••• Tempe Arizona . . • Vol. 79No.103 ' An Independent Morning D aily________ B ic y c lis ts to ja m s tre e ts in p ro te s t . Wednesday, March 22,1995 A id f o r t h e h o m e le s s B y N. Sccrrr T rim ble State Press If you plan to drive down any of the major roads in central Tempe after 5 p.m. Thursday, watch out Hordes of bicyclists are planning to jam the streets to deliver a message. The demonstration, called Critical Mass, has been planned to protest the need to; modify city streets to better accommodate bicyclists and raise awareness of cleaner-air transportation alter­ natives. said Eric lwersen. leader of the planned demonstration. Hundreds of fliers have been passed out around ASU asking cyclists to participate in Critical Mass. The grassroots protest highlights the need for increased biker rights and the benefits of cycling rather than automobile transport. lwersen said. “There are a surplus of cars and they're devastating the envi­ ronment.” he said. ■ ..■ A similar demonstration was held Sept. 14, when 21 cyclists blocked westbound lanes for about 10 minutes on a section of UniversityDrive near campus. Tire Thursday demonstration is expected to cover every major intersection in central Tempe. starting at l()th Street and Myrtle Avenue near Stablers Maiket. lwersen said. It is sched­ uled to last about 45 minutes. lwersen expects more than 1(H) people to turn out for Thursday's event. The cyclists are planning to keep a slow pace in the right lane, allowing motorists to pass them. "We don't want to totally block traffic: we want them to check us out as they go by,'" he said "I talked to city officials and local bike shops to find out how to do this legally and not do B arb ara R o d riq u ez, a 2 2-year-o ld b ro a d ca st jo u rn a lism se n io r, s o lic its d o n atio n s on H ayden Law n fo r “S h a d e s of P o verty,” a p roject to ra ise m oney for the h o m eless. The p roject, w hich is sp o n so red by A SA SU and other cam p us orga­ n izatio n s, in clu d e s p articip an ts cam p ing out on th e law n in a m akesh ift sh e lte r through T h u rsd ay . Tem pe M ayor Neil G iu lian o a lso is sch ed u led to sp en d a n ig ht in the sh elter. . T urn to C ritical mass, page 2. C ouncil m em bers hope to pass zoning buck to courts By D avid P roeeth State P ress • - Tempe City Council members are just like anyone else; they like things nice and simple. That’s why acting as an appeals court for B oard o f A djustm ent cases has always been more than a little annoying, councilmembers said. Arizona law requires city councils in c itie s w ith p opulations exceeding 100,000 to hear appeals from the city’s GlULlANO Board of Adjustment, the body in charge of allowing changes on current buildings. The Arizona Supreme Court has determined that the coun­ cils must act as a "quasi-judicial" body, which means that they cannot talk to anyone about cases, and that they’re only allowed to review evidence already heard by the Board of Adjustment. A bill now floating through the Arizona Legislature would give city councils the option of referring zoning appeals to the Superior Court. Some Tempe City Council members think that’s a good idea. ‘I t ’s better left to people who have an in-depth knowledge of all the (zoning and building) laws," said Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano. “If We can’t consider any additional information than what the board has already considered, then why should we be oveituririhgtheir decision?’’ Giuliano said city councils are public policy-makers, not quasi-judicial bodies. ; “It's difficult for the council to act as judge and jury, councilWoman Carol Smith said. The Board of Adjustment doesriot deal with the potentially controversial process of allowing or rejecting certain types o f businesses, but “special, one-of-a-kind situations." Smith said. Giuliano said the bill would have no effect on a controver­ sial project like the Hooters restaurant proposed for Mill Avenue because the council still would make liquor license rec­ ommendations. "The Board of Adjustment makes a decision on something like if someone wanted to build a carport and the neighbors didn’t like it,” said Giuliano. “It deals with how tall it can be, how close to the street it can be and things like that.” Councilman Joseph Lewis called the Board of Adjustment TufcN to Zoning, page 2. Campus thefts 'extreme problem B ikes, w allets m ain targets By T o d d Kelly State P ress Sam antha Feldm an/State P re sa Stu den ts sho u ld not leave person al item s su ch a s b ack p a cks and su n g la sse s unattended — even for a few m inutes, acco rd in g to R adaw na M ichelle, crim e prevention co ord inato r fo r A S U D P S. IN SID E STA TE PR ESS W eath er O utlook Mostly sunny and breezy. High 74, low 56. World/ Nation Japanese police raid the offices of a religious group suspected o f mak. ing sarin, the nerve gas used in M onday's deadly attack on Tokyo’s subway. Page 3 It can happen anywhere on campus. It can happen in the time it takes for someone to walk to a bookshelf or trash can and back. It’s been reported more than 1,000 times each year in four of the past five years. And it’s not getting any better. Theft of private property on campus is “an extreme problem,” according to Radawna Michelle, crime pre­ vention coordinator for ASU’s Department of Public Safety. “It’s our highest category of any type of crime,” Michelle said. Burglary ranks second, which differs from theft in that someone has to break into a desk or an office to get something, she said. Theft, however, can Sports happen faster and is as easy as picking up a backpack from a table. “Usually it’s a crime of opportunity,” Michelle said. “It can happen and it can happen very quickly.” Last year, there were 1,042 reports of theft at ASU. The year before, there were 1,044, and in 1992 there were 1,081. In 1991, there were 859 reported thefts, and in 1990 there were 1,026. The statistics include all thefts that occur on campus, including bicycles, which account for about 40 percent of the thefts. Michelle added that most of the thefts on campus are of private belongings — not University property — and most of it goes unrecovered. Sometimes wallets are recovered, Michelle said, but not with cash or credit Turn to T hefts, page 2. W here To F ind I t ASU junior A via Morgan and senior Jacqueline Gayle are members o f the 4 x 400 meter relay team that placed third at the NCAA Championships. C lassifieds .................. „ .......17 Page 15 Sports.... ............ ..... . .... „15 Today’s A ctiv ities....... .........3 W orld/N ation ....... . 14 Crossword..........................13 ........19 Horoscopes •...... O pinion........................ ........4 .......10 S t a t e P ress W ednesday, March 22,1995 Critical mass__ T oday Continued from page 1. The Today Section is a" daily calendar o f « v e n ts printed a s a service to the AßU community. Requests are accepted on a Firstcom e, first-se rv e b a sis and are prin ted on a sp a ce -available b a sis. Cam pus dubs and organizations may subm it written entries to tire S ta te P re s s in the basem ent Of M atthews C enter, Room IS . Requests w ill not be taken over the phone. Faxed en tries writ also twyt t)0 accepted En tries m ust contain the k ill name o f the d u b or organization, a description o f tire event, date, tim e and tire fun address b f thé lobatim . AH requests are subject to editing tor content, sp ace arid tÊ trity. incom plete or illegible entries w ill be discarded. Deadline fo r requests in noon tire day before publication and en tries w ill not be accepted mom than tim e working da ysb efore publication. O nly one entry p er organization p er day is perm itted. » Dept, of Psychology h i E d u c a tio n — ■C o u n selin g a vaila b le at C o u n se lo r Trainin g C e n te r à t A S U ; fre e fo r fuft-ttme A S U stu d en ts, facu lty an d staff. C a ll 9 6 5 -5 0 6 7 fo r inform ation. P a y n e Halt Room 402. • E c k a n k a r Society - r D iscu ssio n : “C h a n g e s in ou r liv e s .” N oon, M U G ra h am , R o om 2 16 ; • Student Life-Learning Resource Center — F re e S Q 4 R /C n tical read ing w orkshop . D evelo p m ore effective stra te g ie s to sum m arize and retain im portant inform ation w hile re ad in g . O p en to a ll A S U stu d en ts, facu lty a rid s ta ff, 11 a .m ., M ulticultural Lo u n g e, Stu dent S e rv ic e s Budding. • B lack B u sin e ss Student A sso ciatio n — G e n e ra l m e e tin g , everyo n e w elco m e. 4 :3 0 p .m ., M U R oom 340D . • M U A B C u ltu re a n d A rts C o m m ittee — T h e P itc h fo rk s : W o m e n 's A c a p e lla c h o ir: in o b se rv a tio n o f W o m e n 's H isto ry M onth N oon-1 2 :3 0 p .m .. M U low er level. • VITA-Vofunteer Incom e Tax A ssista n ce — F re e tax a d v ic e , fed eral an d A rizo n a form preparation B ring tax b o o klets, 1993 tax re tu rn s an d 19 9 4 in form ation . 6 -9 p .m ., A rm stro ng H a ll, R o om 114. • Career Services — D eb D o ran. C a re e r S p e cia list, w ill p resen t an ho ur-lon g w o rksh o p on in terview in g . 1 1 :4 0 a .m ,, M U R o o m 222. • Native Am erican Students A ssociation — G e n e ra l m eeting. T h e re ’s plenty to talk about; com e an d join in- 4 :3 0 p .m ., A m erican Indian in stitu te C o n fe ren ce Room . • H isp a n ic B u s in e s s S tu d e n t A s s o c ia tio n — A c a d e m ic L u n ch e o n . Fo o d w ill b e p ro vid ed , a ll stu d e n ts w e lco m e . 1 1 :3 0 a.m .-1 p .m ., M U G o ld . G e n e ra l m eeting, a ll m ajo rs an d stu d en ts w elco m e. 3 :3 0 p .m . B A 2 8 6 . • CO O L Conference — Sto p by fo e C O O L tab le to sig n up to vol­ u nteer a t o r attend a n atio n al stu den t se rv ic e co n fere n ce that will bring 1 ,1 0 0 stu d en ts to A S U fo is w eeken d . 1 0 a .m .-2 p .m ., C a d y M s«. • C ircle K International — W eek ly m eetin g , op en to e v e ry o n e in te re ste d m com m unity s e rv ic e . 1 2 :4 0 p .m ., M U Y u m a , R o om 211. ... • Golden K ay National Honor Society — Social/meeting. Join in the festivities and get to know other members. All members wel­ come. 5 p.m., Minder an d ers. • LG BAU — Reception for Brenda Fraser of foe Human Rights Campaign Fund. 7:30 p.m., MU Programming Lounge. - ‘ something wrong.” _ Radawna Michelle, crime prevention coordinator of ASU Department of Public Safety, said the cyclists are within their rights to demonstrate in this fashion because bikers can ride in the middle of the lane if there are unsafe conditions for cyclists to ride on the street. "However, I think there are better ways for them to get their point across,” she said. Sgt. Toby Dias, public information officer for Tempe police, said that the cyclists do have a right of way along roads as long as they stay within legal boundaries. Drivers near Myrtle and Tenth can expect heavy traffic back­ ups if the protest occurs, Michelle added. “Traffic could be backed up to Parking Structure 3.” Critical Mass, a national grass roots movement, has been active in cyclists’ rights demonstrations in San Diego, San Francisco and Tucson, where Iwersen participated in his first one. The term Critical Mass stands for the critical point society has reached in the balance between civilization and the planet, Iwersen said. “The end-all result of this, I hope, will be more people getting on their bikes,” he said. . Zoning. Continued from page 1. appeals process frustrating. “There has to be a better way to do it,” Lewis said. He said he supports anything that gives the council more flexibility in consulting with its constituents, adding that it’s illegal for him to discuss zoning appeals. “People elect officials to make decisions, and they want to be able to talk to them,” Lewis said. Councilwoman Linda Spears hasn’t formed an opinion on the bill yet. and council m em bers D ennis C ahill, *Ben Arrendondo and Joseph Spracale could not be reached for com- ment Tuesday. The bill has passed in the House of Representatives, and will move- from the Senate Government Committee to the Senate floor “some time soon,” said the bill’s sponsor. Rep. Mike Gardner, R-Tempe. However, the bill has not received universal support. Gardner said the Mesa City Council “couldn’t care less about the bill because it would choose to decide zoning cases and would not pass them along to the Superior Court. Mesa City Council officials were unavailable for comment. Thefts___________ Continued from page 1. cards still in them. Backpacks, textbooks, calculators and com­ puters are almost never returned. Gerry Maas, director of the Student Recreation Center, said that theft at the SRC is minimal because of its access control, which requires visitors to present identification at the front desk. However, that doesn’t always deter people from stealing. “Certainly the opportunity is still there to steah things in the complex,” he said. Maas attributed a lot of the thefts to lack of awareness on the part of the students. “A lot of it is carelessness and people not thinking all the time,” he said, adding that his staff tries to alert people of prob­ lems, like theft, in the complex. But Maas said that while theft is less common at the SRC than at other more open and accessible places on campus, “it happens here. It happens everywhere.” Theft from offices on campus occurs too, according to Michelle. Even keeping a purse in a desk drawer in an office is Jh u rsd ay O nly MARCH MADNESS SHOOTOUT not a good idea, she said. “If you have your purse in your desk, don’t leave your desk unlocked,” she said. Michelle said that the most common places for thefts to occur arc the libraries, the bookstore, the SRC and the Memorial Union. > Jim Selby, associate director of the ASU Bookstore, said he doesn't think theft is a serious problem at the store, “but it’s a concern.” He said that many people lay their backpacks on the floor or on top of the lockers, even when there are free lockers available, leaving them for anyone to take. “But it’s just like any time you lay a book or backpack any­ where on campus and it’s not watched closely,” Selby said. Michelle said people need to watch their belongings. “Never leave anything unattended on this campus, even for a few seconds,” she said. If we had one more you could pick up food for your fish and have your Where to get the things you need. "D on’t M iss Your Shot" Opening in April. Thursday March 2 3 Hayden Lawn 9:00AM - 1:00PM Drawing for M ountain Bike, and other fabulous P rizes. 1015 South Rural at Lemon World/Nation S t a t e P ress Page 3 W ednesday, M arch 2 2,1995 4 p e o p le k ille d in h o ld u p a t N J . p o s t o f f ic e Gunman makes getaway; police scour city for suspect MONTCLAIR, N.J. (AP) — An after-hours hold-up at a post o ffice in an a fflu e n t N ew Y ork C ity su b urb on Tuesday left four people dead and another person critically wounded. The robber or robbers fled before police arrived. Police said at least four men w ere killed at the post office in the Watchung Plaza shopping district near a New Jersey Transit train station. All the victims were thought to be postal em ployees because the holdup occurred at just before 5 p.m., nearly an hour after the post office closed. Essex County Prosecutor Clifford Minor said. Police C hief Thomas Russo said a postal worker who entered the office a few minutes before the shootings called police to say he thought he saw someone lying on the floor. When police arrived, the shooting had already occurred and the attacker or attackers had fled. Howard Finney told WCBS Radio that he got off a com­ muter train and saw police with weapons drawn around the nearby post office. He said he watched as police knocked down the front door of the post office around 5:15 p.m. A few minutes later, he said, about 10 people left the post office or an adjacent doorw ay and were rushed down the street by authorities. He said one o f the w ounded was brought out on a stretcher about a half-hour later, carried to a nearby play­ ground and then evacuated by helicopter. A spokeswoman for University Hospital in Newark said a 44-year-old man was in critical condition with two gun­ shot wounds to the head. Bill Murphy, 25, an employee at Watchung Booksellers a few stores down from the post office, said he heard what may have been three, shots. “I didn’t know what they were. I thought it was a car backfiring. Then someone came in and told us what hap­ pened,” he said. A crowd quickly gathered on the street, he said. “People were crying afterward,” he said. Children and parents in a doctor’s office next door to the post office were kept inside by police for safety in the im m ediate afterm ath o f the shooting. W hen they were allowed to leave, some ran screaming from the office, giv­ ing rise to rumors that they had been hostages. > Postal inspector Peggy Hagar confirmed the deaths but would not comment on the circumstances of the shooting. Montclair, about 15 miles west of New York City, has about 38,000 residents. House GOP bloc torn over party’s ta x c r e d it s ta n c e Tw o policem en patrol the lobby of Haneda A irport in To kyo Tu esd ay. Ja p a n e se au tho rities step ped up se cu rity m easu res around the city in the w ake of M onday’s deadly nerve g a s attack, w hich h a s claim ed at le ast eight liv e s and sick e n e d m ore than 4,000. Religious group’s offices raided Group suspected o f making type o f gas used in fatal Tokyo attack TOKYO (AP) — Police in gas m asks and protective clothing raided the offices o f a secretive religious group Wednesday, two days after a nerve gas attack on Tokyo’s subway system killed eight people. Police faced little resistance as they started to enter Aum Shinri K yo's five-story building at about 6:15 a.m. in a quiet, partly commercial neighborhood of Tokyo. Some of those inside the building attempted to push police back. It w asn't immediately clear how the raid was related the subway attack. The group, previously accused of making the type of gas used in the attack M onday, has denied involvement. Police launched the raid as part of an investigation into the abduction of a public official last month. In the attack Monday, the poison gas identified by police as sarin was released simultaneously in several downtown Tokyo subway stations, including the one under the heart of Japan's government. About 700 people remained