C o m m issio n A ccid en t in ju ries 2 c le a r s ASASU c a n d id a te s Campaign violation allegations couldn’t be proved, Shivers says B y L isa C ary S tate P r e s Five Associated Students of ASU candidates who had com­ plaints filed against them for improper campaigning procedures were all found not guilty Friday by the ASASU Elections Commission. “All of the candidates won their cases because of lack of evidence," said Alex Shivers, ASASU elections coordinator. The commission is in charge of setting penalties, or points, to any candidate found guilty of violating ASASU election pro­ cedures. The candidates can have up to 20 points on their record before being disqualified from the elections. Further complaints still can be filed against the candidates if someone believes they have violated any procedures during Wednesday and Thursday ’s run-off election. Shivers filed five complaints against candidates who he said violated the 75-foot rule by having election paraphernalia in the polling booths. He also filed 12 complaints to candidates whose financial statements were hand-written instead of typed. , “I’m just being picky,’’ Shivers said. Brandy Aguilar, candi­ date for ASASU president, said Shivers has to be fair when assessing points to all candi­ dates. “He wrote up everyone he found violating the rules,” she said. “He couldn’t ignore just one (brochure.)” The commission could have charged five points to candi­ dates who had campaign material within 75 feet of the polling sites and 10 points to those interfering with Shivers’ ability to ensure a fair election. Christy Anderson, who is running for campus affairs vice president, was found innocent of having fliers at the polling sites and for interfering with Shivers’ job. “It’s something you couldn’t control,” Anderson said. “I didn’t know the fliers were being left at the site.” Anderson said she stood behind the 75-foot line and handed out fliers. She said she thinks that because she was a write-in candidate, students took the flier with them to the polling booth and then left it there. Samantha FekJman/State Press ABOVE — A Tem po police o fficer inspects the dam age to a Honda Accord th a t w as involved In a collision w ith a M azda 626 a t Rural Road and U niversity D rive Sunday afternoon. The tw o people injured in th e collision w ere taken to S cottsdale M em orial H ospital. T heir condition is unknow n. RIG HT — An ASU stu d en t involved in th e acci­ dent reacts to th e ordeal afte r talkin g w ith Tem po police. She w as not injured in the Crash. SEERELATED STORY, PAGE2* T urn to ASASU, page 2. W orld Festival to celebrate culture B y B etty M S ta t e P ress ih a l o po u l o s Several student organizations will provide cultural food, crafts, artwork and entertainment from around the globe today in celebration o f A SU ’s Seventh A nnual W orld Festival. The festival, which is open to the public, promptes inter­ national communication and understanding among different cultural groups. Organizations will sell ethnic foods and crafts at the event, but the entertainment provided by local professional groups and ASU students is free. A belly dancer will also perform at the event. “It’s a time for cross-cultural sharing and learning,” said Jesus Trevino, associate dean of Student Life. “Many o f the organizations choose food to express their culture perspec­ tive, but some of them display crafts, posters and artifacts that belong to their cultural groups.” Thé event is scheduled from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in the Student Services Courtyard, weather permitting. During the festivities, people will be asked to make a commitment toward cross-cultural learning and sharing by signing posters created for the World Festival. Trevino said the signed posters will then be distributed and displayed around the campus. Trevino said the m ulti-cultural events are significant because they provide an environment where individuals of various cultural groups can take the initiative to communi­ cate and educate each other. T urn to W orld festival, page 2. M o r e m e te r s fo r M A M A ? M a y b e Tempe needs revenue from downtown parking to offset federal cuts B y G reg Z e m e id a S ta te P ress Tha C ity o f Tem pe is exploring th e possibility of adding m ore perking m eters to th e down­ tow n area. The ad d itio n al m eters w ould help the city rep lace lo st revenue from federal tran­ sit fun din g cuts. INSIDE c. nance for morning showers High 69, low Temjre officials are considering adding parking meters downtown to help make up fo ra loss o f federal transit funding. City officials are expected to decide on the meters after receiving a study on down­ town parking that is being prepared by the Dow ntown Tem pe Com m unity Inc. The study is scheduled to be released later this W orld/ Nation Selma, Ala,, remembers “Bloody Sunday,” the day in 1965 that Alabama state troopers brutalized hun­ dreds o f peaceful civil rights marchers. Page 3 month. The city will look toward the DTC report for guidance on what should be done, said Tempe Deputy City Manager Gary Brown. “In order to just keep our transit system at the same level it’s at today would take a big increase in local revenues,” he said, adding that additional parking meters are one way to do that. The am ount o f fed eral tra n sit funds Tempe receives was unavailable Friday. A dding m eters is only one o f several options that may be presented to the city, said Susan Mulligan, a program associate with the DTC. : Sports Sophomore Cody McKay and the ASU baseball team downed UofA 11-7 Sunday afternoon at Packard Stadium. Page I I “Parking meters may or may not be part of (the final recommendation),” she said. Regardless o f what is done, Tempe is lucky it has so few meters downtown com­ pared with most cities, said Kerry Nolan, e x e c u tiv e d ire c to r o f the M ill A venue Merchants Association (MAMA). “We all understand that something needs to be done,” she said. 'T h e key for me is that (the plan) is fair and equitable.” Brown said one of the city’s.main con­ cerns about adding more meters is the effect on downtown merchants. “The possible downside is what impact, T urn to M eters, pag e 2. Where T o Find It Classifieds .....’........ 14 Comics...... .....'........................10 6 Crossword............ ...... Horoscopes ................. ..15 Opinion..............,.....................4 Police Report.......... ............... 7 S ports............................ ....11 Today’s A ctivities........ .........2 World/Nation.......................... 3 P age 2 r r S t a t e P ress M onday, March 6, 1995 .......... ............ T oday T h e T o d a y S ectio n is a d a ily c a l­ e n d e r o f e v e n ts p rin te d a s a s e rv ic e to th e A S U com m unity. R eq u e sts a re a c c e p te d o n a firs t-c o m e , firs t-s e rv e b a s is a n d a re p rin te d o n a s p a c e a v a ila b le b asis. C am p u s d u b s a n d o rg a n iza tio n s m a y s u b m it w ritte n e n tr ie s to th e S ta te P re s s in th e b a s e m e n t o f M a tth e w s C e n te r , R oom is . R e q u e s ts w ill n o t b e ta k e n o v e r th e p h o n e. F a x e d e n trie s w ill a ls o n o t b e accep ted . E n trie s m u d co n tain th e fuk n am e o f th e d u b o r o rg an izatio n , a d escrip ­ tio n o f th e e v e n t, d a te , tim e a n d th e f u ll a d d re s s o f th e lo c a tio n . A ll re q u e s ts a re s u b je d to e d itin g fo r content, s p a c e a n d clarity. In co m p lete o r ille g ib le e n trie s w ill b e d iscarded. D e a d lin e fo r req u ests in noon the d a y b e fo re p u b lica tio n a n d e n trie s w ill n o t b e a c c e p te d m o re th a n th re e w orking d ays b e fo re pu b licatio n . O n ly o n e e n try p e r o rg an izatio n p e r d a y is perm itted . • Dept, o f Psychology In Education — Counseling available a t Counselor Training C enter a t ASU; free fe f full­ tim e ASU students, faculty and staff. CaH 965-5067 for inform ation. Payne Had Room 402. • Ju s tic e and P eace C o a litio n — W e e k ly m e e tin g . S p e a k e r: C la re H a n u s z, ‘ W ho a re th e m a rty rs o f Central Am erica?” Noon, M U M ohave. • M U A B — M a rk e tin g c o m m itte e m eeting. 5:15 p.m ., M U third floor. • G raduate W om en’s D ialogue C offee dialogue. 3 -4 p.m ., W om en's Student C enter, M U lower level. • Christian Science O rganization — T w ice-w eekly m eetin g . 12 :3 0 p .m ., Danforth Chapel. • C areer S ervices — ‘Job S earch S k ills ,” p res en ted by Leon B ryant. 11:40 a.m ., M U Room 224 • A l p h a M u G am m a N a tio n a l fo reig n Language Honor Society M eeting, everyone w elcom e. Com en and test your foreign language skills w ith students a t a ll levels. G e t help with your foreign language homework. 3 p.m ., C offee Plantation. ASASU C ontinued from page 1, Charges for having campaign fliers at the {Wiling booths also were dropped against Chris Weber, candi­ date for ASASU president, and Aguilar, current cam­ pus affairs vice president. “I only had one brochure that they found,” Aguilar said. “My campaign staff knew the rales and wouldn’t do anything to forfeit me.” Shivers also said there was a “Greek slate” that appeared in several polling booths. The flier listed all candidates who are members of a fraternity or sorority. Senatorial victors Woody Thompson, a sophomore engineering major, and Travis Bryan, a junior justice studies major, appeared on the list, but charges against them were dropped because of insufficient evidence. Weber was also on the Greek list, but he too was found not guilty. Forum, question/answer session scheduled for runoff canidates B y L isa C ary State P ress Candidates in the runoff election for Associated Students o f ASU offices are scheduled to take part in a forum from noon to 1:30 p.m . T uesday in front o f the Memorial Union. The forum w ill start with candidate speeches, followed by a student audience question/answer session. ' Candidates for the executive positions are Chris Weber and Brandy Aguilar for president, Christy Anderson and Eddie Lopez for campus affairs vice president and Viola Fuentes and Marc Wendell for activi­ ties vice president. The ru noff election will take place Wednesday and TTiursday at various polling sites around the campus. The polls will be open from 9 a m until 9 p.m. The results will be announced at S p m. Friday. World Festival Meters C ontinued C ontinued from page 1. He said this approach to providing an envi­ ronment conducive to open communication is based on a concept called the “superordinate task.” “Whenever you bring people from different backgrounds together to focus on something like the W orld Festival, organizing a theater troop or taking a trip, research shows that it will help to break down a lot of barriers and people will deal with each other on a one-to-one basis and not necessarily to ‘X person the AfricanA m erican’ but ‘my friend L in d a’ in stead ,” Trevino said. “So far it is working.” Trevino estimated that about 2,000 people attend each year’s World Festival. “It’s a great day for the cam pus to come together and celebrate,” he said. Suzanne Steadman, coordinator of the inter­ national student’s office, said the festival is a celebration of cultural pride, but it is also gives people the opportunity to view a formal display of other cultures. She said the purpose o f the festival is not merely to promote tolerance among different cultures, but to provide a festive environment where individuals are not expected to thorough­ ly understand or embrace each other’s culture. “We always think that we have to be inter­ ested or get involved in every culture in order for us to be a good person or not considered racist,” Steadman said. “That’s not really true because not every culture o r every aspect of every culture is going to be of interest to you.” However, she said that showing an interest in other cultures is the first step in'learning more about them and appreciating the