduled for every M onday at noon in the Memorial Union-Programming Lounge. There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Check out the comics. ! •NO Activation Fee j • NO Credit Checks | • NO One Time Fees ! • NO Contracts | 279-2944 I j PAG E-C O M j | 3625 N. 16th St. Ste. 102 1 \ *While supplies last { | ‘ Activation required j Student Travel Experts , Lowest airfares anywhere International student &teacher airfares Railpasses issued on-the-spot International Student Identity Cards Work Abroad Prosrams lansuase Prosrams Winter & Sprins Break packases Travel Gear & Guidebooks Hostel Cards Expert Travel Advice Jim Poulin/State Press ASU President Lattie Coor (right) and ASASU President Alan Frost meet with students at INFOASU, an information forum for students. DO YOUR PARENTS A BIG FAVOR. Pump' Send them the State Press every day. Let them know what's happening on your campus. county charge lttorney XSU ‘nature H a l lo w e e n , S IG N U P N O W FO R Y O U R S U B S C R IP T IO N T O A SU'S M O R N IN G D AILY NEW SPAPER (Talk about brownie points!) ■( DO IT NOW AND SAVE!— ) ■ Fill o u t this fo rm an d m ail it w ith p a y m e n t to: State Press Subscriptions, IT'S YOUR NEWSPAPER ¿ 1 m ían ititi in ,ti l ¡,f otate Box 8 7 1 5 0 2 , T e m p e , A Z 8 5 2 8 7 - 1 5 0 2 ■ W P ress ASU'S M o rn in g D aily N e w s p ap er Serving ASÖ since 1 8 9 0 s u b s c r ip t io n □ FALL SEMESTER only $35 (65 issues) □ SPRING SEMESTER only $35 (67 issues) □ FALL, SPRING & SUMMER $65 (142 issues) For first class mail, add J30 per semester to above prices. 120 E. University, Ste. E Tempe, AZ 85281 Located at Forest and University PARENT NAME □ CHECK ENCLOSED Charge my O Visa O MasterCard □ American Express Address______ (directly across fromASU) 966-3544 .'Vvi f L :■■■!■ i'P:: S t u d e n t T ra v e ls m a g a z in e ! C ity. State Phone (______) Card N u m b e r_______________________ _ Z ip. Expiration D a te . Signature____ ■ NEED MORE INFO? CALL OUR SUBSCRIPTION DEPT. AT (602) 965-7572 P age 9 Friday, August 26,1994 S t a t e P re ss P o l ic e R e p o r t \bungUfe R em em ber US? W e know you're out there . . . You did Young Life in high school and thought you would have to leave it behind . . . Well, you don't! Com e join us for: YL 101 ftm iJ M iE y o iim ; i .i i e ) ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: •A male employee reported that someone removed a micro­ scope from the Life Sciences Building. •A man unaffiliated with ASU was arrested for loitering at Tempe Center. •Three males unaffiliated with ASU were seen taking an object out of a car in Area 38. They were advised of trespass and loitering and left the area. •A man unaffiliated with ASU reported that someone removed a handmade red book with skeletons from the Art Museum. •A female employee reported that someone criminally dam­ aged a pillar in the Hayden Library. •A male student reported that someone removed a license plate (AZH1RJ) from his vehicle while it was parked in Lot 35. •A male student was arrested for underage possession of alco­ hol at Manzanita Hall. Tempe police reported the following incidents Thursday: •A 24-year-old female forged two checks at Smith’s, 3255 S. Rural, which belonged to a victim of a car burglary in Mesa. She waived her Miranda rights and admitted to forgery when questioned. •A 48-year-old man approached two women in the 400 block of S. Mill Avenue and started waving a 4-inch blade pocketknife in their faces. He was subsequently located at Fifth Street and Mill Avenue, where he was arrested for aggravated assault and disorderly conduct. •A 22-year-old man was arrested for shoplifting, possession of drug paraphernalia, and furnishing false information to a police officer. While in the Mervyn’s store at 800 E. Southern Avenue, he concealed two pairs of pants valued at $44 each in his clothing and attempted to leave the store without paying. He was detained by Mervyn’s security after leaving the store and held until the police arrived. A search revealed that he was carrying a syringe on his person. A records check revealed three prior convictions for shoplifting as well as 10 aliases used by the subject. Compiled by State Press reporter Karyn Riedell Sunday nights, 7:30 At the Danforth Chapel, in the heart of ASU. For more information call: 966-9371 in the East Valley 990-7455 for Scottsdale and everywhere else. Special 711 S. College An. - Nut te College Street teli • Phone: »67-4049 Mon.-Thor. 7:10«n-l0:Mpio; fri. 7:Moin-Mi4ni|hl; So). 9o»-Mi«loi(lrt: Sin. I1im-I0:30(pm 712 S. C o lle g e (College & U niversity) 60 9 S. Mill 2 LOCATIONS (Across from Coffee Plantation) 858-0567 967-4049 KEGS Student Rates! Coors Light Genuine Draft Miller Lite Icehouse PER MONTH JUFITNESS. plus deposit inzana\ Premier Fitness Centers KEYSTONE ARIZONA LOCATIONS Chandler Scottsdale 3029 N. Alma School Rd., #122 7525 East McDowell Road (602) 345-8944 (602) 945-8118 Tempe Ahwatukes 63 East Southern Avenue (602) 829-0622 7810 S. Priest Dr., Suite D (602) 496-8805 No Limit SAVE N O W WITH OUR 10TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL! 12 pack cans Sale ends 8-27-94 Enroll for just $13 per month, month to month, on our first visit offer with a c netime $74 initiation fee and no processing fees. Limited time offer! C o m ic s Page 10 S tate P reì Friday, August 26, 1994 by Stacy Holmstedt Generation HeXed T H E F A R S ID E By GARY LARSON A V ren n a i evE n m iE ' t a i p k o ñ k h 'm hot•' I ’M & A W T O KO LU Calvin Hobbes and DO 100 \ SURE THATS F\RST SUPPORT \ON OUR B'U. OF THE FREE \ RIGHTS EXPRESSION k ._ „ _ _ OF IDEAS f IN OUft / C - Calvin and by Bill Watterson SO 1CW WOULD R\GHT. 100'YE SO TOU WOULDNT OBÆCT TO BE AGAINST GDI FO TAKE ME BEING EXPOSED TO ART, CENSORSHIP AMD THE BAD HUH MWES OR V\US\C THAT SOME PEOPLE THINK THE SUPPRESION THEGOOD. IS OFFENSIVE i I AND SHOCKING ) RIGHT Hobbes CALYIN 1 ASKED by Bill Watterson TOD SHOUID TAKE YOU TO CLEAN up your, room f OK, FIRST LET ME EXPIMU ABC« OUR RESPONSIBILITY TO BE CULTURAU-1 EDUCATED AND ABLE TOMAKE CRITICAL DISTINCTIONS I DONT NEED TO DO A BETTER JOB. I NEED BETTER P.R. ON TUE JOB I DO ( i DID.1 »JfA*. D o o n e sb u ry BY GARRY TRUDEAU Bunker Hill, June 17,1775: An unfortunate tw ist of fate for one young Redcoat, Charles “Bugeyed” Bingham, was not knowing that the opposing Am erican general had just uttered the historic com m and, "Don’t fire until you see the w hites of their eyes.” FANTASTIC FRIDAY □ D Only $11.99! B B <0 Ö 5< 2N S3 (O Ö 2 N O N O CL O CL For a Large Cheese Pizza & 25 Wings. Specials Valid at this location only. 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. Use your Marriott Maroon & Gold Card Here. (Subject to an administrative fee). LATE NIGHT SPECIAL $ 11.99 ! For 2 Large Pepperoni Pizzas. Available Daily after 9:00pm only. Item substitutions available where applicable Not valid with any other coupons, offers or specials. Customer pays all sales tax where applicable. Limited delivery areas to ensure safety. