G l o r i a S t e i n e m , C o r n e l W e s t s p e a k i n g on c a m p u s t o m o r r o w P a g e 6 ©Copyright, State Press, 1995 . Tempe, Arizona M o n d ay, F e b ru a ry 6 ,1 9 9 5 A n In d e p e n d e n t M o rn in g D a ily VOI. 79 N o . 79 F o r m e r N a v a jo le a d e r jo in s ASU a s a d v ise r imous sense of joy” and are pleased the highly respected statesman is now an adviser. The University is very fortunate to bring Zah to the campus,” he said. “He really has a sense of the pulse of the Native American com­ munity.” Coor said he contacted Zah because he didn’t think the American Indian college experi­ ence is as beneficial as it should be. He added that American Indians have the lowest numbers in college and the lowest graduation rate of all the minorities, despite “substantial strides” in increasing these numbers. Zah, an ASU alumnus, was chairman of the Navajo Nation for four years, followed by a four-year term as president of the nation. He is considered one of the great American Indian leaders, Coot added. Zah said he plans to create a scholarship for Zah to stress American Indian education By Kennes Boug State P ress Thè former president of the Navajo Nation begins work today at ASU as an adviser, with the goal of bringing the University closer to the American Indian community and identifying thè factors that contribute to the high dropout rate of American Indian students. Peterson Zah, who will serve as an adviser to ASU President Lathe Coor, said many students feel the University is often cold toward minori­ ties, causing students to drop out. “Retention is one of the major problems at not only ASU, but all those colleges where there are many minority students,” he said. “Sometimes it just takes a warm person or a warm place where American Indian students can feel at home. “It is our job to create that atmosphere for students. If they feel at home, then they may stay in school, study hard and challenge them­ selves lock) better.” Zàh said that Students often would rather be counseled by a member of their own culture. Zah will advise Coor on issues facing American Indian students at ASU, and he will be at the University about three days a week working to improve the academic success of these students. Lawrence Mankin, special assistant to the president, said students and faculty feel a “unan- American Indian students who do not have die resources to attend college, This would be done by building up die scholarship through annual contributions made to ASU by businesses. During his eight years with the Navajo Nation, Zah said he helped increase the number of American Indian students in college. In 1983, when he became the organization’s chairman, there were only about 2,000 American Indian students enrolled in college, he said. By convincing the states of Arizona, Utah and New M exico to provide out-of-state waivers to students who live on the reservation — which spreads into each of those states — 10,000 American Indians are in college today, he said. Zah said he got his chive to educate and help T urn t o Z ah , page 2. ■ S B il Vending machine break-ins on rise By T odd Kelly State P ress They sit in relatively dark comers on campus, they can hold a lot of money and, at night, when the campus is free of most foot traffic, they become easy targets for burglaries. They’re vending machines, and last week alone, seven of them were burglarized, causing more than $340 in damage and at least $740 in lost revenue. The problem is growing on ASU's campus. “It happened in the spring of ’94, the fall and winter of "94 and now again in spring of ’95. It is not routine but it is happen­ ing on an increasingly frequent basis,” said Radawna Michelle, Crime Prevention Coordinator for the ASU Department of Public Safety. There arc a total of 355 vending machines oq campus, 198 of which belong to Pepsi. The 80 Minute Maid machines are owned by Coca-Cola, the 72 snack food machines are owned by Desert Vending, and five bottled water machines are owned by Premier Vending. Michelle said that the large number of vending machines on campus, as well as the significant decrease of student and faculty activity at night, contribute to the number of incidents of burglar. íes. Lost revenue isn’t the only problem. Even an unsuccessful attempt to get money out of a machine can be costly to the own­ ers of vending machines. “What you’ll find sometimes is that even though the machine has been damaged to the extent that it needs to be repaired... the n P hoto illu s tra tio n by M ark K ram er/S tate Press T urn t o M ach ines , page 2 . Seven vending machines at ASU were burglarized last week, resulting in $340 in damages and $740 in lost revenue. A DAY IN SPACE ASU program teaches K-12 kids about Mars, Space Shuttle By N S c a r r T himbu; State P ress “We show all systems normal, Discovery.” “Roger that Mission Control, all systems go.” “Final countdown commencing; ...3...2...1 Main thrusters on, go!” No, this isn’t the transmission from the latest Spice Shuttle mission tak­ ing off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. It’s Julia" Seinto, a fifthgrader from Booker T. Washington elementary school, commanding a Space Shuttle scenario at ASU’s“ A Day In Space” program. N. Scott Trimble/State Press The program was 'put on Saturday tty die Arizona Mars K-12 Education A stronaut Mike Muttane tails K-12 Program at (he Memorial Union. The program featured ASIJ research of children w hat it’s tike to live ami Mars to children in kindergarten through 12th grade. Events included a sim­ work on the Space Shuttle Saturday ulated space shuttle mission, examination of Martian landscape maps and a lecture by Mike Midlane, a shuttle astronaut Mullane, a West Point graduate in aeronautical engineering, served with the Air Force in Vietnam in 1969 as an F-4 fighter weapons officer. He eventually was accepted into the first Space Shuttle astronaut training in 1977 and served on three shuttle missions as a n ¡ssiotts specialist “Never give up, because you never know when tilings can change your way,” said Mullane, who admitted that he was first rejected as an astronaut in the Apollo program because of his poor eyesight Mullarie answered questions about life on the Space Shuttle, the most popular of which was how astronauts use the bathroom in space. “You basicallysit on a big vacuum cleaner,” he said. After students expressed amazement over his answer, he added, “Don’t tty this at home.” Some students got to experience what a Space Shuttle launch might feel like. Joan Turner of the Challenger Education Center gave scripts to students who were to be shuttle astronauts. The Center was created by the families of the ill-fated Space Shuttle T urn t o Space , page 2 . morning at tha MU. IN S ID E STATE PRESS W eather Outlook Sunny and warm. High 80, low 42. Sports W orld/ N ation Angered by widespread Chinese software piracy, the United States fires the first shots in a trade war between the two nations. Junior Ron Riley and the 16th-ranked Sun Devils tore apart Washington State 87-60 Sunday after­ noon at the University Activity Center. P ag e 3 Page 15 ± Where To Find It Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Comics...... - ..... 14 C rossw ord.............:............. 12 Horoscopes ..............„...,19 Opinion.... . . . . . ........4 Police Report.........................7 Sports,..... ............................ 15 Today’s Activities.........:......2 W o r l d / N a t i o n . . . . . . . ,...3 State P ress XlnnHair Cohnian? f\ 1QQ^ Z ah T oday The Today Section is a daily calendar o f e ve rts printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-com e, firstserve basis and are printed on a space -available basis. Campus dubs and organizations m ay subm it w ritten entries to the S ta le P ress in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Requests wiH not be taken over the phone. Faxed entries w ill also n o t be accept­ ed. entries m ust contain the fuff name o f me d u b o r organization, a description o f the event, date, tim e and me fu ll address o f the location. A ll requests are su b je ct to e d itin g fo r content, space a n d cla rity . Incomplete o r illegible entries w ill be discarded. D eadline fo r requests in noon th e d a y be fore p u b lica tio n and entries w ill no t be accepted m ore than three working days before publi­ cation. O nly one entry p e r organization pe r day is perm itted. • P s y c h o lo g y Dept — M inim al te e su pp o rt grou p lo r w om en w ith a bin g e /p urg e d ie t p a tte rn . T h is w ill in d u d e use o t co g n itiv e tre a tm e n t m ethods. C on ta ct F red Fehr b y w ay o f c lin ic se creta ry a nd a b rie f in te r­ view a t 9 6 5 -7 2 9 6 .5 :3 0 -6 :3 0 p.m ., P sychology C lin ic. • Coalition for Justice and Peace — “H ow to K ill Y our S w eetheart w ith S econd-hand Sm oke ” V ide o fe a tu rin g S teve A lle n . D r. D onald N. M om s, E xecutive D ire cto r to r A rizonans C oncerned abo u t S m oking, w ill speak. 12:30 p.m ., MU M ohave. • Counselor Tralning Center — C o u n s e lin g a v a ila b le a t A S U 's C ounselor T ra in in g C enter. F re e fo r fu ll-tim e ASU stu d e nts and sta ff. C a ll 965-5067. P ayne H all, R oom 402. • Christian Science Organization — “ S cience and H ealth: Journey’s End fo r S eekers o f T ruth.- B y Jean S ta rk H ebenstreit. 7 30 p m , MU C ochise, R oom 212. • Association for Childhood Education International — M eeting, a il new m em bers w elcom e. G re a t o pp o rtu n ity fo r le a d e rsh ip w ith in th is club. 12:30 p.m ., Payne S tudent Lounge. • Solis Diaboli Classics Club — “A rch ae o log y and A rch a e o lo g ists: T h e T ru th a bo u t In d ia n a Jones.” Lecture b y D r. N ancy S erw int. 2:40 p m .. A rt B u ild in g 220. ■ • Counseling and Consultation — E a tin g D is o rd e rs A w a re n e ss W eek. F ilm and D iscussion: “S till KiHing us S o ftly. A d ve rtisin g Im ages o t W om en “ N oon-1 p .m ., S tu d e n t S e rvice s B u ild in g , se con d flo o r; C onference R oom C. • M U A B — M a rke tin g co m m itte e m e etin g , e veryo n e w elcom e. 5 :1 5 p .m ., C onference R oom 2A, MU th ird flo o r. • Ocotiilo/Mariposa Hall Council — W e e kly h a ll c o u n c il m e etin g . D iscussion o f cam pus events. Free fo o d a nd p rize s w ill b e g ive n aw ay. 8 p.m ,. M ariposa P rogram m ing Lounge. • University Libraries — M edline: database Is th e p rim ary source fo r b io m e d ica l lite ra tu re . Indexes and a b stra cts fro m 3 ,3 0 0 n a tio n a l and inte rn a tio n a l jo u rn a ls. 2 :4 0 -3:30 p.m ., N oble S cience L ib ra ry C lassroom 229 • Alpha Mu Gamma — M eeting. 3 p.m ., MU H avasupai, R oom 208D . • ASU Solar Race Car Team — W eekly m eeting: new m em bers w ant­ ed. Team needs a ssistan ce w ith a d ve rtisin g , fu n d ra isin g a n d ve h icle assem bly. 3:30 p .m .. G W C 302. students from his parents. He said they taught him to believe in himself and in his culture. “That gives me the strength to help students that are strug­ gling,” Zah said. He added that in the Navajo tradition, the elders consider all Indian children their own, which is another factor that drives him. Matthew Tafoya, facilitator of the ASU American Indian Council, said ASU does not know how to address the cultural needs of its American Indian students. He said Zah will help ASU woricon its goals to improve the educational experience of S p a c e __________ M a c h i n e s C o n t in u ed from page 1. C o n t in u ed from page 1. machine didn’t actually get completely broken into to the point where was money was taken,” said Paul Luna, marketing repre­ sentative for of Pepsi Cola Bottling Company. “But the machines were so damaged that they would require repair.” Michelle said that the typical image of someone forcing the door open or smashing it with a tire iron is not an accurate depic­ tion of the machines that were broken into. Break-ins have “to do with the electronics rather that just breaking it open,” she said. She added that it’s not difficult to get money from a machine, even without a key. The time it would take someone to get the machine open “is probably under five minutes, which is why this is so difficult for us to stop it,” Michelle said. The burglaries cost ASU nothing. ‘T h e contract (between ASU and the vending services) requires that the vender be responsible 100 percent.” said John Riley, associate director of the Purchasing Department. “The University loses nothing. The vendor is still required to pay us (ASU) the commission, whether the money has been stolen from the machine or not.” H a r v a r d P r o f e s s o r o f A f r ic a n - A m e r ic a n S t u d ie s A .W a d e S m ith _ Challenger that exploded Jan. 28,1986, killing all seven aboard. Among these included the first teacher in space, Christa McAuliffe, who was chosen after a nationwide selection process by former President Ronald Reagan. Turner was the Nevada finalist for the program and one of the teachers who would have replaced McAuliffe if she had become sick before the mission. She said that the accident has only rein­ forced her desire to go into space. “I’m ready to go whenever they call me,” Turner said. To simulate a shuttle on the launch pad, Scinto and six other students sat down in chairs lying back on the floor. Students play­ ing the role of Mission Control exchanged orders with Scinto and her crew to lift off while the rest of the workshop surrounded the crew as the walls of the shuttle. “I think I’ll be an astronaut when Fm older,” Scinto said. In another workshop, Mullane explained the physics of space. “When you throw a paper airplane it Won’t fly in a straight line forever. It will loop circles because there’s no air pressure to balance the lift,” he said. Mullane said that in space, astronauts don’t experience absence of gravity; they experience an endless free fall where there is no ground to hiL ASU researchers Ken Kdgett and Phil Christensen described the two upcoming Mars missions which will explore the compo­ sition of the Red Planet’s soil and atmosphere. The East Valley Astronomy Club invited everyone to Parking Structure 4 after sunset for a star party where participants looked at Mars and other stellar sights. While the Mars Surveyor Space Flight Facility has presented annual workshops for the past five years, this was the first to involve grade school students and feature other space programs, Edgett said. Cornel West G u e s t s p e a k e r fo r th e American Indian students through his constant access to Coor. “The University is pretty lucky,” Tafoya said. “Zah really has a knowledge of what is important to students.” Zah will work at ASU for an indefinite length of time, Coor said, adding that he hopes to keep him on staff for a long time. Zah said that his stay will be determined by how long it takes to complete his job. “The length depends on the work that needs to be done,” he said. “It depends on how hard my mission will be.” firs t a n n u a l L e c tu re Subject of lecture: Philosophy and Race in America Date: Feb. 7th, 1:00PM, Location: Katzin in Concert Hail 7:00PM, Location: Law School-Great Hall Sponsored by ASASU, Honors College and Office of the President Correction: In an article printed Friday about a pre-pay tuition pro­ gram, the State Press incorrectly reported figures regarding Florida’s pre-payment tuition plan. The article should have stated that parents in Florida have bought 325,000 pre-pay contracts, contributing $1.5 billion since 1988. The Florida program has a $55 million surplus. The State Press regrets the error. ASASU Lectu re Series (Your S tu d e n t G o v e rn m e n t) and T he W rite r's V o ice p re se n t a n ig h t w ith Gloria Steinem W hen: W h e re : Tues. February 7, 7 :0 0 p.m . G rady G am m age A u ditoriu m 2 5 0 free ticke ts to be given aw ay ait at th e east entra nce at th e ASASU taole, starting at 6 :0 0 p.m . (First co m e , first serve) World/Nation P a ge 3 Monday, February 6, 1995 State P ress U.S., China fire first shots in trade w ar U.S. demands crackdown on intellectual property piracy WASHINGTON (AP) — The warning shots have been fired in the U.S.