hospitalized, 75 of them in critical condition. * Police were also raiding or waiting tensely outside other buildings belonging to the group in other parts o f Japan. They were also in riot gear or gas masks. There was still no known motive, no claim of responsi­ bility and no arrests in one of the worst terrorist attacks in Japan. But authorities were said to have a suspect: a man eyewitnesses said planted one of the deadly parcels before being overcome by its fumes. The unidentified man was hospitalized and investigators were waiting until he recovered sufficiently to be ques­ tioned, Japanese new spaper and television reports said. Police would not comment. The three central Tokyo subway lines contaminated in the attack resumed full operation Tuesday after military chemical-warfare experts in masks and protective clothing sprayed chemicals in cars and platforms to neutralize the gas. Police said the substance was deadly sarin gas. Newspapers reported trading in the stock of a company that has a monopoly on gas mask manufacturing in Japan was 100 times above average on Thursday and Friday, the two trading days before the nerve gas attack. A spokesm an for the com pany, Shigem atsu W orks, called the trading “visibly unnatural” and was at a loss to explain it. M ore m ystery surrounded Aum S hinri Kyo, w hich denied again Tuesday it was involved in the attack. The group has been linked in news reports to several unex­ plained releases of irritating gases near its facilities and to several unsolved kidnappings. The Buddhist sect, which claim s 10,000 members in Japan, accused the government o f carrying out the subway attack as part o f a plot to blame the group and then suppress it--.' WASHINGTON (AP) — Breaking ranks on a key item in the “Contract With America;” nearly half the Republicans in the House called Tuesday for scaling back tax breaks intended for wealthier families. “I don’t think that’s out of the question,” conceded Speaker Newt Gingrich. The White House and congressional Democrats instantly renewed their attacks on Republicans as benefactors of the rich. “I can certainly understand their unease with ... regressive, trickle-down tax * policy,” taunted House Democratic leader DickA Gephardt of Missouri, who noted that Republicans also favor cuts in school lunch and other nutrition programs. ' ' - „ L r S', With the GOP tax-cut measure expected on the House floor next week, 102 Republican lawmakers cast their request to limit a $500-per-child tax credit as an effort' to plow more money into'deficit reduc­ tion. Even so, their proposal reflected a broader debate among majority Republicans in Congress — and White House hopefuls — of the prominence that tax cuts should receive in the coming months. As approved last week in the House Ways and Means Committee, the GOP tax bill would permit fam ilies earning up to $200,000 a year the full, $5Q0-per-child tax credit promised in the “Contract With America.” A letter from 102 of the 230 House Republicans calls for a vote on lowering the cap to $95,000. “Passage o f this amendment would still cover 85 percent o f the fam ilies in A m erica,” the group wrote. However, they wrote that it would also mean “an additional $12 billion to $14 billion in savings for deficit reduction.” The Republicans intend to bring the tax-cut mea­ sure to the floor at the same time as spending cuts to pay for it. The letter stands out as the most striking exam­ ple o f lawmakers using public pressure to force a key change in the “Contract W ith America” The letter was sent to Rep. Gerald Solomon, RN.Y., chairman o f the Rules Committee that will set dte rules fOr debate on die measure. S e v e ra l so u rc e s. sp eak in g on c o n d itio n o f am»iymity, said Gingrich ta d privately waved off Ig coifiec requests to scale back the tax break. House aides and lawmakers said support feu retaining the $200,000 level was particularly strong within the Christian Coalition. One aide said the inclusion of the $200,000 cap in the original bill was itself a compromise worked out with those who favored no limitation. G ingrich reacted m ildly, saying the letter is “helpful to get a sense o f ’ lawmakers’ views. As for the request itself, he added, “I don’t think that’s out of the question,” although he added no decision has been made. Among Republicans, the letter was the latest in an ongoing debate about the importance of tax cuts and deficit reduction. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, R-Oregon, said commitftee members had agreed at a bipartisan, weekend rdraM th at their principal emphasis would be on deficit reduction ,, . * But in a noontime speech at the National Press, Club, Sen. Phil Gramm o f Texas, a presidential Republicans, saying they returned to the Capitol “ddnlring and sounding Uke Democrats.” Opinion T ? S t a t e P ress W ednesday, M arch ’2 2, 1995 Page 4 P ress S tate ta itorial Terrifying world For all o f you who have read about, heard about or seen the terror that struck Tokyo sub­ way lines on Monday —- get used to it. » As the stability imposed by the Cold War continues to decline, w e’ve seen the rise o f old (and new) conflicts throughout die world. America has becom e inured to terrorism abroad, by and large: with only the occasional exception, it generally only happens to a few Americans and “foreigners,’’ a problem which few o f us face. Just as the Arab-lsraeli conflict spawned terrorism throughout W estern Europe and America, so does the Turkish-Kurd conflict, and the Wars o f the Successor states in thè Former Y ugoslavia and the Former S oviet v Union. -, And America is full o f nice, juicy targets. It’s not that d ifficu lt to sm u ggle bombs around the U nited States (as noted by the World Trade Center explosion) and that raises unsettling possibilities. If you can move SEMTEX underneath a heavily used building, how hard would it be to take a nerve gas on a New York subway“? Release para-anthrax into the streets o f Los Angeles? Did you know, for example, that most o f America’s traffic over the Mississippi is car­ ried on a handful o f bridges? Or that New York and Los Angeles depend on unguarded, vulnerable water systems? And the weapons o f terror aren’t always weapons o f war. I.e., iodine 131 is used for medical purposes, as is radioactive calcium; but in larger, uncontrolled doses, they can kill. Yet they rest largely in m edical fa cilities, often with poor security. Come from a poor terrorist group? Simply pack your terror weapon with a casing con­ taining nuclear waste (relatively easily avail­ able from a number o f sites), and watch the fear spread. Traditionally, terrorist groups have relied on relatively primitive weapons and devices, and have avoided m assive killings because their purpose isn ’t about killing; it’s about fear, media attention and a place on the world stage. But as technology becomes more diffused and if conflicts rise in volume, the possibility exists that the terror w ill spread. Ami even if political terrorist don’t choose to spread, there are always the nut cases e v e n tu a lly , a C o lin F ergeu son o r D a v id Koresh w ill obtain access to a basic chemical laboratory, and m ass murder can enter the next level through weapons o f mass destruc­ tion. • It’s tin » to wake up, America; w e’ve been lotted asleep by peace too long. 1 And the wake-up call’s a killer. STATE PRESS TAFF Lovers change, but does love? The first time I fell in love I learned about the girl. The second time 1 fell in love I learned about me. The third time 1 fell in love I learned what it is to love, but the woman didn’t love me back. 1 began four years of scholarly research on love to find out if 1 was right, and 1 learned far more than 1 ever expected. 1 found the study of love is like throwing a pebble into a pond with the rings coming out of the center. Each idea of love is like the first wave that pushes up the next wave or idea. Many interconnections occur, so limiting the conversation of love is very difficult. The most important thing 1 learned about love is how to pick a lover with whom you will be able to maintain a rela­ tionship over tim e., This is difficult because the only thing we positively know about the person we pick as a mate is that they are going to change. The most important quality a person must have to allow a relationship to survive in the face of change is compas­ sion. The lack of compassion makes beautiful people com­ mon and an abundance o f compassion makes the homely rare and beautiful. In his book. The Power o f Myth, Joseph Campbell, the mythology professor, said, “In the days of the troubadors the ladies of the court tested their men to see if they had a gentle heart, that is a heart capable o f love, not simply of lust. The idea of the gentle heart suggests ... compassion. Which means suffering with. The essential idea was to test this man to make sure that he would suffer things for love, and that this was not just lust.” David Schnarch, associate professor o f psychiatry at Louisiana State University, wrote in Psychology Today, “The end result o f a long-term loving marriage is pain and grief on a level that few of us are prepared to handle — that’s why there are more ‘bad’ marriages than good ones. Most o f us would rather live with ‘a pain in the ass’ than a pain in our heart. It’s riot the utilitarian marriages that are so hard to bear. It’s the really good ones that break your heart.” Campbell says, “The Puritans called marriage ‘the little church within the church.’ In marriage, every day you love, and every day you forgive. It is an ongoing sacrament — love and forgiveness.” It takes time sharing experiences with your lover to see if they are compassionate. A person is not compassionate if they only have love for their significant other because then it is a love o f compulsicgt, selfish in satisfying or complet­ ing some inadequacy in the lover. The one and only love is a love of compulsion, which is not a love that provides free­ dom for change in the beloved. It is static. The psycholo­ gist, Erich Fromm, said in his book The A rt o f Loving, “I love who you are right now because as you are, you com­ plete my life ... This attitude can be compared to that o f a man who wants to paint but who instead o f learning the art, claims that he has just to wait for the right object, and that he will paint beautifully when he finds it.” The real lover is always loving and is always compas­ sionate. C am pbell says som etim es no m atter how m uch one labors, love fails or falters: “the troubadors celebrated this agony of love because where your pain is, there is your life.” In the end, the pleasure is the journey that gets you there and w hat m akes the journey com fortable is your mate’s compassion. The looks, expressions, feeljngs and insights you share w ith your significant other is w hat shapes life and gives it meaning beyond the tangible. The pains and joys of love one experiences along the way is the richness of life, and the highs and lows of relationships are the markers to define and remember the path and oneself by. Daniel J. Blanco is senior journalism major. JASON OW SLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor NICHOLAS BACON ................... KRIS FRIDRICH............ . GARIN GROFF........................... GREG ZEME1DA.... DAVID LASPALUTO.... ... A MARJORY KAMINSKI........ ............... Opinion Editor JIM POULIN. ........ MARK KRAMER ........... .... JEREMY STEIN......................... d a n MILLER ............ •. •.... KEN COLLINS'............ ANNA ULINICH...............„..„-.......Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Kennes Bolig, Lisa Cary, Lome Cohen, Dawn D eC hristina, Patty King, Todd K elly, Betty Mihalopoulos, Angela Mull, David Proffitt, N. Scott Trimble, Kim Watson. SPORTS REPORTERS: Lee Newman, Damian Shaw, Headier Snow. COPY E D IT O R S: Bryn Chancellor, Kim Herm an, Elizabeth Montalbano. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dianne R. Bartsch, Samantha Feldman, Lance D. Terry. EDITORIAL WRITER: James Frusetta. CO LU M N ISTS: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Dan Blanco, Tori Evans, James Frusetta, Tins Holder, Barry Kelley, David Luna, Diana Lopez, Jim Mahin, Delia Maldonado, Greg Nigh. CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington* Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. PRODUCTION: Mark Abromorivitz, Aaron R. Brutcher, Beth French, Adrianná Garcia; Jodi Goldblatt, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. SALES REPRESEN TA TIV ES: Emily Berger, Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Christine Porreca, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor ; The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam peri­ ods. at M atthews Center, Room 1S, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information....... ...... 965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6735 World/Nation S t a t e P ress W ednesday, M arch 22, 1995 JP a g e ¿ 4 p e o p le k ille d in lio ld u p a t N .J. p o s t o f f ic e Gunman makes getaway; police scour city for suspect MONTCLAIR, N.J. (AP) — An after-hours hold-up at a post o ffic e in an a fflu e n t N ew Y ork C ity su b u rb on Tuesday left four people dead and another person critically wounded. The robber or robbers fled before police arrived. Police said at least four men w ere killed at the post office in the Watchung Plaza shopping district near a New Jersey Transit train station. All the victim s were thought to be postal em ployees because the holdup occurred at just before 5 p.m., nearly an hour after the post office closed, Essex County Prosecutor Clifford Minor said. Police Chief Thomas Russo said a postal worker who entered the office a few minutes before the shootings called police to say he thought he saw someone lying on the floor. When police arrived, the shooting had already occurred and the attacker or attackers had fled. Howard Finney told WCBS Radio that he got off a com­ muter train and saw police with weapons drawn around the nearby post office. He said he watched as police knocked down the front door of the post office around 5:15 p.m. A few minutes later, he said, about 10 people left the post office or an adjacent doorw ay and w ere rushed down the street by authorities. He said one o f the w ounded w as brought out on a stretcher about a half-hour later, carried to a nearby play­ ground and then evacuated by helicopter. A spokeswoman for University Hospital in Newark said a 44-year-old man was in critical condition with two gun­ shot wounds to the head. Bill Murphy, 25, an employee at Watchung Booksellers a few stores down from the post office, said he heard what may have been three shots. “I didn’t know what they were. I thought it was a car backfiring. Then someone came in and told us what hap­ pened,” he said. A crowd quickly gathered on the street, he said. “People were crying afterward,” he said. Children and parents in a doctor’s office next door to the post office were kept inside by police for safety in the im m ediate afterm ath o f the shooting. W hen they were allowed to leave, some ran screaming from the office, giv­ ing rise to rumors that they had been hostages. , Postal inspector Peggy Hagar confirmed the deaths but would not comment on the circumstances of the shooting. Montclair, about 15 miles west of New York City, has about 38,000 residents. House GOP bloc tom over party’s tax credit stance Tw o policem en patrol the lobby of H aneda Airport in To kyo T u esd ay. Ja p a n e se au th o rities stepped up se cu rity m easu res around the city in the w ake of M onday’s deadly nerve g a s attack, w hich h a s claim ed at le a st eight liv e s and sick e n e d m ore than 4,000. Religious group’s offices raided Group suspected o f making type o f gas used in fatal Tokyo attack TOKYO (AP) — Police in gas m asks and protective clothing raided the offices o f a secretive religious group Wednesday, two days after a nerve gas attack on Tokyo’s subway system killed eight people. Police faced little resistance as they started to enter Aum Shinri Kyo’s five-story building at about 6:15 a.m. in a qjiiet, partly commercial neighborhood of Tokyo. Some of those inside the building attempted to push police back. It w asn't immediately clear how the raid was related the subway attack. The group, previously accused of making the type o f gas used in the attack M onday, has denied involvement. Police launched the raid as part of an investigation into the abduction of a public official last month. In the attack Monday, the poison gas identified by police as sarin was released simultaneously in several downtown Tokyo subway stations, including the one under the heart of Japan's government. About 700 people remained hospitalized, 75 o f them in critical condition. Police were also raiding or waiting tensely outside other buildings belonging to the group in other parts o f Japan. They were also in riot gear or gas masks. There was still no known motive, no claim of responsi­ bility and no arrests in one o f the worst terrorist attacks in Japan. But authorities were said to have a suspect: a man eyewitnesses said planted one of the deadly parcels before being overcome by its fumes. The unidentified man was hospitalized and investigators were waiting until he recovered sufficiently to be ques­ tioned, Japanese newspaper and television reports said. Police would not comment. The three central Tokyo subway lines contaminated in the attack resumed full operation Tuesday after military chemical-warfare experts in masks and protective clothing sprayed chemicals in cars and platforms to neutralize the gas. Police said the substance was deadly sarin gas. Newspapers reported trading in the stock of a company that has a monopoly on gas mask manufacturing in Japan was 100 times above average on Thursday and Friday, the two trading days before the nerve gas attack. A spokesm an for the com pany, Shigem atsu W orks, called the trading “visibly unnatural” and was at a loss to explain it. M ore m ystery surrounded A um Shinri Kyo, w hich denied again Tuesday it was involved in the attack. The group has been linked in news reports to several unex­ plained releases of irritating gases near its facilities and to several unsolved kidnappings. The Buddhist sect, which claim s 10,000 members in