©Copyright, State Press. 1995 . Tempe, Arizona ' Friday, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 5 An In dependent M orning D aily V ol. 79 No. 96 ASU wrestler shot after quarrel in club B y T o d d K elly State P ress An ASU w restler was shot Thursday during an early-morning altercation at the intersection of 52nd Street and Broadway Road inTempe. : Tracy Brown, a 19-year-old redshirt freshman from Santa Clara, C alif., was in stable condition Thursday at Tem pe St. L uke’s B r o w n Hospital after having surgery to remove a bullet from his groin area. Brown was with two other ASU wrestlers, sophomore Danny Felix and redshirt freshman Rottom Tal-Shahar, and two other men. Mike Quider and Jessie Monter, when NFL vs. ASU Hayden Library joins list of possible Super Bowl closures an argum ent started with three other men at Señor Phrogg’s, 919 E. Apache Blvd., according to a Tempe police report. The other three men, listed as suspects in the report, left the club around midnight and drove off in a 1994 or 1995 white four-door Dodge Neon. Brown and his friends were in another vehicle and fol­ lowed them to the area of 52nd Street and Broadway, according to Toby Dyas, public information officer for Tempe police. v . The report states that as Brown and his friends followed the Neon, they threw beer bottles and other objects at the su sp e c t's vehicle. At the intersection o f 52nd and Broadway, both vehicles stopped and men from both par­ ties got out. Brown said that after he got out of the car, he stood next to it. It was then that he saw one of the other men fire a 9mm handgun toward him and his friends. He fired “two, possibly three rounds and hit Tracy in the groin area,” Dyas said. Brown said he reacted immediately to the gun shots. “When they fired a couple of times, I went to the back of the car,” he said. “They drove off and turned around and as I was getting back in the car (he fired).” Brown and his friends said they did not have any weapons with them or in the car, according to the report. Police are investigating the incident. They said the sus­ pect who fired the gun is either a Caucasian or Hispanic man in his mid-20s, but they have no other information about him or the other suspects. Forever foozeball B y K ennes Bolig State P ress Along with classes and three or four parking lots, ASU's Hayden Library also may close during the Super Bowl's stay in Tempe next year, according to ASU Provost Milton Click. The possible closure of Hayden Library for the weekend of Super Bowl XXX is another issue the ASU Super Bowl Planning Committee will consider, Glick said. The com­ mittee will now consider the possibili­ ty of closing the library after staff had voiced concerns about the feasibility of the library being open during the Super Bowl, he said. : Kathy Jones, the co-chairwoman for the Staff Development Committee and Hayden Library superintendent in government documents, said workGLICK ing during the Super Bowl would create d ifficu lties for library employees. “If the library is open on Saturday and Sunday, how are people going to get to work, especially people working on Sunday?” she said. “1 hope that the library will not be open, but the decision is not mine to make.” Other University facilities will operate as normal during the Super Bowl unless individual supervisors decide it is necessary to take that time off, according to Steve Miller, T urn to Super Bow l , page Engineering majors Long Lee (in hat) and Boa Nguyen participate in a game of foozeball in the MU basement Thursday. Both students came to the United States from Vietnam and say they plan to live here “forever.” 2. Fraternity apologizes for ‘inappropriate’ flier IFC to file charges By P atty King State P ress C o urtesy o f Sigm a P i fra te rn ity Fliers like these were posted around campus as p art o f S igm a Pi fra te rn ity ’s e ffo rts to recruit new members during rush. INSIDE STA TE PRESS W eather Outlook Variable clouds. High 70, low 46. The scantily-clad woman tossed her head back and smiled as cool water splashed all over her. Beside her, a caption read: ‘Tired of being alone on weekends? Interested in going to par­ ties? Looking to meet women? Want a real college experience?” This message on Sigma Pi recruitment fliers posted around campus prompted the Greek governing board to begin disciplinary action against the fraternity and caused its members to apologize publicly. The fliers were placed around campus Feb. 19. fraternity members said. “I think we all know that the flier was inap- World/ Nation propriate and we’re not trying to hide that at all,” said Kevin Cook, the fraternity’s adviser. The 17-member fraternity issued a written apology Thursday. (See sidebar, page 2.) Mike-Pallad, president of the Interfraternity . Council, said that the group’s executive board contacted Sigma Pi on Tuesday regarding the flier. Formal charges will be drawn up against the chapter within two weeks, he said, adding that the chapter will go before the IFC’s Greek Review Board. No date has been set yet. “I think it was not done purposely by the fraternity to insult any group or groups,” Pallad said of the flier. “It was overlooked on their part and it was something that the execu­ tive board found offensive. It will be brought to their attention.” If found to be in violation o f state, University or IFC regulations, the chaptercould face sanctions including community ser- Sports A gunman opens fire in a Seattle courthouse, killing two women and critically wounding' a third. Junior Mario Bennett helped lead the 15thranked Sun Devils to a 7271 victory over . Washington in Seattle Thursday night. Page 3 Page 11 vice hours and educational programs for its members, said Chris Lawson, IFC vice presi­ dent for fraternal affairs. In spite of the fraternity’s apology, Kris Ewing, the graduate associate director of the Women’s Student Center, said that she found the flier offensive. ' „ “It perpetuates the exploitation of women, and I just think that’s inappropriate in an insti­ tution of higher learning,” she said. “A univer­ sity, of all places, should be a place where we value the strengths of women.” Ewing said that she considers the flier’s message to be a form of hazing because one group is treating itself as better than another group. “We took away hazing because it denigrat­ ed and took away the self-esteem of new T urn to Sigma Pi, pag e 2. Where To Find It Classifieds........................... 14 Comics................................. 10 Crossword.................. 6 Horoscopes ......... 15 Opinion..................................4 Police Report.........................6 Sports..«.............................. 11 Today’s Activities........ ..,...,.2 World/Nation........................ 3 P age 2 State P ress Ftìday, March 3,1995 Super Bowl_ f i i " " 1" " ..’f ' ..... ' ' T oday . C ontinued from page 1. chairman o f the planning committee. abroad. 4 p jn „ SAC 313. The Today Section Is a d u ty calendar o l events printed as a service to tite A SU ¡ 8 Asian Bible Fellowship — W eekly m eeting. O pen to new com ers. Singing community. Requests am aooepted on a and fellowship; com e join us. 7:30 p.m ., first-come, first-serve basis an d are print­ M U Room 213. ed on a space -available basis. « S c h o o l o f A rt — F ib e r a rtis t John Campus dubs and organizations m ay M a rs h a l visiting artist, will deSver a free submit written arm ies to the State Press le c tu re a b o u t h is w o rk. 7 p m . A rt in the b asem en t o f M atth ew s C en ter, B u ild in g R oom 2 2 0 . In te rn a tio n a lly Room IS . R equests w ill not b e taken known ceram ic sculptor Rudy Audo wW over tiie phone. Faxed entries w ill also present a tre e slide lectu re ab ou t his not be accepted. work. 7 p.m ., Architecture North, AED 60. Entries must contain the futi nam e o f • KASR 1260 AM/Cable Channel 2 — the dub or organization, a description o f Friday morning mayhem with T-R oc and the event, date, time and the full address the U ’l Jerkys. A preview of the weekend o f the location. A ll requests are subject to concert/party scene, horoscopes at 8:20, ed itin g fo r content, sp ace an d clarity. and the “Stagg Chili Hot Pic of the W eek* Incomplete or illegible entries wU be dis­ a t 8 :5 5 . 6 -9 a .m ., 1 2 6 0 A M , C a b le carded. Channel 2. Deadline for requests in noon the day • A m erican In dian C ou ncil — G eneral before publication and entries will not be m eeting to discuss upcom ing events,. accepted more than three working days 2:30 p.m ., Multicultural Lounge, Student before publication. O nly one entry p e r Services Building. organization p e r day is permitted. • P ro g ra m fo r S E A s ia n S tu d ie s — Colloquium : T h e Sun A fter Septem ber • D e p a rtm e n t o f P s y c h o lo g y In 1965: Politics and interpretation of a con­ E d u catio n — C ounseling av ailab le at tem porary Indonesian Painting.” By b r. Counselor Training Center at ASU. Free K en n eth M . G e o rg e , D e p t, of for full-tim e A SU students, faculty and Anthropology, H arvard University. 1:30staff. C all 965-5067. Payne H aiti Room 2:30 p.m ., LL C 57. Spring open house. 402. 2:30-4:30 p.m ., LL C 50. • W o m en in C o m m u n ic a tio n s — Anyone in terested p lease fe e l free to Saturday, March 4 : , attend. 2 p.m ., Reading Room, Stauffer • Students o f P ub lic A ffa irs N etw ork — Hall second floor. Spring Picnic fo r te e faculty, staff and • N a tiv e A m e ric a n B u s in e s s students of the School of Public Affairs. O rgan ization — Academic Success lun­ S3 for lunch; m em bers ea t free. Noon, cheon, 11:30 a m., MU Arizona Room R, Clark Park; 19th and Roosevelt. General meeting, a|l welcome. 3:30 p.m .. American Indian Institute. Sunday, March $ : • A ll S ain ts C ath o lic N ew m an C enter • M EC hA — Everyone is invited to La — Lenten reflections and First Friday R aza picnic. The purpose of this event is Adorations. All are welcom e to join the to get to know members of our different community any tim e between 6-10 p.m. organization and have better communi­ 230 E. U niversity, northw est corner of cation. 1-5 p.m ., D aley Park; two blocks College and University. south of Apache and College. Korean Undergraduate Student • School o f A rt — The Sunday Salon, a A ssociation — M e e tin g . T rip to free lecture series by School of Art facul­ C alifornia w ill be discussed. Everyone ty , p re s e n ts p h o to g ra p h e r T a m a rra welcome. 