A S U g e ts n e w lo g o , p a g e 6 . ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ©Copyright. State Praas. 1995 Tampa. Arizona Tuesday, March 21,1995 An Independent Morning Daily Vol.79N o.102 M ourners attend m em orial service fo r slain student S p r in g flin g Woman shot in restaurant parking lot B y C arolyn H orn Special to the State -.Press About 100 mourners tuned out Monday right fora memorial service cm campus for ASU student Angela I vie , who was shot and killed this week­ end. “She was truly gen­ uine. Her friendship was I v ie a blessing,” said AnnDenise Fuentes, a member of Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority, to which Ivie belonged. “She did everything for her friends. She'll be greatly missed and her spirit will live on in all of us.” Ivie, a 20-year-old junior pre-business major, was shot in the head and killed early Saturday morning in a Taco Bell restaurant parking lot in Phoenix, The service, which was attended by TriSigma members, Ivie’s parents and other friends, took place at 7 p m at Danforth Chapel. During the service, sorority members performed a ritual in remembrance erf Ivie’s life. Her friends said Ivie was a wonderful person and even “bubbly,” earning her the nickname of “Bubbles.” “Her laugh could light up the world,” said Gina Dinardi, a Tri-Sigma member. ’ “She had a charming and sparkling personal­ ity,” said Bill LaBrie, a friend of Ivie’s. Craig Ivie, Angela's father, said he was glad to hear all the good things said about his daugh­ ter. “It was good for me to hear all these stories T urn to I v ie , pa ge 2. Red Mountain Freeway extended to M cClintock Shobe said students traveling to ASU from the east probably will not see a noticeable differ­ More students can how drive on the Red ence. “They still have to use the surface streets to Mountain Freeway without being driven crazy get here,” he said. ■by it. Shobe said that the congestion caused by Many students will find it easier to travel to ASU now that the freeway (Loop 202) has been eastbound traffic exiting when the freeway ended at Scottsdale Road will go away. extended to McClintock Drive, However, any congestion on Rural said City of Tempe transportation Road that existed before the freeway planner Larry Shobe, See related opened will remain. “If the student is coming from STORY, PAGE Skyview traffic reporter Steve Ludwig the west Valley and is getting off said that traffic was congested in the at Rural Road, he will find it easi­ Rural Road area last January when die er today than he did when the Scottsdale Road exit first opened and increased freeway was only open to Rural Road,” he said. The Arizona Department of Transportation even more during the first week of ASU classes. “That’s when we started to see a backup at opened the one-mile stretch between Scottsdale/Rural Road and McClintock on the end of the freeway aneHhen down Rural Road toward University,’’ he said. March IS. By P atty King State P ress . Biology sophom ore Erich Haupt, 19, enjoys a sunny afternoon playing frisbeo in front of the SRC on Monday. T urn to Freeway, p, wins p r é sid e n t iÄ A SA Sl^ u^ olf B y L isa C ary State Press - ■ ¿ \v ] IS A* the newly-elected student goyemment president, Chris Weber said be warns to increase the organization’s interaction with state legislate«. ’1 want to put emphasis on die leg­ islators who rnalmme ultimate deci­ sions thafcaffect M f e a C said Weber, who won his seat during the Associated ttM ents o f AMD runoff election prior to spring break. W eber tie narrowly defeated Brandy Aguilar by 29 votes, 493 to 464. Overall, 1,001 people. « 2 ; percent of the student population, voted during the M ach 8 and | nm m K M In other i campus Anderson’s 440. Tbeaew defeated Viola lia id elected 3 |p ;is e w fy pp& . , Current AS H *| upcoming and tuition pretty happy (about winning),” Weber said. T W j ‘t a n k » » couraged about the low voter turnout It's something to woik on sakL“H e M World/ Nation Weather Outlook Windy and cooler. High 82, low 55. Tokyo hospitals find them selves inundated with victim s after a terrorist nerve gas attack kills six and poisons more than 3,200 subway riders. Page 3 pAnderson for Lopez received 449 voles te president is Marc Wendell, who Feb. 24, Angelo Desimpoe was Weber, currently ASASU’s student i he expects a smooth transition, but he d lengewifibe finding The election residts areaca ^ heard by the AS ASU Elections Boimplaints filed, care against a candidate ana tne orner against One complaint was coordinator will take office on May 15* In j Alex Shivers against Wendell for not fifipg «’proper Junoff the person drey are replacing to Frost said Ire believes what the job entails. ng Mm, he wfli focus on in addition to financM iùd ■ the way they are,” Frost Shivers: .The bottom riot included and d re& eaaM M i À'receipt didn’t correwaa p e r l by a « u d est because »ported;:#, the«op of ballot cards used in the ejection. Sports National Champion M arkus M ollica was ju st one of several Sun Devils who enjoyed success over Spring Break. Page 23 W here To Find It C lassifieds.................. ».......29 Com ics................................. 22 Crossword............ ...............12 Horoscopes ......, J ..............31 O pinion.................... 4 Police R eport................. 8 S p o rts................................23 T oday's A ctivities.........,,.,.2 World/Nalion .....,..,„ ..„ ...3 - Page Z S tate P ress Tuesday, Match 21,1995 Ivie. T o d ay C ontinued Om Today Section is a d a iy calendar o f events printed as a sentoe to the ASU community. Requests am aocapted on a AsFoame. trstserve basis and am printed on a space-ovalsttB basis. Campus dubs and organizations may submtwrimm emhee to tie State Press in tie basement o t Moahmvs Center. Room IS. Requests *0 not be taken over tie phone. Fw nden&tewiKabo notbe accepted. Entries m ust contain Ota M l name o f tie dub or orgamzaoon, a oeecttpeon o r n Avne one, v w » w 9m U m U tm a atom tooston A» « m m * « » sut*set to edbng for oontert, space and clarity. Incomplete or Ragh ms enuea M ite decanted. Deedtne tor requests in noon die day before pubtroetion and entries wd not be eaxpted mote tra n tre e working days before publication O nly one entry per nfpnriwSm per day is perm itted ♦ O apt o t P«yetx)togy In CrtuceHnn — Counseling avafebte at Counsslor Training Center at ASU, free lor »«<*»-cm »bmm ? for Monrnaaa Payne Hal Room 402. « Com »« Out Wi cm i Un Qwwp— W»Wy meeting. 7:30-9 p.m.. Multicultural Lounge, Student Services Butting, saoondtoor. ♦ Ooaege BepuWcahs — General mooting, everyone wetcome. 3:15 p m . MU Cochise, Room 212. •SunOevSSpaifc V e e rtw *— W deir^niertrw , postSpring Break roundup- 2 45 p.m., Mattheara Center, ConiarencaRocmSO ♦ Graduate Women’s Natwak — CoSee Dialogue: at graduate women wetcoma. Noon-1 p.m., Women's Student Canter, MU tower leveL ♦ ABU Pee» W ow Committee — General meeting. everyone wotooiwe. 3JO p.m , MuHtoJtural Lounge, Studert Services Suiting ^ * •K u n d a M Yoga Club— Kundakn yoga class, every-. : one weloome. Come join us and eaqiand yo tr mind. 2 p.m . MU Room 219 . • Barren M ind tm pro v— Coma see Barren Mind Im prov in fT u b Fuk o f Toast.’’ 1:40 p.m ., MU fte gepandaglaudga . • Asian BiMiUMM Id a d ira Association — Genera] moating. 4:30 pm ., MU R o a m iH ^S ♦ B«MM Student Union — Tuesday P M : Come join us ths Tuesday night tor tun and telowship. The topic «A be: ■Manigb’ utih or without God * 7 pm ., 1822 S. iiB K ♦ PM a g te Oefta Pre-Law — General mooting, aaor-' ney guest speaker. 3:15 p.m., MU La Paz, Room223. . «reBowsiilp of c te tlle n AW e ll I — Guest opos te r SMee SohnMder. MUdc and le loaehtp, everyone « * • oome. 730 p.m., UACHaom 35 »■, , -V; ¿W stm ♦ C m o r 8 w to o s and School A t J mbNog SfcMNff — ■ Career semeiar. featuring a panel at speakers regardng non-tradiBonal career options. 2-JO p.m., MU Gold, Room200. J&* . . Guest speaker Mr this meeting is IwwMMMMMl Arisons Republic. Everyone weloome; remember to bring d p s. 7 p.m., MU Nevgn .r i:. » Setasrm OuMng CM> — Wssfey mooting to dacuss upoteitngevetfcTdPpm.MUt'wte. from page 1. about her and how much fun she had and how happy she was,” he said. Ivie was shot dead in aTaco Bell parking lot at Seventh Street and Dunlap Avenue at about 12:17 a.m. She and four friends had just gone through the drive-through when Brian Reinhardt, the driver, pulled into the parking lot so Ivie could handout the food. Moments later, two Hispanic teenagers in a small, light-colored car who had been behind them in line pulled up near them. One of them got out and stood next to his car, staring at Ivie and her friends. Reinhardt said he asked die teenager what he wanted, and he responded by opening fire with a semi-automatic weapon at Ivie’s car. The teenager walked toward die car while shooting, Reinhardt said. . ‘1 didn’t hear the shots; I just saw the flashes. I thought they were blanks,” he said. “Josh (another passenger in the car) said Trn hit,’ so,I drove off.” Reinhardt drove toward Lincoln Hospital in Phoenix. On the way, he noticed Ivie was injured when she fell on him. “I thought she was dead then,” he said. “She fell from side to ride like a doll. I was trying to hold her up.” Doctors worked on Ivie for more than an hour, but at 1:50 a m , they told her father that she had died. “Angie really enjoyed life,” he said. “She had a lot of friends and she loved them” Josh Pulaski, who was in the car wife Ivie, was shot in fee hip. He was treated and released. There seems to be no reason for fee crime, said Phoenix police detective Mike McCullough. Police described fee suspect as a Hispanic male, 17 years old, 3 feet 8 inches tall and 130 pounds. Ivie’s parents said they will buty their daughter in Utah, where her extended family lives. Freew ay___ C ontinued from page 1. Rio Salado construction to be finished by August Ludwig said that the opening of the. the freeway to Thomas Road, sched­ McClintock section has moved that uled for next year, will have fee greatest congestion one mile east impact ext reducing traffic in fee area. “Now, it's the same jam southbound Robert Johnson, ADOT spokesman, on McClintock at University (Drive) said that fee next section of fee freeway that it used to be on Rural,” he said. is scheduled to open in late summer or Shobe said the Feb. 1 closing of a portion of the Rio Salado Parkway fall. The department will open two pushed additional traffic onto the Red more miles of freeway out to Dobson Mountain Freeway and other streets Road, he said. At feat time, fee Red when the freeway was only open to Mountain Freeway will connect wife ScottsdaleRoad. “When youdose that road, 11,000 Pima Freeway (Loop 101). “Every time we open up a new piece to 13,000 cars a day have to go some­ of freeway it's significant, but this next where else,” he said. He said that opening the freeway to opening will be twice as Significant McClintock also will help the Rio because of fee amount of traffic feat Salado situation. will be able to access that,” he said. “It already has alleviated that prob­ The two-mile segment originally lem,” he said was scheduled to open in June, but 8 to Harvey Friedson, deputy public works direct«’ for the City of Tempe, 10 feet of water in the normally diy Salt said he does not think traffic will River bed delayed work. Unusually decrease on Rural or McClintock with high amounts of rain this year prompted the opening erf die Loop 202 extension. die Salt River Project to release water “We’re going to have heavy vol­ into fee river. umes on both those streets, at least until “We’re hoping that the weather will the freeway is opened to Price Road,” give us a break and feat we can get back he said. Friedson said future extensions of on trade now,” Johnson said. Arizona State University President Lottie F. Coor B y P atiy King State P ress The construction displacing about 600 parking spaces in Lot 59 is expected to be completed on time this summer, despite rainrelated delays on parts of the Red Mountain Freeway. The City of Tempe’s Rio Salado Roadway Improvements project involves installing a traffic signal at Rio Salado Parkway and Packard drives and replacing the lost spaces. ‘They’re supposed to have fee parking lot and Packard Drive completed by August, so it doesn’t obstruct future ASU activi­ ties” said City ofTempe planner Lany Shobe. “When we realign the roadway, it will take a southern dip through Lot 59, and any parking that will have been displaced will be replaced on the north side of Rio Salado Parkway wife no net loss of paridng spaces,” he said. The project, which has closed the Rio Salado Parkway from Ash Avenue to Rural Road since Feb. 1, also will involve installing a traffic signal at Rio Salado and Packard Drive to accommodate die displacement, Shobe said. Packard Drive runs north to south, dividing Lot 59. “You will have a signal to help students cross the roadway,” he said. The larger Rio Salado project involves widening the street to two lanes in either direction, and adding bike lanes, roadway lighting arid landscaped medians, Shobe said. SIGN-UP DEADLINE: MARGH28 Co-Ed Teams invites you to join him in welcom ing Peterson Za h A d v is o rt o t h e P r e s id e n to n A m e r ic a n In d ia n A f f a ir s 7 members • 4 males & 3 females • 3 males & 4 females • Double Elimination • Entry Fee: $20.00per team All participants receive: Water Bottle KeyChain T-Shirt a t a reception. Tuesday March 21st 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p m Arizona Room, Memorial Union Refreshments will be served. For m ore information, please call 965-1985. TOURNAMENT DATE: S a tu rd a y , A p r il 1 st & Sunday^ A p r il 2 nd FO O D • M U SIC » RAFFLE SPEEDO Register at the SRC Intramural Office Monday - Friday 9:00am • 1:00pm ASU Recreational Sports World/Nation Tuesday, March 21, 1995 State P ress P a »:e 3 T o k yo h o sp ita ls b u rie d in n erve gas v ictim s More than 3,200 hospitalized after terrorists strike subway Associated Press Tokyo firefighters spray water on a hazardous materials expert Tuesday after he in sp ected several subw ay cars contam inated with nerve g a s. Monday’s terrorist attack killed six passengers and sickened more than 3,200. TOKYO (AP) — Stepping off the subway, Masashi - “I didn’t really notice anything until I got off the Ito was troubled by the funny smell coming from a large train,” Bachman said. Hospital corridors in central Tokyo were packed with lunch box wrapped in newspapers on the platform. Then gasping, vomiting, red-eyed commuters and subway he saw the man sprawled nearby having convulsions. Ito's own-eyes soon began to hurt, enough to persuade workers overcome by fumes from deadly sarin nerve gas him to go to the hospital. By the time he arrived, he was planted on five subway trains. Some people were coughing up phlegm, bleeding unable to move his fingers enough to write his name and from the nose or suffering from blurred vision. Others, was barely able to talk. Like more than 3,200 other morning rush hour com­ holding ice packs to their foreheads and eyes, complained ___________________ __ of headaches or nausea. muters and subway work. Six people died. ers. ho had been poisoned By late morning, St. Monday by a lethal nerve I c a n ’t im agine how anyone could do L u k e’s International gas planted by terrorists in this. This is a civilized country — we H ospital, one of boxes and jars on one of Tokyo's largest, had to have no room f o r terrorism. the world's busiest subway turn away all other systems. — T okyo su b w a y p atro n M asa h isa M ach id a, walk-in patients. A sign The attack on Tokyo's d e n o u n c in g M o n d a y 's attack on the door said “Sorry, clean and efficient subway _____ ___________ . . : ; no examinations today system, a symbol of pride because of this great accident.” in Japan's principal city, rekindled fears among Japanese ‘‘It’s terrible.” said Dr. Ryuzo Mikami as he looked that their country is not the safe, orderly place they had over patients lying on gurneys waiting for treatment or always considered it to be. Gotfried Bachman, a Swiss businessman, said he was sitting in waiting rooms with intravenous drips in their riding the subway to his office in central Tokyo around 8 arms. “We’ve never had anything like this before.” Students let out early from a central Tokyo school a.m. when he noticed a container of what he assumed was wore cloth masks over their faces as they left for fear of paint thinner. He didn't think anything more about it. But by the possible remaining danger from the gas. The first emergency call came from Tsukiji station near time he got out of the subway station onto the street, his T u r n t o T o k y o g a s, pa g e 1 7 . eyes were hurting and he was losing his vision. One killed, 80 injured in 100-vehicle Alabama pileup MOBILE. Ala. (AP) — People scrambled from their mangled cars and frantically tried to flag down approaching drivers as more than 100 cars and trucks crashed in a series of wrecks Monday on a foggy bridge over Mobile Bay. One person was killed, six were critically injured and at least 74 were taken to the hospital. “I was rear-ended by a truck, then a garbage truck just plowed through everybody," said James Coleman, who escaped without injury in the cluster of rush-hour collisions on the Interstate 10 span. Some three miles of the seven-mile bridge were strewn ,with blackened heaps of wreckage, some of them consists in g jjf dozens of cars. Cars looked like “somebody had crushed a beer can." said one witness. Ned Morris. Fog is a frequent hazard on the bridge, which is a main commuter route and is often busy with vacation travelers. Last August, a state highway consultant, in a prelimi­ nary-report. had listed the bridge as dangerous because of “sudden fog flareups.” said Transportation Department spokesman Ralph Holmes. He said the consultant recom­ mended installing a $4.7 million to $6 million system under which computers would measure any fog and activate warning lights if necessary. At the time of the accident, the proposal was still being T urn t o P heup , pace 15. Associated Press Firefighters and state troopers look at the burned wreckage of several cars destroyed in a hundred-car pileup during morning rush hour in Mobile, Ala., Monday. Vehicle after vehicle slammed Into on e another on the fog-blanketed Interstate 10 bridge, killing on e and injuring 80. ‘92 Republican upstart Buchanan throws hat into ‘96 ring ... M A N C H ESTER , N.H . A S U V M .I N R E A S U Kelley an ‘idiot;’ guns no solution to safety I have to congratulate the State Press. They have managed to find one of the biggest idiots on campus—- Barry R. Kelley — to write for them. I don't know where Kelley gets the idea that guns are the catch-all solution to the security problem faced by ASU students and faculty who find themselves on campus late at night. First of all. perhaps Nancy Tribbensee didn't have to say what she said (if you don't feel comfortable, don’t come on campus), but to compare it to the problem faced by the blacks in the South is ludicrous. Secondly , if all it took to induce moral behavior in a society was to pass a law. we would have no need for lawyers, courts òr jails. Laws are only as good as the society who makes them. ASU's policy is sensible (excuse mÿ audacity), and further­ more. it is probably the best approach that can be taken. Fogger . types of pepper gas have been shown to take down an assailant V within a few seconds. Guns can be taken away and used