Japan, accused the government o f carrying out the subway attack as part o f a plot to blame the group and then suppress it. WASHINGTON (AP) — Breaking ranks on a key item in the “Contract With America,” nearly half the Republicans in the House called Tuesday for scaling back tax breaks intended for wealthier families. “I don’t think that’s out of the question,” conceded Speaker Newt Gingrich. The W hitt House and congressional Democrats instantly renewed their attacks ort Republicans as , benefactors o f the rich. “I can certainly understand their unease with ... regressive, trickle-down tax policy,” taunted House Democratic leader Dick Gephardt o f Missouri, who noted that Republicans also favor cuts in school lunch and other nutrition programs. With the GOP tax-cut measure expected on the House floor next week, 102 Republican lawmakers cast their request to limit a $500-per-child tax credit as an effort to plow more money into deficit reduc­ tion. Even so, their proposal reflected a broader debate among majority Republicans in Congress — and White House hopefuls — o f the prominence that tax cuts should receive in the coming months. As approved last week in the House Ways and Means Committee, the GOP tax bill would permit families earning up to $200,000 a year the full, $500-per-child tax credit promised in the “Contract With America.” A letter from 102 o f the 230 House Republicans calls for a vote on lowering the cap to $95,000. “Passage of this amendment would still cover 85 percent o f the fam ilies in A m erica,” the group wrote. However, they wrote that it would also mean “an additional $12 billion to $14 billion in savings for deficit reduction.” The Republicans intend to bring the tax-cut mea­ sure to the floor at the same time as spending cuts to pay for it. The letter stands out as the most striking exam­ p le o f lawmakers using public pressure to force a keychangéiu the “ConttactW ith America.” The letter was sent to Rep- Gerald Solomon, RM ifl, chairman o f die Rules Committee that will set d ie n te s for debate on the measure. S ev eral so u rc e s, speak in g o n c o n d itio n o f anonymity, said Gingrich had privately waved off earlier requests ip. scale back the tax break. House aides and lawmakers said support for retaining the $200,000 level was particularly strong within the Christian Coalition. One aide said the inclusion of the $200,000 cap in the original bill was itself a compromise worked out with those who favored no limitation. G ingrich reacted m ildly, saying the letter is “helpful to get a sense o f ’ lawmakers' views. As for the request itself, he added, ‘T don’t think that’s out o f the question,” although he added no decision has been made Among Republicans, the letter was the latest in an ongoing debate about the importance of tax cuts and deficit reduction. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, R-Oregon, said commit­ tee members had agreed at a bipartisan, weekend retreat that their principal emphasis would be on deficit reduction. But in a noontime speech at the National Press C lub, Sen Phil Gramm o f Texas, a presidential h o p e fu l, re fe rre d b itia g ly to som e fello w Republicans, saying they retufned to the Capitol "dtiaktog and sounding tike Democrats.” Opinion Page 4 ________________________ . Wednesday, March Terrifying world For all o f you who have read about, heard about or seen the terror that struck Tokyo sub­ way lines on Monday — get used to it. As the stability imposed by the Cold War continues to decline, w e’ve seen the rise of old (and new) conflicts throughout the world. America has becom e inured to terrorism abroad, by and large; with only the occasional exception, it generally only happens to a few Americans and “foreigners,” a problem which few o f us face. Just as the Arab-Israeli conflict spawned terrorism throughout Western Europe arid America, so does the Turkish-Kurd conflict, and the Wars o f the Successor states in the Former Yugoslavia and the Former S oviet Union. And America is full o f niee, juicy targets. It’s not that d ifficu lt to sm uggle bombs around the Uriited States (as noted by the World Trade Center explosion) and that raises unsettling possibilities. If you can move SEMTEX underneath a heavily used building, how hard would it be to take a nerve gas on a New York subway? Release para-anthrax into the streets o f Los Angeles? Did you know, for example, that most o f America’s traffic over the Mississippi is car­ ried on a handful o f bridges? Or that New York and Los Angeles depend on unguarded, vulnerable water systems? And the weapons o f terror aren’t always weapons o f war. Le., iodine 131 is used for medical purposes, as is radioactive calcium; but in larger, uncontrolled doses, they can kill. Yet they rest largely in m edical fa cilities, often with poor security. Come from a poor terrorist group? Simply pack your terror weapon with a casing con­ taining nuclear waste (relatively easily avail­ able from a number o f sites), and watch the fear spread. Traditionally, terrorist groups have relied on relatively primitive weapons and devices, and have avoided massive killings because their purpose isn ’t about killing; it’s about fear, media attention and a place on the world stage. B ut as technology becomes more diffused and if conflicts rise in volume, the possibility exists that die terror will spread. And even if political terrorist don’t choose to spread, there are always the nut cases — e v e n tu a lly , a C o lin F ergeu son or D avid Koresh will obtain access to a basic chemical laboratory, and m ass murder can enter the next level through weapons o f mass destruc­ tion. It’s time to wake up, America; w e’ve been lulled asleep by peace n m long; And the wake-up call’s a killer. STATE PRESS ■ I A T L Lovers change, h u t does love? The first tim e 1 fell in love I learned about the girl. The second time I fell in love I learned about me. The third time I fell in love I learned what it is to love, but the woman didn't love me back. 1 began four years of scholarly research on love to find out if I was right, and I learned far more than 1 ever expected. 1 found the study of love is like throwing a pebble into a pond with the rings coming out o f the center. Each idea of love is like the first wave that pushes up the next wave or idea. Many interconnections occur, so limiting the conversation of love is very difficult. The most important thing I learned about love is how to pick a lover with whom you will be able to maintain a rela­ tionship over time. This is difficult because the only thing we positively know about the person we pick as a mate is that they are going to change. The most important quality a person must have to allow a relationship to survive in the face of change is compas­ sion. The lack of compassion makes beautiful people com­ mon and an abundance of compassion makes the homely rare arid beautiful. In his book, The Power o f Myth, Joseph Campbell, the mythology professor, said, “In the days of the troubadors the ladies of the court tested their men to see if they had a gentle heart, that is a heart capable of love, not simply of lust. The idea of the gentle heart suggests ... compassion. Which means suffering with. The essential idea was to test this man to make sure that he would suffer things for love, and that this was not just lust.” David Schnarch, associate professor o f psychiatry at Louisiana State University, wrote in Psychology Today, “The end result of a long-term loving marriage is pain and grief on a level that few o f us are prepared to handle —- that’s why there are more "bad’ marriages than good ones. Most of us would rather live with ‘a pain in the ass’ than a pain in our heart. It’s not the utilitarian marriages that are so hard to bear. It’s the really good ones that break your heart.” Campbell says, “The Puritans called marriage "the little church within the church.’ In marriage, every day you love, and every day you forgive. It is an ongoing sacrament — love and forgiveness.” It takes time sharing experiences with your lover to see if they are compassionate. A person is not compassionate if they only have love for their significant other because then it is a love of compulsion, selfish in satisfying or complet­ ing some inadequacy in the lover. The one and only love is a love of compulsion, which is not a love that provides free­ dom for change in the beloved. It is static. The psycholo­ gist, Erich Fromm, said in his book The Art o f Loving, “I love who you are right now because as you are, you com­ plete my life ... This attitude can be compared to that of a man who wants to paint but who instead of learning the art, claims that he has just to wait for the right object, and that he will paint beautifully when he finds it.” The real lover is always loving and is always compas­ sionate. C am pbell says som etim es no m atter how much one labors, love fails or falters: “the troubadors celebrated this agony o f love because where your pain is, there is your life.” In the end, the pleasure is the journey that gets you there and what m akes the journey com fortable is your m ate’s compassion. The looks, expressions, feelings and insights you share w ith your significant other is w hat shapes life and gives it meaning beyond the tangible. The pains and joys of love one experiences along the way is the richness o f life, and the highs and lows of relationships are the markers to define and remember the path and oneself by, Daniel J. Blanco is senior journalism major. JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor NICHOLAS BACON.......................................Night Editor KRIS FRIDRICH..............................................Night Editor GARIN GROFF..................................................City Editor GREG ZEMEIDA......................... ...........Asst. City Editor DAVID LASPALUTO............................. News Editor A. MARJORY KAMINSKI......................... Opinion Editor JIM POULIN....................................................Photo Editor MARK KRAMER....... ...........Asst. Photo Editor JEREMY STEIN......... ................................. Sports Editor DAN MILLER.......................................Asst. Sports Editor KEN COLLINS................................. ..Magazine Editor ANNA ULINICH.... ....... .... Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Kennes Bolig, Lisa Cary, Lorrie Cohen, Dawn D eC hristina, Patty King, Todd Kelly. Betty Mihalopoulos. Angela Mull, David Proffitt, N. Scott Trimble. Kim Watson. SPORTS REPORTERS: Lee Newman, Damian Shaw, Heather Snow. CO PY ED IT O R S: Bryn Chancellor, Kim Herman. Elizabeth Montalbano. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dianne R. Bartsch, Samantha Feldman. Lance D. Terry. EDITORIAL WRITER: James Fruseaa. COLUM NISTS: Brian Anderson. Tim Baxter. Dan Blanco, Tori Evans, James Frusetta. Tina Holder, Barry Kelley, David Luna. Diana Lopez. Jim Mahin, Delia Maldonado, Greg Nigh. CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmsledt, Bryce Morgan. PRODUCTION: Mark Abromorivitz, Aaron R. Bratcher. Beth French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, pave Weber. SA LES REPRESEN TA TIV ES: Emily Berger, Dan EUstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jelium. Christine Porreca, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the Slate Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The Slate Press is published Monday through Friday . during the academic year, except holidays and exam peri­ ods, at Matthews C enter, Room IS, Arizona State University. Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The 'State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information.............. 965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine.............. ...965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6735 Opinion STATE PRESS Wednesday, March 22, 1995 Kelley gets to point o f guns, personal defense Barry R. Kelley's column, “Is that a pistol in your pocket...” in the March 9 edition of the State Press was like a pair of scis­ sors in a red-tape world. Bravo to Kelly, for he’s cut right to the point: We all need a true means of personal defense, and there will never be adequate security for us to leave our fate up to oth­ ers. While Kelley seems especially concerned about preventing the victimization of women, other sections of tire State Press fall out of step. Only a few pages after Kelley's article there is a huge ad for Playboy. How exactly does Playboy stop victimization and objectification of women? It doesn't and the State Press does not have to accept all of the advertising requests that it receives. There is already an abundant supply. Come on editors, you’re better than that! Until the State Press builds the courage to say no. we shall have to protect our own ethics from trashy advertisements by cutting out such ads personally. Yes, we need plenty of school supplies here at ASU — hand­ guns to halt victimization and scissors to stop objectification. Adaiii Nogaki Junior Manufacturing Engineering However... Congratulations. Bam R. Kelley, for stepping forward as this week's Store Press resident ignoramus. His article “Is that a pis­ tol in your pocket...” in the March' 9 paper was a model of misin­ formation and unfounded logic. An honorable mention goes to Stacy Holmstedt for her idiotic cartoon accompanying Barry’s article. . Kelley begins his article by stating the inane argument that all gun activists use — that because enforcement of a gun ban is dif­ ficult, criminals will always be able to get them. By this logic, we shouldn't have speed limits on our highways. I mean, they're dif­ ficult to enforce, aren't they? People speed anyway, don't they? Iif reality, the enforcement of traffic laws, however difficult, dis­ courages speeding and saves lives. Prostitution is also difficult to eliminate by enforcement of the laws prohibiting it. Why then are these laws still on the books? Because as a society, we've decided that prostitution is harmful to women and (dare 1 say it?) immoral. As a community, we have also decided that guns and other weapons on campus are more of a threat than a deterrent. First of all, guns don’t protect women from rape. In fact, guns lead to the murder of the victims who cany them. Let me illus­ trate my point with a challenge. Bany (or Stacy), I’ll give you five feet of space and die handgun erf your choice. I’ll approach you from behind, armed only with a three-inch pocketknife. I’m willing to bet my life that you’ll never get to use your weapon. Why am I so sure? Because that handgun will be stowed in your backpack (or in Stacy’s case, her purse), and in the time it takes you to recognize me as a threat, retrieve your weapon, turn around and aim it at me. I'll have already sUt your throat. You see, I am a criminal, experienced if not trained in the use of a knife. I have the initiative. You are a surprised and frightened cit­ izen with a handgun that you may not even know how to proper­ ly use. And as you lie there, in a pool of your own sticky blood, you can wonder why you didn’t obey die ASU weapons ban. You can wonder why, instead of being robbed or raped, you are now gasping for your last breath of air (Surprise! I was only a serial rapist/burglar!). Kelley may here retort that other aimed citizens would come to his rescue. Are you so sure? The Feb. 21 rape had no witness­ es besides the victim. Besides, in a densely-packed campus where thousands of students crowd the malls, do we really want some vigilante shooting randomly at your attacker? Even if this vigilante were to shoot me, if he uses the Colt .45 firearm that Holmstedt depicted, there is a good chance that the bullet will keep on going. I’m not going to rise to the level of Kelley’s arrogance (or ignorance) and pretend that 1 have the solution. Perhaps we can expand the Safety Escort Service and extend their hours. Perhaps we could spend some of our massive budget to beef up DPS and ensure that there are always armed officers arodhd when crimes such as rape are more likely to occur. Barry, I ‘m proud of the fact that I live in a free country. However, the opportunity cost of freedom is that individuals are going to abuse that freedom and be anti-social. A mass arming will not prevent these individuals from perpetrating their offens­ es. But, if guns (and other weapons) are harder to get and illegal to cany, fewer criminals will risk concealing them and using toem. Alfredo Velez Sophomore Zoology/Pre-Med r etters to the editor S ta to Itess th » «neo*»» and eacourB#es wnttea le^oas* from <*r «Mito* #a any tone. AN te» e n aw « be typed, doubie-sp»c«d w d so teaser I t o two m e s to be eligible tor publication Please include your full name, cl»M standing. ~ .jn r (or any « h er affiliation with the University) and phone number Only Omm * tenu» sM te a¡wi Urwi *a | »W wltw I n inmr-* —*v -■**• " T T T " * “ •— *** ****"* *** ■■»■te-«* ■» o p in io n page editor for factual errors and print spece availability. Lettere con­ fin in e cK S a e taewat errors will he rejected AH letters mua etdwr be brought W B«nao WMb a photo t o . to the State P nss front desk In the basement of the CeoteToTaddressed <0 Store Press, A m «71302. Arizona State L etters t o the E d it o r E D U - Internet: ICJBO@ ASUVM.INRE.ASU E -m ail: ICJBO@ASUACAD M ailing Address: State Press Box 871502 Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 To write something against art is hypocritical Every day I read something in the State Press (which may even be considered a waste of money, paper and ink) which presses the trivia to the page. For Jim Mahin in his column in the March 10 issue to accuse art itself through writing, a medium with direct lineage to art, is sacrilegious. He m ight as well have urinated in a ja r containing the image of Rush Limbaugh. To endorse written language by any form o f taxation, however indirectly, is wasteful. This kind of commentary is paid for, in part, by my tuition money, which in turn helps to pay for the classes which excite feeble thoughts to go into print and creativity fester below echoes o f N ew t Gingrich for a brighter America. Art is to blame for enabling the image of Mahin to be captured by photography and regurgitated alongside his plan for tax revision. Yes, Jim is a political science major. With these