differences. Steadman said she thinks it is important that people understand the validity of such an event and its importance to the community. “W ith the world fest, w e’re saying, ‘Let’s not just say we understand people’s culture, but le t’s enjoy it th ro u g h m usic, d an cin g and food,” ’ Steadman said. The festival is sponsored by ASU Student Life Cultural Diversity Committee, the interna­ tional student office and the Martin Luther King Celebration Day Committee. from page 1. if any, it would have on downtown busi­ ness,” he said. “That is why the DTC wants to look at (the meter issue) very carefully.” Brown said there may be som e com ­ plaints from downtown shoppers, but the DTC is working on possible ways to allevi­ ate that. . - ■' O ne p o ssib le p lan is to o ffe r store refunds to compensate shoppers who pay for parking. For example, if someone pays $1 for parking, a store would give that cus­ tomer a $ 1 refund on any purchase. It is not known how m any m eters the city would add to the downtown area. Tempe M ayor Neil Giuliano said peo­ ple’s reactions to additional parking meters will depend on the specifics o f the plan, such as whether they will be enforced 24 hours or just certain times of the day. Giuliano said that he could not comment on any specific aspect of the report until he reads it. “I don’t want to prejudice anything in the report,” he said. SOMETHING IS HAPPENING TOMORROW A N D IT CONCERNS YO U ! COME GET THE ANSWERS YOU HAVE WANTED ¿ CONCERNING SRC ’ . SERVICES, OPERATIONS AND BUDGET ORANGE MALL (NORTH SIDE OF MU) NOON -1 :30pm. BETHERE, NOTONLYTO ASKQUESTIONS, BUTALSO TOVOICEYOUROPINION. (NOlulffSIDE OF '■ -^ U . ) ■■:r"' m m s tà W' I I I 13:00 "If you’re not there, you're n o w h ere. . YOUR STUDENT G O VERNM ENT FUNDED BY ASASU World/Nation Page 3 M onday, March 6, 1995 S t a t e P r ess Washington police still baffled by body found in zoo pen WASHINGTON (AP) — The m edical exam iner was still trying to determine Sunday what killed an unidentified woman whose partially devoured body was found in the lions’ pen at the National Zoo. And police said they were working on figuring out how the woman got over the 9-foot wall and 26-foot moat that separate zoo visitors from a pair of African lions. “ All inform ation about the autopsy resu lts w ill be released by the medical examiner and the medical examiner Only,” said police spokesman Sgt. Joe Gentile. “Anything from any other source is not an official cause of death.” A spokesman for the medical examiner said no informa­ tion would be released before Monday. The Washington Post reported Sunday that the victim appeared to be in her mid- to late 20s and was carrying identification showing she was from Little Rock, Ark. Homicide Detective Sgt. Clarence Muse confirmed that identification was found on the body, but said police had not determined whether it belonged to the victim. He said he could not confirm it was issued in Arkansas. A zookeeper going to feed the two lions housed in the compound found the victim’s mutilated remains around 7 a.m. Saturday. Police were immediately called and the area was roped off to visitors before the zoo’s 8 a.m. opening. The Washington Times reported that the woman’s arms appeared to have been chewed off nearly to her shoulders and her scalp had been mutilated, with clumps of hair scat­ tered around the pen. An unnamed police detective quoted by the newspaper said there was no evidence anyone had killed the woman and thrown her body into the lions’ den, where a fem ale named Asha resides with a 450-pound male named Tana. “The staff of the National Zoo i§ very saddened by this tragedy,” said zoo public affairs chief Robert Hoage. “The safety of our visitors and animals is our primary concern, and this incident will be examined very carefully.” The death was the second lion-mauling incident in the zoo’s history. In 1958, a 2 1/2-year-old Canadian girl, Julie Ann Vogt, was mauled and decapitated as a caged lion pulled the girl through the pen’s vertical bars. Zoo officials said that incident led to changes in the design of the lions' habitat, which was previously separat­ ed from the public viewing area by only a guardrail and six feet of space. Winning $100 million ticket sold in Arizona DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — One Powerball tick­ et purchased in A rizona m atched all six numbers Saturday to win the multi-state game’s $100 million prize. D ie winner’s identity wasn’t immediately known Sunday. There were 43 tickets that matched die first five numbers, but missed die Powerball, to win $100,000 each. They were sold in 13 states and the District of Columbia. H its was the game’s third-largest prize. On Nov. 30, a $101 m illio n ja c k p o t w as sp lit b etw een a wom an from North Platte, N eb., and a m an from Alexandria, Ind. 11» game’s biggest jackpot was die $111 million won by a Wisconsin teacher in 1993. Powerball tickets are sold in Arizona, Delaware, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Oregon, Rhode Island, South D akota, W est V irginia, W isconsin and die District o f Columbia. ■ I Associated Press S tate troopers use b illy clubs, tear gas and horses to break up a vo ter rights m arch in Selm a, A la., on Sunday, M arch 7, 1965. O rganizers Of the m arch returned to Selm a Sunday to m ark th e 30th anniversary o f “Bloody Sunday.” B loody Sunday 30 years later, organizers retu rn to scene o f Selm a’s b ru tality SELMA, Ala. (AP) -— Two of the men who led the “Bloody Sunday” voting rights march 30 years ago received the keys to the city Sunday from the mayor — then a segregationist, now anally of blacks. It was on March 7, 1965, that white lawmen beat and gassed hundreds of marchers trying to cross Edmund Pettus Bridge. Footage of the beatings ran on national television, sparking outrage and leading to passage of the landmark Voting Rights Act, which outlawed litera­ cy tests in many Southern states. Two weeks later, Martin Luther King Jr. led an even bigger march all the way to the steps of the state Capitol in Montgomery. A cold rain fell Sunday on demonstrators gathered outside the National Voting Rights Institute as they pre­ pared to march once again across the bridge named for a Confederate general. The group also planned to make the 54-m ile jo urney to. M ontgom ery for a rally on Saturday; a small number of them will walk. “This 30th anniversary is very timely because once again we’re having to fight for our voting rights,” said the Rev. Joseph Lowery, president o f the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, blasting courts that have struck down majority black congressional districts.. “The courts are invalidating congressional districts ostensibly because of the shape of the district, but it’s really the shade of the representative they’re concerned about,”. Lowery said. Lowery, Jesse Jackson and U.S. Reps. John Lewis and C ynthia M cK inney, both G eorgia D em ocrats, jo in e d in cerem o n ies at the B row n C h apel AM E C hurch, also the launching site o f the first march. McKinney’s district is one of those being challenged. Lew is and another leader o f the original march, Hosea W illiam s, received keys to the city from Joe Sm itherm an, Selm a’s white segregationist m ayor in 1965. He now says he was wrong and continues to hold the top governm ent jo b in a city with à black majority. Associated Press Selm a m ayor Joe Sm itherm an w atches Sunday’s festivities a t the fo o t o f Edm und Pettus B ridge, the s ite w here hun­ dreds o f c iv il rig h ts m archers w ere b e a te n by A labam a state p olice in 1965. Smitherman said the foes today are in Washington. “You may have lost an enemy with those billy whips and all those kind of things, but you do have an enemy today, I have an enemy today and that’s those congress­ men in their Brooks Brothers suits,” said Smitherman, noting that he grew up in a single-parent household relying on subsidized food and a $21-a-month welfare check. “In the name of conservatism and balancing the bud­ get, they’re going to cut programs that affect whites and blacks,” he said. ’96 presidential run may force Dole to let another lead Senate WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Bob Dole said Sunday he would consider stepping down from his post as Senate majority lead­ er if early w ins in Republican prim aries next year make him the front-runner in the GOP presidential race. The candidate who can capture the presi­ d e n tia l c o n te s ts in Io w a an d N ew H am pshire is probably going to win the nomination, the Kansas Republican said on CBS’ Face the Nation. “If I lose those two states, I can be full­ tim e m ajority leader. If I win those two states, then I think I’d take a hard look at stepping aside,” he said. D ole w as resp o n d in g to a statem ent made Saturday on CNN’s Evans and Novak by Senate M ajority W hip T rent Lott, RM iss., that it would be difficult next year for Dole to lead the Senate and still run for the GOP presidential nomination. “I think T rent is right,” Dole said. “I think he stated it about right.” Dole said he expected the outcome of the presidential race to be decided fairly quickly once the primary season begins in the spring o f 1996. “It might be that you could just take a leave o f absence for 30 days, but I’ll address that later.” At least three other Republican senators. Phil Gram m o f Texas, R ichard Lugar of Indiana and Arlen Specter o f Pennsylvania, are expected to run against Dole, as is for­ mer Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander. Alexander, also appearing on CBS, said D ole should rem ain as m ajo rity lead er w h ile a W a sh in g to n o u ts id e r su ch as Alexander occupies the White House. “The best contribution Bob Dole can make is to stay right where he is," Alexander said. Opinion P age 4 T 7 S t a t e P ress Monday, March 6 , 1995 S P ress S tate TA £ j d itorial America to the rear is there any doubt that the United States is die world’s champion of democracy, peace and human tights? Um, yes. As United Nations troops enter die final phase of their long retreat out of the strife of Somalia, U S. troops have landed — to help out with the retreat. The bold venture, begun two years ago, was an attempt to bring order out of the chaps of warlordism, civil war and famine which ravaged Somalia. And after 120 U.N. troops died — including 42 Americans — the officials in charge made a dramatic decision. Run. It’s a far cry from some of the actions the United States has made in the past For good or for bad, America was willing to intervene abroad. This attitude, bom of mixed motives, to be sure, ranged from the base to the idealistic. Not now. “All the land in the third world isn’t worth the healthy bones of one Illinois National Guardsmen” is the battle cry of today’s Congress, a Congress which is now rallying to forbid U.S. troops from serving under U.N. command in future actions. Which well suits an American people who have little understanding of events abroad, little interest, and would probably cheerfully let every non-American die in slow, painful torment if it meant McBurger prices would fall. This is a pity, because the United Nations has acted decisively enough in some situations. No one seems to remember success by the U.N. in Cambodia, or the benefits of UNPROFOR troops" in Macedonia — or the problems that may result if a group of short-sighted U.S. congressman help to end U.S. efforts in peacekeeping. Ironically, though, the events in Somalia hurt one country more than any other— America. The America of the 1990s isn’t emerging like the revolutionaries of the 1790s, abolitionists of the 1860s. anti-imperialists of the 1940s or Cold Warriors of the 1980s. Whatever we may think of their policies, it must be admitted that these were politicians who were willing to fight for the issues they cared about Today’s America is the age of the impassive actor. International genocide? Oh welL Economic terrorism? Naughty, naughty. Civil war? Oh my! It doesn’t