3 p.m ., M U Pim a. 1 Kaida, whose works are in m ajor photo­ • B lack Business Students grap hic c o llec tio n s. 2 p .m ., A S U A rt Association — A pollo night. 7 p .m ., Museum, Nelson Fins Arts. N e d ) Hall. • U ltim ate Frisbee — Open practice and • A IE SE C — All m em bers and anyone scrim m age. B eg inn ers w elco m e. Fo r interested invited to our weekly meeting. more information call 966-9013. 6 p.m ., All m ajors welcom e. G et practical busi­ SRC Fields. n e ss e x p e rie n c e an d an in te rn s h ip \\T< >& “We want to showcase the University so We are not going to encourage people to not work,” he said. “However, there might be unique situations in this end of campus (by Sun Devil Stadium) where it might make some sense to take time off.” Most classified staff do not want the University to close despite the potential problems accompany­ ing the Super Bowl, said Robert Curry, president of Classified Staff Council. “If you cancel people’s time, then you have to ask how you would make that time up. You would have to use Vacation time or compensation time,” he said. “This would be less satisfactory than prob­ lems dealing with the traffic.” The main concern of classified staff is the park­ ing situation, Curry said. “We want to know if we will be able to get to campus in the morning and how it is going to be if we want to leave for lunch,” he said. University officials hope to have a clear plan of how to deal with traffic and parking concerns by the end of the month, Miller said. The committee is waiting on the final decision of thé placement of the NFL Experience before making more certain plans. “The NFL Experience tentatively will be along Rio Salado Drive, but this is not definite,” he said. “We are fairly certain but not absolutely certain. We don’t want to make decisions dependent on the placement of the NFL Experience because if, for any reason, it doesn’t happen there and it is some­ where else, it will create problems.” Miller said the Public Safety subcommittee’s draft, which will include the parking and traffic plans, is due to him March 15. Currently, the proposal to cancel classes the Thursday and Friday prior to the Super Bowl is cir­ culating through the Academic Senate’s executive committee, according to Debra Losse, president of the Senate. She said the Senate will meet Monday to discuss the proposal. Glick said he hopes to receive advjce from the Senate and will make a final decision concerning classes shortly thereafter. Sigma Pi___ C ontinued from page 1. pledges,” she said. ‘To me, this is a form of hazing. You’re taking women, you’re demeaning the women and essentially it could cause harm.” " She added that the flier’s harm is its message that women are there tor the taking. “We just had a brutal rape on campus,” she said. “We don’t need anything else to potentially perpetuate violence against women.” ~ '* ' Kelly Campbell, a Gamma Phi Beta sorority member, said that the flier incident makes the entire fraternity system look bad. “They do a lot of good things, but unfortunately, ads like these play into the previously existing stereotypes,” she said. Campbell said what bothered her most about the flier is the assumptions it is based upon. “I think that it doesn’t give credit to men or women — say­ ing that this is all that men want and saying that this is all that women can give,” she said. “I would hope that people would be above that.” V t; l :> .1 1 The Sigma Pi fraternity issued the follow­ ing apology ‘Thursday addressed, to ASU administrators, staff, students and visitors: “We, the brothers of Sigma Pi fraterni­ ty, extend our sincerest apology to the entire ASU community regarding the pub­ lication and posting of offensive and inap­ propriate iush fliers. We accept complete responsibility for our conduct, along with any ramifications our ill-advised actions may render. Immediately, this fraternity will embrace more positive endeavors to make Sigma Pi, the Greek system and ASU stronger. We deeply regret any discomfort, embarrassment or personal distress the fliers may have created.” H a ï? oni P i, f i : for U Call It 7-9pm Longnecks 7-10:30 Ik tny Orini the Hou 9-10:30 y J The first 200 people have a chance to win a TRIP TO LAS VEGAS. SW Corner of Scottsdale 8 McDowell • 423-8499 World/Nation WASHINGTON (AP) — In dramatic fashion, a battle-weary Senate rejected the balanced budget constitutional amendment by the narrowest of margins Thursday, scut­ tling the cornerstone of the Republican drive to slash federal spending. The GOP was dealt its biggest defeat since capturing control of Congress last fall when lawmakers voted for the amendment by 65-35 — two votes short of the twothirds m ajority required to change the Constitution. President Clinton, who waged a quiet campaign against the measure, attributed the amendment’s failure to the refusal of Republicans to offer a “simple guarantee that Social Security would be protected.” The margin would have been only one vote but for a parliamentary maneuver by Senate M ajority Leader Bob Dole. The Kansas Republican, who backs the propos­ al, voted against it at thè last moment so be would have the right to force lawmakers to vote on the hugely popular measure again in the fall of 1996 — in the heart of the P a g;1:0S73:0 0 , 5 :1 5 .7 :3 0 , 9 :4 5 . (12 :1 0 a ---------J■■■cTrAiiee U S T C A U S E mi > ¡Fn-Sun) 12:00, 2,-15. 5:30, 8 :0 0 ,1 0 :1 5 , (12:30 am Fn, Sat) . .D U M B AN D D U M B E R m u > BffWSunJ 11:45. 2:00, 4:30, 7:00. March 2-5, 1995 C e n t e r p o in t 11 ■ HIDEAWAY«. >w „ iFri-Sun) 12:15.2:50. 5;20,-«*'HWo * . m - 7:50. 10:20, (12:35 am Fn. Satt saga " (Fn-Sun) 12:10, 2:35, 4:55, 7:1 30 % OFF TH E IVIAI\IGL.ER<«>> (Fn-Sun; 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, ----- (T2:45 arrim sari g M I A M I ^ W S o d u (PQ13) * - iF/FSufÿ12:3Q. 2:55, 5:20, 7:45; 10:05; (1 2:20 am Fri. Siti ROOMMATES '2 :00 . 2:30, 5:00, 7 — (12:40. am Fit, Sao , T H E H U N T E D ,f Thx 9:20, (Midnight Fri. sat; P Q R R E S T G U M P ____ iFn-Sun) 1;00. 4:00, 7:00, 10:00, (1 2 :3 5 am Fn. Sari o i b i t a i e tra ck J U S T C A U 8 E jm > (Fn-Sun; 12:40, 3:05. 5:30, 7:55, DO Twv 10:20. (12:30 am Fri. Sari omht«l iriA EVERYTHING ILLY M ADISON (pai)) > ri-Sunt-12:25. 2:40, 4:55. 7:10, 25 , tMiqnignl Fn. Sat) ON THE S ID E Hu > (Fn-Sun) 1:10, 4; 10, 7;25. M0j00Jt2j30ama^ Excluding Periodicals _ .. IE M A D N E S S OF K IN G G E O R G E a « (Fri: Sal) 1 :20, 4:50, 7:20. 9:50: " (Sun; 1 :2 0 ,5 :4 ¿ .8 :10 N O B O D Y ’S F O O L ih) (Fri. Sat) 1 : 4 0 . 4:30.7:10,10415; ffl>»^l;4a5:30. t :50 T H E Q U IC K AND THE D E A D im (Fri. Sat) 1:10, 5:00, 7:40, 9:55; (SunjT:10. 5:50. tí: 2 0 L E G E N D S OF THE F A L L in (Fri. Sat) 1 :3 0 , 4 :4 5 . 7:30, 10:15; (SuuTiàÒTS: lò ; 7 :sè T H E SH A W S H A N K R E D E M P T IO N nu - Mon. - Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-8 Sun. 10-6 i ------ ">.4:15.7:“ " m il 7:00, 10:00; 1:00. 6:00, é:00 P FIC T IO N i«, 901 S. Mill Ave. in Tempe C enter S.E. Corner o f M ill & University ih 1:0 0 ,4 :0 0 . ti & IS MIONS ,P THE ADVENTURES OF VEUOW 0 0 0 : IFAR FR O M H O M E iroi s 3 :2 0 .7 :1 0 I THE UOW KINQ wr « 1:15. 5:10. 9:00 ITH E S A N T A CLAUSE m i • _ 3 :35,7:50 I » Ì WEÌTHOHTER u-ora ■ I »TARPATE ifooT * ilj|jw __________________________________________________________________ 2 :40 , 7-20 State P ress Friday, March 3, 1995 P age 8 For $39, we can make your parents think about you every day. Send them a subscription to the State Press. Subscribe now and send your parents the State Press for Spring Semester 1995. They'll receive 68 issues and will be able to keep up w ith w hat's goin g on at ASU instead of relying on you to keep them updated! GREAT GIFT IDEA FOR FRIENDS, RELATIVES, PARENTS and GRANDPARENTS. ■( IT'S YOUR NEWSPAPER S tate P ress ASU'S Morning Daily Newspaper Serving ASU since 1890 DO IT NOW AND SAVE! )" Fill out this form and mail it with payment to: State Press Subscriptions, Box 871502, Tempe, AZ 852871502, or stop by the State Press subscription office in Mathews Center basement. SUBSCRIPTION □ SPRING SEMESTER only $39 (68 issues) For first class mail, add $35 per semester to above prices. SUBSCRIBER NAME Address_________ _ State___Zip City Phone ( V O Check here if you'd like us to send a g ift card to acknowledge the g ift subscription. □ CHECK ENCLOSED Charge my □ Visa □ MasterCard □ American Express Card Num ber ' . :. •: Expiration D ate___________ _ Signature Your Nam e • Your Phone Num ber NEED MORE INFO? CALL OUR SUBSCRIPTION DEPT. AT (602) 965 7572 Friday, March 3, 1995 State P ress ASASU offers unique trip: LA’s M useum o f Tolerance By Betty M ihai.opoui.os State P ress Spring Break is usually a time to take off for some fun in the sun, but this year 40 ASU students will get a more serious expe­ rience by traveling to the Simon Wiesenthal Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles. The museum is a high-tech, hands-on experimental museum that focuses on the history of racism and prejudice in America as well as the hi story of the Holocaust. Marc W endell, director o f the A ssociated Students o f ASU’s M ulti­ cultural Awareness Programming Board, said that although he has not visited the museum himself, he has read the literature and heard positive things from the people who have gone. . “This is the type of multi-cultural pro­ gramming ASU needs,” W endell said. "We’ve had years and years and years of different weeks and different days for dif­ ferent cultures and that’s fine, but unfortu­ nately a lot of people who are not a part of those cultures do not participate." ■. The “Toleranccnter" of the museum fea­ tures 35 hands-on exhibits that spotlight the major issues of intolerance and racism. In one exhibit, various aspects of the 1992 Los Angeles riots are explained from different viewpoints. In the hands-on seg­ ment o f the exhibit, visitors are asked for their personal profiles such as age, gender and ethnicity. Participants are then chal­ lenged on questions of social justice and responsible citizenship according to their profile information. In an exhibit called “The O ther America,” a wall-sized interactive comput­ er map locates and provides information on more than 250 hate groups in America. In the Holocaust section, each visitor receives a different photograph with the story of a