-China trade war, but both sides are leaving room for a truce before real damage is dorié to One of the world’s most important trade and political relationships. The United States, exasperated by China’s failure to crack down on intellectual property theft, on Saturday announced 100 percent tariffs on $1.08 billion worth of Chinese products. China promptly retaliated, complaining its national dignity had been violated. It placed 100 percent tariffs on a variety of U.S products, including video games, compact discs, cigarettes and alcohol. U.S. Trade Representative Mickey Kantor’s pronouncement that “we are drawing the line here today” on trade came just three days after an annual State Department report faulting China as an authoritarian state that had failed to improve its record of ‘‘widespread and welUdocumented human rights abuses.” Both were admissions that President Clinton’s decision last spring to remove the link between trading privileges and human rights had done little to promote improvements in either area. China's trade surplus with the United States was nearly $30 billion last year, second only to Japan and growing rapidly. The trade dispute is serious. It could, for example, result in China turning to Europe for billions of dollars worth of future aircraft purchases. But both sides are likely to work hard to keep it within man­ ageable limits. " 'v ; _ “I was surprised by the Chinese reaction; I thought it would be much worse than it is," said Robert Demberger, professor of economics at the University of Michigan's Center for Chinese Studies. “Who cares if they slap tariffs on U.S. cigarettes?" he asked. " The restrained nature of the Chinese reaction indicates they want this resolved.” Both countries put off the effective date of the tariff increas­ es until Feb. 26, providing a three-week grace period. Only last week, Kantor said the tariffs would go into effect “just a few days” after Feb. 4. F.ven as he announced the trade sanctions Saturday. Kantor praised the Chinese for making some progress in enforcing a 1992 agreement on copyright and trademark protection. “China A Chinese man examines a pirated compact disc he is about to buy, while the seller keeps an eye Put for police on the streets of Beijing. Widespread piracy in China led the United States to slap huge tariffs on a variety of Chinese imports, triggering a trade war between the two nations. has begun to make important changes in its enforcertient sys­ tem. It has launched nationwide raids -— but so far only against retailers and, frankly, the little guys,” he said. The higher tariffs directly affect only about 5 percent of total bilateral trade, which reached $46 billion last year. With senior leader Deng Xiaoping near death and no longer exercising control, China watchers question whether top offi­ cials in Beijing have the political .will to crack down on copy­ right piracy without a strong shove from Washington. The reported involvement of the army and some govem- ment officials in pirating operations has also stymied crack­ down efforts. “The Chinese are well aware that a trade war is not what they want to happen. They need the markets, the technology, the capital,” said Nathaniel Thayer, Asian studies director at Johns Hopkins’ Nitze School of Advanced International Studies. But he said Beijing’s leaders “have a history of letting the economy take care of itself,” and so far they have not been willing or able to tackle the intellectual property rights issue. Flood o f Chechen refugees overwhelming neighbors N A /.R A N . R ussia (A P) — R efugees fleeing the war in Chechnya have caused a near crisis in neighboring Ingushetia, where the population has sw elled by half, and m ore arrived Sunday in battered buses, packed cars and canvas-covered trucks. About 10,000 people have been arriving in this Caucasus republic from Chechnya each week since Russian troops invaded the republic on Dec. 11 to suppress its claim to ’ independence. Some refugees have gone on to neigh­ boring N orth O ssetia. D agestan or else­ where in Russia. But m ost stay in tin y In g u sh e tia , cram m ed in to e m erg en cy h o u sin g o r squeezed into private homes and putting tremendous new strains on the already bat­ tered economy. T h ere are now m ore than 140,000 re fu g e e s, the m a jo rity o f them from Chechnya, in addition to the 260,000 per­ manent residents. With an area of roughly 2,400 square m iles, Ingushetia is only a capital for weeks with his wife and six-yearthird the size of Chechnya — slightly larger old son before heading to the Ingush capital of Nazran. than the state of Delaware. Entering the sixth week of their siege of “Soon there may be a deficit of food, beds and m ed icin e h e re ,” said N azir the capital, Russian forces pounded two Doskiycv, head of the Ingush immigration n eig h b o rh o o d s in so u th ern G rozny on office. “If the refugees stay until summer, Sunday, Ingush officials said. th e re ? m ay ^ - ' Moscow’s a lso be an “Let Yeltsin choke on his humanitarian tro o p s also epidemic.” ' la u n ch ed an T h e aid. H e’s a maniac, a bloodthirsty bas-. a ttack w ith refugees con­ armored vehitin u ed to tard.” — M u ra t G a z d iy e v , c les S unday arrive Sunday C h e c h e n re fu g e e m o rn in g on am id reports ----- ——--- -— ------ ------—— the village of of heavy new —— • ■■—-———“ — — shelling in Grozny and a Russian ground Yermolovka, 9 miles southwest of Grozny, according to Russian m ilitary sources in attack on a village west of the capital. “ P eo p le in G ro zn y are d y ing u n d er N azran quoted by the ITA R -Tass news destroyed houses — old women and chil­ agency. In Nazran, several thousand refugees dren are dying o f h u n g er,” said M urat Gazdiyev, 59, who holed up in the besieged occupy railroad cars on sidings, a school Arizona border guard beefed up by Clinton Storm puts Northeast in deep freeze GRAY, Maine (AP) - Nearly 2 feet of snow that fell across the Northeast in the region’s first major winter storm froze solid Sunday as arctic winds kicked up and temperatures plum­ meted. The snow that dum ped half a foot to 21 inches from Kentucky to Maine on Saturday tapered off in most of the region, but was followed by numbing cold and winds gusting up to 50 mph. In northern New York, the wind chill factor fell to 44 below in Massena and 40 below in Plattsburgh. In Maine, winds of up to 30 mph made it feel like minas 19 degrees in Portland and minus 17 in Presque Isle. “For most people, it was just a good, old-fashioned winter storm,” Jim Mansfield of the National Weather Service in Gray, Maine, said Sunday. At least six traffic deaths two each in Kentucky and New Jersey and one each in Massachusetts and New Hampshire —-. were blamed on the weather Saturday. Power was temporarily knocked out to thousands across the region. Airports were reopened and most roads were clear Sunday, although whiteouts caused by blowing snow were reported along some sections of the New York State Thruway near Syracuse. Last year’s severe winter made snow blowers a hot com­ modity. But with this year’s mild weather, most were gathering dust in the garage —*until now. “I was hoping I’d never have to use it,” Robert Wheeler said as he cleared snow from the driveway of his home in Johnson City, N.Y. Winds buffeted West Virginia on Sunday, bringing the mercuiy down to minus 22 in Wheeling, minus 21 in Morgantown and minus 3 ) in Martinsburg. “It’s cold and it’s windy and we’ve got big, big snow here,” said Gary Berti of Davis, W.Va.. “There’s powder everywhere. It’s hard to tell how much is here because it’s blowing so fast” Although major roads were cleared by Sunday, people who didn’t shovel during the storm were likely to be stuck with the icy snow for the rest of die week, with temperatures around 0 expected Monday. and other emergency housing. Each refugee is given free housing, blan­ kets, some food and $5 by the Russian gov-, emment — the very force that bombed them out of their homes. U ltim ately , the C h ech en s’ pow erful attachm ent to their ancestral hom eland, even if it lies in ruins, may prevent the refugee crisis from bringing a long-term dis­ aster to Ingushetia and neighboring regions. But first the war must end. Gazdiyev, holding his little boy’s hand as they w alk ed dow n a N azran street, seemed tom between rage and homesick­ ness. “Let Yeltsin choke on his humanitarian aid,” he said. “He’s a maniac, a bloodthirsty bastard.” “We must go back as soon as possible — it’s our home,” he continued. “I will dig in the ground, and make a hut for my family back in Grozny if I have to.” I WASHINGTON (AP) — President .Clinton ordered 62 border patrol agents to Arizona on Sunday to combat an increase in illegal border crossings that the White House attributed partly td the peso’s collapse. Press Secretary Mike ^feCurry said in a written state­ ment the agents will repeat to work Tuesday, increasing (he border forces at Nogales, Ariz.,by 17p®cent He said the administration had been training 100 new patrol agents for Arizona in anticipation o f increased crossings there, stemming from border crack downs in California and Texas. “But illegal crossings increased so dramatically in January in the wake of the peso devaluation that more agents are needed now,” McCurry said The 60 agents are being reassigned from operations on die Canadian border and from interior stations in Arizona auad other parts o f the country. Opinion "1 j State P ress Monday, February 6, 1995 P age 4 State P ress JDditorial Slave galley ASU Picture this: rows o f emaciated, sweaty faculty m em bers chained to oars, uiged on by the brutal, rhythmic throbbing drum beats above. “Teach!” Boom! ‘Teach!” Boom! ‘Teach!” W elcome to the Legislature’s dream for higher education. Crack! “N o talking! Teach!” And the dream m ay m ove another step toward reality — that is, if all full-tim e professors are required to teach at least nine credit hours. It’s the latest attem pt by a g roup o f people w ho know nothing about education to regulate those that do. And, as usual, if the boneheads at the C apitol building said to them selves, “Hey! Let’s find a way to m ake sure that the m ost tal­ ented faculty and graduate students in the nation d on’t com e to state universities to teach,” they couldn’t have com e up with a better plan. Faculty m em bers are, a s a rale, busy. First, there’s the standard w ork involved in-teaching. Add on grading. D on’t forget the various depart­ m e n ta l, c o lle g e a n d u n iv e rs ity c o m m itte e s. T here’s also graduate and honor student advise­ m e n t, s p e c ia l g r a d u a te c la s s e s (lik e th e 5 9 0 /6 9 0 /7 9 0 s e rie s ) a n d th e s is /d is s e rta tio n advisem ent Add paperwork, correspondence and “extra weak” which appears out o f nowhere. B ut y o u ’re not done yet — th ere’s also the ten u re re q u ire m e n ts to m eet, w h ich in v o lv e steady dedicated research and publication by a professor. A nd o f course, to fund that research schedule you have to apply far outside funding from grants, endowments and programs. Yeah, professors are self-centered an d lazy, aren’t they? As students, administrators or legislators, w e m ay not see that, because it’s not a glam orous jo b . We d o n ’t see parades, festivals, books o r m e d ia a tte n tio n fo c u s e d o n p r o fe s s o rs . (In Phoenix, that’s reserved for basketball players.) O h, but the bill doesn’t stop there. Part o f the bill’s purposes is to keep teaching assistants out o f the classroom — after all, doesn’t every stu­ dent deserve time from a real, live professor? T h a t is about as far-sig h ted a view a s yo u could expect out o f a legislate»'. Q uick lesson: If you don’t allow graduate stu­ dents to teach, then where do new teachers learn how to teach? Cloning technology is still in its infancy, you know. Even better, w hen the legislators w ho spon-. sored the bill thought it up, did they stop to think how A SU w ould support g rad u ate students if they aren’t allowed teaching assistantships? L et’s face it — A SU isn ’t that attractive in term s o f graduate salaries at th e m om ent, and booting them out o f the classroom will m ake it even moré likely that the average grad w ill say, “Hi ho, Harvard! A nd away!” So, the end result to both aspects o f the plan is to sabotage A SU ’s academic reputation as m uch as possible. Suffice it to say at d as point that if perhaps the le g isla to rs actu ally sp e n t a little tim e o n th e U niversity cam pus, they m ight not sound halfcocked when they bring up little plans like this. s STATE PRESS TAFF They have nothing: a reoccurring theme in too many societies today • .. .. While reading the newspaper one day, I happened to read some IM stu ff ab o u t new u p risin g s in I M exico. The article tried to be ZOTKIE impartial and take no sides, but I Guest Columnist could tell that there was a slight sway tow ard the governm ent’s point of view. I was dismayed at seeing this. First, let’s look at the rebellion in the Mexican state of Chiapas. The Native Americans are willing to fight and die because they truly have nothing. They have no education, medicine or anything else. Most importantly', violence is the way they can make themselves heard. Their say in govern­ ment has almost no effect at all. They are forced to scratch out a living as, for lack of a better word, slaves. Their par­ ents lived the same lives that they do, and their children will be forced to live in the same manner. All of the means of production - land, money, education and technology - is controlled by rich people who got their wealth from one of two places: either an inheritance or from the backs of oth­ ers. These people have no way to break the cycle of pover­ ty, except through violence. This is also the reason why Communists were able to take over all of mainland China in 1949. Chiang Kai-Shek, even with all of his technology and monetary support from the Allied powers, couldn’t crush a communist rebellion that was made up of peasants. The mainstay of the commu­ nist forces at that time in China was the foot soldier with a rifle. Normally, this would have been all that Chiang had. But Mao Tse Tung had the support of the people — peas­ ants — that in the end would make him victorious. The Palestinians are another good example. The Israelis have all o f the wealth, and they are not about to let the Palestinians have any. Israel, as I have been told by those who have been there, is a beautiful country. The desalina­ tion plants provide a lot of the water needed for cities. But the areas where the Palestinians live is terrible. The only source of income for them is meager jobs that pay very lit­ tle. Just like the poor residents o f the Chiapas state in Mexico, there is very little education, medicine and other technology available for them. That is why there are so many suicide bombings. These people have nothing. Some people might tell you that the teachings o f the l t falirrÍAn raollv VlOC nntVltnCT fn ilft Koran are4,^toLln.v.n blame.D iBut religion really has nothing to do with the situation. On one side, there is a group of people who have nothing. On the other side, one group has every­ thing. If you look at pictures of Jews living in some of the many new settlements in the occupied West Bank, what you see are nice homes, surrounded by underdeveloped areas where the Palestinians live. There’s also the crisis in Ireland with the IRA. The vast m ajority o f members inthis organization have nothing. Their situation is almost identical to the other areas with uprisings. For centuries, their ancestors lived in total pover­ ty. Their say in government was minimal at best. When they wanted to see what the “good life” was. all they had to do was look at the English. They had everything that the Irish could possibly want. Finally, there’s the case of John and Lorena Bobbitt. John first went to military court for spousal abuse directed at Lorena. Later, he was back in court, this time civilian, for spousal abuse again directed at Lorena. A fter they divorced, John was back in court again several times for dom estic problem s arising from relations with his new female friends. When John first began to abuse Lorena, he should have realized that women are not inanimate objects that you can abuse over and over again without consequences. Although the incident with the knife brings a shiver down the spines of most men, John had it coming. I don’t know whether or not Lorena had planned out her actions, but the worst thing that could happen to Lorena is that she would be sent to prison, a place where John couldn’t get to her. John Wayne Bobbitt, the rich land owners of Chiapas, the Israelis and the rest have to realize that you can’t keep on abusing people over and over again without them retali­ ating. The United Nations as well as the United States can’t make this violence stop. I don’t know of any quick solu­ tions to any of these problems, but when you hear about a new uprising or other disturbances, take a good long look at the cast of characters and look for the real aggressor. Also try to learn from them so that a similar large scale uprising doesn’t happen in this country. Jim Zotkie is a senior journalism major. - JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor ...... ..Night Editor NICHOLAS BACON ... .........Night Editor KRIS FRIDRICH.......... ...........City Editor GARIN GROFF............ ..Asst. City Editor GREG ZEMEIDA......... .........News Editor DAVID LASPALUTO., ..Opinion Editor A. MARJORY KAMINSKI. JIM POULIN..................................... ...........Photo Editor MARK KRAM ER ..........,:.,:.....;.,i.,,.Asst, Photo Editor JEREMY ST E IN ............................... Sporn. Editor DAN MILLER.......................................... Asst. Sports Editor KEN COLLINS................ .....Magazine Editor ANNA U U N iC H ........................ ...... Asm. Magazine Editor REPO R TER S: Mika Akikuni, Christina Bailey, Kennes Boiig. Lisa Cary, Lprrie Cohen, Dane D’Antuono, Dawn DeChristina, Patty King, Todd Kelly, Betty Mihalopoulos, A ngela M u ll, D ave P ro ffitt, N. S co tt T rim b le , Kim Watson. SPO R TS R EPO R TE R S: Lee Newman, Damian Shaw, Heather Snow. COPY ED ITORS: Kim Herman, Elizabeth MontalbanO, Lynn Readicker. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : D ianne R. B artsch, Sam antha Feldman, Lance D. Terry. ED ITO RIA L W RITER: James Frusetta. C O L U M N IS T S : B rian A nderson. Tim B axter. Dan Blanco, Tori Evans, James Frusetta, Tina Holder, Barry K elley, David Luna, D iana Lopez. Jim M ahin, D elia Maldonado, Greg Nigh. C A R T O O N ISTS: Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. PR O D U CTIO N : Marc Aaron, Aaron Bratcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth French, Adrianna G arcia, Jodi G oldblatt, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : E m ily B erger, Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Shane Sijrn, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned-editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam peri­ ods, a t M atthew s C en te r, R oom 15, A rizo n a S ta te University, Tempe, Aria. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Inform ation.................9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N ew sro o m .............. .9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M agazin e...................9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 A d vertisin g............ ..9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 C la ssified s................... 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 Opinion Monday, February 6, 1995 State P ress A n d erso n w as rig h t, L atam w as w ro n g D ear Mr. Làtam, I read your letter concerning Brian A n d e rso n ’s take on crim e in A m erica- I believe that Anderson had you in mind when he wrote his article and identified the problems with our correctional system and a healthy chunk of American society. Unfortunately, if you’re not part of the solution, then you’re unwittingly part o f the problem. Moreover, if you can’t think yourself straight enough to see even a little bit of the light in your eyes, then I’m not the Answerman. I can only help those who are willing to help themselves. Too many others are making an effort. As for Anderson not offering to feed you solutions with his airplane pen, I suggest that it is your expectation of being fed that leaves you hungry. Personally, I find the air refresh­ ing in the smoke-free section. Let a few people come up with their own answers for a change. We do have the right to be uninformed! Ignorance can be bliss, but only if you’re will­ ing to acknowledge and embrace it. With few exceptions, I d o n 't want an answ er to a question that I d on’t have. Conversely, beware of the person offering you the solutions to your questions on a silver platter. Even bad love starts with just one kiss. A mind is a terrible thing to waste, but worse is letting some over. Real hunters feed off of their own kills! To conclude, at what point is it detrimental to society, and unfair to those helping to heal past wounds, to not acknowl­ edge all that society has created, and thus, is responsible for? Believing that A m erica’s crime situation is going in the wrong direction fast, at what point do we do something other than what has been done for too long already? If you mow off the top of a weed, it only grows back. Adding insult, you have no one else to blame but yourself. Unless, of course, you’ve managed to convincingly blame someone else. They then will become the unforgiven. The finger pointing may read well on paper, but it will do nothing for our descendants on the near side of twenty-one. As an aside, could the crime industry brakes be applied, to the extent that it would make a difference, without someone — eventually becoming many — screaming about their job? R etters to the (E d ito r ED U -Internet IC1B0@ASUVM.INRE.ASU E -m a il ICJBO@ASUACAD M ailing A ddress I S tate Press Box 871502 Arizona S ta te Uhivers.ity te m p e , AZ 85287-1502 W hen is Elvis com ing to study on A SU campus? H ello.... is there a journalist in the house? Am I the only person who picked up today’s State Press and wondered why the hell you wasted two-thirds of the front page on some bum who plays guitar in front o f the MU? Your news judgment is priceless. I can’t wait to see what you’ve got cooked up for Monday’s lead. “Elvis Sighting In Neeb Hall,” perhaps? How about “Three-Headed Aliens Invade S tu d en t R ec C en ter, T ake O ver R acq u etb all Courts”? M ikeFim ea Graduate Student History u o ta B le s . . . Q: /ftrickpcop/c con&l'/Ue/>more ofttiri* mootÿ, tkco poor-people, uon/dit te tte r oftft. Xrr- Jim M ahin, columnist Page 5 Struggle lives on through outside world This is in response to Mitch P. Clanahan’s article on Feb. 1. What were you thinking when you wrote this article? You are definitely entitled to your own opinion, but not when you imply that what we see everyday is made up. Your solution for the end of prejudice is all fine and dandy, but wake up, will you? Racism is a part of everyday life and it will never completely end because there is always going to be some ignorant person who keeps it alive. We (African Americans and other minorities) don’t need your sympathy. You will never, in a million years, understand the struggle our ancestors grappled with and the fight we are still undergoing today. So take your sympathy and turn it into something productive, like learning our history and explaining it to some of your friends. Your insinuation that “Whites Only” signs exist in our heads is completely unfounded. Can I break it down for you really quickly? Am I perchance imagining the stares I get when I walk into a department store that is considered “ritzy” and the saleslady is permanently glued to my hip? Or maybe I dreamed it when I walked into a fancy jewelry store to get my mother a ring and was completely ignored. The only way I got the man’s attention was by jumping up and down yelling, “Excuse m e?’ And then he had the nerve to tell me he would be right there but came five minutes later. Oh, and here’s the kicker: Do you think I have a chance of becoming a part of your “exclusive” country club? I didn’t think so! You want to know who we are “so-called” fighting? The media, society ... must 1 go on? If you’re still not convinced, I invite you to leam for yourself by coming to one of our meet­ ings about our history at Umoja (located in Ocotillo Hall, C2 and D3 wings). Try it — you just might leam something new! Jennafah Mehu Sophomore English R epublican hate-language follow s a pattern I ’m w riting because I ’ve become very, very frightened Gerry Anderson and concerned with the plethora Graduate student of Republican racist, sexist and Second year law hate language that has spilled from the mouths of GOP elected officials — particularly GOP leaders — during the past few months. The following is a list — a pattern — of GOP elected Jed Smock uses a strategy which attracts and baits stu­ officials speaking what appears dents into his world by using deliberate confrontational and to have becom e standard abrasive methods. Thèse are a part o f scheme to provoke Republican argot: • Oct. 1994, GOP Governor students into listening to and arguing with him. What do Fife Sym ington’s aide, Jay y o u th in k th e K ing Jam es B ib le in h an d and the Heilmann, uses the word “queer” Christopher Columbus tie around his neck are all about? 1. King James Bible - sign of an ignorant fundamental­ in talking with reporters. The Republican governor refuses to ist. admonish Heilmann, and later 'OF Course its k HoNEt MooN. Ho^— ' 2. C olum bus necktie - sign of a politically incorrect promotes him to a higher paying It’s all the more ominous because, in the case of Rep. Armey bigot. . : :: position Smock knows that these two items are regarded by most using the word ‘Tag,” he did s o a s a slip of the tongue. Any psy­ • Nov. 1994, GOP Senator Jesse Helms, Chairman of the college students as bigoted and narrow-minded. Yes, these Senate Foreign Relations Committee, tells reporters that the chologist or psychiatrist would advise that a slip of the tongue is a items are used by Smock to deliberately irritate and suck President ought to have a bodyguard with him when he visits true revelation of what one is feeling inter-personally. I’m very afraid for the future of minority groups in this coun­ students into a confrontation with him. Most evangelists, if North Carolina, and that military personnel stationed in that state try and for those expressing opposing views to the Republican they just simply preach directly without debate and argu­ pose a physical threat to their commander-in-chief. mentation, do not attract large audiences here at ASU. • Dec. 1994, GOP Senator-elect Jon Kyi of Arizona defends Party. If one is a gay person or a woman or a black or just some­ Paul Marco, another evangelist at ASU, generally Uses a Senator Helms’ comments by saying, “He did not intend to be one with an opposing viewpoint, the Republican Party appears to be steadfast in crushing that person. I immediately have visions straight, non-argumentative and simple approach, but no taken literally.” • Jan. 1995, Ms. Kathleen Gingrich, mother of GOP Rep. of brown boots hard-stomping against the pavement in gooselarge crowds stand around him or dialogue with him. But Newt Gingrich, discloses on national television that her son steps. God help us. Smock is smart and knows that every move he makes is Long ago, Pastor Martin Niemoller reflected on the persecu­ rehearsed by himself and calculated to elicit maximum irri­ described Ms. Clinton as “a bitch.” tion of minority groups: • Jaa 1995, GOP Rep. Gerald Soloman of New York, chair­ tation and argumentation from ASU students. This is exact­ “In Germany, they first came for the communists, and I didn’t man of the House Rules Committee, hangs a huge portrait of a ly what he wants. speak up because I wasn’t a communist. They then came for the 1950s-era racist and outspoken segregationist in the House Rules Smock will deliberately insult you so that you will insult Jews, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. They then him and hate him — but at least Smock now has y our, Committee meeting room. • Jan. 1995, GOP Rep. Robert Doman of California goes on came for the trade unionists, and I didn’t speak up because I attention and you have now become his audience. Student national television and accuses the President of “giving aid and wasn’t a trade unionist They then came for the Catholics, and I insults and student complaints against him are exactly what comfort to the enemy—” a criminal act of treason if it were didn’t speak up because I was a Protestant They then came for Smock needs because he can show his donors through pho­ m e— but by that time no one was left to speak up.” true— during the Vietnam debacle. tography that many students came out to hear his message, • Jan. 1995, GOP Rep. Newt Gingrich tells reporters that David W.C. Mindrup and thereby Smock can justify their donations to him. women should not serve in combat because, after being in a fox­ Senior So if you spend your time heckling Smock, you yourself hole for “30 days, they get infections.” Communications are playing his game and are falling right into his trap. • Jan. 1995, GOP Rep. Armey — the second highest ranking Smock’s ministry feeds on and off your irritation and con­ GOP leader in the House— calls Rep. Barney Rank a ‘Tag.” frontational attitude toward him. The more you confront • Jan. 1995, GOP-presidential hopeful, Pat Buchanan, in Smock the more you support him, because this is exactly Arizona for the straw vote meeting, evoked the memory of for­ what Smock needs to justify to his donors their support for m a' Georgia governor and segregationist, Lester Maddox. These are words and examples of hatred, racism, bigotry and his preaching ministry. The Suite Presi welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All lettere musi be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages If you want Smock to go away, ignore him and he will. extremism. They give a resonant voice to a hidden agenda of dis­ tu be eligible for publication. P le a » include your full name, class standing, mtyor (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only But if you keep trying to argue with or shame him, this is crimination against gay people, against women, against blacks— signed letters wiB be considered for publication. Requests for anonymity will against anyone who does not support the Republican party. exactly what Smock wants and he will come back for more. be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the This is immeasurably portentous because it is the very same opinion page editor for factual errors and print space availability. Letters con| tabling obvious factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought pattern that the national socialist party in 1933 Germany used Clay Javurek jp n o n «m int photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement o f the a d d re s s e d » S tm t Press, B tw & 7i502, Arizona-State Staff before the genocide against gays, gypsies, communists and Jews Ite Septette. '.