against the victim who wields them in self-defense. On or off campus, guns are no solution to the problem of safety' in our society. Perhaps your Texas A&M economist, who probably isn't the best person to consult concerning such matters, didn't con­ sider the effectiveness of alternatives. Maybe the best protec­ tion isn't the “escort trained in the art of French literature,” but it sure beats a newspaper columnist unaware of the art of com. mon sense. University administrators arettying to ensure that everyone will receive the education they come for while at the same time attempting to secure a canjpus of 40,000 students. This is not an easy task, but they do the best they can. The administration certainly is not an “implicit accomplice ... when it comes to violent crime on campus." Kelley, however, by openly encour­ aging students to break the law (handguns are prohibited from campus by state law by virtue of the Board of Regents’ deci­ sion to ban them from campus), is a willing accomplice to that violation and should suffer the same punishment if that law is violated. He has the nerve to accuse Lattie Coor of audacity when he intends to incite people to break die very law he touts. I think Bany R. Kelley is the one who is audacious, not Lattie Coor. John Ferra Junior Philosophy letters to the editor Tht S o tte rra m U iu m m t mvmm m i w riUW «W WW *n u me mKhn m my M f*. AB letta» m m b ttyfml. hews The Good nb *> IS.IflNMt'f PWhSED » Ì W hen it comes to sexuality, where do we draw the line? 1 am writing about the article that appeared in the March 3 issue of the State Press titled “Fraternity Apologizes for ‘Inappropriate’ Flier.” While an undergraduate at another university, I was an “active” in a 60-member social fraternity/While I served as treasurer, the fraternity alumni officer mailed a letter to our alumni about an upcoming party which stated, “booze and broads will be there. Come enjoy the fun.” The letter was not proofread before its mailing. When it was received, many alumni and active members were outraged by this let­ ter and the officer was removed. In my opinion, the flier, which was the focus of the arti­ cle, is degrading to women and appropriate actions should be taken by the Interfratemity Council to correct the situa­ tion. In my mind, this situation is far more complex. This past Saturday afternoon, I was walking to a local restaurant on Rural Road. I noticed that a campus sorority was co-sponsoring a car wash with a business located on the same street. Tliere were three women standing on the comer advertising a carwash. All of them were wearing bikini tops, denim hot pants and holding signs above their heads. One of them was standing with her knees bent, her waist twisted toward the on-coming traffic. As I observed them, I was reminded of the copy of the fraternity poster that was printed in the State Press. I remembered the letter that was written by my fraternity’s former alumni officer. Upon further observation, I noticed these women would appear angry at the men who walked or drove past them and leered at them. If a group of guys publish a flier o f a scantily clad woman, it is degrading. If a group of women who am scant­ ily clad attract business to a fund-raiser, it is cute and fun. The questions I impose to nay fellow students air Where do we as a society draw the line? Is it appropriate for women to use their sexuality for charity? Is it appropriate for a men’s group to use a woman’s body on a flier to attract attention to an upcoming event? Is it okay if we do it to ourselves, just don’t let anyone else to it to us? Where do our individual rights for self-expression begin and our responsibility to society and for ourselves begin? In my mind, herein lines the double standard. What is right and what is wrong? I could only answer, “I am not certain.” But there are some things I do know. I know that women have struggled far too long for equality in the United States. I know the struggle is not over. I have seen too many women who were forced by society into roles that were not of their choosing. I’ve seen these women pass these beliefs on to their daughters and to their daughters’ daughters. I know fathers who pass the stereotypes of women and soci­ ety to their sons and their sons’ sons. And so it goes. I do not want this for my family or for me. Therefore, if things are to change in my small comer of this diversified world, it must begin with me, with you, with us. I know that men and women are constantly redefining their roles in the home, the workplace and in society as a whole. I believe the fraternity flier was degrading to women. While I do not dis­ courage anyone from donating time and money to non-prof­ it agencies in our community, I believe the actions of these women on Rural Road were as degrading as the flier. It reinforces the stereotype that women have fought against for more than 100 years in this country and on the cover of the State Press for the past few days. It perpetuates and illustrates to all of us that misunderstandings between men and women still exist between us. Much work is ahead of us all. Dwight Vick Graduate Associate Public Affairs P a ge 6 Sta te P ress Tuesday, March 21, 1995 Coor, Curry: 2% merit-pay raise simply not enough Coor said although merit increases for academic professionals will be determined Dissatisfied ASU officials are saying by existing guidelines, a system for staff is University employees deserve more money still being developed. "We have a basic system for staff, but it than the 2 percent merit-pay raise approved is still not completed,” he said. “We will do recently by the Legislature. The increase, signed into law Thursday, that before the distribution takes place.” Although ASU and the Arizona Board fell short of ASU's 5 percent request. of Regents requested a 5 percent merit“ I believe that both the cost of living and pay raise, two other budgeting groups the need to reward performance are such recommended less. In early January, the that if you look at the increases over the last couple o f years, the 2 percent is not governor’s Office of Strategic Planning enough." said ASU President Lattie Coor. and B udgeting suggested a 4 percent "We should have a larger pool from which in cre ase w hile the Jo in t L e g isla tiv e B udget C om m ittee recom m ended no to draw." The merit-pay raise will be distributed in increase. Gardner said he is not satisfied with the January to faculty, staff and employees who 2 percent increase, but added that the com­ qualify under University guidelines. They promise is better than no increase. will receive 2 percent of their existing “I wanted more, but I knew that was as annual base salary . ■ good as the deal was going to get,” he said. In addition, if one employee is not given Classified staff employees such as custo­ an increase, another employee could then receive a 4 percept indícase, said Rep. Mike dians. secretaries and groundskeepers also wanted a larger increase. According to Gardner, R-Tempe. “WeTl give dll state agencies enough for . ASU's budget request, these employees are a 2 percent raise for everybody, and how 24 percent below their counterparts in the public and private sector o f M aricopa they dish it out is up to them." he said. Bv A ngela M ull S tate P ress County. C lassified S ta ff C ouncil P resident R obert C urry said he is d isappointed because he hoped for at least a 4 percent increase. He added that an across-the-board raise would be more fair in terms of the dol­ lar amount because merit-pay raises allow employees already on the salary bracket’s high end to receive more than those on the lower end. “I think we have a long way to go to address the issue of paying staff employees the living wage,” said Curry, who is also an office specialist senior. Although the Legislature decided on a merit-pay raise, Gardner said that at one point, the Legislature considered approving an across-the-board increase. However, he said he preferred a merit-based increase. “I think it’s the correct way to manage the business of the state," he said. Coor agreed that merit pay is the best method for distributing salary increases because it rewards employees based on their different responsibilities and salary levels. “Across-the-board does not give us the ability to reward those who are teaching more effectively or working more effective­ ly,” he said. A better option would have been com­ bining a merit-pay raise with an across-the-. board increase, Curry said. ; “Just merit alone doesn’t deal with the whole picture in terms of state employee salaries,” he said. “If the state wants to be com petitive in term s of recruiting and retaining employees, it needs to pay com­ petitive salaries that can compete with simi­ lar jobs in Maricopa County.” Another reason University employees thought the increase should be larger is because Arizona’s economy is improving, said Susan Malaga, assistant vice president for Human Resources. “We understood that in the years when the economy was not doing well, it was not practical to give increases, but when it is doing well, we should benefit from that,” she said. Last year, the Legislature approved a 5 percent merit-pay raise for state employees. Three percent was effective in July and 2 percent takes effect in April. Coor unveils official ASU logo to replace 130 others B y K elly W endel S pecial t o the S tate P ress ASU has a new graphic identity, thanks to a grant from the ASU Foundation, which paid for the design of the new logo. Esser Design of Phoenix won the bid to produce the new icon, which will replace the 130 different marks and logos currently, used throughout the University by various depart­ ments and schools. “The administration felt they needed a graphic design system to uniformly represent the University everywhere,” said George Cathcart, ASU director of Information and Publication Services. The new logo, which features a golden-rayed sun sil- houetting the “S” in ASU, is not meant to replace the ven­ erable “Sparky” logo dear to the hearts of many ASU fans. "This doesn’t do away with Sparky,” CathcarT said. “Sparky is close to sacred around here.” He said the new logo will be put into place over the next two years. After July 1, 1996, all external communications will contain the new logo, and by July 1997, all University­ generated material will have the new icon. ASU President Lattie Coor presented the new logo on Monday at a breakfast meeting hosted by the foundation. He said he was “very pleased” with the new logo. D O YOU NEED HELP PAYING OFF SPRING BREAK? REMEMBER THOSE BILLS COME IN 30 DAYS. THE ASU TELEFUND IS NOW HIRING!! •*5.50 TO START + BONUSES •ONLY REQUIRED TO WORK 10 HOURS A WEEK •CHOOSE YOUR SCHEDULE CALL 965-6754 •' "W-■••¿'■'A"' P age 7 Tuesday, March 21,1995 S tate P ress C o m e s h a re th e w o rld o f tra v e l a t th e 1995 A SU TO D A Y 8 a m - 5p m IN T H E M E M O R IA L U N I O N V E N T A N A B A L L R O O M U J 2 2 2 2 S S IO V is it o v e r 5 0 e x h ib it b o o t h s f e a t u r i n g 19 9 5 I n f o r m a t i o n f o r s u m m e r v a c a t i o n a n d o t h e r t r a v e l p la n s S IG N U P F O R D O Z E N S O F TRAVEL GIVEAWAYS! G R A N D s1 P R IZ E ! 1 O n e p r e m ie r e tic k e t f o r t w o p e o p le o n A m e r ic a n A ir lin e s m t o a n y d e s tin a tio n in t h e d o m e s tic U S. a n d C a rib b e a n AmdricanAirtinM 9 9 5 ASU TRAVEL SH O W - SPONSORED BY: Its S r ’t t ' O O n Campus CO-SPONSORED BY: CONVENTION AND VISITORS BUREAU SI West Third Street Suite 105 Tempe,Arizona 85281 (602) 894-8158 I M l«cl ' S tate P ress Tuesday, Match 2 1 ,199S Reception to present American Indian adviser to students ASU alumnus Zah served as Navajo Nation president B y B etty M ih ai .o p o u i .os State P ress A welcoming reception is scheduled today for students to meet with ASU’s new adviser on American Indian affairs. All students Can attend the reception and meet with Peterson Zah, the former president of the Navajo Nation, who joined ASU Feb. 6. “They will have a chance to meet and share ideas about the American Indian community at ASU." said Cal Seciwa, director of the American Indian Institute at ASU. He added that Zah has an open door policy with students. The reception will take place from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Arizona Room of the Memorial Union. Zah. an ASU alumnus, was chairman of the Navajo Nation for four years before he served a four-year term as president of the nation. As President Lattie Coor’s adviser, Zah will work with issues affecting American Indian students from preparation for higher education through completion of degrees. He will meet with students, present guest lectures and imple­ ment programs for American Indian students. In addition. Zah will represent ASU in external relations with American Indian communities and assist ASU in con- STATE PRESS P olice R eport ASU police reported the following incidents Monday: • A female student reported that someone attempted to steal her rented vehicle while it was parked in Area 51. • The intrusion alarm at the north tunnel system by the Old Main Building was set off by a cat. • Two Students and one man nth affiliated with ASU were contacted in Sonora Center after three 911 calls came from the room. They were all warned of 911 violations and of ■ alcohol violations. • Two bicycles were reported stolen. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents: • A 55-vear-old man was contacted after his neighbor saw him damage his boat by hitting the outboard motor with a piece o f chrome stripping that he had ■removed from the boat. He also reportedly damaged a light component on the boat. He then went into the man's fenced yard and into a shed in the yard, where he took a can of carburetor cleaner and poured it over a blanket that was hanging on a line in the yard. The two men had had confrontations in the past. • A 27-year-old man was arrested for being in possession of dangerous drugs and driving with a suspended license at Seventh Street and Priest Road after being stopped for improper registration. A search of the vehicle produced no drugs, but the man admitted that there were illegal drugs under the floor mat on the driver's side of the vehicle. A female passenger in the car also voluntarily turned over a small plastic bag with a yellow crystalline substance, believed to be methamphetamines. She was arrested as well. • A 20-year-old man was contacted at 715 N. Mill Ave. He agreed to empty his pockets for the officer and handed over a small plastic bag containing about 1/16 of an ounce of marijuana. A further search produced another bag of mari­ juana and some rolling papers. • A 20-year-old man was arrested at 3100 S. McClintock Road for being a minor driving a vehicle under the influence of alcohol. He was pulled over for running a red light and did not have a driver's license. He also claimed not to have been drinking. Compiled by State Press reporter Todd Kelly necting with the needs of Indian communities'in Arizona and nationwide. “We hope there will be a substantial turnout of Itudents at the-reception to wish him a warm welcome," Codr said. “Peterson Zah can bring a lot of knowledge and informa­ tion about the American Indian community to ASU.” Adelaida V elasco-Sverson, coordinator of special events, said today’s open reception is especially for stu­ dents. “This one is for the students and we’re doing another one for the faculty next week,” she said. “It’s kind of like an open house for them.” Velasco-Sverson said the reception will be informal with light refreshments and no guest speakers. i n t e n t i o n a l m is u s e o f t h i s p r o d u c t m a y c a u s e s e r io u s in j u r y . George is Buying Beers Every Tuesday Night at M inder Binder's. W ANT T O : * Earn $10 to $20 an hour? * Be able to w ork when you don’t have class? * Work full or part time? G *VV. aO ** BARTENDINGACADEMY Nachos A ll extras co st extra 921-9925 1 2 5 0 E. A P A C H E # 1 0 8 715 S- McClintock • Tempe, AZ 85281 • Finally, college bookstore with everything you'd expect insi' all the seem® need to keep life from becoming out brother second-yea told you it would. Thanks Bro. Where to get the things you need. O p e n in g in A p r il. 1015 South Rural Road at Lemon State P ress Tuesday, March 21,1995 Page 10 Academic Senate approves Interdisciplinary Studies degree Coor, ABOR must still approve new BIS B y A ngela M u ll State P ress The A cadem ic Senate approved a degree Monday allow­ ing students to relate tw o d iscip lin es of study, preparing them to work in a variety of jobs. Ron A lvarado, A l v a r a d o ch airm an o f the Faculty Committee on Development of an Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Degree Program, said there was some opposition to the degree, but he is pleased that the pro­ gram passed. He added that he is confident that President Lattie Coor and the A rizona Board of Regents will approve the degree. “The administration has been supportive, and the ABOR gave advance planning approval for this type of degree program,” he said. “While I anticipate specific ques­ tions, 1 think they will support the concept." The B achelor o f In terd iscip lin ary S tudies, or BIS degree, requires 120 semester hours, including about 45 hours divided between two areas of emphasis. In addition, students must complete 12 hours of interdisciplinary core classes to develop a career plan with faculty and advisers. . Not all senate members were enamored with the degree, however. At the conclusion of a presentation by Alvarado, who is also associate dean of the College of Extended Education, English professor Arthur Colby asked a rhetorical question: “How is this degree to be practically construed as anything other than a last resort for those students unable to succeed in other degree programs?” Alvarado and Provost Milton Glick said the program is not for everyone. However, Glick said there are some students who will have a more satisfying experience and receive better preparation for job-hunting with a BIS degree. - “Most of us will not have a single job throughout our lifetime,” Glick said. “We won’t be identified throughout our career by a single job but by a multitude of jobs and activities.” Shortly béfore the degree was approved, an amendment by anthropology professor James Schoenw etter was approved. He requested that faculty, not advisers, have the authority to identify the courses in the area of emphasis and identify any substi­ tutes for those courses. “It is important that faculty recognize the responsibility to the success of the BIS degree program,” Schoenwetter said. In other business, the Senate approved changing the name of the Department of Civil Engineering to the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. The Re-Entry Connection at ASU w ish e s to .th a n k the fo llo w in g fo r th e ir d o n a tio n s in su p p o rt o f o u r 4th Annual Silent Auction Kaplan helps you focus your test prep study where you need it most. W e'll show you the proven skills and test-taking techniques 11 ¡ ■ ¡ ■ I . th a t help you get a higher score. ___ great skills . . . -V*# Kaplan has the most complete arsenal of test prep tools available. From videos to im p ip p i software to virtual reality practice tests w ith computerized analysis to great teachers .................. I W ÊR H .. ._ Station J iA A tte. H H x M W S Ë ÏÊ Ê Ê M M t y ; ' f ^ I X l 0 2 . $ % * ^ p t ì ^ . ^ . S u h Devil’ [ & Casino. Oakland who really care, nobody offers you more ways to practice. Courses also available fo r DAT, NCLEX, OAT, TOEFL, GRE Psych 3 1 0 S . M ill A v e . • H a y d e n S q u a r e T e m p e » 9 6 7 *2 9 6 / Proud Sponsors o f G old en Key N a tion al H o n o r Society get a higher s c o re KAPLAN A ll p ro ce e d s b en efit o u r sc h o la rsh ip fund The d ra w in g w ill begin at 12:30 p.m. M arch 2 8 ,1 9 9 5 , in the A d u lt Re-Entry Center, Low er Level M U . Tickets w ill be available u n til 12 noon. 50c each, 3 fo r $1.00, o r 18 fo r $5.00 ym m ù m . x. r < Z HOWTO GET YOUR JOLLIES AT COLLEGE 24 HOURS A DAY. #; * Open a tab at a diner. Belgian waffles and cheese fries w ith gravy are delicious, regardless o f the hour. Visit a local court of law. Plenty o f seating, unique conversation and drama that improves the later it gets. Be the gym night janitor. W o rk ou t at your leisure and never wait in line fo r lat pulldowns o r the erg. % Get a Citibank Classic card. For your peace o f mind, operators are on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. M M M W E RE LO O K IN G O U T FO R Y O U . To apply, call I-800-C IT IB A N K . Page 11 Tuesday, March 21, 1995 State P ress Beam collapse kills worker at Atlanta Olympic Stadium Waiting for a hot deal on a PowerBook? Today’s the day. rasm fflaasssxss 32S on the bleachers below, although the lights did not fall on him. “He didn’t move, man. That was it,” Houston said. Two other workers were injured, said Fire D epartm ent spokesm an Tim Szymanski. He said one refused treatment; Georgia Baptist Hospital said it received one injured person, who was in satisfactory condition with a bruised hip and h ead injuries. The stadium was ‘’topped o ff ’ by union workers last week to mark the completion of major steel work. Construction began last summer. The Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games issued a statem ent saying there would be an immediate investigation. A woman who answered the phone at Atlanta Stadium Constructors, the jo in t venture building the structure, said no one was available to comment. ATLANTA (AP) — Metal beams hold­ ing up a bank of lights collapsed Monday at the Olympic Stadium under construction downtown. One worker was killed and two were injured. It was the first major accident at an Olympic construction site in Atlanta. The $168.8 million stadium will be the site of the 1996 Summer G am es’ opening and closing ceremonies, as well as track and field events. The beatns were part of a 150-foot-tall light tower. . ' £ . ■t • • - ■; - - r i • . /.