child whose life was changed- by the Holocaust. Throughout the tour, the story is updated and at the end, the fate of the child is revealed. Wendell said there is a new dynamic to comprehending true diversity. “The understanding is that we are all dif­ ferent,” he said. “We have similarities and we have differences; we should focus on the similarities. “Unfortunately the emphasis for many years has been race and ethnicity, but there are other cultures that^ire not defined by race and ethnicity handicapped people have their own culture and certainly gays and lesbians.” Students going on the trip, which is sponsored by ASASU, will leave on March 10 and return March 13. Any students interested in participating can fill out an application, which will be screened by the board. Wendell said orga­ nizers are not necessarily looking for racist people, but the typical ASU student. “I am looking for the guy or the girl next door,” he said. “Every human being has a bias or prejudice. We are socialized to think in a certain way — it's a challenge to accept that fact.” * ASASU A ctivities Vice President Patrick Baker, who has visited the museum, said the board is trying to send people who will learn something from the experience. “We’re sending students because I think there is a need on campus for people to go to this museum,” he said. “I live on campus and I have witnessed incidents of racism and ignorance so I feel there is a need for action.” ASASU President Alan Frost, who has visited the museum, said it has a unique way of presenting a lot of history. “It was quite an experience and it was very interactive where the viewer actually becomes a part of the exhibit,” he said. SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU 1.0.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL GET A DINNER ULOSY This year we're doing it again! Every Sunday (but ONLY on Sunday), Mjke Pulos of The Spaghetti Company will give you one FREE dinner" for each dinner you order! it's our 2-for-1 SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL. And it's good for the whole year at our Tempe, Phoenix and Scottsdale locations. Any day of the week, for lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Company is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY ASU SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices even better! Our dinners include a full-course meal with all the trim­ mings - from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you can't beat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY O N SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price of 1! *But you MUST have your current student I.D. card o r fee receipt w ith you to take advantage o f this 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 special. OPEN A T I t :00 A M . TO 11:00 PM . SUNDAYS! _______________ OPEN AT 10 A.M. ON GAME DAYS!_______________ Enjoy our nightly drink specials. $ p a g l ( c t t i ( o n t p a i i ^ RESTAURANT PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 7373 N. Scottsdale Rd. Just North of Indian Bend 257-0380 483-5669 OLD TOWN TEMPE 4th St. & Mill 966-3848 Page_9 A SU officials urge everyone to strive for m erit-pay increase Maricopa County. “There’s an attitude problem we’re As the Legislature marches toward a having to fight,” she said. “It’s dot just final decision on ASU’s 5 percent merit- the Legislature.” Shick also questioned the need to pay raise request, University officials are urging faculty, staff and administrators repeatedly engage in merit-pay raise to contact their legislators its support o f debates with the Legislature. Instead, she suggested passing a bill that would the pay increase. Howeyer, a Classified Staff Council bring classified staff employees up to member said he thinks the council is just ; the salaries o f their counterparts in spinning its wheels by attem pting to Maricopa County and provide yearly pay increases. sway legislative opinion. “To me, it’s absolutely stupid that “I don’t think it will make a half of beans as to what we do,” said Ramos once a year we go through cartwheels Medina, a senior buyer in purchasing because the Legislature holds our lives in and a CSC m em ber. “T hese people theif hands,” she said. “It’s kind of like giving them perm ission to .je rk us already have their minds made up.” The Legislature is expected to make around.” While Medina suggested organizing a its final decision later this month based on the University’s request and recom­ classified staff rally similar to one held mendations from two other groups. The last fall, Sheila Stewart, an administra­ governor’s Office of Strategic Planning tive associate, said the council «ould cir­ and Budgeting recommended a 4 percent culate a petition in support Of the pay increase, while the Joint Legislative increase. “They recalled {Gov. Evan) Mecham Budget Committee recommended no with signatures” she said, laughing. increase. In other business, the CSC approved a CSC P resident R obert C urry, an office specialist senior, said at the coun­ motion to double its size by electing 21 cil meeting Thursday that it is important new members this semester, although to continue com m unicating with the their three-year terms will be staggered. Legislature through telephone calls and Curry said it is important that the council letters. However, some CSC members begin encouraging c la s s ifie d 's ta ff employee nominations. offered other suggestions. “In terras of advertising in advance, Cherylene Shick, an office automa­ tions specialist, said classified sta ff we need to start this month,” he said. Donalea Robertson, CSC vice presi-. employees such as registration, secretari­ al and custodial workers must also fight dent and sponsored programs administra­ the voters’ misconception that all state tor, said the cotmciPs woik will not end workers are permanently employed, can­ when the new members are elected. “W e’re going to need your help to not be fired and are well-paid. Classified staff employees at ASU are 24 percent train these people,” she said. “You can’t below the salaries of their counterparts in disappear into the woodwork.” By Angela M ull State P ress ASU electric car to race in Chandler By Federico Q uintana Special to the State P ress ASU’s electric race car team, along with more than 80 other teams, is scheduled in this weekend’s Fifth Annual APS Electric’s race at Firebird International Raceway. ASU team pilot-Mike McGovern will drive a 100 mph battery-powered car for ASU during the event, which runs today through Sunday. “We just might win this weekend,” said team member Roger Bailey, an industrial engineering student. “The car allows for different engine configurations, battery types and current distribution.” The event, at 20000 S. Maricopa Road in Chandler, includes both uniiqpity and high school electric race car teams from around the country in various divisions. ASU will be competing against five other universities. Last year, ASU’s electric car competed in three races against other universities, including NAU, Oklahoma State and Notre Dame. The ASU team finished third, first, and fourth, respectively. “We are the only ones with nickel cad­ mium batteries. They have a longer life span, but we can’t run full voltage power and that limits our top speed a little,” said Robert Hajduk, another team member from the engineering department. The team is also relying on McGovern’s driving skills to make up for the small power loss. The 1,000-pound racing car needs to meet race specifications established by Solar and Electric Racing, a Phoenix-based company that regulates these races. It fea­ tures a belt-driven, four-motor configura­ tion and is powered by 24 six-volt nickel cadmium batteries allowing for a 25-mile range at full speed. The electric car is part of an extensive student project that began during the 1994 spring break session. The basic $40,000 frame and body work were provided by the main sponsors, Arizona Public Service, while the batteries were supplied by Salt River Project. It was up to the students, however, to build the rest of the car and to make it competitive. The team will qualify this afternoon and races are scheduled to begin at 8 a.m. Saturday. The finals are slated for Sunday. Admission for each day of the event is $4. P olice R eport ASU police reported the following inci­ dents Thursday: • A male employee reported that a ther­ mometer was broken and mercury spilled onto the floor in Life Science E-wing. • A male employee found a knife and razor blades in room C l 57 at the E. Homer Durham Language and Literature Building, which were impounded for destruction. Tempe police reported thé following inci­ dents Thursday: • A 33-year-old man was arrested for disor­ derly conduct at Club 411 after he was physically removed from the bar. He tried to reenter, but when three bouncers would not allow him in', he began directing racist terms at two of the bouncers. • A male suspect is at large after entering through an open rear door of'an Auto Zone at 7:45 a.m. Wednesday and stealing one employee’s wallet and the money from the store safe. Inside the store, he told one employee to get on the floor and that if he moved, he would be shot. He pointed the gun at another employee in the front of the store, took his wallet and made him open the safe. He then fled down an alley behind the store. • A 38-year-old man was stopped for a traf­ fic violation and had a suspended license, an expired temporary registration on the rear window of the vehicle and no proof of insurance. A records check revealed that he had two outstanding w arrants from Snowflake, Ariz. Compiled by S tate P ress reporter Todd KeUy Comics State P ress Friday, March 3,1995 Page 10 [ n f ir f t t íiN Hl;Xed Sí I aca} H oLttviteAt THE THIAL OF THE CENTURY.. 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They were both wrong. “I thought we were through,”- Mario Bennett of the Sun Devils said. “But we got our shots to fall at the end.”' Isaac Burton’s 3-pointer from the right corner with three seconds left gave No. 15 ASU a 72-71 Pac-10 victory over Washington Thursday night. “We're fortunate.” relieved Sun Devils coach Bill Frieder said. “We got down by five and we didn't quit.” “That was certainly disappointing. I feel terrible for the kids,” disappointed Washington coach Bob Bender said. The Sun Devils (21-7, 11-5) came back to win after the Huskies (8-16. 