tate P r ess Thursday, March 23,1995 An Independent Morning Dally ASU crime rise reflects national trend A ggravated assaults o n cam pus d o u b le d since 1990 By T o d d K elly State P ress Aggravated assaults at ASU have more than doubled in the past five years, coinciding with a national trend of increasing crime against people. There were 42 reports of aggravated assault at ASU in 1994, compared with 20 reports in 1990. However, burglar­ ies and motor vehicle thefts are down, according to the ASU Department of Public Safety’s annual crime report released Wednesday. Despite the increasing reports of aggravated assaults at ASU, the crime rate for crimes against people — the total num ber of sexual assaults, robberies and aggravated assaults combined — are similar; to nationwide increases, according to Radawna Michelle, crime prevention coordi­ nator for ASU DPS. “There was a study released nationally last year and it indicated that in general crime rates are down, but you are more likely to be a victim of a violent crime than before,” she said. “So crimes against people are going up nationally.” At ASU, the total crime rate, the total number of crimes E h re n S c h w to b e rt/S ta te P r e s s C onference to prom ote student volunteerism S e e in g t h e lig h t By K en n es Bo u g S t a it: P ress Volunteerism will take center stage today as the 1995 Campus Outreach Opportunity League (COOL) National Conference kicks off four days of events, providing various community service opportunities for ASU students. The event will begin at noon on the Student Recreation Center fields with a presentation of the Volunteer Spirit Awards, sponsored by Buick Motor Division. Following the presentations, hundreds of students participating in a project called the Plunge will leave for a day of community service at one of 10 Valley sites. COOL, which began in 1984, travels annually to college campuses to provide a showcase for student volunteerism. The conference brings students involved in community service from across the country together to discuss aspects of their work. According to Dawn Hutchison, the national meetings direc­ tor for COOL, the conference can help break the stereotype that college students are apathetic. •■College students are really making a difference," she said. "The stereotype of Generation X is just not true, and having ASU host it (the conference) is a perfect illustration of that.” This year, about 1,200 students from more than 100 cam- Journalism senior Chris Strohm relaxes Tuesday in the MU Montgomery Lounge reading room w hile w aiting fo r his evening class. Montgomery Lounge is on the southwest side of the MU. f CBN t o G O O L , PAGE 2 ,; H o m f if s s o n H a y d e n She said the project is going much better than her organization anticipated and she expects it to raise at least $2,500. On Tuesday, organizations raised $700. The Aid Association .for Lutherans B y B etty M ihalopoulos matched that amount. State P ress Also scheduled to participate in the project is Tempe Mayor Neil A hard ground and the early morning arrival of garbage trucks on campus provided a rude, though realistic awakening for students Giuliano, who said he will spend tonight in a shelter after he leaves who spent the night in self-made homeless shelters on Hayden a city council meeting. “I think it’s very positive that the students are participating in Lawn. As a part of “Shades of Poverty,“ a three-day project running this experience as a way of showing support for the homeless com­ from Tuesday through today to raise money for the homeless, stu­ munity,” Giuliano said. Banz said that some people have been concerned that students dents from various campus organizations spend the day “begging” for money from passers-by on campus so they can “purchase” the are trying to replicate what it is like to be homeless and that they are making light of a serious issue.' materials needed to construct their shelters. “The students are having fun. However, I want people to know The materials for the shelters are “sold” by the Associated Students of ASU and, in turn, it donates that money to local home­ that this is not in any way a good representation of what people go through who are homeless every day, but at the same time it is not a less charities. The project is sponsored by the ASASU Community Service mockery of the homeless,” she said. “Participants will not truly learn what it is like to be homeless as Program (CSP) and Leadership 2000. Proceeds will be donated to the Agua Fria Food Bank, Home of Hope homeless shelter and a way of life, but they will find it gets cold at night and begging sucks,” said CSP member Dora Valentin. Habitat for Humanity. Heather Cooley, president of SATETC (Student Action Team “It was cold and the ground is very hard,” said CSP co-director Tanya Banz who spent the night on Tuesday. “The garbage trucks Educating and Training on Critical issues), said it was hard to beg pick up garbage very early on this campus.” T u rn t o H o m eless, page 2 . Students learn hard facts of ‘poverty’ Members of ASASU and other campus organi­ zations spend the day Wednesday on Hayden Lawn as part of an effort to raise money for homeless charities. The effort, called “Shades of P o v e rty ,” is sch ed u led to run th ro ug h today. World/ Nation IN S ID E S T A T E PRESS Aw Japanese p o lice d isco v e r a cac h e o f a solvent used to m ak e n erve gas during th e ir raid s o n a religious g ro u p 's headquarters, Page 3 Sports Ju n io r R on R iley an d the fifth-seeded S u n D evils face top-seeded K entucky to n ig h t a t 8 in a S w eet 16 show dow n. Page 11 Where To Find It Classifieds........................... 