• Mayor Bill Campbell said the tower had been in place for about a week. The dead worker had been performing ‘ minor, incon­ sequential” work at the top just before it collapsed, he said. Construction worker Thomas Houston said the dead worker had been hanging from the beams by a harness when they fell. He said the lights and the man both landed StätePress Right now is th e perfect time to buy h i g h f ib e r , l o w fa t . an Apple* PowerBook* computer. Prices have never been lower. And that makes ou r special deals for students even more irresistible: Of course, every ftjwerfiookin the 500series is ready for PowerPC™ | R oyal T aj Cuisine of India upgrades, th e RISC-based technotogyof the future. And with SoMTindows™ software from Insignia unuicu Solutions* you can use applications for DOS and Windows as well Plus, for a limited time, you can get a handsome Austin Caseworks dairying case But the most important news of all is they’re availabJe now. So visit us today. - Apple For more information visit ASU Computer Store Mon-Fri 9:00-5:00 or call 965-4488 •SoftWindows softwarefromInsigniaSolutions/whichtsusedto.tunMS-DOS62mdWindows31.comesbundledwithcertainftjwerflookconfigurations ffrceAustintaskworkscjnvmgcase asuggesed mail valueof »90. «uhthepurchaseofamftjwrrflookcomputer 5« i salespersonformore «ifòrmanon. 01995AppleComputet;Inc AHrightsreserved Apple, theApplelogo,andtewtfloofcareregisteredtradonariBofAppièComputaInc.ItawerfCs atrademaritofInternational Business MachmesCorporationandusedunder licensetherefrom'R'mòows is»trademarkófMktosoÉCorporationandSoftWindowsa atrademark usedunder leemeb>InsgmafromXjcroaoi Corporahon. MentionofnomAppieproducaisfaradotmauonalpurposesorihandconsonnesnfr : thetanéndorsememnorarecommendation PrKesareset bvindividuai dealersandma\ van Open Seven Days A Week 11:30-2:30 Lunch 5:00-10:00 Dinner Dine In, Take Out, Catering Available A F o r a R o y al T r e a tm e n t V isit U s. W e H â v e a Full B ar. Lunch 5.95 Buffet | With Coupon. Exp. 4-4-95 20%OFF • -.■• ‘.v y ■ DINNERS With Coupon. Exp. 4-4-95 9 6 7 -5 2 3 4 L O O K IN G F O R T H E B E S T ? xIT x 'S u HERE! B Join ) T 3P 0/ A KMLE Country 108 & Country Thunder . on all 1845 E. Broadway S.E. Corner Broadway & McClintock 7? f? lp vvAtb BEST FAIITAS IN TOWN Êa on campus from 10 a.m . to 2 p .m ., near the MU Northeast Corner Dobson & Main •GAME HEN ROTISSERIE •ROCKY POINT SHRIMP •BIG BURGERS •SEAFOOD SPECIALS » •HUGE SALADS & MANY MORE DELIGHTS! T R I- C IT Y M A L L 1982 W. Main St. Mesa 827-8144 Sun.-Thurs. 11am - 10pm Fri.-Sat. lla m -llp m H A P P Y H O U R 4 T O 7 M O N . - F R I. Û0 ■ H $1 75 ;Ìg mg i m DRAFTS P re se n t Coupon W hen P lacing O rder. E xpires 3/31/95. 1/2 O F F i * * FROZEN mSrga&itas P re se n t C oupon W hen P lacing O rder. E xpires 3/31/95. 1 ‘ 9 o z. M U N C H IE S F R O Z E N R IT A S w ith o rd e r o f B FIT CLASSIC E N T R E E S br FA JIT A 'S GALA w ith o rd e r of B F IT CLASSIC E N T R E E S or F A JIT A ’S GALA Not Valid With O ther Offers. Not Valid With O ther Offers. I J State P ress Tuesday, March 21, 1995 P a ge 12 ASU students show o ff ‘talent* on MTV’s spring break ‘Fame or Shame* T he course to take on your lunch hour Shows taped at Lake Havasu to be aired Friday, Saturday B y K ennes Bolig S tate P ress MTV came to ASU looking for people willing to embar­ rass themselves for its Fame or Shame spring break show in Lake Havasu City.it found them. Judd Shulak, a junior communications major, said he tried out for the Music Television talent show March 8 at the Improv at 930 K. University Drive. To get on the show, Shulak said he told MTV he was willing to shave his body. He was told he would have no trouble making it. "I justwanted to get on MTV and have a good time,” Shulak said. However. Shulak only had to sacrifice the hair on his head, along with half of one eyebrow that he lost during the audition, he said. V "Some girl 1 met shaved my head during the show, then (rapper) Ed Lover pulled me aside afterward and said, ‘Let me finish you up and do you right,’” Shulak said. “I look like an idiot.” Despite his new hair style, Shulak said he still had a great time during the taping. “I met a lot of people like Ed Lover and Dr. Dre.” he said. ‘‘It was really cool.” v Andrew Kennedy, a sophomore theater major, also tried out for the show’ at the auditions held March 9 on Hayden Lawn at ASU. He said he did impressions of Fire Marshal Bill and Puck, a cast member of MTV's Real World llh which he dedicated to Rachel Campos, who also starred on the Real World III and hosted the auditions. Kennedy said although taping the show was fun, it was S tate P ress also hard work. “It was kind of a bummer since it was during spring break,” he said. “We had to be there at 9 in the morning and had to stay there until 5. It was like a work day.” Kennedy also said he noticed how staged the show was. “They totally staged it,” he said. “They had funny things, and then they had the real talent. They, had the joke acts set up to lose ... and they had three good ones picked out that the judges decided from.” According to Kennedy, the runner-up on the show was an ASU student who called himself the Yo-yo Assassin. “He did all these tricks to a Nine Inch Nails song. ... He got the yo-yo going to the rhythm of the song, and that got the crowd pumped,” he said. “He was really amazing.” The special is scheduled to air on MTV Friday through Sunday. During MTV's stay in Lake Havasu City, things have been "pretty crazy,” said Sail! Frattini, executive producer of the spring break special. She said the experience so far has been positive. f "We possibly could return,” she said. “We just want to get through this week first. We’ve got five down and two to F o rm e r M u n ic ip a l J u d g e B e y o n d D r i v e n dramatic landscaping on campus - or anywhere room or patio seating and a comfortable “private dub” atmosphere make 'HE The Trophy Room a great TROPHY M>OM At TH EA5Ù KARSTEN GÓLF COURSE 1125 E; Rio Salado'Parkway Tempe, ÂZ 85281 • (602) 921-8073 . change o f place. In all, an easy course to; take. If not an easy course to play. On campus. On budget. On course. CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH 3 Computers floppy 4 Slalom maneuver 5 Taft, for one 6 Sermon reader 7 Circle part 8 “Unforget­ Answer table" 34 Andy’s author singer partéer & 9 Counter­ 22 Columnist 1964 35 Gas sta* Smith feiter 15 Moose's tion fixture 24 London catcher kin 36 Kojak’s weather 10 Utters 16 Choose first name 25 Play­ 17 Print units . 14 Good 38 Long skirt ground times 18 Gardner's 39 Pub pints game 18 Computer/ fictional 40 Pinball phone link 2 6 Hog lawyer no-no haven 19 Spook's 20 Criminal portrayer 30 “Hud” star 42 In the 23 Breaks past 31 Difficult 20 Craze 27 Base 43 Fort —, situation 21 “The undoer New 33 Zodiac Name of 28 Castle ring Jersey sigh the Rose” 29 Eggs B 9 10 S purchase 4 1 2 S' 1 12 31 Damp 32 Compas­ sion 13 34 Fitting 17 16 15 37 Hawk’s ■ ■ love 18 38 Wrestling I ¿3 need 41 Boxing 2 champ after 1964 29 3(L 31 44 Last letter 3^ 45 Computer screen dot _ ST” 46 Cook’s ■ P " measurer 4i 42 37 47 Be real 44 DOWN i 1 Pilaf need 46 2 Vaccine A C R O SS 1 Western competi­ tion 6 Treaties 11 Kind of -r coffee or stew 12 Kitchen come-on. 13 Boxing champ to fo r m ore in fo . r looking some o f the most Large-screen TVs, dining Call 965-3161 a brunch and lunch, over­ Southwestern specialties. r/ -K A 3R Radio CfofoVmöticm. :: F Championship breakfast, gourmet sandwiches and Moviéç. 252-0312 a prerequisite!) I salads and soups, ASU CHANNEL 2 A ndy G astelum Course (relax, golf is not Modestly-priced fresh r e a l n e w s p r in t e d o n r e a l p a p e r ! •C rim in a l C harges •In ju rie s from N egligence call for free p h o n e c o n su ltatio n th e ASU-Karsten G o lf else, for that matter. go ” „ Amid the craziness accompanying the MTV filming, no major crimes have taken place in the city, according to Lt. Mike R eynolds o f the Lake H avasu C ity Police Department. “Things went pretty well as expected,” he said. “We mostly had underage drinking and fairly minor assaults ... nothing significant.” D .U .I. T h e T ro p h y Room at § 7 i u 14 BORDERS B O O KS A N D MU S IC ® Experience the ultim ate escape for book and music lovers. Borders is open 7 days a week, has two convenient locations, and offers ongoing events: • Espresso Bar. Featuring live pe rform an ces b y th e best m usicians in th e Valley • 100,000 Titles • 60,000 M usic Titles • R eference M aterials • M usic Listening Lounge • Lectures • A u th or Signings • Book a n d W riting Discussion G roups ,.. a n d M uch M ore! M o n d a y - S aturday 9:00 a.m . until 11:00 p.m . Sunday 9:00 a.m . until 8:00 p.m . 1 L DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3-21 HT G B CRYPTOQUOTE X BO W M EL B Z ZHGL M ESA 13 6 1 S . A lm a S c h o o l R d . M e s a , A Z 8 5 2 10 (6 0 2 ) 8 3 3 -2 2 4 4 P h o e n ix 2 4 0 2 E . C a m e l b a c k R d ., # 2 0 0 P h o e n ix , A Z 8 5 0 16 (6 0 2 ) 9 5 7 -6 6 6 0 P. UKM TBBDHEL MQBOVL YB Q G M QG MI , H G , G LM W O G IB Q ' G V K O N W D M K M E G .— R M K B N M RMKBNM 01995byKingFeaturesSyndicate. Inc. Page 13 Tuesday, March 21, 1995 S t a t e P ress MARCH MADNESS EVERY WELL & DRAFT 8 -I f "■ Environmental leader to give 3 talks on climate, science, politics By P atty Kin g State P ress Sir Crispin Tickell, a form er B ritish ambassador who alert­ ed the World’s govern­ ments to environmen­ tal issues, will speak on campus today and Wednesday as ASU’s T ic k e l l Centennial Lecturer. “No one in the world has been more influential in bringing the issues of climatic change, the environment and the human consequences o f catastrophic clim atic change to the attention of the world’s gov­ ernments and policy makers,” said Ted Humphrey, dean of the Honors College. Tickell, the warden of Green College in O xford, w ill address the topic “Catastrophes: Extraterrestrial, Planetary, Biological, Human” at 10 a.m. today in the Arizona Room in the Memorial Union. On Wednesday, his topic will be “The Hum an H azard: R efugees and Environmental Change” at 7:30 p.m. in the ASU Music Theater. Admission is free for both lectures. The C entennial Lecture Series is an annual ASU event underw ritten by an endowment from the Flinn Foundation, which awards scholarships each year to top students in Arizona. Tickell will spend this week on campus as part of a scholar-in-residence program arranged by the Hoqors College. The environmentalist will also address “Prospects for the United Nations and W orld’Order” at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Scottsdale’s Kerr Cultural Center. There is no charge. • Tickell’s focus is on the effects o f cli­ matic change and natural disasters on rela­ tionships between nations, Humphrey said, adding that Tickell is described as a doomsayer as well as a diplomat. “He has his own point of view on the relationship between human beings and the environm ent and he is not optim istic,” Humphrey said. Mary Charette, program coordinator seriiof of the Honors College, said Tickell is recognized as a mediator between sci­ ence and politics. “He feels strongly that the gap between politicians and scientists has a big effect on environmental policy,” she said. Tickell spent 26 years in the B ritish Diplomatic Corps and Served at- embassies in Mexico and Paris. He took a leave of absence in 1976 to study environmental sci­ ence at Harvard. In 1977, he published the book Climate Change and World Affairs, which explored the policy implications of climate change. He currently serves as chairman of the Climate Institute of Washington, D.C., the M arine Biological Association and the Government’s Committee on the Darwin Initiative. Tickets are required for the evening lec­ tures and can be picked up at Gammage Box Office or at Kerr Cultural Center for the Thursday lecture. S t a t eP r e s sC la ssifie d s-w e 'rea lw a y sinth eb a c k . UNDA THO RSO N N AN CY DUSSAULT G R EG M ULLAVEY in sisters Rosensweia W EN D Y W ASSERSTEIN DIRECTED BY DAN IEL SULLIVAN May 30-June 4 • Gammage Auditorium TicketsonsalenowatGammageAuditorium^3^T^vnTj[ BoxOffice&all Dillard'soutlets. C h a rg e b y p h o n e : B ROADW AY Gammage: 965"3434 orDillard's: 678-2222 Mi l l { f t y -' J ewish Ni-:ws P ^ \ ’y '' hi:\ u of Greater Phoenix . kSSSs- New/C hannel{C) Presented by ASU Public Events &P’&CE Theatrical Group, Inc. Sta te P Tuesday, March 21, 1995 ress B u ch a n a n C ontinued from fact 3. direct mail, radio and an 800 number to seek smaller contributions. Bay Buchanan, who is her brother’s cam­ paign chairwoman, suggested he will have to come in at least second in New Hampshire and make a strong showing in the Iowa cau­ cuses to keep his campaign going. “The Buchanan brigades are not leapyear conservatives,” Buchanan said, con­ tending that some candidates turn to the rig h t as p resid en tia 1-election years approach. After his announcement, he headed to Chicago and then to Iowa for a Winnebago tour of the nation’s leadoff caucus state. His strategy is to try and knit together sup­ port from anti-abortion forces. Catholics, gun owners, Ross Perot voters, term-limits supporters and those who share his belief that immigration and foreign trade entan­ glements undermine job opportunity for Americans. “This campaign is about an America that once again looks out for its own people and our own country first,” he said. He said he w ould use the N ational Guard if needed to defend border states from illegal immigrants who “break our laws, cross our borders and demand social benefits paid for with the tax dollars of American citizens.” Although he is relying on anti-abortion support, he did not mention the issue in his speech. Real news printed on real paper! A C EN TU R Y Or'WOMLN the story of American women in the 20th certâMy narrated by Jnnn Fonda "* As told by... A I Sta te P ress Mtyt Angelou Jodi* rasiti Meryl Streep cicely Tyson and m any m ore. Great food at great prices Burgers • Steaks • Sandwiches Fresh baked goods Daily specials - A TB S S P E C IA L PRESEN TATION t u e s d a y , m a r c i« 2 *1 , 8 : 0 5 4 3 0 N. S c o ttsd ale Rd O p en 11am M on - F ri Sally Raid p m /e t if f lf l ORIGI NALS 8940533 INTELLIGENT SELF-DEFENSE PRESENTS: A WOMAN'S PLACE IS IN CONTROL! 