take much to figure that the next Hussein down the road will have a different view Of the United States — why fear a nation that won’t intervene abroad? So evil spreads as each little aggressor nation ruled by a dictator encroaches on neighbors. And (he reputation of the United States sinks. We’re a Winston Churchill slowly becoming a Neville Chamberlan. And, if the United States attempts to seek its interests in the future, it may find it just doesn’t have that much credibility left. Take die coward’s path, and gain the coward’s name. s STATE PRESS TAFF 1 /1 8 /9 5 ANgraCMOURSffiUDENCE ' A WORK IN PROGRESS. Move over, peds: Bikes have rights, too It happened again. I was riding my bike to class, m inding my own b u siness and L -/ i z c arefu lly m an euvering around M O N TA LBA N O pedestrians in a very non-hostile way, when I heard a shrill whistle that jarred my senses. I looked up and saw, a few yards ahead of me, a blue-shirted man waving author­ itatively. Although I didn’t exactly understand his Neanderthal grunts and incoherent motions, I put two and tw o together and deducted that he was yet another representa­ tive of the Big Brother of bike patrol trying to tell me to dismount from my bike. • Is it me, or is it really unpopular to be a bicyclist ‘round these parts? If you haven’t heard the latest, there’s been a whole lot of hullabaloo lately about the bicycle situation on ASU’s campus. Various plans range from a total ban of bicycles on campus, to a proposed “bike loop” that would revert bike traffic to campus perimeters, eliminating it from the center of campus (which is the only place most of us want to go, anyway). Does any of this sound irrational, unreasonable and just plain dumb to you? If it does, good. It shows you were given a healthy portion of the o f brain pie when you were bom. Let’s lay down some basics here: Firstly, anyone who’s even slightly conscious (and sometimes, there aren’t many) while walking on campus cannot fail to notice that bicy­ cling to class is extrem ely popular. Take a look on the streets at any given time during the morning or afternoon on any given weekday, and the number o f bikes stopped at a traffic light on the way to campus vaguely resembles the starting line of the Tour de France. S eco n d ly , b ik es do n o t need fuel, b ac k fire , spew exhaust, have loud, obnoxious horns or otherwise maim the already abused natural environment.- Sure, there are always going to be a few smart-asses who want to indiscriminately lay tread marks on the astroturf-like, over-saturated grass that dots the campus,'but being from Pennsylvania where the grass grows naturally without the help of a thousand automated sprinklers, I can’t really blame them. Assuming that we all agree on these pre-existing condi­ tions, why do bicyclists face such non user-friendly atti­ tudes on ASU’s campus? Practically all of campus is a dreaded “Dismount Zone.” I can’t ride my bike anywhere without some schmoe on a power trip screaming, “Ma’am you must dismount!” as I go gliding by. Hey, if 1 wanted to walk, I wouldn’t take the deadweight of my bicycle with me. There’s no point in rid­ ing to campus unless you can stay “mounted” on your bicy­ cle. True, there are bike lanes, but they are few and far between and in obscure places where no one really needs to ride anyway. Furthermore, they always seem to be occu­ pied by some elephantine-moving pedestrian who refuses to yield, and I’m fairly sure that if a bicyclist barrels over a pedestrian, the excuse that the ped was illegally occupying bike turf will not be a satisfying one. Whether ASU officials know it or not, bicyclists are not agents of Satan. They don’t purposefully target oblivious pedestrians on campus hell rides, cackling wickedly as they leave broken bodies in their wake. And just in case campus authorities haven’t learned the following bit of knowledge from some history or psycholo­ gy class they may have taken long ago: Placing more restrictions on a person or a certain group of persons (i.e. bicyclists) will probably only encourage the oppressed group to be more rebellious. Telling us we’re not allowed to ride in certain places, and placing obnoxious, path-blocking bike patrol Gestapo to order us around only makes us angri­ er and more apt to act defiantly. Don’t get me wrong — I don’t think general bike regula­ tion on campus is such a bad idea, but I don’t think the members of bike patrol should wield their power so abra­ sively. There are going to be a few showoffs and daredevils out there who speed through campus on their bikes, so why not target them instead of attacking anyone on two wheels? Most of us on bikes really just have places to go, like any other person. And believe it or not, it is possible to maneu­ ver safely through pedestrian traffic on a bicycle, as long as both peds and bicyclists respect each other. So here’s the bottom line, people. Bikes are cool — th ey ’re econom ical, th ey ’re environm entally-friendly, they’re healthy and they’re just plain fun to ride. Cut us some slack. Bicyclists have just as much right to travel on ASU’s campus as anyone else. Unless, of the course, they’re cops who tell the rest of us we’re not allowed to ride. Elizabeth A. Montalbano is a graduate student studying English literature. JASON OWSLEY, Editor D A VID STROW, Managing Editor ................... ...Night Editor NICHOLAS BACON .......... KRIS FR IDR ICH ................... GARIN G R O FF........... GREG ZEM EIDA....................... ................. ...News Editor D AVID LASPALUTO...,...... A. MARJORY KAM INSKI... ... . JIM PO ULIN................................. MARK KRAM ER........................... JEREMY ST E IN ............................. DAN MILLER.................................. KEN COLLINS................................ .............. Magazine Editor A N N A ULINICH.................................Asst. Magazine Editor R E PO R T E R S: Kennes Bolig, Lisa Cary, L om e Cohen, D aw n D eC h r istin a , P a tty K in g , T od d K e lly , B etty M ih a lo p o u lo s, A n g e la M u ll, D avid P roffitt, N. S cott Trimble, Kim Watson, S P O R T S R E PO R T E R S: Lee Newman, Damian Shaw, Heather Snow. C O P Y E D IT O R S : Bryn C h a n c e llo r , K im H erm an, Elizabeth Montalbano. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : D ian ne R. B artsch , Sam antha Feldman, Lance D. Terry. * ED IT O R IA L W RITER: James Frusetta. C O L U M N IS T S : B rian A n d er so n , T im B a x ter, Dan Blanco, T on Evans, James Frusetta, Tina Holder, Barry K e lle y , D avid Luna, D ian a L o p ez, Jim M ahin, D elia Maldonado, Greg Nigh. C A R T O O N IS T S : Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holm stedt, Bryce Morgan. PR OD U CTION : Mark Abromorivitz, Aaron R. Brutcher, Beth French* Adrianna Garcia, Jodi G oldblatt, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S : E m ily B erg er, Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, A lisa Jellum, Christine Porrecá, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the view s o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A MARJORY KAMINSKI D AVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor N ew s Editor The State P ress is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam périr p d s, at M a tth ew s C en ter, R oom 15, A r iz o n a S ta te University, Tempe, A d z . 85287-1502. ~We do not answer questions o f a general nature. , The State Press is the only newspaper exçlusivèly pub­ lished for and circulated on the A SU campus. The new s and view s published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the A SU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information..............965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine..... .......965-1695 Advertising..............965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6735 Opinion STATE P r e ss ___________ ___________ M onday, March 6 , 1995 • . " . P ä 8 e '^ PC: Security blanket of the right “A joke is an epitaph on the death o f a feeling.” Who could have imagined that Nietzsche would capture the spirit o f m odern-day bickering under the rubric o f “political correct■n e ss? ” O ne sid e, p o rtray ed as weak, whining and feminine — in se n tim e n t if n o t in g e n d e r — moans about sensitivity and feel­ ings. The other, typically painted as tough and m asculine, shoots back, “can’t anyone take a joke anymore?” “ S h o rt” or “ v ertically c h a l­ lenged?” “Black” or “African-American?” Masculine pro­ nouns? M ulticulturalism as “epistem iological fascism?” The battleground o f political correctness is w here the socially downtrodden hark about their feelings, demanding that their subjective experience be considered objectively unassailable. O r is it? For those who care to look deeper it will be -found that there is much more going on under the linguistic umbrella of PC. And those who throw the most stones at the PC temple should be careful not to hit their own house, lest it shatter around them. One branch of discourse labeled PC certainly seems pre­ occupied with “sensitivity.” The confusion surrounding the appropriate designator for a given self-identified ethnic group is, well, confusing. A s increasing social stratification takes place, groups continue to redefine and are brought, into the melee of the discourse on labels. It is difficult to take all of this discussion of semantics seriously. It is a shame that our collective social self-esteem has dipped to the point that even acknowledging such con­ fusion is often labeled “insensitive,” though even this is an easy statement for a White boy. But what is now labeled PC extends far beyond ques­ tions of individual or group semantics. Also falling under this rubric is any intellectual or social discourse which calls into question the sanctity of Western Civilization. This is L etters t o t h e E d it o r E D U - Internet: ICJBO@ASUVM.INRE.ASU E-mail: ICJBO@ASUACAD M ailing Address: State Press Box 871502 Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 an enterprise which is far rem oved from volleys about October. The “Standards” report failed to condemn such (in)sensitivity. But by throwing it all under the same label, intellectual pursuits as Marxism and feminism. But even those in defense of the Western Tradition reduce a rigorous more, it didn’t thoroughly glorify the history of capitalism and crucial intellectual exercise to the level of semantic in the way in which it has been in the past. In an ironic moment of self-revealing, Phyllis Schlafly bickering. That such an ensnarement limits the scope of academic complained, “It seems elementary that all schoolchildren debate is hot in question. O f course it does. The question is should be taught the historical facts about how America ... whether or not fee universities are an appropriate place to grew to our [sic] present size, and greatness, and we didn’t engage in such debate in the first place. Lynne Cheney, the need 'a federal project to tell us that.” Indeed, perhaps we fo rm er h ead o f the N a tio n a l E n d o w m en t fo r the didn’t need a project commissioned by Lynne Cheney her­ Humanities, has bemoaned the rise of the “gang of four,” self to tell us that. But America’s self-evident“ greatness” referring to Marxists, feminists, multiculturalists and theo­ can only remain firmly intact if critical historical examina­ tion is designated either inappropriate or dangerous. rists. And what is it that this “gang” has been doing? When Schlafly goes on to express horror at the exclu­ Cheney says that they are “all coming to bear on one concept and threatening to displace it. I think specifically of sion of Paul Revere, Thomas Edison and a few other U.S. the concept o f Western civilization,” Such a comment sig­ historical landmarks from the “Standards”, the irony inten­ nifies one of the major victories of the right: The establish­ sifies. The authors state that their “report” is designed to ment o f a thing called the W estern Tradition that is an “develop a comprehensive set of thinking skills” in stu­ unassailable and objective fact. By arbitrarily claiming this dents, and to encourage students to “go beyond sorting out Tradition as it has been as the cultural reference point, all facts and dates” to thinking about“ why things happened in the past, not just what happened,” others become, by default, subjective. So, caught in their own rhetoric, the right is demanding And, in the rhetoric of the right, wrong. In the PC game, the right can justly Claim for itself three that history be told their way, with all the Western icons significant accomplishments. First, it has necessitated a indisputably in place. It is only because conservatives are ridiculous debate— namely, whether or not that thing called wielding the PC sabre that they have not cut their own _______________________ ———^ — =——^ ^ = 8 - ! = = throats over this p articular the Western Tradition is simply a way of telling history. . j ? .