13 Comics.............¡.... .........10 Crossword............... -.6 Horoscopes ........;...... .,...,..15 Opinion.,...............L,.“ —4 Police Report..... ..*..,.,...7 Sports................... .11 Today’s Activities...............2 World/Nation.... ............ 3 rrim e T oday The Today Sedrion is a deify odender o f events printed ese service to ih e ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis and am printed on a space-available basts Campus dubs and organizations may submit written entries to tie State Prese t ) A s basement o f Matthews Cedar, Room IS. Requests M l not be taken over tie phone. Faxed entries MB also not be accepted. Entries must contain tie SMI name o f the otub o r organization, a descrip­ tion o f the event, date, trine and tie fu l address o f Re location. M l requests are subject to editing to r content, space 'end clarity. Incomplete or ¡legible entries M l be decoded ____ Deadrine fo r requests in noon Vie day before publication and entries writ not be accepted more then three working days before publication. Only one | entry per organization per day is permitted. • Pel CM — General meeting. 5 p m , Psychology Building, PSY 205 • Cem pue Crusade »or Christ — Thursday Eight liv e . Special guest Tom Shrader, East Valey Stale Fellowship: "What 90 people «Ao ara 9 0 yaaie eU said they'd change about their Jives’ 7:30 p.m„ Physical Science H-wtng, Roam 1 5 1 . t • University Teeelm aelars — Weekly meeting. Improve your chances for success; develop speaking, listening and funking skfc through ASU's chapter 01 Toastmasters International. 6:30 p-m., MU Coconino. • C areer a ervtees — International students: panel discussion of job search success. 3-5 p.m., Physical Science F-wirtg, Room 123 » 9MRM *— General meeting of science fiction and fantasy dub, Speoal sur­ prise activity: everyone welcomo- 4:30 p ita , Pttysicsl Sctortoe H-vring, Room isa State P ress Thursday, March 23,1995 P age 2 ! « \ i Wvj « Student LB» t eem ing Resource C en ter- - fre e S Q W C tttc a l rearing workshop Develop more effective strategies to summarize » id refcan ntpon tant information while reading. Open to a l ASU students, faculty and staff 11 a m .. Mvatcuriural Lounge. Student Services BuM ng. • A m erican M arketin g A ssociation Susan Karts, sales m e e p .s l KVRY, w# be speaking on networking. Social hour wtil follow meeting. 4 3 0 p.m., SAC 116. « Ca nterbury Episcopal Cam pus H k ib ti'y — Worship service, dnner and book study. 6:30 p.m , S t Augustine's Church: northeast comer of Broatbvay and Cologo. - ’ * . • PRSSA — Bt-monthiy meeting. 4:30 p.m., Stauffer HaB Reading Ftoom. • Society a t IHsparSc Prof— tone! engin eer» — General meeting, spon­ sored by SRP. Elections for new officers: come and vote, 4:30p.m ., C O B 250. • jnfartbeolpllnary H um anities Program — Graduate Brown Bag Series: “Social peat», u ioraiaw in ed eonaertt. social jualice, and S toraB etflberalbatffion. By Renato Satomone. 1 p.m., LL B638. »•Vofuntm r beco me Tart A seh ta n ro — Prse tax adyioe.fedetal and Arizona form preparation Foreign students vroloomo Thursdays. Bring tax boaidras, 1993 tax return and 1 9 M tax information. 6 -9 pun., Armstrong H A Room 114. vv • H onors C ollege C ouncil — M eeting to work on Academic Exceifonce W eak. 3 p m , MoCintock H A Study Lounge. • C ritical Mass Bike Ride — Demonstration ride for education and support of alternative transportation in downtmwr Tem ps 5 p.m., south side of Stapler's Market: 10th St. and Myrtle fB S p • B spbsl Student U nion — Noonday. Com a and jean us for a b ee homecooked m eat There wd be a short devotional Bible study afterwards. Noon, TSSS’SLMilAM&v • ACtS — PrinUpN Karen Kurdin w * speak about interviewing techniques and resume wrSng ter future teachers. A l wotaomo, 7 p.m ., Payne H a l. Room 860. • C O O L N ational G o n h ten ce— * is not too Mte to register for the greatest event on student oommunity service. M ake new friends bom a t over foe naben whie learning to make a dWerence »t our oommurviy. 10 aun., M U sec­ ond door. PLUNGE into foe streets: come today to serve your community. Work vrifo foe homeless, foe anwronment, chicken, older addlto, hunger end muchmore. 1 0 3 0 a.m.