■■ Engineering began. Ignore Jed, he’ll go away; taunt him, hç’ll never leave letters to thè editor State P ress Monday, February 6, 1995 P age 6 Steinern, fem in ist leader, talks at G am m age B y K a th leen G ilbert D eC hristina State P ress and D awn Gloria Steinem, controversial lead­ er of today's feminist movement, will speak on campus Tuesday . Steinem is scheduled to speak at G am m age A u d ito riu m at 7 p.m . T uesday as p art o f the A ssociated Students of ASU Lecture Series and YWCA Writer’s Voice program. “ She g av e a lo t m o re w om en courage to speak up about it,”' said Patrick Baker, activities vice president for ASASU, referring to S teinem ’s leadership in the m odern w om en’s movement.. Y ■ Besides Steinem 's involvement in feminist issues, she is also interested in gender roles and child abuse as roots o f violence in the cultures o f indigenous people and in organizing for peace and justice across national boundaries. Steinem, an activist and writer who has striven for total equality between the sexes, is a consulting editor for Ms. magazine, the international femi­ nist publication that she co-founded in 1972. She is also president of Voters for Choice and o f the Ms. Foundation for Women, a multi-racial women’s fund that supports grassroots projects. Steinem graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Sm ith C ollege in 1956 after grow ing up mainly in the M idwest, where her unconventional childhood did not include a full year of schooling until she was 12. Som e o f h e r b o oks AHWATUKEE ORAL and MAXILLOFACIAL SURGERY in c lu d e Gregory P. Edmonds D.D.S. O utrageous A cts and E veryday Rebellions, M arilyn: Norma Jeane. and her most recent, Moving Beyond Words. Ahwatukee Professional Building 10827 South 51st Street, Suite 204 (6 0 2 ) 5 9 8 -3 0 0 6 In March, Steinem will be the sub­ je c t o f the A rts and E ntertainm ent television series Biography, and in the spring, she will be featured in a bio­ graphical book. Parents Magazine has also se le c te d h e r fo r its life tim e achievem ent award o f 1995 for her work in promoting girls’ self-esteem. Tickets are $15 for adults and $7 for students and seniors. They are available at D illards, 678-2222. At least 250 free tickets will be distribut­ ed at the east entrance of Gammage at an ASASU table starting at 6 p.m. Tuesday. IMPLANTS, WISDOM TEETH, TMJ, JAW SURGERY - Twilight Sleep and General Anesthesia available. FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE MBA Later? GMAT now! Recent studies have shown that students still in school score 30-40 points higher on the GMAT than similar testers who have been out o f college for 1 year or more. The time to take the GMAT is NOW! Harvard professor W est to address ‘m atter o f race’ B y B etty St a t e P M ih a l o p o u l o s ress Cornel West, a Harvard professor and author known for his philosophical approach to racial issues, is scheduled to speak on campus at two public lectures Tuesday. - West, the author o f the best seller, /face Matters, a book of essays that addresses issues for African Americans, will speak on “philosophy and the matter of race” at 1 p.m. at the Katzin Concert Hall in the Music Building. At 7 p.m., he will deliver a lecture at Armstrong Hall in the College of Law in honor of A. W ade'Smith, A SU's sociology chair­ man who died last year of cancer. Smith was active in pro­ moting cultural diversity. The speeches are free and open to the public. In Race Matters, West defined the fundamental crisis in black America as one of too much poverty and too little self love. He advocates building bridges between the races rather than focusing on Afrocentrism. “He is one of the most popular public intellectuals who is addressing issues of culture and race that right now are im portant to a lot o f people,“ ’ said A rt C arter, dean o f Student Life. “He looks at issues from a detached point of view and that is a good thing.” Carter said West, who is the grandson of a Baptist min­ ister, speaks from ail emotional as well as an intellectual perspective, and he has been well-received at other univer­ sities. West, 41, graduated from Harvard magna cum laude in 1973 in three years. He received his master’s degree and doctorate from Princeton, and later became a professor of religion and director o f the Afro-American studies pro­ gram, He began teaching in the Harvard Divinity School and the Afro-American studies program last year. Ted Humphrey, dean of ASU’s Honors College, recalled when West was keynote speaker at the first annual meeting o f the National Collegiate Honors Council. “He is a great speaker,” Humphrey said. “Two years ago he addressed about a thousand persons in an extraordinarily meaningful and moving way.” Humphrey said West is one of the most significant and original philosophers today. Sponsoring W est’s visit are the Associated Students of ASU, ASU President L attie C oor’s office, the Honors College and the ASU Department of Human Resources. The Princeton Review offers: v. Expert Instructors V Personal Attention V The Most Current Materials v. Small Classes V Complete Review o f Math & .Gram m ar Skills V Testing Taking Strategies Call THE 967-1480 PRINCETON C J f « « 8 REVIEW jS ja rt P rince to n R eview is n o t a ffilia te d w ith P riiice to n U nive rsity o r GMAC- ARIZONA STATE B u s in e s s OBTAIN YOUR BUSINESS MINOR IN ONE SUMMER! S p e c ia l T w o -W e e k S e s s io n advertising; 3 9 4 Inlrodudionto Advertising-The primary objective of this course ¡s fo provide the student with an understanding of the ADV communication process within the marketing and advertising disciplines. (64924) 8 am-! 2 asqMay 15-26 Daily; 6 pm-8:30 pm May 18 &25^ finance FIN 394 Personal Finance —Topics emphasized include credit use and abuse, buying and financing major assets, selecting appropriate SAMPLE SCHEDULE*: It's simple — just complete 5 courses over the 3 summer sessions. Special Two-Week Session; May 15-26 1 Business Minor Course First Five-Week Summer Session; May 29 -June 30 2 Business Minor Courses Second Five-Week Summer Session; July 3- August 4 2 Business Minor Courses 5 CLASSES s BUSINESS MINOR! *See Complete Course Listing at Right FOR INFORMATION: Visit the Undergraduate Programs Office - BA 123 or Call 965-4227 insurance coverage, investment alternatives, and retirement and estate {Harming. Current news sources used. (67693) 9 am -1 pm Daily and 2-4:30 pm May T9 &26 (also offered during the second session — see below F ir s t F iv e -W e e k S u m m e r S e s s io n econom ics ECN 306 Survey of international Economics—Survey of international trade issues, commercial policy, hade theory, customs unions, and international monetary topics. (57907) 11 am-1230 pm Daily international business studies 1 6 $ 3 0 6 Survey of International Economics ~~ Survey of international trade issues, commercial policy, trade theory, customs unions, and international monetary topics. (65721) 11 am -1230 pm Daily legal and ethical studies LES 394 legal and Ethical Studies — The role of tew as it affects business and citizens hi our society. Case studies relating to die legal principles that govern business consumers, insureds, real estate transactions, investments, employees and estate planning. (68901) 11:30 am IKK) pm (TV Course • See Schedule ter line number. Note; Students taking course at job site should see your corporate contact ter line number) 11:30 am -1:00 pm Daily , _ management MOT 394 Principles of Management for Non-Majors - Strategic, administrative, organizational, and behavioral theories and functions of management contributing to the effective and efficient accomplishment of organizational objectives. (66507) 9:20 am • 10:50 am Da8y. S e c o n d F iv e -W e e k MKT 394 Introduction to Marketing and SeHh refute to business environments. Different « 11 am -12:30 pm Daily S u m m e r S e s s io n marketing Explores dynamic and competitive nature of marketing and personal sefling » they g situations presented by guest leciarers, videos, and lectures. (87318). (Enrollm ent in upper d ivision courses requires the com pletion o f 56 hours and a m inim um 2.0 ASU grade point average.) Page 7 Monday, February 6,1995 State P ress Parking Services moves to University Towers B y T o d d Keily State P ress If you need to purchase a decal for your car or you’d like to make a parking appeal, don’t go to (he parking services office on Apache Boulevard. ASU’s Parking and Transit Service has moved from the southeast com er of cam pus to the U niversity T ow ers at Fifth Street and Forest Avenue. All ser­ vices are expected to be running today after the office moved Friday. The move was necessitated by two things, said Radawna Michelle, Crime P re v e n tio n C o o rd in a to r fo r A SU Department o f Public Safety: a need for m ore space and m aking access to the office easier for students. “It will be an adjustment to go to the new location, but traffic and accessibility w ill m ake it m ore c o n v e n ie n t,” Michelle said. S ta te P ress C lassifieds - w e ’re P R o l ic e epo rt ASU P olice reported th e fo llo w in g in ci­ dents over the weekend: • An ASU employee and a male student were involved in a vehicle/pedestrian acci­ dent at A pache B oulevard and C ollege Avenue. The student was treated by the Tempe Fire Department and transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. • A fem ale student attem pted suicide at M anzanita Hall. She was treated by the Tempe Fire Department and transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. • A woman not affiliated with ASU was contacted at Gammage Auditorium while sleeping in the bushes. She was advised of trespassing and left the area. • A man not affiliated with ASU was con­ tacted at Tempe Center while sleeping. He was advised o f trespassing and left the area. • A man not affiliated with ASU was con­ tacted at Tempe Center while panhandling. • An ASU employee reported that someone damaged a planter at Goldwater Center. • A female employee reported that someone stole an ASU key from her key ring. • Three female students were arrested for being in possession of alcohol. • A male- student was arrested, cited and released for being an underage person in possession of alcohol. • A woman not affiliated with ASU was arrested, Cited and released for assault and third-degree crim inal trespass at 910 S. Terrace Road. • A female employee reported that someone damaged a glass door at Sahuaro Hall. • A male employee reported that someone damaged a window at Mitchell School. • A male student and a man not affiliated with ASU were contacted at the Dash Inn where they were involved in an altercation. The two men were advised of disorderly conduct. • A male student reported that someone stole his keys from the Student Recreation Complex. • One bicycle Was reported stolen, Compiled by State Press reporter Todd Kelly. solutions fro m yo u r branch office ... k in k o s . In d e p e n d e n t steve is en g in e e rin g , Stacey's C a ir e . IE S E M E b I ACURAI CAR SPECIALISTS IN D EP EN D EN T S E R V IC E p re-law , alan's business ad m in istratio n , I l l interests vary, but theyafl « t e f ^ o n ld lk O ^ , •F R E E Estimates •Fair Prices •O n e Day Service on Most Repairs 'C o m p le te Parts Departm ent ■FactoryTrained Technicians V IM uftg P eople W ho K now Use Vaiyolinet Bring this ad into Kinko's and get up to 100 copies at 1/2 the regular price. Offer limited to self-serve copies on standard 8.5x11" paper. One coupon per customer per visit. Not valid with other offers. Offer expires 2/20/95. $ O IL C H A N G E & O IL FILTER 1 4 .9 5 (Includes up to 4 quarts) Check O ur Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services Hem M 10 valley locations including: Tempo • Rural & University 894-1797 Your branch office Scottsdale • Scottsdale Rd. & 1st Ave. 946-0500 Sow Open: A hw atukee • Ray & 48th St. 893-0700 968-5989 1820 E. A P A C H E B LV D . TEM PE TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 954-7923 One-way trips to ASU 3039 E. T H O M A S RD. P H O E N IX Open 24 hours a .day, 7 days a week. Call 1^800-743-COPY for .the Kinko’s' nearest you. JO IN A R IZ O N A 'S FA ST E ST GROW ING CO M PU TER COMPAN Y Insight D irect, Inc. is a 200 m illion dollar direct m arketer o f com puters, hardw are and softw are. T he com pany was founded by Eric Crown (’84 A SU graduate), and his brother, Tim in 1986. B ased in Tempe, Insight now has m ore than 500 em ployees, and becam e a public com pany this year. In order to offer valuable '' on the jo b " experience w e have opened up part-tim e positions to the students o f ASU. We are seeking responsible, m otivated individuals w ho are looking for an "internship" opportunity in a fun, fast paced, professional environm ent. P A R T - T IM E S A L E S / M A R K E T IN G P A R T - T IM E T E C H N IC IA N S R e s p o n s ib ilitie s in c lu d e ta k in g in c o m in g c a lls, d e v e lo p in g r e la tio n s h ip s w ith c u s to m e rs , se ttin g u p a c c o u n ts, c lo s in g sales, a n d a s s is tin g f u ll-tim e s a le s re p re se n ta tiv e s. K n o w le d g e o f h a rd w a re /s o ftw a re o n IB M c o m p a tib le P C 's n e cessary . In te ra c tio n w ith c u s to m e rs o v e r th e p h o n e re q u ire s e x c e lle n t c u s to m e r se rv ic e sk ills. $ 8 .5 0 HOUR GUARANTEED PLUS IN C EN TIVES $ 8 .0 0 - $ 8 .5 0 HOUR DOE PLUS IN C EN TIVES FLEXIBLE EVENING AND W EEKEND HOURS FLEXIBLE M ORNING, EVENING AND W EEKEND HOURS IN TE R N S H IP PO SSIB ILITIES KNOWLEDGE TEST REQUIRED SALES/MARKETING TRAINING TR A IN IN G PROVIDED For more information call Ren Smith, 902-1000 x4007. Apply in person at 1912 W. 4th Street, Tempe, AZ 85281 or fax resume to (602) 902-1157. Please specify which position you are applying for. Mandatory drug testing. EOE m/f/h/v State P ress Monday, February 6,1995 P ag e 8 World news. cartoons. State news. Classified ads. Sports. Coupons. ASU news. C ro s s w o rd p u z z le s . Weekly magazine. Theater ads. Police Report. Comic strips. Opinions. C ryptoquote puzzles. In-depth features. Help wanted ads. Letters to the editor. L ik e th e S tr a n g e r y e t, t h e S p r i n t C o l l e g ia t e V i. F O N C A R D '" fro m S p rin t. B o o t h on campus is giving T h e la te n ig h t M o o n l ig h t away groovy T-shirts just fo r M a d n e s s ® r a t e it o ffe r s is signing up. T h e C o l l e g ia t e certainly'unusual. So unusual, FO NCARD only Sprint offers it. G ab all n ig h t lo n g fr o m 9* A T h is C o l l e g ia t e F o n c a r d is s o e a s y it ’ s w e ir d . 11 p m -6 a m a t ?< a m in u te . M IN U T E RATE, 30 fro m S p r in t. Totally w e ird . C h eck it o u t at th e S print Booth on campus. Sprint. FREE M IN UTES A N D A FREE T-SH IR T? IO O T H . k | G N U f ^ ^ O U R B O O T H ! *IONDAY-FRIDAY, FEB. 6-101 C A D Y HALL, 9 A.M. T O 5 D aily horoscopes. City & county news. S pecial a d ve rtisin g inserts. Daily events schedule. A p a rtm e n t re n ta l ads. Cultural activities. It's free. It’s free. 9, , „unut« applies to domestic calls made between 11 p.m, and 6 am. In addition to the 9*1 minute rate, surcharges win apply to C ollegiate f6 ,NCARD calls. ©I W Sprint Communications Company LP. it's free. It's free. It's free. S tate P ress Page Monday, February 6,1995 S tate P ress 9 ASASU seeks Supreme Court Justice G reat fo o d at gre a t p rice s B u rgers • S teaks ■S a ndw iches Fresh baked goo ds D aily sp e cia ls Senior C itize n d isco u n t By L isa C ary State P ress II0 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. O pen 11am M on ? F ri 8940533 The City o f Scottsdale's Community Services Department is M O W R E C R U IT IN G The Associated Students of ASU is searching for a new Supreme Court justice to replace a justice who graduated in the fall. C hief Justice Don House graduated in December, leaving a vacant place among the five -justice court. ASASU President Alan Frost said he is tak­ ing applicants for the post. He said he would like to appoint a Justice before the ASASU elections later this month are over, because that is when the justices are utilized the most. To apply for a Supreme Court position, an applicant must have attained 45 semester hours at the time of appointment. No past law experience is required. Frost said he has one application so far, and he wants five before he sends his recommen­ dation to the senate. Volunteer Tutors for Jr. High/High School Students “There are five justices that are selected by the president and then arc sent on to the senate ■ for ratification,” Frost said. “But I make the ultimate decision.” Justice Kevin Myer said he and the other three remaining justices will choose among themselves who will fill the position of chief justice. The justices are summoned if there are com plaints arising u n der the ASASU Constitution or bylaws. “It’s the duty of the Supreme Court to settle disputes by interpreting the bylaws and consti­ tution of ASASU,” Myer said. “We help the student government function properly.” The other Supreme Court justices are Kristi Lappe, a second-year law student; and David Kolbe and Corwin Townsend, third-year law students. Myer is a senior philosophy and eco­ nomics major. Last chance to get a higher scare! ALL SUBJECTS Socialize and meet new people Give back to the com m unity Gain experience for your resume TAR G E T E D TR A I N I N G is the most customized, flexible approach to GMAT Study ever. (especially for future teachers) Be a positive role model for young adults Provide academic assistance to local teens Kaplan gives you • l i v e classes • a training library • home study materials • extra-help workshops • software and on-line help sessions Com e to our inform ation b ooth on Tuesday, February 14th, in th e Kaplan will create an individualized study plan that targets your needs. Farm er Building Courtyard for more inform ation. D rop by any tim e b etw een L a s t c la s s b e g in s : S a t u r d a y , F e b r u a r y 1 1 f I am - 2 p m o r call Bill a t 9 9 4 -2 4 8 3 . 