kind o f political hopefuls, it stands to reason that this country is $5 trillion in debt. Edmund J. Orr Jr. Senior Photography Q: uotaóles. . . Peap/tfirtm coasts /¡ t, sap/tygos (eoi /¡de a ita ci, it/c/fi geo. dee t. tfoa io ti, fida a ita ci ¡fi tic ita ci tire» tp t t itsc/fia ed ti/tic uttee cetu/cdtutg it ficee uddisposi. - David LaSpaiate, News Editor, on the desert Liberals are reason for conservatives’ success The wheels on the new conservative revolution are spinning fast. After forty years of tax and spend and big government lib­ erals, the people have finally seen the light. Authors like W illiam Bennett, Richard Herrnstein, Charles Murray and Newt Gingrich have been at the top of the best selling chart for the past couple of years. Talk show hosts like Rush Limbaugh and Ken Hamblin have been reporting a larger share of the market. Subscriptions to National Review and Conservative Chronicle arc at their all-time high. America has opened its eyes. The reason for the conservatives’ great success is that people like columnist Christina Bailey exist. She and other liberals believe the only way to help someone is to give them money. These people subscribe to the theory that society needs its “Big Brothef” or big government. What they need to realize is that money isn’t the solution to every problem. If it was, the country wouldn’t need welfare. Since Lyndon Johnson enacted his Great Society program, the United States has poured over S4 trillion into welfare. This spending has resulted in nothing. Conservatives say it isn’t working and get labeled cruel, cold-hearted uncaring and racist, It is time for people like Bailey to research the issues instead of trying to “move people into action.” If she did her home­ work, she would have seen that spending on school lunch and breakfast problems will actually increase by four percent this year. Under the Contract With America, the state and local gov­ ernments will be given control over the people. I commend Bailey’s research on affirmative action, but change doesn’t occur overnight. Until the time comes that it’s ingrained into every child in America that education is the key to success, there won’t be a level playing field. I condemn Bailey's stance on affirmative action. All it truly, is is anothér form of discrimination. I believe Martin Luther King Jr. would roll over in his grave if he saw what’s happen­ ing today. I don’t recall him saying in his letter from a Birmingham jail that he dreams of a day when his children are playing with exactly 1/2 white children, 1/4 Hispanic children, 1/8 Asian children and 1/8 black children. My suggestion to Bailey is to dig deep into her soul and find the real reason she wants to become a journalist. I believe she’ll see that “moving people into action” isn’t the most important goal, but opening people’s minds and eyes to events that occur across our country and world. It has never been one’s writing that has caused action. It’s writing that opens one’s mind. Gregg Pekau Senior Economics State Press seems oblivious to ASU Greek system During my two years here, I have always been fascinated by the State Press staff. I am not sure whether it is their severe lack of attention to detail, their ability to tell only partial truths or their blatant hypocrisy when it comes to advertising. I think that together they make for one fine assembly o f journalistic skills. This year’s fall semester they managed to run a picture of Lambda Chi Alpha’s watermelon bust in which the cap­ tion told how many pounds o f watermelons were just wast­ ed by the event. However, there was no mention of the what it was or why it was done, insinuating that there was no real reason for it. A little investigative reporting on the part of the photographer would have revealed that in fact there was a reason: It was a philanthropic event done in order to raise money for charity. M aybe that would have made a good article to have reported. The fabled elitism o f the Greek system doing good for the community. This semester they ran a picture depicting Delta Sigma Phi’s trash dumpster empty, but sur­ rounded by trash. The caption also read that there were reportedly a few students picking up the trash two hours after the pictures were taken, failing to comment on one aspect of who those stiylents were. They were A.J. Brown, Matt Herman, Brady Lamar and Tim Roos, students at ASU as well as member of Delta Sigma Phi. An article later ran explaining what had happened but not actually reporting on how the mess was created. Regardless o f what the expert claimed the homeless have tendencies to and not to do, it was caused by homeless peo­ ple going through the trash. If you still find this hard to believe, contact Brady Lamar who has pictures of the event taking place. On March 9, a cartoon ran in response to Sigma Pi’s rush flyers. As tasteless as they may have been, it was just following the logic that sex sells. Granted, their flyers did not depict this, but Sigma Pi’s fraternity is heavily based on service to the community. I am sure that if one were to con­ tact a few of the members o f this fraternity, you would be able to report on that as Well. Not to mention that the car­ toon by Brian Fairrington, as humorous as it may seem, is not realistically based. First o f all, fraternities are not allowed to use kegs in their parties. This was decided by. G.A.A.R.P. a few years back and has been in effect ever since. Secondly, there is no one that 1 am aware o f in the Greek system who subscribes to an X-rated internet — I didn’t even know it was a con­ cern for this campus. Thirdly, there is a sheep in the car­ toon. This is downright disgusting. This holds on to outdat­ ed rumors o f hazing that most probably never existed on this campus. In fact, if you look, the last confirmed report of hazing occurred when ATO was still on campus and it was from a pledge passing out while mowing the lawn. This representation of the Greek system is just another example o f the long line of unbased, non-factual slams on the Greek system. So how is this hypocritical? Periodically, an ad runs in the classifieds saying that the State Press advertising loves Greeks. It should read that the State Press advertising loves Greek money. This hypocritical nature does not stop there, either. For weeks now, articles about the degradation of w om en at the re sta u ra n t H ooters have been running. Continual comments on how these scantily-clad women bring down the moral fiber of society and how it would be a travesty to allow this business to open near the ASU cam­ pus, at least nearer than the one in Phoenix, are mentioned. Whether or not I agree with you, at least these women are clothed. March 9 an advertisement ran for Playboy. The original m en ’s m agazine that shows wom en even less clothed than at Hooters. Again, they don’t seem to mind when it is paying the bills to keep this paper in operation. My point here is simple. For a newspaper that tries to pride itself on such responsible journalism , you should practice what you preach and make sure that you do actual­ ly find out the who, what, where, how and why of the situa­ tion — all of them — and not just the ones that fit the per­ ception you would like to give. In addition, you should stand by your convictions. If you want to persuade people to believe the same things you do, you shouldn’t turn around and allow the institutions you are trying to under­ mine to advertise in your paper, let alone going and asking them for their business. Basically, I am asking for a little more responsibility and consistency in your reportirlg. Chris Ahlswede Sophomore Political Science W ednesday, M arch 22, 1995 S t a t e P ress Photo courtesy AP ^ ¡ g UmBpIport of the Sun Devils action as it happens sl^ ffi^ ^ tareen TV from the U niversity A ctivity Center!! o p y n a t 7 p .|tv .J H a n d s w ill be o p en |A S U P u b lic E v e n ts Q Page_7 W ednesday, M arch 2 2,1995 S t a t e P ress o s t a ^ i c a Call | Now!!! 1-800-765-0025 IS L S Pont let the opportunity of a lifetime pass you byl Round trip from Phoenix A Thursday Night Bible Study Vacation while learning Spanish Thinking about what to do with your sum­ mer vacation? Why not spend it in a tropi­ cal location, doing something that you can justify to your parents? Learn Spanish! The. Institute for Spanish Language Studies has 5 different Total Immersion Schools to choose from. Live with a Costa Rican family and study with stu­ dents from all around the world. With different locations and price packages, yout. satisfaction is guaranteed! SPECIAL STUDENT FARES ÜNdERSTANdiNq f h f B ib U Sponsor: Christian Students Fellow ship Place: Tem pe W oman's Club 1290 S . Mill Ave. (Across from Gammags Auditorium) L O N D O N ........................... .612 AM STERDAM ................... 672 T O K Y O .....................................699 O S A K A ........... ......699 C A B O SAN L U C A S ........ ...230 PUERTO V A LLA R T A ............ 280 NEW Y O R K ................................ 298 ST. L O U I S ........................ .219 H O U S T O N ............... ...............198 Subject: Phil. — .2 Th éss. Time: 7:00 p.m. Speaker: BUI Freem an Philippians to 2T h essalo n ians Date Subject Book & Chapter Mar. 2 3 ..-..,... W hat O ur Response«Tett Ue — ... 1 T h e se. 1 3 0 ...........What Is Our Value System ..................1Thess. 2 April 6 ............ Having a Blam eless H e art................1 Thess. 3 1 3 .........The Will of God in Our L iv e s........ .......1 Thess. 4 F R A N K F U R T ............... ........7 1 3 570 P A R IS ............................. B A N G K O K ................................869 S E O U L .............................. 799 M EX IC O C I T Y .................... 324 M A N Z A N I L L O ........... ...3 3 8 C H I C A G O ..............................178 N EW O R L E A N S .................... 249 P O R T L A N D ................... 168 Other Cities Available M ILL AVEN UE TR A V EL 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 Christian Students Fellowship Discounts Also Available To Faculty & Staff For further information call 948-4488 Restrictions Apply. Subject to Availability. W ANT TO: * Earn $10 to $20 an hour? 1 D O LLA R P IT C H E R S * Be able to work when you don’t have class? * Work full or part time? IARTEND1H6 ACADEMY 921-9925 1 2 5 0 E* A P A C H E # 1 0 8 I F IN A LLY -A S W IM S U IT T H A T FITS A N D IS A FFO R D A BLE W h e n I t F it s , I t F la t t e r s Gregg Rothman M atching A ccessories • U nderw ires • Separates R eady-M ade S uits • G ift C ertificates • VS/M C 9 DOMESTIC 480Z. PITCHERS 715 SOUTH McCLINTOCK »TEMPE, AZ 85281 • 966-1911 SYSTEM S 7030 FIFTH A VEN U E #1 • SC O T TSD A LE, AZ 85251 (602)941-2099 S t a t e P ress Hayden, N oble libraries extend hours for semester due to survey would prefer,” she said. “Hours later at night were ranked first, with earlier hours It is a bookw orm ’s and studyaholic's on Sunday morning second, and the third c h o ic e w as c lo sin g la te r on S atu rd ay dream come true — more library hours. Hayden and Noble library hours have night.” Conrow said the first choice of students, been extended by 4.5 hours a week Id m eet the needs of ASU students for the remain­ an increase of 12.5 hours per week, was not possible because of the cost, $153,000. ing eight weeks of the spring semester. But Provost M ilton Glick was able to The libraries are now open 10 a.m. to find enough funds, about $3,000, to extend m id n ig h t S u n d a y , 7 a.m . to m id n ig h t h o u rs u n til th e end o f th e se m e ste r, M onday through T hursday, 7 a.m . to 7 Conrow said. That figure does not include p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. additional costs for Facilities Management The longer hours were prompted by a and ASU’s Department of Public Safety. su rv e y c o n d u c te d la s t fa ll by th e Conrow said she wanted to implement A ssociated Students o f ASU U niversity . Services Com m ittee and library officials. the new h o u rs as soon as p o s s ib le to In the poll, students were asked to rank accommodate students. “It took less than a month after the data their preferences for when to extend hours, sa id Ja n e C o n ro w . a s s o c ia te d ean o f was collected and analyzed to put the new hours into effect," she said. “We realize libraries. “About 1.500 students responded, giv­ that not everyone will be happy, but we > ing us useful information on what students will renegotiate next year.” OPEN FORUM Join m em bers o f the University Com m unity ' . to m e e t additional ca n d id a tes for the position o f . «ixecutive D irector o f th e ASUAIum ni Association y B y K im W atson S ta t e P ress B a c *. ' W ednesday, M arch 22, 4:00 to 5:30 pm Arizona State University C lub * ¥ DOLBERfT M M B M B i Friday. M arch 24. 3:30 to 5:00 p m Arizona State University Club a d d itio n a l in fo r m a tio n , c a ll D o ttle K o b ik, O ffic e o f In s titu tio n a l A d v a n c e m e n t a t 5 -4 9 8 0 . V . mu te s.,m imm wm&. St ate P ress C la s s if ie d s - w e ’r e a lw a y s in t h e b a c k . «8« » «§11 IlllPlPÖ ÜB® m If 2 0 % O FF ALL C H A M P IO N MERCHANDISE m m . D.U.I. L Buy now and save! Sw eats • Shorts • T-Shirts, etc. y o u 'r e R g lp iffT g lS P O TH ER ’S B O O K S T O R E IN C L A S S , Y O U R C O L L E G E B O O K ST O R E c a ll fo r fr e e p h o n e c o n s u lt a t io n Y lt iR B S S lG 625 E. A p a c h e • 967-5445 Andy Gastelum TRO U BLE. • C r im in a l C h a r g e s • I n j u r ie s fr o m N e g li g e n c e Thanks for shopping at Rothers! '•Rem em ber Rother's when you sell your books - Highest p rices palcL _____ 252-0312 F o r m e r M u n i c ip a l J u d g e DO YOU NEED HELP PAYING OFF SPRING BREAK? REMEMBER THOSE BILLS COME IN 30 DAYS. T m ~TT THE ASU TELEFUND IS NOW HIRING!! • s5.50 TO START + BONUSES •ONLY REQUIRED TO WORK 10 HOURS A WEEK •CHOOSE YOUR SCHEDULE H ave A F u n n e r S u m m e r The only w ay to have m ore fun this sum m er other than sw im m ing, laying out, playing sand volleyball and m eeting new friends, is to have them all in one place. The Com mons. A nd w e're only 2 blocks from cam pus. Call us or come by today, w e are currently accepting applications for a funner summer. ■ fully furnished • spacious 2 bedrooms, 2 full bath suites • ■ large heated pool with jacuzzi* washer & dryer in each suite * ■ large kitchen with microwave, dishwasher & disposal • regulation sand volleyball court ■ ■ racquetball court, weight room & sauna ■ planned sodal activities ■ ■ roommate matching service ■ wMking distance to Campus ■ 3® 829-0933 2 Blocks from ASU CALL 965-6754 I ll T H E IIJ COMMONS T, MEMBERS ONLY f 1111E. Apache Tempe, AZ Page 9 W ednesday, M arch 22, Ì9 9 5 S t a t e P ress Ä PIIO N , STATE UNIVERSITY 3T A T E P r ess "I told you, you should have stayed in bed." -S tate Press Horoscopes, In the classified section. >1xtell__________ ; New Standards In Fixed A sset Management A xtell is the em erging w orld leader in bringing innovative solutions to organiza­ tions' dynamic asset management needs. - Axtell integrates extensive business expertise w ith the latest software and com puting technologies to provide a total solution to our diems. Axtell offers unique, challenging opportu­ nities in consulting services and product development to graduating students with the following backgrounds: Accounting • CIS/DIS CS/CSE • Master of Taxation C hicken pox gets its w ings clipped New vaccine may eliminate disease; ASU to offer it in April or May By N. S c o tt St P ress T r im b l e The last survivor of the childhood diseases may soon become a thing of the past — vaccination for chicken pox is on its way. The vaccination for the varicella virus that causes chick­ en pox, which recently the won o f approval by the Food and Drug Adm inistration, is expected to be available at ASU’s Student Health Center in April or May. The immunization, called Varivax, was developed by Merck and Company, who has researched a cure for the stubborn disease for more than a decade. Chicken pox affects 3.7 million people annually in the United States. Ninety percent o f those affected are under the age o f 15, said Gil M eza, spokesm an for A rizona’s branch of the FDA. Typical symptoms include 200 to 500 lesions through­ out die body, fever and loss o f appetite. Adults who contract the disease are 10 times rtiore likely than children to experience more severe symptoms. The ASU Student Health Center has treated 12 students with chicken pox since September, said Linda McNiel, a nurse at the Student Health Center. She said ASU will probably offer the vaccine when it is first distributed in April or May. “We have only seen normal occurrences of the disease, W e will be on campus; Tuesday, March 2 8 , 8 0 4 -0 9 9 9 k il o w a t t s P izzeria & D eli Group Meeting 6:30-7;30pm, M.U. Rm. 224. WEDNESDAYS: Wednesday, March 31, Interviews Ham-4:15pm a te %‘ | TWO !6" ONE-ITEM PIZZAS Inquiries please contact: A xtell (602) 255-0508 l Mary Waldron X -l21 $ 1295 ' I ? Two Subs, Two Chips, Two Sodas... -7s* i t6" One-item Pizza... *8** j F ree D e l iv e r y INTELLIGENTSELF-DEFENSEPRESENTS: mok-fr. n -s nothing extreme,” she said. Annually, about 90 people die in the United States from chicken pox and about 9,300 are hospitalized in serious condi­ tion. Most of the deaths and complications arise from victims who have immune deficiencies as a result of chemical or hered­ itary agents, said Kim Bradley, a spokeswoman for Merck. Chicken pox traditionally has been considered nothing more than a nuisance, but concern to finally find a cure resulted from the financial burden o f victims taking off school or work and the number o f extreme cases in which victims have become seriously ill or killed, Bradley said. “A routine chicken pox vaccination would save the U.S. $384 million annually,” she said. Children from 12 months to 12 years can be immunized by receiving one injection of the new vaccine, while teens and adults receive two injections four to eight Weeks apart. The projected cost for inoculations is $35, Bradley said. Side effects o f the vaccine in some patients have been mild cases of rash and pain localized in the injection area. More extreme effects have been localized areas of blisters and nausea, M eza said. Neither the FDA nor Merck can say just how long the inoculations will last. The FDA has established a commit­ tee to research the longevity o f the vaccine and whether it should be listed among the required vaccines like mumps and measles, M eza said. “I think eventually we will see it with the other required vaccines,” M cNiel said. “Chicken pox is the last o f the childhood diseases.” 