-noon. Student R ecre^on Com p*« COOL C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . and the crime rate for property went down,, according to the statistics. Aggravated assault is the only crime that has increased every year since 1990. There were 23 in 1991; 28 in 1992; 36 in 1993 and 42 in 1994. However, there were two fewer reports of theft than last year. There were 1,042 reports of theft in 1994, and in four of the last five years, theft reports exceeded 1,000, w hich M ichelle said has been holding steady. Burglaries have steadily decreased, from 176 in 1990 to 113 in 1994, as have motor vehicle thefts, down to 43 from 54 in 1990. Arson (four in 1994), rape (four), rob­ bery (seven) and murder (none) remain the least reported crimes on campus. Michelle said that the statistics “mostly look pretty good.” puses have come to ASU for the con­ ference, Hutchison said. She said she hopes to have the visiting students integrate with ASU students who may not already be involved with the con­ ference during the kick-off events, which are open to anyone. Students will hold more than 120 workshops Friday and Saturday, cov­ ering service topics such as literacy programs, diversity programs and homelessness issues. As part of the conference, comedi­ an Louie Anderson is scheduled to provide a free show for the partici­ pants Saturday. To kick off COOL, Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano will speak about the importance of community service dur­ ing die presentation of die Volunteer Spirit Award. “The COOL Conference really represents the coming together of stu­ dents and collegiate organizations across the country,” he said, “It is a strong vehicle for students to show they care.” The Volunteer Spirit Award was designed six years ago to award ASU students for their volunteer time and efforts, according to Julie Kipper, coordinator o f the award presenta­ tions. This year the presentations are in conjunction with the COOL Conference. The winners of the award are sophomore Sarah Welling, junior M ichael Chu and senior Dora Valentin. Faculty staff member Jennus Burton, associate vice president for administrative services, and ASU alumna Tracy McConnell are also recipients of die award. Another facet of the COOL kick­ off event is the Plunge, sponsored by COOL, Student Life, ASU and the Community: Together in Volunteer eless_ C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . for money at first, but she eventually got used to it. “When the students actually thought I was homeless, they told me things like ‘get a job,’ but when I said I was raising money for the homeless they started to donate,” Cooley said “ I wanted to defend myself and say ‘I work 20 hours a week, l am grad­ uating from college,’ but homeless people don’t really have a defense and they have to do this everyday.” Nikki Kendrick, another SATETC mem­ ber, said participating in the project made her think of people who are homeless every day. “I think this is a great program because it raises money-for people who need it,” she said. “This is by no means an experience to learn what it is like to be homeless because we can’t know what it’s like;” Excellence (ACTIVE), AS ASU Community Service Project and ASASU Multi-cultural Programming Board. The Plunge, which is normally called Into the Streets, occurs once a semester. It is a one day service pro­ ject that takes students and “plunges” them into the community, said Erin Murphy, director of ACTIVE and coordinator for the event. Students participating in the event will travel to one of 10 sites to do community service. The projects cho­ sen this year are the Family Emergency Services Center, Papago Park Clean-up, Tempe Graffiti Removal, the Engel side Middle School Health Fair sponsored by the Phoenix Children’s Hospital, the St. Mary’s Food Bank, the Salvation Army Family Shelter, the Tanner Chapel Manor, the Home of Hope Homeless Shelter, the Tempe YMCA and the American Red Cross. : Welling, who is also the student director of the Plunge, said the event will show the volunteering side of col­ lege students. “It will show that college students are willing to help their community instead of just taking from it,” she said Students participating in the Plunge, which includes 220 students from COOL and 32 team leaders from ASU. will leave campus around 1 p.m. and return around 4:30 p.m. Murphy said that students can still sign up for the event in front of the SRC between 10:30 a.m. and noon. Students interested in participating in the entire COOL Conference can still sign up by contacting Hutchison at 965-9512. There is a $20 fee to be a part of the conference. (ËUMQFWS PSBNftij ^ MARCH X I MADNESS' SHOOTOUT "D on’t M iss Your Shot" Thursday March 2 3 H ayden Lawn 9:00A M - 1:00PM D ra w in g fo r M o u n ta in B ik e , an d o th e r fa b u lo u s F r iz e s , W State P ress o r ld /N a tio n Wednesday, March 23,1995 P age 3 Cache o f nerve gas solvent seized by Japanese police TOKYO (AP) — Police seized nerve gas solvent, $7.9 million in cash and 22 pounds of gold Wednesday at two' dozen sites linked to a secretive religious sect that calls itself the Sublime Truth. Several sect members were arrested in a kidnapping case, but police refused to say whether they were also being questioned in Monday’s subway attack. Ten people were killed and nearly 5,000 sickened by the poisonous gas released during rush hour. The cult-like group Aum Shinri Kyo has denied any role in the attack. There was still no known motive and no claim of responsibility. In a chilling development, the sect's leader. Shoko Asahara, was reported to have delivered an apocalvptic-sounding mes­ sage Tuesday to followers in the Russian Far East. “The time has come at last for you to awake and help me," Asahara said in the message, broadcast Wednesday night by Japan’s NHK television. “You must act to ensure you do not have any regrets