3 1 0 S . M ill A ve, * H a y d e n S q u a re Tem pe V 9 6 7 - 2 9 6 7 U ^ v v v v p X get a higher score KAPLAN F R E E o v v p h o e n ix su n s R everse W eave TICKETS Hie authentic heavyweight cotton sweatshirt m C o u r te sy o f C h a m p io n P r o d u c ts 2 pairs of tickets valued at $ 150/pair } >- f mm ÉriÍÉM M M M ÍM láiM ÉHbÉM M M M^:' _ R E G ISTE R T O D A Y a t th e ;c lo th iju g d e p ä r t p e n t i D r a w in g h e ld F e b .1 0 Full athletic cut Oversized cuffs and waistband Coverseaming for extra durability Orange Mall & m MU YOUR Bookstore employees & family members not eligible. CL HEADQUARTERS Computar Commons j 2_ ASU Bookstore HOURS: M on.-Thurs. 8-6 Fri. 8-5 Sat. 10-2 S tate P ress Monday, February 6,1995 P a g e 10 .Jl'-1" Campus polling site becoming reality B y K im W atson State P ress 6820 E. Fifth Ave., Scottsdale ; í t S1Mea. I M en’ s Regular^^ j of M ora Dress Shirts^r^l Not Valid With Discounts ■On^Ha^cf’^ralT! mm One Coupon VML 1i.1BU9U Febdrary T9, '»986 ] PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER | UPRESENT COUPON WITHORDER g •*;*$! CHECK OUT OVER 700 STYLES OF SPORT AND NON-SPORT CAPS - - - - - - t ■ ASU CAP *8 I with any o ther cap purchase. I Certain conditions apply. Exp. 4-30-95 - 7587 • Scottsdale Rd, & M cKellips (In the ABCO Shopping Center) 4’4 7-1300 ' ARIZ0 NAS LARGEST GAP STORE ■■ • CO ■Pk> O ■„) 11 i 1 11 Anderson's Fifth Estate ~ THECOOLJEWEL | Toe Rings ^ 414 S. Mill Ave #121 Ankle B racelet? 1 (behind TheSpaghetti ■ ' Company) j Nose Rings 829-1127 / (Fake Nose Rings) Hoops, Cuffs, Studs a n d Lots o f Single Earrings A n y D ry C le a n in g With Order $10 Or O lh er P er • ■.— ... $5“ Off D.J. SOULMAN •: TO YOUR HEALTH. 3 8 CLEANERS spinnins your favorite dance music at -, PRODUCT MAYBE HAZARDOUS \AG1C TOUCH PRESENTS EVERY TU E S D A Y N IG H T - I n t e n t io n a l u s e o f t h is R obert Curry, president of C lassified Staff Courtcil, sa id th e c la s s if ie d s ta f f s u p p o rts th e id e a . “ T h is enlarges people’s options and encourages student, fac­ ulty and staff participation.” The last two obstacles to overcom e are finding a fa c ility on cam p u s th a t m eets th e e le c tio n s b o ard req u irem en ts and g ettin g ap proval from the Ju stice D epartm ent for changing A SU ’s voting precincts. M itch E tter, m anager o f voter reg istratio n fo r the M aricopa County E lections D epartm ent, said there is no reason this w on’t be approved. “T he Ju s tic e D e p a rtm e n t d e te rm in e s if the new precinct lines w ill dilute the m inority influence,” he said. “The new lines will not be diluting or increasing it significantly to make a difference.” T here are three p re c in c ts around th e U n iv ersity , co m p o sed p rim a rily o f stu d e n ts. T he new p re c in c t lines would allow students in residence halls south of Apache Boulevard and those in C holla Hall to vote on campus. T om R aw les, ch a irm a n o f the M aric o p a C o u n ty Board o f Supervisors, said that conceptually everyone w ants to see the goal rea liz e d . “C h ris ’s g ro u p , the U niversity and I have come to an agreem ent on how to accom plish this. Everybody believes we can overcom e the rem aining obstacles.” Rawles said it is easy for him to support anything that encourages people to vote. “Setting the habit early in college will help estab­ lish a pattern through.their lifetim e,” Rawles said. EASTSIDE PRODUCTIONS . Mon - Fri. 7am - T ritt Sat 8am - 5pm r THECAP CO. YOUR ONE-STOP CAP SHOP ON BfTH ST.. B0 IT EAST OF MILL STATE Press Sports-W c cover good sports, bad sports, rich sports and poor sports. 921-1200 ASU Box 8 7 1 5 0 2 Tem pe, AZ 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 Valentine Love Line Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Beat th e ru sh a n d place y o u r ad n o w - b u t n o t later th a n Friday, February 10 before n o o n P lease p rin t one le tte r p e r box, leave a b lank box betw een w ords. O nfy$l>75 >r 3 fines, $1 each adefitionaf fine* Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. The lia­ bility of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but a credit will be held on account. Q Cash Ö Check J* T | $ 1 .7 5 for 3 lines or less. $1 each additional line. Add a bold headline for th e cost of 2 lines. Please Include Student ID# or s License # . ■ BaaeRate.■$ Bank Card Number Nam e o n C ard Expiration D a® Deadline: F ricte y.F eb ru a iy 10¿Noor> $ ______ _ cR ÉBÜ É $ . 1.75 , I i 1 M-TH 10-7 F-S 10-10 SON 12-0 g ta rt Kou r 3 ove s ^)afentine s w ith a g tate 1 19 30 20 36 35 31 32 ■f 39 38 ■ 8 14 15 22 M A T T E R 29 Turn aside 30 New , Zealanders 31 “— we all?” 32 Tree houses 36 One of the Bobbsey Twins 22 Moulin Rouge dance 23 Flew 24 “Young­ blood” star 25 “The King and I” setting 27. Whisky holders 1u A1 10 S T E N O S Friday's Answer 5 3 L A P 1 A V A N T A S T S E E IX. E N A D 0 E N T N T H E E N O B A E pD O U B U N C L |P O K E 1* “ DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES —■Here's h o w to w o rk it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation o f the words aré all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 2-6 YFIZ CRYPTOQUOTES X NG OQHZ, YNQB BZOY, YFIZ X N G YFIZ CNQIBYZ BFOFGQYZ .—SQN NQFI XN X NFIBUXD Wm 1 2 5 0 i.A p a c h e .# 1 0 8 Friday's Cryptoquote: LOST TIME WAS LIKE A RU , IN A STOCKING. IT ALWAYS GOT WORSE. - ANN LINDBERGH 61995 by King Features Syndoote, Inc. K JPage_13 Monday, February 6,1995 S tate P ress ...— i S tate P ress — Real n ew s printed on real paper! mÊÊÊÊéÊÊ& ' I HR HNRHBIi l b inherit his family’s fortune, Billy is going back to school back. ¿JL' MMj| MÉMÉI ISfSÏSS» SïSKïSÎ:I -. A'''"'.':-«.'"" a m o ro n :. G> FREE 20 oz. COFFEE WITHTHIS COUPON AT THESE LOCATIONS ONLY: Pick up your State Press at any of these locations: • Dobson & Southern "•■■• University & Hardy • Apache & Price « Terrace & Apache • University & Ash « Rural & lemon • University & McClintock ■ p ■ A dam S a n d k 'r A comedy about an overwhelming underachiever. UNIVERSAL PIClIMfcrs sRHRI M D S .w r a aIAMRADAVISfumAIIAM M R "BILLYMADISOIT B R A IW IiR il JOSH MOIL BRIDGLHEWILSON NORM MacflONALD mH I IM U T RANDY 1 1 1 1 :4 ; RALPHSALS • -4HICHCARY* I Ü HERURYsADAMSANDLL l É S Ë É S S i . ^ S t R lK liN O S ’ I R A K A U N M lR M OPENS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10™ AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU JTUNKYOUFORJHOPPING ATjCJRCmt_ STUDENT HEALTH FACTS Before you g e t sick .. . g e t to know us. P a rtn e rs in H e a lth M edical A ppointm ents W HAT TO D O : • Schedule appointm ents by phone or in person. • Cancel appointm ents by calling 965-WELL one day in advance to avoid charges. • Arrive on tim e so we can process paperwork and m edical charts and take your vital signs before your office visit. • Bring a picture ID. • Parking is limited. Allow adequate tim e to park and walk. • Expect to be here for a t least 1 hour. TESTS A N D TREATMENTS: • • Laboratory and radiology services are available. • G et your Student Health prescription filled a t our pharmacy. •• C om plete all phases o f your treatm ent plan. HOURS: MON.-WED.-FRI. 8-5 : TUES.-THURS. 9-5 INFORMATION LINE: 9 6 5 -3 3 4 6 All s t u d e n t s a r e e l i g i b l e fo r s e r v i c e s . SHOW US YOUR ASU I.D.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL GET A DINNER U V -O S V T h is ye ar w e're doing it again! E very Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), M ike P ulos o f T he S paghetti C om pany w ill g ive you one FREE d in n e r* fo r each d in n e r you orde r! It's o u r 2 -fo r-1 SU ND AY ASU SPEC IAL. A nd it's good fo r th e w hole ye a r a t o u r Tem pe, P hoenix and S cottsdale loca tio n s. A ny day o f th e w eek, fo r lunch o r d in n e r, The S paghetti C om pany is know n fo r a g rea t m eal a t an a ffo rd a ble p rice . B ut th e SU ND AY ASU SPEC IAL m akes o u r alre a d y te rrific p rice s even better! O ur din n e rs inclu d e b fu ll-co u rse m eal w ith a ll th e trim ­ m ings ^ from salad to d essert. Just s o u th o f th e U n iv e rs ity B r id g e •But you MUST have your current student I.D. card o r tee receipt w ith you to take advantage of th is offer. 15% gratuity added to a ll discounted checks (except senior citizen discounts). Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed Filet o f Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Marsala, Veal Marsala, Three Pasta Opera and orders to go ARE NOT included in the 2-for-1 spécial. OPEN A T 11:00 A M TO T 1:00 P.M. SUNDA YS! ________________ OPEN AT 10 A.M. ON GAME DAYS! I E n j o y o ú j r n i g l j i i i y d y i n k 1s p e c i a l s . | ^ p a g lf c U i ( o n t p a it y F ees m a y a p p ly . ASU Student Health So, d o lla r fo r d o lla r, w hen yo u 're hungry and you need a break, you c a n 't b ea t The S paghetti C om pany! ESPEC IALLY O N SU ND AYS! W ith 2 d inners fo r th e p rice o f 1! RESTAURANT PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE S outh on C entral Ju st P asta M cD ow ell 7373 N. S cottsdale Rd. Ju st N orth o f Indian Bend 257-0380 483-5669 OLD TOWN TEMPE 4 th S C & M ill 966-3848 Comics ’£nCmtÌ#N HeX òIÌ GAP I '/ f GONNA be sm State P ress Monday, February 6,1995 P a g e 14 RUBES ® b y S ta c y H c tn ^ ite A t Ÿ'KNOU H W /MTV IS TEWMG MMT MAFPENEÙ, A/ELL tew EVERYONE TO c/roeus’ to p . ' f r e e their m ines '? / By Leigh Rubin £GA£>! IT 'S EVEN SMALLER TUAN WE THOOCHT! Me Ì) homemK H Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson TIGHT CORNER Doonesbury BOOPSIE, SUES ONLYTHREE. t PONTTHINKA TWO-HOURPRJVE WITHA BAG Om.HEK.HEAP ISSUCHA GOOPIOEA! iM S H iO U V BRING SAM TO SBEME.BO.— I MISS HER. SOMUCH... MAYBE THEHP MAKEAN EXCEPTION fOKHEK. 1 n by Ken Grundy andMalcolm Willett STALIS rjusr 'ES GROWVTME— I PETER, BEINGA JOURNAL­ IST COVERINGTHBO.J. TRIAL IS A PAUNTIN6 TASK, RE­ QUIRING STAMINA, JUP6 MENTANO FINELY HONE? COMMUNICATIONS SKILLS;. BUT YOUKNOW, PETER, THOSE WHOCOVERTHEPRÈGS ALGO SERVE! CASE IN POINT, WA9HINSIONPOSTMEDIAREPORTER-RICK REOFERN, HERBWITHMGNOW..; SOWHAT0 WELL,rrsT0U6H, TTUKB ROCANO. I'M OUT THEREINTHEFIELP, COVER­ ING ME, PAYAFTERBAY, WTTH NO s e lf -respect RICK? \ ATALL-NONE! BUT YOU'RE: NO, ACTUALLY. APRO. YOU I'VEPRETTY GET THE JOB ' MUCHRE­ DONE, RIGHT? FUSEPTO s oorr, / & --- 7==*-------- H i NOMINATIONS N EED ED ! O s c a r. R ecog nition f o r excellence in t h e A c a d e m y o f M o tio n P ic tu re A r t s a n d S cien ces. D is tin g u is h e d T ea c h in g A w a rd . R ec o g n itio n f o r excellence in t h e College o f Liberal A r t s a n d S cie n ce s . S tu den ts. N o m in a te a C LA S e d u c a to r , w ho se in s tru c tio n a l excellence h a s en ric h e d y o u r * college e d u c a tio n , L e t us know . if a f a c u lty m e m b e r m a d e a d iffe re n c e in y o u r a c a d e m ic life, f a k e a fe w m in u te s t o id e n tify a n e d u c a to r w ho exem p lifies th e College c o m m itm e n t t o p ro m o te in s tr u c tio n a l excellence. N o m in a tio n fo r m s a re a v a ila b le a t t h e re c e p tio n d e s k In S o c ia l S c ie n c e s 111, C L A S d e p a r t m e n t o ffic e s , M U In fo rm a tio n Desk, a n d all r e g is t r a r s 's it e s . O r s e n d l e t t e r s o f n o m in a tio n a n d inq uiries th ro u g h e -m a il t o ( a p p e ll@ a s u v m .in re .a s u .e d u ), W ith y o u r help, we c a n reco gn ize o u ts ta n d in g t e a c h e r s a n d p r e s e n t th e m w ith t h e c o v e te d — College o f Liberal A r t e a n d S cie n ces D is tin g u is h e d Teaching A w ard ■ N o m in a tio n s c lo s e M a rc h 9 , 1 9 9 5 . Sports STATE P r e s s - _____________ Monday, February 6 , 1995 ' . __ Pagg_15 S u n D e v il b a sk e tb a ll d e c la w s C ou gars 8 7 -6 0 By D an M iller State P ress Sunday’s basketball game between 16th-ranked ASU and Washington State contained a little bit of everything. Sun Devil forward Ron Riley nailed six three pointers,» which matched his season high. Big man Mario Bennett made four free throws in a row. Freshman Jeremy Veal became a “sophomore.” All that and more added up to an 87-60 ASU romp in front of 9,287 fans at the University Activity Center. “I’m proud of my team. They did a nice job,” ASU Coach Bill Frieder said. “I was very concerned about this game.” Frieder had good reason to sweat the Cougars, They had won three straight over the Sun Devils, were 3-2 against top-25 teams coming into the game and started the week leading the country in field-goal percentage. But surprisingly, it was ASU’s half-court defense that gave the Cougars fits. WSU shot 37.3 percent from the field (22 of 59), which was its lowest shooting percentage of the season. Also, the Sun Devils’ 27-point margin of victory was the largest by any WSU opponents this year. In addition to that, the 60 points by the Cougars were 10 points less than their lowest scoring output of the season. “Our half court defense was really good,” said Frieder, whose team forced 20 Cougar turnovers. "... Janice (his wife) gets on me if we give too many threes up, so we stayed with those shooters pretty good.” The win improves ASU's record to 16-5 overall and 6-3 in the Pac-10. which keeps it tied with Stanford for third place in the conference and one game behind UCLA and UofA. ASU went down 9-2 in the first four minutes, prompting an early time-out. Then Bennett's follow off Riley’s miss with 14:45 left initiated a 15-1 swing that put the Sun Devils up 17-10 at the 1()-minute mark. “Once we got the lead in the middle of the first half, I felt we were in control,” Frieder said. But the Cougars fought back to pull within 32-28 at the half, thanks in part to woeful free throw shooting, by the Sun Devils, who made just 3 of 11 in the first half. After Cougar Isaac Fontaine tied the game at 36 at the 17:14 mark of the second, Riley and Veal keyed an 18-5 ambush that gave ASU a 54-41 lead with 11:05 to play. Veal, a true freshman, turned in a career best 19 points, 3 of 4 from three-point land. T u rn t o B asketball , page 17. Sam antha Feldm an/S tate Press Junior Ron Riley (left) and Washington State's Isaac Fontaine fight for a loose ball as Sun Devil senior Jam es Bacon (00) looks on during the second half of Sunday's game at thé University Activity Center. ASU won 87-60 over the Cougars. ‘Team win improves baseball’s record B y L ee N ewman State P ress M ark K ram ar/S tate Press Sophomore Kaipo Spencer delivers a pitch in the ninth inning of Friday’s 6-3 win over Texas Tech. Spencer recorded the save in that game, and went on to pitch a complete game vic­ tory in Sunday’s 5-2 victory. - ASU’s out-of-this-world play came back to earth this weekend, but it was a short stay. The 13th-ranked ASU baseball team lost its first game of the season when it fell to Texas Tech 10-2 Saturday. However, behind the pitching of Kaipo Spenser and the late inning heroics of Damon Lembi, the Sun Devils rebounded Sunday with a 5-2 win over the Red Raiders Sunday’s win was ASU’s second in three games against Texas Tech, improving its record to 6-1. “T here’s no question about it, this was a team win,” ASU Coach Pat Murphy said. “I love the way the players don’t get rattled. They play big in big situations.” “We had a big crowd Saturday, and we all felt we let them down because we played so terrible,” Lembi, said. “So it felt good to win today. We played real well.” Texas Tech (1-2) was given a two-run lead early in the game, when shortstop Dion Ruecker hit a two-run home run over the center field wall. That would be the only runs Spenser would allow. He pitched the first complete game for any ASU hurler this year, en route to his second win this season. Sunday’s win was coupled with Friday’s out­ ing, when Spenser got the save in ASU’s 6-3 victory. “He (Spenser) did a lot for us this weekend,” Murphy said. “When he throws, he’s just a good prospect, but when he pitches, he’s a dominate force.” “I felt a bit uncomfortable when I started out, but as the game went on I got stronger and stronger,” Spenser said. Ruecker’s blast in the second was matched by ASU’sTravis Flowers, who hit a solo shot in the bottom half of that inning to cut the deficit to 2-1. A pitcher’s duel then ensued until the bottom of the sev­ enth inning, when second baseman Randy Betten’s infield single scored pinch-runner Richy Leon, to knot the game at 2-2. Then, with one out, an intentional walk to third-base­ man Cody McKay loaded the bases for DH Damon Lembi. Lembi, who has struggled so far this season, doubled down the right-field line, clearing the bases and giving ASU a 5-2 lead — a lead that the Sun Devils never relinquished. “I’m really happy for D am on,” M urphy said. “H e’s T urn t o B aseball , page 16. ASU gymnastics captures 1st place B y J eremy Stein State P ress The ASU women’s gymnastics team turned up the heat Friday night, posting a season-high 191.825 to capture first place in the Southw est Cup at the U niversity A ctivity Center. The 13th-ranked Sun Devils, whose previous season high Was 191.