4-11) took a 71-66 lead on two free throws by Jamie Booker with 19 seconds to go. Bennett. ASU’s 6-foot-9 junior center, scored a career-high 37 points, 24 in the first half, on 17-for-24 shooting, including eight dunks. Bennett's previous best was 35 as a freshman against Arizona in 1992. Freshm an Mark Sanford helped the Huskies fight back from a 17-point deficit early in the second half and finished with 26 points, 18 in the second half. “We thought it was close to being over,” Sanford said with a grim ace. “Unfortunately, we were wrong.” After Ron Riley of ASU made a despera­ tion 3-pointer from about 10 feet behind the line with 11 seconds left, the Sun Devils forced Bryant Boston to lose the ball out of bounds w ith nine seconds left, Washington’s 26th turnover of the night. Burton was wide open on his winning basket, the only 3-pointer he made in six attem pts, after receiving a pass from Marcell Capers, who was double-teamed when he drove the lane. Bennett was supposed to take ASU’s final shot, but the Huskies had him cov­ ered. Burton said he was glad to oblige. “If you're a shooter, you’ve got to keep shooting,” Burton said. “If there was a big shot to take, I wanted it to be on my shoulders.” “He’s a scatterbrain,” Frieder said. “And a scatterbrain will make big shots in crucial situations.” ASU won its eighth game in 10 starts and beat Washington for the 13th consecutive time since 1989. The Sun Devils were ahead 45-33 at half­ time — mainly because of the Huskies’ 18 turnovers, eight by point guard Jason Hamilton, against ASU’s intense full-court pressure. Washington came back in the sec­ ond half to nearly win the game, making only eight turnovers in the second half only one by Hamilton. ASU took a 52-35 lead on Bennett’s dunk 4:37 into the second half aiid it appeared as if the game was over. The Sun Devils appeared to lose interest at that point and Washington battled back to tie at 58 on a 3-pointer by Sanford with 8:28 to go. Bennett’s 5-footer with 8:06 remaining put ASU in front 60-58; Boston tied the score at 60 with a 12-footer with five min­ utes left; Bennett's free throw gave the Sun Devils a 61-60 lead, and Sanford’s dunk put the Huskies up 62-61 with 3:31 left. A 3-pointer by Sanford with 2:34 left and two free throws by Hamilton with 52 sec­ onds on the clock staked Washington to a 67-61 lead. Capers’ 3-point play with 31 seconds for ASU made the score 67-64 before Boston sank two free throws for a 69-64 Washington lead with 29 seconds remaining. . Bennett made his eighth dunk — and ASU’s first basket in almost eight minutes — to cut the Washington lead to 69-66 before Booker’s two free throws with 19 seconds to go. A sso ciated Press Junior Mario Bennett drives to the hoop as W ashington's Mark Sanford attempts to defend dur­ ing ASU’s 72-71 victory Thursday night in Seattle. Bennett led all scorers with 37 points. Sun Devils fail to overtake Cougars, suffer 74-67 loss By Lee N ewman State P ress Jim P o u lin /S ta ts P ress Washington State senior Susie Jarosch and ASU sophomore Lifsa Kotilainen fight for a loose ball during the first half o f Thursday night’s 74-66 Cougar victory in the University Activity Center.Next on their schedule, ASU faces Washington at 4:30 pan. Saturday In the UAC. ' The ASU w om en’s basketball team found them selves in a fam iliar spot Thursday night, and it was also a familiar outcome. The Sun Devils were always in the game but could never overtake W ashington State, resulting in a 74-67 defeat at the University Activity Center. For the third consecutive home game, ASU (8-17 overall, 2-14 Pac-10) found themselves trailing throughout the whole game, but never by more 10. And just like the two previous games, ASU was never the recipient of a key series that could have turned the game around. Unlike their last two home games, the Sun Devils were not completely pleased with their play. “Offensively, the points didn’t come easy for us,” ASU Coach Jacqueline Hullah said. “We missed a ton of lay-ups.” “We forced shots,” sophomore Molly Tuter said. “Our concentration, at least mine anyways, just wasn’t there. This was a game we should have won if we would have played our style of play.” W ashington State (14-10, 7-8) outrebounded ASU 52 to 38, including 21 offensive boards. Sophom ore Amy Saneholtz finished with 22 rebounds, nine on the offensive end. “The boards killed us,” Hullah said. “We were so inconsistent with our weak-side rebounding. That hurt us.” Saneholtz’s 22 rebounds was a Pac-10 season-high. She also finished with 16 points. “She was super tonight,” Washington State Coach Harold Rhodes said. “She did a great job of constantly pounding the boards.” Tuter finished with a gam e-high 20 points but was just 3 for 12 from the field in the second half. Freshm an Stephanie Freeman finished with 19 points, thirteen of which came in the second half. She also fin­ ished with nine rebounds. Senior Tiffany Krahenbuhl returned to the lineup for the first time since Feb. 4 and finished with three points in just over five minutes of playing time. “ASU has a young team that’s still learn­ ing her (H ullah’s) style,” Rhodes said. “They’re a team that is definitely going to threaten next year.” “I’m disappointed, but I’m still optimistic because we’re learning,” Hullah said. “We’re struggling, but we’re building on things for the future. “I look at a team like Washington State, who was in a same situation last year that we’re in this year. They were at the bottom of the Pac-10, and this year they returned almost everybody. They have one more year’s experience, more continuity and they’re playing with much more confi­ dence.” ASU w ill now set its sights at Washington, as the Huskies visit the UAC Saturday at 4:30 p.m. Washington is tied for second in the Pac10 with Oregon State. The Huskies are 11-4 in the conference and 21-7 overall. The Sun Devils lost 82-37 to Washington when the schools met on Feb. 2 in Seattle. “The previous two games we played we got blown out,” Tuter said. “So even though we’re disappointed we lost, this game tonight gave us some confidence for Saturday because it proved that we don’t get blown out if we play half-way decent. I think Saturday is going to be a good game. I think we’ll play much better than we did tonight.” •> - P age 12 State Press Friday, March 3,1995 Sun Devil baseball to fight Wildcats in 3-game series By L ee N ewman State P ress Jim P o ulin/S tate Press Junior right-hander Derek Mickelson and the Sun Devils face UofA ih a three-game series this weekend. The series starts with a 2:30 p.m. showdown in Tucson today. ASU vs. UofA —- it has been an in-state rivalry as long back as anyone attending either school can ever remember. Baseball fans are going to get a first-hand look at what this rivalry is all about this weekend, when the 13th-ranked Sun Devils battle the Wildcats in a three-game series beginning today at 2:30 p.m. in Tucson. The series continues at Packard Stadium Saturday at 7 p.m. and concludes Sunday at 1 p.m. Another importance of this weekend’s scries is that it also marks the beginning of ASU’s Six-Pac schedule. However, don’t think the Sun Devils have spent the season worrying about this weekend. “To tell you the truth, I haven’t really thought about U ofA ,” ASU Coach Pat Murphy said. “We’ve been concentrating on each game we play.” “We don’t want to overlook teams and look too much ahead,” senior Randy Betten said. “When the series starts, w e’ll be thinking about them.” ASU (16-4) is Scheduled to start senior Billy Neal today and sophomores Kaipo Spenser and Jason Bond Saturday and Sunday. The trio started all three games against Loyola Marymount. In that series, the Sun Devil pitching staff recorded 32 strikeouts in 27 innings. Neal recorded 12 Ks in his start, while Spenser recorded 10 a day later. Both totals were career highs for the two pitchers. Starting for UofA will be Pat McMillin Friday and Ryan Frace Saturday. Sunday’s starter is still undetermined. McMillin has an 0-0 record on the season, with a 1.89 ERA and 13 strikeouts in 19 innings. Frace is 3-2 on the year with 3.22 ERA. In his six starts this season, Frace has three complete games, one shutout and 32 strikeouts. The Sun Devils are coming off series sweeps of San Francisco and St. Francis and two out of three against Loyola M arymount. Their 16-4 record is tops among all Six-Pac teams. UofA is 12-10-1 on the season — a vast improvement from last year’s 15-40 mark, which came after UofA lost 11 players to professional contracts. The W ildcats’ one tie came against Texas A&M when the 3-3 game had to be called because o f rain. The Wildcats are coming off of a two-game sweep of New Mexico State Tuesday and Wednesday. Wednesday’s 10-8 victory saw seven dif­ ferent UofA players with RBI's. Catcher Chris Cooper highlighted the Wildcat scor­ ing with a three-run home run in UofA's seven-run first inning. Seniors Jeff Gjerde and Menno Wickey lead UofA offensively. Gjerde leads the team with a .366 batting average and 21 RBIs. Wickey is batting .325 with a team-leading three home runs and nine stolen bases. “UofA has a good program,” Murphy said. “We’ll have to play good baseball to beat them.” ASU owns the series with UofA. Since 1959, when baseball became a varsity sport, the Sun Devils hold a 131-87 edge over the Wildcats. Last season, ASU won four of six from UofA. Gym nastics not worried about letdow n against D enver By J eremy S iein State P ress The ASU women’s gymnastics team Finally gets a break in its schedule this week. The Sun Devils (7-4). who have faced eight top20 opponents in their first seven meets, host the Denver Pioneers tonight at 7:30 at the University Activity Center. Denver brings a 5-7-1 record into the meet with a scorching Sun Devil squad. ASU has tied or set its season-high score in each of its past four meets, culminating in last Friday’s 194.225 against then-No. 8 Oregon State. According to freshman Carie Courtney, the Sun Devils are once again prepared to better their previ­ ous week’s performance. “Our goal is (to score) a 196,” Courtney said. “We’re really pushing for that, because this team is very capable of reaching that.” : ASU Coach John Spini agreed the Sun Devils try to improve every meet but said the team has no control over the score it receives. “Our goal is to hit our routines,” he said. “We have no control over how the judges