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. Sports S t a te P ress ports Shorts S Champions get break with 1st-round draws for Open The ailing defending champions o f the U S. Open, Pete Sampras and Steffi Graf, could rest easier on their training tables after the draw Thursday. Though they would each rather be playing to get in shape for the year’s find Grand Slam event next week, they could take solace in the kindness o f a draw that pitted Sampras against a qualifier and Graf against a novice in the first round. S am pras, w inner o f the Australian Open and Wimbledon, hasn’t played a match in more than a m onth, but he probably could walk his way through his first few matches. If his inflamed ankle joint doesn’t worsen, he’ll be favored to go on to his third U.S. Open tide. Graf could do the same, despite back spasms that are one more in a series of nagging injuries. She starts against Anne M all o f La Mesa, Calif., in the first round, but could face a tough opponent in Zina Garrison Jackson in the third round. One o f the casu alties o f the absence of M artina Navratilova, along w ith M onica Seles and Jennifer Capriati, who have been out since last year, is that there are no glamorous early matches among the women. There may be upsets, but nothing that stands out as par­ ticularly exciting. No. 2 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario opens against Linda Ferrando, and No. 3 C onchita M artinez, the W im bledon ch am pion, plays Veronika Martinek. Rams may be moving Los A ngeles Ram s ow ner Georgia Frontiere said she wants to keep the team in Anaheim but believes it is no longer possible, especially if Orange County fails to build her a new stadium.. “ T here is alw ays hope, but u n less so m ething d rastically changes I don’t see how we can,” she said in Thursday’s editions of the Los A ngeles Tim es. “ You know when the hankers start say­ ing this is it, you have to start lis­ tening to them.” O range C ounty officials and businessm en met for two hours Wednesday with Rams president John Shaw and made several pro­ p o sals, in clu d ing a rem odeled Anaheim Stadium and a new prac­ tice facility. Baltimore and St. Louis each have made lucrative proposals to try and attract die Rams. The Rams, who have had more than a 35 percent drop in seasonticket sales while boosting their payroll with free-agent acquisi­ tions, have projected a $6 million loss this season. Giants prepare for refunds The San Francisco Giants’ front office is preparing for a barrage of refund and exchange requests for games canceled by the strike-short­ ened season. Season ticket holders were mailed letters Thursday giving them the option of a refund or credit towards 1995 season tickets. Other ticket holders can make their refund or exchange requests by mail. If the strike ends and the cuircnt season resumes, fans will be able to exchange cancel«! tickets for remain­ ing 1994 games, according to Pat Gallagher, the Giants’ senior vice president of business operations. Compiledfrom AP reports Hopkins ready for starting tailback spot Young running backs give ASU bright future B y T o d d K elly S t a t e P ress Chris Hopkins, confident and exuberant, is ready to play football. He has seen only limited activity in fall practice due to a sprain to his right ankle, but take his word. He’s ready. “I ’d tell you I was 100% even if I wasn’t,” Hopkins said after watching the ASU football team work through it’s last scrimmage before Sept. 3’s game against Oregon State. Hopkins is ASU’s starting tailback on the 1994 Sun Devils football team after waiting two years for the nod. Now he has it. “I’m finally getting an opportunity to play, and I’ve prepared for it,” Hopkins said. “I’ve taken my two years to prepare for just this opportunity and I’ve worked all my life for it.” Hopkins, a 5-foot-11-inch, 183-pound junior from Tucson, has played in 19 games but has yet to start for the Sun Devils. He has 268 career rushing yards and 24 career receiving yards at ASU, mostly spent as a backup to Mario Bates. Another runner with a chance to shine is Parnell Charles, normally the starting fly­ back, who adds depth to a backfield that is without much experience. Charles is the leading returning scorer from last year and has shown versatility as a receiver as well. After that, it’s anybody’s ball. If fresh­ men are going to step up, as they will be expected to this season, the running game could receive a boost from Terry Battle. Battle is a freshm an tailback from San Diego, Calif.. “He’s a good runner,” ASU Head Coach Bruce Snyder said after a last night’s scrim­ mage. “He got a little juice to him. He looks better to me tonight. He looks like he’s now starting to feel it a little bit. I feel good about him.” The rest of the running corps has little ASU experience. Derrick Land, from Red M ountain High School in M esa, has appeared in 22 games as a tailback, kickoff returner and a special teams player. Land returned six kickoffs last year for 134 yards, including three for 60 yards against Oregon State. That leaves Darryl Gideon, a junior from Compton, Calif., and Mike White, a walk on who redshirted last season, to fill out the tailback position. Charles has been impressive in fall prac­ tice and continues to be one of the most improved players on the team. He played in all 11 games last year and averaged 6.4 yards per carry and 11.2 yards per catch. There are two transfer players who will play back up to Charles at flyback this fall: Ryan Wood, a transfer from Youngstown __ . ....................................... ü Chris Hopkins leads the ASU running attack into the 1994 season. State, and Kyle Peavler, a transfer from the U. S. Military Academy (West Point). C learly, C harles and H opkins w ill anchor the backfield for the Sun Devils this season. Aside from these two, this backfield’s inexperience is perhaps indicative of the team’s overall youth. “I personally feel that maybe we can be fa rth e r along getting ready for next Saturday’s game,” Hopkins said. “But I Craig Macnaughton/State Press think it’s going to fall into place.” Hopkins likes how he sees his team pro­ gressing. “I think we have a very disciplined team that works real hard about what they want to get accomplished and how we want to get it accomplished. We have a chance to make this team a really surprising team in the Pac-(10).” Predictions emerge with start of new season It’s the most wonderful time of the year, the start of school! I must be nuts you say. Fifty minutes of boring lecture by a long winded professor in a room full of 300 sweaty bodies is not. your definition of w onderful, or mine neither. But w hat has me so excited is that the beginning of school also means the beginning of the qollege foot­ ball Reason. The roar of the crowd, the crunch o f the shoulder pads and the look of the freshly cut grass (or maybe the wetted down astro-turf is more appropriate). The adrenaline rush you get as your team drives the field for the goahead touchdown with the fourth quarter winding down is the next best thing to actu­ ally being on the field playing. I am an avid college football fan, and m ore im portantly a diehard N ebraska Comhuskers fan. While I am no Lee Corso, thank God, the following are some thoughts and predictions for the upcoming college football season. •Let there be football - Sunday at 11:00 a.m. Arizona time the season begins with the Kickoff Classic in East Rutherford, New Jeresey pitting the No. 1 Nebraska Comhuskers, according to Playboy maga­ zine, against the W est V irginia Mountaineers. The Comhuskers are cur­ rently a 16 1/2 point favorite and should have no problem covering the spread. When taking into consideration the num­ ber of players West Virginia lost from last year’s 11-1 squad and the experience on the N ebraska team , m ainly quarterb ack Tom m ie F razier, the gam e will be a blowout. Prediction: NEBRASKA 45, WEST VIRGINIA 16 •And they’re off - Unlike Charlie Ward last season, there is no clear cut favorite in this year’s Heisman Trophy race. Tyrone Wheatley had taken an early lead in the race, but fell out of contention Wednesday after separating his shoulder. (Wheatley is expect­ ed to miss a good portion of the season.) With Wheatley out, the front runners now become UCLA split-end J.J. Stokes, G eorgia q u arterback E ric Z eier and Wisconsin tailback Brent Moss. As a true Comhusker fan, I believe that Frazier has a decent shot if N ebraska can go 12-0 through the regular season. Prediction: J.J. STOKES •And the winner is... - After getting cheated out of the mythical national cham­ pionship last year, Notre Dame should be back with a vengeance this season. The Fighting Irish are always among the top teams in the country, and there is no reason to believe that things will be different this year. But, with a tough schedule that includes Michigan, Stanford, Florida State and USC, and freshman Ron Powlus at quarterback, Notre Dame may need a little T urn to S t e in , pa g e 13. Sta te P ress Friday, August 26, 1994 Page 12 \ 49ers wide receiver moving toward another NFL record San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Jerry Rice enjoys a light-hearted moment during an August, 1994 preseason practice session at Sierra College in Rocklin, Calif. Rice, entering his 10th NFL season, is just three touchdowns shy of breaking the NFL career mark of 126, set by running back Jim Brown. State P ress Po lice Reports- Too bizarre to be anything but real. SANTA CLARA, C alif. (AP) — So much about Jerry Rice evokes speed and grace, from his wind-matted jersey when he runs a pass pattern to his sleek black M ercedes sedan with the personalized “Flash80” plates. The San Francisco 49ers wide receiver is in no hurry, though, to look back on an astonishing career, especially not now with another milestone in sight. “All the records I have broken, I really haven’t had a chance to reflect on them because it’s almost like my career is just flying by on me,” he said. “Everything is happening so fast.” So could his next accomplishment. Rice, entering his 10th season, is just three touch­ downs shy o f breaking the NFL career m ark o f 126, set by running back Jim Brown in 1965 after nine seasons with the C leveland B row ns. C h icag o ’s W alter Payton had 125. “When this is all over,” Rice said, “I would like to put a song together for all my touchdowns to express the way I do things on the football field. It’s not going to be rap music or anything like that. It’s going to be something real laid back.” He added with a laugh, “It has to be a long, long song though.” Rice, who has scored two or more touch­ downs 29 times, gets his first crack at the m ark Sept. 5 when the 49ers and Los A ngeles R aiders play in the opening Monday night game. “I ’m not going to say when I go up against the Raiders that I’m going to break the record,” said Rice, whose 118 touch­ down receptions are the most in NFL histo­ ry. He also has six rushing touchdowns. “I don’t know. I don’t feel like I have to break the record the first game. If it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen and that’s the attitude I take.” That said, the 31-year-old Rice believes he’s starting the season at his best, a notion seconded by teammates. “Jerry’s not slowing down. Jerry’s still the best in the business,” 49ers safety Tim McDonald said. “I can’t say anything dif­ ferent about Jerry than I’ve said in previous years. He’s the hardest working guy I’ve ever been around and he’s still the same guy.” Rice, a seven-time Pro Bowler, got with­ in striking distance of Brown’s mark with an NFL-high 16 touchdowns last season, 15 of them on passes. His 1,503 receiving yards also led the league and marked his eighth 1,000-yard season, tying him with Steve Largent’s NFL mark. “Defensive backs are going to get beat. They’re going to win some. They’re going to lose some,” Rice shrugs. “I feel good this year. I don’t have any nagging injuries. I feel strong. I feel more explosive this year than I ’ve felt in nine years. It’s weird because when I watch myself on film now, I look quicker. And it’s not my imagination because my teammates, they keep telling me, ‘Jerry, man, you look really explosive. You’re moving.’ “ Rice, who hasn’t missed a start because of injury, came to San Francisco in 1985 as a first-round pick out of tiny Mississippi Valley State. Since then, he has helped San Francisco’s pass-oriented system flourish. In succession, he has been the primary target of Joe M ontana and now, Steve Young. All three are former NFL MVPs, Rice when he caught an NFL record 22 touchdown passes in 1987. Overall, he has scored an average of bet­ ter than 13 touchdowns in each of his previ­ ous nine seasons. “I can’t fathom. That’s unbelievable,” Young said. “You think about it, 10 touch­ downs a season is a lot.” Rice said he has stayed on top of his game because of a rigorous offseason work­ out program and healthy eating habits. Celebrating 6 Years as ASU's Favorite Sports Bar FITNESS CENTERS Saturday, August 27th 4pm - Close 1/2 Price V^ings & Pizza $3 D om estic Pitchers $1 Jäger Shots A MONTH • NO CONTRACT with ASU I.D Raffle Prizes, Giveaways Bring in Your W orld Gym $30 Coupon and W e W ill W aive Initiation Expires: 9 /3 /9 4 DANA V. I Photo By: Les ManessJ 2 3 0 W . 5 th S t., T em p e 1 block west o f Mill Corner o f 5th and Ash A S U 's M ost Complete Sports Coverage Since 1988 ___ __ ___ \ Sta te P ress Learning Made Easy... Photoshop Illu strato r QuarkXPress Bob Cringely of InfoWorU: “ Photoshop, Illustrator, and Quark... th is is incredibly complex software... but Mark Solomon with his calm assurance and Southern-boy manner really makes it look easy." Each program has two 90-m inute vol­ umes graphics and picture file on flop­ py disks and a program outline booklet.” We g u a ra n te e ou r p ro d ­ u c ts t o be th e very b e s t in teractive to o ls available to d ay ... f a r s u p erio r t o M acA cad em y... If you d o n’t agree, we'll refund your money an d pay you $10 per volume retu rn ed. S a v e 2 5 % ... o r d e r b y O c t . 15 - $ 7 5 + 5 & H / p r o g r a m . Make check o r money order payable (NY add tax) to: VGS Productions. 3 5 0 W. 71 5 t „ #4B5, NYC 10023. 21 2-80 2-3 394 . COM PUTERS DATAPRO Page 13 Friday, August 26, 1994 $899.00 Student Specials from $899 486SLC2-50 M in i Tower Case 200 W Power Supply 4MB RAM 1.44 MB Floppy Drive 170 MB Hard Drive SVGA .39 M onitor SVGA 512K Video Card INFOPRO $1239.00 486SLC2-66 Mini Tower C ase 2 0 0 W P ow er S u p p ly 4M B RAM 1 .4 4 MB F lo p p y D rive 2 1 0 M B Hard D riv e SVGA .2 8 M o n ito r SVGA 1MB V id e o Card 2 S e r ia l/1 P a r a lle l/1 G a m e 101 K eyboard M icro so ft M o u se W in d o w s 3 .1 1 /D O S 6 .2 2 S e r ia l/1 P a r a lle l/1 G am e 101 Keyboard Stein C o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e 11. ‘luck of the Irish’ in order to remain unde­ feated and have a shot at the title. Other teams that should be serious con­ tenders are Nebraska and Florida. The Cornhuskers, who came within a 45-yard field goal of being named the national champions last season, have the experience and coach to earn their first title since 1971. The only thing that may stop Nebraska from going all the way is their recent trend of looking past the so-called “easy games,” such as the one-point victory