* , 7» incident. C onservatives are Of course it is, which those A«2f tflOSg who throw the most stones at w hining th at the tellin g o f dangerous and sub v ersiv e the PC temple should be careful not to history might not include the “theoretical” investigations hit their own house, lest it shatter around com plete cast o f characters they like. plainly reveal. They obviously recogJr jr Second, it has put many them. — nize that only through the sti­ lib e ra l ed u c a to rs in the —— unwarranted position of having to defend critical thinking fling of historical analysis will the wave o f blind patriotism and analysis when the subject is their own culture and his­ that has thus far whitewashed our history continue to roll. And by labeling such attempts to reinvestigate our cul­ tory. Third, it has allowed the right to point fingers at the ture and history as PC, it is ail magically reduced to the “cultural fascism” of those who suggest other ways to view more readily discounted matter of hurt feelings and man­ W estern history, without Calling attention to the fragile dated sensitivity. foundations of their own arguments. C o n serv ativ es w ere o u trag ed w hen the “ N atio n al Greg Nigh has his m aster’s in H um anities and is now Standards fo r U nited States H istory” was released last working toward a degree in alternative medicine. S tate P ress etters to the editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. A ll letters «Bust be typed, double-spaced m i no longer than tw o pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing, major (or any other affiliation with Ibe University) and phone number. Only signed letters wfll be eoasldenti tor publication. Requests for aaoflymity WB1 be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors and (Him space availability. Letters con­ taining obvious factual errors w ill he rejected: A ll letters must either be brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front' desk ia the basement o f dm M atthews Center, or addressed to State P ress, B o* 8 7 1 3 0 2 , A rizona State University, Tempe Ariz., 83287-1502. N o faxes, please. H igh classroom standards has student/professor conflict I vigorously applaud Connie Sue Spencer’s appeal for professors to take control of the classroom. Professors have à duty to students, their departments, the University and future employers of the students to assign grades students e a rn . W hen a s tu d e n t g ra d u a te s With a d e g ree, the University declares that the student has obtained sufficient skills and knowledge, particularly with respect to his or her major. Employers depend on faculty to uphold these stan­ dards. The University and its departments risk losing repu­ ta tio n s w hen e m p lo y e rs h ire stu d en ts w ho have not achieved certain skill and knowledge levels. Unfortunately the intrinsic and extrinsic rewards to fac­ ulty fo r setting and m aintaining certain standards are increasingly outweighed by the penalties for doing so. In her column, Marianne Moody Jennings (Arizona Republic, Feb. 12) does not detail the environment in which faculty have succumbed to grade inflation. Faculty are increasingly encouraged to measure performance not only by objective measures such as percentage o f multiple choice questions answered correctly, but by more subjective evaluations o f a student’s understanding through essays, papers and partici­ pation in class discussions. Increased reliance on subjective measures necessarily breeds even more student accusations o f U n fa irn e s s , student explanation for his or her poor partic­ ipation and reinterpretation o f written and oral assignments. As our students can attest, I and many o f my colleagues always have and continue to maintain high standards in our classroom s. H ow ever, I have observed that a professor faces at least three penalties for remaining firm in his or her expectations against a student’s appeal. First, the student continues to plea his or her case to the professor, taking additional time from the faculty members’ other obligations to students’ research and the department. Second, a stu- dent’s appeal may be approved anyway if a higher adminis­ trator has limited time and prefers to maintain a positive, affable relation with the student body. Thus, even when the professor attempts to have control o f his or her classroom, he or she may not.'Furtherm ore, the student’s appeal is Unlikely to reflect favorably on the professor. Few students have a similar tendency to express to administrators appre­ ciation of a professor’s efforts for maintaining high stan­ dards. Thirdly, the student returns to class, tells his or her peers what an unfair and unimaginably demanding profes­ sor they have the unfortunate luck to have. Result? Poor evaluations at the conclusion o f the semester. Each “poor” evaluation cancels out the excellent evaluation given by the student who learned and benefited from the class, under­ standing and studying with the professor’s high standard in mind. Despite their limitations, evaluations are still the pri­ mary evidence to departments and college of a professor’s performance in the classroom. Evaluation scores of faculty aren’t footnoted with grade distribution. So, let’s review what we have learned. The professor who sets and maintains high standards receives intrinsic rewards for producing knowledgeable, motivated students consistent with the objectives o f an institution o f higher learning. The same professor has less time for other obliga­ tions. The student grapevine reveals the professor to be too demanding and unfair. Examination o f the teaching perfor­ mance by the merit committee reveals the professor to be average. Karen A . Sm ith A ssistant Professor Accountancy ASASU participants should be appreciated For the last few days, the State Press has been lambasting the ASASU elections. I thought you might want to have a dif­ ferent viewpoint — that of someone actually involved with the elections. I decided to run for the ASASU senate seat for the Nursing college for three reasons. First of all, I ran because I was irate about the number of students who complained about the problems with the Nursing college and that ASU and didn’t do anything about it My belief is that if you are going to com­ plain, you should be willing to work to find a solution to the problem. Secondly, I ran because my chances at winning a senate seat were very good. I knew from experience that less than 20 out of the 500 nursing students voted for the nursing senate seat. I knew that if I persuaded a few of my nursing friends to vote for me I would win the office. Thirdly, I ran because it was extremely easy to become a candidate. I only had to fill out three forms to become a candi­ date. The three forms were a write-in candidate form and two finanrial forms. All three of these forms took me less than five minutes to fill out. I feel that the State Press should show some appreciation to the three percent of the ASU students who showed concern about how their student government operates and voted in the last election. I will be the first to admit that I don’t agree with how the ASU student government operates. But at least I will make an effort to improve it so the student government better meets stu­ dent needs. Ken Overturf Junior Nursing S t a t e P r e ss M onday, March é, 1995 P age 6 DUI • C rim in a l Im m ig ra tio n Personal In ju ry R o b e rt A . D od ell A tto rn ey a t Law FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY $2°° OFF | Any Large 16" N.Y.-Style Pizza i N o t v a lid w it h o th e r o ffers . E xp ire s 3 / 1 7 / 9 5 ¡ M A M A ’S P IZ Z E R IA 8 9 4 -M A M A P I^ A y H om e o f the y ‘K iller’ Calzone ^ . 1 b lo ck East, o f M ill Ave. cn t h iv e r s it y 8 9 4 - MAMA FREE CALZONE! Buy 2 ca lzo n e s a t re g u la r p ric e Former County Prosecutor 945-8016 FREE CO NSULTATIO N MEASURE YOUR TOE AT THE , COOL / JEWEL S and get 3rd calzone FREE) o f e q u a l o r lesser v a lu e Notvaitd' òdtif offpßk 3/17/95 i MAMA S PIZZERIA 894-MAMA j THE COOL JEWEL I Toe Rings ______ 414 S. Mil! A ve#121 | Ankle Bracelets " (behind The Spaghetti I C o m p a n y) / Nose Rings 829-1127 / (Fake Nose Rings) Hoops, Cuffs, Studs and Lots of Single Earrings ■ ■■«Jl CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH Have A Funner Summer The only w ay to have m ore fun this sum m er other than sw im m ing, laying out, playing sand volleyball and m eeting n ew friends, is to have them all in one place. The C om m ons, we're only 2 blocks from cam pus. Call us or com e by today, w e are currently accepting applications for a funner summer. A T H 0 S L A U R A A P R 1 L E R O T L A C 1 L K 1 L E N G A C E 0 E R T t A E A R N E R S E C E N E L 1 P A N T 1 M A G E D A C O M M A T S T P A T H O W T O E T H A N N N A S O O L E 1 R L W 1 N D T O u R R after ACROSS 41 Stage 1 Flower 1 5 Trunk tire gun, for N example 10 Division D A K DOWN word E N 11 Playwright 1 — nez B A 2 Basket­ Pinter U A L ball's 13 Advocates S S O Shaquille of what’s E G E 3 Feed the new Friday's Answer furnace 14 John of 25 Heal works 4 Bridalveil “Hearts 16 Confined 27 Increases Afire” Fall 29 Scandina­ 21 Expedi­ setting 15 Baker’s vian inlet tion head­ 5 Got need 30 Sub quarters smaller 17 Actress finder 22 In a comfy 6 House Gardner 31 Scout manner coat? 18 Iron or master? 23 Cockpit 7 Museum iodine 32 Catch ■ worker fill 19 Scot’s cap some Zs 24 In front of 8 Turns 20 Pen filler 38 Sister, of the 9 Raise 21 Alpha a sort audience follower 12 O ’Neill 6 7 5 8 3 1 2 22 “Patton" ' star 11 10 25 Jobs for detectives 13 14 26 Zero 17 is 27 City transpor­ lé id tation 28 Good 20 21 times 29 Groves 22 23 24 33 “Scram!“ 27 26 34 Snoopy persona 31 28 35 Grassland 34 plains of 33 South 3$ America 37 Actress 39 dé Archer 38 Dairy buy 49 39 Partner " 40 Looks 3 -6 t- f ; 1 ■ ■ ■1 ■ ■ fully fu rn ish e d « spacious 2 b ed ro o m s, 2 full b a th suites« ■ large h e a te d p o o l w ith jacuzzi« w ash er & d ry e r in each su ite« large kitch en w ith m icrow ave, d ish w ash er & d isposal ■ reg u latio n sa n d volleyball co u rt ■ ■ racquetball court, w eig h t room & sauna ■ p la n n e d social activities« ■ ro o m m ate m atching service« w alk in g distan ce to cam p u s« DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's h o w to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another, hi this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3 -6 A Y 829-0933 2 Blocks from ASU THE COMMONS t MEMBERS ONLY!f 1111E. Apache Tempe, AZ CRYPTOQUOTES T H JAY X Y YILZPDYI DM IMYHW'D U T W I JAM ML D FWMJ. — SYMXS FWMJH JAP D AY HTRRYB F r id a y 's C ry p to q u o te : TH E SPIR IT CA N N O T E N D U R E TH E B O D Y W H EN O V ER FED B U T IF U NDERFED, TH E BODY CANNOT ENDURE THE SPIRIT. - ST. FRANCIS DE SALES . © 1995 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. _Page_7 M onday, March 6 ,1 9 9 5 State P ress P olice R eport loitering and left • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested for driving with a suspended license, possession of marijuana, possession of drug para­ phernalia arxl for having two outstanding warrants. • A male student repented that someone broke into his vehicle and stole a speaker box and car stereo amplifier from Parking Structure 4. • A man not affiliated with ASÜ reported that someone damaged his vehicle while it was parked in Parking Structure 2. , • A male employee repented that someone damaged his vehicle in Parking Structure 2. • A man not affiliated with ASU was contacted at Tempe Center after he was observed going through a dumpster. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested fen underage posses­ sion of alcohol and driving under the influence in Parking Structure 5. • A male student was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol at 600 E Sixth St ASU Police reported the following incidents over the weekend: PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER H PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER |, • 946-7587 • Scottsdale Rd, & McKellips Mon - Fri. 7am - 7pm Sat 8am-5pm (In the A B C O Shopping C en ter) STÂfË P ress" The only free thin g a t ASU. • A woman reported drat someone stole three credit cards from Agriculture Building, Room 112. • A female student reported that someone stole her backpack from the Student Recreation Complex. • A male student repeated that someone stole his backpack from the Student Recreational Complex. • A male employee reported that someone stole several faucet stems, hand faucets and washers from Ocotillo and Mariposa Halls. • Two non-affiliated male juveniles were arrested, cited and released for shoplifting at Tower Records in Tempe Center. • Three non-affiliated male juveniles were arrested, cited and released for being minors in possession of alcohol at Tempe Cento'. • A non-affiliated male juvenile was arrested, cited and released for being a minor in possession of alcohol at Lee Optical in Tempe Cento:. • A male student was arrested for being in possession of marijuana at Sonora Center. • A man and woman not affiliated with ASU were contacted at the north side of Lot 59 while parked in a vehicle. They w oe advised of WEBUYANDSELL* Compiled by State Press reporter Todd Kelly CULTURAL DIVERSITY COMMITTEE/OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE WE BUY 501% 505% 517% 550%SILVERTABS, SHORTS, 701's AND LEVI &LEEJACKETS ÀSU PRESENTS ALL COLORS & FADES, DENIM & CORDUROY. ‘Scottsdale location only. CHANDLER 499 N. Arizona Ave. (between Chandler Blvd. b Ray Rd.) FE ST IV A L SCOTTSDALE 1810 Scottsdale Rd. (Between McKellips b the 202 FWY) 947-8245 TO DAY Student Services Courtyard N W PHOENIX 3208 W. Glendale 973-6367. BY STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS EAST MESA 7440 E. Main St. (1/2 mile east of Power) 924-0775 ’ TEMPE University b Farmer (3 blocks west of Mill) ENTERTAINMENT 10 :3 0 a .m .-3 :3 0 p .m . For Further Information, P lease Contact: Jesús Trevino, A ssistant D eán Of Student Life for Cultural D iversity 965-6547 or LLOYD BRIMHALL, Program Coordinator, International Students O ffice 965-7451 SPR IN G BLOWOUT SALE M A R C H 8-12 ( B a s e ® SUBS & SALADS C h eck O u t O ur D a ily S p e c ia ls 6" Cold Sub $ 3.89 Foot Long Cold Sub $ 5.99 chips & small drink chips and medium drink nosubstitutions, nocoupons. LARGEST SELECTION OF Free Delivery To All ASU Dorms ARIZONA STATE 921-9222 C L O T H IN G A N D SO UVENIRS Q i9K Q W ¡\ I M A T • f H t « T • G E 9 S I f T S 725 S. RURAL RD. 829-1743 CORNERSTONE M ALL S E Comer Broadway & Rural N "3 < oc -.3 ■ f BROADWAY ■ H m ■ BLIMPIE CLEANERS OFFICE ACE FASHION IIAX HARDWARE GAL Mon- Sat 8am- 11pm Sunday 9am- 9pm Page 8 State P ress M onday, March 6, 1995 A ATTENTION CREEKS M B r ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE 0 A E G reek Open House Three Days Only n Tues., Wed. & Thu. Z March 7th , 8th & 9th H 0 -A L L ¿ R E E K M E R C H A N D IS E - D R A S T IC A L L Y I K A The Honda Doctor's Helpful Honda Hints Tip# ring can p rem aturely w ear o u t the p HONDA DOCTOR T Y 3 l ^ J \ 9 wm Where "Blue Ribbon Service" means [ m ■ 9 ■ 9 I K Q a honest, quality repairs at fair price s - and student discounts. i Service by Appointment 7:30AM - 6:00PM, Mon-Fri • Thursday nights 'til 8PM Also in the Scottsdale Airpark • 998-5966 . 'P MTV '9 5 THE IMPROV IN TEMPE^1a / 4 _ n A T T E N T IO N v i“ * S P R I N G U GRADUATES! I n v ite You To A u d itio n F o r The d e a d lin e t o ap p ly fo r Spring '95 g r a d u a tio n is Friday, M arch 31! Fame or Shame MTV'S ONE & ONLY TALENT SHOW Come show o ff yo u r quirky, offbeat talent th a t only a m other could love. T a p e d live in Lake H av a su C ity Place: Improv in Tempe Date: Tuesday, March 7th Time: 7:00 p.m . to 9:00 p. m. Sign u p now: 921-9877 gm % Near ASU at 2090 E. University, Suite 115, Tempe (University at River, just west of Price) X Spring Break^ ^SpringBreak^ ARIZONA STATE -^pringBreak^. 'H / \ / N $152! s’ J > 4 T V MTV replacem en t can be as m uch as | 6ET5DONBT D.U.I W e ' r e m o r e th an a b o o k s t o r e . " ¿ ^ P A R S C O R E i T E S T F O R M Rother's Bookstore M ust present coupon. Limit 1 per custom er. NOW SERVING WIN6$ m We Accept MasterCard &Visa on Delivery! Open Daily for Lsnehl Qg FAST, a n d $389* Cancún M ONDAY M AD N ESS $559* 14* LAR6E $ ¿ $ 0 Located at Forest and University (difcctfyxrossfiom A SU .) 966-3544 E u ra ilp a s s e s issued on-the-spot! e v e r y M o n d a y $ C FREE n ig h t... - A L L YO U C A N P LA Y 6<5 p m CARDINAL’S PIZZA Cabo San Lucas 120 E. University, Ste. E Tem pe, A Z 85281 a n d G en eral A n esth e sia availab le. 2 5 2 -0 3 1 2 829-0064 $339* Council Travel (602) 598-3006 IMPLANTS, WISDOM TEETH, TMJ, JAW SURGERY - T w i l ig h t S leep w DELIVERY DAILY! Spring Break '95 Mazatlan , A h w a tu k ee P rofession al B u ild in g 10827 S o u th 51st Street, S u ite 204 FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE F o r m e r M u n i c ip a l J u d g e Open llam-2am Daily! •AH fores are per person from Phoenix and include air and hotel for 4, 5 or 7 nights depending on destinations. Rates d o not include taxes based on auad occupancy. Restrictionsapplyahd fares subject to change without notice- Gregory P. Edmonds D.D.S. A n d y G astelu m ' O pen 7 days a w e e k 6 2 5 E . A p ach e 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 ~ AHWATUKEE ORAL and MAXILLOFACIAL SURGERY •C rim in a l Charges •In ju rie s from Negligence call for free phone consultation (u s e d l o r a ll m a th s c o r e s ) o n ly a t , You'll never know unless you read your horoscope. In the classified section. WORLDr . ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE ARIZONA STATE UNIVEASITT , ^Staee Press BY GARRY TRUDEAU $c h o q l \ Y I _ 1 I h t-lfem Pizza Yes, tw o h o u rs o f a s m a n y || g a m e s a s y o u c a n p la y f o r $3! 1 «r T u is D A v " S P E C I A L i I 2*Item filiti Ü W ILD W E D N E S D A Y 1 16" 1 2 * P fc z * f SO * O U R P O O L A R E IZ V S P UNLIMITED TOPPINGS O S I X m V T A B L E S IN C L U D E D 4 1 1 S. MILL AVE. BELOW CLUB 4 1 1 894*5453 DADDY'S V i p e rù a l R e a l i t y A r c a d e Sports S TA TE Press ' _______________ M o n d a y , M a rc h 6, 1995 ; , ■ P a g e ll Baseball wins 2 in ‘great series’ w ith Wildcats B y L ee N e w m a n St a te P ress College baseball — Catch the fever! The weekend’s ASU-UofA series proved the excite­ ment and thrill that made baseball the great sport it is, isn’t dead — you just have to know where to look for it. After losing a 9-8 heartbreaker Friday in Tucson, ASU rebounded Saturday and Sunday at Packard Stadium taking both hard-fought games. 5-2 and 11 -7, respectively. “This was just a great séries,” ASU Coach Pat Murphy said. “No matter how good either team is or what the records are, when ASU and UofA match up it’s going to be a dog­ fight,” júnior Robbie Kent said. After losing an 8-3 lead Friday, the Sun Devils found the roles reversed Suifday. ASU trailed 5-0 after the Wildcats scored two runs in the fourth and three runs in the fifth, highlighted by Menno Wickey and Scott Kidd home runs, That’s when Sun Devil bats exploded. ASU scored six runs in the bottom half of the fifth and five runs in the sixth to give them the 11-7 win. Kent had an RBI double, a single and two runs scored in the two-inning barrage. Junior Darren Troilo also had a double and a single and added two RBls and tw o runs scored in the two innings. On the day, the duo was seven for 10.' “Troilo and Kent have been doing it all year,” Murphy said- “Kent does everything right at the defensive end and T urn to B aseball; page 12. Jim Poulin/StatePress Sophom ore third basem an Cody M cCay tags out UofA’s Jeff G jerde in th e top o f the fourth inning o f Sunday’s gam e a t Packard Stadium . The Sun Devils w on the gam e 11-7. M en s ten n is takes 2 at A S U /P e n n In v ita tio n a l Elias, who Went mano-a-mano at second singles with Marc-André Tardiff. With the The weather held up. The frankfurters team score knotted 3-3, Elias used penetrat­ were tasty. The ASU m en’s tennis team ing groundstrokes and ingenius approach won a pair. And Sargis Sargsian went pub­ shots to polish off Tardiff 6-3, 6-3 to seal lic about the future of his now 3 1/2 week the ASU victory. “The pressure is alw ays there,” Elias old beard. A ll dnd a ll, the a n n u a l A S U /P enn admitted. “The thing is how you deal with, Invitational went off without a hitch over it. 1 played very solid today.” A SU ’.s man o f steel, Sargis Sargsian, the w eekend,. With triumphs over UC-Irvine Sunday who walked across the Salt River on his and San Diego Saturday, two formidable w ay to the W h item an T en n is C e n te r, regional foes, the Sun Devils (6-2 overall, ‘ p roved he may be a m ere m ortal as he 0-2 Pac-10) are now in an ideal position for dropped his first set since the eighth grade picnic. an NCAA regional berth. After the uncharacteristic second set loss, “This certainly puts us out in front in the regional race,” ASU Coach Lou Belken said. Sargsian was back to his usual self in the third set, beating A nteater No. 1 player “These are two teams that we had to beat.” Sunday’s confrontation with UC-Irvine Chris Tontz like a rented mule, 6-2,5-7,6-1. “I was kind o f happy actu ally ,” said (6-5) came down to one of the Sun Devils’ sm oothest operators, sophom ore Sergio Sargsian, w ho, d espite being unable to B y D a n M iller S t a te P ress finance an electric razor, will shave after n e x t w eekend’s m atches in C alifornia, “This is kind of good for me to have Some practice in a longer match.” Freshman wonder Tsolak Gevorkian also posted a 7-5,6-3 singles victory over David Chang in the fifth spot. “I just beat him physically and mentally,” he said. “No one can stop me when I’m hit­ ting my passing shots, especially my lob.” For the second day in a row, the Sun D evils swept all three doubles scraps to earn the doubles point: The third doubles tandem of Gevorkian and junior Paul Reber highlighted the perform ances with a 9-7 drubbing of Tardif and Julian Foxon. “They w ere the second best team we played at (third singles) all year,” Reber said, Belken said the Sun Devils broke away from their traditional warm-up routine for the Anteater match, thanks to the diligent work of assisant Steve Bickham. “The guys were a little tired when they Came in from playing Saturday,” Belken explained. “Steve set up a fun doubles game that got guys energized and ready to play. That’s a credit to him.” Sophomore No. 6 singles player W olf von Lindenau pocketed his first singles vic­ tory o f the season ag a in st T o rero Je ff Greenhut on Saturday-. The fiery lefty found himself in unfamiliar territory when he was up 6-1, 1-0. “ I got a little tig h t,” co n fessed von Lindenau, who lost the second set 7-5. “I think I was thinking about w inning too much.” However, things got ugly in the third set as von Lindenau played like he had an early dinner date, dismantling Greenhut 6-1. “I ju st killed the guy,” von Lindenau added. Lister’s perfect 10 on balance