1ST UDENT TRAVEL T h e w o rld 's la r g e s t s t u d e n t a n d y o u th tr a v e l o r g a n iz a tio n . 800-777-0112Æ i LOOKING FOR THE BEST? IT'S HERE! AWIMMrSPUCE ISINCONTROL! Featuring M IKE HAYASHI Self-Defense Expert and 3rd Degree Blackbelt Star of “Take Control" Self-Defense Saturday With Mary Jo West! Nationally acclaim ed personal safety instructor, Mike Hayashi has trained 250,000 people like you at over 300 com panies including: Apple Computer, Motorola. Blue Cross/Blue Shield, U S W est, Honeywell and AT& T O v er 3 0 0 T V A p p earan ces o n e ra » "In cred ib le! A Lottery w as needed to h and le aH th e req u ests!" -Pat M ancini, B lu e CrossVBIue S h ie ld "Inform ative, entertaining , arid tim ely for all w o m e n !"-T e ss N elsen , U S W est 7 Areas ef Focus at All 4 Sessions S I Self-esteem, self-reliance 0 Proactive & assertive mind-set ig Physical defense techniques 0 How.to control FEAR & PANIC 0 Njon vertx* com m unication skills • improvised weapons demos • prevention, awareness, & evasion Fret Self-Defense Workbooks Included . N ortheast Corner Dobson & M ain T R I-C IT Y M A U L 1982 W. M ain S t. M esa 827-8144 _____ c o n n u FEW Sun.-Thurs. H a m - 10pm F ri.-Sat. lla m - llp m DONTl i m e r a i ! e e n m bs ra u n o m Attendance Limited to 300 per session Call to Reserve Yout Seat NOW! For INFO Call 905-2007 Admission $20.00 ($25 Day of Event] Visa-MC-Amex 4 Sessions To Choose From: Sat. S Sun. March 25-26. 9:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. each day At Club Rio, 430 N. Scottsdale Rd. Tempe A Z TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALL TICKETMASTER TICKET CENTERS INCLUDING’WHEREHOUSE ENTERTAINMENT. TOWER RECORDS/VIDEO, ROBLNSONS-MAY STORES. TO CHARGE TICKETS BY PHONE, CALL (602) 784-4444 . IN TUCSON (602) 321-1000 (ASK FOR INTELLIGENT SELF DEFENSE SEMINARS! ** A PORTIONOF PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT THE ____ A SOJOURNER CENTER BBom A LOCAL SHELTER FOR BATTERED WOMEN AMD THEIR CHILDREN P resent Coupon When Placing Order. Expires 3/31/95. P resent Coupon When Placing Order. Expires 3/31/95. 1/2 O F F M U N C H IE S 1* 9 o z. FR O Z E N RITAS w ith order of BFIT CLASSIC ENTREES or FAJITA'S GALA Not Valid With Other Offers. w ith order of BFIT CLASSIC ENTREES ' or FAJITA'S GALA ■'f Not Valid With Other Offers. St a t e P r ess Wednesday, March 22,1995 Pag< 10 P olice R eport tru c k b a c k e d in to h is v e h ic le in the p a rk in g lo t at Tempe C enter and then left the scene. • A fem ale em ployee reported that someone burglarized, her office in the G oldw ater Building. • A fem ale student reported that someone dam aged her vehicle in Lot 51. • A fem ale stu d en t re p o rte d th at som eone sto le the license plate from her vehicle. • A fem ale student was contacted at Palò V erde E ast after the sm ell o f m arijuana was reported com ing from her room. • The east ex it door o f the Fine A rts Shop was reported dam aged. A S U police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • A w om an not affiliated w ith ASU was contacted at the M em orial U nion w hile sleeping. • A m ale em ployee reported that som eone dam aged a w indow in Palo Verde W est, • T w o m ale stu d en ts Were in v o lv e d in a n o n -in ju ry accident at Apache B oulevard and Norm al Street. • A m a le s tu d e n t r e p o r te d b e in g h a r a s s e d by an unknown person while in the Life Sciences Building AW ing. • A m ale em ployee reported that som eone broke into Business A dm inistration Room 219 and stole a VCR. • A m ale em ployee reported that som eone dam aged a lock in the G eology W arehouse, • A male student reported that som eone driving a brown Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents: • A 60-year-old man was arrested for trespassing and The Re-Entry Connection at ASU 4th Annual Silent Auction |p  ç p Î * ® /|: B ookstore Ip tá e ^ l ■A S ^ IN (te rc o B fcg iate''|^ ^ Ä ^ b o ö t» ' Athletics * JKA Shotokan karate Club DeMarco s Gift Shop lnc. Desert Botanical Garden Ramingo Hilton. LaugMin.NV O dd River Resort & Casino, l.aughlin. NV HearttMuseum KVRV 104.7 FM Radio Station KNIX 102.5 Radio Sfctìoii Oakland A ^ | ç s" ^ & ’ v; ' Phoenix Municipal Stadimti P hoenix A rt M n s e ^ f f i :v - y Scottsdale C éite rftu die .Sun DevU g f e '' Team Travel / The jinttes,T einp^ , v The Ml mmm All proceeds benefit our scholarship fund The d raw in g w ill begin at 1 2 :3 0 p .m . M arch 2 8 ,1 9 9 5 , in the A d u lt R e-En try C e n te r, Lo w er Level M U . T ick e ts w ill be a v a ila b le u n til 12 n oo n. 5 0 c e a ch , 3 fo r $ 1 .0 0 , or 18 fo r $ 5 .0 0 Trouble with Algebra? Compiled by State P re ss reporter Todd Kelly A T T E N T IO N S P R IN G '9 5 GRA D U A TES! w ishes to thank the follow ing for their donations in support of our Arizona Chuan Fa Society Cametback Golf Club 1 Castles-m(>astert á p - * : Changing Hands ; crim inal dam age when he entered his neighbor’s yard and cut down a lemon tree that had a branch hanging 15 inches over the property line. The man had previous w arnings from his neighbor about en tering the yard. Dainage is estim ated at $ 1,000. • A 25-year-old man was arrested for assault after he pushed another man over and hit h is head five tim es with his fists. He believed the man was having an affair with his wife. • a 33-year-old w om an and a 26-year-old man w ere arrested for fraud after they were found to be in posses­ sion o f a stolen vehicle, a stolen license plate, several checks belonging to various other people, various credit c a rd s and equipm ent to create false identification cards. The deadline to apply fo r Spring '95 graduation is Friday, March 31! H E R E 'S H O W T O D O IT : 1, Pay your graduation fee at the Cashiering Services Offices in Student Services, second floor. 2. Complete the "Graduating Senior Report Card" that is given to you by the cashiering staff. (Undergraduates only) FEE SCHEDULE: Graduates $17 Undergraduates $12 late Fee $5 (after deadline) DO IT TODAY! 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 appeare in the Commencement Program. Graduate students should contact the Graduate College at 965-3521 to make sure all deadlines áre being met. W ITH TH IS AO 2 fo r 1 SMOOTHIES Schaum's Guides can help. More than 50 subjects A lo t m ore than ju st te xtb o o k s! With this ad-good thru 4/1/95 (Limit 1 coupon per customer) 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 2 0 4 S. C ollege Buy one of any of the more than 20 other Sm oothies on our menu and get a secon d Smoothie of equal or lesser value F R E E ! 2 FR EE Roadrunners Hockey tickets 9 with our Castro! Oil Change! A ( 2 0 V a lu » ! ‘T h e Alternative to Fast Food” with an Extensive Variety of SM OOTHIES Fresh Juices, Wheatgrass & Healthy Snacks (T h r o u g h 3 / 3 1 / 9 5 ) A S a m p le of O ur F e a tu re d S m o o th ie s #8 Slap Shot..................... ...... ............................ $3.30 This sweet blend of cranberry, strawberry, blueberry & raspberry will send you flying. #15 Freestyle,..................... ........ -i*—•• •— $3.30 This strawberry, mango, peach blend will make you first in the water. #21 Freefall.....'.............. ............... ...................... $2.70 This chocolate-banana shake will make you feel like you’re on top of the world. $16.95 Visit the JU ICE STO P featuring Tempe’s All Natural SM OOTHIES $39.95 AT THE CORNERSTONE >Vegetable Juice • W heatgrass • Healthy Snacks LEGEND6 AND PASSPORTS SLIGHTLY MORE GALL NOW TO SCHEDULE! Phone in orders are welcome 968-2855 • Fax (602) 968-2868 (S E E U S FO R D ETAILS ON HOW TO R EC EIV E YO U R FR E E RO A pRU N N ERS TIC K ETS) THE H O N D A DO CTO R 967-7282 2000 E. University, #115 Mon.-ftl. 7 : X A 6:00 PM Thursdays t i 8.0OPM r i tB M I M H « 7144 S. Primi, *101 Call 346-1177 M n 5 Opinino Approximately May 1 ► R Y■ IF R I I LE. LE . D 1 / EI . L II VV E L .I1 -^ 1 725 S. Rural Road, y 1U N IV E R S IT Y Suits €-104 W ITH T H IS AD CO RN ERSTO N E M A LL ..... . M • ■ w • State Press Is on the World Wide Web Read us online by sim ply typing in the following address: http://aspin.asu.edu/provider/StatePress/ Once at our site, visit our sponsor's site, Sunny's Pizza, to link up with the Sweet Sixteen Men's College Basketball games sites. SAN FR A N C ISC O (A P) — T hose psychedelic colors weaving through the coral reefs aren’t all tropical fish. Some are the handiwork of Jerry Garcia. The Grateful Dead lead guitarist, whose artistry already decorates silk ties and shirts, has added wetsuits to his line. J. Garcia WaterWear, made by Henderson Aquatics Inc. of Milville, N.J., features wet­ suits with shoulder pieces and arm insets in wild patterns painted by Garcia and inspired by his love of scuba diving and the sea. BERLIN (A P )— Karl L agerfeld has made Robert Altman do a little tailoring on his film spoof of the fashion industry. The fashion designer sued last week to stop the German distribution o f Ready to W ear because o f a scene in w hich h e ’s described as a thief. The offending word has been removed from the G erm an-dubbed film , and the I E B E 3E 0 I ACURAl INDEPENDENT SERVICE U s f V a lw x jn e ^ $ 1 4 .9 5 '(Includ es up to 4 quarts) Membership open to all ASV students and employees. Check Our Low Price on 15,000 & 30.000 Services 968-5989 954-7923 1820 E . A P A C H E B L V D . TEM PE O ne-w ay trip s to A S U 3039 E . T H O M A S R D . P H O EN IX The store stayed open after midnight to sell the album on its Tuesday release date. • 14.5% APR VISA* Credit Card with no annual fee available to sudents with good or no credit history • Low-cost checking accounts to suit your needs • Worldwide ATM network • 24-hour account access by phone • Auto loans as low as 7.75% APR and more OIL CHANGE & O IL FILTER T W O L O C A T IO N S TO S E R V E YO U Made in England. With your limited funds, why worry about high-cost checking accounts, credit cards and loans? Join Desert Schools and take advantage of our wide variety of low-cost financial services, including: ’F R E E Estim ate s •F a ir P ric e s •O n e D ay S e rv ice on M ost R e p a irs • Com plete P arts D epartm ent • FactoryT rain ed T e ch n icia n s subbed version w ill open T hursday in Hamburg and Berlin, according to distributors Senator Film. “Only one word has been changed. For legal reasons we can’t say what the change was, because that w ould be the same as telling you, ‘This is where the original said ‘thief,’” said Barbara Schmidt, a spokeswom­ an for the distributor. Lagerfeld is also trying to get the text changed in the French version of the movie. LOS ANGELES (AP) — Elton John’s fans were still standing well into the wee hours, waiting for autographs from the singer. More than 1,000 fans lined up Monday night outside a Tower Records store where, just after midnight, John began signing old and new recordings, including his latest, Low on funds? Join Desert Schools and save C A R S P E C IA L IS T S •PfòPijEWhoKnow P ag e 11 W ednesday, March 22, 1995 S t a t e P ress Desert Schools 8 nion f Desert Schools representatives are on campus today L . — visit the information booth on Cady Mall. Visit our Tempe Branch at C all 433-7000 for m ore inform ation 1223 E. Broadway Road professionally managed by Collegiate Community for the Arizona State University Student Now accepting applications for Sommet & Fall '95. L l-Mwwjtnl a v a ila b ilit y . ■ C all Us 602/894-2320 525 S. Forest Avenue S t a t e P ress W ednesday, M arch 2 2 ,1 9 9 5 Page 12 V & u rM O N E Y hasn't gone this fa r since you lived w ith y o u r P A R E N T S . H igh-rew ing, 120-horsepower, fuel-injected engine (hey, < ^v this car's for driving, not ju st looking at) 5-speed transm ission - you expect that on a rea l se t o f wheels, but one for around $12,500? (yep) Tubular rea r axle w ith springover shock sport suspension and progressive ride tuning (m eans it's great on curves - you'll understand once you drive it) G reat sporty looks, inside & out, that say ‘Hey, ya wanna have fun?" (say yes) Safety-cage construction - hey, we like you Oh, Courtesy Transportation that's part o f PO N TIA C CA RES too (see? w e really do care) A ir conditioning - A ir condi­ tioning?? fo r around $12,500?? (we told ya it was a co o l car) Single-key locking - o n e key locks & unlocks doors, trunk and a ll the fun o f Sun fire A nti-lock brakes - why Should only big, fancy, expensive cars have a li the coo! stuff? Your choice o f a great-looking coupe (shown) o r sporty four-door sedan (both so goodlooking, you m ight have a tough tim e choosing) Clearcoat paint - paint you can't see keeps the paint you can see looking g ood (see?) D ual airbags - two things you don't need until you realty need 'em (and always w ear those safety belts, even _ with airbags) Battery rundown protection you accidentally leave the interior fights on, the Sun fire w ill turn 'em o ff - so you don't w alk hom e (rem em ber to say "thanks'! A M /FM radio - what, you mean it's not standard on every ca r? (nope, it's not) (you wanna spend a little more, you can have a built-in CD player) „ A H U G E glovebox big enough fo r a 12-pack o f sodas (or som e realty, realty big gloves) J h Fold-down rea r seats - in v case you win som e 9-ft teddy bear a t the carnival (hey, it could happen) PO N TIA C CA R ES - ca ll an 800 num ber, g et free Roadside A ssistance - fo r fiat tires, dead battery, even if you run out o f gas o r lo ck yourself out (Pontiac * wants to see you and yo u r Sun fire™ driving) Corrosion protection - tells rust to g o chew on som eone else's ca r W ES ŸONTiKO Watch "LIVE FROM THE HOUSE OF BLUES PRESENTED BY PONTIAC SUNFIRE ' every Friday and Saturday night on TBS midnight Eastern/9:00pm Pacific, I P O N T I A C SUNFI RE :W E A R E D R IV IN G E X C IT E M E N T I Finally,a real setof wheels foraround$12,5CMX *5/2.545 MSRF Price as of 9/21 iealer prep and destination charge. Tax, license and other optional equipment extra, t to change. Prices higher in CA and MA. c 7994 GM Corpi All rights reserved. Fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n , call t-8 0 0 -2 P O N T I A C. S ta te P Page 13 W ednesday, M arch 22, 1995 r ess O u r S u m m e r R a te s S iz z le H o r o sc o pe 's GUARANTEED OR E | ' ;l YOUR MONEY back! St a t e P ress ^ iii^ * 8 5 0 . ' " Your Own Room— The Whole Summer One Price — May 28 — August 5 U tilities Included* THE COMMONS *up to $120 per condo per m onth on Lemon 1 The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook — An investment in your lifetim e O rder yours today for $42.60, Matthews Center basement, Rm 50,965-6881 •E d u c a tio n a l • A d v e n tu re •C u ltu ra l •E n v iro n m e n ta l R o b ert A . D odel I AROUND THE GLOBE A tto rn e y a t L a w E A G L E R U N TR A VEL (602) 820-9673 Former County Prosecutor LO W ES T A V A IL A B L E A IR F A R E S CROSSWORD P A c T S A R 0 1STA S C L A Y T ■E N S O ÜÍ] R T F IT S MO A T S O G G Y C V R ■ M A Fr A A T P1X E L É X 1 S T R O D E O 1 IR i S H C A S S 1 by THOMAS JOSEPH A CR O SS DOWN 1 “Aliens" 1 Children's star card 7 Wild goat game of Europe 2 Before, to Byron 11 Pinball 3 Blackjack parlor 12 Apple or half 4 Worth olive 13 Land, as 5 Do Yesterday’s Answer a fish magazine 17 Natural in 33 Actor 14 Occupied work George 6 Clinton's craps 15 Perfect 18 Fight 35 M ecca attorney place native general site 17 Ump's call 36 Rat's test 7 Start of 19 Lo ses 20 Bracelet control 37 U se the Descartes' setting, remote, perhaps observa­ 21 “Little slangily H ouse' tion 23 G o awry 38 Grand — 8 Escap es 24 Pipe girl Opry 9 Conger, 22 Cager cutter Patrick 40 Under for one 26 Flying the formation 10 Deleted 24 Listens to weather 25 Leathèr 16 W alks 27 She tool 41 Bom the sheep 42 Helium or waiting 30 “— in St. 28 Nod in ozone Nice room ? Louis* 29 Tooth 1 2 3,; -V4 5 6 9 10 coatings * 172 11 31 Fancy vase 14 13 32 Au natural 1 1 6 16 33 Doe's mate 21^ ■ 17 ^ 1 9 34 Opening i “ word 23 37 Kind of .j a z 26 suit i ” 3 9 “— Bull” 1 r 29 43 Home­ * 1 & Icoming attendee, 35^ for short * 44 Flowering 41 shrub ■ 45 Baseball's 43 * Rose 45 46 Mississippi * m isses 3-22 945-8016 FREE CONSULTATION Serving Lunch a n d D inner 7 Days a Week M A M A R O S A 'S Traditional Sonoran M exican Food Recipes A re Sim ply the Best! Fabulous Fajitas - Beef • Shrimp • Chicken ■ Camaron Ranchera and Diablo .(Shrimp) I Savory Black Beans : ■ Steaming Sides of Fresh Vegetables ■ Incredible Fish Tacos FAM OUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS W a M W 1/2 P R IC E DINNER P®“T C$! With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 3-28-95. M esa 2 0 2 3 W . G u a d a lu p e (Southwest Corner Dooson & Guadalupe) ' 897-9411 H appy H our B u ffe t Tem pe 960 W. University (Northeast Comer University & Hardy) 4-7 p.m. Monday-Friday 966-0852 M il'iy id challenge to student organizations to spend the night on the West Lawn a W ent V DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW 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. CRYPTOQUOTE 3-22 GKL X EBU ELLM H PN G K W S E S GSNB S KX BL P KX J XSG N E O L SB B U N H KN H S WSE G O X R- H L O H . — D X ICE G S U B X O Yesterday's C ryptoquote: IF YOU ARE FOOLISH ENOUGH TO B£ CONTENTED, DON'T SHOW IT, BUT GRUMBLE WITH THE REST.—JEROME K. JEROME , 0 1995 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. 968-6427 1215 East Lemon J St Ate P ress You don't ev en have to take n otes. D U I • C r im in a l Im m ig r a t io n P e r s o n a l In ju r y DISCOVER THE WORLD Reserve Your Space Today In an effort to rafeemoney íorlUe homeless, donations will be accepted to buy blankets, wood, noils, etc. Anyquestions,callíonyaBanz at 965*3161 sponsoredbyC5P/A5ASU4 leadership3000 Comics S tate P ress W ednesday, M arch 22,1995 Page 14 ■EnCmtÌ#NHcXel m nmrr n u n PNOM now on, fa r m t n i l oo on TUESDAYS, and t u s o nurstA ts. ù£C/Û£b THAT YOUR CLASS IS SO Ù 9 L L , r r s NOT NORM CO*!NO TO 7V/CB A UÉEK. \ By Leigh Rubin R U B ES b y Ç taA y H cL th A eM a r c r r v c u r a t, to tf r ym tr m e c a ll tr •ooneuìm SAVINGS 77/iE * AND U E'LL Sh A P ¿« T E S . \ £ A R 1 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson t h is w a l k g o e s TO LET ME \H! lOUR MOM SAID I COULD STM HERE NÓ.' GO ; AWAY' 100 CAM WMT SH A TREE.’ TVS T EU -'N S / CALVIN W H Y L E T WE I N ' ' N W ■:SHH' ' SVSHU.' OK, O K.' SN FACT, HEW HESS HEH, VHW DONT SCW GO SH AHEAD OF M E? 1 JUST REMEMBERED A BSG ORANGE SURPR\SE WASTING R jR W DONT BE SCARED.' .V. S^ ] a l F — n MY HOUSE V ’f/n J by Ken Grundy and Malcolm Willett - tl— D o o n e s b u ry WITH TH IS ANT/-HANPOUT B ILL, WHAT UJE NORMAL- AMËRJCANS ARB SAVING ID LIBERALTRAITO RSIS‘LOOK,THERE REALLY ISNO w m » £ l fREEW NCH!" TIGHT CORNER TEAVS, I'M Y I L L JUST TREMBLING. I STEP WAT, WAT BACK HERE.' BY G A R R Y TRUDEAU M R. SPEAKER, YOUTALK ABOUT YOUR-BILL UKE IT S A FA IT ACCOMPLI!i YEAH. SH ARIN 'IN M Y BOOTS! COMB ON,CLINTON ISN 'T A PLAYER ANYMORE! HE'S IR ­ RELEVANT 10THB PROCESS! OH,YEAH? =| OH.YBAH? CERNERABOUT A PO SSIBLE * mot C am pus C o rn er 712 S. C o lle g e (C o lle g e & University) 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 Two LOCATIONS •Bur & Soda •Photo Developing •Health S, Beauty Aids Make the bright choice this summer. . . come to The Beach! C alifornia S tate U niversity, Lo n g Beach 609 S. Mill (A cro ss from C o ffe e Plantation) 85 8-0 5 6 7 Photo Finishing Everyday Low Price 1995 S ummer S essions c s u LB UNIVERSITY C O LLE G E ft EX TEN SIO N S E R V I C ES Session One: Tune 5-July 7 S ession Two: June 19-July 28 S ession Three: July 10-August 18 Registration begins March 15. • Notes CBULB le on the eemeeter ejetem. « From art to wom en's studies - and just about everything in betw een - CSULB Summer Sessions offers you a selection of over 1200 courses in a w ide variety of subjects. • Many of these courses are transferable to other colleges and universities. • Registration is fast, ea sy and convenient. • No formal adm ission to CSULB is required. ■7 i 24 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS color 0 4 1 process Best price in town. For more inform ation, or to request a FREE Summer S ession s 1995 catalogue of courses, axil toll-free or w rite to: University C ollege and Extension Services, CSULB 6300 State University Drive, Suite 104 Long Beach, CA 90815 (800)963-2250 X60005 The Choice for Continuing Education UniversityCollege andExtensionServices • California State University. Long Beach 4P Sports STATE PRESS ■ :-v. ; Wednesday, March 22,1995 _____________ _________________i_______________P a 8 e 15 T r ip l e THREAT San Jacinto transfers bring speed, cohesiveness to ASU track team B y D an M iller S tate P ress Lance D. Terry/State Press A SU jun io r A via Morgan (left), sen io r Jacq u elin e G ayle and ju n io r Lorieann Adam s (not pictured) hail from S a n Ja cin to Ju n io r C o lleg e in P asad ena, T e xas. They team ed with sen io r O m olade A kinrem i to take third p lace in the 4 x 400 relay at the N CA A C h am p io n sh ip s two w eeks ago. * ‘ \ Men’s g olf finishes 9 th in Texas From Staff Reports The ASU men’s golf team finished in ninth place at the Cleveland G olf/M orris W illiam s Intercollegiate tournament Tuesday in Austin, Texas. The Sun Devils finished the three-round tournament with a score o f 887, 20 strokes behind first-place UNLV. Texas came in second with an 872, followed by O klahom a in third, G eorgia Tech in fourth and TCU in fifth. A SU ’s top individual fin ish er was senior Todd Demsey. Demsey, the 1993 NCAA Champion, tied for ] 2 th p lace w ith T e x a s ’ R obby S k in n e r, U o fA ’s B enjam in N ic o la y , U N L V ’s C had C am p b ell and Oklahoma State’s Alan Bratton with a 3-over-par 219. The Sun Devils’ second-highest finisher was sopho­ more Chris Hanell, who finished in a three-way tie for 20th. Hanell shot rounds of 76,74 and 72 to finish at 222. A SU ’s other three com petitors were ju n io r Joey Snyder, senior Larry Barber and freshman Pat Perez. Snyder tied w ith.seven others?for 25th w ith a 224, while Barber finished tied for 43rd (231) and Perez tied for 48th at 234. The Sun Devils now prepare for the Southwestern Intercollegiate in Los Angeles March 27-28. ASU senior Jacqueline Gayle’s trips to the grocery store are a lot less stressful nowadays. “All my life, everytime my mother would send me to the grocery store she would want me to hurry up,” said Gayle, a native of Clarendon, Jamaica. “She would always spit and said to be back before it was dry.” The challenge of those half-mile, childhood sprints made Gayle realize she loved to run. That love has translated into a successful track career at ASU, where she is a three-time all-American sprinter. “It’s fun to win and it’s fun to beat anybody,” Gayle said, “but you’ve got to understand next week it may not happen that way again.” Gayle, fellow Jamaican junior Avia Morgan and junior Lorieann Adams of G eorgetown, G uyana each attended San Ja c in to J u n io r C o lle g e in Pasadena, Texas before becoming Sun D evils. ASU track coach L eonard Braxton remembers spotting the three A d a m s at the 1993 National Junior College Indoor Championships in Manhattan, Kan. “They were real talented young ladies,” Braxton said. “I didn’t know how talented at the time, but you could see that there was something special about them. When I sat down with them and met them, I realized they were good people and that was a major selling point for me.” Gayle, 21, who was the first of the three to transfer to ASU in 1993, was the national junior college champion in the 400-meter and the runner-up in the 800-meter that year. “Jackie paved the way. She was the first to believe in . me,” Braxton said. “She helped convey the message to the others to come here.” Adams joined the Sun Devils the following year in the fall of 1994 and Morgan arrived at ASU in January of this year. Morgan, 22, was the runner-up in the 400 in 1993 and 1994 and was also a member of die record setting 4 x 400 relay team. After graduating from high school, she worked as a receptionist in Jamaica for eight months before arriving at San Jacinto in January of 1993. |t » i T urn to Triple threat, page 16. D iam ondbacks, Jordan capture sports w orld spotlight W e’re back from spring break and we all know what day we’re in fin a lly . W ell, most of us do. It’s W ednesday. It's time for us to get b ack in to the realm of everyday life and sta rt to fin d o u t w h a t’s g o in g on in the w o rld ag ain — e s p e c ia lly the sportX world•E ven spring break en th u siasts have p ro b a b ly h eard o f the A riz o n a D iam o n d b ack s, one o f M ajo r L eag u e Baseball’s newest expansion teams. Being the avid baseball fan that I am, I already ow n a D iam o n d b ack t-s h irt and a Diamondback key ring. Now we get to wait three years until the Diamondbacks play. Three years? F 11 be earning Social Security by then, and what’s really sad is we’ll prob­ ably wait all that time only to see replace­ ment players take the field. , If th a t is n ’t en o u g h to d e p re ss an Arizona baseball fan, there’s still people who are trying to keep the stadium from getting built because they have to pay a quarter-of-a-cent sales tax. They are whin­ ing about the fact that they d o n ’t even watch baseball so why should they have to pay taxes for a stadium. I’ve never hunted a day in my life so why do I have to pay taxes for Wildlife Conservation? I’ll never be in downtown Phoenix to use the new library built with taxpayer money, and I’ll never go to the ballet in the new Hcrberger Theatre across from Phoenix Civic Plaza although taxes paid for that, too. If all you do is sit in your house and veg­ etate then I guess you have a right to argue about paying taxes for the new stadium. Otherwise, just sit back and enjoy the fact that Arizona’s new baseball team is going to bring jobs and boost the state’s economy, and try and let us baseball fans have a little enjoyment. •The biggest news in pro-basketball is the return of Michael Jordan. Scottie Pippen and B.J. Armstrong’s egos are probably the most excited that old number 2 3 ,1 mean 45 is back. W ith Michael gone they realized they were just on an average team, and in Armstrong’s case he found out he was just an a v e ra g e p la y e r. H o w ev er, w ith Michael’s return their heads are beginning to exceed regulation size, and their arro­ gance can once again match the John Starks and Vernon Maxwells of the league. •Football. The only sport that year in and year out continues to make Arizona resi­ dents scream, “Oh, dear Lord!” Last year the Cardinals’ major problem T urn to N ewman , page Thursday. March 23 •Track and field hosts the Sun Devil Invitational at 1 p.m. at Sun Angel Stadium •Women’s tennis hosts Washington State at 1:30 p.m. at Whiteman Tennis Center p.m. and the Sun Devil Distance Carnival a t 7 p.m. at Sun Angel Stadium •Women’s tennis hosts Washington at 1:30p.m. at Whiteman Tennis Center Sunday. March 26 •Softball versus New Mexico at 10 a.m. in the Diamond Devil Classic •M en’s basketball versus Kentucky at approximately 8 p.m. in Birmingham. Ala. (KPHO Channel 5, KTAR 620 AM) •M en’s swimming at the NCAA Championships in Indianapolis (through March 25) Saturday. March 25 •M en’s tennis hosts New Mexico State at 1:30 p.m. at Whiteman Tennis Center •Softball versus Virginia at 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. and New Mexico at 6 p.m. in the Diamond Devil Classic •Track and field hosts the Sun Devil Invitational at noon at Sun Angel Stadium •Women’s gymnastics hosts the Pac-10 Championships at 7 p.m. in the University Activity Center Monday. March 27 •Baseball at Stanford at 2 p.m. *All home contests in italics. All times are Arizona time Friday. March 24 •Softball versus Western Michigan at 4 p.m. and San Diego State at 6 p.m. in the Diamond Devil Classic at Sun Devil Club Stadium •Track and field hosts the Sun Devil Invitational at I •Baseball at Stanford at 2 p.m. •Baseball at Stanford at 3:30 p.m. •Men’s golf at the Southwestern Intercollegiate in Los Angeles (through March 28) •Men’s tennis at Pepperdine at 2:30 p.m. Teusdav. March 28 •Women’s tennis at UofA at 2 p.m. Admission to all ASU sporting events is free o f charge with a validated student ID, except men's basketball and football games. 16. State P ress W e d n e sd a y , M a rc h 2 2 . 19 9 5 Triple threat C ontinued from p a g e Newman 15. C ontinued Adams. 24. who set Sari Jacinto records in the 1,500 and 800, gathered all-American honors at the NCAA Divison 1 Indoor Cham pionships in Indianapolis on M arch 10 by placing seventh in the 800 with a time of 2:07.77. the third fastest indoor time in ASU history . “It felt great,” Adams said- “but I just see it as doing well at another level of competition." Adams also anchored the Sun Devils’ third-place 4 x 400 relay team which crossed in 3:33.77. the second fastest time in Sun Devil history. Gavle started the relay. Omolade Akinremi was second and Morgan ran third. “I like running the anchor very much,” said Adams, who grew up pushing a tire during two-mile runs to the store. “It’s a lot like running the mile relay." > “Lorieann can run just about anything I put her in and compete with the best in the country," Braxton added, Gayle and Morgan, who grew up in Kingston, Jamaica, a neighboring parish of Clarendon, have been acquainted since 1989 when they competed at different high schools. Both started’out running the 100- and 200-meter dashes but soon switched their focuses. “We were transformed into quarter-milers,” said Morgan, who stands 5-foot-10. “I was just told probably because of my height and my body that 1 could be a good quarter-miler.” “My ends used to be better than my starts, so they moved me to the (400),” added Gayle. All three runners have dreams of representing their home countries in the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta and accord­ ing to Braxton, those dreams are close to becoming reality. “Its foreseeable,” Braxton said. “The stone is there. I’m just polishing it.” ' /.'A ;; A. What docs having all three bring to ASU’s repertoire? “Cohesiveness and unity,” Braxton said. “They know how to win.” IS . was at quarterback. That was all the Cardinals needed to be a playoff team. “I’m going to get a quarter­ back,” Buddy Ryan proclaimed. So he went out and got one — Dave Krieg. I didn’t realize we had timewarped back to the early ’80s. I’m going to go home and watch The Dukes o f Hazard. Come to think of it, maybe we could get Uncle Jesse to be a back-up. You know your franchise is in trouble when you lose a bidding w ar for A lvin H arper to the Tam pa Bay Buccaneers. •Here in Tempe, no news tops that of the ASU bas­ ketball team. For the first time since 1975, the Sun Devils are in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA tournament. What makes it even sweeter is the fact that while ASU is getting all the attention, UofA sits at home after being knocked out of the tournament in the first round for the sixth time in 10 years. This also comes in a year in which ASU swept UofA in the regular season. It doesn’t get any better than this, don’t you agree Mr. Frieder? However, be careful ASU, Your next oppo­ nent is the Wildcats — The Kentucky Wildcats. FREE TAX HELP F R O M V IT A V o lu n te e r I n c o m e T a x A s s i s t a n c e W e d n e s d a y s a n d T h u r s d a y s 6 -9 p m Feb. 15th to April 15th an d S a tu rd a y s 9am -noon M arch 15th to April 15th Foreign S tu d e n ts welcome - T hurs. only R E SID E N C Y C o lle g e o f L aw Armstrong Hall Room 114 m i ibh from page Note FREE Tax Advice an d Form P reparation A ssistance Every Wed. & T hufs. 2-3 p.m . Student Services Amphitheater IRS Sponsored N ew G u id elin es fo r Fall ’95 The ASU-Kentucky men’s basketball game will be shown on Big Screen TV Thursday night at the University Activity Center. The game will begin around 8 p.m. and the doors will open at 7 p.m. Admission is free of charge. Invitation to apply for State Press Editorship The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the S tate P ress editorship for the Fall Semester 1995. Applicants for the position of editor: m ust be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not on academic or disciplinary probation); must have a cumulative grade index of 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the State P ress; m ust have completed a minim um of 15 hours of journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and journalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. Applicants must also: • . submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those ■courses; submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the State P ress or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State Press or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the State P ress office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Thursday, April 13,1995, Bruce D. Itule Director, Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 Ad funded by ASASU OW N. Yours and yours alone. MAC. Power Macintosh’17100 AVw/CD Macintosh Performa* 6115 w/CD 16MBÌUM/700MBharddrive, O H M drive, 15"colorá jla y, keyboardand mouse. 8MBRAM/350MBharddrive, CO-BOM drive, 15"colordhplay keyboard, mom ondaliAe softwareyou're ¡M y to need. The awesome computer with all the bells and whistles. ASAP We mean like yesterday. Macintosh Performa* 636 w/CD Powerbook* 520c w/Modem 8MBRAM/250MBharddrive, CD-BOMdrive, 14"colorcBjlay keyboard, mom andallée softwareyodrttihely toneed 12MBBÁM/320MBharddrive andmodem. with the Appli Computer Loan and 90-Day Deferred Payment Plan, you can take home a Mari'with- P A Y N O T H IN G F O R 9 0 D A Y S . Bemg a student is had. So wtfie made buying a Macintosh* easy. So easy, in fact, that prices on Madnkxfa personal computers are now ewnlower than their already low student prices. And Applet. For more information visit ASU Computer Store Mon-Fri 9:00-5:00 or call 965-4488 iKlesmaMMsmpdeedJ*9OdauOaeeedaccrulmdmVmÉa9Odktrpes*MwMlf0dddk1nplsidpé mktioittayrkedOJOl^fMUmeriMaeamjmMdel^lMaamOmvam im ietm 1h$ amtiattimul Imr Hum Miltm émiMecmt repaymentstte é ie UtmOftpey tdescribedMmewaddime hern m 90-dayMermen!tfprindful prepeymeM/mMtymdOtMbjeaic _________ r^telOpkkpp,llimade,lkdOatáPeriovm,Pveeeeñede,ljmñhaaSiii40rimBddMmmdm lh*p¡¡mV¡hejum f-Rft“ — •—si yrtl HadsteftMxMoebPeifirma, PwerBook, Tbe aaeedbkWbMmheb wVkdteebMty. lb learn more(US only), aeB800-776-2333orTDD8004)36223- Classifieds TOWNHOMES/ CO N DO S FOR RENT 3BD 2B A condo, near pool. 510 Alma School. Mesa. 8 min. from ASU. Avail April 15. $750/mo. 423-0571 7^ 3B:D 2BA condo »across from pool. 5 to W University Tempe, S875/mo. Avail. April 1. . 423-0571 FURNITURE SOFA SET. $265, Queen bed $80, Full $70, Chest of Drawers $40. Dinette $125. 234-5729» SOFA/LOVESEAT. OFFWHITE. New- still in wrap. Contemp. Bth pcs $499. Bill 996-6933. COMPUTERS "'-.J' L a p t o p 1386 85mbHD. v g a HAYDEN SQ:. beautifully furn.: mono; QOS ($2 & Windows 3i 1 Tons of software $750obo 9462bd 2ba. Upstairs; SI iOO/mo. ' Short or long term-' 968-5002. ® ■:3230A :/--s;:- V-:HERfibSA PI... 510 W. Univesity. 2bd 2ba condo nr ASU. pool, w/d, fans. $635. 966r0987. ■ MAC PERFORM A 475, new complete color system, loaded: w/add'l software, Great buy at $1100. Mark 706-0448. : , QUEBT a V i d a 3bd 3ba. 2 pools, jacuzzi. ind, Faqet,, e.- NOVELL NTWRE V 3 11/3; 12: fans, microwave, 1 : w/d. . Documentation, manuals, study guides. New, in box. Must sell! $90Q/mo. 'Qreg-94'i *684$: •' I/O takes all! EriCy 345-1869. RENTAL SHARING AN N O UN CE­ MENTS DYN A MIC HE ALT H for the 90's. Heatlhy: living and Nutri­ tion success seminar by Dr. Jack Pfèifery MD. Saturday:; March 2.5. 199$, pm.- Ari­ zona Biltmore Hotel. Cost.$ 10. • To. rsvp and for mòre info call : 829 707 i LIVE C O M PU TE R C H A T 6 GA M ES Nine lines for your needs! . 14.400 B aud.,.. T h e U v i W i k i BBS Gafi with your modem 2 7 7 - 0 0 2 5 - 24 hours WE BUY & SELL USED LEVI'S! BEH JEAN ®BUYER C a ll fo r D etails 9 4 7 -8 2 4 5 (between Curry McKellips); 5 minutes from ASU! • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. APARTMENTS TICKETS M RMTE needed to share 2bd 2ba in Quads ; w/female. $300/mo beg. May I- V alerie. :■921-3756 ' VU,-\. NEEDED- MALE to share 3bd 2ba luxury apt w/2 fem ales.. Near campus, beg May 1. Must be "studious but fun; 967-1567. >; RESP N/S; F rmte-asap! 2bd apt G lbrt/M ain. Must like dogs. $30Q/fno incl util. 668-9530’ ROOM S FOR RENT M/F FOR 3bd, 2ba house w/pool. $2,7'5/mo + 1 /3 util: Avail 4/1. 