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C A L L (6021784-4444 IN TU C SO N (502) 321-1000 (ASK FOR INTELLIGENT SELF DEFENSE SEMINARS: ** A PORTION OF PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT THE SOJOURNER CENTER ALOCALSHB.TE0 FOR BATTEREDWOMENANDTHBR CHILDREN In an effort to raise money for tKe^ometos, donations will be accepted to buy blankets, wood, nails, etc. Anyquestions,callTonyaBanzat 965-3161 sponsoredbyC5P/A5A50 4 leadership2000 St a t e P r ess _________________________ _ _ J j g d a j[ i_ M a rd i2 iLi 9 i f you're m entioned in the Po l ic e R epo rt! A H W A TU K EE O R A L a n d M A X IL L O FA C IA L SU R G ER Y Gregory P. Edmonds D.D.S. A hw atukee Professional Building 10827 South 51st Street, Suite 204 (6 0 2 ) 5 9 8 -3 0 0 6 IMPLANTS, WISDOM TEETH, TMJ, JAW SURGERY - Tw ilight Sleep and G eneral A nesthesia available. FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE 9 S _ ^ Page 15 _ _ P ileu p _______ ___ C o n t in u e d fr o m pa g e 3. studied. State Trooper spokesman Sgt. Mike Boan said “one big wall of fog” had moved across the bridge early Monday, and “you could not see in front of you anything.” . The first collision occurred in the westbound lane about 6:45 a.m. As motorists slowed or got out to see what had happened, other cars and trucks entered the fog and rearended other vehicles. “All you could hear was wham, wham, wham,” said James Cartwright, who helped rescue a woman trapped in a crushed car. “I sat with a lady for maybe 35 or 40 minutes in her car until they brought equipment to get her out. She was pinned in. We kicked the windshield out and tore the hood off to help them get in there.” Others, afraid of being hit, nearly jumped into the bay. The bridge is about 30 feet above the shallow bay waters. Authorities said no one went into the water, and guardrails kept several vehicles from falling in. Charles Lathan said he narrowly missed getting hit by a tractor-trailer truck. “We saw a lady waving frantically,” Lathan said. She was trying to warn him and a passenger to stop before hit­ ting the wreckage ahead. Lathan said they got out 30 sec­ onds before an 18-wheeler hit his truck and pushed it into a pileup. “There’s a black Blazer up there that looks like an accordion,” tow-truck driver Brise Blackwell said as he helped remove the damaged vehicles. “It’s a mess up there. Cars every which way you could imagine.” The death occurred in the westbound lanes in a fiery wreck involving two tractor-trailers and three cars. The east and west lanes are separated by water. M E A S U R E Y O U R 'T O E THE COOL & JEWEL Toe Rings _ Ankle B racelets X ^ N ose Rings (F ak e N ose Rings) Floops, Cuffs, Studs a n d Lots of Single Earrings th e a lte rn a tiv e tb e a lte rn a t« ve th e a ite fria tiv « N P R » ^ ite rn a i iwe th e ah te n ta tiv e th e « w B ^ H ttfe th e altë r* n a tiv e th é a lte r rtaliv e th e a ltw a tà X w fr ia lte rn a tìig fe th e a it e r n a ^ e T Ç y jW ^ r h a t ïv e vftHÿ a lte r n a tiv e th e a ite re ia tlv e th e M* te ra a tiv e th e a lte rn a tiv e th e a!ta§> n a tiv e I! le rh a fi: liv e th e k itiv e ti th e a lte ve th è .; a lte r n a i tè rn a tiv ___ n a ti v e th e a lte rn a tiv e th e a lte rn a ­ tiv e th e a lte rn a tiv e th e a ite rn a tiv ïi th e a lt e ^ it iv . e th e a lte rn a tiv e t i # a ite rh a flv rj y y y y # th e t e r n a t i « tM l i U A w t f t f t e / a ite j n a tiv e « e - « | i | J W f l l h ^ I t e r n » > I t e m a t i v e t h e a l t e r n a t i v e ti n a t i v e t h e a l t e r n a t i v e th è • so u th i m ill a ve te m p e c e n te r thè alternsg» a lte rn a tiv » ornative tlijp i t i v e the-è^jp e a l t e r n a t i v e t h e a lte a» I t e r n a t i v e t h e a lte r n « » ■ e a l t e r n a t i v e thfc; th e ^É r n a t i v e t h e al» k i v e t h e alten » a lte rn a tiv e c o p y sh o p 8 2 9 -7 9 9 2 ^ fa x : 8 2 9 - 8 0 0 9 Tuesday, March 21,1995 STATE PRESS WITH DEVIL DEALS St a te P Tuesday, March 21,1995 ress T okyo gas C ontinued fro m page 3. Tokyo’s largest fish market about 8:15 a.m. Emergency work­ ers in protective gear and gas masks rushed to several stations as choking passengers staggered or were hauled from trains. At K am iyacho station o n the H ibiya line, som e 30 pas­ sengers on a platform collapsed after they were overcom e by fum es w hich w ere stro n g en o u g h to be sm elled one level up at the ticket hall. At another station, subway workers and passengers sat sprawled, dazed and coughing on the streets to which they fled. Some were covered with blankets; others lay on news­ papers or on blue plastic sheets brought by police and ambulance workers. There was little panic among people walking to work as subway commuters' poured out of the stations. Self-disci­ pline is highly valued in Japanese society, and many people would have been reluctant to stop and offer to help because of the burden that would place on the injured to somehow repay diem. “I can’t im agine how anyone could do this,” said Masahisa Machida, a 37-year-old office worker who rides the subway regularly. “This is a civilized country — we have no room for terrorism.” State P ress Classifieds - the bargains are in the back. Lunch at Monti's LUNCH M ENU S E R V E D 1 1 A .M . T O 4 P .M . N o Coupons N ecessa ry —B e st V alue A n yw h ere! 1. Ground Sirloin Steak Sandwich from Ground Beef, on Cheese Toast with Slice o f Cheese, Choice o f French Fries o r S paghetti.................................................... $3.10 with bacon................................................... $3.50 2. Cubed Sirloin Steak Sandwich on Cheese Toast with Slice o f Cheese, Choice of French Fries or Spaghetti... ...$3.45 with bacon............................ .......$3.85 3 .7-oz. Prime Rib Choice o f Baked Potato, French Fries, or Spaghetti.......................... $6.00 4. Breaded and Deep-Fish Catfish Sandwich with Lettuce, Tomato, Cheese & Pickles, Choice o f French Fries or Spaghetti......... $2.90 5. Filet Mignon Steak Open-Faced on Cheese Toast, Lettuce, Tomato, Choice o f Baked Potato, French Fries or Spaghetti.............. $4.90 6. Bar B-Q Beef with French Fries............$2.90 7. Pork Chop with Cheese Toast, Lettuce, Tomato, Choice o f Baked Potato’ French Fries or Spaghetti, Apple Sauce......................... $3.00 8. Diet Center Salad Plate Shrimp, Sliced Egg on Bed o f Lettuce, Choice o f Diet Salad Dressing, Crackers (approx, 23 grams o f protien}. $ 4 .6 5 9.1/2 Order Baby Back BBQ Pork Ribs Salad, Bread & Butter; Choice o f French Fries, Baked Potato or Spaghetti................ $7.00 10. Casa Burger 1/2 lb. with Lettuce, Onion and Pickles, Choice o f French Fries or Onion Rings....... ...............$3.50 with cheese...... ......................... :............... $3.60 11. Italian Chicken Seasoned Filet o f Chicken on Whole Wheat Bun with Choice o f Vegetables, French Fries..............................................J$3JB5 Ma\e Monti's Your Choice for Special Get-Togethers and Banquets. Private Rooms Available. E xperience fine dining in th e M onti's proud tradition of quality food and service, large lunch and dinner m enu selections, very affordable prices, and th e g reat atm osphere that's b een here since 1871. For Inform ation on reservations for large or sm all gatherings, family get-togethers, group m eetings and banquets, contact Jill a t 9 6 7 -7 5 9 4 ! 3 West First S treet TEMPE AT THE FOOT OF THE BRIDGE ...... .... ......"? Ju st a 5W a lltg & S fr fro t § ASU ! I F A M O U S F O R ST E A K S ^ 967-7594 Sunday - Thursday — 11A.M . to 11 P.M. Friday - Saturday— 11 A.M . to M idnight PageJL7 State Press Tuesday, March 21,1995 Page 18 O lym pic Æ k P e rm s Rags to riches .. V Karl Vliek (left), a sophom ore exercise scien ce major, searches through the sea of clothes at a rummage sale on Orange Street yesterday, She couldn't buy anything because sh e didn’t have any money. 7 4 3 W . U niversity Dr., T e m p e , AZ • 9 6 6 - 2 6 7 9 5 ft C o pie s Aljeon Novie (below), a junior dance ma|or, exam ines a piece of clothing. She ended up buying a White shirt The clothing drive Was sponsored by Tri Sigma sorority. -87x II White Paper • Expires 4-11-95* Not valid with otlx* afters. M AIL BOXES ETC. I t 's N o t W liH W e D o . I t 's H ó w W e D o I t . ” ' 9 0 3 S. R u ra l (SSMth o f UwhW i lh f) T«*np« • 967 1414 1 7 3 9 E. B roadw ay ( a t M cC lintock) 1 1 1 0 S. A lm a S ch ool M . M esa • 9 4 6 -10 01 T em pe • 8 2 9 X 9 0 0 .T Sam antha Feldm an/State P re ss “2 for 1” I SNO SALE V f Æ Buy 1 SNO — Get flie 2nd SNO of Equal or Lesser Value I I FREE!! I I I Expires 4 /3 /9 5 . C o rn e r o f L em o n & R ural I ‘Good Food &. 967-1114 Cool Com pany’ ^ ! mo core hoir I I I F0Rl° i I 1 / tanning i SESSIONS l| E x p : 3 /2 6 /9 5 I i QUALITY HAIR CARE - AFFORDABLY PRICED 403 W. U niversity D r. • 829-7774 II • MoojFH. O C E 4 N S ID E IC E ¿ R E N 4 \ j S kate or Diè A .v Ï ■.......... ..>• - . - y/ZV'P'. J 2 for 1 PASS ¿ p • 1 s t person pays adm ission • 2 n d person skates FREE! •S kate rental o n ly $1.50 * - H onte o f the K iller * C alzo feOOpm 1520 N. McClintock » 947-2470 (n e x t to B ig Surf) o f M ill Ave. on U niversity M Lin gerie fo r that sp ecial person! 10 % M I P r o t e c t io n | Q u a lit y .™ SAVE ü m $ 4 0 0 _.__ __ j r v i c e ^ 1 S 9 5$ ’Reg 2 2 .9 5 JAGJC TOUCH I CLEANERS Up to 5 quarts • 10/30, 30 wt. • No appointm ent necessary • M ost cats O ne coupon per v is it »N ot valid w ith any other offer. $ 1 * EPA D isposal Fee GROUP MEETING >7-30 pm SSB Multicultural lo u n g e « A n y D ry C le a n in g - L — — — _ - I f R I t t f kmmm'mmrnmmJ 2 n d Root ! W ith Order of HO O r More * T ” * * 1 MnMftifcfWIIti •I W * V.warw »▼**** tmnewmf LAMBDA LEAGUE M e m H f 6 p m * MM Ä d B o o f c * C onference Room 1 A * f l ▼ COMING OUT DISCUSSION j PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER 2014 S. Rural Road • Tempe • 921-9695 250 W. Guadalupe Road »Tem pe • 730-8001 B0ÏÏU 3 M EETIN G t è i IN F O $5°°Off I P e r fo r m a n c e M jm NEVADA day Pennzoil 10-Minute I Oil pitchers SIERRA I Chocolates 'S hue I £ ¿ 4 9 1 £722 »2.99 H BD A FROM T H ^ \ NUMBER ONE a LINGERIE STORE H IN THE EAST I VALLEY! ■ B est I S e le ctio n ! ■ 1 L o w e stP rice s! | 1855 E Guadalupe a l McClintockm IR M I A KILLIAN'S Scottsdale Rd. & McKellips (In hie ABCO Shopping Center) '■ i - WEDNESDAY/ MARCH 23: * LGBAU RECEPTION for Brenda Fraser from HRCF Programming lounge MU PRESENT COUPON WITH ORDER wmm Mon - Fri. 7am - 7pm Sat 8am - 5om LAMBDA leag ue: , MARCH 23: h i LGBAU office Page 19 Tuesday, March 2Ï, 1995 S tate P ress P E O P LE NEW YORK (AP) -— Madonna hasn't lost her taste for discipline. More than 1,000 people showed up for a party at a Greenwich Village nightclub to promote her new video, "Bedtime Story.” The crowd was rowdy by the time she took to the stage to lounge on a brass bed and read “Miss Spider's Tea Party.” “I'll just wait till you shut up,” she told the crowd late Saturday. “ Show some respect,” LOS ANGELES (AP) — Professional house guest Brian “Kato” Kaelin wants to stretch his 15 minutes of fame. Hollywood publicist Lee Sobers, who has represented Barbra Streisand. Frank Sinatra and Michael"Jackson, said he was hired to promote the career of the B-movie actor best known as a guest at O.J. Simpson’s estate. "1 told him I was interested in only one thing — career publicity — and not using O.J. Simpson as a device,” Sobers said. ’ CAM PUS CORNER 712 S. C o lle g e (College & University) 967-4049 Solters said Monday that Kaelin has lost some potential movie roles because he has to be available to testify at Simpson’s trial. One of Kaelin’s confirmed projects is a movie titled “The 16th Minute.” The title stems from Andy Warhol’s quip about everyone someday achieving 15 minutes of fame. N A SHV ILLE, Tenn. (A P) — C ountry star Suzy Bogguss has given birth to her first child, a son. Benton Charles Crider, 8 pounds, 12 ounces, was bom Friday at a Nashville hospital. Bogguss, 38, is married to songwriter Doug Crider. She recently released the album Simpatico with guitarist Chet Atkins and sang ‘Take It to the Limit” on the tribute album Common Thread: The Songs o f the Eagles. PARIS (AP) — Brigitte Bardot joined hundreds of ani­ mal-rights activists outside the Norwegian Embassy on Monday to protest the Oslo government’s decision to allow •Beer & Soda •Photo Developing hunting o f baby seals on arctic ice floes to resume. “As the ice melts, we have to make preparations this year so that it stops and is not started again next year,” the former screen star said. Norway had banned huhting of baby seals since 1989 but recently voted to resume the practice, saying the ani­ mals are used for scientific research. MOSCOW (AP) — Boris Yeltsin sent 80th birthday congratulations Monday to' pianist Svyatoslav Richter. The Russian president called Richter’s musical interpre­ tations “a source of inspiration and love of beauty,” and wished the maestro “many more years of creative work,” the ITAR-TASS news agency reported. Richter was traveling abroad, the agency said. But friends and admirers organized a music party in his honor. Richter became the Soviet Union’s leading pianist in the 1940s and toured the world’s stages in the' 1950s. He has toured rarely in recent years. GET S M A R T A B O U T SEX.. •Health & Beauty Aids Partners in Health 609 S. Mill from Coffee Plantation) 2 LOCATIONS (Across858-0567 Spring Break Photo Special Sexually A ctive? G et checked. N o S ym p to m s g e t checked. You c a n c a tc h sexually transm itted disease (STD) from partners w ho have no symptoms. You ca n have an STD a n d no t experience symptoms. Even p e o p le w ith HIV m ight no t know it. S ym p to m s g e t checked. M e n 's a n d W o m e n 's R e p ro d u c tiv e H e a lth -----—► g e t c h e c k e d . Exam s — — DOUBLE PRINTS 2 4 C o l o r E x p o s u r e C - 4 1 P r o c e s s B e s t B r ic e I n la w n ! • For STD's • For pregnancy • For HIV — co n fid e n tia l or free anonym ous testing offered P re v e n t P roblem s g e t sm art. . P ractice safer sex. C om plete tre a tm e n t prescriptions. D o n 't "d o it" unless you're ready. HOURS: MON.-WED.-FRI. 8-5 TUES.-THURS. 9-5 INFORMATION LINE: 965-3346 All students are eligible for services. Fees may apply. ASU Student Health Just south o f th e University Bridge on Palm W alk Page 20 Sta te P ress Tuesday, Match 21,1995 In Russia-Chechnya war, mothers go beyond call o f duty MOZDOK, Russia (AP) — The women sit qui­ etly, lining the walls of a small room in a convert­ ed movie house, a short drive from the Russian headquarters running the war in Chechnya. They don’t speak — everything has been spo­ ken during the days of waiting. They don’t cry — the handwritten notices on the walls cry for them: “Ivanov Oleg A lexandrovich, born 1974. Military unit 65345. Married; a 2-year-old daugh­ ter is missing her father very much. Those who have any information about him ...” The two-story, decaying building is the meet­ ing point for the m others o f R ussian soldiers fighting in Chechnya. Some have covered thou­ sands of miles to get to this dusty town in North Ossetia, northwest of the breakaway province. There are women from Togliatti on the Volga and Naberezhnye Chelny on the Kama, and Omsk in Siberia, and Ryazan in central Russia. Some two dozen women have spent months in Mozdok, awaiting news about their sons listed as missing in action. Some have located their sons’ units and even traveled to the front lines to see them. But each day can bring the fatal words, and now they wait for the units to be ordered home. A few are here for the second time, having spent a fortune on tickets and on renting a room in Mozdok. “Maybe somebody knows som ething about Sultanov Danya. The family was told that he died but the parents did not identify him. Zarechny, Sverdlovsk region, tel. 3-43-77 ...” Officers of the front units arrive at 10 a m, and 4 p.m. They tell the mothers that their sons are not on the casualty lists and try to convince them not to venture into Chechnya and distract the sol­ diers. They tell them the roads are dangerous and A group of Buddhist monks pray in Nazran, Russia, during a two-day prayer and fast se ssio n that began Monday in this town w est of Chechnya to protest the war in the breakaway republic. The monks are traveling with Russian sol­ diers' mothers, who plan a protest march to the C hechen capital Grozny on Saturday... ’ State P ress their sons are about to be withdrawn anyway. With the fighting in Chechnya turning more strategic and the flood o f dead and wounded becoming a trickle, the military seems to be better organized and more open about its casualties. The number of dead officially stands at 1,300, the wounded at 4,000. Hundreds of soldiers,, howev­ er, remain unaccounted for. Some among the 400 MIAs might be held by the Chechen rebels. Others were probably those whose bodies were lying unburied for weeks on the streets of the Chechen capital, decomposing and feeding Grozny’s stray dogs. The Mozdok meeting place is informally run by the Committee of Soldiers’ Mothers, a move­ m ent form ed several years ago to defend the rig h ts o f young c o n sc rip ts in the face o f widespread hazing and brutal treatment. Its mem­ bers have held rallies across Russia to protest the war and have traveled to Chechnya, convincing rebel fighters to free some of the Russian prison­ ers. Continuing a protest journey that began with a m arch outside the Krem lin w alls earlier this m onth, the com m ittee is taking its anti-w ar actions to the battlefield. Hundreds of mothers will travel from Moscow to Nazran, the capital of the ethnic territory of Ingushetia bordering on Chechnya, and march 50 miles to Grozny next Saturday. M eanw hile, R ussians are becom ing accus­ tomed to war. The paper notices on the wall in Mozdok are turning yellow with time. “A kim ochkin V itya, m ilitary unit 5427-b. Sonny, I’m here in Mozdok. I’m in a railway car at the train station. Will be here until Jan. 30. Mama.” take notes RESIDENCY I N F O R M A 1 I O N S E S S I O N H a rk in s T h e a tre s $ ^ ! > 0 0 G ourm et Snack Bar Stereo Surround S ound Every Wed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m. Student Services Amphitheater N e w G u i d e l i n e s f o r F a l l ’9 5 rCwnop nocAiM . ueazuooK . BYE BYE. LOVE pc *« (Tym-nvy 1200.230,4:50,7:30. fr50 FO RREST OUMP Mi* (W A m* 1:15.4:15. 7:15.10:00 • Hea v en ly C reatures fTvm-nuv 12:30. 2:5« IS. 7:45,10:10 2:45, 5:00. 7:45.10:10 W hen I t F its , I t F la tte r s AREWELL TO THE FLESH « Tmm-t***2Q0. 4:4577:15^45 THE BRADY BUNCH MOVIE rei» “ nani 1:15. 3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 10:00 JU S T CAUSE a . rw n w 2 :1 S . 5:30. 8:00, 10:20 4 BYE ove BY RVPE.LQ V EK M is i* (Tm-T*0*12OO.2:~ t h e r e w il l b e a q u i z . □ And ■ (0 Ò Z < 2 N ON Û CL Present LOSING ISAIAH * F IN A L L Y -A S W IM S U IT T H A T F IT S A N D IS A F F O R D A B L E Lewis Camera ... 32*? The Sun Devil Spark Photo C ontest 7 in »an f f g CANDVMAN: FAREWELLTOTHEFLESH A« (Tim-ton 12:40.2:56. 5:20, 7.50.10:10 P r iz e s : &SSSS LOSING ISAIAH t*a tTutt-THjri) 12:05, 2:35, 5 0 5 . 7.35. 10:05 ÖUTBREAK*, 1 (Ttm-Thu»i 1:45, 4 :4 5 .7 :4 5 ... : am ~ -TtHfsi 1:00, 4:00. 7:00, 10:00 . on tw o s m e tta HIDEAWAY,« I (Tum-THnt 12:20. 3:00. 5:30, 1 8:00, 10:30 3HX//DOßS.t5 RADY H MOVIE trat* F irs t O n e P riz e p iz z a a - (one w inner) w e e k fo r a y e a r MAN OF THE HOUSE irai - -2:10,^:3574:55, , S&.4Ì5&.9-5& ROOMMATES ra (Tim-Thnt 12:00.2:30. 5:00. 7:30,10:15 JU ST CAUSE n im m u n ii& s S l THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE it (Tvm-niM 1:210. 5:40. 8:10 BILLY MADISON (PCI» (Tutt-Thunt 1:4 0 ,5 :5 0 , 7 :5 0 ' FO RREST GUMP (perii IT w n w 1 30. 5:10. 7:55 THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION a - t-niumi.1:1S. 5:20. 8 :15 . PULP FICTION in. n w 1:00. 5:00.8:00 MIAMI RHAPSODY «>•» (Tum-Thueti 1:00. 5:30 IOYS ON THE SIDE .* (Tum-nuvO'.OO, 7 :3 5 Gregg Rothman Matching Accessories • Underwires * Separates Ready-Made Suits « Gift Certificates • VS/MC Q “CUSTOM FITTED COMPUTER PERFECT 'SW IMW EAR I SYSTEM S 7030 FIFTH AVENUE #1 • SCOTTSDALE, AZ 85251 (602)941-2099 take TW O S e c o n d P riz e - ( o n e w in n e r). $100 Gift certificate from Lewis Camera T h ird P riz e - (10 w in n e rs ) A copy of the '94-95 Yearbook, stamped with your name figotf2 AAovmafor Mmprie*ofout' THE UON KINQ ioi 1:10. 3:20. 5:20^ 7:20 9,55 THE JUNGLEBOOK ira, A 2:35,7:10 WCHIE BICH ,ra. *-12:20 4:55 9:30 HIGHLANDER I irai» JL 12:55, 5:30,10:05 STAR TREK: — 3:05.7:40 irai» iTn » THE RIVER WILD ,ra .» « 1 THE SANTA CLAUSE ira, . THE MASK •poo, * 1 2:50.7:30 Contest Deadline: 5 p.m., April 14,1995 Information available at The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook Office, Matthews Center, Basement, Room 50, or call 965-6838 - ask for Craig Steeves Winners anrlounced in the State Press on May 1 St a t e P Page 21 Tuesday* M arch 2 1 ,1 9 9 5 r ess A m b u la n c e ru sh e s stu d e n t to h o s p ita l An ASU student, w hose name was withheld by paramedics and police on the scen e, is placed into an ambulance Monday afternoon .to be rushed to Tempe St. Luke's Hospital. The student, who works as a student monitor at the Computing Commons Gallery, reportedly complained of chest pains and then collapsed. The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook O rd er yours today for $42.60 M atthew s Center basement, Rm 50 ARIZONA’S LARGEST CAP STORE Vacation while learn in g Spanish CHECK O U T OVER 7 0 0 STYLES OF SPORT AND N O N -SPO RT CAPS Thinking about w hat to d o with your sum ­ mer vacation? 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University (Northeiast Cornar University & Hardy) 966-0852 C o m ic s Page 22 St a t e P ress T uesday, M arch 21, 1995 b y, $ fe e y HoL*KiteÀX r YOU PROBABLY SPENT THE WHOLE ' BREAK S/TTtHG IN PROMT OP YOUR COP!POTER PLAYING "pllNESHEEPEPP STILL "SOCIALLY C U A LLE N G W f\ C a lv in and H obbes I HAVE TO STAV HEREOWTL MV MOWŒIS UOHE. « By Leigh Rubin REY/ / SEAT TRE RECORD M M SCORER/ b y B ill W a t t e r s o n TOOK HOUSE IS OVER WERE ns A LOT MORE OBVIOUS: rThat vcvre Not .comins WANT ME TÖ DRAWVCU A MAP OE HOWTO ÇET WERE? TO MY MOUSE y?, OBWOUSLV nw V NOT GOm TO MV HOUSE ) RUBES ® " “ r M AT?