about death.” The police raids provided frightening evidence of the sect’s hold over its followers. At a cult compound in the wooded foothills of Mount Fuji, police found about 50 people who were weak and ill, and six were hospitalized. Doctors said they were probably suffering from malnutrition. O ther sect m em bers were bizarrely dressed and appeared disoriented. And a 23-year-old woman sect mem­ ber was reportedly rescued from a container where she had been confined. Police said they could not confirm that report, by Kyodo News Service. Despite the resolve the raids showed, authorities were clearly treating the sect with considerable caution. Police employed notable restraint, using no weapons to subdue sect followers who resisted. • . Officials even refused to specifically say the raids were in connection with the subway attack, instead citing their investigation of a public notary 's kidnapping unrelated. But it was widely assumed that the impetus was the sub­ way attack, and police took every precaution against a pos­ sible chemical-weapons clash. Officers wore gas masks and protective suits and carried computerized gas sniffers. Some resorted to a more old-fashioned method for detecting poisonous vapors: caged canaries. ;■■■■■■' Chinese naval o fficer Chen Haifan has his photo taken by a colleague as he poses w ith Am erican Seamen David Humphreys (left) and Issac Anthony in front o f the USS Bunker H ill In the Chinese port city o f Qingdao Wednesday. The Bunker H ill is the first U.S. warship to dock in China in six years. U .S. ship pulls into C hinese port Warship s visit Navy’s first since ’89 Tiananmen massacre QINGDAO, China (AP) — As a Chinese military band played “The Star Spangled Banner” on shore, the USS Bunker Hill sailed into port Wednesday on the first visit by an American warship since China’s 1989 crack­ down on pro-democracy demonstrators. Chinese sailors lined up on the decks of nearby destroyers to welcome the ship. The United States suspended military relations with China after its army attacked demonstrators in Beijing on June 4, 1989, killing hundreds of people. High-level talks resumed in 1993, and Defense Secretary William Perry visited China last fall. Rear Adm. Bernard J. Smith, commander of the Navy’s Cartier Group Five, called the Bunker H ill's port call a friendship visit and insisted there was noth­ ing political about it. It was the third visit since Communist China was founded in 1949. Warships visited Qingdao’s nuclear submarine base in 1986, and in 1989 the navy made a port call at Shanghai a day before Premier Li Peng declared martial law in Beijing as a precursor to the military crackdown. The last visit by a Chinese navy ship to the United States was in April 1989 in Honolulu. Chinese sailors and officers were taken on tours of the 567-foot Bunker Hill and shown the Ticonderogaclass cruiser’s missile-launching system, gun mounts, combat information center and pilot house. Capt. Zhang Zhaozhong accepted an invitation to sit in the captain’s chair and joked, in English, “Let’s go.” His men were allowed to take pictures and video­ tapes, but the Chinese did not let U.S. seamen photo­ graph the insides of the Chinese destroyers arid sub-.; marines they toured. Ferguson slapped w ith 6 life terms for LIRR shooting Convicted Long Island Rail Road gunman Colin Ferguson is led out of court In handcuffs and shackles Wednesday, shortly after a judge sentenced him to six consecutive life terms. MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) — Colin Ferguson was sentenced wounding 19 as he walked down the aisle of the train on to life behind bars Wednesday for shooting to death six peo­ Dec. 7,1993, firing a semi-automatic handgun. The judge also ordered Ferguson to serve 50 years, the ple on a commuter train, prompting cheers from survivors m axim um , for 19 counts o f attem pted m urder, two who endured cross-examination by the killer-tumed-lawyer. “You, Colin Ferguson, will never again return to soci­ weapons charges and reckless endangerment. During the trial, police testified that Ferguson was carry­ ety, but will rather spend the rest of your natural life in prison,” Judge Donald Belfi said as he handed Ferguson the ing handw ritten notes the night of the shooting that maximum on the murder charges —- six consecutive sen­ expressed his hatred of whites and Asians, blamed whites for sabotaging his life and announced that the LIRR would tences of 25 years to life. FerguSon, 37, who acted as his own attorney during the be his “venue” for revenge. All but one of his victims were white or Asian. trial, was stonefaced as he was led away handcuffs. In the notes, he also said that he hated “Uncle Tom Before hearing the sentence, Ferguson, who is black, Negroes” and that he held repeated his claim that the his fire until the commuter shooter was a white man train had left the New York who stole his gun from his City limits to avoid embar­ bag while he slept on the You, Colin Ferguson, will never again rassing then-Mayor David Long Island R ail Road train, and he likened him­ return to society, but will rather spend Dinkins, who is black. The sentencing — ordi­ self to a martyred saint. the rest o f your natural life in prison. narily a pro-form a affair “John the Baptist lived wrapped up in a few hours in the wilderness, a humble — stretched over three man, and he was put into — Judge Donald Belfi, days. prison for no reason. He sentencing Colin Ferguson to six The first day, Ferguson was beheaded by a criminal life terms for the 1993 LIRR massacre delivered a 3 1/2-hour rant justice system sim ilar to against the news media, the this,” Ferguson said. prosecution, the judge and “After his death, we can the jury. look back and say with 20Day two was for the victims and their families. One of 20 hindsight, ‘This is a great man.’ And as much as I’m hated in Nassau County and America, I believe there are Ferguson’s legal advisers was reduced to tears as a dozen victims took the stand, including Robert Giuglianot who persons that are strengthened by me and my stand.” Survivors, angered by Ferguson’s legal efforts, marched screamed at Ferguson, “You’re nothing but a piece of * out of the courtroom en masse when he began to speak. garbage!” In imposing sentence, the judge said he had Jiever They returned for Belfi’s sentencing and cheered wildly as presided over a trial “with a more selfish and self-centered Ferguson was led away. “Thank God it’s over,” said Carolyn McCarthy, whose defendant.” “ What could be more cowardly then to enter a train husband was killed and son crippled in the rampage. filled with unsuspecting homebound commuters and sys­ “Hopefully, today will be the last of Colin Ferguson.” Ferguson was convicted o f killing six people and tematically shooting them at point blank range?” Belfi said. O pinion S tate P ress Thursday, March 23,1995 P a g:e 4 State Press itorial .ßear_/V w e c h jÿ i Sweet 16 spirit This evening, ASU will be making its bid to become one of the top eight teams in the NCAA when it plays Kentucky. It’s a banner day for ASU basketball, and a round of congratulations is in order for the players, the coaches and all others who help to shape Sun Devil basketball. Unfortunately, not every student can enjoy the back slapping and congratulations. You see, many of us are guilty of ignoring our team. That’s not particularly new; ASU is notori­ ous for its lackadaisical school spirit {unless, of course, national recognition seems in the works). But ASU hasn’t had just a good team; it’s had a great team. The Sun Devils have swept the Wildcats in season series for the first time since the ‘82-’83 season. It surprised the nation by first qualifying for the NCAA tour­ nament, then has gone on to place in the Sweet 16 for the first time in 20 years. And yet, conference home games couldn’t sell out despite being ranked in the top 15 teams in the country. So, to be blunt, why don’t we have enough school spirit around here? Part of the problem may be that ASU is the sixth largest University in the country; With 43,000 students, it’s difficult to create a feel­ ing of community, tradition and school pride. Part of the problem is also that, setting aside the 1885 founding date, ASU is a fairly new university; The progression from teach­ ers’ school to nationally ranked university has been a gradual one, and only in the last few decades has ASU become a nationally known name. Perhaps it’s a little much to expect ASU to be another Harvard, Yale, Princeton — or even a USC or UCLA. The State P ress, to be honest, might not be doing enough to encourage school spirit (though it’s debatable whether that’s the prop­ er role of a newspaper in collegiate society), and commentary on the subject is welcome. And maybe the nature of ASU is simply different. With a majority of commuter stu­ dents, 11,000 graduate students (holding affection for their first alm a m ater) and two branch campuses, Arizona State just may not be “set up” to have school spirit ASU fe e ls like a diploma mill — a vast educational factory whose primary purpose is to graduate as many degree students as possi­ ble to impress grant committees. And that’s a shame, because the source of the school spirit we’re envious of is the feel­ ing of community — that all ASU students have something in common, a shared experi­ ence we all can relate to and sympathize with. s TAFF STATE PRESS b îjjO & K iC D A Z - - _ _ - — 1 - - - - - - - - /h u fß C f - . - - ------------------------ VICE -A SSISTA N T APM INISTRATOR of FEDERAL SCHOOL LUNCH PROGRAMS wr s r f l f p*(35 a S(/ G reg L ouganis’ m oral b elly flop Now that Greg Louganis has officially been elevated to the status ' ARRY R. of martyr, I presume it is only a mat­ ter of time before he is nominated KELLEY for sainthood. Since Louganis announced that he has AIDS, amid the public wal­ lowing of sympathy by politician and celebrity alike, Newsweek had the poor judgment to link Louganis with other sports heroes who have fallen victim to HIV,' specifically Arthur Ashe and Karvin Johnson. While coupling Louganis and Johnson may be appropriate, it is slanderous to marry the honorable reputation of Arthur Ashe to the reprehensible morals of Greg Louganis. Arthur Ashe was a giant among men. Not gifted with great speed or power, he defeated his court opponents by outsmarting them. Not surprisingly, he used this same intellectual talent to outsmart his opponents off the court, namely bigotry and racism. Ashe was a man of honor and integrity. As America’s