are going to come out and score. ... We would love to have a high score that beats the 194.225 mark, but we have no control over that.” With the lowly Pioneers heading into Tempe, some may wonder if ASU will be m otivated enough to top its season-high score again. The 1lth-ranked Sun Devils, though, have no fear of a letdown and will treat this meet like any other. “Our focus is more on the score and not on who we’re facing or who we’re trying to beat,” senior Danna Lister said. “We just focus on increasing our score and bettering it each time.” “I don’t think we’re concentrating on who we’re competing against. We’re concentrating on what we can do and what we’re capable of doing right now,” Spini said. The first glimmer of what ASU is capable of came two weeks ago in Tuscaloosa, Ala. ASU came into the meet with a No. 14 ranking and an average meet score of only 191.025. Although the team came in second to the third-ranked Crimson Tide, the Sun Devils posted an impressive road score of 193.625, well exceeding their former season-high of 191.825. According to Lister, that meet was a turning point in ASU’s season. “Against Alabama it just seemed like all of our hard work was starting to pay off. It wasn’t like we were just in here working for nothing any more,” she said. “The older girls have known for some time what a good team we have and how good we can be. 1 think maybe the freshmen realized what a good team we have and that all it takes is to be consistent and to hit.” Spini agrees that something happened to the team in Alabama but won’t go so far as to call it a turning point in the season. “I see the Alabama meet as a group of athletes stepping up to the challenge. I think before we were competing some really talented freshmen in there and they did a good job, and our upper class was having a little trouble. But, they knew it was a long season “I didn’t even concentrate on what that meet meant to us. It’s just that we did better.” Mark Kramer/State Press Junior Katie Freeland and the 11 th-rtinked wom en's gymnastics team host Denver at 7:30 tonight in the University Activity Center. G olf seeks 6th straight wiii-at;Stanf<|K Senior Wendy Ward also feels confident about the team. By H eather Snow “Everyone’s to m playing well, and we got some good State Press The ASU women’s golf team is looking few its sixth rounds in this week,” Ward said. “We’ve had good prac­ consecutive win this weekend as it begins play at the tices and everyone’s prcparedfeebest they c m i Stanford Invitational today. The lineup for this weekend’s tournament will be “We want to continue to play well and hopefully con­ seniors Ward and KristeJ Moujrgue d ’ A lgto, junior tinue our first-place finishes,” Coach Linda Vollstedt Linda Ericsson, sophomore Heather Bowie and freshman Kellee Booth. Junior Vinny Riviello will also be playing said.” The tournament consists of 15 teams, and according to but as an individual. Vollstedt, it’s a good field. “Individually, any o f these five pfeyerlc<$ald « ^ f e i s “This will be a strong field with teams like Stanford, San tournament,” Vollstedt said. “They all individually fin­ Jose State, Tulsa and ourselves,” she said. “But I feel confi­ ished in the top 10 in last-week's tournament in Tucson, dent, and we just have to go into every tournament and do . so I feel confident,” ... as well as we can and not necessarily planning to win.” W « i , who finished^ ^ b p n d at the’# w ^ a in e n t in Tucson, is excited about this tournament. I “T h is is a strong field with a lot of Pac-lO teams, especiaUy o u r big rivalStattford,” she said “I hope t o :? (day w ell, boUffs hard to p red ictso w e’llju st see what shots fell.” ' 1 '• According to Booth, this is a good course and she feels comfortable with j t . . “I’ve played this ebytse bef°re a n d I’ve scored well on it in the past, so I feel confident going into the tourna­ ment,” Booth shid, ‘T drink overall the team will do very well, and this is the kind of course feat the whole team can perform well pof- ' *ifi T r ie S an d ija g j M M i. * 1 \ * State Press P a g e l3 Friday, March 3,1995 Tennis to battle San Diego, UC-Irvine at 2-day event By D an M iller State P ress Free food. No, its not a misprint. The annual Penn/ASU National Collegiate Invitational men’s tennis tourna­ ment will be the main event at Whiteman Tennis Center this weekend. The Sun Devils (4-2 overall, 0-2 Pac-10) will host SMU, UC-Irvine and San Diego in the unique two-day affair. ASU will do bat­ tle with San Diego at noon on Saturday and UC-Irvine at noon on Sunday. The action will be non-stop as two matches will com­ mence simultaneously on each side of the tennis center. Back to the rations. The Sun Devil Club will sponsor a bar­ becue absolutely gratis to all fans beginning at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday. The entrees will include succulent, charbroiled. cooked-toorder hot dogs — buns are optional — and ice cook refreshing soda. ASU students must have their validated student IDs on their person — no fakes — or else they will be forced to take in the irresistible wiener odors while standing in the searing heat in parking lot 59. “Who says there’s no free lunch,” ASU Coach Lou Belken joked. ASU sophomore W olf von Lindenau was kind enough to offer a few words to the 'wise. . / ‘Come out and grab what you can,”' von Lindenau said of the franks and pop. “Make a day out of it. Get some .free food. Get some sun, and watch some great tennis.” Both of ASU’s matches will have crucial regional repercussions. The Sun Devils, who are ranked eighth in the N CAA’s region V III (A riz., C alif., Nev., Ore., Wash.), are aware that wins over the No. 11 Toreros and the No. 9 Anteaters will have a considerable influence on the regional selections at season’s end. “They are teams that in order for us to get into NCAA regionals, we’re gonna have to do well against,” Belken said. “They are teams that I don’t know much about this year, but historically we’ve always battled with them.” Belken’s sentiments were echoed by von Lindenau. “These are probably the two biggest matches in the season,” the gutsy south-paw said. “If we can win these, it pretty well clinches us a spot in regionals. “We’ve got to come out and take care of business and get these out of the way.” As always, the Sun Devils’ top spot will be occupied by their fearless leader, Sargis Sargsian, who is ranked second in the coun­ try for the moment. Sargsian, who might as well wear a red “S” on his chest, has a team best 27-2 record. He and sophomore team­ mate Sergio Elias have been terrorizing opponents at the No. 1 doubles spot. The two boast a 10-2 record thus far. Freshman Tsolak Gevorkian has been kicking some rear and taking names at fifth singles as of late, and junior Paul Reber is coming off a near flawless performance against Washington last Friday. junior transfer Dave Critchley, who has been plagued with knee problems for most of the season, appears to be climbing back to his usual form after a pair of productive outings last weekend; “My knees are feeling a lot better,” said Critchley* who packs a walloping 130 mph serve. “I’d say I’m about 75 to 80 percent right now. If I keep improving, I’m gonna be very optimistic about the rest of the sea­ son,” ,Y, ■ At press time, there was still no official word on whether or not Sargsian will keep M ark K ram er/S tate Press ASU junior Sergio Elias and the rest of the Sun Devil m en's tennis team host the annual Penn/ASU National Collegiate Invitational Saturday and Sunday at Whiteman Tennis Center. his beard for the w eekend’s matches. Sargsian is sporting three-weeks growth. Regular adult admission is $3, but kids and seniors citizens are $2. Anyone show­ ing a Penn logo item will receive 2-for-1 admission. Farm animals are strictly pro­ hibited. “It would be nice to see a lot of students come out,” Critchley said. “We seem to play better in front of bigger crowds.” Expansion committee to ask owners to vote on 2 cities SCOTTSDALE (AP) — Baseball’s expansion com­ mittee will ask owners next week to vote on which two cities to add in 1998 and what price to charge for the franchises. Expansion committee chairman John Harrington said Thursday he wasn’t sure whether owners would take a final vote when they gather at Palm Beach, Fla. Harrington also said representatives from all five expan­ sion groups will make second presentations to the commit­ tee when it meets Tuesday. Harrington said the committee then will meet jointly with the executive council during the evening and make its recommendation of which cities to add. Full ownership will debate the matter at Thursday’s major league meeting. Phoenix and St. Petersburg, Flà., are considered the overwhelming favorites to get the franchises, Which are expected to cost from $125 million to $150 million each. Two groups from northern Virginia and one from Orlando, There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Fla., also have applied. The committee will recommend a second wave of expansion that would start no earlier than the year 2000. The northern Virginia groups have asked that if they aren’t awarded a team for 1998, they be designated next week to receive a team in the second wave. Harrington said that request would be passed along to the full ownership group. Baseball officials have said it’s unlikely the leagues for the new teams would be set next week. If one team each is added to the American and National leagues, that would necessitate the start of interleague play. Some want both teams added to the same league. Phoenix needs a decision on its bid by March 31. Maricopa Country authorized a tax to fund construction of a $238 million retractable roof stadium, but the authority will lapse if a franchise isn’t awarded by the end of this month. r w e c o re h a ir 1 I QUALITY HAIR CARE - AFFORDABLY PRICED I f MEASURE YOUR TOË] i 403 W. University Dr. • 829-7774 classified section. MIGUELS MUSICŒNTER J ► M ETRONOM ES • ACCESSORIES AC CESSO RIES •»ETC. 