over Kansas last season and the loss to Iowa State two years ago. The Gators, who are ranked No. 1 in both the A ssociated Press and USA Today/CNN Coaches poll, have one major thing going for them- experience. Florida has six offensive starters and eight defen­ sive starters returning from last season’s 11-2 team . Terry Dean and Danny Wherffel give the Gators one of the most experienced quarterbacking crew in the country. The main obstacle for Florida is its schedule, which includes games at both Tennessee and Florida State. Prediction: 1) NEBRASKA, 2) NOTRE DAME, 3) WISCONSIN, 4) FLORIDA, 5) ARIZONA ■Up and coming - This season should present a couple of surprises in the final top 25 polls of the season, with Kansas State, Illinois and Texas all leaving big impressions. Kansas State had one of its best seasons in school history last year finishing 9-2-1. Quarterback Chad May, who set school records in almost all passing catagories, is back and so are his main targets, receivers Kevin Lockett and Mitch Running. The Wildcats’ schedule, which includes a non­ conference line-up o f Southw estern Louisiana, Rice, Minnesota and UNLV, should also help the team capture its sec­ ond consecutive top 25 ranking. Illinois looked impressive last season despite posting ju st a 5-6 record, and should be even beter after losing only four starters from last year. The Fighting Mini return all 11 starters on defense, including the 1993 Big 10 Defensive Player of the Year, Dana Howard. Illinois also gets back starting quarterback Johnny Johnson. Texas has a tough schedule, but with quarterback Shea M orenz among nine returning offensive starters, the Longhorns will be tough to beat. M orenz will be throwing to possibly the nation’s best receiving tandems in juniors Mike Adams and Lovell Pinkney. Prediction: TEXAS - NO. 13, KANSAS STATE - NO. 15, ILLINOIS - NO. 23 Upgrades Available While You Wait Memory • HD • Monitor We configure YOUR system to meet YOUR special needs. 831-0339 CALL NOW SUPERSTITION FREEWAY CARTER Ever Perfect Systems 4720 S. Ash Ave. Tempe, AZ 85282 = ■ [ S tate P ress 2 < BASELINE THE COUNT DOWN IS ON You don't even have to take notes. B E A T T H E CLOCK (A N D T H E RUSH) BY SIC N IN C U P NOW FO R A FFO R D A B LE ASU STU D EN T H EALTH CA RE C O V ER A C E g expei mmakl iffM Come to Student Health or call (6 0 2 ) 965-2411 to get the information you need. You’ll save time and lots of bucks. The clock is ticking. Be smart and prepare for the unexpected. It’s the healthy thing to do. Hint: It’s Samaritan Campus Care. It’s available through Student Health. It has to do with student health insurance. And, you only have until September 7, 1994. Samaritan Campus Care. From Samaritan Health Insura rice Company. The health care pack leaders. UllllB «I« »!■__ -^ STARTS TO DAY 55th Ave.Sc Bethany 939-9715 Hayden Rd. & McKelllps 949-9451 UNITEDARTISTS METRO PARK UNITEDARTISTSPAVILIONS UNITEDARTISTS VALVISTACROSSINGS Alma Sch. Rd. & Southern 9S6JAMC * D1S AMC TOWN ft COUNTRY6 A M A R I T A N GLENDALE9 Dl Indian Bend ScPima Rd. 9914200 * D1S Metro Circle 997-59J1 AMC FIESTAVILLAGE6 S « TOggiBS AMC LAGUNAVILLAGE 10 Ray & Kyrene Rd. Chandler 956-4AMC STEREO GENERALCINEMA BELLTOWNECENTRES 20th St. ScCametback 956-4AMC * D1S 1/2 Blocks/o 7th St. & Bell 863-6161 HARKINS CHRISTOWN LUXURY5 HARKINS FASHIONSQUARELUXURY7 19th A venue & Bethany Scottsdale 8cComebackRoads 2494800 «DTSUIMOI 423-1400 *DTSHM* SCOTTSDALEDl Southern Sc Vat Vista 641-0006 AMC LAKES6 Baseline a t Rural 95Ó-4AMC GENERALCINEMA PARADISEVALLEY £ Cactus & Tatum Btvd. 996-7618 HARKINSSOUTHWEST8 67th A venue & Thomas 873-0200 DOLBY UNITEDARTISTS EASTVALLEYMALL 2140N. ArizonaAve. 732-0888 AMC GATEWAYVILLAGE 10 6060 WestBellRoad 956-4AMC . D1S * AMC SUNVALLEY 10 7420EastMain. Mesa 95^ A M C m K 0 LIApftZIMC P CENTERPOINTLUXURY 11 Mill& University 966-6655 *DTSSXM * DTS PRESENTED IN... , ta ‘ ' NO PASSES OP DISCOUNT COUPONS ACCEPTED ________Classifieds________ Friday, August 26, 1994 Page 14 N otice to our readers: B efore 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 o f 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. f College is a place ' where one may learn the ’p rinciples’ of salesmanship from a Ph.D. who has never sold anything, or the ’p rinciples’ of marketing from a Ph.D. who has never marketed anything. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 3BD 2BA dw, w/d, ac, pool, ten­ nis, 7 1 4 -4 99-4065 or 60 2-9668187. ASSUM. NO qual. TH $39,500. 9 4 8 S . A lm a S c h o o l, # 1 0 5 . B.Hegarty.Coldwell Banker. 8398 2 0 0 _________________________ A BEAUTIFUL 2bd 2ba condo, great loc. PPVI, incl. w/d, fridge, etc. $675/mo. Call 759-7868. QUESTA VIDA t/h, pool, jacuzzi, w /d. dishwasher, etc. Price/ Apache, $700. 437-1048. WHY RENT? You can buy using FHA's student hom e loan pro­ gram . C a ll for d e ta ils, P e g g y Pearson, RE/MAX, 838-7772. RENTAL SHARING C L E A N . Q U IET, resp. n /s f e ­ m ale room ate to share n ic e ly furn. 2bd 2ba apt. near A S U . $294 + 1/2 utl. Call 921-8099. ANNOUNCE­ MENTS FEMALE HOUSEMATE for 4bd 2ba ,with pool, w/d , f/p. South­ ern & College. Must see, $235 + 1/4 util. Brad 902-0784. C A SH FOR c o lle g e . 9 0 0 ,0 0 0 grants available. N o repayment ever. Qualify immediately. 1-800243-2435.______________________ FE M A L E R M M T, w a n ted to share 2bd 2ba apt. Very close to ASU. Hayden Place, $250 + 1/2 util. Christina 921-1371. Is 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. $ 3 00/m o (incl pool/law n svc) + 1/4 util. 838-0296. She con be. Movie Poster Sale. 8am-5pm MU Gallery THRU AUG 26 M A T U R E M /F n eed ed 9th & Hardy area, 2bd lba $235/m o + half utilities. Call 921-0421. 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 re e n in g o n M o n d a y , August 29 at 7 p.m . at: Making Waves Salon SE Corner Dobson & Guadalupe (Mesa) Questions? Call Sandie, 968-3512. APARTMENTS 1 BD apt, $330,1/2 mi E o f 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. 2B D 1BA 4 -p lex , 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. A SU A R E A 1 & 2 b ed room apartments from $310 & up per month not incl util. 966-8838. ATTENTION Newly remodeled 1 & 2 bd apts. $375-$450. Ceiling fans in bds. Also avail: older style 1 & 2 bds, $325-$400. Laundry fac, pool, basic cable, water, gas. Walking dist./A SU . 600-840 sq ft (great for roommates). 967-7372. LARGE 2 bedroom apts in 4-plex - 4 blocks A SU , private patios, $425/$450 month. 967-6000. MOVE-IN SPECIAL, spacious 12 b edroom s, fa cin g park near Mill/ASU. 966-1662 (5-6 rings). HOMES FOR RENT R E S P O N S IB L E FE M A L E roomate wanted. Lg private rm avail in 3bd 2ba condo. $325/mo. all util incl. Call 827-2627. ROOM A VAIL in 3 bd house w/d, pool table, yard, 1/3 util on $235 rent. M/F. Call 491-8776. ROOM IN q u iet h o m e 3 mi/ASU. Mature grad student pre­ ferred. N o sm oking. $235 incl util, w/d. 752-1959, Joseph. ROOMMATE NEEDED Sept. 1. M/F, n/s, in Questa Vida condo, Tempe. $235/mo + 1/3 util. Call Jenna or Todd, 966-9074. SHARE LG apt. 2bd, 2ba in ups­ cale S.M tn area. P o o l, ten n is, gym. $330+ 1/2 util. 592-9058. STUDIOUS M/GRAD wants to share 3 bd hom e, w /d, storage, quiet, bike to A SU , $275 + 1/2 util, 966-1544. BU Y IT, sell it, find it or tell it with State Press Classifieds! RO O M S FOR RENT FREE ROOM with ow n bath in Mesa, in exchange for light clean­ ing & 16 hrs babysitting (eves). Call for details 827-9499. N /S FEMALE pref, $300/m o util­ itie s in c lu d e d , p a rtia lly fu r­ nished, covered parking. McKellips/Scottsdale Rd. 941-5620. PA PA G O PARK I, ow n b ed ­ room & bath, all amenities, $350/ mo utilities included. 