Davis Cup captain, he once publicly reprimanded the world’s number one player, John McEnroe, for his repugnant behavior, inso­ lence and immaturity, going so far as to threatening to pull him off the court and forfeiting the match. He believed no one was bigger than the game itself, including himself. Arthur acquired HIV during heart-bypass surgery, a transfu­ sion with contaminated blood, at a time when there were no tests to determine contamination. If anybody had a right to feel anger and spite, certainly it was he. But for a man who faced the Klan in America and white racism in South Africa, it would have seemed petty to seek revenge by urinating in a New York reservoir., Placing Greg Louganis in the same rank with Arthur Ashe, as some have tried, strains Newsweek’s credulity. Judging by the lives the individuals led, it is very plain that Louganis is no Arthur Ashe. By his own admission, Louganis is the sole person responsi­ ble for his contracting AIDS in the mid 80’s. He did not acquire it through blood transfusion or contaminated dental instru­ ments, but instead via promiscuous, unprotected homosexual sex. Recall during this period the incessant media warnings about the AIDS epidemic, from Ryan White to Rock Hudson. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop testified before Congress that the best protection against the transmission of HIV, barring B abstinence, was the use of a condom. Mr. Louganis chose nei­ ther. While it has become fashionable in certain circles to blame Ronald Reagan or the Vatican for the spread of AIDS and for homosexuals to heckle John Cardinal O’Connor during Mass in St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Louganis has no scapegoat. He is now bearing the consequences for his actions and the partners he chose. Louganis' actions were not motivated by some altruism to cure the world’s overpopulation quandary. He succumbed to his own narcissism and nihilism. This sort of self-obsession is what feeds HIV. The commu­ nities at highest risk of infection have placed séxual privacy above public health. Ten years ago, Bill Buckley suggested that the way to con­ tain the vims is to tattoo everyone infected on the left ami and the left buttocks. Since high-risk groups were intravenous drug users and homosexuals, this would be a warning sign to poten­ tial partners or needle-sharers. At the time, such measures, fostered memories of yellow stars and concentration camps, and were roundly derided by civil libertarians. While politically unpalatable, such a program might have spared Greg Louganis from his current predica­ ment. More reviling than the conditions under which Louganis acquired AIDS was his post-infection behavior. His diving accident in the ’88 Olympics, bleeding in the pool, failing to notify officials or the physician who stitched his scalp was not a minor oversight. The world’s perception of a profile in courage, was in reality a profile in cowardice. Defenders of Louganis say his apprehension was warranted, since coming out of the closet would probably have meant the loss of endorsements. In other words, Greg Louganis decided the value of a human life was less than the cover of a Wheaties box. We are told now that the chlorine would have destroyed the virus in the pool. That is easy to say seven years later, but in 1988, that was medically unknown. If a diver following Louganis had contracted HIV and consequently died, Louganis would certainly be facing a civil lawsuit and possibly a criminal indictment on second-degree homicide — and rightly so. Louganis will pay the ultimate price for his actions. That alone does not earn him the public’s forgiveness. Justifiably, many Americans will treat Greg Louganis with the same atti­ tude he displayed for the lives of his fellow competitors: Contempt Barry R. Kelley is a graduate student studying Asian history. JASON OWSLEY, Editor PAVID STROW, Managing Editor NICHOLAS BACON KRIS FR1DRICH...... .............City Editor GARIN G R O FF.................... GREG ZEMEIDA. . : . DAVID LASPALUTO................ A. MARJORY KAMINSKI......... JIM POULIN............. ... .......... .. MARK a m f r ,1 ...... ...........Asst. Photo Editor JF.REMY STEIN ............ DAN MILLER ......................I.. KEN COLLINS .. . ............ —..... ANN A ULINICH... .................Asst. Magazine Editor R E PO R T E R S: Kennes Bolig. Lisa Cary, Lorrie Cohen, D aw n D e C h ristin a . P a tty K in g , T o d d K e lly , B etty M ihalopoulos, A ngela M ull, D avid Pro ffitt, N. Scott Trimble, Kim Watson. SPO R T S R EPO R TE R S: Lee Newman, Damian Shaw. Heather Snow. C O P Y E D IT O R S : B ry n C h a n c e llo r, K im H erm an, Elizabeth Montalbano. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : D ianne R. B artsch, Sam antha Feldman, Lance D. Terry. ED ITO R IA L W RITE R : James Frasetta. C O L Ù M N IS T S : B rian A nderson, T im B ax ter, Dan Blanco, Tori Evans, James Frasetta, Tina Holder, Barry K elley, D avid Luna, D iana Lopez, Jim M ahin, D èlia Maldonado, Greg Nigh. C A R T O O N IST S : Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, J Bryce Morgan. / PROD U CTIO N : Mark Abromorivitz, Aaron R. Bratcher, Beth French, A drianna G arcia, Jodi G oldblatt, Jerem y Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : E m ily Bè rg e r, D an Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Christine Porreca, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a WholeBoard members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor* Opinion Editor ! News Editor The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam peri* \ o d s, a t M atthew s C e n te r, R oom 15, A rizo n a S ta te University, Tem pe,'^riZ. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f 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 Press Phone Numbers Information............... 965-7572 N ew sroom ................ 965-2292 M agazine................ .965-1695 Advertising................965-6555 C lassifieds................965-6735 O pinion S tate P ress Page 5 Thursday, March 23,1995 Letters T Silly letters amuse us, keep home fires burning . , vAs a columnist, I have the unique opportunity to express my views in a public forum. Readers have also, on occa­ sion, been generous enough to convey their droughts regard­ ing my arguments. Some o f diese letters were written with intelligence and thought, while others were written with, well, they were just written. Tinas ; brings me. to the point o f my discussion. ^ ~ ’*1 I have never proclaimed the great citizens o f Arizona, espedally the ones occupying the Valley, to he anything even remotely near bright. It would seem as though -many Arizonans have a very difficult time dissecting and comprehending complex issues, or even simplistic ones for that matter. Nothing underscores my theory nun« d m i»y daily disoovery kttm s aem to the editors of Valley newspapers. Now don’t get me wrong, I appreciate the opinions o f my fellow dtizens.1 am also grateful that we have the opportunity to vent our aggressions in a published arena. However, many of these letters are incredibly ridiculous and would have been more effective if they wore sent to area garbage dumps as opposed to local newspapers. My first example, from the Arizona Republic (which, incidentally is the source for all of my letters), comes from What I assum e is an old lady nam ed S ylvia Ki Hemal 1 (all names have been changed to protect the dim-witted). To paraphrase Kiilemall’s asinine theory, AIDS is a disease that homosexuality created and there­ fore is not worth recognizing as a deadly epidemic. Furthermore, “(AIDS) is also affecting a small percent of the heterosexuals, but why not (teal with the real issue and quit denying where it’s coming from?" This letter speaks for itself and its abhorrent, misin­ formed Reagan administration theorist. However* fop those of you who may not be able to ditch your homo­ phobic mentality, here is my response. Acquired immune deficiency syndrome is a deadly virus transmitted mainly through sexual contact and the sharing of needles. Gay or bisexual men may have previ­ ously been the primary contractors and transmitters of AIDS, but they have now educated themselves, therefore reducing th e ir risk o f co n tra ctio n im m ensely. Heterosexual women and men could only be so lucky to attain die necessary education in order to eradicate this devastating disease. So Sylvia, wake up and smell the condoms. Z This next offering, albeit a simple one (wait a minute! — they me all simple mies), comes from an ignoramus in Scottsdale named Amy J-Think-I-Have-A-Lot-OfInfluence. Apparently, Amy is a slight bit irked because the Arizona Republic placed some story oh the front­ page. According to Amy, this story was not a hews story, but rather an “opinion piece” that belonged in the appropriate section. Near the end of Amy’s “letter” is her most powerful assertion, the mother of all threats, an argument sure to bring the Republic to its proverbial knees. Good old Amy states: “Its ftat kind of stunt that has me questioning my long-standing subscription.” 1 am certain Eugene Pulliam, pretident of the Arizona R epublic, is fearful o f Ms paper’s swift and certain demise because Ms. I-Think-I-Have-A-Lot-Of-Infltrence might cancel her subscription* Alas, I may have a solu­ tion to Eugene’s ominously pending problem, Pulliam should grant complete o m n ^ L t f t t s newspaper to Amy. After all, Amy knows ¿ m e titan Republic staffers when it comes to defining the differences between .a news stray and an “opinion piece.” Right? My final example o f idiotic newspaper letter writers is also the uncontested w inner o f my im prom ptu Dumbest Letter To The Editor award. Earl A-Cop’sW ord-Is- As-Good- A s-G od’s wrote to the A rizo n a Republic because he was concerned the Phoenix Rohce Department was getting beat up on, so t» speak, because they dropped a couple of “suspects.” Earl writes: “When a police officer gives a citizen a command, the citizen m ust immediately obey. Tell everyone that a police officer’s order is the same as an order from God! If the police ever lose this authority, anarchy is the result.” Wow! That was some display of an individualistic and free thinking man. “A police officer’s order is the same as an order from God!” Come on Earl, what in the hell are you thinking? Where were you a couple of years ago when the Los Angeles police nearly killed a man because they abused their authority? Moreover, I have reason to believe that police departments across America continually