964^7657. ;" ROOM FOR rent. 48th Si./S6utheiti. female, clean- pri­ vate hom e w/pool 1- $250/mo. ■437-0952. • V,-- TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE DUPLEX ASSUME/NO qua! loan, $ 12.500 ctm. May carry , pos. cash flow. nice are 841- r;V DUPLEX» ASSUME/NO qual. loan. $12.500 CTM. May car-: ry, pos: cash flow, nice area 841-4916 'V ■ B uy O f T he W eek ASU AREA studio, $295 not including utilities.:. Pool; 966^838. Questa Vida, 2 master suites, fresh paint, refrigerator, w/d, . microwave, fireplace, sun deck. $65,900. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 2bd apt.. walk to ASU. pool, laundry rm. 1 blk so. of University on 8th St. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238. B o b B ullock R ealty E xecutives SUMMER SUBLEASE wanted in Tertipe. 2bd 2ba for JuneAug. Call Doug at 962-1969. M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 5BDRM 2BA , 15th & College. SI500/mo. Call 8944)288. SÀBATICÀL HOME in Scot­ tsdale. 2bd plus office. Fura or unfura. 1-800-3824)755. 998-2992 SCRGEOK SCRUBS U N ISEX drawstring pant and shirt sold in blue, green and pink (S .M .L.X L). Send $14.50 per garm ent plus tax and $2.95 S&H to: MDG Sales i NiH fcew f Cuta* Btatataet H S -4 7 ÎS AN N O UN CE­ MENTS SCASH TODAY!$ I buy all used cars, trucks,: mise, items. Q üf Al, 994-4369. 83; VW Quantum . Must sell. Maroon w/tan cloth int., pw, pd. AC needs fixed, lots of miles but in good cond. inside and put. Only asking $ 1500. Must see to apprec. Call 4933747, \ y-.-; NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tion vehicle. Spine work OK. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. m o t o r c y c l e T~ 92 YAMAHA Jag 50ce, low miles, orig owner, great cond. $1000. 949t-$625: DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. 1 specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. 1 also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. STUDENT TRAVEL Club!! $75 off first ticket purchase! $99 Worldwide Airfares.;, Dis­ counted E urope/lht'l Fares, Youth Hostel Gpide, and more. Join today!! (919) 929-4398 ext, T1015. ASU summer school to Bermuda and Caribbean Islands. Earn Global Awareness and elective credits this summer. PO Box 332 N .Y., N .Y. 10018 AN N O UN CE­ MENTS Get aTeachingJob Dr. Karen Kundin will speak about • Resume Writing • Interview Techniques Thursday, March 23rd 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. Payne Hall Basement Room B60 Sponsored by ACEI HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL CLOSE TO ASU $6 PER HR. PLUS Setting app. for Premier Pblng. 15-20 hrs./wk work at home. Call Curt at 996-7265. $7P/HR, $150 signing bonus. AMS, located at Broadway & Mill is hiring 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 894-9810 518$7/HR + CA$H! * Set free appointments tor health services: Fun office, nearby Fies­ ta Mall; Eves & Sat. Fun phone work! 649-9580. - , *M.ARKET RESEARCH phone interviewers, no sales, Tempe Days or eves. Susan 967-444L A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office pe rspn. W i 11 tra i n. Gdod ad­ vancement potential, 4020 N: Scottsdale Rd. Ste. 108. Apjrfy in person, EXEC'S ASST: Imnied opening for p/t asst to real estate brokers in N.E, Valley. Must be an or­ ganizer, & excellent communi­ cator (both written & phone), have Macintosh Computer knowledge & have dependable transportation to run occasional errands. Pis fax resume. Sc in­ dicate salary desired. Fax # 602r 585^105, • ANSWERING SERVICE, all day Saturday, Scottsdale. 941- '.4890 Call 965-4630 for information packet. y;v , ;; v-.- A$U GRAD students; the ASU Telefund has a great opportun­ GET A summer job now! Attend ity for you. Wp are presently the Summer Job Fair ’95. Wed., hiring Grad, students to contact March 29 Cady Mall. Meet with alumni of the Graduate College. We update inform ation, tell ; dozens of potential employers! them about advancements here GREAT P/T job. 4-8pm M-F at ASU and look for financial $6.25/hr. Call Kelly between 9support. This would be a great 5,894-9442 way to enhance yptir network­ GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. ing opportunities and have a Enthusiastic gymnast to teach very flexible part time job. We children /ages 5-11. M,T,Th require associates to work a 2i30-4:30;$7-9/hr. 955,7805. min. o f 10 hours a week & you choose the evening & Weekend I NEED ASU students now!! $6 shift. Call 965-6754. to start, plus bonus, walking distance to ÀSU, flex hrs, shortsurveys. calf today 784-2279 ASU STUDENTS! Quick cash! Good pay. Atten­ dant' needed. Must be reliable & flexible. 2 hburs/daily, 3 times/ week. Adam, 784-8330. CASHIER, GENERAL office, computer & 10 key exp. help­ ful. Afternoons & Sat.’s. 8936884 CASHIER, GENERAL office, computer & 10 key exp. help­ ful. Afternoons & Sat.’$. 8936884 CHILDREN’S SUMMER camp in Oracle, AZ is looking for -ac­ tivity area specialists; archery, riflery, arts & crafts, nature, rap­ pelling, challenge course, 'life­ guards , and; wranglers. Also looking for kitchen supervisor and staff, & AZ R.N and nurse's assistant. Good salary & experience plus room and board. YMCA Camp, 602-8840987. $20-$25 AN HOUR Part-tim e student managers needed. AZ High School grads only. Limited positions. Call 990-8861 for qualifications. Looking for P/T Work? Now Hiring for Customer S ervice Representatives! C urrently Seeking C andidates T hat H ave T he F ollowing Q ualifications: •M ust be A ble to T ype 3 0 wpm • I nterpersonal C omm Skills • P revious Sales/ C ust S ervice Exp a P lus! •M ust be A ble to W ork Saturdays C all K elly S ervices T o d ay ! 838-8405 T empe L ocation KELiy SERVICES EARN $350-$400 PER WEEK OR MORE! People Needed To Do Fun, Easy, Respectable Part or Full Time Work Al Home. 24 Hr. Msg Gives Details C A LL N O W ! 1-809-474-2821 Int'l Ld rates apply. HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL CLUCK-U LOOKING TO earn some seri­ Dash Designs is now hiring arid ous cluckin' money? Cluck-U training for its busy summer sea­ is now recruiting marketing son: quality inspectors, shipping clerks, sewing operators, and cus­ majors to create innovative mar­ tomer service representatives. We keting ideas. Apply in person also need a part-time Foxbase : 855 S. Rural Rd. 1 blk S Of (Foxpro) programmer and a cadUniversity. cam ,operator; Salary range: $$-■■ LUXURY GUEST Ranch now 7/hr. Close to ASU, friendly environtnent. Gall Borinie for easy hiring for summer season! Serv­ directions: 967-2678. ers, childrens counsélors, wran­ glers, culinary students, fine din-: COUNSELORS WANTED; ing. waiters/wàitrèsses, wine ste­ Tririi down-fitness, co-ed.: NYS • camp. 100 positions; sp o rts,. ward, outside maintenance, flow­ er & garden, & others. Send re­ crafts, others. Camp Shane, Feirsume & GPÀ (Picture requested) ndale, NY 12734. (914)271-4141. to Wit's End Guest Ranch,: 254 DATA ENTRY '&'• purchasing pfr County Rd. 500; Vàllecitò Lake, sitioris ft & pt. $8/hr + bonus &. CO 81122: incentives & benefits. 4 0 IK. Flex hrs. Autdm 5226 S. 31st MAH-KEE-NÁC FOR Boys/DgnPlace. 243-5200. . ;^ bee for Girls. Counselor posi-; I NEED- Students to sell Tshtrts! Make $2 for each sold. C^l Kelly 929-9142 r IF YOU haye the désiré to succeed, we have the désiré to meet yoii. 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. 73.11 E. Thomas, Scottsdale 945-7692. LAW LIBRARY shelver posi­ tion to Shelve, retrieve items and other duties for mornings M-F. Job #7869 at Student Em­ ployment. 965-7114 for info. LAWN SERVICE Needs p/t help. $6/hr. 966-3269. Open to students in all majors. a it h e o t ic 3BD IBA wood floors, walk tó ASU. $800/mo. avail. 4/1. Tim 894-0288 C Ii n H M AUTOMOBILES HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL HOM ES FOR RENT m VAN HALEN tickets April 1st. 966-4519 after 6pm, ROOM ATE WANTED 2br 2ba 93 NINJA 60ÔR 3k mi, like luxury, condo; near McClintdck new never ride,; black, teal & and University. Papago Park II. purple. $5500 Erik 491-2709 ' .N/S:: ASU student preferred» avail now. $325/mo includes•■ TRAVEL . . . water & elec. Scott 951-2624 49ifr - • 1810 Scottsdale Rd Stet« M Page 17 W ednesday, M arch 2 2 ,1995 S t a t e P ress Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be senior invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility fot the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more informatics and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. tions for Program Specialists; All Team Sports, especially Base­ ball, Basketball, Golf, Field Hòckey, Roller Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; also Archery, Riflery, Pioneering/Ovemight Camping, Weights /Fiojess and Cycling; other open­ ings include Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Pottery; Figure Skat­ ing, Gymnastics, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Rocketry, Ropes and Rock Climbing; All Waterfront Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing, W indsurfing, Canoeing/Kayakingj. Gréat salary, room, board arid travel. June, 18th -August 18th. Inquire: Mah-KeèNac (Boys) 1,90 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, NJ. 07028. Call; 1800-753-9118. Danbee (Girls) 17 Westminster Drive, Montyille, NJ, 07045. Call: 1-800-392-3752. MODELS - Calendar models needed. Exp'd male/female. Aladdin EnL, 404-0856. MODELS - Calendar models needed. E xp'd male/female. Aladdin Ent., 404-0856. MODELS ■> Calendar models needed. Exp'd male/female. Aladdin Ent., 404-0856. MODELS: NYC, Toyko, Paris, Milan. Local scouts want you! Scottsdale; 941-6922. MUSIC INDUSTRY National concert promotion /iriarkëting cO. based in LA seeks re^ sponsible, outgoing; Music /Mar­ keting Interh, based in Phoenix /Tempe. Sophomore or above in college, know your market well & be very into new music. For more info, call (213) 368-473$. NO SELLING ! survey homeowners . Flex. hours. Salary plus comrriissiori. Cull John 949-9353. HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL PAUL S ALE Hardware is ac­ cepting applications for full time salesperson and part-time cashier. Hardware exp. a plus for positions. Applications w ill. be acc. at our Tetripe location, 1153 W. Broadway. PERMANENT P/T positions: Minutes 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. No collections or sales!! Shift hrs.2-6pm M-F with some a.m. shifts avail­ able also. Base rate of $6/hr with ihcentivesiCall .Personnel bet­ ween 8am-3pm at 431-9309.; PHONE SÙRVEYS, not- salesMarket 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 443f 8883,’ ' ■ '• ;.'v CONSULTANT National firm has immédiate opening for part-tim e entry level field rep, based in Phoe­ nix area. (N6 Sales) Good; com­ munication skills, experience in dealing with the public, pro­ fessional appearance. Spanish speaking a plus. Some travel. Resume to; P CX Box 1500, Rowlett, TX 75030. ATTENDANT FOR qùàdriplégiç male.Some lifting re.q. M-F mornings 2hrs.John 967-0495 RESEARCHER, LIST compiler for local publication. Flex. hrs. Call 808-8984, ; RETAIL SALES person wanted. Exp pref.pt Must be here for summer. Cactus Sports 921 1278 / ' '• SODA STOCKERS Needed immediately! Two shifts avail to stoiçk grocery store w/beverage products. $5/hr plus 28é/mile. If you are reliable;.de­ tail oriented, have good math skills, & own .transportation please call today! 838-8405, We encourage a diverse workforce. Kelly Services. Never an applicant fee. EOE. ; STATE PRESS Classified Ad Dept, needs an articulate studr ent(s) to answer phones arid help walk-in customers with classified ads. Must be able to work afternoons. Must be a good speller and have skill in typing. Call Bridget or Beth to­ day; 965-6735; VALET ATTENDANTS needed for morn. & afin, shifts. Must be responsible, clean cut, polite, clean driving record (no DUl's), $7-9/hr DOE. 955-8125 lv msg; THE ORIGINAL PRRTV GARDENS is hiring bartenders, wait staff, cocktail staff, door staff, barbacks, cooks,delivery mgr. We are happy to announce this great employment opportunity at AZ's largest entertainment complex. Apply at Balboa Cate Wed. March 22, bet l-5pm. RETAIL SALES OPPORTUNITY W e are now accepting applications for the following positions in our soon to open college retail store: •Full-tim e Office M anager •Full-tim e Supply/Clothing Sales Associates •Full-tim e Shipper/Receiver •Part-tim e Cashiers/Sales Associates These break-through opportunities offer: •Rewarding Advancem ent Possibilities •A Chance To Utilize Your Talents if you can relate to people and have the desire to be in the College Bookstore industry...apply in person. M arch 21 thru M arch 2 5 ,9am to 4pm the College Store i 21 S. Mill, Suite 210A Tempe, AZ 85282 Camp Counselors needed for outstanding Maine camps! Camp Takajo for boys and Camp Vega for girls. Each located on mag­ nificent 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 instrumehtalist/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 board, travel allowance, salary based on qualifications and experience. TENNIS COUNSELORS Qualified tennis instructors needed to teach tennis and live in a bunk with campers. W ere 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. M E N -C A M P TAKAJO 525 E. 72nd St., 25th Floor New York, NY 10021 1-800-409-CAMP W OM EN -CA M P VEGA PO Box 1771 Duxbury, MA 02332 1-800-838-VEGA W E WILL BE O N CAMPUS Tuesday & Wednesday, March 21 & 22 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in MU Rooms 214 & 215 WALK-INS WELCOME HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDGENERAL ARMOUR SWIFT Eckrich, a Div. of Conagra has an open­ ing for a p/t temporary sales rep from May to August. This po­ sition could possibly become a permanent p/t one depending on job performance & company expansion. The position in­ volves the selling & merchan­ dising of our items in retail gro­ cery stores. It is perfect for someone who is planning a ca­ reer in sales & would like to gain viable experience with a major packaged food company.; Compensation is hourly wage plus mileage allowance. Please send resume to: A. Svetiy - unit manager, ASE, 5025 S. Ash Ave. #B2, Tempe, AZ 85282> . SUMMER JOB- Maine sports camp. All land, water, adventure & individual sports. Outdoor sum m er working w/children. Great facilities available to coun­ selors. Fun summer!! Call now, 617-277-8080. Camp Cedar, 1758 Beacon St.. Brookline, MA 02146, SUMMER CAMP Counselors: Coed residential cam p seeks live-in counselors and instruc­ tors : Archery, Art, Dance. Drama, Fencing, Fishing. Horseback Riding, Music. Rifleiry. Ropes, Swimming, Ten­ nis and mòre! Brush Ranch Camps, PO Box 5759,. Santa Fe, NM 87502-5759 <1 -800.722-2843); SALES PERSON needed f/L Apply at Leonard's Luggage at Fiesta Mall 835-7000, TACO JOHN’S Excellent restaurant manage­ ment opportunities aie available with America’s second largest Mexican quick-service chain. We are seeking highly moti­ vated Area Managérs, Restaurnat General Managers arid As­ sistant Managers. We offer com­ petitive ^ salary plus bonus, flexible work schedules, group insurance and paid vacation. If you have restaurant manage­ ment experience and growth ex­ cites you, pick up an applica­ tion at our Tempe or Mesa res­ taurant. or request one by cal­ ling 1-800-543-5222. Resumes can be sèrit to: Taco John'sHeadquarter^-. AZ. 808 West :20th Street, Cheyenne. WY 82QOJ. Equal Opportunity Em­ ployer. SALES REPS needed for immed hire. No exp nec. Flex hrs. Call 1-800-925-3524 for info, VALEO INTERNATIONAL, an environm ental co. is looking for several sales reps as well as a ' few individuals . w/mgmt skills. No exp. nec. Will train. Call for an interview 940-3804. HELP WANTEDCLERICA L FINANCE CO. seeking p/t data entry clerk. 20:hrs/wk. Must be flexible eves/wknds. 48th. St./ Southern. 438r2511., • THE LITTLE Gym is looking for. a piano instructor for child­ ren 3 - p/t hrs. sòme music exphelpful .Call 413-0015. RECEÎnONIST P/T pos. avail, wknds & poss. wkdy aft/early ! VALET PARKING attendants 3eves. Phone exp, computer lit­ 4;nights/week ; Must be willing to; erate & professional, appearance. drive tó Phx, Seotts. PV. etc Avg $6/hr. Century: 2 J. AM Realty. $8/hr.861-9182, : 831-1114. Barbara: . Y MCA CAMPING Services' (Sky-Y Camp &; Chàunceÿ Ranch) located in Prescott. ÀZ is now hiring dedicated, ftin. loving, creative; caring profes. sionals to work w ith co-ed campers between the ages Of 7 & 17 in a residential camp set­ ting. Come bë. a part. Of the magic & share in an experience that will last a lifetime. Camp­ ing season begins last week of May. arid runs through early ' August. Call for application & information at 254-1571. HELP WANTEDSALES : . a d v e r t is in g s a l e s p e r ­ s o n needed fo r Tempe area, flex. hrs. For appt. call 808- ~ ; GRAD STUDBNT w/Marketing background for p/t sales - Car al­ lowance, salaryC om m ission DOE. Call VJ>. at 921-3003. HELP WANTEDGENERAL P a rt-tim e e v e n in g s •P aid Training HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BANDERA HELP WANTEDGENERAL Ahwatukee Foothills schedule pro- A p p ly in p e r s o n to g ran R ^ ^ B ^ N B n m en t «655 E Via de Ventura, 8300 In stru ^ ^ ^ ^ m ram u ral Scottsdale, or Fax resume G vm n a^ ^ ^ H tru ctors, Swim I i j H H - o - Recre­ ational ^ ^ ^ B ’is o r s & Front D a N H ¿A, Apply at: 3233 E. Chandler Blvd. Phoenix TOP GYMNASTICS PROGRAM Gymnastics Jobs—Camp Vega for Girls in Maine—Top salary, r e o n / b o a r d / ja un d r y » clxjthing/tràvcl all-owahee. Women or men 'with good gym­ nastics background who can teach children beginning and advanced vaulting, floor ex, uneven parallel bars, balance beam. Call or write: Camp Vega PO Box 1771 Duxbuiy, MA 02332 We are on campus to d a y & to m o r r o w from 10am-4pm. MU Rm. 214-215. No A p p o i n t m e n t N ecessa ry DELIVERY DRIVER Mon-Fri 510 p.m. Apply in person, Blimpie, 9 11 E. Broadway. BLIMPIE Help W anted days & week­ ends’ 4-6 hrs/day. Apply in person, Blimpie, 911 E. Broad­ way. . f;’V •; , , ' ' KOREAN GARDEN C o ttk ^ ^ H rn c h c rs , W e W o u t A round Y o u r S ch ed ule N o S e llin g The valley’s finest m ar­ ket research firm is look.ing for interview ers. We offer flexible scheduling a n d a p rofessional s e t­ ting. sta rtin g a t $6 per hour. Excellent advance­ m ent possibilities. C hll M anny at *4**7SSS I H g |I n h n U i , m A aaoctntra LK U lSb 5HIP5 now hiring Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour companies. World travel. Sea­ sonal & full-time employment available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C59185. ' ^ m _ COOL JOBS Employment Guide. Earn $2000-6000 a month + free travel. Jobs on cruise" ships, Alaskan fisheries, Club Med, ski resprts, whitewater raft.ing, Disney, national parks and . US Forest Service. Guaranteed success. 