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LOS PR A D O S -H A R D Y /13TH St. 1/2 mile, to cam pus $70k 2 „ story 3bdrm/3bath. $54,900 patio hm 2 bdrm 2 bath 3pools/spas« ten n is, v lly b a ll, bsktball. C all today Connie, John Hall A sso­ c ia te s 8 4 0 -5 1 7 6 o r 9 4 8 - 0 5 5 0 ♦3986 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE ANNO UNCE­ MENTS SPORTING GOODS & Military Collectible Show March 11 & 12 at American Legion Post 2; 2125 S.. industrial Park Dr., Tem pe. Sat. 9 -5 , Sun. 9 -4 : $4 a d m is­ sion; Buy, sell, trade. Free park­ ing. Good food & fun. For table info call 984-9683, Proceeds to charity; ($ 1 o ff with this ad! ) 2BD 2BA townhouse w/great rm, vaulted ceilin gs, skylights, 2-c carport. C lose to ASU: Incl refrig, W/d, $55,900- 7.5% assum­ able loan . C all Ron M oore o f Judy Jones, The Prudential Ari­ zona Realty, 483-4900. • Break. Into M odeling by Entering TRAVEL CHOLLA BAY/RO CK Y Point. Cabin rentals, $40r$50 4 persons, add’l add $5/ea. Beds, stove, ba w/shwfs, fpl. 968-8009 msg. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your nam e-1 specialize in quick departures. M ost places w orld­ wide. Tálso buy transferable coupons/a wards. 968-7283. R/T TO Austin; Tx, $150; Lv 3 10, 5 p m , ret 3 /2 0 , 6am . C a ll Akash 965-7406: SPRING BREAK Hotel Reservations $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 B uy O f T he W eek : CALL 9 9 4 - 4 7 0 5 P a p a g o P ark 3 bd, $92,000. Skylights, light & bright, walk4n closets.. B o b B u ll o c k R ealty E x ec u tiv e s 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 LIVE C O M PU TE R CH A T & GA M ES jsiine lines fc>fVour needs! - BBS C allw ithyour modenri 2 7 7 - 0 0 2 5 • 24 hours WE BUY & SELL USED L E V I'S ! ® 1991 H O N D A E lite C h80 red, low m iles, new battery, rear tire and clo th seat, like new $ 800. Mike 994-4012 anytime. D o n i Bé Left A t Home! Pageant ■■■;/ 14 ,4 0 0 Baud. T N I Live W i n JEEP C J-7 1 9 8 5 4 x 4 , n ew tir e s , s o ft & b ik in i to p , runs grea t. M o v in g , m u st s e ll. $ 6 0 0 0 o b o . C a ll J e s s i , ; 8 3 4 5265. Rocky Point/San Carlos T he Ms. Plus Model of the Year •S iz e s 12 &.Up •A ges 18 & Up •No experience n e c essa ry 92 VW Cabriolet, 29K, like new, red-white, at, ac, pw, alarm, air­ bag, prem. sound. $11,995 obo. Pvt pty, 502-5430 or 994-9813. Pithaya Bar - G ra n a d a Del M ar HUD SALÉ! East V a lle y , A S U a fe a H U D hom esv o n ly 3% dij. C all T.J. Carty, Realty Exec, 831-0322.. PLUS MODELING 8 9 M A ZD A M X -6 GT C oupe, blk, at, a c, p s, pb, sunrf, tint, 49K, exc cond. $6500. 894-8347. M OTO RCYCLES" HOMES FOR SALE -F. H. Bradely . State P ress Friday, March 3,1995 Page 14 H IJ E A N BUYER Call for Details 947-8245 •1 8 1 0 Scottsdale Rd (between Curry & McKellips) 5 minutes from ASU! • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM apartment to sub­ let. Available March 1 to Aug 31. Call Dave, 921-8804. 2 B D , 1B A , evap co o lin g , from $ 3 2 5 /m o util incl. A vail 3 /10. Good credit réq’d. 345-8390. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 2bd apt., walk to ASU, pool, laundry rm, 1 blk so. o f U niversity on 8th St. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238. LEA SE EN DS June 20- Lrg 1 bd, $450/m o + elec. P ool/sp a, laundry fac. Lauren, 967—42.52. •.... HOMES FOR RENT IB D iB A guest house, 2blks to A SU , $380/m o. 3bd avail.-also, Tim 894-0288. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 5BDRM 2BA , 15th & C ollege. $1500/m n. Ibdrin I ha S460/m o includes utilities. Call 894-0288. STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS 965-6735 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE A L PIN E ST A IR C L IM B E R . B a rely u sed. E xc epnd* c o m ­ pact and fun. Get f ^ d y fofTiTkin i se a so n . $ 5 0 '' firm -'. 983- 5742. j :'- -HEWLETT PACKARD business c a lc 19BTI. does finance, stats, ; b u sin e ss c a lc s . A ls o lis ts ap­ pointments,: nam es, etc., $1.00. Joe;'967-7668. FURNITURE ~~ B E A U T IF U L SQ FA fp f sa le, blue (light & royal) with mauve $250 obo. call 831 -3862 SO FA SET, $ 2 6 5 , Q ueen bed $80, Full $70, Chest o f Drawers $40, Dinette $125. 234-5729. WHITE A N D brass day bed with a pop up trundle. Like “new. $275 947-4655 r : COMPUTERS INTERNET- GET on the infor­ m ation su p er h ig h w a y ! S lip S lash PP P w ith W W W , FTP, neWs, E-m ail, more. $9.99/m o! Net 99.249-0957, M A C 2CI w /e o lo p m on. 5 /8 0 , kybrd, mouse., lot o f orig. soft­ ware. $970 Mary 813-6129. TICKETS SU N S V S S eattle SupersoniCs Friday. Starting at $50 each. Call Steve, 678-0316. AUTOMOBILES $C ASH TODA Y!$ I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call A l, 994-4369. DO EUROPE $249 anytime! Hawaii $129Jamaica $318 r/t $ Cheap $ Fares $ $ Worldwide $ Call for FREE program description HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL S7P/HR AM S, located at Broad­ way & Mill is hiring 20 p/t tele­ marketers. S et your own sched­ ule, work as few as 20/hrs a jveèk or more. You w ill receive $7p/hr+ b onus, paid training, casu al dress, daily incentives. Call 894- EXÉCUTIVE ANS Svc needs re­ lia b le, cheerful operators with •'You B e t” attitude. P/T d ays, ev es, w knds. $ 6 starting. Must ty p e 4 5 w p m , k now 1 0 -k èy , com p exp , have reliable trans. Call 264-4000 for int. M E S S E N G E R , SC H L E PPE R and general all-around gopher needed for the advertising d e­ partment in the State Press. 'You need a car, a positive can-do atti­ tude and must be available 10am2pm each Tuesday and be willing to work on an as needed basis. Opportunity to make some bucks w ithout heavy* com m itm ent. If th is is a p p ea lin g to y o u , c a ll now. 965-6555 ask for Jackie Eldridge. W HO S A ID g re a t te s t sco res n ever g o t anyone a great job?. The Princeton Review is seeking bright, enthusiastic & dynamic individuals with high scores on the S A T , GRE, GM AT, L SA T or MCAT. P/t eves/wknds 9671480 9816 ': ’; * $7/HR + CASH! * Set free appointments for health services. Fun office, nearby Fies­ ta Mall. Eves & S a t Fun phone work! 649-9580. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale ; needs pt/ft front and back office p erso n . W ill tra in . G o o d ad­ van cem en t p o ten tia l, 4 0 2 0 N . Scottsdale Rd. Ste. T08. Apply in person. A S U G R A D student seek s at­ tendant for eves/wknd moms. No exp née. Good pay Tom 949-6041 A SU S T U D E N T S . Short sur­ veys. Easy. $6/hour base + bo­ nus, clerical positions Start now. 1 block east o f A SU , 784-2270 or 1000 E. Apache, Suite 212. '■ ; A SU STUDENTS, the A SU Tel­ efund offers the best part tim e job on campus! A position with us, w ill work with your schedule w h ile a llow ing you to ex c el in your studies. W e contact alumni to update inform ation, inform them about advancem ents and seek financial support. C hoose the ev en in g & w eek en d sh ifts you want to work, and gain sub­ stance for yoür resume. C all 9656754 ' A; ■ ' • J/'' ' ' „• . / C A N Y O U w o rk 8 :3 0 -1 0 :3 0 a.m. daily? The Stat.e Press Clas­ sified advertising department has a student worker position avail­ able. Responsibilities include an­ swering phones, helping walk-in customers place classifieds ads, filing and typing. You need a cando attitude, a sm ile and excellent spelling and typing skills. Pick up your application in the north basement o f Matthews Center to­ day! We need you to «tait 3/20. FIELD MKTNG Promo Co. in Tempe seeks ener­ g e tic tea m m em b ers in entry level positions, M ust be outgo­ ing & able to handle resp. Fax res: 602-949-9744., FLEX HRS. your sched. Door to door canVasers, including team leaders w/car & appt. setters. For more info, 897-6961 G E N E R A L A S S IS T A N C E & cleaning for A SU faculty family. Refs.$6/hr 968-9922 lv msg. GET A summer job now! Attend thè Summer Job Fair '95 W ed., March 29 Cady Mall. Meet with dozens o f potential employers ! GREAT PART-TIME job even­ ings 4-8 p.m. Mon-Fri, $6.25/hr. Call Vann, 894 t9442. IM AX THEATRE SODA STOCKERS Scottsdale. Come join our team! The Imax Theatre in Scottsdale is looking for- enthusiastic, smiling faces to fill hosting positions, 153 0 hours per w eek. A ll shifts. Ça» ¿49,-3100x204, ■v INTERNS - Bankers or Biomed­ icai engineers. Pref Tempe can­ didates. Avail J,üne-Àug in Ger­ many. German pref but not nec. Resumes only to; TSC, c/o 286 W . Pafom inp #175; Chandler, 85224. 3 1 0 .3 9 4 .0 5 5 0 S k i a t P in e t o p C L E R IC À L P R O D U C T IO N , light industrial, temporary ft/pt. ' 956-3444:: . ( ;';'V ; ; Ü IF E G U A R D W A N T E D , f/t weekdays, 9âm-5pm. The Phoe­ nix Country Club, 263-5208. Call Camp Wilderness 602-996-6169 HELP WANTEDGENERAL $10 PER HOUR PT/FT, flex hrs. Member reser­ vations, set appts by phone. N o selling & no cold calls. Several p o sitio n s o p en , room fo r ad ­ v a n cem en t. C am per C lu b s o f A m erica, 2 3 3 8 S . M cC lintock D r., T em p e. 1 - 8 0 0 -3 6 9 -2 2 6 7 . Apply in person. $10.25/START Nat'l. com pany h a s im m ediate openings in retail. N o exp; req. Flex hrs. Scholarships. Cond. ex­ ist. Secure summer positions ear­ ly. 968-4797. A N S W E R IN G S E R V IC E , all day Saturday, S co ttsd a le. 941 4890 ' : CLUCK-U CHICKEN Looking for a fun cluckin’ job? Corné join the Cluck-U-Chicken Team! W e are now hiring cock­ tail servers, bouncers, drivers, - c o o k s and C h ick en M a sco ts, Apply in person 855 S. Rural Rd. C O M P U T E R M A JO R S: N o Unix? Growing national internet service provider needs you. Net 99.24 9 -0 9 5 7 . COUNSELO RS W ANTED. Trim dow n-fitness, co-ed, N YS ca m p . 1 0 0 p o sitio n s : sp o r ts, crafts, others. Camp Shane, Ferndale, N Y 12734. (914)271-4141. C O U R IE R D R IV E R S h e e d e d Mon-Fri mornings or afternoons. Light pickup helpful. Exp pref. Starts $5/hr. 248-7977 ÏYm sg. CRT PHONE operal Basic typing skills C s h ifts . S a t. req'd. hour/steady increase: portunity -r4 3 1 -9 9 7 7 DAILY- WORK, daily ipayi -Misc jobs. Earn m om with a car. Re­ port 6 a.m. any day To: 8 0 6 W. Madison S t D ELIVERY DRIVERS needed part tim e/full tiipe-on call posi­ tions. Must have own car, truck preferred, knowledge o f Phoenix area. Call Bob and leave message, 831-8159. RESORT IF Y O U h a v e th e d e sir e to succeed, w e have the desire to meet you. Our çp. offers a salary o f $7/hr + commission. Your re­ sponsibilities include conducting promotions for businesses in the Phx area. Bus. & Comm, majors encouraged to apply. Please call 921-7755 to schedule appt. IT A L IA N S A N D A L ¿6. needs person t a db ffght clerical,'mar^ keting, & variety o f other excit­ ing; v en tu res. G reat w ork .