beam part o f A SU m en Sun Devils’ record-breaking 195.700 outing split last 2-game trip B y J erem y S t e in S tate P ress S enior co -cap tain D anna L is te r becam e th e firs t ASU gym nast, since records have been kept, to record tou r perfect 10s in her colle­ g ia te c a re e r w ith th is b eam p e rfo rm a n c e Friday night against Denver at th e U niversity A ctivity C enter. You are m obbed by your team m ates after sticking the dismount following a pic­ ture-perfect routine and you look up to see a 10 being flashed by the judges. For most collegiate gymnasts this sce­ nario never becomes anything more than.a dream, but for ASU senior Danna Lister it has become old habit. Lister racked up the fourth perfect 10 of her collegiate career Friday night to help lead the ASU women’s gymnastics team to its highest score in the team’s 19-year history in a 195.700-188.425 rout of Denver in front of a University Activity Center crowd of 525. With her perfect perfomance on beam, L ister becam e the first Sun D evil since records started being kept to record four 10s in a career, all of which have come on beam. B esides her flaw less beam perform ance, Lister also set career-highs on vault (9.3), floor (9.925) and in the all-around (39.125), and tied her career-high on bars with a 9.9. “I felt pretty good,” Lister said. “I was a little disappointed in vault, becuase I was almost on my feet.” L ister w asn ’t the o n ly one breaking records against the Pioneers, Freshm en Meagan Wright and Gina Holleran both had career-best show ings in the all-around. Wright finished first in the all-around for the second-consecutive meet with a team seasonhigh of 39.250, while also posting a careerhigh mark on floor with a 9.925. Holleran finished thrid in the all-around, behind W right and Lister, with a 38.950 and set career-bests on floor (9.85) and bars (9.75). While the freshmen duo was happy with their showings, both feel there is still some room to improve. “I felt I d id pretty good, (but) I can improve on beam and vault,” Wright said. “I was really happy with it,” Holleran said o f her Outing. “It was the best I’ve done this year, but I have a lot more things I want to work on.” As a team, ASU suffered only three falls in 24 competitive routines and hit both of its exhibition routines on bars. “I was really enjoying what I say,” said ASU Coach John Spini, who is in his 15th year as the helm for the Sun Devils; “I was very happy with wjhat I saw on bars. When you have eight kids go on bars and hit eight sets, that’s nice. We worked really hard on getting that event up.” A ccording to a ssista n t coach T racy M oser, the key to Sun D e v ils’ success Friday was their ability to stay focused. “They were very focused. We are really pleased with their intesity,” she said. “I’m real proud of them.” D espite putting up season-high team scores on bars (49.050) and floor (49.325), ASU is still not content. ‘T here’s a lot of things we can still do better. Beam is not even close to what we can do, and it was good tonight,” Spini said following, the meet. “We still have room for improvement, and that’s the good thing,” Lister said. The Sun D evils now take a w eek off from competing before hosting rival UofA at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 16 in the University Activity Center. By Dan Miller State Press It could have been worse. The I5th-ranked ASU men’s bas­ ketball team survived another week­ end of Pac-10 heart attacks with a split with the Washington schools. The. Sun D evils’ (21-8 overall, 11-6 Pac-10) 84-71 loss to W ashington State in Pullman on Saturday left ASU Coach Bill Frieder at a loss for words. “It was such an emotional game that it is best that neither me or my players comment,” Frieder said, “We tried to beat them.inspite of everything.” The setback against the Cougars m ade last T hursday’s com e-from behind victory over Washington even sweeter, because losing two straight games and then going to Tucson to play UofA is not something the Sun Devils would wish on anyone. The W ildcats are coming off a sweep of the Washington schools, which, solid­ ified their second-place standing in the conference. Although the Sun Devils remain in third place in the Pac-10, their shot at a top four regional seed at the upcom­ ing NCAA tournament took a signifi­ can t blow . Now all signs p o in t to g Tucson for the Sun D evils’ highly an ticipated season finale w ith the Wildcats on Saturday. P age 12 W omens golf captures 6th tournament victory Fr o m S taff R eports The ASU women’s golf team won its sixth tournament title in six outings this season with a first place outing at the Stanford Invitational over the weekend. The Sun Devils easily outdistanced Second-place San Jose State shooting a three-round to tal o f 872, 11 strokes ahead of the Aggies. Stanford finished third, followed by UCLA in fourth. S o p h o m o re H e a th e r B o w ie and senior Wendy Ward led ASU. The two golfers tied for first in the individual co m p e titio n , b o th sh o o tin g a fo u runder-par 215. The win gave Bowie her third consecutive and fourth overall first-place finish of the season. Other top finishers for the Sun Devils included freshmen Kellee Booth, who took sixth w ith a 223, senior K ristèi Mourgue d’Algue, Who finished 11th, and junior Linda Ericsson, who came in 14th. Baseball C o n t in u e d f r o m pa g e 11. the offensive end. He is a good college baseball player.” Murphy said that he didn’t really give his team a pep talk when they were down 5-0, he just told them how it was. “I said, ‘Fellas, why are we playing scared? We’re going to lose unless we take it to 'em .’” ‘C oach came, out to talk to us when we w ere down and he looked so relax ed ,” Sophomore Cody M cKay said. “He said £ I £ S t a t e P ress M onday, March 6, 1995 that five runs in five innings is nothing and we-could do it. He reallly tries to make ns feel relaxed and in control at all times.” A total o f over 10,000 baseball fans attended the three-games series, including over 7,500 in the two games at Packard Stadium. Saturday’s crowd o f 4,138 Was ASU’s largest Since 1992. “T he cro w d s w ere u n b e lie v e a b le ,” Murphy said. “It’s great to have that many people cheering for you.” M ens sw im m ing takes 2nd at Pac-10 Cham pionships B y H eather S n o w S tate P ress T he A SU m e n ’s sw im team cam e through with a second-place finish over the weekend at the Pac-10 Championships in Long Beach, Calif. ASU Coach Ernie M aglischo is very happy with his team’s performance, espe­ cially considering the Sun Devils were pre­ dicted to finish fifth. “I’m very pleased with getting second and the team really swam their hearts out,” Maglischo said. Stanford Won the m eet, follow ed by ASU, USC, UofA and California. According to senior Richard Bera, the team had set a goal to come in second place, “It was a team goal to try and come in second, and overall the team really swam well,” he said. ASU had two swimmers automatically qualify for the NCAA Championships, and according to M aglischo four m ore w ill probably qualify at the qualifying meet on Friday and Saturday. Seniors Eduardo Piccinini and Bera both autom atically q u alified fo r the NCAA Championships. Piccinini qualified in the 100- yard butterfly and Bera in the 100 freestyle. A ccording to M aglischo, sophom ore Mike Melley will most likely be invited in the 1650 free and junior Felipe Delgado in the 50 free. “Mike and Felipe came so close in their events that they will probably be invited,” he said. “They both had very outstanding performances.” Juniors Robert Smith and Nelson Vargas will also most likely go as members of the 400 and 800 free relays. Maglischo said that it’s tough to make the au to m atic cu ts fo r th e N CA A Championships, but he believes that more w ill q u alify at the m eet ori F riday and Saturday. “I was disappointed that none o f our medley relays qualified, but we’ll try again this weekend and hopefully come through,” he said. Looking to the NCAA Championships, the Sim Devils feel ready to take on a tough field. “Although it will be a fast field, we feel c o n fid e n t g o ing in to the N C A A Championships,” Bera Said. The NCAA Championships run March 23-25 in Indianapolis. ARIZONA’S £ LARGEST £ CAP STORE £ CHECK OUT OVER 700 STYLES OF ^ . SPORT AN D NON-SPORT CAPS AS0 CAP *2“ It l f If i M-TH 10-7 F-S 10-10 SON 12-5 '■ THECAPCO. Y 0 U R O NE - S T O P CAP 1 6 T B * T . , BO F T E A S T O F M I L lj W hoever Said "the best th in gs in life are free” p ro b a b ly h a d a tr u s t fu n d . 9 2 1 -1 2 0 0 TERMINIX Excellent Employment Opportunities VISA Flexible Hours tailored to fit your schedule Residential/Commercial Service X tfe CA REER ADVANCEM ENT •youvwaxtt tobe.® Opportunities II began my careerlike thisil CALL: Doug Webb - Regional Manager 602 731-3151 - J . | w ith any o th er cap purchase. |j Certain conditions apply, Exp. 4-30-95 © V isa U.S.A. In c. 199S State P ress P age 13 M onday, March 6 ,1 9 9 5 Track coach happy w ith team ’s 1st outdoor m eet By Damian Shaw State P ress The ASU track and field team started its outdoor track season Saturday hosting the Bill Sawyer Invitational at Sun Angel Stadium. For the Sun Devils, the meet was character­ ized by Coach Leonard Braxton as a success. “Overall for the first meet we did well,” Braxton said. “We experimented with peo­ ple in different events and I think some people weren’t in their right spots yet. So overall, I was pleased. In this particular case I give the team an A minus.” The Sun Devils won the women’s 4x100meter relay; the men’s and women’s 800m eters with V ondre A rm our and Lade Akinremi; the women’s 400-meter hurdles with seniorTammy Rockwell;and the men’-s and women’s 200-meters with Ivan Jean-Marie and Avia Morgan. ASU also captured first and second in the w om en’s 400-m eters with Lorieann Adams and Joronda White, respec­ tively. Rockwell, who edged out the UofA’s Kim Veeder by .4 seconds to win the 400-meter hurdles, was happy with her performance. “I ran it once last year, and I wasn’t sure how I was going to do here. But 1 made it hurt so I was happy. The pain’s here so I’m „ IHX ■ MEXICAN P VFOODt t FR E E TAX HELP FROM VITA V olu n teer Incom e T ax A s s is ta n c e S ervin g Lunch a n d D in n er 7 D ays a W eek Permanent Hair Rem oval W e d n e s d a y s a n d T h u r s d a y s 6 -9 p m Feb. 15th to April 15th a n d S atu rd ay s 9am -noon M arch 15th to April 15th Foreign S tu d e n ts welcome - T hurs. only R em oving U nw anted Hair from: Bikini Line • Back • Neck Upper tip • Cheeks • Chin Eyebrows • Underarms • Abdomen ABSOLUTELY PERMANENT Armstrong Hall Room 114 IRS S p o n so re d M A M A R O SA 'S Traditional Sonoran Mexican Food Recipes Are Simply the Best! • F re e C o n s u lt a ti o n E v e n in g s /W e e k e n d s 1 College o f Law FREE T ax Advice and Form Preparation A ssista n ce happy,” Rockwell said. She also believes with the end of the indoor season and the beginning of the outdoor sea­ son, the team is starting to come together. : “Just recently our whole team’s attitude has changed fo r the b etter. T he w hole team’s attitude toward each other is much better,” Rockwell said. “Since this has just happened recently, I think w e're going to get even better.” Sabina Verbeck, a freshman running in her first outdoor meet for ASU, welcomed the fresh air. “I love it outdoors. There’s so much of a difference because when you’re inside all the d u st gath ers and you c a n ’t breath. O u td o o rs, I c o u ld run fo re v e r,” said Verbeck, who also enjoyed the home crowd o f about 200. “I ju st like having people there. It helps having people there cheering for you when you run.” Braxton agreed with Verbeck. “W e’re an outdoor team. This was our first outdoor meet, so now I have an idea and the practices will change according to what some o f the individuals have done today, and we're looking forward to a good outdoor season. We had a lot of people here today and I think it was good for the team.” Specializing E x clu sively in th e Insulated "IB, P ro b e" ' M eth od o f Perm anent H air R em oval (Ind ivid ual Insulated Probe) R eco m m en d ed N a tio n w id e b y Ph ysicians & D erm a to lo g ists Sm ce 1988 Fabulous Fajitas - Beef • Shrimp • Chicken I Camarón Ranchera and Diablo I Steaming Sides of Fresh Vegetables ■ Incredible Fish Tacos ,, FAM OUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS 1/2 PRICE DINNER With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 3-6-95. M esa 2 0 2 3 W . G uadalupe Ad fu n d e d by ASASU 941-8936 ■ Savory Black Beans (Shrimp), ; (Southwest Comer Dobson & Guadalupe) 897-9411 H ap p y H our B uffet 4-7 p.m. M onday-Friday $ Tempe 96 0 W . University (Northeast Comer University & Hardy) • 966-0852 3080 N . C iv ic C enter, #29 (1 b lock N . o f T h om as & E. o f S cottsdale Road) * Earn $10 to $20 an hour? * Be able to work when you don't have class? * Work full or part time? T h a t ’ s w h a t y o u t e l l y o u r p a r e n t s , d o n 't TELL THEM THAT SOME OF THE BEST SKIING IN THE WESTERN UNITED STATES IS JUST 4 HOURS AWAY at S u n r is e P a r k R e s o r t . A r iz o n a ’ s l a r g e s t SKI RESORT WITH 3 MOUNTAINS, 6 5 RUNS AND A FULL RENTAL SHOP WITH SKIS AND SNOWBOARDS. W it h t h e S u n r is e S t u d e n t P a c k a g e , f o u r STUDENTS CAN STAY TWO NIGHTS IN THE SUNRISE P a r k H o t e l a n d g e t l if t t ic k e t s f o r t w o d a y s OF SKIING FOR JUST $ 3 7 p e r p e rs o n p e r d a y . A $ 4 1 0 v a lu e ! SO REMEMBER, KEEP YOUR .MOUTH SHUT, AND COME FLY THE SLOPES OF SUNRISE PARK RESORT. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 1-800-55-HOTEL TODAY. your SUNRISE F*\RK RESORT IT A LL S T A R T S A T S U N R IS E O W N ED AN D OPER ATED BY TH E W H IT E M O U N T A IN AP AC H E T R IB E . Student Package good Sunday through T hursday throughout the 9 4 '9 5 season . Offer BASED ON A V A IL A B IL IT Y , FOR FOUR STUDENTS, PER D AT . PER ROOM , W ITH A TW O -N IG H T STAY, NOT VA LID HOLiOAYS AND SPÉCIAL EVENTS. W EEKEND PACKAGES A tS O AV AILAB LE. C lassifieds P age 14 N o tice to our readers: B efore responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The, State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our Classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. HELP WANTEDGENERAL TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE $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 va 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. B u y O f T he W eek Questa Vida, 2 m aster suites, fresh paint, refrigerator, w/d, microwave, fireplace, sun deck. $65,900. B ob B ullock R e a l t y E x e c u t iv e s 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 Laziness The m ental alertness to avoid hard work. -Anonymous * $7/H R + C A $H ! * MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE DRAFTING TABLE A T % 31" w ith s h e lf $ 7 5 , padded roller chair $ 3 0 , and flu orescen t-in ­ ca n d escen t sw in g arm lam p with mount $45.946-5144 FURNITURE ANNO UNCE­ MENTS SHORTING GOODS & Military Collectible Show March 11 & 12 at American Legion Post 2, 2125 S. Industrial Park D r.* Tem pe. S a t.'9 -5 , Sun, 9 r4 . $4 ad m is1 sion. Buy, sell, trade. Free park­ ing, GoOd food & fun. For table irifp call 984 9683. Proceeds to charity. ($1 off with this ad!). ■ ~ ~ B E A U T IF U L SO FA fo r sa le, blue (light & royal) with mauve $250 obo. caH 831-3862 SO FA SE T , $ 2 6 5 , Q ueen bed $80; Full $70, Chest o f Drawers $40, Dinette $125.234-5729. COMPUTERS INTERNET GET on the infor­ m ation sup er h ig h w a y ! S lip S lash PPP w ith W W W , FTP, new s,.E -m ail, more. $9.99/m o! Net 99. 249-0957. TICKETS ~ R O U N D T R IP T ic k e t C o n ti­ n en tal U S u se by 3 /2 0 $ 2 5 0 obo Jennifer 493-1198 $CASH T O D A Y !! I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items: Call Al, 994-4369. $SE L L Y O U R C A RS Or truck for. quick cash! Foreign , or domestic same day response. L eave d escription & any in fo ; 24hrs. Brian 246:3499TDG. 1 BEDROOM apartment to sub­ let. A vailable March 1 to Aug 31. Call p a ie , 921-8804. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 2bd apt., walk to' A SU . pool, laundry TmV 1 blk so: o f U niversity, on 8th St. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238; HOMES FOR RENT 1BD I B A guest house, 2blks to A SU , $380/mO; 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 o. 1bdrm 1ba $460/m o includes utilities. Call 8944)288. A QUjESTA Vida, 2 mstr suites, 2 ba, f/p, w/d, micro. Overlook-* ing p ool, spa, rqball, w gt rm, sauna: A vail 5 /1 5 $ 7 0 0 -$ 7 9 5 . 829-0902 HERMOSA PL., 510 W. Univesity, 2bd 2ba condo nr ASU, pool, w/d, fans, $635. 966-0987: Set free appointments for health services. Fun office, nearby Fiesr ta Mall, Eves & Sat. Fun phone work! 649-9580; A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office p erso n . W ill.tr a in . G o o d ad­ van cem en t p o ten tia l, 4 0 2 0 N . Scottsdale Rd. Ste. 108. Apply in person. A SU G R A D student seek s at­ tendant for eves/wknd moms. No exp nec. Good pay Tom 949-6041 A SU ST 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. ASU STUDENTS, the A S U Tel­ efund o ffers the best part tim e job on campus! A ”position with us, will Work with your schedule w hile a llow ing you to ex cel in your studies. We contact alumni to update information^ inform them about advancem ents and seek financial support. C hoose the ev e n in g & w eek en d sh ifts you want to work, and gain sub­ stance for yot|r;résuni&'Call;-965r .;6754^: AUTOMOBILES APARTMENTS 84 CORVETTE, bronze, leath­ er, load; exc maint, 93k, $7500 must sell 955-2581 V"• ■■• /; ; C A N Y O U w ork 8 :3 0 -1 0 :3 0 a.m. daily? The State 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 sk ills. Pick up your application in the north basement o f Matthews Center to-­ day ! We need you to start March - .f:' 9 2 V W PA SS A T, teal, 4 -d r,. 29 6 ta g s.d e a le r s u c ’d ,im m a c., 39k ,be.low KBB at $10,500.955-2581 C A SH IE R , G E N ER AL o ffic e , com puter & 10 k ey exp. h elp ­ fu l. A ftern o o n s & S at.'s. 8 9 3 6884 - JE E P C J-7 1985. 4 x 4 , tir es, s o ft & b ik in i to p , great. M o v in g , m ust $ 6 0 0 0 ob o. C all l e s s i , 5265- C L E R IC A L P R O D U C T IO N , light industrial, temporary ft/pt. 9 56-3444. : new runs s e ll. 834- BICYCLES MTN BIKE w /clip s, gèl, pump p d $ 6 5 0 m ust s e ll $ 4 0 0 ca ll Mg 947-3736 exclnt condition. C O M P U T E R M A JO R S. N o unix? Growing national internet service provider needs you., Net 99 249-0957. ■ ■ TRAVEL COU NSELO R S W ANTED. Trim down-fitness, co-ed, NYS c a m p .: 1 0 0 p o sitio n s : sports,crafts, others. Camp Shane. Ferndale, NY 1 2 7 3 4 . (9 l4 )2 7 I-4 i4 1 . CHOLLA BAY/ROCKY Point Cabin rentals. $40-$50.4 pejs°ns, add'l add $5/ea, Beds, stove, ba w/shwrs, fpl. 968-8009 msg. C O U R IE R D R IV E R S n eed ed Mon-Fri mornings or afternoons. Light pickup helpful. Exp pref. Starts $5/hr. 248-7977 lv msg. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize ip quick departures: M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. S P R IN G B R E A K Don't Be Left At Home! ■ Pithaya Bar - Granada Del M ar Rocky Point/San Carlos CRT PHONE operators wanted. Basic typing skills (20 wpm) p/t s h ifts . S a t, req'd. $ 5 .7 1 per hour/steady increases. Great op­ portunity -4 3 1 -9 9 7 7 . DAILY WORK, daily pay. Mise jobs. Earn more with a car. Re­ port 6 a.m . any day to: 8 0 6 W. Madison S t Hotel.Reservations RENTAL |H A R IN ^ _ _ _ FEMALE &/OR couple needed to share 3bd, 2ba apt, 6 mi to ASU. May to Aug only. Pis call tn se e & ask T s. 491-4788. HOMES FOR SALE LOS PR A D O S-H A R D Y /13TH St. 1/2 m ile 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 a lf today Connie, John Hall A sso­ c ia te s 8 4 0 -5 1 7 6 or 9 4 8 -0 5 5 0 *3986 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE ________ DUPLEX, TEMPE, xlnt cond* as. sume, no qual.i CTM 512,500, al­ ways reitted. 841-4916. S t a t e P r ess M onday, March 6 ,1 9 9 5 $14 per person/Quad 0aN Today ? Space is limited! MEXICO TOURS 1 -8 0 0 -7 5 9 -7 8 1 0 HELP WANTEDGENERAL S10.25/START N a tl. com pany has im m ediate openings in retail. N o exp. req* Flex hrs. Scholarships. Cond. ex­ ist. Secure slimmer positions ear­ ly. 968-4797. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! COMPUTERS EARN $350-$400 PER WEEK OR MORE! People Needed To Do Fun, Easy, Respectable Part or Full Time Work At Home, 24 Hr. Msg Gives Details HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL CUSTOM ER SVC , Ahwatukee area. A p p ly to d a y , start work im m ed . 2 5 o p e n in g s , 4 -9 p m , $6.50/hr. N o telemarketing. Ap­ p ly M on, 9 -1 la m . T R C , 3 0 3 3 N . 4 4th St. # 2 4 0 , or ca ll 8400931. GREAT PART-TIME job even­ ings 4-8 p.m. Mon-Fri, $6.25/hr, Cali Vann, 894-9442. PO S S Y S T E M S , IN C . F/t, p/t cu sto m er s e r v ic e , PC litera te with varied software exp. Send re­ sum e or apply in person (8am5pm ) to: POS S y ste m s, A ttn. Hum an R e s o u r c e s , 1 0 0 2 7 S. 51st S treet, Ste. 102, Phoenix, AZ 85044. STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE needed to run marketing project on campus, P/T, great earning po­ tential, 1-80CM59-VISA x35. D ELIVERY DRIVERS needed part time/full tim e-on call posi­ tions. Must have own car, truck preferred, knowledge o f Phoenix area. Call Bob and leave message, 831-8159. IF Y O U h a v e the d e sir e to succeed , w e have the d esire to meet you. Our cp. 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. IMAX THEATRE ECHO CANY ON River Expedi­ tions (Royal Gorge Region) ac­ cepting resumes for the follow ­ in g p o sitio n s : R iv er G u id es (exp'd & trainee positions); Gust Service Spec (office); CDL Bus Drivers. L ooking for upgraded medical training, drug-free, supe­ rior work ethic. Send resumes to: PO Box 1002, CO Springs, CO 80901, 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. EXECUTIVE ANS Svc needs re­ lia b le, cheerful operators with "You Bet" attitude. P/T days 7-1, M /T/Th/F & *8-1 Sun; ev es 4-8 M -F & 3 -8 S u n . $ 6 sta rtin g . M E S S E N G E R , SC H L E PPE R and general all-around gopher needed for the advertising de^ partment in the State Press. You need a car, a positive cán-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 h eavy com m itm ent. I f th is is a p p e a lin g to y o u , ca ll now. 965-6555 ask for Jackie Eldridge. M u st ty p e 4 5 w pm , k n o w 10key, computer exp, have reliable trails. Call 264-4000 for int. FIELD MKTNG Promo Co. in Tempe seeks ener­ g e t ic team m em b ers in entry level positions. Must be outgo­ ing & able to handle resp. Fax resr 602-949 9744; . — FLEX HRS. ypUr sched. Door to door canvasers, including team leaders w/cdr & appt. setters. For more info, 897-6961 GET A summer job now ¡ Attend the Summer Job Fair '95 Wed., „March 29 Cady Malls Meet with dozens o f potential employers! GET PAID to see m o v ies! Part tim e jo b o p portun ity to work with a major Hollywood studio! Visit Career Services at the Stud­ ent Services Building for more in­ formation, Application deadline is April 15, Looking for P/T Work? N ow H iring for Customer S ervice R epresentatives! C urrently Seeking , C andidates T hat H ave T he Following Q ualifications: • Must be Ai|LE to T ype ' 30 wpm ♦Interpersonal C omm . Skills •PjREVIOU$ Sa LES/CUST Service Exp a P lus! •M ust be A ble to W ork Saturdays Call 949-3100x204; ITALIAN S A N D A L co . needs person to do light clerical, mar­ keting, & variety o f other excit­ in g ven tu res. G reat w ork a t­ mosphere. Call 350-9414. M O DELS: N Y C , T oykó, Paris, Milan. L ocal scoiits want you! Scottsdale, 941-6922. P/T DELI driver needed for 48TH Street D eli. M-F, 11-2pm. $6/hr + tips. 431-0011, P/T SHOP help, Apache & MeC lin to c k F iresto n e.; A sk for. Ron Or Terry, 966-7206. EQE. PHOTOGRAPHY/SALES- RE­ SORT Photography w ants you to jo in our rapidly grow ing co. T ir e d o f w a itin g ta b les? RPI can offer a new & exciting careeer in a resort atmosphere with ex c elle n t earning opportunity Call 998-5866. HOSPIWUTY FRANCHISE SYSTEMS,M C S p rin g Break*** G et P lan s? W orld's Largest H otel Franchise has openings fo r Full & Part Tim e • Reservations Sales Agents • Look for Us by the MU . a Taking inbound Calls • Wili Work Around Student Schedules Training Begins M arch 1 3 ft M arch 20 C al l K elly S e r v ic e s Today! HUn Vo m Puns Howl Offontnaras rat tovruKSNun 838-8405 CALL NOW FOA DETAILS lnt'l Ld rates apply. 