(M)O, easily outscored No. 12 Illinois State (188.650) and Iowa State (187.100) to win their sixth con­ secutive Southwest Cup title. “We still have work to do. We’re still inconsistent in a few areas, (but) it was much better overall,” senior co-captain Danna Lister said of ASU’s performance. “Maybe the score was only .825 better, but our attitude, team unity and everything else was much better.” "Our scores were a little bit higher. We want them to be higher yet, but we need to just take it one meet at a time,” assistant coach Tracy Moser said. Led by Lister and freshman Meagan Wright, ASU took an early lead on its way to winning every event, a feat the team had not accomplished all season. Wright, who graduated in December from W estwood High School in Mesa, topped all gymnasts with a 39.150 all-around score. Her score was ASU’s highest since Tina Brinkman set an ASU record with a 39.475 against UofA last year. Wright finished in the top three in every event, taking first on bars (9.800) and floor (9.800), second on beam (9.825) and third on vault (9.725). “(She did a) great job. She does a good job competing and has a lot of fun out there,” Moser said of Wright. “She has real strong skills.” “I am happy. I’m glad I hit all my events,” Wright said. “Hopefully I can do that in every meet.” The Southwest Cup was an extra special meet for Lister. The Tulsa, Okla., native competed all-around for the first time since her senior year in high school. Since becoming a Sun Devil in 1992, Lister had competed in every event but vault, until Friday night. While her first collegiate vault was not picture perfect (she scored only an 8.85), L ister was pleased with her showing. “I vaulted for the first time in four years, so that was a major accomplishment for me,” Lister said. Although her vault perform ance may have been the biggest for her personally, Lister’s best performance for the team came on beam. Lister came up just short of collecting her fifth perfect 10 on that •event, scoring a 9.950. The Sun Devils appear to be gaining momentum at just the right time. Seven of ASU’s final eight opponents are currently ranked in the coachs’ top 20 poll, including No. 4 Alabama on Feb. 18 and No. 5 Oregon State, which is the Sun Devils’ next home meet on Feb. 24. Next up for ASU is the UCLA Invitational on Feb. 11, where it will face No. 20 UCLA and No. 11 Cal-Slate. D ianne R. B a rtsch/S ta te Press Freshman Meagan W right vaults during the first rotation of th e Southw est Cup Friday night a t the U niversity A ctivity Center. ASU won the meet with a score of 191.825. S tate P ress Monday, February 6,1995 Blowout builds confidence for ASU wrestlers B y D amian S haw State P ress Jim Poulln/State Press ASU Junior Steve St. John throws New Mexico'? Sal Grimalbi to the mat during Saturday's meet at the University Activity Center. SL John outscored Grimalbi 22-7 in his match termination. Going into Saturday’s wrestling meet w ith A SU and P h o en ix C o lle g e , New M exico C oach Bill D otson said, “W e’ll d e fin ite ly have o u r b ack s to the w all against Arizona State. They have thè type of program we’d like to have here.” This was an understatement to say the least, The Sun Devils went on to rout die Lobos 42-0. ASU C oach Lee Roy Sm ith fe lt the blowout built confidence for thè team on an individual level.. “I was happy for the individuals that gained confidence with these matches. We were able to get a lead and build on it, and that’s important” said Smith. The Devils were led by Steve St. John, who outscored his opponent 22-7 on his way to a match termination. Also scoring big for ASU were Aaron Sim pson, who pinned UNM ’s Kevin Ruth, and Markus Mollica, who scored a major decision over Axel Siverts of New M exico and pinned Phoenix College’s Tony Sandoval. Mollica solidified his No. 1 ranking irt the n atio n last M onday, w hen he beat defending national champion Mark Branch from Oklahoma State 3-2 at the National W restling Coaches A ssociation A ll-Star Classic in North Carolina. Coming into his. matches against UNM and PC, Mollica felt he might have a little bit o f a letdown. “I wasn’t as much up for it. I was trying to stay focused, but it was hard,” Mollica said. And as for pinning his opponent? “No biggie.” The 15-1 Mollica has been winning his , matches by an average score of 11.6 to 4.6,; and with last week’s win, he has extended his record against Branch to 3-0. Adding to the blowout was sophomore Danny Felix, who extended his record to 17-2, the best on the ASU wrestling squad. It was the fifth win in a row for Felix, who has recently moved up in the national rank­ ings from seventh to fourth, according to Amateur Wrestling News rankings. The closest and most exciting match of the night was an overtime duel between ASU sophomore Jason McCloud and junior Matt Deller from UNM.. It was the second over­ time match in as many meets for McCloud, who was beaten by Deller last year. “A w in’s a win any way you can get them,” M cCloud said. “There were some controversial calls leading up to the over­ tim e, o th e rw ise I w ould have w on it straight out. But since he beat me last year, I’m real happy with that match.” ----- »an SSn'w*».«mi. iMlta Kfcxrrn orn'lk Madkess * IH91M TgltMK B a s e b a ll C o n t in u ed from page 15. struggled, but by putting him’ in the three-spot, hopefully it showed that we still have confidence in him.” An aspect of ASU’s game that shined Sunday was its defense, especially up the middle. Bcttcn and shortstop Steve Goodell made spectacular plays again and again throughout the course of the game. Betten saved a run in the second when he ran down a chopper up the middle, and as he continued to run towards left field, threw across his body to just get the runner at first. Then in the eighth. Goodell saved at least one run when he chased down a ball that was deflected off the glove of third-baseman McKay and threw the runner out from deep in the hole between third and short. “We have a real good defense,” Spenser said. “They were busting their ass out there.” , , Next up for the Sun Devils is Tuesday and Wednesday, when they battle Southern Utah at 2:30 p.m. at Packard Stadium. That series is a prelude for this coming weekend, when ASU has its showdown with second-ranked Florida State. That series is also at Packard Stadium Friday, Saturday and Sunday. ■ •« : z H O W T O G E T Y O U R JO LLIE S A T C O L L E G E 24 H O U R S A DAY. Open a tab at a diner. Belgian waffles and cheese fries w ith gravy are delicious, regardless o f th e hour. * V isit a local court of law. Plenty o f seating, unique conversation and drama that improves the later it gets. Be the gym night janitor. W o rk out at your leisure and never w ait in line fo r lat pulldowns o r the erg. * G et a Citibank Classic card. For your peace o f mind, operators are on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. W E ’RE L O O K IN G O U T F O R Y O U . " To apply, call I -800-C ITIB A N K . S tate P ress P age 17 Monday, February 6,1995 G olf hopes to 3-peat at nationals Bv H eather Sn o w State P ress For the No. 1 ASU women’s golf team, today’s UCLA Bruin Classic in Temecula, Ca.lif., marks the beginning of what it hopes will be a successful spring season.. “We’re looking to three-peat at nationals this season, which has never been done before,” Coach Linda Vollstedt said. “We’re looking forward to another successful season.” The team had a very impressive fall season by winning three tournaments: the Diet Coke Roadrunner Invitational, the San Jose Spartan Invitational and the Fall Preview. “Two individuals, Heather Bowie and Wendy Ward, per­ formed very well,” Vollstedt said. “At the New Mexico State Tournament, Bowie finished first and Ward finished second, and at the Fall Preview, Ward finished first and Bowie second.” D espite the success o f the team in the fall, Bowie believes the spring will be even more successful. “We had a good fall, but we’ll play better this spring,” Bowie said. “The fall was a tune-up and we all learned a lot, so I think we’ll play better with more experience.” Along with Bowie and Ward, freshman Kellee Booth and Linda Ericsson also competed well during the fall. They both finished in the top 10 in three out of four of their tournaments. Vinny Riviello had her best finish at the San Jose State Tournament, in which she finished fourth. Booth believes the team is ready for the UCLA Bruin Classic after working hard over the long break. ' “The team's looking very good for the spring season and everyone worked hard over the break to get prepared for the season, starting off with the UCLA Bruin Classic,” Booth said. Along with the Bruin Classic, the team also has tourna­ ments in Tucson, Stanford and at home this season. ASU swimming gets mixed results B y H eather Sn o w State P ress While the ASU men’s swim team had a difficult road trip to Texas, the women’s team swept Loyola Maiymount 161-20. “Even though this wasn’t a tough meet, we got a lot out of this weekend,” Coach Tim Hill said. ASU won every event and had good swims from Erin Kilbum, Dorrà Tang and Cynthia Janssen. “I Was most impressed with times from Erin Kilbum, who had a 24:44 in the 50 free. Dorrà Tang, who had her first time under a minute in the 100 back with a 59:98 and Cynthia Janssen, who had a 1:07.07 in the 100 breast and a 5:05.33 in the 500 free,” Hill said. According to Hill this meet was good preparation for both the Pac-10 and national championships. “This meet helped to determine who will swim what at the Pac-10 and national championships,” Hill said. The men lost to SMU on Friday 131-112 and to Texas on Saturday 134-101. “It was a disappointment losing to SMU. We swam well, but they ju s t had the hom e-pool advantage,” Coach Ernie Maglischo said. “On the other hand, we knew we were going to lose to No. 4 Texas, but I believe we beat them individually.” Senior Richard Bera won every event he swam in both meets. He had his season best in the 200 free against SMU,' a 1:38.62, which “improves his ranking to top-25 in the country,” Maglischo said. Senior co-captain Eduardo Piccinini won the 200 fly against SMU and Texas. Mike Melley won the 500 free against Texas with a 4:32.37, and Nolan Schifren won the 200 breast with a 2:06.46 and the 200 free with a 1:22.46 against Texas. “Schifren’s time in the 200 free now ranks him eighth in the country,” said Maglischo. “It was a wire-to-wire contest, and finishing second was more important as long as we had good swims.” said Bera. B a s k e tb a ll C o n t in u ed from page 15. “Shots were just falling,” said Veal, who already had 10 points in the first half. “I thought I played better than a freshman does today.” So did Frieder. ■ “Jeremy Veal became a sophomore in Maui. He became a sophomore on the California and Oregon road trips and now at home he just became a sophomore,” Frieder raved. “He finally played a game at home like we’d hoped that he could play.” After Riley, who finished with 20 points, sank his sixth bomb and exited to a standing ovation with 8:29 left, team­ mate James Bacon made the score 64-46 on a short jumper. T hat was B en n ett’s cue to shine at the line. His four straight foul shots that followed elicited bows from the UAC crowd and teammate Isaac Burton at half court Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding die investigation of an advertisement, jplease contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. Freedom is exemption from the stress of authority. -Ambrose Bierce ANNO UNCE­ MENTS KUNDAL1NI YOGA Club, 2582580. 2 floor-MU. Everyone wel­ come. Tues. 2-3pm. Ck monitorroom#. TH IS IS w here it's a t! C h at, gam es. E -m ail. M ulti Player Doom. Make friends & have fun on the Live-Wire BBS, with com­ puter modem call 277-0025. ANNO UNCE­ MENTS THE MU Gallery Committee is accepting applications and slides for our spring exhibition season. We are interested in both 2-d and 3-d art,, th at is:m o u n te d and would be available between the dates df:April 10 through May 6, ,as opr final exhibit o f the year. We are looking specifically forstudent art,, w hether you are a BFA or BFA student. Please sub­ mit your slides and resume to the third flo o r o f the M em o rial Union, in the MUAB section of the third flo o r, attn.: G allery C om m ittee by M arch TO, F o r more infix; call Jen Cruz 965-6822 WE BUY & SELL USED L E V I'S ! TupQ M iJE A N BUYER C a ll fo r D etails 947-8245 •1 8 1 0 Scottsdale Rd (between Curry & McKellips) 5 minutes from ASU! F R E E I F U N ! HAIR SERVICES! BEAUTY PRODUCISI Bé a hair m odel fOr our Feb. 26 show or Feb. 27 seminar. (Model coll Wed. 2-8.5pm) C ali • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PL.. 2bd 2ha condo nr ASU. pool, w/d, fens. $645. 2bd,yd, wtr pd, S550.966-0987. MAKA Beauty Systems fordetails: 968-7980 PAPÁGO PARK- Walk to school 2 bd, 2 be. Avail 2/1-12/15. Nw cpt. $950 lse. 602-530-8864. APARTMENTS ASU A R EA - 1 & 2 bedroom apartments from $325 & up per month not incl. util. 966-8838. RENTAL SHARING CLEAN 3 bd house 5 min/ASU. $150 + 1/5 o f utilities. Great deal available now. 947-4027. FEM, 4 bd, 1-3/4 ba, W/d, pool, $275/m o+ l/4 utilV Very d o s e / ASU (Broadway/Rural). 2guys/ 2girls. 929-0140 Shawn or Abby. FEMALE N/S, 4 bd 2 ba furn hom e, Ig yd, pool 1/3 util $250/mo. S o f Southern, E of Price. Christine, 831-5099 GRAD STUDENT seeks female to share 2bd, lba apt. No smok­ ing. $261/mo + 1/2 util. No livein boyfriends. Please call Leslie, 350-9130. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE ASU/MCC 2035 S. Elm #104. G orgeous 2BD, 2BA, 1C, l,000sf. Split fir/ pin. Comm pl/spa. Assume 7>5% loan w/qual 23.5K CTM. L,ist $63,500. Call Todd, 390-WUSA (9872) West USA Realty. CLOSE TO ASU, Papago Park II. 2bd 2ba luxury am enities. $8000 dn.FH A assum, 641-7034 CONDOS FOR sale - ASU area. Reasonable prices, great deals. From $34,000. Call us today Coldwell Banker Success Realty, .496-9001. MISCELLANEOUS F O R S > y |_ _ = M/F TO share deluxe 1100 sf con­ do, 2bd, 2ba, just E McClintock at University. $375/mo incl util ex­ cept phone. Scott, 951-2624. LEADING EDGE 286 w/printer, printer stand & mouse $250. 2 bookcases, double & single $75 for pair. Sanyo double cassette, tuner, equalizer & 2 speakers $50.940-9588. 7 MALE, 4 bd, 2 ba, w /d, yard,/ Spanish tile, new carpet, $240/mo + 1/4 util. 968-9860. NEW ATHLETIC shoes- lowest$ Major brands, Reebok, Adidas, & more. Erik 784-0774. RO O M S FOR RENT BOOKS POOL, F/P, near Baseline/Rural. $315/mo incl utilities and cable. 838-4849. HOMES FOR SALE ASSUM. NO qual 4bd 2ba family rm, kitchen, dining rm, living rm, 2 car garage, pool, lg yard. Close to ASU & Tempe schools. $120,000. Very nice! Cooperate w/agents. 413-0632. T IR E D O F C ookie C u tte r Houses? 5 min walk/ASU. Bet­ ween Broadway/Apache off Col­ lege. $129K, pre-qtfal or cash buyers only. By appt. 966-4700. 119 E. Encanto Dr. Tempe. MAGIC: THE G athering, new comics, back issues, largest se­ le ction in Tem pe! ! ! C om e to Funny Books! SW comer Mill & Baseline 820-7672. Mention this AD and get 10% off your pur­ chase!!! FURNITURE FUTONS The Futon Fave, 2604 W. 1st. St. #34,Tempe.804-1554.We deliver. NEW WATERBED $100, sofa $50, desk $30, dining tab. + 4 set $40. M ust sell!!! ev. 894-8722. SOFA SET, $265, Q ueen bed $80, Full $70, Chest of Drawers $40, Dinette $125.234-5729. COMPUTERS MOTORCYCLES 486 SUPER-QUICK computer with VGA color & MS-Windows. $600. 