-at-' mosphere. Call 350-9414. Group Rates $29 per day includes 2 meals, lodging, fit skiing QC MGR M otivated take-charge person needed for QC position to start up lab. Technical background a must. Chemistry or Food Science degree prof. 921-1991. # Reservations Specialist. Orange Tree Resort has -35 perm, posi­ tions avail, in new dept. $7/hr b a se w /b o n u s. $ 2 2 5 -5 2 5 /w k , mgmt. opport. ho selling, 8:301:30 & 4-9, training, must have exceptional attitude and be ex ­ perienced w/the public. 874-8613 ext. 212. Jarrett. : C A SH IE R , G E N ER AL o ffic e , com puter & 10 k ey exp . h e lp ­ fu l. A ftern oon s & Sat ’s. 8 9 3 • 6884 .V ; : AIRHITCH tm ••••••••••••• POS SY S T E M S , IN C . F/t, p/t cu sto m er s e rv ice; PC literate with varied software exp. Send re­ sum e or apply in person (8am5pm ) to: PO S S y ste m s, Attn. H um an R eso u rces; 1 0 0 2 7 S . 51st Street, Ste: 102, Phoenix, A Z 85044. v MAIL BOXES, Etc.: Gust svc p/t. Need clean cut hard worker for packing & shipping. Car needed. A p p ly a t 1 7 3 9 E. B ro a d w a y , Ìt'empe or ì 1 l OS . Alma School Rd., Mesa. MARKET RESERCH Co. seeks p eo p le to conduct opinion sur­ v e y s . D o o r to door, p h o n e, & m a ll. N o e x p . n ec. F/t & p /t avail. Own transp. a must. 277•6678, MODELS: NYC, Toyko, Paris, M ilan. L ocal scoUts w ant you ! Scottsdale, 941-6922; P /T SHOP help, Apache & Mc­ C lin to ck F iresto n e. A sk fo r Ron pr Terry, 966-7206. EOE. ■ Needed immediately ! Two shifts a v a il to sto ck g ro c ery sto re w/beverage products. $5/hr plus 28C/mile. If you are reliable, de­ t a il orien ted , have g o o d math S k ills, & ow n tran sportation please call today! 838-8405. We encourage a diverse workforce. Kelly Services. Never an applic­ ant fee. EOE. SPA ATTENDANT- Hiring in­ d iv id u a l to w ork va ried a jn . h ours. $ 5 /h r + c o m m iss io n . Apply Village Racquet & Health Glub, 44.44 .Gamelback ;R d . , Phx, ’ •' STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE needed to run marketing project on campus, P/T; great earning po­ tential. 1-800-459-VIS A x35 . . TELE SURVERS 4-8pm M-F $6.25 per hour + bo­ nus. N o selling. N o experience required. After 3 months $7,75 per h o u r+ b o n u s. C a ll Jen, 894-9442.^ / c-: YMCA CAMPING Services (SkyY Camp & Chauncey: Ranch) lo­ cated in Prescott,. AZ is now hir? ing dedicated; fun-loving, crea­ tive, caring professionals to*work with co-ed campers between the ages o f 7 & 17 in a residential camp setting, Come be a part o f the magic & share in an experi­ en ce that w ill la st a life tim e . Camping season begins last week o f May and runs through early August. Call for application & in­ formation at 254-1571. EARN a c t iv it y LEADERS Edycational/Recreational oppor­ tunity to supervise before & after school program. Req’s cre­ ative energetic team player. P/T positions avail M-F. Director, $6 22-$7/hr, 4 hrs/day (req 21 yrs age, 2 yrs exp w 2/yrs relat­ ed education); Counselor leader, $5-$6/hr, 3.5 hrs a day (req 18 yrs a g e). Paid training and YMCA membership privilege. Apply with references at: TEMPE YMCA . 7070 S. Rural Rd. $350-$400 85 M A Z D A M B 4 d r man, pwr ev w/sun, a/c, ster/cass runs great 140K $ 2 4 0 0 ,9 4 6 -2 191 Earn some cash after dass! If you’re comfort­ able with phones, we have several customer service positions open for evenings and Saturday! Bring a friend! Interview's taken 9am-4pm. Social Security card a must. 86 H Y UNDAI Exel, 2dr hatch­ back, factory a/e, red w /saddle brown int. Xlnt cond. 68K mi. $2250 965-3241 or 831-1852. STIVERS 87 BUICK Skyhawk, wht, 2dr, auto s/r, ac, low mi. cute, am-fm cass, turbo. $3500 obo/820-3290 64 E. Broadway, Ste 205 966-1100 TEM PO RA RY PER SO N N EL. People Needed To Do Fun, Easy, Respectable Part or Full Time Work At Home: 2 4 Hr. M sg Gives Details CALL NOW! 1-809-474-2821 Inti Ld rates apply. '¿¡M ProM ark I, the nation's 166th fastest growing ^company, is seeking energetic, highly motivated ’ individuals to be a part o f its telemarketing team. * Both full and pan-time positions avail^ble^ $6-$ 14 per hour depending on performance. Previous experience preferred but not necessary, opportunity for advancement, in person at 1232 E. Broadway, Suite 205, Tempe, AZ or call (602) 784-J599 P r o M ENVIRONMENTAL CO. look­ ing for f/t or p/t mgmt sales peo­ ple. Call Jean 969-9178. GRAD STUDENT w/Marketing background for p/t sales - Car al­ lo w a n c e , salary . c o m m issio n DOE. Call V P. at 921-3003: S A L E S PE R SO N n eed ed f/t. A pply ut Leonard's Luggage at Fiesta Mall. 835-7000. YOU'RE HIRED! Int'l environmental company ex­ panding in Phoenix seeks 2 out­ g o in g in d iv id u a ls fo r sa le s reps/mgrs - Immediate opening. Will train. FT/PT. 940-3804. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL FINANCE CO. seeking p/t data entry clerk. 20 hrs/wk. M ust be fle x ib le ev es/w k n d s. 48th S t./ Southern* 438-2511. P /T C O M P U T E R in p u t, fle x hrs, days only. Near A SU , Real; esta te m ajor p ref. C all 966-2301. HELP WANTEDF O O D J |R V IC |_ ARENA CANTINA N ew restaurant next to Majerle’s downtown, very busy lunch hour. Need wait staff, hostesses & bus help. Apply in person, corner o f 2nd St& Wash. 495-9969. A Z COUNTRY Club hiring p/t pm fo o d servers. N o exp nec. Must work weekeridsV~5668 E. Orange Blossom, Phxl EOE. CLUB TRIBECA - A ll positions available. Apply within* 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. FIND IT in the Classifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL WANTED: Student who would like some­ day to be a stock broker. I want a HARD W ORKING, PRO­ FESSIONAL, INTELLI­ G E N T person. One that is willing to work for the expert- ■ ene'e o f being connected with one o f the biggest and most successful brokerage and finan­ cial companies in the world, Merrill Lynch. You must be willing to listen and learn as you go. Cold call­ ing will be required. I want a; bard charger chat real­ ly wanes a chance to get into this business. Call me at 898-6635. PER WEEK OR MORE! $SELL YOUR CARS Or truck for quick cash! Foreign or dom estic sam e day response. L eave d escrip tion & any in fo 24hrs. Brian 246-3499 TDQ. HELP WANTEDSALES a r k f ìT ProMark One Marketing Services. Inc. 8 Jeff Korte Vice President Lo o k in g for P/T W o r k ? Now H ir in g for C u st o m e r S ervice R eprese ntat ives ! C ur rently S eeking C a n d id a t e s T h a t H av e T h e F ollowlng Q ua l ific a t io n s : • M u st be A ble t o T ype 3 0 w pm • I nter per so n a l C o m m S kills • P rev io us S a l e s / C ust S ervice E xp a P l u s ! • M ust be A ble t o W ork Saturdays C all K elly S ervices T oday ! 838-8405 T empe L o c a t io n r KELiy SERVICES HELP W A N TiD FO O D SERVICE CORK 'N CLEAVER A cc. apps. for lunch host(eSs), lu n ch fo o d serv er & e v e n in g cocktail. W ill train, p/t, concern w/appearance. reliability & per­ sonality are important. Apply in person. M -F ¿-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. COSMIC PIZZA now hiring exp p izza c o o k s, d eliv ery drivers, d a y tim e sa n d w ich m ak ers & nighttime flyer distributors. We o ffe r fie k -h o u r s , co m p e titiv e w ages, a fast track to manage­ m ent & great w ork in g c o n d i­ tio n s . A p p ly 1523 Ë- A pache Blvd. (N o phone calls please.) D AY S BTWN. 8am-3pm, $(6/hf start. Kenny R ogers R oasters, 3530 N. Goldwàter Blvd. Sçotts. 874-0028. '' • DELIVERY DRIVERS needed. Must have own car & insurance. Day & night shifts available; big money; big prizes, great perks, . Working out o f Tempe's hottest new club Thè Electric. Ballfoòm. Apply in persoli at Kilowatts Piz­ zeria insideTheElectric Ballroom 1216 E. Apache. Mon-Fri; 12-6; È D D Ÿ !S GRILL is looking for hosl/hostess. Please apply M-Th 2-4pm; Ask for Tracy - 4747 N. 7th St., Phoenix. 24) -1188;. JOB OPPORTUNITIES A A CRUISE Ships Hiring! Earn big $$$ + free world travel (Car­ ibbean, E urope, H aw aii, e tc .) Summer/permanent, no exp nec. Guide. (919)929-4398 ext C 1015. C R U ISE S H IP S n ow h iring Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour com panies. World travel. S ea­ sonal & fu ll-tim e em ploym ent available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext, C59185. C R U IS E S H IP S now h irin g . Earn up to $2000+/mo. Working on cruise ships or land tour com ­ panies; World travel (Caribbean, Hawaii, M exico, etc.) Full-time & seasonal employment. No exp. nec: Call, (g 18) 705-3416. XC488 Hi m You Bun Ciuckco t a t KAMIS 9 -C lo s e Hon« of the Gxllofl Pitcher Servers needed for lunch & dinner tim es. $7+/hour. A pp ly in per. son, 132.4 S, Rural Rd. PRANKSTERS ©AR & DRILL ■ Reverse Happy Hour SANDWICH PRP/DVR flex hrs. ASÙ area. Apply: Browns, on 6th, 570 S. College, Tempe. 968-4884. Happy Hour Buffet! • B A B Y SITTER S & N A N N IE S, S et your o w n sch ed u le. D a y s, evenings &/or weekends, $4.25$6.70/hr. 345-2433 o p r o g w N m |s _ MENU STA FF ATTITUDE POOL ROOM ATA DANYELLE- Get ready for a wild semester! You're the Best Dot! v Mom A FA D E B B IE - Can't w ait till Monday to tell you w ho I am! Get excited! You're the best! v Mom (Guess Who!) •99*8raaktaati»Baek D rily 7-10:30 a.m. •1/2 Price Espresso Coffees Daily 6:30 a.m.-4 p.m. • $325 Daily Lunch Specials • Happy Hour Daity 4-7 p.m. ¡¡1 BIG T - Happy 21st! I hope you made it to class this morning!!! The Jefer. COUPLE SEEKS Caucasian fe­ male as egg donor. A ge 21-26; drk hair; a v g h e ig h t/w e ig h t; p roven fe r tility p ref, but not req ’d. C a ll R uss & Pat 9 7 1 7701. FORTUNE 500 interview ques­ tions at the "Art o f Selling Your­ self" sponsered by AKPSI March 4 , 10am , B A C 116, $ 8 , in c l. take home info on tips for inter­ views, persuasion, etc. Call Amy 858-9012 for more info. FA Q MARIA - Happy Birthday! N o cak e for you—-only m ucho drinks! * your roomie Debz. Happy H our M o n -F ri 3 to 6 GET A summer job now! Attend the Summer Job Fair '95 Wed*» March 2 9 Cady Mall. Meet with dozens o f potential employers. 2 *°* 1 .jtuerv« Margs\ Domestic D raft {, Premium. Wells t t LI T's Friday ^ THE GIMMICS Saturday THE [CHIMERAS^ ^ ■ 99#J,, I WATERMELON SHOTS Friday, after 9 p.m. Private Party Rates 1 -4 days, $1.30 per line/per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line/per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line/per day (3 line minimum) Commercial Rates 1 day, $2 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line/per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line/per day 10+ days, $1.00 per line/per day (3 line minimum) Geta Jiimpcm 0 0 0 0 ITWOWEEKSI Unlimited Tannin# 9-Close m 968-S250 H HEALTH & FITNESS M ASSAGE - Sports massage & r o lfin g . T h e b e s t in tow n. Mill/Univ. Steve, 966-1776. SPRING st bathing Suits. Drop weight fast. Thermogenic herbal blend drops. Look & feel great. Guaranteed. Cheryl, 814-1309. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typin g /w o rd p r o c e ssin g . N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. A S U A R E A . A P A /M L A ex p . •IBM/laser, W P5/6, transcription. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime ESL/ENQLISH TEACHER w ill type &/or edit your papers. IBM WP. Reasonable 966-8615. Rural Et Apache 894-2662 provided! Guide. Guaranteed suc­ cess! (919) 929-4398 ext. A1015. A LASKA SUM M ER jobs. Earn up to $6000+/m o-Fishing indus­ try. Free transportation! Room & board! N o exp nec. 818-774-1199 ext. A48845. W ORK IN PA R A D ISE Sum , UVE COMEDY I I I SAVE THE PLANET! I I OR AT LEAST A BUCK I $1 OFF ANY PIZZA I 12" or 16" 1 I 1 Coupon Per Pizza Dine-ln. Pick-Up, Delivery I 9 6 8 - 6 6 6 6 1 3 0 1 E. University I PIZZA & PASTA Barren Mind Im prov I D m d uyv 1 40 p m H F ire « Side C erned? ■ F h d x yi 12 4 0 p m mm A D O P T IO N * A WELL educated school psy­ chologist, financially secure, anx­ io u sly a w a itin g to b e a m om , d esires to adopt a newborn or baby boy. W ill provide stable & loving home. Please call 1-800637-7999, YcxmI Droadway & Rurat AFFORDABLE SECRETARIAL -desk top publishing, p/u & dlvry 7 days/eves. 921-8328 FREE PAY PER VIEW SUNS CAME TONIGHT Deadline: Noon, one day prior to publication »20 AFFORDABLE - Term papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast tur­ naround. Laser quality. Tow n­ send W/P, Maureen, 955-0969. All Domestics Personals (Student rate, must show ID) $2 for 3 lines, $1 for each additional line YourS»m$ Break Tan RESUME PKG. ALASKA SUMMER jobs! Earn thousands this summer in canner­ ie s, p rocessors,, etc- M ale/ F e­ m ale, R oom /board/travel often Matthews Center Basement Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. TIM-HAPPY 21ST! What time is y o u r n ex t c la s s ? L o v e, Michelle Saturday, after 9 p.m, J Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 $ 2 /P G , $ 15 resu m es. Proofed. L aser. F ast. S a m e d a y . D T P. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. 9 » « BoonTtaa oft M t- tm Tampa S tate P ress ST AT PRO C O R PO R A TIO N Statistical analysis - Call for free estimate - 837-1999: PHI D E L T A T h eta p re-R u sh dinner M onday Mar. 6 M 6pm at the Phi Delt house. w m . ¡I MALE/FEMALE EXOTIC danc­ ers available for bachelor/bachelorette parties. Call 404-0856 or 250-9511. $1.99 PG- Fast. Accurate. Laser. APA/M LA. Experienced editor. Rural/University. Jim, 967-2360. NO COVER 990 E L E C T R O L Y SIS B Y D egn a. M ulti-probe &. blend m ethods. Rural/Southem area. 921-1146. KEN-l'M REALLY looking for­ ward to Saturday. I lo v e you very much!! Love, Krust. R A S P B ER R Y UkwCMto ‘ 4MS tMAM.SuBaWI JOB P A R <3, O R IL L E K C H ILD CARE - Hiring exp'd in­ d iv id u a l to w ork va ried a.in . hours. $5/hr. A pply at V illage ' R acq uet & H ealth C lub, 4 4 4 4 E. Camelback Rd. PROVIDE CHILD care for a Sun­ d ay aftern o o n ; $ 7 .5 0 /h r . Exp pref. 464-3957. ATA D AN IELLE - You're the best!! Monday will be here soon. Can't wait to tell you who I am!! vMom. on C*Nptt$* P ÿ DftiVEKS WANTED STATE PRESS back issues can be picked up at the Information Desk, north basement o f Matthews Center, Monday »Friday, from 8 a.m. to 5 pjn. ATA CAROL A n n - You are the Best Dot! Have fun this Semester v Mom CooêPt** i asmmi M A L E S 1 8 -2 4 le a n , h ea lth y , nonsm okers, wanted for a stu­ d y . $ 6 0 0 o ffe r e d . S tu d y re­ q u ires 4 short h o sp ita l sta y s. Call Nicole 945-8923. AFA ANNE~ I am so excited to b e you r m om . C an't w a it till you find out who I am v Mom Lots of Shot Specials 1024 E Broadway Tempe *967-8875 D IR E C T E X P R E S S w eek en d shuttle. Phoenix to Tucson, $10. For reservations call 746-3578. A4> S ARE ¿dying for a date par­ ty" this Saturday! See you few hicky men there ! M POLLIWOG MISCELLANEOUS 990 PITCHERS- Friday & Sat­ urday 7-9pm at Flakey Jakes Bar! Home o f the 990 Weekend !!! A Mon-Fri 4-6:30 p.m. WANTED $400 SCHOLARSHIP- Pick up apps. today at the scholarship office, MU, cm: a college’s office. Deadline March 10! Hurry!!!!! ^ © T h e Newly Remodeled^ D ISH SERVICES PERSONALS SUB STOP S atu r day: WAITERS, WAITRESSES, bar­ tenders, p/t for private parties. Must have exp. 956-3444. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE Rogue or Corona Beer $3.50 22-oz. Bottle NEW NEW NEW NEW ~ ~ LOOKING FOR a musical com­ poser for a pop project. Must be talented in keyboard, guitar, bass, & drums to create music at a high­ er le v e l. C all a fter 7pm 2 4 5 1289. Mon-Fri 247-8008 F r id a y : SWENSEN S TEMPE has open­ ings for sandwich cooks & wait staff. N o exp nec. Apply T-F 45pm. Price & Baseline. $504100 C *h Paid OaHy Im m ediate p o rtio n « available! I M P S. R m 4 T w p e I ¡ g l ¡ ¡ In p a n a n a ta r 4 ju n . I -, I M U S IC E very F riday E ve nin g 4:30-7:00 p.m. Sat-Tue 11 a.m.-1 p.m. RED ROBIN Tempe's Cooks receive top wag­ e s , pd. v a c a tio n s & b o n u se s. Apply today 1375 W. Elliot. R A PPELING A D V E N T U R E S learn confidence, speed, or com­ mando style. Bill 967-7475 S u b S to p Jazz Q u a r te t IMPORTED BEER JAZZ SALADS GOURMET COFFEE 222 E. University Dr.. Tempe on Umv between College/Forest 967-7744 V C LU C K -U CH ICK EN PA R A D ISE BA R & G rill w ill be accepting applications for wait staff thru Friday 3-3; between 25pm, 401 S, Mill A ve. ^ — 4\ BANDERSNATCH 5th St. & Forest BREWPUB | -Make up tp . Help Wanted days &. week-ends, 4 -6 hfs/day; A p p ly .in person, Blimpie, 9 1 1 E. Broadway; P/T HELP, deli counter & clean­ up. Flexible schedule. Capistranos, 3) W. Southern, Tempe. • by 1 M A R C O N IS I 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. -NO COVER- C l teaching basic conversational English abroad. . Japan, Taiwàn, and S. Korea. * For more: information call: (206) 632-1146 ext. J59183 RESTAURANTS/ BARS LEA RN W H A T the C IA , FBI and US Seal teams are training today. Jeet K u n e d o co n cep ts and Filipino'm artial arts, co n ­ tact certified instructor D aniel Bissohnette 941-2550 LIVE MUSIC! $2,Ò00-$Ì000+/mo, HAVE A GREAT W EEKEND from State Press Classifieds KOREAN GARDEN SPORTS & ttC R |A T K > N _ RESTAURANTS/ BARS •INT'L EMPLOYMENT* BLIMPIE KITCHEN HELP, $6/hr to start, Sakana Restaurants 5061 E. El­ liot, Phx. Apply in person. P a g e 15 Friday, M atch 3,1995 State Press $ 5 9 .9 5 in cl. extras. C row ning A chievem ents. C all for details. 491-2766. PHOTOGRAPHY M UST SELL asap!! Pentax ME S up er 35m m ca m era , P entax MEI1 auto-winder, Canon 55mm zoom , Vivitar flash. Leather case, cable releases & other goodies in­ cluded. $350 obo. Call Chris 8073220, Real steal!! WANTED I BUY CD'S! W ill com e to U. 800-835-7712. STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS 965-6735 n d iv id u a l oroscope Frances D rake LATE NIGHT I STUDY I SNACKS I ^lon.-Sat. I 8am+¿pm I Sunday 19am-9pm I W E D ELIV ER ! Broadway & Rural 921 -9222 For Friday, March 3 ,1 9 9 5 ARIES (March 2 T to April. 19) Many people w ill try to tell you what to do with your life, but it’s y o u r turn to p la y th e ro le o f counselor, H ow ever, be sure to keep confidences. TAURUS (April 2 0 to May 20) After playing your hand close to your v est for m dst o f the day, y o u m ig h t g o to the o th er extreme and talk too much. Not all pieces o f the financial puzzle fit. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Put a s id e a ll th at c o n flic tin g advice,w hich ju st g iv es you an added ex cu se to procrastinate. M ak in g ev e ry o n e e ls e f e e l at home would put a strain on your ow n good time. GANGER (June21 to July 22) N ew amusements ^»perf to you. S in gles receive romantic intro­ ductions. You are likely to devel­ op some new friendships. LEO 1 J ■; ? ■ (July 23 to Aug. 22) At tim es, you ’re easily angered. A t o th er tim e s, y o u ’re to o accommodating. A partner serves as an anchor. B u d g ets shou ld prevail. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Familiar surroundings make for the b est en tertain m ent. S in ce you’re more sensitive than usual, y o u eWuW’jJ jp r r e a c t. F o r g et about real or imagined slights. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct, 22) Decisions relating to children ar favored. Your customary shrewd­ ness in money matters seem s to abandon you,'Keep expectations reasonable, and avoid outlandish behavior. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to N ov. 21) You don’t have to look far for som eone w ho understands you. partners have an open ear. It’s best to put woiic interests aside. Parents w ill have enjoyable times with children. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Romantic em otions could cloud judgm ent. Y o u ’re at your b est s o c ia liz in g w ith frien d s w ith whom you share a common intel­ lectual interest. Luck is with you financially. CAPRICORN (D ec, 2,2JO Jan, 19) Good things fall into your lap, so d on ’t w aste tim e com p laining over the strings that are attached. Second thoughts make romance or a social outing a touchy situa­ tion. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Y ou ’ll have no trouble making money; but expect som e differ­ ences o f opinion from those close to you on what you should d o with it. Listen carefully! PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) ’T h ere co u ld be ¿sdm e m inor affronts to your pride,but nothing that serious. You feel people are crowding you a bit, and it’s diffi­ cult to get the privacy you need. YOU BORN TODAY are quick to bounce back from Adversity. You usually enjoy challenges in your woiic. Y ou have a genuine interest in the welfare o f others and are very much the individu­ alist. Creative pursuits are high o n y o u r p o s s ib le ca reer lis t, a lth o u g h y o u a ls o m ig h t be drawn to governm ent, p o litics and the law. B irthd ate o f: J a ck ie Joyn erK ersee, athlete; L ee R adziw ill, socialite; David Faustino, actor. Friday, March 3, 1995 P age 16 ^ M TV ^ M TV ^Spr.ngBreak^ ARIZONA STATE < W » M c < St a te P ress hogi