/ MV MOM ANOVoOR VIELE, ITS MVMOMS ROLE 5AVS 7 mom.' vcw Wink THAT VOM can syv in oor WHO?-3 I MADE TH\s 0P? varo, bot vcaj cant VCWWINK I WANT COME IN THE HOUSE, j TO BE HERE ?? „ : 1986WH-sor O * by ottuM Aiw s Syr de l D o o n e sb u ry BY G A RRY TRUDEAU TIGHTCORNER by Ken Grundy and Malcolm Willett ONLY $ 6 .99 ! ONLY $ 11 . 99 ! FOR A LARGE ONE-ITEM PIZZA FOR TWO LARGE ONE-ITEM PIZZAS SPECIALS VALID TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY. MARCH 21 & 22 ONLY. PLEASE ASK FOR TH IS SPECIAL WHEN PLACING YOUR ORDER. 9 903 6 8S-. Rural 5 5 5Rd.5 Specials valid at this location only. D om ino's O riginal W ings M ild, M edium , Hot o r B B Q A Dozen W ings..i$3.99! 25 W ings...$7.49! 50 W ings...$12.99! Sports STATE P ress : Tuesday, March 21, 1995 ■ _P age_23 ◄ ◄ S un D evil S pring B reak R ew ind ^ ^ National Champion Mollica helps lead ASU B y D amian S haw State P ress JimPoulin/StatePress Junior Markus Moliica captured his second National Championship in three years Saturday at the NCAA Championships in Iowa City, Iowa. As a team, ASU finished fourth at the tournament The Sun Devil wrestling team came back from spring break this weekend the fourth best team in the nation. W hile m en’s and Women’s basketball teams from around the nation entered their NCAA tournaments, so did 82 Schools which took part in the NCAA wrestling tourna­ ment in Iowa City, Iowa. ASU; which finished fourth as a team, crowned a national champion in Markus Moliica at 167 pounds, and three other top eight finishers in senior Jeff Theiler (third), Steve St. John (third) and Danny Felix (seventh). All w restlers fin ish in g in the top eight are nam ed allAmericans. “Markus had a great tournament,'’ ASU Coach Lee Roy Smith said. “There wasn’t a match he wasn’t in control of going into the third period.” In the Finals Moliica faced a familiar nemesis, defend­ ing national champion Mark Branch from Oklahoma State, whom Moliica had already defeated twice this year. “In the finals the score was close, but Markus didn’t leave a doubt that he was going win,” Smith said. Moliica entered the tournament the favorite, seeded number one. But just because he had already defeated Branch before, didn’t mean he was taking him likely. “That can work both ways,” Smith said. “He didn’t assume Mark wasn’t going to roll over for him. He was very well fotused and turned out just an outstanding per­ formance. One hundred sixty-seven is a very competitive weigh class and it would be no big surprise if anyone from the top five won it. But Markus has been the clearest most consistent performer throughout the year. “That final match was something he’d prepared for all T urn to W r e s t l in g , p a g e 25. Swimmer Kaszuba shines at NCAA Championships By H eather S n o w State P ress ASU swimmer Beata Kaszuba stole the show at the women’s NCAA Championships in Austin, Texas March 16-18. . Kaszuba. a junior, won the 100-yard breaststroke, break­ ing a minute and her own previous record of 1:00.41 with a time of 59:72. Along with this, Kaszuba also won the 200 breast, set­ ting a NCAA record of 2:09.71, and she came in 10th in the 200 individual medley with a time of 2:00.64, which was a new team record. Kaszuba was not only voted the most outstanding swim­ mer of the meet, but she was also voted Swimmer of the Year by NCAA coaches. Coach Tim Hill said that breaking a minute in the 100 breast was a big accomplishment. “No one has ever come that close to swimming under a minute in the 100 breast, so this is a huge accomplish­ ment,” she said. Although Kaszuba is only a junior, this was her last sea­ son swimming for ASU. The Poznan, Poland native lost a year of eligibility after transferring from a university in Poland, and was very pleased with the way here collegiate career ended. “I was hoping to do well, but 1 didn’t plan to do this well,” she said. “This was a great way to end my career at ASU.” According to Hill, the relays also performed well. The 400 medley relay finished in 11th place, the 200 medley finished in 12th and the 800 free relay finished 14th. Hill also said senior Becky Hackiewicz swam strong for the Sun Devils. “Becky had an outstanding mile swim, placing 21st with a time of 16:34.98,” Hill said. “She had a great four years T urn t o Kaszuba, pa g e 24. ASU’s Ward finishes in 4-way tie for 3rd at Ping Pro Tournament By H eather Sn o w State P ress Lane*D. Terry/State Prese Senior Wendy Werd finished in a third-place tie at the PING Pro Tournament over the weekend in Phoenix. Ward w ee the only amateur com peting In the tournament. ASU golfer Wendy Ward sure didn’t compete like an amateur over the weekend at the Standard Register PING Pro Golf Tournament in Phoenix, finishing in a four-way tie for third. Ward, the only amateur in the tournament, tied for third with professionals Joan Pitcock, Katie Peterson-Parker and Rosie Jones. While Laura Davies won the tournament and Beth Daniel finished second. According to the senior Ward, she just thought of this tournament as any other one, although, knowing that if she was a professional she would have won close to $35,000 for her third-place finish. “I knew that I could of won $35,000 if I was a pro, but that time will come,” she said. “My biggest goal was to enjoy myself, and I had a great time.” Ward said that she didn’t feel intimidated competing with such big name professionals, but rather received a warm welcome. “I was competing and looking at all these stars I’ve looked up to over the years,” she said, “I didn’t feel intimi­ dated and I downplayed m yself knowing that they’ll respect me for my game and not the title behind my name. “Many of the pro’s came up to me and introduced them­ selves and they were all very receptive and encouraging. That’s what it’s all about, feeling comfortable hitting next to Hall of Famers.” Ward said she realized this was a business for all of the professionals and she just kept to herself, however, they were all very social. “I didn’t want to make the first effort because I know that this is like a business for the pros, but they all made the effort and made me feel very comfortable,” she said. “This puts me at peace to what will come in the future, since you see the same players at all the same tournaments it’s as if we’re all one big family.” ASU teammate, sophomore Heather Bowie, was Ward’s caddie for the tournament and according to Ward it was a great experience for her. “Heather had a blast and she talked with many other players and caddie’s /’ Ward said. “Many of the caddies offered Heather help if she ever needed it and that made her feel like there was a-lot of camaraderie.” ASU Coach Linda Vollstedt was very impressed with Ward’s performance. “This was a big stepping-stone for Wendy to go out in a professional event and do so well,” Vollstedt said- “This will really give her a lot of confidence for her future as a pro.” . Ward agreed with her coach. “This definitely gives m? a lot of confidence, knowing I can compete at a professional level,” she said. Despite the excitement, Ward is ready to get back to reality. “I’m excited to get back to the team, since the season is coming to end,” she said. “The whole experience helped me realize that I’m still a student -athlete.” S tate P ress Tuesday, March 21,1995 Page 24 S un D evil S pring B reak R ew ind S o ftb a ll bounces b ack t o p o s t 5 - 3 record over break B y D amian S haw State P ress While spring break got off to a slow start for the ASU softball team, the Sun Devils were en fuego down die stretch, as they posted a 5-3 record over an eight-day span. ASU started the break with a California road trip, where it dropped two games to' die then-No. 2 UCLA Bruins on March 11 by scores of 8-1 and 1-0 and split a doubleheader with UC Santa Barbara on March 13, 4-1 and 1-6. The Sun Devils bounced back though after returning home, crushing San Diego 11-0 and 70 on Saturday and Oregon 3-0 and 5-4 on Sunday. Sunday's showdown with the Ducks was high­ lighted by freshman pitcher C arrie Breedlove. Breedlove picked up a rare two wins in one night in the doubleheader played at Sun Devil Club Stadium. “It was really a good win, but once the second game went into extra innings I was really nervous,” stud Breedlove, who started the first game and canoe in as the reliever in the second game. The second game lasted into the 10th inning, three more than the usual seven. According to NCAA softball rules, when a non-toumament softball game lasts more than nine innings, the last out from the ninth inning starts out as a runner at second base in the 10th. “I was especially nervous going in with no outs and a runner on second," Breedlove said of the final inning. “It’s not that hard to score off that, so when we held them it was really exciting ” The Sun Devils had 1994 All-Pac-IO player Alyssa Johnson on second to start the bottom of the 10th. Oregon’s Kim Kampfer, who pitched the first game for the Ducks, also was brought back in relief, matching up the pitchers from the first game with . the score tied 4-4. After an intentional walk of junior slugger Kerry Moloney, freshman catcher T e a h Bartel! launched a shot to left that brought home Johnson to score the winning run and nail down the 5-4 victory. Coach Linda Wells was pleased with her team’s performance. “I was happy with the win. 1 think we totally out­ played them in the fast game,” Wells said. “We flat­ tened out a little in the second game, but we had great individual efforts that carried us over.” TU b « t o S oftball , page 27. Frieder looks to silence ‘experts’ Thursday vs. top-seed Kentucky B y D an M iller State P ress Its mid-March and that usually brings several things to mind. Spring training. Spring break. March Madness and the NCAA basketball tournament. And with M arch M adness com es the A m erican pasttime that may rival only hot dogs and apple pie—the tournament office pool. An ASU basketball fan who has even glanced at this year’s 64-team draw might have been hard-pressed not to notice the Sweet 16 possibility of the top-seeded Kentucky Wildcats and fifth-seeded ASU in the Southeast Regional in Birmingham, Ala. If one played by the num bers, the W ildcats would have been the obvious pre-toumament choice. And now with the m atch-up set, Kentucky is a 14-point favorite going into the game. So if you picked the Wildcats to advance despite you’re undying com m ittm ent to ASU, d o n ’t feel g u ilty because y o u ’re not alone. “I think my daughter’s got Kentucky,” jo k ed ASU C oach Bill F ried er in his weekly press conference Monday. “What am I gonna do, beat her ass because she picked Kentucky? “You respect what people do in the office pools. That’s the fun of the whole thing. T h at’s why this is the greatest spectacle in all of college athetics. It’s incredible.” Frieder knows his Sun Devils, who heat Ball State and Manhattan in rounds one and two to set up Thursday night’s showdown, are heavy underdogs. But that doesn’t bother him a bit. “I have nothing against people that picked Kentucky, they’re a great basket­ ball team,” said Frieder, who admitted to averaging about three hours of sleep a night over the last three weeks. “But we Coach Bill Frieder sh ou ts to his team during the NCAA Southeast Regional gam e against Manhattan Saturday at The Pyramid in Memphis, Tenn. At his press conference Monday, Frieder said his team is out to prove the experts wrong by beating Kentucky on Thursday. got to find a way to make the experts wrong.” The w inner of the the game w ill play the w inner of the North Carolina-Georgetown game for a ticket to the Final Four. It will be ASU’s first Sweet 16 appearance since 1975, surpâssing the last Sun Devil tournament-team which lost to Arkansas in the second round in 1991. 5th-ranked ASU sluggers sweep Sooners, Trojans B y L ee N ewman S tate P ress Paul BMlng/SM*PraM Freshman Dan McKinley safety elides past the tag of USC catcher Jason Brown In Saturday’s 10-9 ASU win at Packard Stadium. K aszuba C ontinued from page 23. for ASU.” The other ASU swimmers that competed in the NCAA Championships were juniors C hris Jeffrey, Joanne C urrah and Lisa Urban and freshman Erika Sohlen. Overall the team finished in 14th place. but according to Hill, the meet was very tight. “We would have liked to have finished a little higher, but the meet was very close between 11th and 20th place,” Hill said. ‘The girls put a lot of effort into it and they all performed well.” Most students are probably wishing that spring break was still going on so their headaches could be a result of a good time instead of upcoming tests. However, some students want spring break to continue because it marked a week in which ASU athletics have never been more successful. From Wendy Ward’s third-place finish in the LPGA’s Standard Register PING to ASU basketball’s first Sweet 16 appearance in 20 years. Sun Devil athletics flourished during the break. And right at the top of that list is the fifth-ranked ASU baseball team. The Sun Devils started the week with two wins against the eighth-ranked defend­ ing National Champion Oklahoma Sooners, 6-2 on March 14 and 8-2 on March 15. The Sooners w ere resp o n sib le for ending ASU’s season last year, beating them twice in the College World Series. ASU follow ed the Oklahom a sweep with a three-game sweep of the team that was the preseason favorite to win the Pac10 Southern Division — the 1 lth-ranked USC Trojans. It was a series that had most ASU fans exceeding their target heart rate for the weekend. The Sun Devils beat the Trojans 7-6 in 15 innings on Friday in a five-hour-plus game. Then on Saturday, the Devils scored three runs in the bottom of the ninth inning to win another nail biter, 10-9. The Sim Devils capped off their unde­ feated week with Sunday’s 10-4 victory over the Trojans. ASU exploded for four home runs in the game. Freshm an Dan McKinley started the onslaught in the sec- ond inning with a two-run shot. That was followed by back-to-back HRs by sopho­ more Cody McKay and junior Robbie Kent in the fifth inning. Junior Travis Flowers capped off the home-run barrage in the sev­ enth inning in grand fashion, appropriately enough, with a grand slam. “T his was an ex citing w eek,” ASU Coach Pat Murphy said. “It’s got to make us fee j that we can beat anyone.” Sophomore Kaipo Spenser pitched his fifth complete game of the season and sec­ ond of the week in Sunday’s victory. His record now sits at 6-1 with a 1.51 ERA. He has also has 75 strikeouts in just under 66 innings pitched. Offensively, McKay has been ASU’s catalyst. A first-inning double on Sunday extended M cKay’s team-leading hitting streak to 19 games. For the season the third baseman is hitting .355 with 29 RBIs and 26 runs scored. McKay’s double and home run came on a day when he wasn’t sure if he could play until moments before game time. McKay was hit by a pitch Saturday night, resulting in a swollen knee. He couldn’t run when he came out to stretch on Sunday, but right before the start of the game he told Murphy that he could play. “He’s the type of kid who wants to play and loves to play,” Murphy said. “He was hurting, but he knew he could help our team win.” ASU’s record now stands at 23-6 overall and 5-2 in the Six-Pac. It’s the Sun Devils best start since 1982, when they jumped out to a 23-4 mark. ASU’s five wins against highly-ranked opponents last week jumped T urn to Baseball, page 27. fWI l£ r! JH.V ,/r.fjwuT Tuesday,~March 21,1995 S tate P ress Page 25 ◄ ◄ S un D evil S pring B reak R ew ind ^ ^ Gymnastics ends dual-m eet season w ith 2 wins By J eremy Stein State P ress Freshman Kim Keever performs on floor during ASU’s 193.675-192.200 victory over UofA on March 16 at the University Activity Center. layoff w ill be helpful in the postseason tournaments. The ASU women’s gymnastics team fin“It’s great that we had a weekend off, ished up its dual-meet season with two vie- because I think that’s going to prepare us to tones over the break. know how to work and to know how to comThe Sun Devils downed rival UofA pete when wc have weekends off in between 193.675-192.200 on M arch 16 in the regionals and nationals and Pac-10s and University Activity Center and dropped regionals.” BYU 194.350-193.700 Saturday in Provo, Against the Wildcats, ASU was led by Utah. junior Katie Freeland. Freeland posted a While ASU’s scores fell well short of the career-high score of 39.175 to take top hon195.700 the team posted against Denver in ors in the all-around. She took second on the its previous meet on M arch 3, the Sun floor (9.825) and vault (9.9) and was third on Devils were happy with last week’s outings, beam with a 9.825. “We did really good considering we had The Sun Devils other top performers on a week o ff,” senior co -captain T ina the night were Brinkman, who finished first Brinkman said. "Anytime you go in streaks on vault (9.925) and floor (9.9), Lister, who of constantly competing every weekend and captured first on beam with a 9.875, and then you take off a week, sometimes it’s freshman Meagan Wright, who tied for first hard to get your motivation and it’s hard to on bars with a 9.875. get back in that competition mode.” . Saturday against the Cougars, Wright “It was good, but maybe a little out of and Brinkman once again took center stage, focus,” senior co-captain Danna Lister said Wright, who did not compete all-around of the team’s performances. “We hit most against UofA, finished first in the allof our sets and we did a good job. We carnè around with a 39.025. She finished tied for out with two good scores.” second with Freeland on the beam (9.85) With the two wins, ASU finished the and tied for second with Brinkman on bars dual-meet season with a 10-4 mark and with a 9.825. Brinkman captured first on now must prepare for postseason competi- vault with a 9.9 and finished second on tion, which begins Saturday night with the floor with a 9.875. Pac-10 Championships. ASU next hosts the P a c -10 According to Brinkman, the team’s abil- Championships Saturday at 7 p.m. in the ity to perform well following an extended University Activity Center. Sun Devils jump on von Lindenau s bandwagon B y D an M iller Staje P ress It was the type of stuff of legends are made of. Seventh-ranked USC. winners of the NCAA men’s tennis championship three of the last four years, against ASU. which had never beaten the Trojans at their home court in Sun Devil history. On Sunday. March 12, all that would change. After the Sun Devils seized the doubles point, ASU top gun Sargis Saigsian and third singles player Paul Reber each posted straight-set victories. With the Sun Devils up 3-2 and freshman No. 4 player Tsolak Gevorkian waiting in the wings, one match was still being decided on the five-court complex. Enter Wolf von Lindenau. The sophomore south-paw was trading blows with Kyle Spencer, a former standout in the junior ranks who has estab­ lished himself as national doubles force in college. Von Lindenau was 2-8 heading into the confrontation. It was David and Goliath revisited. “Everyone thinks about being in that position,” von Lindenau said. ‘The match is on the line. Its USC. Its all up to you.” Needless to say. the Cinderella story from rural Idaho rose to die occasion. After von Lindenau dropped the first set 6-2, he broke Spencer early in the second and evened the score 6-1. Spencer’s crisp new balls to start the third set spelled trouble for von Lindenau. Before he knew it, von Lindenau was down 4-1 and looking for a large rockTo hide under. “I knew Sargis and Reher had already won and (Dave) Critchley and .Sergio (Elias) had lost." von Lindenau recalled. ‘Tsolak had gone on and dropped the first set fast. I had to win my match." The combatants each held their ensuing serves to make it 5-2 Spencer. After saving a match point, von Lindenau managed to hold in a marathon service game to make the score 5-3. The gloves came oft. It was time to brawl. A scorching von Lindenau-passing shot saved another match point at 5-3. “I saw W olf s score and I couldn't take my eyes off his match,” said Gevorkian, who was two courts down struggling through cramps and fatigue to stay afloat with Fernando Samayoa “It was really exciting. 