219-4006, Tony. HONDA SCOOTER, graduated, must sell. Tuned-up, runs well, riot.pretty. 947-2849 (msg.) BROTHER WP- Diet Ï+II, Spell ck, Spreadst, thés., PC con. i-yr old $200,894-8722 ev: SELL IT for as little as $3.90-—3 lines/1 day. 965-6735. ¡SOFTWARE! Microsoft Office $134.95 Microsoft Works $67.95 PhotoShop $198.95 Illustrator $97.95 many, many others! Student/Faculty ID or : class verification required Computer Room Technologies, Inc. 1130 East University Dr. Suite 205 • Tempe 85281 8 2 9 -3 1 3 7 Hours 10 am to. 5 pm ¡HARDWARE! A U TO M O B ILE S ^ $CASH TODAY!$ 1 buy all used cars, trucks, mise, items. Call Al, 9944369, TRAVEL SPRING BREAK '95 Rent your houseboat now! Call for more information. 1-800-2422628. SPRING BREAK BICYCLES Pithaya Bar - Granada Del Mar USED BIKES. Mountain, road & childrens. More than 30 bikes, Prices from $50. Bicycle Wheel­ ers, SW corner Broadway & Ru­ ral. 968-801L TRAVEL ASU SUMMER program to Ber­ muda and Carribean for 6 credits. Call 965-4630 for information packet. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. SO U TH ERN C A L IF O R N IA Spring Break Hot Spot Surf & $ki packages. Available imme­ diately. Prices a? low as $55/person. Call today! 800-797-TRIP. Rocky Point/San Carlos Hotel Reseivations $14 per person/Quad Call Today - Space is limited! . M E X IC O T O U R S 1 -8 0 0 -7 5 9 -7 8 1 0 HELP WANTEDGENERAL $$ SPRING BREAK $$ Work eves for 3 hrs, $5/hr + bo­ nuses. No experience nec. Trans­ portation provided. 649-8130. $6 PER HOUR Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Universal Portraits: Call Rachel or James, 496-0255. TRAVEL $$C ASH NOW $$ For all vehicles foreign / domes­ tic! Cash in your hand fast! Brian 246-3499, lv msg, 24hrs TDG. 2 SEATER sports car, sun-roof, 5sp, hatchback, runs good. $ 1500 obo. 81 RX7. 530-9226. 73 VW Bus. Runs good. Dailydri ver. Som e rust. E ngine re ­ built. Many extras. $1000 obo, 838-1941 days, 491-8093 eves. 82 VW conv. Rabbit a/c, am/fm, cass., 5 speed. Must sell $2500. Call Laurie 784-2975. 86 NISSAN 20ÓSX. $1700 obo. Ask for Rocio, 921-0347. 94 HYUNDAI Excel, new, take over payment. Red, 4-dr, tinted win, alarm, a/c, am/fm cassette, 5spd. Wendy, 830-4043. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Berm uda & the C a r ib b e a n Exotic summer school experience. Earn 6 ASU . elective and global awareness credits! Inform ational m eeting Tuesday, Feb. 7, MU Santa Cruz Room #213,3pm Call 965-4630 for info. HELP WANTEDGENERAL S tate P ress Monday, February 6, 1995 Page 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL W ORK FROM hom e around SHOPPING MALL Info Desk, NEW ENGLAND Massachusetts your schedule, setting appts by Scottsdale. Part-time, 20-25 hrs. Brother-Sister Camps: On Gamphone. Earn up to $15 per appt. $6/hr Call 941 -0216, ' ; pus Interviews. Mah-Kee-Nac for Call Aqua Chill 829-9255. Boys/Danbee for G irls. C oun­ SMALL CO. seeks sincere, per­ selor positions for Program Spe­ YMCACAMPING Services (Skysonable, hardworking indiv for EARN CASH everyday passing ACTORS! ART LOVERS! cialists: All Team Sports, espe­ Y Camp &. Chauncey Ranch) Jomise bookkeeping duties. Close out fly ers ,for G um bys Pizza. Dramatic?. Articulate? Sell ticket cially Baseball, Basketball. Golf, cated in Prescott, Az is now hir­ to campus. Flex hrs. $5.25-$6/hr Apply in person, 2107 S. Rural, pkgs via phone for the Phoenix Field H ockey, R oller Hockey, ing dedicated, fun-loving, crea­ DOE. Call Chuck, 267- 0864. Comer Rural & Broadway. Symphony! Excel lent benefits! tive, caring professionals to work Socper, Weights/Fitness arid Cy­ P/T 5; 30pm-9:30pm. Sun-Thurs. SUMMER CAMP! Co-Ed sleepEXP'D SWIM instructors needed with co-ed canqjers between the cling; other openings include Per­ 222-3875, V~v'; away! Many counselor positions to teach private & small group ages of 7 & 17 in a residential forming Arts, Fine Aits, Potter, available! We need role models, lessons in N. Scotts & PV. WSI camp setting. Come be a part of ADVERTISING INTERNSHIPS: Figure S kating, G ym nastics;. sensitive* caring and skilled staff pref. $l0-$15/hr. 661-0366. the magic & share in an experi­ Sell ad v ertisin g for the State Newspaper, Photography, Year­ members. For the best summer of ence that w ill last a lifetim e. , Press and earii while you learn! book, Radio Station, Rocketry, GENERAL OFFICE, clerical po­ yOUr life! In NE Pennsylvania’s Camping season begins last week You'll need -a car, a big box o f sitions available right How, heavy ' Ropes and Rock climbing; All Pocono Mtns. On-campus inter­ of May and runs through early; personal motivation arid desire W aterfront A c tiv itie s (Sw im ­ telephone work, flex hfs, M-F. views 2/16. Get applications at August. Call for application & in­ for success, and you must be tak­ ming, Skiing, Sailing, Windsurf­ Don't Wait! 784-2279: ,V Student Employment Office or formation at 254-1571. ing 13 credit hours or less. If this ing, Canoeing/Kayaking). Great call 800-429-5453. Cam p Tosounds good to ybu, call Jackie ElWORK EVENINGS'M-F $500salary, room, board arid travel. wánda, Honesdale, PA. HELP WANTEDdridge today for an informal in­ $800 per month. Call Judd at 894June 18th - A ugust 18th. R e­ terview. 965-6555. : • , CLERICAL 9442 between 9am-5pm, TALENT AGENCIES looking cruiter will be on campus: Wed­ for new faces to work as extras, nesday, February 22nd 10-4pm. A R TIST PR O FIC IE N T in GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR ACCTS. PAYABLE clerk, pt, m odels, & actors in sit-com s, Quark, Illustrator and Photoshop needed p /t, boys/girls classes,.. Call for an appointm ent & in­ coniputerized system. Prepare com m ercials; & feature films. needed. Must be flexible and mulformation. For more information Call Desert Devils, 941-3496. , checks,; bank reconciliation & Call Mark at (818) 259-3198. tir-tasked, while riiéeting tig h t contact: M ah-Kee-Nac (Boys) other clerical duties. South Chan­ deadlines, Call 813-3156. . . HELP W ANTED p/L f/t apply iri 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, dler. Call L. Muncey 961-0143. THE ASU Telefund is hiring! person at World Gym, 1465 N, N X.- 07026. C all: 1-800-753Are you looking for a job that has Hayden Suite #7, Scottsdale. ASSEMBLY JOBS ASST NEEDED for tax account­ 9118. Panbee (Girls) 17 West­ flexible hours? We require you to Lighting co. needs ft or pt resp. ing office. Some office experi­ m inster D rive, M ontville, NJ LIFEGUARD FOR weekends & Only work 10 hours a week arid students for day assembly work. ence nee. Flex hrs. Start $6/hr. 07045. Gall 1-800-392-3752. som e w eekday«. T estin g re ­ you choose the evening and week­ Electronics background desirableCall Kathy, 968-7202. V quired-Call 8^ $7/hr. Scottsdále Air Park, Call end shifts you want to work. We PART TIME Youth Worker for Pori 10-2, 998-0325. : AZ RELAY Service has immed. contact alumni to update info, in­ behavioral modification program MAI NTEN ANCE TEC H fo r openings foi* operators. 50 wpm a form them about adavneements at using mini-bikes. South Phoenix sm all ap artm en t com m uriity. CA M P CANADENSIS, Pocono must. AH shifts ft/pt. $6.30/hr, + ASU and ask for financial sup­ location. B ilingual preferred. Local reference & experience re­ Mtns, PA. Exc residential coed xlnt beriefits. Near ASU. Call 929port. This is a position that will YMCA, 257-5172, Pori. summer cariip. Wanted: Caring . quired. $7/hr to start. 829-9607. 4848, EOE. enhance your resume not just fill; counselors, must love children. PHONE SURVEYS - not sales. . it up, Call 965-6754M A K E A D ifference In The Help teach baseball, basketball, FOUR DATA entry pos. avail. Market research company located Lives o f Children: Birch Trail soccer, tennis, nitn, bikes., mo-'; AM‘s or PM’s. Flex sched., ft/pt. VALENTINES DELIVERY driv­ near I- 10/Baselirie needs p/t shift . Camp for Giris NW .Wisconsin,, torcycles, ropes course, climbing We can work around your: sched. ers w ith veh icle. ;$6/hr. C a lf M-Th, 5-9pm, and Sat, 9-3. Must seeks committed, fun, motivated . wall.; dance, arts & crafts, lakeAUtoin, 5226 S .. 31 st Place. After Hours Flowere 894-3419. : be dependable ¿ .e n jo y phones. Phx: Beverly. 243-5200, . front, lifeguard (WSI). & much ; people as: cabin counselor/activity Office exp desired. $5/hr. Emily, instructors (you name it, we teach f VALET PARKING attendants 3moré. Season: 6/20-8/18/95. Stop OFFICE CLERK- Seotts location. 4 riights/week. Must be willing to by Student.Employmént, SSV-;. if!), w ilderness leaders, life- : M-Th 3-9pm (some later nights drive to Phx, Scptts, PV, etc. Avg C-222 to .schedule interview. We PT MON-FRI. 1pm-5pm..Need guards,: clim bers; secretaries, req'd). Gen pfc/lgt data entiy/cust V; ! .will be bn campus February 8. reliable trarisp/, xlnt opp.for any-. $8/hf;861r9I82: kitchen -workers & more ! Trip f \ sv e /e rra n d s/lg t ’ cleanup. body going into the legal pay. generous travel allowance W AREHOUSE WORKERS needr CASHIER - Paul’s Tempe Hard­ $5:50/hr. Susan, 443-8883: prof.Call 254-6147 for appt. plus roorii & board! Want tö help ed part-time/qri-call. Shifts from ware. i;s: acceptiiig. apps.-for p/t create a. nurturing, ripnTCpmpeti-; PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST, Ipm-MidnighL $6 f incentives. cashier position. Hardware eashR ECEPTIO N IST - Duties ihcl five, supportive environment for evenings & weekends. Apply in Apply in person Tue-Thur 8amiering exp a plus.: Apps accepted taking appts, answer phones. & person at Scottsdgle Jaguar, 6725 4pm , 396 William Dillard Dr., .’at Paulis Tempe Hardware, 1153- c h ild ren th is sum m er? C a ll retail sales.1Icon H air, Scotts Richard of Rachel: l-800r544. E. McDowell, r Gilbert, AZ 85234 W; Broadway,.Tempe. \ Fashion Sq. Charlene; 941-8656: . . jCAMP! • C O LLE G E STU DEN TS & T e a c h ers!. C h ild ren ’s Sum m er MARKETING POSITION avail­ J w * ) CUSTOMER SERVICE REPS ,Camp in Oracle, AZ -is. looking . able .in the Health Care field, ft/pt CHARLES SCHWAB fo r P ro g ram L ead ers, C oun­ ARIZONA on weekends. Commission. Com­ selors. Lifeguards. Camp Nurse, O n e o f the N ation's largest Stock Brokerage Firm s needs munication skills a must.; Call 396REPUBLICAN PARTY arid Cooks to work June 1- Aug TE M PO R A R Y S TO C K Q U O T E R S . W e are looking for 4400 from 1pm. to.5 pm. NEEDS YOU! 12. Good salary, job experience, custom er service exp, desire for grow th & a great attitude. MODELS/ACTORS - Beautiful plus room/board. Write YMGA PART-TIME HRS. P /T m orning positions available. Apply 9 a.m .-3 p.m . at people needed for nat’l ad cam­ Camp, PO Box 111L Tucson. AZ Î6+/HR. paign. 26&-6224. 85702 or call f-602r884-0987; STERLING *$8.50 HR + In cen tiv es* . Sales/MarReting or Technicians Professional work environment. See our half page ad - Page 7. . COM PUTER MAJORS- Have Unix. PC, Wart, Lari exp? Ex­ panding national Internet service needs you. Net 99. 249-0957. MAT SULLIVAN COUNTER PERSON & delivery drivers riéededl Apply at 1420 N.;. Scottsdale Rd or.call 945-8850. . INTERVIEWERS • Salary + Bonuses • 6 9pm Mon-Fri; Sat 10anv2pm • N O S E LLIN G A dvancem ent, fu ll tra in in g . Worldyvyri Acceptance CàW George, 99Ò-1010 STATE SVC INTERN $7:04/Hr/Phoenix Position, is Limited, part-time days until: 6/30/96. Satisfactory: 'completion o f at least 1 yr (30 sem hrs)..’o f academic, education, in college or university, and be currently pursuing a degree in . Hydrology, Geology,- Watershed M gt, Regional P lanning, or other closely related field. A transcript or suppl 10 must be . submitted. With y-our. employe merit application. STATE SVC INTERN $7<04/Hr/Phoenix Position is Limited,, part-time days. Satisfactory completion o f at .least 1 yr (30 sem.hrs) of acad^ emic education in college br uni­ versity and be currently pursuing a degree in the-field, o f Science or. Engineer!ng. program . Prefer . Spanish speaking candidate. A transcript or suppl 10 must be subm itted with your employmerit application. STATE SVC INTERN $7.04/Hr/Phoenix Seasonal position. Must have sat­ isfactorily completed at least 1 yr (30 sem hrs) o f academic educa­ tion in college or university arid |>c currently enrolled as either a full or part-time student and be currently pursuing a graduate level degree, in H um an Svc, Social Work or Public Admin. A transcript or suppl 10 must be subm itted with- your eiriplbyment application. Apply at Arizona Dept, of Administration Human Resources 1831 W. Jefferson Phoenix, AZ 85007 *’ - -or •. LocalDES Job Service Office NEED WÖRK w/flex. schedule? . Earn $6-$ l 2/hr, p/t days; Car/phone must. Call CCC Çp. 451-1039. CONCESSION WORKERS W ork th e H ockey G aines, th e D b g R a c e s, a n d be a h e a d o f th e c r o w d arid s ig n tip e a rly fo r S p r in g Training. Pay ra n g e s from $S-$6 p e r h o u r + gratuities in som e cases. A pply in p erson •• M on-Fri 10 a.m.^3 p.m . STIVERS . 957-7770 jag W e W ork A round Y o u r S chedule No Selling T he valley's fin est m a rk e t re se a rc h firm is look­ in g fo r in te rv ie w e rs. We o ffe r flexible s c h e d u lin g a n d a p r o f e s s io n a l s e t ­ tin g , s ta r tin g a t $6 p e r h o u r. E xcellent a d v an c e ­ m e n t possibilities. TEM PO RARY PERSONNEL 64 E, 3410 E. U niversity #160 • Phx, A Z • (I-10 & Univ. Exit) 470-8000 Call Manny at 946-7535 Great New Location ffj B Associates 966-1100 HELP WANTEDFO O P SERVICE OFFICE SPECIALIST. Close to ASU. Ans phones, type invoices, data entry, etc. Must have good phone sk ills, type at least 35 wpm, be Comp literate. M-F 125. $5.50/hr. Nancy; 945-3431. Acc apps for line cooks w /l-yr broiler exp. Must be able to work nights. Also lunch hostess & food servers. Apply in person 2-5pm M-F. 404 S. Mill Ave, Hayden Sq. P/T ADMIN Asst at Chamberlin & Associates. Typing; filing & ans phones. 4 hrs/day M‘-F. Call David Chamberlin at,•731-9901 ib. — ■ IDLY ROVE (rock band) has 5 pt/ft marketing positions avail & many benefits; Scott, 491-3254. bBLIVERY DRIVER apply at Sub Factory. 1116 S. Dobson. Flex hours. VALEO INTERNATIONAL, an environmental co. is looking for several sales reps as well as a few individuals with mgmt skills. No exp. nec. Will train. Call for an interview. 940-3804. HOST/HGSTESS - days/nights, p/t, flexible for elegant Santa Festyle restaurant in Scottsdale. Fea­ tured in Feb. Phoenix Magazine. Apply at Hermosa Inn, 36th St. & Stanford, 1/2 mi north of Camelback. HELP WANTEDFO OD SERVICE AZ COUNTRY Club hiring p/t pm food servers. N o exp nec. Must work, weekends. 5668 E. Orange Blossom, Phx. EOE! BUSY MILL Ave cafe hiring all positions. Iixp'd on|y;. Applyr in; person at Caffe Boa, 709 S. Mill. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL COLLECTORS BANK CARD NEGOTIATORS ACB BUSINESS SERVICES, IN C , a business unit of First D ata Corp:., is seeking top negotiators fo r p ur new high performance recovery center. If you a re s e lf-m o tiv a te d , energetic and possess: excel­ lent communication skills then apply with us today! • Excellent benefits • Paid training program • Base pay plus commission • Flexible hours • Professional work environment Fax/mai! your resume now or .s to p by and co m ple te an application: B m Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1334 E. Broadway, Building A, Tempe Broadway &Dorsey fAcross from Native New Yorker) 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 Equal Opportunity Employer a B B .......... ....... NOW HIRING CORK'N CLEAVER HELP WANTEDSALES 3600 E. University Dr. Suite A-1450 Phoenix, A2 85034 Fax:602-379-1350 Phone: 602-379-1300 B BALBOA CAFE Acc. apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch fo o d serv er & evening cocktail Will train, p/t, concern w/appearance, reliability & per­ sonality are im portant Apply in .person. M-F 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th .St. 952-0585. The Valley’s BEST plasma donation center just got even better! ABI hais moved to a great new facility at 1334 E. Broadway! We now have MORE MACHINES to serve you better! This is yoiir perfect opportunity to perform a TTM//v needed service : and earn S15(^$ 185 per month at the same time! It couldn't be easier! Neii’donors earn $25 CASH theirfirst donation! Open 7 days aweek jfor yqur convenience! H ig g in b o t h a m Broadway, Ste 205 HELP WANTED t CLERICAL ACB BUSINESS SERVICES, INC. , HOST/HOSTESSES, FT/PT. Apply after 2-5pm at Monti/S, 3 W. 1st St., Tempe. 