921-4308. Q U IE T H O M E , 5 m iles from cam p u s, p r e f s e r io u s fe m a le , $200/mo + 1/2 util, 838-5797. HOMES FOR SALE 3 HOMES: Super values! 2 & 3 bds, close to MCC & ASU. Quick possession. "SHAR", RE/M AX Anasazi Rlty, 838-7772 ext. 140. W A L K T O A SU Cute 2 bd. 282' deep lot! $54,000 (approx $1400 dn + $441/mo P&I)* B IK E T O A SU Sharp block 3 bd, remodeled interior. $64,950 (approx $1800 dn + $520/mo P&l)* *(9% APR - 30 yrs) MUST QUALIFY Paul Pastore Realty Executives 4 BD 2 1/2 BA, 5 min. walk to A SU , pets ok, $900/m o. Avail, immed. 966-7061. NEWLY DECORATED one bd house, 1 mi from ASU. $385/mo. Grad students pref. 964-6352. S(*t* Press Classifieds I® 96S-67ÍS 829-0160. ENJOY THE life style at Hayden Square. Fabulous 2bd 2ba condo, f/p, pool, spa, ex cellen t condi­ tion, $ 93,000, orig. owner.Call Karen at Karen Bolwar Realty, 951-8578. 1 N /S m ale. 2 bd at Sycam ore Creek, 5 m iles from A SU . Call Mark Godfrey at wk, 951-8883. CLEAN GRAD housemate for 3 bd. 2 ba; w/d, pool, garage; 1.5 mi/ASU; $225 + 1/3 ut. 784-1558. Jody foster In Vour Sedroom? C O N DO 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. .n ' 9634000 «¿¿m m GORGEOUS 1 bd & den condo. 1 ba. 1 car g, f/p, vaulted ceilings, all appl incl. Tile roof, near pool & spa. $59,900. assum loan avail­ able. Todd, 390-W /USA. HAYDEN SQUARE Units for sale . RE/MAX Excalibur, ask for Gary Green-acre, 483-3333. O N L Y $ 4 2 .9 0 0 ! 10 m in from ASU! 2bd, 1 1/2 ba condo, incl. refrigerater, new carpet, new paint, new d ish w ash er & new fen ce! Dana H ubbell. R e/M ax Anasazi 838-7772. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE HP48G GREAT for engineering. N ever opened, $ 2 4 0 obo ($280 new) 829-8056 btwn 7pm-10pm. REFRIGERATOR, GE, 14 cu.ft. dorm size, $95. GE turntable mi­ crowave $85. 967-7607. W O R D P R O C E S SO R , Sm ith Corona, $100.451-3894. FURNITURE B U Y A Maytag washer, get GE dryer free. A sking $250. A lso a queen sz. waterbed w /6 drawers, only $85. Call 831-6905 Jason. FOR SALE: L oft (bunk bed), $50; fan, $15. Call 894-0671. LIQUIDATORS Over 200 o ffices o f furniture to sell: desks, chairs, files, bookcas­ es, computer tables & more. AZ O ffice Liquidators, 5064 S. 40th St., (1/2 mi S o f Broadway), Phx. M-F 9-5, Sat 10-3. 437-2224. LODGE POLE bed $ 1 5 9 , twin mat & box $49, student desk $99, sofa & love seat $275. 841-0818. NIC E FU TO N , co o l print $75, c o lo r 24" tv $ 7 5 , 2 lam p s $20ea., desk $75. Call Dave 9214308. __________________ FURNITURE SALE •Mattress Sets Twins $49 Fulls $59 Queens $89 Kings $119 •Sofa Sets from $199 •7-Piece Bedroom Sets from $199 •5-Piece Dinettes from $119 •5-Drawer Chests from $39 •Day Beds (Complete) from $117 FURNITURE THE FUTON FAVE Our futons are terribly comfort­ able, aw fully practical, wonder­ fully inexpensive. 222-9825. WE BUY & sell good clean used furniture and household item s. Used Furniture & More. 2829 E. University. 924-8448. COMPUTERS 2 LEADING EDGE, 1 IBM, and 1 IBM clo n e. $ 2 0 0 -$ 3 0 0 ob o . 894-0020, M-F 9am-5pm. 3 8 6 SX IBM com patible, k ey ­ board, MSDOS, W indows, $450. Sharp portable P C ,$ 2 0 0 . Rick 351-1720 days, 837-6217 nights. HI-TECH AT LOW$ Let me custom-build a brand new computer suited to your needs 4 less than any store! I repair/upgrade sy stem s too. C all M itch 602-731-9450._________________ M A C + , 2 hard d r iv e s, Im age W riter II & lo ts o f so ftw a r e. $550 obo. John 596-1990. NOTEBOOK COMP, NCR 3170, n ev er u sed . 3 8 6 4 M B R A M , 120MB hard drive, 14,400 baud V .42bis and M N P-5 data co m ­ p r e ssio n fax m od em c e llu la r ready. Comes with Windows, bat­ tery pack, external drive, carry­ ing case and warranty. Valued at $3,000. Will sell for $1,500. Call Julie at 965-0982 M-F.__________ PA C K A RD BELL 4 8 6 S X , 33mhz, 4 mos old, incl fax mo­ dem, monitor, mouse, HP520 ink jet printer. Software in cl. N ew $2000, sac $1600. 395-0725. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu: gold, ster., pearls, antiques, gems, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave. Tempe Center 968-6074. TICKETS I'LL PAY for gas! Commute to A SU ? I live at 7th St. and M c­ D o w e ll. C all Jennifer today at 271-9384 to carpool. AUTOMOBILES $CASH TODAY!$ I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call Al, 994-4369. 1979 MGB B.R. green, restored, and in great co n d itio n & a/c. $4500. Call Jay 968-5346. 73 SUPER B eetle, orange, new tires, new exhaust, needs genera­ tor, recent rebuilt engine. Good cond. Asking $1800. 395-9591. 83 N IS S A N Sentra. Tan, lo w ­ ered, stereo system w/Alpine CD, fender trim, custom wheels, runs great. $2500 obo. Call Todd, lv. msg. 519-0044. 83 TOYOTA Cressida, all power, cold a/c, 6-cyl, at, 4-dr sdn, runs, d r iv e s, and lo o k s e x c e lle n t . $3400. Ben, 860-0776. 84 CELICA GTS, red, fully load­ ed, all elec, sun roof, mint cond, $4200 obo. 494-0420. 8 5 S E N T R A , 5 -sp d , a /c , t/w , 1 12K , runs w e ll, $ 1 5 0 0 o b o . Evenings, 929-0128. 86 NISSAN Sentra 2dr, 5spd, ac, Blue, very clean, runs well $2000 obo. 829-1996 or 264-0190. 91 DODGE Shadow 2-dr, 5-spd, a/c, am/fm, ps, pb, low miles, exc cond. $5800 obo. 731-4838. Furniture Depot 92 VW Jetta GLi, mint condition, only 13K mil, sun roof. $14,300 obo. Call Rob, 839-3800. In M esa 85 YAMAHA Riva, new engine, r/tire, v-belt. Just tuned up, $900 obo. Mark, 968-5683. 93 K A W A SA K I N inja Z X 6 E model. Exc cond, low mi. $5000 obo. Patrick (lv msg) 219-5248. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL $6.50/H R + B O N U S , FLEX hrs, p/t, setting appts. by phone. N o selling! Qualified leads supplied. John Robberts 957-7155. APPOINTMENT SETTERS So. S cottsd ale fle x sch ed ., salary & comm., part-time. 481-9200. *EARN $7/HR!* Lighting company needs respon­ sible students for day assembly w ork. E lectron ics background desirable. $7/hr. Scottsdale Air­ park. Call between 10-2pm. 9980325. ASSEMBLER JOBS 94 HONDA Elite 80, 2000 miles, excellent cond. $1900 new , sell for $1500 obo. 345-6712. S ettin g free ap poin tm ents for chiropractors. Fiesta M all area. 470-1828 anytime. FOR SALE, red 88 Honda Elite 80, good cond. 12,000mi. $850 obo. 829-9533._________________ A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office person. Will train. 4020 N. Scot­ tsdale Rd., Suite 108. HONDA SCOOTERS & Yama­ ha Seca 550. Good running con­ dition. Phone 443-7610. BICYCLES M TN. BIKE 1988 Trek 8 3 0 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 w orld­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. ROCK CLIM BING, rappelling, guided trips. 209-4913. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $30 HR min. Sell funny college Tshirts & profit $3-$9/shirt. Risk­ free prog. 19 d iff designs. Free catalog. 1-800-700-6240. NO SELLING T e le p h o n e R e s e a r c h Survey F le x h o u r s a v a ila b le T u es-F ri 2 -9 :3 0 p m & S a t. 9 -5 S ta rt @ $ 6 /h o u r Associates 8 2 9 *7 3 2 6 TRANSPORTATION P lu s M u ch M ore!! 4434 E. University: ; ^ $,30-5708 .; ^ MOTORCYCLES ADV ER TISIN G INTERNS for State Press. Get hands on experi­ ence before you graduate. Paid on a com m ission basis. Com plete, professional training. You must be able to commit for one year, be taking 13 credit hours or less, have a v eh ic le and be ex cited about learning about the world o f advertising and marketing. Call today. Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 for interview. ADVISOR NEEDED for Young Judaea youth group in S cotts. Exp. with children, knowledge o f Judaism and Israel. P/t, flex. hrs. Call collect 1-303-321-8013. ANIM AL HOSPITAL in Chan­ dler needs p/t clean-up, vet. asst., & receptionist. Eves. & wknds. Call for office mgr. 963-2340. ATTENTION 15 retail openings. Start at $7.45. N o exp req. Flex hrs. Scholar­ ships, cond exist. All majors. Will train. 407-6461. AZ REPUBLICAN Party needs telem arketers. $6+/hr. Contact Max Fose 957-7770. BECOME A m obile DJ w eekends/part-time work. Depend­ able persons only. Reliable vehi­ cle a must. 820-8220. M-F. CASH DANCERS Students needed for wheel chair bachelor parties. Call 966-2059. CASHIERS FT/PT. Apply in per­ son. China Express 1501 S. Rural Rd. Tempe. $5/hr to start. CLERK TYPIST, p/t, drugstore in Phx, near A SU . Flexible hrs. Call for appt in a.m., 956-8540. B R O A D W A Y D I S T R I B U T I O N C E N T E R is hiring m otivated people for F T /P T positions in receiving and m erchandise p ro cessin g for o u r co m p ressed 4 d a y -1 0 hour shifts starting at $ 5 .0 0 /h r + bonus. W e offer flexible schedules, discounts, benefits, and a friendly work envi­ ron m en t. Please apply from 7 a .m .-4 p.m . at 1 5 2 4 W . 14th Street, T em p e, A Z . E O E . city o f scottsdale recreation d iv isio n WANTED: H ig g in b o th a m 1-PAIR PHANTOM, 9/16. Must sell or trade. $80 obo. Lorenzo, 829-0251. 91 SUZUKI Sidekick, 4x4, con­ vertible, auto trans., a/c, $8100 obo. Randy 262-5330. 3332 W. McDowell 233-2236 STATE PRESS FUN IN the sun! 1984 VW Rabbit convertible, W olfsburg edition, w hite-on-white, 5-speed, am/fm cassette, a/c. $ 3 5 0 0 . Call 7060680 or 956-5439. • - Siale Press Classifieds Matthews Center Basement COACHES & OFFICIALS Boys Girls Flag Football Volleyball $6.49 - $8.66 per hour ARTLOVERS! The Phoenix Symphony needs articulate and fun loving persons to sell ticket packages via phone, part-time evenings. Sun-Thur. Call 222-3875. ATTENTION RocH-NRoU Got your attention? A ir conditioned office needs help evenings, p /t, elose to ASU. Construction aupply company - sell tools nationwide - w ill tra in . $5.S0/hr + 894-1176 etmminiont Joe (guarontood) For application information contact the Student Employment Office, Job referral #8144-J Applications will be accepted until Friday, September 9. 994-2408 Graduate Students! Excellent opportunity T e a c h sm all g ro u p s o f h ig h schoo l stu d e n ts Chemistry, Physics, Mathem atics, and SAT and ACT preparation. The ideal candidate will be proficient in all these areas, but w ill consider proficiency in a com bination o f these areas. Necessary for form al interview: Tw o w ritten references, evidence of CPA and SAT scores. P art-tim e hours b e tw ee n 1 -9 p .m . tw o to four days/w eek, M o n d a y th ro u g h Thursday. M u st be ab le to w o rk 9 m o n th s fro m S e p te m b e r, 1 9 9 4 through M ay, 1995. Sum m er hours possible. Pay ranges fro m $ 8 -$ 1 5 /h r , DOE. V ery steady hours are guaranteed. Located in Scottsdale. M ust have reliable transportation. Call 9 5 3 -3 0 7 0 Monday-Thursday between 1:30-8:30 p.m. for an interview. $ 7 .0 0 PER HOUR - FULL BENEFITS Zales Regional Credit Center is seeking motivated individuals for: P /T COLLECTORS HOURS: M-F 5-9 p.m.& 2 Saturdays per month 9-lp.m. 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 •4"!SSS"L je w e le r s 9a.m. - 4 p.m., M-F ' Fi nanci al 1221 N. College Ave. #101 S ervices Tempe, AZ 829-5804 Equal Opportunity Employer HELP WANTEDGENERAL CLUB LEADER 15-19 hrs, co l­ 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. T em pe, A Z . M -F 7:30am-4:30pm. Application re­ quires resume and 3 reference let­ ters. COUNTER HELP wanted. Parttim e w ith fle x ib le hours. C all 460-2845. D ELIVERY D RIV ER S needed 1 lam-2pm wkdys. Apply/prsn, 25pm 528 W Broadway 894-6065 EARN $5/HR, flex hrs/days, se­ curity co needs m en/wom en for p/t spec events duties. L ie req., paperwork avail at int. 731-4688. ENERGETIC PEOPLE needed to supervise middle school students at K yrene M iddle S ch ool from 11:30 to 1:30 daily. The rate o f pay is $8 per hour. P lease call Theresa or Nancy at 496-4666 to schedule an interview. EXC OPP avail for students with good writing skills and those who enjoy using computers. If you're a person who works w ell without supervision, this is an excellent opportunity to earn up to $8/hr. Call 460-2845 for more info. EXPERIENCED TUTORS want­ ed! Earn $6-8/h r. Call M iracle Tutoring at 967-1236. GYM NASTICS INSTRUCTORS needed. Desert D evils, 941 -3496. G YM NASTICS INSTRUCTOR. Exp, enthusiastic teacher for ages 5-12. 7th St./Glendale, $9-11/hr, M-Th, 2:45-5pm. 955-7805. IN T E R -C U L T U R A L A FTER sch o o l program now hiring for teacher assistant and recreation leader positions. $6.50 per hour 2pm-6pm, M-F. The Gingerbread H o u se, S cottsdale. Linda 4235922 or 941-1630. INTERESTED IN politics? Cam­ p a ig n w ork - resu m e stu ffer. $ 5 /h o u r. P le a se a ll B rian or Steve, 955-7358. L IF E G U A R D , W E E K E N D S . Pool located at 7th St. & Thomas. Gall Carl, 263-5208. ♦M ARKET R ESEA R CH p o si­ tions. Computer assistants and phone interviewers. F/t, p/t, days or eves. Tempe. 967-4441. M A R K E T IN G S P E C IA L IS T w an ted . Theatre c o . n eed s p/t asst. Great for mktng or theatre major. Contact Susan 894-6379. M O V ER S N E E D E D for lo c a l m oving co. Exp desired, exc pay incentives, close/A SU . 829-8888 OUTGOING, ENERGETIC coun­ selo r s needed for after sch ool c h ild care program s in M esa. Starting salary $5-$6.22/hr DOE. For m ore in fo , call The M esa Family YMCA, 969-8166 P/T: COM PUTERIZED digital video & audio productions. MSD O S /W in d ow s exp erien ce re­ quired. P ro fessio n a l en viron ­ ment, flexible hours. Mr. Parks, 990-3323. (Scottsdale) Customer Service Reps Part-time customer service positions available, flexible hours. Tempe location. 9 6 6 -0 7 0 9 A SU A lu m n i lo o k in g for juniors, seniors, or continuing students for p/t security work. Starting wage based on experi­ en ce. M ust have p h on e and reliable transportation. Hours available 24-hr basis including weekends. One location 2 miles from campus. Call 9 6 1 -1 1 6 1 ext. 394, ask for Greg Claus, ,7am-5pm, M-F or leave mes­ sage at 420-1193 anytime. N O W H IR IN G 94-95 before & after school activities lead­ ers. Hrs for the follow ing p/t positions are: 6:45-8:15 am or 2-6pm, M-F. Counselor: M u st: be 18 yrs, enthusiastic & self: directed. Site Director: Must be 21 and possess related exp + education. Apply at: ■ Tempe YMCA 7070 S. Rural Rd. Page 15 Friday, August 26, 1994 S t a te P ress HELP WANTEDGENERAL PART-TIME HELP 29 hrs/w eek, M on/Thurs after­ n o o n s 2 :3 0 -8 , Sat 8 a m -4 :3 0 , $7/hr. base pay, up to $15 hr. (productive workers earn). Flexi­ ble hrs near finals time. 7 posi­ tion s a v a ila b le for cu st. serv. reps, for N at'l m agazin e sub ­ scription agen cy. Located near Tem pe's D ia b lo Stadium. Call Orca Int'l 438-8095. P A R T -T IM E W A R E H O U SE clerk. $5/h r., exp . pref. 8am12noon, M-F. Call 268-4800. R ESEA R CH ER/INTER N SH IP NEEDED for national commer­ cial real estate firm. Junior and senior b u sin ess related majors p referred; com p