1didn't know what to do.” With von Lindenau serving down 5-4, he ran the gauntlet again, saving his third match point with a low angle volley into the comer. Soon it was 5-5 and the onlookers were living and dying on von Lindenau’s every move. “I’m thinking I can’t believe I saved these match points,” von Lindenau said. “I saw the rest of the team up in the. bleachers. The adrenaline was running through me. I kept my composure real well.” After von Lindenau cracked a pair of textbook returns at Spencer’s feet to make the score 30-love, the fledgling Trojan called an equipment timeout to change his shoelace. Despite von Lindenau’s frustration, he held on to go up 6-5. Five points later, Spencer misfired oh a volley and the Sun Devils had clinched their first victory over the Trojans at their court in ASU history, 4-2. “I cried out,” said von Lindenau, whose teammates stormed the court afterward to join in the celebration. “I just threw my racket and ran to him,” said Gevorkian, whose match was suspended as soon as v o t i Lindenau’s ended. “It was like he had just saved my life. “I think he did a heck of a job. The guy is just unbelievable. Wolf is a hero.” ASU Coach Lou Belken agreed. “Its a tribute to some of his hard work,” he said. “He fought back and didn’t quit” Prior to the singles matches, Gevorkian teamed with Reber at third doubles for a knock-down-drag-out slugfest with Samayoa and Brett Hansen, who is the No. 4 singles player in the nation. With the doubles point on the line, the pair woe down 6-1 in tiebreaker at 8-8. but somehow they staved off five consecutive match points to triumph 9-8. “I was kind of like eating the ball with my eyes,” Gevorkian said. “The ball was like candy to me.” “Neither Gevorkian or Reber gave up down five match points,” Belken said. "Gevorkian came back and played some solid tennis. Its a tribute to both of them” The Sun Devils were actually a day behind schedule because last Friday's inclement weather forced them back to the hotel for a day full of Yahtzee and Starsky and Hutch reruns. “I think the key to the. match was on Saturday we had rain,” Belken said. “Because of the rain we played singles first (against UCLA). We lost 4-2 and we didn’t feel like we should’ve lost that match.” Sargsian, the No. 1 player in the country, tasted defeat for the first time in months against friend and rival Robert Jariecek of ASU sophom ore Wolf von Lindenau played the match of his career a g a in s t U SC 's Kyle S p e n c e r on March 12 in L os A n geles. Von L indenau’s three-set victory at sixth sin g les clinched ASU’s first victory over the Trojans on their court in ASU history. UCLA. ASU is now 8-3 overall and 1-3 in the Pac-10 and will likely take a noticeable jump in the new team rankings scheduled for release today. “1 think on a national level people didn’t know who we had on our team,” Belken said. “People weren’t giving us very much credit We opened their eyes.” W re stlin g _______ C o n t in u e d f r o m pag e 23. along. He’d planned to peak during the Pac-10 champi­ onships and the NCAA’s, and it clearly paid off for him.” Theiler shared Smith's exuberance. “It was great, he really deserved it,” Theiler said of his temmate. “He’s been wrestling well all year.” Theiler finished his wrestling career on a high note, los­ ing only one match in the tournament. “I was happy that I went 5-1. I was a little disappointed that I lost that one match, but I think I was concentrating on other things,” Theiler said. Theiler’s weekend was riot all good though. While away at the tournament, Theiler learned his Tempe apartment had been broken into and that his wooded ship collection he’d had for four years had been stolen and vandalized. Theiler had carved all the ships himself: The good news, however, was that Theiler, who is from Des Moines, Iowa, got to wrestle in front of his family at the tournament. “It was great getting to see my family, I was real happy about seeing them,” Theiler said. As for the team, Smittvwas proud. “I thought we had as good a tournament as could be expected,” Smith said. “We had outstanding performances in the consolation rounds that pushed our final team score up. It made a big difference in bringing home a trophy.” The top four teams in the tournament bring home hard­ ware along with bragging rights which will carry over to next year. Also, since the Sun Devils finished in the top 12, they will be more likely to have wild card wrestlers entered into the tournament next year. Theiler was also pleased with how the team finished. “I thought it was outstanding placing fourth and having four all-Americans, with Steve and I repeating, Danny get­ ting his first and Markus with his third,” Theiler said. With Theiler being the only senior, Smith thinks the teams future looks bright. “We’ve only got one wrestler graduating,” Smith said. “I think with all the guys we’ve got returning we’re going to be in good shape next year.” ,V.15 ! . I,S H Siisi! 4 .Vf.b n u f Page 26 St a te P ress Tuesday, March 21,1995 S un D evil S pring B reak R ewind W omen cause racket in 4-match homestand By D an M iller State P ress Home sweet home. That was the underlying theme of the ASU women’s ten­ nis team’s spring break excursions. The Sun Devils leveled three of the four opponents that invaded Whiteman Tennis Center over the break to run their record to 9-4. : “We’ve played really well overall,” Sun Devils Coach Sheila Mclnemey said. “Kori (Davidson) has really started to play well. She beat (Jane) Chi, the top kid in the country.” Most recently, the Sun Devils schooled the Notre Dame Fighting Irish on March 19, 8-1. Davidson, ASU’s No. 1 singles’ player thought she might have her Work cut out for her with Wendy Crabtree, but the Sun Devil sniper was fir­ ing on all cylinders and rushed Crabtree into the lockerroom 6-3,6-1. “Crabtree is really good," Davidson said. “It Was closer that the score indicated. She just got frustrated. I was hitting all of my shots.” Second singles p layer Joelle Schad, No. 3 Reka pionships. Davidson couldn’t find enough adjectives to describe the play of her partner. “Joelle is just amazing at doubles,” Davidson raved. “I just stand back arid watch basically. With my groundstrokes and her ability to poach, we can play with anyone. “I used to hate doubles but just playing With Joelle has changed that ” “When we’re playing well, it doesn’t surprise me,” Schad said of the pummelling. The UCLA Bruins handed the Sun Devils their only loss over the break on March 12. Davidson and Moll both won their singles tussles by identical 6-4,6-1 scores. Davidson avenged her loss to Jane Chi in the Rolex Championships last month and also climbed out of the rut she was in. “It was a big match for me mentally because I was kind of out of it,” confessed Davidson, who said a touch of senioritis may have been a reason for the minor lull. “For the first time in a while, I really feel good about my game. I’m confident again.” Cseresnyes, No. 4 Kara Schertzer and No. 6 Anna Moll also rung up straight-set singles victories, while No. 5 Stephanie Lansdorp posted a three-set triumph. Moll has been smoking as of late with six straight victories. In doubles action, the top two teams of Davidson and Schad and Schertzer and Moll picked up where they left off in singles with a pair of wins. Davidson and Schad were down 4-3 in the third set of their match before slamming the door. “Sometimes its hard to go out and play the doubles after you’ve won the singles 6-0,” admitted Schad, a senior. On March 18, the Sun Devils mopped the court with Syracuse 8-1. Davidson was true to form again in the top slot with a 6-2, 6-4 snubbing of Jana Strnadoya. Then Cseresnyes spanked Nicole Stmadova 6-4, 6-3 in the third spot. Schertzer and Moll both served up double bagels at fourth and sixth singles and Lansdorp pocketed a routine straight-setter at No. 5. The highlight of the doubles bouncings was Davidson and Schad’s 7-5, 7-5 humbling of Strnadova and Erica O’Neill, who were finalists at the national clay court cham­ Wildcats drop ASU in womens basketball finale played the last game of her college career and finished with 13 points, six rebounds and three assists, ASU shot 51.7 percent from the field in the first half and trailed by three at die break, 40-37. However, in the second half the Sun Devils only shot 37.1 percent, while the Wildcats were 55.2 percent in the final 20 minutes. That proved to be the difference as ASU matched UofA in every other category. From staff reports The ASU women’s basketball team ended its season on March 11 with an 81-72 loss to UofA, despite Coach Jacqueline Hullah’s guarantee of a victory prior to the meeting. ASU’s leading scorer on the season, sophomore Molly Tuter, finished with a team high 15 points and added 11 rebounds. It was her sixth double-double of the season. Senior Tiffany Krahenbuhl U ofA ’s Adia Barnes finished with a game-high 28 points and was 12 of 16 from the field. ASU finished a disappointing year with an 8-19 overall record and a 2-16 mark in the Pac-10. The Sun Devils lost their final 11 conference games. ASU doubled its overall wins from a year ago, when it fin­ ished 4-22. However, the Sun Devils’ con­ ference mark remained the same as they finished last in the Pac-10. One bright spot for the Sun Devils was the acknowledgment of forward Stephanie Freeman. Freeman was art honorable mem tion for the All-Pac-10 freshmen team. She averaged 9,2 points and 5.1 rebounds per game. She led ASU in scoring four different times. Her best game was in a 68-63 loss to the UCLA Bruins on Feb. 18, when she fin­ ished with 22 points and seven rebounds. St a t e P ress SPORTS-We cover good sports, bad sports, rich sports and poor sports State P ress P o l ic e R e p o r t s Too bizarre to be anything bu t real. The Honda Doctor’s Helpful H on d a Hi nt s > Tip # That musty smell coming from your air conditioner can often be eliminated by running your A/C on “Fresh Air" setting for 15 minutes every few days. A THE HONDA DOCTOR Experience Kinko's new Accent Color at half-price! Get up to 50 self-serve tegatltjNdm N ii «°paper. 8 l/2”xl I ” Accent Color copies (black plus one color) on standard copy paper ■ , ■ — » - ■ 1T""C“J BMW — A A ■■ % |§ % # _ # ^ 3 ^ 3 ■ ™ f Where “Blue Ribbon Service" m eani K ( ¿ O 3 3 h half-price with this ad. One-sided, single original only. Not valid with other honest, quality repairs at fair prices - and student discounts. Near ASU at 2090 E. University, Suite 115, Tempe (University at River, just west of Price) Service by Appointment 7:30AM - 6:00PM , Mon-Fri • Thursday nights 'til 8PM offers. One coupon per customer. Offer expires April 3,1995. 10 valley locations including: T e m p e 933 E. University 894-1797 Scottsdale 4000 N. Scottsdale Rd. 946-0500 • A hw atukee 4940 E. Ray Rd. 893-0700 Also in the Scottsdale Airpark • 998-5966 ■„ , A T T E N T IO N S P R IN G '95 G RA D U A TES! The d e a d lin e to ap p ly fo r Spring '9 5 g ra d u a tio n is Friday, M arch 31! H E R E 'S copies half-off H O W 1. Pay your graduation fee at the Cashiering Services Offices in Student Services, sécond floor. 2. Complete the “Graduating Senior Report Card” that is given to you by the cashiering staff. (Undergraduates only) T O D O FEESCHEDULE: Graduates $17 Undergraduates $12 Late Fee SS (after deadline) B B Open 24 hours a day. 7 days a week. Call I -800-743-COPY for the Kinko’s nearest you. TixAres T I R E $1 A U T O M O T I V E 30W • 10W30 * 10W40 • • • • • FREE Tires Delivery To Your Alignments yVÔrkof Brakes i f Home. Shocks/Struts Custom W heels IT : 2033 W. University 644-1201 3. Take your graduation fee receipt and completed survey to the graduation section (Student Services, first floor) Apply on time to ensure that your name appears In the Commencement Program. Graduate students should contact the Graduate College at 96S-3S21 to make sure all deadlines art being met.________ 1 rLÛ B E - -~ÔÎL FÎLTËR"! (Dobson & University) ! 1 IKS ||£| ' I " fXl.JB'ir“ a Lubricate your vehicle & chassis, drajn old oil, add up to 5 qts. of new oil and install a new oil filter. Diesel extra. Most cars and light trucks. Includes a 17 pt. vehicle m aintenance Inspection. Plus $1.75 oil disposal charge. Expires 4-21-95. C bT^P U fEWZED W HEEL BALANCE 8c 4 TIRE ROTATION • Check inflation on ail tires • Computerized balance on 4 tires • Four tire rotation • Most cars and light trucks Not to be combined with another offer on same produd/asrviot o r used te reducs outstanding d s b l E xpires4-21-06. | | S tate P ress Page 27 Tuesday, March 21,1995 Remaining NCAA games have tough act to follow B y A sso c ia te d P ress The 15 games left in the NCAA tournament have a tough act to follow. With six overtime games, a few early upsets and a bunch of blunders and buzzer beaters, the first two rounds had everything a basketball fan could want. One TV was not enough, The next act starts Thursday night with the first games in the round of 16. Following the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show might have been easier. On Sunday alone, three of the tournament’s greatest moments looked a lot like some of the NCAA's best high­ lights from years past. : Tyus Kdney’s length-of-the-court drive covering 4.8 seconds for UCLA's game-winning shot against Missouri looked like Danny Ainge's sprint that shocked Notre Dame in BYU’s 51-50 win in the 1981 East Regional semifinals. Don Reid’s rebound and basket off Allen Iverson’s airball gave Georgetown the buzzer-beating win over Weber State. The play was similar to North Carolina State’s 54-52 title game win over Houston in 1983 when Lorenzo Charles dunked Dereck Whittenburg’s airball at the buzzer. Lawrence Moten’s time-out when Syracuse bad none left in a loss to Arkansas immediately had people bringing up Chris Webber’s similar mistake in Michigan's 77-71 championship game loss to North Carolina in 1993. Those harried,endings capped four days of OTs. upsets and emotion. Old Dominion’s triple OT win over Villanova was the tournament's longest game in 13 years. Two No. 14 seeds won, and another could have if a buzzer shot hadn’t bounced off the rim. And for every group of huggers and jumpers, there were just as many locker rooms full of criers. The eight highest seeds — four No. Is and four No. 2s — are still going, and none of the remaining teams are seeded lower than sixth. The round of 16 will also be with­ out a team from the Big Ten — the first time that's hap­ pened. Six Big Ten teams started and five lost in the first round. Purdue lost in the second round. As bad as the first two rounds were for the Big Ten, they were perfect for the ACC, which has four teams still alive — one in each region. The SEC has three and the Big Eight and Big East still have two. Each region has its own subplot this weekend. In the East, second-seeded Massachusetts figures to con­ tinue its bump-free ride to the regional final, playing sixseeded Tulsa. No. 1 Wake Forest and No. 4 Oklahoma State send their inside-outside combinations and tremen­ dous defenses against each other. If top-seeded Kentucky gets past No. 5 Arizona State and No. 2 North Carolina beats No. 6 Georgetown, there would, be a Southeast Regional final between the two winningest programs in college basketball history. The M idwest starts with the neighborhood battle between second-seeded Arkansas, the survivor of two cliffhangers, and No. 6 Memphis. That winner will face the winner of top-seeded Kansas against No. 4 Virginia. Kansas’ proximity to Kemper Arena won’t be anything new for Virginia, which had to beat Miami of Ohio at Dayton in the second round. The West will have all eyes focused on top-seeded UCLA as it tries to make the 20th anniversary of John Wooden’s last title even more special. The Bruins get fifthseeded Mississippi State, while the other game is No. 2 Connecticut vs. No. 3 Maryland. Fifteen more games over two more weekends. Plenty of chances for the NCAA tournament to try and top a great first four days. . , B aseb all_______ S o ftb a ll C ontinued from { O N T IN U H ) H IO M PAG E 24. the Sun Devils from 10th in the country to where they find themselves now — fifth. The team’s impressive start comes in what many called a rebuilding year for the Sun Devils — a year in which ASU had just two reluming starters and not one position player returning to the same position they played a year ago. "1 have refused all year to call this a rebuilding season,” Murphy said. “We know we’re a good team, but we’re still not where we’d like to be. We’re get­ ting better^ but there’s still things we need to work on. DU I • C rim in a l Im m ig ra tio n Personal In ju ry page 24. . Wells also praised Breedlove for her effort and sees great things in her future. “Not only is she getting stronger, but she hasn't even started to be able to use all her pitches. She just has so much upside potential,” Wells said. “She’s been a big, big addition to our softball team.” Breedlove recorded her third shutout in a row with a 30. five-hit effort in the first game. The Sun Devils contin­ ued their streak, holding their opponents scoreless for 20 innings until the lucky Ducks picked up an unearned run in the second inning of the second game. Sophomore Lisa Dacquisto brought herself to the verge of ASU history in the first game against Oregon by snag- DISCOVER THE WORLD r jk R o b e rt A . D o d e ll Z A yZ \ A ttorney a t Law Associated Press Junior Ron Riley and Manhattan’s Keaton Hyman scramble for a loose ball during the second round of the NCAA Southeast Reglonals on Saturday at The Pyramid in Memphis, Teitn. •Educational •Adventure •Cultural •Environmental TOURS A R O U N D THE GLOBE ging her 36th-career stolen base, one shy of the mark set by now assistant coach Ann Rowan. Dacquisto had a shot at tying the record, but was called out for leaving first base too early in her attempted steal. • “I’m not stressing when I’m up to bat, thinking I’ve got to get on base so I can steal, but it is something in the back of my mind because it would be a big accomplishment. “ Dacquisto said. “That’s just something I’d like to get out of the way so I can work on shattering (the record).” Ironically, when Dacquisto, only a sophomore, does break the stolen base record, Rowan won’t be able to wit­ ness it. Rowan is playing for the U.S. softball team in the Pan-American games. apQ Q Q CO O O CO CCO MIGUEL'S MUSIC CENTER ►METRONOMES • ACCESSORIES • ETC. ►ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS \ ►AMPS • ELECTRIC EFFECTS • SHEET MUSIC 4 ! ? ►LESSONS EA G LE RUN TRAVEL LO W EST A V A IL A B L E A IR F A R E S FREE C O N S U L T A T IO N ...and much MORE! 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The business ol the novelist is not to relate great events, but to make sm all ones interesting. -Arthur Schopenhauer RENTAL | h a r ! n g b s_ MOTORCYCLES _ :; FEMALE ROOMATE needed in Tempe. Mi 11/13th area. 3bd 2ba house. 