617-334-4096; MARILYN'S Mexican Restaurant now hiring host/hoStess positions. Wait staff, cocktailers, bussérs & all kitchen positions. FT/PT. Apps avail at 700:1 N. Scottsdale Rd. & PV, 12631 N; Tatum Blvd. MR. GOODCENTS Subs & Pastas now hiring for, day shift, part-time hours avail­ able. Please apply in person. 528 W. Broadway between Mill and \ Roosevelt. SANDWICH PREP/DLVRY. Flex hours. Apply Browns on. 6th- 570 S. College. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE MOTHER S HELPER wanted for mornings Mon-Fri. Trans, req u ir e d H e lp w/spn in North : Phoenix home. 569-9545. HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL TODDLER & PRESCHOOL Caregivers needed immed. W onderful working environ­ ment. Inquire at Light & Life Christian Preschool, 6430 E. Boise, Mesa. 985-0221. ALASKA SUMMER jobs. Earn up to $6060+/mo-Fishing indus­ try. Free transportation! Room & board! No exp nec. 818-774-1199 ext. A48845. Servers needed for dinner time. $7+/hour. Apply in person, 1324 S. Rural Rd; ^ MOTHERS HELPER to drive kids afterschool T & Th. Dep mid sz car a must. Refs req. NE Scotts Pima/Shea 451-0941 JO B OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA SUMMER jobs! Earn thousands this summer in canner­ ies, processors, etc. Male/ Fe­ male. Room/board/traVel often provided! Guide. Guaranteed^>uccess! (919) 9294398 ext, A1015; GRAND CANYON Staff- Spend the summer at the breathtaking Grand Canyon! Multivenue operation seeks kitchen staff, cashiers and rum uérs. Exp. preferred, competi­ tive wages, housing available & a great working environment! Please call (602) 638-0182 or 956-0257, HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE JO B o p Scottsdale. ,is looking for ex­ perienced, energetic people to MOTHERS HELPER/ child care fill open positions in our din­ wanted. After school aprox. 2:30n e r house. Positions avail: 5:00. M-F. Full timé summer an Servers w/at least 2yrs. full svei optioQ; 2 children 11 & 12. Must exp. Bartenders w/2yrs exp.. have safe, reliable transportation: Captains w /l yr. host/ess exp. - 952-9051 ;• ' Cooks w/culinary bkgrnd Vk a desire for a culinary future. If PROVIDE CHILD care for á Sun­ day afternoon; $7.50/hr. Exp you want a solid income in à great restaurant environ, apply , pref. 464-3937;. •; in person 2-4pm- 3821 - N. SUMMER JOB- Ft child care Scotts. Rd. * (minimal) in my home for 9 yr old boy, 6/1-8/18. Use of pool CLUCK-U & exercise equip. Lgt hskping. Looking for a fun cluckin' job? $165/wk. 814-0126 after 6pm. Come join the CluckrU-ChickTEMPE LITTLE Gym has an eri team! We are now hiring drivers, cooks, bouncers, cock­ immed. opening for pt help. Pre­ school gymnastics WST instruc­ tail servers, and chicken mas­ cots. Apply tn person.855 S. tors needed; Must enjoy children. Rural Rd. Call Kim at 413-0015. •W ork around school to 991-2826 CORK 'N CLEAVER Acc, apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food server & evening cocktail. Will train, p/t, concern w/appearance. reliability & per­ sonality are important. Apply in person. M-F 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585; UNE COOK Wanted, broiler exp needed. Apply at 850 S. Ash. COMPUTER OPERATORS. Parttime, entryievel positions, ; Am hrs. Some,schedule fle x -\ ibility. No exp necessary we ' Will; train. Duties include Doc printing, data transm ission, bursting, and _decolating. Apply at The Advertising Checking Bureau Inc 1.919 W Fairmont Dr. Sté 7, Tempe 438‘ 2320 jeed M /F ; , TAKEOUT E X P tó s S Order taker, $5/hr to start. D e ­ livery dri ver•$8-1 Ó/hr) flex ève hrs., N Scottsdale. Scott 4949974 daySv Jim 951 -9144 aft 5pm;. 8984. St a t e P ress W ednesday, March 22,1995 PaSe 18 AA CRUISE Ships Hiring! Earn big $$$ + free world travel (Car­ ibbean, Europe, Hawaii, etc.) ^Summer/permanent, no exp nec. Guide; (919)929-4398 ext ClOtV CRUISE SHIPS & vacation re­ sorts hiring. Earn up to $2500+/mo. Working for these companies. World travel & exotic resorts. Free transportation! Room & board! No experience nec. Call (818) 705-3416. M4.88 WORK IN PARADISE Su m m er positions avail­ able at Nationwide destina­ tions includ ing Hawaii,' Florida, the R ockies, Alaska. New England, etc, Earn up to S12/hr+tipsJ For more info ca ll R ESO R T EMPLOYMENT SERVICES: E (206) 632-0150 ext. R59581 A LA S K A JO B S Fisheries. Earn up to $3,000-$6,000+ per month. Room & Board ¡¡^Transportation!; Male o t Female. • No experience necessary! (206) 545-4155 ext. A59185 56 41 E . L in co ln D r. S c o ttsd a le EOE Care Providers Part-time ,flex hrs conve­ n ie n t to class schedule working 1:1 w/individual w/special needs in private i a m il y h o m e clo se to you. Choose convenient assignm ent/set ¡up conve­ n ie n t schedule. No exp re q fo r so m e assig n ments/will train free. For new p ay r a te s /d a te s to apply call Job H otlin e 494-1234 M-F 9-4 ONLY. C reative N etworks, Inc. NATIONAL PARKS Hiring Seasonal & full-time employ­ ment available at National Parks, Forests & Wildlife Preserves. Benefits + bonuses! Call 1-206545-4804 ext. N59182. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MAKE MONEY ON K A D IO /T V Your Voice ( iould Be Y our Fortune D oing f om m ercidK 230-5368 ' 24 h rs SPORTS & RECREATION LEARN WHAT the ClAj FBI and US Seal teams are training today. Jeet Kune do concepts and Filipino martial arts, con­ tact certified instructor Daniel Bissonnette 941-2550 FR El LOST/FOUND LOST COUPLE of weeks ago: Brown leather Wallet between LDS Institute and my apart­ ment. If found call 829-4948. No cash, just Want my I.D. G R A D Y ’S A M E R IC A N G R IL L N ow h iring all positions 100010 North Scottsdale Rd. South of Shea HELP WANTEDGENERAL Looking for w ork? Attend Sumn»eK ’9 S J O B F A IR M W M iA g r M arch 2 9 9am -2pm CA D Y M A LL HELP WANTEDSALES PERSONALS FAST FUNDRAISER- Raise $500 in 5 days - Greeks, groups, clubs, motivated individuals. Fast, easy - No financial obliga­ tion. (800) 775-3851 ext. 33. ZEE- ARE you psyched to Rack ’em Up? PERSONALS ALPHA GAM-DABEE!! Have a wonderful day today ! Happy Birthday ! Luv-Karin ANY COIN- Any drink! !! Weds. 7- 10pm at Flakey Jakes BarHome of the 99? weekend!!! HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL Summer Jobs at Friendly Pines Camp in Prescott We need a few top-notch coun­ selors and instructors for our 1995 camp season (5/28-7/30). Activity areas include horseback riding, climbing, outdoor skills, and target sports, but enthusiasm, selflessness, and willingness to work are most important requirements. For more information call Kevin or Eric at 255-0550 HELP WANTEDSALES ZEE- The men of AKE extend our deepest sympathies. If there is anything we can do to help, please let us know. . _ _ _ _ _ ST JUDE Novena. Thank you. JI. RESTAURANTS/ BARS CHI O’S- HOPE Spring Break was fun! Let’s finish the semes­ ter on top! Welcome Back. IRISH H I MUSIC CONGRATULATIONS TO AAA Jén Cnota on quaiifing Yor div­ ing nationals.Av ,Your Sisters SBANDERSNATGH CONGRATULATIONS TO AAA Dabney fo r becoming Head RhoChi. AW, Your Sisters AKE- GET ready to Win! Rack ’em Up is almost here! Wf. You y y y coaches. FRATERNITIES- GET ready to Rack ’em Up with the ladies of Tri-Sigma! 5th St. &Forest BREWPUB CHOOIE'S I 2 fo r 1 H A P P Y H O U R ( Buy any food item at the regular price k receive thé second item of equal or lesser value FREE! | Valid 4-8pmdally, all day Sunday I I | ■ ' | GET À summer job now! Attend the Summer. Job Fair ’95 Wed., March 29 Cady Mali. Meet with dozens of potential employers. ¡825 W. University • 894-8387 ■ GQ MIKE- Thanks for the best Spring Break ever! I love youSweet Cakes. ________ _ £ GREEK REVIEW Swimsuit ASU KARSTEN Golf Course Model Auditions. Today only presents golf instruction. After , at Fumble’s 4-6pm! work/school programs, week­ days 5:30-7pm: beginning HAPPY NEW YEAR 3/27. To enroiyinfo 784-4839. Kouchoulou... wMahi HELP WANTEDFOO D SERVICE HELP WANTEDFO O D SER V IC E M a rrio tt’s M o u n ta in S h a d o w s has a n o p e n in g for pool atte n d a n t positions. Parttim e a .m . & p .m . h rs av ailab le. CPR certifica­ t io n re q u ire d . M a rrio tt M o u n ta in S h a d o w s is com m itted 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 St 1:30-4 p.m. INTERN AT Merrill Lynch. Get a fast start on your career in in­ vestments. Looking for ener­ gized & hard working ind. ready to work. Call Barry Bayat at 481-2748. FUNDRAISING KAPPA DELTA Chi New mem­ bers, Good luck at Mid-Re­ view! Love the Actives. KAPPA DELTA Chi, Little Sisters, Georgina Alaffa and Elisa Conas, Good luck at MidReview on Wednesday. Love your Big Sister Denise Valen­ zuela. p.s. Thank yem for all of your support. KAX NEW Member Giovanna: Good luck with Mid Review.Love, Your Big Sis Michelle. KAX-TO the best jelly beans: Shari & Norma-Good luck to­ night! Love, your Big Sis An­ gelica NATALIE AND Maria, Good luck at Mid-Review! Love your Big Sis Diana _______ EN GET ready for ZEEs RackEm-Up! Love your coach, Amanda. ZEE FAITHFUL unto death! I love you all! E love, Moo. 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 264-0108 ext. 53 for more information. SE Comer of Hardy P A R ' o s ^ r TONIGHT! BLACK ASHLING TYPING/WORD PRO CESSIN G $1.99 PG. Fast. Accurate. Laseri APA/MLA. Experienced editor. Rural/University. Jim, 967r2360. 9 9 « TALL BEERS M9 p.m $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTPNear ASU. Brian. 967-5987. J O S E C U ER V O ?* Ml 9 p.m. .. For a Good Tano caS 966-1900 B a lm C a b - 404 S. Md! Ave , Surte 101 T««*» ¡¡g .AFFORDABLE - Term papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast tur­ naround. Laser quality. Town­ send W/P, Maureen, 9554)969. CarviN J ones Ba n d ! L IV E B TONIGHT AT CLUCK-U Starts at 9 p.m. $ ! Kami Shots and for the ladies 9 9 C Frozen Margs 8S5 S. Rural • 894-2112 I Blk. S. o f University CHICKEN CO. PIZZA SZ PASTA Where ASU Goes for Pizza TODAY State Press back issues can be picked up at the Information Desk in the Basement o f Matthews Center 917-3194 SERVICES HAIR DESIGN First Time Haircut WANTED regularly $12-$ 16 SERVICES 5 th & Mill 968-9539 Graduate Studies Database Psychology' • Counseling • Social Work and Related Studies Every week­ day, we give you the State , Press absolutely free. Great news. Great features. Even a magazine. Crosswords and horo­ scopes. Not to mention the huge savings from all the coupons. We do this for you every day. Will you do something for us? Good! Thanks! 4,000 Concentration Programs More than 1,000 Graduate Schools Over 300 Credentialling Programs 500 Professional Organizations Plus: School Catalog Service ...w e send the catalogs to you! Why spend hours re-searching what school has what concen­ tration, in what area of the country. Wehave all die informa­ tion right here, the most extensive database available* and we even mail you the catalogs from the schools you choose. Information packets are available for students and Resource Centers. Caraar Network Associate« 2210 Mt. Carm el Ave., Suite 110 Dept. A Glenside. PA 19038 (215) 572-7670 Fax: (215) 576-83S4 Begin Your SUMMER TAN FREE TAN w ith a n y package Try O ur Ik B R O N Z IN G BED s2395 C a ll for G rea t Specials! O N U N IV E R SIT Y J u s t 2 It l o c k s E a s t o f R u r a l 1301E, U niversity (Next to Beauvais) 14 oz. No c a t c h . No co v e r. No k id d in g . 1301 E. University When the State Press has inserts, they tend to flop to the ground and create a safety hazard as well as an eyesore. Would you be so socially correct as to bend over and pick an insert that might slip out of your State Press? Thanks. We appreciate your help. And so does the earth. 829-1737 WE NEED YOUR ■h u n d r e d s o f ■ EMPLOYERS I CALLING DAILY! ■W m m ■ • OVER 20,000 EMPLOYERS HAVE ACCESS TO OUR REVOLUTIONARY DATABASE • HUNDREDS OF SMALL AND LARGE S u n n y ’s P izza N o w o n the W o rld W id e W eb w ith b a s k e tb a ll s ite s for A S U ’s b attle w ith K e n tu c k y h ttp ://asp in .asu.ed u / p ro v id e r/S ta te P re s s / CORPORATIONS CALUNG DAILY THEY W ill CALL YOU! • OVER 50% RECEIVED JOB OFFERS *15 *$15 Listing in Electronic Database for 90 days Include Persomi VoiteMul Senno* HEALTH FITNESS HEALTH & FITNESS Drafts Coors Light • Bud Light 3 p.m.-Close 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 Entry Level Experts. Special Student Discounts! Writing, Formatting, Printing T h e W r ite R esu m e $rOff KINKO’S COPY Center makes the grade! Get reports;"resumes, & flyers fast! Color copies, Mac­ intosh & IBM rental & much more! Open 24 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. MALES 18-24 lean, healthy, nonsmokers. Wanted for a stu­ dy. $600 offered. Study re­ quires 4 short hospital stays. Gall Nicole 945-8923. Resumes W ith Results! "HP- Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. On campus! 966-1984. A G re a t T an in Less Tim e! 2 Weeks UNLIMITED SÜSTS 5 0 * I W ANT IT NOW! APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. PER SON ALI ZED S KIN care program, customized foi your skin type, dermatologist tested. Call today for à free consulta­ tion. Christy ; Mary Kay Beauty Consultant 413-1281; Any Sandwich Pizza Specials Late Night Food 11 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Great Lunch Specials Drink Specials Every Night O' P age 19 Wednesday, March 22,1995 State P ress Quest EMPLOYEE MMQflNó CMPlOVft IfflH EMSOYEA’ UOCATORI 1818 E. Southern Avenue, Suite 17-A Mesa, AZ 85204 • 602-892-2506 1-800-524-5627 FAX 892-2739 A S SEEN ON TONITE SHOW WITH JAY LENO Artiazing New "O N E DAY D IET" Hottest diet in the 90‘s! F R E E SA M PLE. 602-985-6579 CRAMMIN* FOR EXAM S WITH NO DOZ? TRASH IT! New "SUN B U R ST" lets you stay up all night with 100% memory in the morning. No drugs. Guaranteed. 602-985-6579 Y o ur In d iv id u a l H o ROJCOPE F rance.) D rake = FR EE jQ Hr GAM E of BOW LING W ith t h is a d a n d A S U ID Æ New Exp ire s 4-28-95 • e u » « *"? j Xscor®'8',• Offer v o id w ith other coupons M em o r ia l U nion R e c r e a t io n C e n t e r F or W ednesday, M arch 22, 1995 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) If you’re not careful, you’ll fall behind on your work tasks and will need extra hours to catch up. S o licit help from a cow orker. At hom e, som eone close needs your advice. TAURUS (April 20 tb May 20) Buoyed by, recent successes, you are still revved up to accomplish much on the job. The home front is another mat­ ter altogether. You are neglect­ ing certain domestic needs. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) It seems everything is working like a w ell-o ile d m achine, thanks to you. Don’t let a minor obstacle completely throw you. You easily attain the solution. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) W ith y o u r recen t m alaise ' behind you, you are ready to tackle chore$ at work. You are pleasantly surprised that things didn’t pile up and accomplish much. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You demonstrate clearly to big­ wigs that you are a team player as well as a leader. A loved one is feelin g neg lected . Spend some tim e making up to this person. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) T he sun breaks through the clo u d s and you are feelin g much more optimistic. Family members respond to your good m ood -and try to foster it. A neglected domestic chore needs your attention. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You have the b lu es fo r no apparent reason/ p o n ’t allow yourself to take all the burdens o f the world on your shoulders. Your sensitive nature som e­ times is a plague. SCORPIO (Opt,.23 to Nov. 21) Although unprepared for an assignment which comes your way, you are more than up to the task. In fact, you can Com­ plete it by day’s end. Evening hours are favored for socializ­ ing. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) An intriguing social invitation received holds a lot of opportu­ nity for you; You could meet many influential people who can help you in the future. T hose of you who are unat­ tach ed could begin a new . romance. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You’re being a bit conceited and full of yourself The atti­ tude doesn’t go over well with co-workers or family members. Be more realistic. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You are less thain pleased with the news you h ear ab o u t a friend. It’S best to take it in stride. Y our friend does not want your advice and won’t lis­ ten anyway. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) It’s a good time to take a break and stop driving yourself so hard. You have a tendency to be much too intense. Lighten up and relax. YOU BORN TODAY can be physically lazy or steadily pro­ ductive, doing everything at your own pace- Once you have taken a position, you are hard to budge. Your responses are strongly aesthetic and pleasure loving. You want to do every­ thing fp t the moment and are good at determining the materL al value o f things. Y ou are - attracted to artistic-fields such as museum curator, jew eler, design or architect. Birthdate of: Pat Robertson* ev an g elist; G eorge Benson, musician, Bob Costas, sports commentator. © 1995 King Features Syndicate, Inc. 3b Culture 81 A rts presents The Pitchforks ASU Acapella Women's Choir M U P ro g ra m m in g L ou n ge I X • 12 to 12:30 T o d a y ! Page 2 0 S t a t e P ress Wednesday^ M arch 2 2,1995 SAVE LEVI’S JUNIOR TEES SA LE $12-$18 Orig. $16-$24. Levi’s Knit tees for juniors in a variety of fun colors and designs. Get set for spring! Get a head start on summer. Sizes S-M-L. 29,99 LEVI’S JUNIOR SHORTS Great buy! Levi’s shorts in a big assortment of styles and denim washes. Be the first in the sun in casual Levi’s fashion. Regular and original prices are offering prices only and m ay or m ay not have resulted in sales. Advertised m erchandise m ay be available at sale price in upcom ing sa le s events.