11111,1 COMPUTERS 4M eg R A M , 200M eg H D , 3 -1 /2 ' Floppy, M ouse, Fax/M odem , V G A G S M onitor, K eyboard, D O S & W indow s, M icrosoft W orks - W ordprocessor, G raphics, D atabase, S pread sheet. Plug & G ot C om plete $995 QCM GR M otivated take-charge person needed for QC position to start up lab. Technical background a must. Chemistry or Food Science degree pref. 921-1991. RESORT Reservations Specialist. Orange Tree'Resort has 35 perm, posi­ tions avail, in new dept. $7/h r b a se w /b o n u s. $ 2 2 5 -5 2 5 /w k , mgmt. opport. no selling, 8:301:30 & 4-9,' training, must have exceptional attitude and be ex ­ perienced w/the public. 874-8613 e x t 212. Jarrett. SO D A ST O C K E R S Needed immediately ! T w o shifts a v a il to s to c k 1 g ro c èry sto re w/beverage products, $5/hr plus 280/mile. If you are reliable, de­ tail o rien ted , h ave g o o d math s k ills , & o w n tran sportation please call today! 838-8405. Wè encourage a diverse workforce. Kelly Services. Never an applic­ ant fee. EOE: SPORTS M INDED N ow hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate erap. $8 guaranteed tq start at 1 5-30 fle x ib le hrs/wk. C all Mike for int, 921-8282. 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 e n 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. KEL1Y K \ M \I ) \ ^ M SUMMER INTERNSHIP Earn $3,000-$5,000 Great Experience! Inc 500 company seeking sales people for the Unofficial Student Guide voted America's Most Admired College Publication. Info session: 7pm March 27th Rm 223 Memorial Union or contact Andy Degenholtz, Campus Concepts 800-743-2220 Free C h ild Care W h ile Y ou D o n a te ! The Valley's BEST plasma donation center will begin providing FREE childcare (during donating) effective Monday, February 27th. (Some restrictions apply.) This will be offered 10am-4pm Mon-Sat & 10am-3pm Sunday^ We have 54 machines to serve you bett^!! This is your perfect opportunity to perform a vitally needed service and earn $150-$185 per m onth at die same time! It couldn't be easier! Newdotiors earn $25 CASH theirfirst donation! Open 7 days a week for your convenience! Open Monday-FridaytilS p.m.! A ssociated B ioscien ce, Inc. 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102, Tempe Broadway & Dorsey (Across from Native New Yorker) 968-6139 HELP WANTEDSALES GRAD STUDENT w/Marketing background for p/t sales - Car al­ lo w a n c e , sa la ry , c o m m issio n DOE. Call V .P . at 921-3003. S A L É S PE R S O N n eed ed f/t. A pply at Leonard's Luggage at Fiesta Mall. 835-7000. VALEO INTERNATIONAL, an en v iro n m en ta l c o . is lo o k in g for several sales reps as w ell as a few in d iv id u a ls w /m gm t sk ills. N o exp ijec. W ill train. Call for an interview 940-3804.. YOU’RE HIRED! lnt'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• W ill train. FT/PT. 940-3804. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL P /T C O M P U T E R in p u t, fle x hrs, days only. Near A SU . Real es ta te m ajor p ref. C a ll 966-2301. HELP WANTEDF O O D ^ R V g l^ B U D D Y RYA N 'S Bar & G rill wants to draft you!! FT, PT serv­ er, bar, host/hostess. Call 2584646 for appointment. FIND IT in the Classifieds. HELP WANTEDGENERAL No S elling The valley's finest mar­ ket research firm is look­ ing for interviewers. We offer flexible scheduling arid a professional se t­ ting, starting at $6 per hoilr. Excellent advance­ ment possibilities. C all M anny a t 9 4 0 -7 5 3 5 H igginbotham A sso ciates TAKAJO d a y s in n S E R V IC E S W HO S A ID great test sco res n ev er g o t anyone a great job? H ie Princeton Review is seeking bright, enthusiastic & dynam ic individuals with high scores on the SA T , GRE, G M AT , LSAT or MCAT. P/t eves/wknds 9671480 W e W ork A round Y our S chedule T empe L ocation CALL NOW! 1-809-474-2821 IBM Based 486/50 Student System CCT® (800) 228-6368 HELP WANTEDGENERAL C am p Counselors needed for outstanding M aine camps! C am p Takajo for boys and C am p Veg^i for girls. Each located on mag­ n ificen t lakefront settin g w ith exceptional facilities. O ver 100 positions at each cam p for heads and assistants in tennis, baseball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, g o lf, street h ock ey, field hockey; sw im m in g , sa ilin g , ca n o ein g , w atersk iin g, S C U B A , archery, riflery, weight training, athletic trainer, journalism, photography, woodworking, ceramics, crafts, fine arts, dance (jazz, tap, ballet), nature study, radio & electronics, rocketry, vid eo, dram atics, piano accom panist, m u sic instrum entalist/band director, back­ packing, rock clim bing, whitewater canoeing, ropes course, gen ­ eral (w /you ngest cam pers). A lso lo o k in g for. R N 's, secretaries, m aintenance, kitchen. C am p dates approx June 20-A ugust 20. R oom and board, travel allowance, salary based on qualifications and experience. T E N N IS C O U N S E L O R S Q ualified tennis instructors needed to teach tennis and live in a bunk w ith campers. W e’re look in g for college level players and g ood former high school players. Teaching experience a plus, but n ot a must. Takajo has 17 tennis courts ( 6 w ith lights). V eg i has 10 tennis courts (4 w ith lights). W A T E R F R O N T STAFF Qualified waterfront staff needed for sw im m ing, sailing, waterski­ ing, SCU B A , canoeing. M E N - C A M P TAKAJO * 5 2 5 E. 7 2 n d St,, 2 5 th Floor . N ew York, N Y 10021 1-800-409-C A M P W O M E N - C A M P VEGA PO Box 1771 Duxbury, M A 0 2 5 3 2 1-800-838-V E G A W E W IL L BE O N C A M PU S T u esday & W ednesday, M arch 21 & 2 2 from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m . in M U R oom s 2 1 4 & 2 1 5 WALK-INS WELCOME S tate P ress HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE JOB OPPORTUNITIES SPORTS & RECREATION CLUB TRIBECA - A ll positions available. Apply within, 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. C R U ISE S H IP S now h ir in g Eam up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cm ise ships or land-tour com panies. W orld travel. Sea­ sonal & fu ll-tim e em ploym ent available. N o experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C59185. L E A RN W H A T the C IA , F B Î and U S Seal teams are training today. Jeet Kune do co n ce p ts and F ilip in o martial arts, co n ­ tact certified instructor D aniel Bissonnette 941-2550 CORK *N CLEAVER A ce. apps. for lunch h ost(ess), lu n ch fo o d serv ér & 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 2 5pm or bv appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. COSMIC PIZZA now hiring exp p izz a c o o k s, d eliv ery d rivers, d a y tim e sa n d w ich m akers & nighttime flyer distributors. We o ffe r fle x h ours, 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 E. A pache Blvd. (N o phone calls please.) D AYS BTWN. 8am-3pm, $6/hr start. K enny R ogers R oasters, 353Q N. Gold water Blvd, Scotts. 8744)028. DELI COUNTER, p/t help req’d. A pply in: person, 1st A ve/Y an Buren. 256-7777. DELIVERY DRIVERS needed. Muist have Own car & insurance. Day & night shifts available; big m oney, big prizes, great perks, working out o f Tempe's hottest new club Thè Electric Ballroom. Apply in person at Kilowatts Piz­ zeria inside The Electric Ballroom 1216 E. Apache. Mon-Frb 12-6. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES A M odel , "B tg h im 'i C M t f# M crfrM afreeJr 1 ' iu Wih kew f ww i ■weed, fttfj u y | i i ) t f , ‘ — ftn l f é (»w h r meIttmr>4 é ftm aft Semi $14 S i to Send ftaibor PuMMilng Oeot. 5. t I16A Sth i t , #157 - MinhiUtalMdLÖMW RESTAURANTS/ BARS 10C WINGS DRAFTS $1 S Bud, Bud Light Mon-Thur 3-7 p.m. Sat 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun 12-9 p.m. M BANDERSNATCH BREWPUB BIJM PIE KITCHEN HELP, $6/hr to start. Sakana Restaurant, 5061 E. El­ liot, Phx. Apply in person. CARVIN JONES Is C oming To T he C luck S tarting T his Wednesday 9 pm 855 S. Rural • 894-2112 P/T HELP, deli counter & clean­ up. Flexible schedule. Capistranos, 31 W. Southern, Tempe. PRANKSTERS RED ROBIN Tempe's cooks receive top Wag­ e s , pd. v a c a tio n s & bonusies;. Apply today 1375 W; Elliot. W A IT E S ; WAITRESSES, bar­ tenders; p/t for private parties. Must have exp .956-3444. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE fflA R & IR IL L Tempe's Best Sports Bar 3 full Satellites 12 Televisions 6 Foot Big Screen 15c Wings All Day New Import Selection including Harp & Guiness on Tap BA BYSITTER S & NANNIES.: • v S et your ow n sch ed u le.;D ays, evenings &/or weekends; $4.25$6.70/hr. 345^2433. ; ; £; 1024 E. Broadway Tempe • 967-8875 PROVIDE CHILD care for a Sun­ d ay a fte r n o o n ; $ 7 . 50/h r. Exp pref. 464-3937. JO B . :: . OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA SUMMER jobs! Earn thousands this summer in cannerr iesV p rocessors, etc. M ale/ F e­ m ale. Rdoih/board/travel often provided.! Guide Guaranteed suc­ cess! ( 9 ^ 929-4398 ext. A 1015, ALASKA SUMMER jobs. Earn up to $600G+/mo-Fishing indus­ try. Free transportation! Room & board! N o exp nec; 818-774-1199 • ext. A48845. A A CRUISE Ships Hiring! Earn big $$$ + free world travel (Car­ ib b ean , E urope, H aw aii, e tc .). Summer/permanent, no exp nec. Guide, (919)929-4398 ext C l 015; C R U IS E S H IP S & C lu b M ed hiring- Earn up to $2500+ /m o. W orking for th ese com p an ies. W orld travel & exotic, resorts. F ree tran sportation ! R oom & board! N o experience nec. Call, (8IS) 705-3416. M488 •INT'L EMPLOYMENT* Make up to . $2,00Q-$4,000+/mo. teaching basic conversational English abroad, japan, Taiwan, and S. Korea. For more information call:. (2 0 6 ) 6 3 2 -1 1 4 6 e x t J 5 9 1 8 3 WORK IN PARADISE J*- Summer positions avail- > « |e able at Nationwide destinatio n s in c lu d in g H aw aii. ¡F c r t - F lo rid a , th e R ockies, ■ i __y Alaska. New England, etc. t i __ Earn up to S12/hr+tips! For - D , ' m o re in fo c a ll RESORT EMPLOYMENT SERVICES: (206) 632 0150 ext, R59581 Stata F r u ì C lM tiftaS* Matthews Cantar l i i M N t B A R HAVE TO get rid o f dog. Can't bear to put in pound. H ealthy la b /ch o w m ix. S h o ts current. $20 to provider o f good hom e. 649-0607 Leave. Message. F U N D R A IS IN ^ ^ FA ST F U N D R A IS E R - Raifce $500 in 5 days - Greeks, groups, clu b s, m otivated in d iv id u a ls. Fast, easy - No financial obliga­ tion. (800) 775-3851 ext. 33. < ttùfité, MUMI liM Mi pài aMNNW, h MNf ( 5th St. & Forest RAPPËLING A D V E N T U R E S learn confidence, speed, or com ­ mando style. Bill 967-7475 PETS KISS OFF Corporate America! Receive rewards for your efforts by jo in in g the interactive net­ w ork m ark eting w ave o f the 90's and b eyon d. For con su l 1tation on planning and d e v e l­ opm ent o f your b u sin ess, call Rebecca for an interview at 2035845 : V : ED DY 'S GRILL is looking for host/hostess. Please apply M-Th 2-4pm. Ask for Tracy - 4747 N . 7th St,, Phoenix. 241-1188. Help Wanted days & week-ends, 4 - 6 hrs/d ay. A pp ly in p erson , Rlimpie, 911 £ . Broadway, Page 15 Monday, March 6,1995 <3, G R I L L E NEW MENU NEW STAFF NEW ATTITUDE NEW POOL ROOM •99cBreakfast it Back Daily 7-10:30 a.m. • 1/2 Price Espresso Coffees Daily 6:30 a.m.-4 pjn. • $3.25 Daily Lynch Specials • Happy Hour Daily 4-7 p.m. M onday: C lo ck P eople T C R S O N A L ^ ^ SERVICES MALE/FEMALE EXOTIC danc­ ers available for bachelor/bachelorette parties. Call 404-0856 or ' 250-9511. STATPRO CORPO R A TIO N Statistical analysis - Call for free, estimate - 837-1999. D E S IGN $COff «3 First T im e H a ircu t A