897-1894. GRAD STUDENT seeks resp., clean p e rso n , M /F. to share house in Tempe area. 820-4802. RESP N/S F rmte-asap! 2bd apt G lb rt/M ain . M ust like dogs. $300/mo incl util. 668-9530 RO O M S FOR RENT M /F FOR 3 b d . 2ba house w /p o o l. $275/m o + 1/3 u til. Avail 4/L 964-7657. ROOM FOR re n t, 48th St ./Southern, female, clean, pri­ vate hom e w /p o o l. $250/m o: '437-0952. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE CONDOS FOR sale - ASU area. Reasonable prices, great deals. From $34.000. Call Us today Coldwell Banker Success Realty, 496-9001 ANNOUNCE­ MENTS D Y N A M IC HEA LTH fo r the 9 0 ’s. H eatlhy living and N utri­ tio n su ccess sem inar by Dr. Jac k P feifer, MD.. S a tu rd a y , M arch 25, 1995,;9- 1pm. A ri­ zona Biltmore Hotel, d o st $10 TO rsvp and fo r more inifo call 829-7071 DUPLEX ASSUM E/NO qua! loan. $12.500 d m . May carry, pos. cash flow , nice are 841*. 4916 • . ' •'. DUPLEX, ASSUM E/NO qua! loan. $12,500 CTM M ay c ar­ ry. p os. cash flo w , n ic e are a 841-4916 LOS PRADOS- 3bd, Iba townhouse. G reat 2 -sto ry place.. $73.500 Call Elise. 966-7789, Buy Of The Week Papago Park 3bd. $92,000. Skylights, light & bright, walk-in closets,. B ob B ullock R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 WE BUY & SELL U SE D L E V I'S! H ä JEAN ■ BUYER C all fo r D etails 9 4 7 -8 2 4 5 • Page 29 Tuesday, March 21,1995 FURNITURE SO FA SET, $265. Q ueen bed $80. Fidi $70, Chest o f Drawers $40. Dinette $125. 234-5729 ¡93 N IN JA 6R 3k m i, (ike new never ride, black, teal & purple. $5500 Erik 491-2709 BICYCLES MTN BIKE: Diamond Back, 18 s p , 6 mo. old, new tires, tubes, bar ends, H 20 rack, u-lock inc. Call 350-9937, Pete $225 obo TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. 1 specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide, I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. * ASU sum m er school to Bermuda and Caribbean Islands. Earn Global Awareness and elective credits this summer. Open to students in dll majors. Call 965-4630 for information packet. B ackpacking Through Europe this S um m er? We carry over 130 light-weight travel products from packs to sleep sacks. We want to make your trip a success. Call for our 1995 Travel Gear Catalog, and we will include a copy of our Packing Guide and Foreign Currency Guide FREE. Bitter Root C all 8 0 0 688 -9 5 7 7 HELP WANTÊDGENERAL $20-$25 AN HOUR P art-tim e stu d en t m anagers needed. ÀZ High School grads only. L im ited positio n s. C all 990-8861 for qualifications. . HELP WANTEDGENERAL $6 PER HR. PLUS Setting app. for Premier Pblng. 15-20 hrs./w k w ork at home. Call Curt at 996-7265. S7P/HR, $150 signing bonus. AMS, located a t Broadw ay & M ill is h iring 20 p/t telem ar­ keters. Set your own schedule, work as few as 20/hrs a week or more. You will receive $7p/hr + bonus, paid training, casual dress, daily incentives. Call 894-9816 * $7/HR + CASH! * Set free appointments for health services. Fun office, nearby Fies­ ta Mall. Eves & Sat. Fun phone work! 649 9580. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office person. W ill train. G ood a d ­ vancem ent poten tial, 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste. 108. Apply in person. ASU GRAD students; the ASU Telefund has a great opportun­ ity for you. We are presently hiring Grad, students to contact alumni of the Graduate College, We update in fo rm a tio n , tell them about advancements here at ASU and look for financial support. This would be a great way to enhance your netw ork­ ing o p p o rtu n ities and have a very flexible part time job. We req u ire a sso c iates to w ork a min. of 10 hours a week & you choose the evening & weekend shift Call 965-6754. CASHIER, GENERAL office, com puter & 10 key exp. help­ ful. A fternoons & Sat. s. 8936884 C A SH IER, GEN ERA L office, com puter & 10 key exp. help­ ful. Afternoons & Sat.'s. 893-6884 Rural RdC O U N SELO R S WANTED* Trim down-fitness, cö-ed, NYS cam p. 1Ô0 p o sitio n s: sp o rts, crafts, öfters. Camp Shane, Ferndale, NY 12734. (914)271-4141. G R EA T P /T jo b . 4 -8pm M -F $625/hr* Call Kelly between 95. 894-9442 COMPUTERS (between Curry & McKeliips) 5 minutes from ASU! • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. APARTMENTS . ASU AREA studio, $295 not in clu d in g u tilitie s . Pool. 966-8838 ¡SOFTWARE! BEAUTIFUL LARGE 2bd apt., walk to ASU, pool, laundry rm, 1 blk so. o f U niversity on 8th St. Cape Cod Apis. 968-5238. HOM ES FOR RENT 3BD IB A wood floors, walk to ASU $800/mo, avail 4/1 - Tim 894-0288 5BDRM 2BA . 15th & College. $ 1500/mo. Call 894-0288. SA B A TIC A L HOM E in Scot­ tsdale, 2bd plus office. Furn or unfum. 1-800-382-0755. TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PL 510 W, Univesity, 2bd 2ba condo nr ASU, pool, w/d, fans, $635 966-0987/ Q U E ST A VID A 3bd 3ba, 2 pools., Ja c u z z i, ind. ra q c t., c. fa n s, m ic ro w ave, w /d. $90G/mo. Greg 941-6847. ¡HARDW ARE! TICKETS VAN HALEN tickets April 1st.; 966-4519 after 6pm. AUTOMOBILES SSELL YOUR CARS O r truck for quick cash! Foreign o r domestic same day response. Leave description & any info 24hrs. Brian 246-3499 TDG. 83 VW Q uantum . M ust sell. M aroon w /tan clo th in t., pw , pd. AC needs fix e d , lo ts o f miles but in good cond. inside an d o u t. O nly a sk in g $1500. M ust see to apprec Call 4933747. Camp Coun$dors needed for outstanding Maine camps! Camp Takajo for boys and Camp Vega for girls. Each located on magnificent lakefront setting with exceptional facilities. Over 100 positions at each camp for heads and assistants in tennis, baseball, basketball, soccer, lacrosse, golf, street hockey, field hockey, swimming, sailing, canoeing, waterskiing, SCUBA, archery, riflery, weight training, athletic trainer, journalism, photography, woodworking, ceramics, crafts, fine arts, dance (jazz, tap, ballet), nature study, radio & electronics, rocketry, video, dramatics, piano accompanist, music instrumentalist/band director, back­ packing, rock climbing, Whitewater canoeing, ropes course, gen­ eral (w/youngest campers). Also looking for RN‘s, secretaries, maintenance, kitchen. Camp dates approx June 20-August 20. Room and hoard, travel allowance, Salary based on qualifications and experience. TENNIS COUNSELORS Qualified tennis instructors needed to teach tennis arid live in a bunk with campers. We're looking for college level players and good former high school players. Teaching experience a plus, but not a must. Takajo has 17 tennis courts (6 with lights). Vega has 10 tennis courts (4 with lights). WATERFRONT STAFF Qualified waterfront staff needed for swimming, sailing, waterski­ ing, SCUBA, canoeing. MEN-CAMPTAKAJO 89 TOYOTA Tercel 2-dr Coupe 5-spd, 63 K mi, 30+m pg, a/c, tin t, p/s. $4950 obo. 834-6391. State triti CI.iiif.Mi Mi Hillwi Ctat.r Baiimtnl fu -tm LUXURY GUEST R anch now hiring for summer season! Serv­ ers, childrens counselors, wran­ glers, culinary students, fíne din­ ing waiters/waitresses, wine ste­ ward, outside maintenance, flow­ er & garden, & others. Send re­ sume & GPA (Picture requested) to W it's End Guest Ranch, 254 County Rd. 500, Vallecito Lake, CO 81122. CLOSE TO ASU Dash Designs is now hiring and training for its busy summer sea­ son: quality inspectors, shipping clerics, sewing operators, and cus­ tomer service representatives. We also need a part-tim e Foxbase (Foxpro) programmer and a cadcam operator. Salary range: $57/hr. Close to ASU, friendly en­ vironment. Call Bonnie for easy directions: 967-2678. CLUCK-UCHICKEN Looking for a fun cluckin' job? Come join the Cluck-U-Chicken team ! We are now h iring drivers, cooks, bouncers, cock­ tail servers, and chicken m as­ cots, Apply in person 855 S. DATA ENTRY & purchasing po­ sitions ft & pt, $8/hr + bonus & in cen tiv es & ben efits. 4 0 IK. FleX hrs. Autom 5226 S. 31 st Place. 243-5200. EXEC'S ASST: Immed opening for p/t asst to real estate brokers in N.E, Valley. Must be an o r­ ganizer, & excellent, communi­ cator (both w ritten &. phone), have M acintosh C om puter knowledge & have dependable transportation to run occasional errands. Pis fax resum e & in585-0105. G ET A summer jo b now!’Attend the Summer Job Fair '95 Wed., March 29 Cady Mall. Meet with dozens of potential employers! GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. E nthusiastic gym nast to teach c h ild re n ag es 5 -11. M ,T ,Th 2:30-4:30. $7-9/hr. 955-7805. IF YOU have th e d esire to succeed, we have the desire to meet you. Our co. offers a salary of $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. KENNEL WORKER needed p/t. Must be neat, dependable. 7311. E. Thomas, Scottsdale 945-7692. LAWN SERVICE Needs p/t help. $6/hr. 966-3269. LOOKING TO earn some serL oq$ cluckin' m oney? C luek-U is now re c ru itin g m arketing majors to create innovative mar­ keting ideas. A pply iri person 855 S. R ural Rd. 1 blk S o f University. MAH-KEE-NAC FOR Boys/Danbee for G irls. C ounselor posi­ tio n s for Program Specialists: All Team Sports, especially Base­ b a ll, B ask e tb a ll, G olf, F ield Hockey, Roller Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; also Archery, Riflery, Pioneering/O vemight Camping, Weights /Fitness and Cycling; other open­ ings include Perform ing A rts, Fine Arts, Pottery, Figure Skat­ ing, G ym nastics, N ew spaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, R ocketry, Ropes and Rock Climbing; All W aterfront A ctivities (Swim m ing, Skiing, Sailing, W indsurfing, Canoein g /K ayaking). G re a t sala ry , room, board and travel. June 18th August 18th. Inquire: Mah-KeeNac (Boys) 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, N J. 07028. Call: 1800-753-9118. Danbee (Girls) 17 W estm inster D rive, ftJontvirie, NJ, 07045, Call; 1-800-392-3752. M ODELS -. C alendar m odels needed. E xp'd m ale/fem ale. Aladdin Ent., 404-0856. MODELS: NYC, Toyko, Paris, M ilan. Local scouts Want you! Scottsdale, 941-6922. * Cara Providers Part-time flex hrs conve­ n ie n t to class sc h ed u le working 1:1 w/individual w/special needs in private fa m ily h o m e d o s e to you. Choose convenient assignment/set u p conve­ n ie n t sch ed u le. No exp req f o r so m e assig n ments/wili train free. For new p ay ra te s/d a te s to apply call J o b H o t l i n e 4 9 4 - 1 2 3 4 M -F 9 - 4 O N L Y . C reative N etw o rk s , I n c . M U SIC IN D U S T R Y National concert promotion /mar-, keting co, based in LA seeks re­ sponsible, outgoing. Music. /Mar­ keting Intern, based in Phoenix /Tempe. Sophomore or above in college, know your market well & be very into new music. For more info call (213) 368-4738. PAUL'S ACE Hardware is ac­ c ep tin g a p p lic atio n s for full tim é salesperson and part-time cashier* H ardw are exp. a plus for positions. Applications will be acc. at oür Tempe location, 1153 W. Broadway. PERM A N EN T P/T positions, M inutes from ASU & ideal af­ ternoon hrs for students, Perm p/t telephone reps needed to provide info & instructions to credit card customers, with office located @ Pointe South Mtn. N o collec­ tions or sales!! Shift hrs 2-6pm M-F with some a.m. shifts avail­ able also. Base rate of $6/hr with incent i ves. Call Personnel bet­ ween 8am-3pm at 431-9309. PHONE SURVEYS, not salesMaricet Research Co. located near I-10/Baseline needs p/t shift MTh, 5-9pm & Sat. 9-3. Must be de­ pendable & enjoy phones. Office exp, desired: $5/hr. Emily 443■8883.;-; ' CONSULTANT N atio n al firm has im m ediate o p en in g fo r p a rt-tim e entry level field rep. based in Phoe­ nix area. (No Sales) Good com­ munication skills, experience in d ealin g w ith thé p u b lic , p ro ­ fessional appearance. Spanish speaking a plus. Som e travel. R esum e to: P.O . B ox 15Ô0, Rowlett, TX 75030. EARN $350-$400 PER WEEK OR MORE! People Needed To Do Fun, Easy, Respectable Part or Full Time Work At Home. 24 Hr. M sg Gives Details C A LL N O W ! 1-809-474-2821 Int'l Ld rates apply. NOW HIRING Technologies, Inc. 829-3137 I NEED ASU students now!! $6 to s tart, plus b o n u s, w alking distance to ASU, flex hrs, shortsurveys, call today 784-2279 jo b m n I Wednesday March 2 9 | 9a»2pn CAPY MALL Microsoft Office $154.95 Microsoft Works $67.95 PhotoShop $198,95 Illustrator $97.95 many, many others! Scudent/Faculty ID or class verification required Hours 10 am to 5 pm CHILDREN'S SUMMER camp in Oracle, AZ rs looking for ac­ tivity area specialists: archery, riflery, arts & crafts, nature, rep­ e l l i n g , challenge course, life­ g u ard s, and w ranglers. A lso looking for kitchen supervisor and sta ff, & AZ R .N . and nurse's assistant. Good salary & ex p erien ce p lu s room and board. YMCA Camp, 602-8840987. \ S w n fl NOVELL NTWRE V.3.11/3.12. Documentation, manuals, study guides. New. in box. Must sell! B/O takes all! ¡Eric, 345-1869 1130 East University D r.; Suite 205 • Tem pe 85281 HELP WANTEDGENERAL i C om puter Room >B D IB A, evap cooling, from $325/m o util inch; Avail now. Good credit req'd. 345-8390. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ATTENTIO N STUDENTS!! 1 " ........ 1 3 =^ = L A P T O P 1386 85m bH D , V G A m ono, DOS 6.2 & W indows 3.1 T ons o f softw are $7500bo 9463230 '.A 1810 Scottsdale Rd HELP W ANTEDGENERAL 525 E. 72nd St.* 25th Floor New York, NY 10021 1-8Ô0-409-CAMP W OM EN - CAMP VEGA PO Box 1771 Duxbury, MA 02332 1-800-838-VEGA WE WILL BE O N CAMPUS Tuesday & Wednesday, March 21 & 22 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in MU Rooms 214 & 215 W ALK-INS W ELCOME C o m e b e a p a rt o f D ia la m e ric a ’s d iv e rs e te a m ! WE OFFER: • Paid Training a t $7.50 per hour guarantee • G reat Pay $8-$12 averag e per hour Highest Earnings up to ... $ 19 per hour! • Flexible Hours to work with your school schedule • Bonuses... $ • Professional/Comfortable Environment • Sharpens Com m unicatlon/Career Skllls/Resume Builder • Nearby Location a t 1100 E. University In the University C enter Dial A merica M arketing CALL 894-0264 FOR INTERVIEW S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, March 21,1995 Page 30 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDSALES HELP W ANTEDFO O D SERVICE BLIMPIE - ARM OUR SW IFT E ckrich, a D iv. o f C onagra has an open­ H elp W anted d ays & w eek ­ ing for a p/t temporary sales rep ends, 4 -6 hrs/d ay . A pply in from May to August, This po­ person, Blimpie, 911 E. Broad­ sition could possibly become a way. SODA STOCKERS p erm anent p/t, one depending Needed immediately! Two shifts LINE COOK wanted, broiler exp on job performance ft company av ail to sto ck g ro cery sto re needed. Apply at 850 S. Ash. e x p an sio n . The p o sitio n in ­ w/beverage products. $5/hr plus volves the selling f t merchan­ 28e/mile. If you are reliable, de­ MARILYN'S dising o f Our items in retail gro­ ta il oriented, h ave good math Mexican Restaurant now hiring cery s to re s. It is p e rfe c t for Skills. & ow n tra n sp o rta tio n h d st/h o stess p o sitio n s. W ait someone who is planning a ca­ pléáse call today' 838-8405. We, staff: cocktailers, bussers & all reer in sales & w ould lik e tty encourage a .diverse workforce. kitchen positions. FT/PT. Apps gain viable experience w ith a Kelly Services:; Never an applicavail at 7001 N. Scottsdale Rd. major packaged food company. ; aiit fee; EOE: ft PV. 12631 N Tatum Blvd. C om pensation i$ hourly wage SÜMMER CAMP Counselors: plus m ileage allowance. Please MR. GOODCENTS Coed residential camp seeks send resumé to:. A. Svetly - unit Subs ft Pastas now hiring for live-in counselors and ihstrucmanager., ÁSE. 5025 S. Ash day shift, part-time hours avail­ ..torS:. ArOhery, Art, Dáiice.. Aye. #B2. Tempe. AZ 85282. able' Please apply, in person. .528 Drama. : Fencing. Fishing. VALEO INTERNAtlONAU, an W. Broadway between Mill and Horseback Riding. Music; Rien v iro n m en tal co. is looking, fiéry, Ropes. Swimming;; Ten.-' Roosevelt. for several sales reps as well ás nis and more! Brush Ranch SA N DW IC H PR EP/D LV R Y ; -Gam ps..PO Box *5759. Santa ;: . a few in d iv id u a ls w /m gm t Flex-hours. Apply Browns on skills; Nò exp nec. W ill traini Fe. N M.¿7 502-5.7 59 "t I -8006 th -570 S. CoUège •; Call for án interview 940-3804. , ’ 722-28431 RETAIL SALES person wanted. Exp p re f.p t M ust be h e re fo r sum m er. C ac tu s Sp o rts 9211278 - TACO JO H N ’S Excellent restaurant manage­ ment opportunities áre available with America's sepprid largest Mexican quick-service chain;. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BANDERA /S c o ttsd a l e. .t s looki ng fo r ex - j periencedv en e r g è ti c pe op 1e to fill open positions in pur dinher h o u se P o sitio n s ay ai l : Servers w/at least .2yrs.. full sv e.. e x p., B a r te n d e r s w /2 y rs exp -. .Captains w /ly r. h o st/ess exp; C ooks w /culinar>\bkgrnd f t a desire for a culinary future. If .you w ant a solid incom e in i great restaurant eh virón. apply in p erso n 2-4pm . 382.1 N ■Scotts. Rd. • . We áre seek in g h ig h l y . m ot i­ vated Area M anagers: Réstaurnat General Managers and As­ sistant Managers, We Offer com­ p e titiv e salary p lu s b onus, flexible work schedules, group insurance and paid vacation. If y o u. ha ve ré s t au r an t.-ma nagement experience .and growth ex­ cites Vou,. pick up an applica­ tion at our Tempe o r Mesa res­ taurant, or request one by cal­ ling 1-800-543 5222. Resumes can be sent; to : Taco Jo h n 's.. H ead q u arters- AZ. 808 W est CORK 'N CLEAVER 20th S trée t, C hey en n e; WY Acc, apps. for lunch host(ess), 8 2 0 0 Í. Equal Opportunity Em-: lu n ch food serv er ft evening pkjyer. . ; v •; : cocktail Will train. p/t, concern w/appeafance, reliability, f t per­ T AKEOUT EXPRESS sonality are important. Apply in Order taker. $5/hr to start. De­ person. M-F 2-5pm òr by appt. livery dri ver.$.8-10./hf... flex eve 5101 N 44th St: 952-0585: h rs.T J Scottsdale,. S co tt 4949974 d ay s. Jim 9 5 1 -9 1 4 4 a ft 5pm. DELIVERY DRIVER Mon-Fri 510 jJ.rn. Apply in person. Bliiripje, 91 1 É. Broadway. VALET ATTENDANTS needed for morn. &/a fín .shifts. M ust be GRAND CANYON responsible, clegn cu t, polite, ■;clean. driving. record (no DUf's), : Staff- Spend the summer at the b re a th ta k in g G ran d C anyon! $7-9/hr DQE. 955-8125 lv msg: M ulti venue o p e ra tio n seeks VALET PARKING attendants 3kitchen Staff* cashiers mid. run­ 4 jiights/week: Must be willing tó ners: Exp preferred, com peti­ drive to Phx. Septis, PV. etc. Avg tive w ages, housing available $8/hr. 861-9182. . ; ■ ; ft a great working environment! Please call <602) 638-0182 of YMCA CAMPING Serv ices (Sky9564)257. Y Camp ft Chauncev Ranch) lo­ cated in Prescott, AZ is now hir­ ing dedicated, fun-loving; crea­ tive. caring professionals to. work . : with co-ed campers between die. ages o f 7 & 17 in a residential camp setting: Come be a part o f the magic ft share in. an experiencé that w ill Iasi a rifetim e: Camping season, begins last week o f May and runs through early August, Call for application & in­ formation at 254-4571. HELP W ANTEDSALES GRAD STUDENT w/Marketing background for p/t sales - Car al­ lo w a n c e ; salary,, co m m issio n POE. Call V P. at 921^3003: SA LÉS PERSO N n e ed e d f/t. Apply at Leonard's Luggage at Fiesta Mall. 835-7000. SALÉS REPS needed for immed hire. No exp nec. Flex hrs. Call 1-800-925-3524 foritifo HELP WANTEDGENERAL MASCOT NEEDED Local radio station is seeking outgoing. responsible person to be a station mascot. Must have flexible schedule and weekends free< " This position is part-time. Call 264-0108cm S3 . for more information. THE ORIGINAL PARTY GARDENS is hiring bartenders, : wait staff, cocktail staff, door staff, barracks, cooks,delivery mgr. We are happy to announce tWs great employment opportunity at AZ's largest entertainment complex. Apply at Balboa Cafe Wed. March 22, bet l-5pm. ; ■ HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Summer Jobs at Fricqdly Pines Camp in Prescott We need a few top-potch coun­ selors a n d in stru cto rs for o u r 1995 cam p season (5/28-7/30). Activity areas include horseback riding, climbing, outdoor skills; and target sports, but enthusi­ asm, selflessness, and willingness to w ork are m o s t im p o rta n t requirements. For more information call Kevin or Eric at 255-0550 Free Child Care While You Donate ! The Valley's BEST plasma donation center will begin providing FREE childcare (during donating) effective Monday, >w.. n February 27th. (Some restrictions apply-) This will be offered 10am-4pm Mon-Sat ft 10am-3pm Sunday. We have 54 machines to serve you better!! This is your perfect opportunity to perform a vitally needed service and earn $150-6185 per month at the sanw time! it couldn't be easier! New donorsearn $25 CASHtheir .first,donation! Open 7. days a w eek for your convenience! O pen Monday-Friday til 8 p.m.! Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1334 E- Broadway, Suite 102, Tempe Broadway ft Dorsey (Across front Native New Yorker) 968-6139 HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE CHILD CARE needed ray. home for ode. eyes, f t wknds. $5/hr. 2 children 3 ft 15 nips. Hardy ft Broadway. Lori 968-0428. MOTHER'S HELPER wanted for m orn ings Mon - Fri. T rans. re­ quired. H elp w/sOn in N °rih Phoenix home; 569-9545. MOTHERS HELPER to drive kids aftérschool T ft Th., Dep ttrid sz; car i must. Refs réq' NE Scotts Pipia/Shea 451-0941 ALASKA SUMMER jobs. Eam up to $6000+/mo-FiShiiig indus­ try. Free transportation! Room ft board! No exp nec. 818-774-1199 ext. A4884S. ASU K ARSTEN G o lf C ourse presents golf instruction. After w ork/school program s, w eek­ d ays 5:30-7pm . beginning 3/27. To enroll/ihfo 784-4839. C O O L JO B S E m ploym ent Guide. Eam $2000-6000 a month + free tra v e l. Jo b s on c ruise ships, A laskan fisheries. C lub Med, ski resorts, whiiewater raft­ ing, Disney, national parks and US Forest Service. Guaranteed success. 617-334-4096. LEARN W HAT the CIA . FBI and US Seal teams are training today. Jeet Kune do co n cep ts and Filipino m artial arts, co n ­ tact certified instructor Daniel Bissonnette 941-2550 A A CRUISE Ships Hiring ! Eam big $$$ + free world travel (Car­ ibbean, Europe, H aw aii, e tc .) Summer/permanent. no exp nec. Guide; (919)929-4398 ext CIO 15. CRUISE SHIPS & vacation re­ sorts ' hiring. E arn up to $2500+/mo. Working for these companies. World travel ft exotic re so rts. Frefe tra n s p o rta tio n ! Rodin & board! No experience neV' Call, (818) 705-3416. M488 .CRUISE SH IPS now h iring Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour com panies. W orld travel. Sea­ sonal & full-time employment available. No experience neces: sary; For more information call 1.-206-634-0468 ext. C59185 N ATIONAL PARKS H iring Seasonal f t full-tim e em plpyment available at National Parks. Forests ft W ildlife Preserves, Benefits + bonuses! Cali 1-206545-4804 ext. N59182. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FINANCE CO. seeking p/t .data entry clerk. 20 hrs/wk. Must be flexible eves/w knds. 48th St./ Southern. 438-2511: has a n o p en in g for pool attendant positions. Parttim e a .m . & p .m . h rs available. GPR certifica­ tio n re q u ire d . M a rrio tt M o u n ta in S h a d o w s is Committed to a drug free w o rk p la c e . A c c e p tin g apps M on-Thurs, 9 a.m .N oon & 1:3(M p.m. 5641 £. Lincoln D r. Scottsdale EOE L o o k in g fo r P/T Now H i r i n g W ork? fo r C u s t o m e r S e r v ic e R e p r e s e n t a t iv e s ! C u r r e n t l y S e ek in g C a n d id a t e s T h a t H a v e T h e F o l l o w in g Q u a l if ic a t io n s : • M u s t be A ble t o T y p e 3 0 w pm • I nter per so n a l C o m m S kills • P r e v io u s S a l e s / C u st S e r v ic e E x p a P l u s ! • M u s t be A ble t o W o r k S aturdays C all Kelly S ervices T oday! 838-8405 T e m p e L o c a t io n KEL1Y SERVICES W IN G S \ BANOERSNATCH BREWPUB 5th S t. & F o re s i ! CHlCAOi^S 1 Buy any food item a t the regular price.ft receive the second Item I of equal or lesser value FREE! ■ Valid 4-8pm daily, all day Sunday I 825 W. University 894-8387 FUNDRAISING FA ST FU N D R A ISE R - R aise $500 in 5 days - Greeks, groups, c lubs, m otiv ated individuals. Fast, easy - No financial obliga­ tion. (800) 775-3851 ext, 33. SE C om er o f Hardy ( P I Z Z A & PASTA j ) PERSONALS ~ KOUCHOULOU H ope you had a greàt Spring Break... ¥46453 ^ / r ATA DASH Crew- Thanx 4 in­ troducing us to the Dash! W e hope U had a killer Spring Break! yT A flC ftV . ATA- THANKS for a great so­ c ia l! L e t’s dp i t ag ain soon! . vTA Q Michelle S. HAPPY NOROUZ K o u c h o u lo u . . » ; i ; •: . . . . vEjazeh I H AVE the best mom in the world! Mom- I hope you have a great day and eat a good lunch, Malkem says hi and love "ya"! Have a great day Mommy, Jack­ ie: Love. Olivia. ALASKA SUMMER jobs! •Earn thousands this summer in canner­ ies, processors, e tc . M ale/ Fe­ male. Rodtn/board/travel often provided! Guide; Guaranteed suc­ cess! (919) 929-4398 ext. A 1015. Marriott's Moantain Shadows 9 IK TANK UP TUESDAY $2.25 plus ta x 6 0 oz. Pitchers Bud Light • Coors Light Leinenkugel's Red $2.81 98«Pitchers of Soda 9 6 B -6 6 6 6 1 3 0 1 E. University HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP W ANTEDFO O D SERVICE GRADY'S AMERICAN GRILL Now hiring all positions 100010 North Scottsdale Rd. South of Shea / JOB ~ OPPORTUNITIES HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HOT WINGS & COOL JAZZ Hr LOST COUPLE of weeks ago: Brown leather w allet between LD S In stitu te and m y a p a rt­ ment. If found call 829-4948. No cash, just want my LD. H i MOMMY! I love you! This is M eagan. Did you know that ypu .are very sw eet because I love you and I could kiss you 1,000,000*29 tim es. H ave a great day ! •* ^ TEM PE LITT LE G ym has an immed. opening for pt help. Pre­ school gymnastics WSI instruc­ tors nettled. Must enjoy chifiren. Call Kim at 413-0015. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS | 2 fo r 1 H A P P Y H O U R G R EEK R EV IEW S w im suit Model Auditions. W ed. March , 22nd at Fumble's 4-6pm only. PROVIDE CHILD care for a Sum day a fternoon; S 7.50/hf. Exp pref. 464-3937. LOVING CA couple w ants to build family by adopting baby. C an you help? C all c o lle c t, Laura or Eric at 510-254-0563. FREE LOST/FOUND GET A summer job now! Attend the Summer Job Fair ’95 Wed,, March 29 Cady Mall. Meet with dozens o f potential employers. MOTHERS HELPER/ child care wanted. After school aprox. 2:305i00. M-F. Full time summer an option. 2 children l i f t T2.. Must have safe, reliable tiansportation. 952-9051 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL AD O PTIO N SPORTS ft RECREATION JOB OPPORTUNITIES JIM & Craig - 1 hope you guys had a great Spring Break! r ST JÜD.É Noveria. Thank, you: •VJ L Y HELP WANTEDGENERAL Ahwatukee Foothills YMCA M f HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDFO O DSERVICE GET PAID FOR YOUR OPINIONS A national market research company located in Scottsdale is looking for ADULT MALES 21 -29' yrs. to participate in a consumer product discussion group. These groups fill fast so call now. If you qualify and participate, you will be paid for your time. •Paid Training . «Work around school schedule Call 941-0048 Apply in person to Celebrate N ew Opportunities 8655 E.Via de Ventura, 8300 Scottsdale, o r Fax resume to 991-2826 Apply at: 3233 E. Chandler Blvd. Phoenix RETAIL SALES OPPORTUNITY We are now accepting applications for the following positions in our soon to open college retail store; •Full-time Office Manager •Full-time Suppiy/Clothing Sales Associates •Full-time Shipper/Receiver •Part-time Cashiers/Saies Associates These break-through opportunities offer: •Rewarding Advancement Possibilities •A Chance To Utilize Your Talents If you-can relate to people and have the desire to be in the College Bookstore lndustiy...apply in person. March 21 thru March 2 5 ,9am to 4pm Ask for CHIP C ome to O ur J ob Fair ! C aterair International; a global leader in airline catering, is now recruiting energetic and enthusiastic people far the follow ing positions: • D rivers • A ssemblers • Fo o d P roduction • U tility W orkers « W e offer full and part-time positions, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Ideal for students interested in extra income or those thinking of a career in the service industry. Free meals, uni­ forms and parking. Excellent benefits for fu ll time positions. Fa ir H o u rs : TODAY W ed ., M arch 2 2 • 9 a.m .-6 p.m . F a ir Lo catio n : 1451 S. 23rd St. W est of Sky Harbor A irport (Cross Streets * 24th St. & Buckeye - Follow the Signs!) Applications also accepted Monday-Saturday, 7 a.m .-4 p.m. O r fax resume to: (602) 225-0737. the College Store 2121 S. Mill, Suite 210A Tempe, A Z 85282 EOE M/F/y/D RESTAURANTS/ BARS TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING SERVICES $$ GUARANTEED $$ Scholorship money, no GPA re­ q u ire m e n ts, no in co m e re ­ quirements. S10 0 no risk guar­ a n te e. G u aran teed at le a st 6 s c h o lo rsh ip o p p o rtu n ities. Only $89.898-5594. D IR EC T EX PRESS w eekend shuttle. Phoenix to Tucson, $10. For reservations call 746-3578. $ 5 O FF TO N IG H T! Y o u r e troie c . CAFE A sk f o r N an e y al 7 3 0 -5 9 9 2 • ( c re p e fR V ' -11^*4 404S IMAM..Set. 101 ...— 1^ D A R & O K tL L I NIK HjtTJTW08| *$$JS OsKy Lunch «ilmiyltiiwBliy IfJN|. I B ilil C A R V T f^ O N E ^ fa i C m M ALES 18-24 lean , h e alth y , nonsm okers, wanted for a stu­ dy . $600 o ffered . Study re ­ q uires 4 short ho sp ital stay s. Call Nicole 945-8923. MISCELLANEOUS HEALTH ft FITNESS NATURAL PROGESTERONE therapy a v ailab le fo r PM S A m enstrual irreg u laritie s. C all "Always A Woman", Madeline Kasian, NP, 732-9744. Every weekday, we give you the State Press absolutely free. Great news. G reat features. Even a magazine. Crosswords and horo­ scopes. N ot to m ention the huge savings from a ll the coupons. SPRING » bathing suits. Drop weight fast. Thermogenic herbal blend drops. Look & feel great. Guaranteed. Cheryl. 814-1309. $2/PG , $15 resumes. Proofed. L aser. Fast. Sam e d ay , DTP. Near ASU. Brian. 967-5987, APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord p ro cessin g . N eed it fast? Call Jessie. 945-5744. R £svm £s W ith R esu lts! Entry Level Experts, Special Student Discounts! Writing, Formatting, Printing. T h e W rite Resume 917-3194 (April 20 to May 20) You surprise yourself with your ability to do more than one thing at a time. Applying this talent allows you to quickly finish an assigned task. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) The value o f teamwork continues to impress you. Utilize your leader­ ship abilities to rally co-woricers around you. Superiors are favorably impressed. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You are still not feeling quite up to par. If possible take a day o ff and spend die day resting. If not, try to relieve yourself o f as much stress as you can. (July 23 to AUg. 22) Someone’s new idea has caught fire in your imagination. Add your spe­ cial touches to i t You and this person work well as a team. VIRGO 7 * (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Snapping at family members isn’t going to solve your problems. A pos­ itive approach is what’s needed and you must be assertive. An older relative can offer good advice if you are wise enough to reach out.. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to O c t 22) Even you are amazed at what you can do when you apply yourself/ Although you sometimes take the easy way out, this is not one o f those times. Bigwigs take note o f this. W e appreciate your help. A rid so does d ie e a rth .. Buy O ne, G et One Free 6AM - Midntghl Daily T d t/fv F ^ ^ V ^ 894-4636 Buy one personal, get the second for FREE! One coupon per person, per day. Must show ASU student I.D. Coupon not good on late ads. Expires 4-28-95 HEALTH ft FITNESS A S SEEN ON TONITE SHOW WITH JAY LENO Amazing New "ONE DAY DIET" Hottest diet in the 90‘s! FREE SAMPLE. 602- 985-6579 CRAMMIN 1 FOR EXAM S WITH NO DOZ? TRASH IT! New "SUN BURST" lets you stay up all night with 100% memory in the morning. No drugs. Guaranteed. 6 0 2 -9 8 5 -S 5 7 9 SERVICES SERVICES -------- SCORPIO (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) A health concern requires some attention at tiiis time. If you listen to medical advice given, all will be well. However, you must utilize willpower on that diet and exercise program. SAGITTARIUS (NoV. 22 to Dec. 21) An exciting career opportunity virtually falls into your lap. This eases your mind since there is a great potential for financial success. Do be sure to check out all details before signing an agreement. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) A romantic interest from your past just won’t let go. Instead o f being annoyed, try to treat tiiis person with compassion. Your current mate will understand and is not jealous. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) A certain change you are contemplating is not to your best advantage. Make sure you explore every facet before plunging in. Seek an expert's advice. . V PISCES ■ 5 'F (Feb. 19 to March 20) 1 You are never one to consider “work” a four-letter word. Higher-ups appreciate that and could reward you in the near future for your dili­ gence. ' ■ YOU BORN TODAY approach life as an opportunity to acquire, appreciate and use material things. You express yourself best through methodical, deliberate and measured movements. You don’t push your­ self into situations, often taking time to-mull over new ideas. You feel most comfortable in a steady, secure job that poses little or no chal­ lenge. You rely on steady progress and avoid any risky situations. Biithdate of: Johann Sebastian Bach, composer, Timothy Dalton, actor: Florenz Ziegfeld, theatrical producer. GET PERSONAL... THEN GET PERSONAL AGAIN! ■ HEALTH ft FITNESS oroscope F r a n ce s D rake TAURUS SERVICES Longest Tanning Hours in Tempe I n d iv id u a l H For Monday, M ardi 21.1995 ARIES (Match 21 to April 19) You awaken feeling refreshed and ready to tackle anything. This good mood pervades your workday and much is accomplished. The evening is best spent in the bosom of family. W hen the State Press has inserts, they tend to flo p to the ground and create a safety hazard as w e ll as an eyesore, W ould you be so social­ ly correct as to bend Over and pick an insert that m ight slip o u t o f your State Pressi Thanks. w VIDEO GAMES Codes. «11 combos - All Moves. Kilter Instinct, Primal Rage, MK2. Virtua Fight­ er. Send $5. Finish Him. Box 41344. Mesa. AZ 85274. our = W e do th is fo r you every day. W ill you do some­ thing fo r us? G ood! Thanks! A FFO R D A B L E SECR ETARIAL-Desktop publishing, p/u & dlvry. color. 7 days/eves. 921-8328 W Y LEO . AFFORDABLE - Term papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast tur- « naround. Laser quality. Town­ send W/P. Maureen. 955-0969. Is B bc K á iw iM FA ST TU RNAROUND. Term papers, theses. MLA/ APA, las­ er, fax. Pat, 897-1741. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING NEW ME8U 9 NIWlSTAFP S * 09g ESL/ENGLISH TEACHER will type &/or edit your papers. IBM WP. Reasonable 966-8615. WANTED o r ¡i Full Sc i o f N ail.'' a c o u s t ic ' C U STO M IZE D R ESU M ES 5/$25. N xt day sve avail. C all for info. John 482-9325. Leave ■msg.________________________ I lavvciiian P a i n lir e 'A l t e r n a t iv e ^ t -. Page 31 Tuesday, Match 21,1995 St a t e P ress State Press Classifieds Matthews Center Basement ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. WE NEED YOUR HUNDREDS OF EMPLOYERS CALLING DAILY! Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Prase, including punctuation. Please check your ad the firs t day It appeare-the lia b ility of the State Press shaH not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to can­ oe! your ad s credit w ilt be held on account for future advertising. » OVER 20,000 EMPLOYERS HAVE ACCESS TO OUR REVOLUTIONARY DATABASE Q C heck# □ B D M M ftta n M * ■ ORM I Bank Ceni Number • HUNDREDS OF SM ALL AN D LARGE ^ y - Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $ 1 .25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day A r i l i 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. f Price pe t Day $ #«*D ey» X . L xp ru t Q u est mfijomtí CMR.OVHvmpetov»' I'. lo I ' * 1 EMPLOYEE /wdiii's Perso««/ VmceMatl Srrnces . T otal * $ ... THEY WILL CALL YOU! *St5 Listing in Electronic Database (or 90 days 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1,00 per line, per day Classification Nairis/ISkimber: CORPORATIONS CALLIN G DAILY • OVER 50% RECEIVED JOB OFFERS Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line H aasE E i 1818 E. Southern Avenue, Suite 17-A Mesa, AZ 85204 • 602-892-2506 1-800-524-5627 FAX 892-2739 098 Adoption 065 Airplanes OÌO Announcements 020 061 064 051 077 054 086 Apartments Automobiles Bicydes Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Loet/Found 068 062 040 101 074 072 073 070 . 071 030 " ■* 1 ■ Sorry, we cannot accept personal ads Swaugh a e flJ r itr j'■* * Ä .» mm 040 Homes for Sale Fundraising 102 Housecleaning Furniture 107 Instruction Oarage Sales 103 Insurance Health & Fitness 056 Jewelry Help WantecFChHd Care 076 Job O pportunities Heip W anted-Clericál Help Wanted-Food Service 015 Legal Notices '120 Miscellaneous Help Wanted-General 050 Miscellaneous for 8a!e Hefc> W artted-Saies Homes fo r Rent 045 M obile Homes 063 062 090 084 110 097 047 035 060 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rent 100 081 058 031 041 060 067 108 105 115 Services Sports A Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Gondos for Rant Townhomea/Condos for Sale Transportation Travel Tutors Typing/W ord Processing Wanted P age 3 2 State P ress Tuesday, March 21,1995 Ta Introduce :i& ig Ìfe lÉ Ì itSOVliP i Offer Expires 3-24-95 IRraSB&llRUfi M h h H I w ill include an orthopedic test, a neurological test, a spinal alignm ent and a private consultation to dlscuss the results. ■ Twelve Danger Signals 1. Numbness in arms and hands 2. Restless nights j 3. Pain between Shoulders 4. Stiff ness of neck 5. Nerve tension 6. Depression 7. Headaches R. Anxiety in the chest 9. Stiffness or pain in the lower back 10. Tired hips and legs 11. Painful Joints 12. Whiplash Example of poor spinal structure. Do You Understand the Damaging Effects of Subluxation? ■ O n ly D am aged Tissue Gives You Sym ptom s. ■ You C an Build Disease W ith o u t K now ing It. Brain Stem C o n tro l C e nter C 1 . C2 (Atlas-Axis) H ealthy Nerve spinal structure. Pinched Nerve = S ubluxation = Disease = S ym ptom s CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT ASU's Samaritan Insurance, Personaltnjury, [io n , insurance ar||f:Cash A ccejfe^ •’nealcintomene Dr. Richard L. O'Neal, Palm er Graduate Team Physician Sport and Fitness Council I World Olympic I Chiropractic Committee ■ I LAKE COUNTRY VILLAGE Shopping Center 491-1242 Celebrating 14 Years in Practice For your convenience, BASELINE ROAD 1070 E. Baseline Rd., Tempe call 8:30am - 6:45p m M on.-Fri. for appointm ent.