967-7594. JOHNNY ROCKETS Now hiring cashiers & assistant . mgrs, ft/pt. Fashion Square Mall. Apply in person. 423-^1505; STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers: Apply in person M^F 10am-5pm. 5001 . E. Washington. East of 48th St. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Marriott's Cameiback Inn Resort, Golf Club & Spa, Arizona's most decorated resort, is accepting applications for: • Clerical Secretaries, fr/pt • Hosf/Hostessès AM/PM, f/t • H air Stylist, p /t • H air Stylist Asst, p i t • Nail Technician,, p/t • Lead Salés Glçrk, f/t • Spa Cbordinatbr, f/t > W omen's Pool Attendant, , p /t . • M en's Spa Therapist, f/t • Bussers A M /PM , p /t • Buffet Attendants, p/t Applications accepted M on-W ed 9amr3pni; Thurs ; 9am-Noort. » Apply at: Human Resources Dept. 5402 E. Lincoln I)r. Scottsdale, AZ Excellent benefits package available. M arriott proudly supports a ■drug-free environment. EÔE M /F/V /D §* jggl Summer Employment in ... Yosem ite Concession Services Corp. r offers you the opportunity to live and work" in one of the world's most beautiful sites. The "Yosemite Experience” is atradition of exceptional guest service. If you have tfie ability to work hard and smile, now is your chance to join our team. A representative w ill be on cam pus W ednesday, F e b ru a ry 8th, 1995. C o m e b e a p a rt o f D ia la m e ric a ’s d iverse te a m ! WE OFFER: » Paid Training at $7,50 per hour guarantee • Great Pay $8-$l 2 average per hour Highest Earnings up to ... $19 per hourl • Flexible Hours to work with your school schedule • Bonuses ...$ • Professional/Comfortable Environment • Sharpens Communication/Career Skills/Resume Builder • Nearby Location a t 1100 E. University in the University Center D im A m e r ic a M a r k e t in g CALL 894-0264 FOR INTERVIEW We will be accepting applications for a variety of positions in all areas of hospitality service in our hotels, restaurants, retail, recreational, and support facilities. State Press HELP WANTED* FO O D SERVICE RESTAURANTS/ BARS WANTED: Quick Service Restaurant Employees! 10c WINGS , DRAFTS $1 « Taco John's Restaurant is looking for crew members to be part of our TEAM! All shifts available day time, evenings and week­ ends. We need mature individu­ als who can work 10-35 hours per week, We offer group insur­ ance, paid vacation, discounted meals* flexible work schedules an d co m p etitiv e w ages plus merit increases. Please apply at; Taco John's, 735 E. University. We work hard and have a lot of fun, SO COME j6 lN OUR TEAM! Equal Opportunity Employer. ciÜ i | Bud. Bud Light Mon-Thur 3-7 p.m. Sat 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun 12-9 p.m. 2— 5S5 IRAMflFR^NATHU 5th St. &Forest BREWPUB T o n ig h t I P it c h e r s ’« to d , Bud iig h t, Coors tight, MGDT BANQUET SERVERS 30 S erv ers n e e d e d fo r th e NBA Playoffs a t th e C ivic P la z a . W ill P ay $6.75 p e r h o d r to q u a lif ie d c a n d i­ dates. M ust have o r be w ill­ ing t o buy: • Black T uxedo P a n ts/S k irt • W hite Tuxedo Shirt •Black C um berbund •Black Bow Tie Join th e excitem ent an d b e a p a rt of the action! ^ p p ly .iri p erson M on-Fri 10 a.m.-3 p.m. I I I L«jiifehlugfeUI { [ [y I r II JTiTTi!^ H appy H our 2 « *1 Cuervo Margs Domestic Drafts Premium Wells r - PERSONNEL 64 E .B ro a d w a y, Ste 205 966-1100 HELP WANTÉDCHILD CARE Rural & Apache 8 9 4 -2 6 6 2 BABYSITTER FOR toddler & baby in Scottsdale.: Must have car & reférences: Wed. &. Fri. rriorh. ings. Kathleen 922-9221, ' t Tiw Newly Remodeled BEHAVIOR THERAPIST rieed’. ed to tutor 2- 1/2 yr old autistic: ; boy. 2-3 times a week.. Training •provided. Psych or Education, major pref. Please contact Linda, 995-4154. ’ . C H IL D CARE, eves Scoccasiònal wknds,; for 2 girls, ages 4 ;& 7. Must be dependable & able ; to in te ra c t. Jennifer,. ; 4370405(days), 838-0745 (eves). . TEACHER. ELEMENTARY for residential treatment center, Spe­ cial Ed & A Z.C ertified/ salary DOE, no formal exp nec; send re- ; , sume PÒ Box 3628, Scottsdale, " AZ 85271, Jo b OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA FISHERIES hiring! Earn thousands this summer in :canneries. processors, etc. Male/ Female. Room/board/travel often provided! Guide. Guaranteed sucf cess ! (919) 929-4398 ext. A 10:15. CRUISE SHIPS hiring! Earn big $$$ + free world travel (Carib­ bean, Europe, Hawaii, etc.) Sum­ mer/p.e rm an e n t, no exp ne.CGuide. (919)929-4398 ext CÌ0J5. C R U ISE SH IPS now h iring Earn up, to $2,00Q+/mohth work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour com panies. W orld travel. Sea­ sonal & full-tim e employment available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext C59184. FITNESS MINDED National Co. seeking energetic, enthusiastic indv. Great iri’e. po­ tential, flex hrs. Contact Kevin . 804-1629 or 829-9120. BUSINESS O P T O ^ N m |S _ FAST CASH for Spring Break, own hours, no obligation. SASE to SI Distributors-P. PO Box 97. Murphysboro, IL 62966. RESTAURANTS/ BARS PRANKSTERS i A R & iR IL L Tem pe's B est S po rts Bar 3 full Satellites 12 Televisions 6 Foot Big Screen 15c Wings All Day Tempe;«8S7-8875 TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING PERSONALS SIGMA DELTA Tau is so excit­ ed to meet our new Pledge Class! NEW MENU NEW STA FF NEW ATTITUDE * 99« B reakfast is Back Daily 7-10:30 a jn . • 1/2 P rice E sp resso C offees Daily 6:30 a.m .-4 p m . • $ 3 ^ D aily Lunch S p ecials ♦ $3 P itch ers Daily 4-7 pxn. NEXT WEEK IS ASU AIDS AWARENESS WEEK! Feb 13-17. Cool Place on Campus' Comer of Forest ^ndUniversity,Tempe I FUNDRAISING FA ST FU N D R A ISER- R aise $500 in 5 days - Greeks, groups, clubs, m otivated individuals. Fast, easy - No financial obliga­ tion. (800) 775-3851 exfc 33. PERSONALS ATTN ALL Greeks: Ozzies Bar & Grille welcomes you back with 20% o ff an y menu item . Just wear your letters. CASH PRIZES! Dart tournament af Flakey Jakes Bar. Test your skill against the best! HAVING PROBLEMS - need so­ lutions’- looking for answers? Quo Vadis Books - in the Arches, 120 C E. University. ------- ” ------- ------ 1 * — ---------LA M BDA LEAGUE w eekly meeting and event info: Lamba League meeting Feb; 7, 5:45pm, third floor MU, Conference Rm 2. Coming out discussion group meeting 7:30pm Feb. 7, Student S erv ices B ldg, M u lticu ltu ral Lounge. LG ABU, 7:30pm, Feb. 8, Rick Lloyd presenting "Creat­ ing Change." Delta Lambda Phi Spring Rush Info Meeting, 6pm, Feb. 13. MU. , .location to be an­ nounced later. PARK ACROSS from ASU. $ 100 per semester. No tickets, no has­ sles, Call Steve, 967-1990 (msg). S P R IN G It R E A R CTPueito Yalteri5Z> 7 nights/8 days $399. d S aaF etip * 4 nights/5 days $99 Hurry! Oijly a few spots left. GETTRAVEL / PLANET TOURS (¿02)968-1158 oroscope ===. Frances D rake TERM PAPERS, thesis, resumes, manuscripts, etc. Accurate with money-back guar. Judy, 345-9015 EDUCATE! PARTICIPATE! See a movie in the MU.. .grab a condom on the mall.. .check out the MU G alle ry ...d isc u ss.. AI D S ..j Wear a red ribbon to show yo u r su p p o rt...b rin g in canned food. ..experience a can­ dlelight vigil and a reading o f the names o f those who have died from A ID S ...h e ar a w inning essay on ^'How AIDS has affect-ed my life " ... hear g re a t m usic.. .see the AIDS Q uilt... watch performances... get a SafeSex Valentine's Day kit. Spend a Week learning; how to educate yourself about HIV and AIDS. TUTORS MATH REVIEW Test #1- 106,117, 119, & 210. Get that grade! Free sample test inch Math Masters 491-3363. STUDY PARTNER for 8th grade Phoenix Christian Academy girl* to pick up from school & accom­ pany to library. Em phasis in math. $6.50/hr. 970-3354. merits v WANTED . GRANDMA LOVES the first two and is ready for another baby to spoil and love, and so áre we.Fun Joying, devoted & secure couple with 5 arid 4 yr old adopted sons :are seeking a báby girl to cbm-, píete bur family. Call Richárd & Tammy, 897^0130. Pick up your FREE copy of Devil Deals in the basement of Matthews Center. RESUME. W RITING your re ­ sume? Learn how to avoid the 20 most com m on m istakes. Also get the top 10 most successful resumes o f 1994. Price $8.95.: N .C .S. 7620 M cK ellips 461. Scottsdale, AZ 85257 HEALTH & FITNESS (There's a coupon for a free State Press Classified art-a-m a-bob... \ you can use It ■ with your Valentine Love Line!) LOSE WEIGHT safely. Herbal based products* Guaranteed. Call Deborah or Jerry 481 *0162 TUTORS TUTORS AFFORDABLE RATES. Term papers/reports, theses, resumes.,. Free estimate. Fast turnaround. Laser quality, Townsend Word Processing, Maureen 955-0969. GALLERY COMMITTEE j SCORPIO (Oct; 23 to Nov, 21) A co-worker seems difficult to get along* with, but try to be Understanding. Spending couid get way out of band, so find less costly ways to have fiiri at; night. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to.Dec. 2 i ) You'll have to bend a bit in your dealings with oth.ers. A little frien d ly .persuasion does w bnders. Concentrating on work helps you get over a disap­ pointment, ; CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 tp Jan. 19).. Don't let tiriie by yourself cause, you to dwell on things that might go wrong. Needless worry will sap inner strength. It's best to put aside career concerns now. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Implement those changes you've beep contemplat­ ing at home. Theri, go out somewhefe special with a loved one. it is also a good day to make business presentations. PISCES (Feb, 19.to Mar. 20) You'll reach an understanding with a loved orie. A friend might rub you the wrong way, in which case you should make peace* 1 YOU BORN TODAY are intelligent and creative. You work especially Well in the world of arts and crafts,, teaching and Writing. You have an unusual outlook ori many thirigs, and your work is usually ahead of its time. It seems you can arrive a t a con­ clusion long before anyone can actually get to th e . bottom o f a situation. A s a result, you are sought after as a negotiator and peacemaker. Birthdate of: Mike Farrell, actor; Zsa Zsa Gabor* actress; and; Robert Townsend; actor. TUTORS TUTORS A N Y O N E C A N C L A IM T O BE T H E ''B E S T ", B U T O U R R E P U T A T IO N SPEAKS LO U D E R T H A N A N Y W O R D S ... $2/PG, $15 resum es. Proofed. L aser. Fast. Sam e day. DTP. ; Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987; ? AAA- KIN K O ’S C opy C enter makes the grade! Get reports, resumes, & flyers fast! Color cop­ ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & m uch m o re ! O p e n '2 4 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. F For Monday, February 6,1994 ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Business and pleasure definitely do riot mix now. . However, the day is clear fo t fun and romance. Don't let a problem with a friend interfere with ybür happiness. TAURUS , (Apr. 20 to May. 20).; You might find, something you need in a newspaper advertisement, Little things blight go wrong, but you will succeed in setting thirigs straight. GEMINI (May 21 tp J une 20) There's nothing Stopping, you from making career progress. Even though your insights might be cor­ rect, y ou'll need tact in expressing them * •CÁNCER ••S | (June 2 1 to July 22). Although your thinking is on target regarding home affairs, in money matters you could make an unwise move. Resist the urge to say something sarcastic. At night, exercise creative talents. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Thera will be some happy social m om ent for you, but a pressing problem on the home front looms. You might be overly concerned about the welfare o f. a loved one. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept, 22) . You’re thinking clearly arid should make those important phone calls. It's time to put theory into practice. Shopping is favored. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) The work situation seems complicated by a romantic attraction. Make sure this person is sincerely inter­ ested and not just flirting. You have high ideals. SERVICES ELECTRO LY SIS BY Degna. M ultirprobe & blend methods. RufahSouthern area. 921-1146; d MWOWeUMONACTTVTTÏjBQWO ’ M ALES 18-24 lean, healthy, nonsmokers, wanted for a study. $600 offered. Study requires 4 short hospital stays. Call Nicole 945 8923. ADOPTION TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING H I n d iv id u a l FA ST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses. MLA/ ÀPA, las­ er, fax; Pat, 897-1741-. LOSE WEIGHT! Feel more en­ ergy! Phytochemicals, enzymes* and antioxidants! Easy to take, in­ expensive and convienent. Call 423-3800. T o n igh t : our ASU AREA. APA /M LA exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6, transcription. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime SCHOLARSHIP COMPUTER search 24hr. recorded message, 602-582-1.243: ext. U2. B A R <3. O R I L .L . E Y APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typin g /w o rd processing. N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. SIGMA KAPPA Ashley: Con­ grats on a successful Kick in the Grass Philanthropy. Love, Heath­ er and Jade. f c U T 's N O COVER STIVERS TÉM POF A V î P a g e 19 Monday, February 6, 1995 Algebra Calculus/Precalculus Finite Math Statistics Physics Chemistry Advanced Math W e offer tutorial fo r th e follow ing classes: MAT 106, MAT 114, MAT 117 MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271, MAT 170 MAT 119 QBA 221, PSY 230, STP 226 PHY 111, PHY 112, PHY 121 CHM 101, CHM 113, CHM 115, CHM 116 MAT 272, MAT 274, MAT 342 R e g is tra tio n fo r S p rin g S e m e ste r is g o in g o n n o w . O u r sessio n s f ill u p fa s t - c a ll us to d a y fo r in fo rm a tio n . S u c c e s s fu lly h e lp in g s tu d e n ts s in c e 1 9 8 0 . Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • "SIMON" USE THIS FORM Valentine Love Line To express your deepest devotions! O n ly $1.75 fo r 3 lines, $1 each a dd ition al line. Deadline: Friday, Feb. 10 N o on State Press Classifieds M atthew s C enter basement , Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. The liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but a credit will be held on account. O C ash "'"mí ___ L'V v i C hdck # „ p A j p £ $1.75 for 3 lines or less. $1 each additional line. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Please include Studenti)# or O dw 'éueense# Osadtin®: Friday, February 10, Noon SSO a HB °HB I . Base Rate " Bank Card Number á iiiü ie tp • aÿ $ | 75 ,. Brtm Lines 8 S1 each » . $ ■ ’f 'E m M g ñ i U t ........... iifc k k sf , - $ , 1 , , M „.tM.,,. „ImM .M.... ^ P ag e 2 0 S tate P ress J M o n d a j^ e b ^ To introduce you to the healing world of chiropractic, please accept my special offer. m m ta t spinal examination r ISSeC and x-rays O ffe r Expires 2- 10*95 ^ I will include an orthopedic test, a neurological test, a spinal alignm ent check, an examination for restricted or:excess motion In the Spin#, x-fay ,■ and a private consultatlbtiit^djfeoss,t)iojr^lults, ,j Twelve Danger Signals 1. Numbness in arms and hands 2 . Restless nights 3. Pain between shoulders 4. Stiff ness of neck 5. Nerve tension 6. Depression 7. Headaches 8. Anxiety in the chest 9* Stiffness or pain in the lower back 10. Tired hips and legs 11. Painful joints 12. Whiplash spinal structure. Do You Understand the Damaging Effects of Subluxation? ■ O nly D am aged tissue Gives You Symptoms. ■ You Can Build Disease W itho u t Knowing It. Brain Stem C ontrol C enter C1. C2 (Atlas-Axis) Healthy Nerve spinal structure. Pinched Nerve = Subluxation = Disease = Symptoms CALL TODAY FOR APPO INTM ENT ASU’s Samaritan Insurance, Personal Injury, Workman's Com pensation, Insurance and Cash Accepted. O’NEAL CMROmCTIC Dr. Richard L. O'Neal, Palmer Graduate Team Physician S portane! Fitness C ouncil W o rld O lym pic C h iro p ra ctic C om m ittee LAKE COUNTRY VILLAGE 4 9 1 -1 2 4 2 Celebrating 14 Years In Practice AMERICAN EXPRESS For yo ur convenience, 1070 E. Baseline Rd., Tempe call 8:30am - 6:45pm Mon.-Fri. fo r ap po intm en t.