u ter litera te. Please call Luke or Michelle at 954-9000. SPARK YEARBOOK needs copy writers. $10 a story. A lso pagi­ nation editor. Experience with AP style and JRN 201. Pagination Ed. m ust k n ow 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. SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 fle x ib le hrs/wk. Call Mike for int, 921-8282. S T U D E N T T R A V E L S a les! Sunchase Tours is seeking ambi­ tious sales reps to promote ski and beach trips for C hristm as and Spring B reaks! Earn cash and free trips. C a ll today: 1-8 0 0 SUNCHASE. S T U D E N T S W A N T E D w ith good verbal & writing skills for weekly publication staff. Pt/ft po­ sitions available. Pay ranges from $ 5 .2 5 -$ 1 0 /h r. F lex hrs around your schedule available. Call 4602845 for more information. S U B ST IT U T E TEACH ERS & substitute school nurses needed for Mesa Public Schools. Teacher/nurse and/or substitute cer­ tificate required. Participation in a training s e s sio n to the auto­ mated substitute system (SEMS) is necessary for registration and access to the system. If interested, contact Beverly, substitute office, personnel dept. 546 N. Stapley Dr. Mesa (898-7723). SURVEYS, NOT sales, p/t even­ in gs & Saturdays. $5/hr. M ust enjoy phones. Emily, 438-2800. HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO is look­ ing for energetic, sm iling indi­ viduals to cast as customer serv­ ice reps and entry level manag­ er s. F le x ib le hours & fun a t­ m osphere. A pp ly in person at your nearby Blockbuster Video. SECRETARY/REAL ESTATE, p/t, run M acintosh, type, book­ keeping. 5 days/w k. Call 5968878. OUTSIDE SALES: Work eves, $5/hr + bonuses. Talk to people at their homes about the local news­ papers. N o exp nec. 649-8130. ACCEPTING APPS for: D riv­ ers, up to $8/hr incl tips; Counter help. Sammy B's Pizza, 945-8850. PHONE CLERKS - no exp. Will train, flex shifts, hrly + bonus, b en efits avail. Rural/Southern. 350-9336. B LIM PIES S U B S and Salads. A pp ly in person. B rw y/R ural. Tempe. Help wanted p/t, wknds, nights, & afternoon shifts STRUCTURE BROW N'S CAFE, 5 7 0 S. C ol­ lege, Tempe is hiring delivery & counter help. Stop by to apply. S cottsdale Fashion Square, p/t sales positions. Fun atmosphere, g en ero u s d isc o u n t, ex p pref. Apply in person 10-6 M-F. STUDENTS WANTED N ew Sales Co. in Phx. has imme­ d ia te o p e n in g s for sa le s reps/m gm t. p o sitio n s. N o exp. nec. - train, avail. l-5K/m o. pot. 732-9704. T E L E SC R E E N E R S N E E D E D by Harris, K ovacs, Alderm an, one o f nation's leading physician recru itin g firm s. P o sitio n 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 s io n s. M -Th, 3 -8p m . C lo se 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 th e general public; our pro­ gram consists o f 78 m ovie rentals for $34.95, valid at 18 o f th e valley's largest video stores. Your compensation will include a salary + commission. Avg earnings o f $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. UNLIMITED OVERTIME and DMS pays every Friday! $9 p/h W e are DM S, located at 64th St. & East Thomas Rd. DM S is looking for outbound jcustomer service reps to make c a lls on b e h a lf o f S E A R S , TEXACO, CHEVRON & many major banks across the U.S. to their own cardholders. Hiring 100 reps. CALL NOW. 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 v o l­ unteers, asst w /spec events. Rel trans a must. Resumes by 9/9 to: Comm R el, 2841 N. 31st A ve. Phx, 85009. THE BLUE N ote. Blues Night­ club, now hiring all p osition s, 8708 E. M cDowell, Scottsdale. THE TIME is now! A SU T ele­ fund has a few positions left to fill. This p osition 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 2 0 -4 0 hrs M -F . C all M arlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. VALET PARKING, 3-4 nights/ wk or lunches, 1 lam-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 illin g 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. HELP WANTEDSALES ADVERTISING SALES rep for sports magazine. Strong market­ ing & sales skills. Curt, 991-1574. CSR NEEDED for local moving co. P eople person ality a must. C lose to campus. Hrly + comm. 829-8888. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE 994-9903 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL P/T OFFICE help, filing, phones, k n o w le d g e o f v a lle y a m u st. C lo se to A S U . T u es/T h u rs 27pm, alternating wknds, 8-4pm. City wide Plumbing, 966-9571. W EEK EN D R ECEPTIO NIST, Sat/Sun only, busy phones, light clerical, energetic, positive per­ son required for exciting compa­ ny 10 S. o f A SU , fax resume to L. Muncey 602-796-0660. R eceptionist Needed Tuesday & Thursday 12:30-8:30 p.m . for a Scottsdale education center. Education major preferred. Call 953-3070 Monday-Thursday between 1:30-9:30 p.m. for an interview. CLUCK-U-CHICKEN NOW hir­ ing co o k s, d eliv ery drivers, & counter help. Earn to $$$. Apply in person, 855 S. Rural Rd., 1 blk S. o f University. COSMIC PIZZA, is now hiring exp. pizza cooks & del. drivers. W e offer flex . hrs. com petitive w ages, a fast track to m anage­ m ent & great w o rk in g co n d i­ tions. Apply @ 1523 E Apache Blvd. (N o phone calls please). Part-time tem p to staff p o sitio n s N oon-5pm . Must be computer liter­ ate. Clerical duties. No fee. Call Stivers 966-1100 STIVERS TEM PORARY PERSONNEL SANDWICH COOKS WAIT STAFF COUNTER HELP Swensen's Tem pe has immed openings, days/nights, ft/pt, no exp nec. Apply M-F, 4-5pm, Price & Baseline. N AN N Y, LOVING & exp. for 2 yr old girl N Scotts, T & Th 8:303 :3 0 ,$ 6 /h r. L eave m ess. 451 3894, name, # & refs, on machine BABYSITTERS & NANNIES Set your own schedule o f days, evenings or weekends. $4.25-$6.70 p er h o u r. M u st have reliable transportation. Call at 3 4 5 - 2 4 3 3 C L U B T R IB E C A - D oor staff, wait staff & floor walkers. Apply between 12-3pm M-W, 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. 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 com ing busy season. AppFy in person between 9-1 lam & 2-4pm M-F. Majerle's Sports Grill, 24 N. 2nd St., Phx. H U N A N E X P R E SS part-tim e lunch & dinner. A pply M-F 45pm, 818 W. Broadway, Tempe. SS aJk « s i m H U I by MARCONIS S B E I -N O C O V E R - (but only if you truly love children) JOB OPPORTUNITIES CRUISE SHIPS now hiring- Earn up to $2,000+/month working on cruise ships or land-tour compa­ nies. World travel. Seasonal & full time employment available. N o exp erien ce n ecessa ry . For more information call 1-206-6340468 ext. C59181. INTERNATIONAL EMPLOY­ M E N T - M ake up to $ 2 0 0 0 $4000+/m o teaching basic con­ versational English in Japan, Tai­ wan, or S. Korea. N o teaching background or Asian languages required. For info call: (206) 6321146 ext. J59181. NOW HIRING 94-95 graduates. T h e cou n try's h ig h e st p ayin g companies now interviewing. All majors available. Must call CareerLink today! (800) 655-3826. SPORTS & RECREATION HEALTH & FITNESS P E R SO N A L T R A IN IN G - Let our p ersonal trainers d esign a com plete & individualized pro­ gram for you. From weight loss to serious b ody b uild in g-w e'll get you results! 250-6105. ■ ■ 1 n ft u n r n n i i n v n i i = » BANDERSNATCH t BREWPUB Get A Hard Sexy Body Lose Fat! Get toned & shapely - My workouts are fun & easy, guaran­ teed results. 12 years experience. Certified. Call Mr. Arizona 945-0712 B A B Y SIT T E R W A NTED : N o smoking, reliable car, references, CPR cert. Gilbert area. On-call as needed. 813-0371 or lv msg. COUNTRY GLAZED Ham now hiring ft/pt, flex schedule, morn­ ings & lunches. 2501 E. Camelback, Camelback Esplanade. In­ terviewing M-F. 955-8069. DOC & EDDY'S LIVE MUSIC! HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE Parent's Time O ut Need 2 p/t bartenders. Must be ex­ perienced w/references. Apply in person, 909 E. Minton, Tempe, Baseline/Rural. 831-0635. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 5 t h S t. & F o r e s t C O U N T E R /D E L IV E R Y PER ­ SON needed for lunch time, M-F. Apply at Kudos C afe, 1725 W. University, 967-6610. TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING Friday CHIMERAS Saturday ONE Sunday STROLLING ^ BONES j $2/P G , $15 resum es. Proofed. L aser. F a st. Sam e d ay. D TP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. P rofessional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. FA S T T U R N A R O U N D . Term papers, theses. MLA/ APA, las­ er, fax. Pat, 897-1741. I WANT IT NOW! Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sum e service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966-1984. TO iota For a Good Tim© call 966-1300: Balboa Cafe 4 0 4 S . Mill Ave., S u ite 101 ; SERVICES DUI? LEGAL defense. Don't go alone! N/C 4 consult. Exp & rea­ sonable. 24hr. 820-5726. HERPES DATING SVC C om pletely discreet! Call 9472047 for a recording. PAST CREDIT problems? Start a new credit file . 100% legal. Call today 994-4722.____________ 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. OPEN CASTING Call: National T V s h o w , M on d ay A u g . 2 9 , 1994, 6245 N. 24th Pkwy #216, P hx. 7 am -4p m o n ly ! M ust be very attractive, fit, non-union, non-agency, female or male and must be 18 or older with ID. Sfate P ré » Classifieds 965-6735 SERVICES TANNING We accept any tanning competitor's ad or coupon! JOHNNY ROCKETS Now hiring cashiers, asst, mngrs, f/t & p/t. Fashion Square Mall. Apply in person. 423-1505. PLA Y B A L L ! If in terested in p la y in g b a se b a ll in a T em pe league, please call 852-8701, msg. Offer NOW HIRING: servers, bussers, cooks, prep cooks, dishwashers, exp not req. Native New Yorker, 1964 N. Alma School, Chandler; or 1559 S. Gilbert Rd., Mesa. O N C A L L b anq u et serv er s. Apply at The Buttes Resort. 2000 Westcourt W ay. Tempe. Human Resources Dept. Mon 10am-4pm, Wed & Thur 10am-lpm. POHLCAT GOLF course is now hiring kitch en p erson nel, bar­ tenders & beverage cart opera­ tors. Apply in person at 5740 W. Baseline, Phoenix. 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. SUNNY'S PIZZA Join the staff at Sunny's. Restau­ rant and delivery positions avail­ able. Flexible shifts. 1301 E. Uni­ versity, 968-6666. TACO JOHN'S hiring all shifts. Starting pay $4.50/hr. Apply at 735 E. University. N o phone calls THE DMPROV Attention Students HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE C o m ed y C lub and R estaurant needs kitchen, box o ffic e , bar, door, and wait staff to help with our busy fall schedule. Looking for p eo p le w /ex p er ien ce (R em anco a + ) and integrity w ho en jo y th e s e r v ic e and en ter­ tainment industries. Please come by Thur. - Sun., 6pm. - 7pm., and ask for Dan or send resume C/O The Improv Ste. D l-2 0 1 , 930 E. U niversity. T em p e, AZ 85281. Attn: Dan. N o phone calls! W AIT STAFF, evenings/days, 4 shifts/week. Must be able to work weekends. Apply in person, 430 N. Dobson, Mesa.______________ THE TEMPE YMCA is currently accepting registrations for its Fall S o c c e r and Sand V o lle y b a ll leagues. Soccer league is open to all children a g e 4 through 8th grade, Sand Volleyball to child­ ren in grades 6 through 12. Prac­ tic e s b eg in in S ep tem b er and gam es run on Saturdays, Octoberl 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. RESTAURANTS/ BARS expires 9 /6 /9 4 1301 E. University (N e x t to Beauvais) Youa 829-1737 Individual H For Friday, Aug. 26,1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) T h o u g h fin a n c ia l p ro sp e c ts w ill improve today, either you or a partner may tend toward wild extravagance. Morning hours bring a job success. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) T h is.is an excellent day to go after what you want. Place the accent on initiative and the enjoyment of leisure in te rests. Y ou’ll hear from an old friend. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You may let things slide at work, and then you’ll have to play catch-up later. B oth shopping and fam ily life are h ig h lig h te d now . T o n ig h t m ay be quiet. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You may be making plans to give a party. It’s a great day to speak out at g ro u p m ee tin g s and to v isit w ith friends. Try not to overspend on plea­ sure. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) A project on the back burner gets hot today. You’ll impress'Others in career dealings. Guard against over spending on home furnishings. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Plans may be in the works for a won­ derful vacation trip. A meeting with an agent is successful. Couples will be sharing a responsibility after dark. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You’ll have success in obtaining finan­ cial backing for a project. Extra drive combines with self-discipline to bring career gains. However, watch extrava­ gance. o r o sc o pe SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) M ake sure you follow through on com m itm ents. It’s a great day for a weekend getaway. Couples will enjoy an evening out at a favorite spot. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You may suffer from periodic spells of inertia now, but overall this is a day of accomplishment. Be persistent in your e ffo rts a nd y o u ’ll m ake c a re e r progress. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You may have an inclination to go overboard when in the com pany o f friends today. However, it’s a fine day for rom ance and leisure tim es. Just don’t overdo. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Y ou’ll get sta rte d now on a hom e improvement project. Family interests and dealings with financial consultants are favored. Stock up on home neces­ sities. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) A greem ents w ith others are easily reached today. Couples reach impor­ tant understandings. Joy comes from creativity, sports and other entertain­ ment. YOU BORN TODAY perhaps have more executive qualities than the typi­ cal member of your sign. You are both intellectual and practical. Usually, you’re happiest in work that reflects your ideals. You have a reflective side and may be draw n to the academic life. Sometimes you serve the business community as an adviser. You usually succeed at commercializing your cre­ ative talents. Birthdate of: Maxwell T aylor, Arm y general; C hristopher Isherwood, author- and Ben Bradlee Washington Post editor. S t a t e P ress Friday, August 26, 1994 Page 16 "Too Much Soul To Control" OUSViN^ m m m f - « g if W V C /r,^ > ► * " i# # * 1HÜRSOM’ SrnWe r SS ä * 2 ® ii 2to t ^ O to fts & -' :? 0P r t ' SttOV^ m o 6^ oN sR tG G ^ W . . v te e Ä a -io p w Sep ***4 6u s \t'e 5S G u e s ' S j g J K c h a ,d W > W 'P s o n ’ PfO®^ *DeiW lNandBuCWl'®a1 '-''1•M ito v i« '® 990 TQ HOT SHOTS EVERY NIGHT! Call For Local and National Acts 967-1234 410 S. Mill • In Hayden Square