abuse their power and authority. Anarchy would not be the result if the police lost their authority, but instead the sound of a relieved citizemy would blan­ ket the weary streets of the Valley. Congratulations to Earl Porter, for he is the author of the dumbest letter to the editor this year — so far. Earl receives a lifetime supply of pencils and paper so he may continue to confuse, amaze, infuriate and insult people with his tyrannical rantings. I would also like to extend my great thanks and appreciation to all o f the other contestants who regrettably could not be men­ tioned because of the lack of space. Keep up the horrific work. After all, we need someone to laugh at and it may as well be you. Brian Anderson is a junior journalism major. Controversial subjects should be considered more 1 would have to say. that the regurgitation of sexist dogma that has lately hit the “news stands” (a.k.a. soapbox­ es) is about to make me scream anti-Semitic epitaphs. Seriously, how can anyone make an effort at debunking the arguments when we are bombarded with an incredibly Counterproductive issue that is turned round and round before our very eyes? Let’s regress to the days before Spring Break, when Hooters was fighting for its legal right (yes, folks* I thought we had a democracy; key word: thought) to attain a restau­ rant and liquor license. The State Press editorial stomped on any realistic issues about their business and based their argument upon sexism. Then a certain fraternity posted a “degrading” flier, which I actually had the chance to see, enjoy fo ra moment, chuckle to myself about the triviality of the whole thing and forget about, all in the time it takes my eyes to blink. At that moment, I never even considered the flyer until the State Press informed us about the controversy behind it. I believe that the majority of students probably acted in the same manner as I did. No harm done, except letting another attempt to squash our rights of freedom get by our sharp college minds. Then, I thought about this whole sexism/degradation thing. L et’s count the number o f State Press ads that include such nasty, non-Christian, mind-warping material. On any given day, I could probably count two —that’s two too many for a newspaper that uses it’s own editorial col­ umn to denounce such heinous propaganda. But, the State Press tipped the canoe when it allowed Playboy to adver­ tise on nearly 3/4 of a page with a scantily-clad woman as their spokesperson. I think a quote from an unnamed tag­ ger, inscribed upon the torn out page including the ad explains many of our feelings about this: The State Press is a sexist rag. Maybe a little harsh was the message, but it was the thought that counted. The State Press, as well as many other people, need to consider their positions carefully before bluffing their way onto our personal black lists. Before accepting a story for its controversial content, they should consider choosing a side and sticking with it. You wouldn’t change your mind in the middle of a debate and give in if you wanted to win the debate, right? The issue is much like any other controversial one out there and the sides are going to be radically distributed. Handguns, abortion, the death penalty, discrimination, political cartoons, great taste vs. less Ailing — you name it, and we can create violent controversy. But the thing to remember is that everyone has a different opinion. Not a wrong or right opinion, only different. And the ones who have more of the same decisions win. Those who don’t protest and whine until the get their way, or sabotage the other side. It’s not going to get any better, only more diffi­ cult to judge. Jason E . Burk Freshm an A rchitecture 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 N ew A S U mascot? So what is a sea urchin doing in the new ASU logo? Has Sparky the Sun Devil been replaced by Spikey the Sea Urchin? Bruce Long C lassified Staff Sure, bikers have rights but pedestrians do, too I’m writing in response to the “Bikes’ Rights” column of March 6 by Liz Montalbano. As a pedestrian on campus for the past two years, in all fairness I admit that, yes, the major­ ity of bicyclists do seem to ride with regard to those around them on foot. However, I have seen enough irresponsible riders to make me think twice about blithely strolling across campus without regularly glancing over my shoulder. On average, I would estim ate that I ’ve had a “near miss” encounter with a bicyclist roughly once a week, and most of those times I don’t believe that I was the one at fault. As Liz states, “Most of us on bikes really just have places to go, like any other person.” This implies that bicyclists are in a hurry, just like the rest of us. The difference lies in the fact that if a bicyclist and a pedestrian collide, the pedestrian will absorb most of the force of the collision, although cer­ tainly both people could be severely hurt. As* the more potentially dangerous party due to speed, the bicyclist bears the brunt of avoidance. I realize that pedestrians are quite capable of making some pretty thoughtless maneuvers. Also, because a bicy­ clist is moving so much faster, he or she must constantly make split-second decisions as to which way to go at any given moment to avoid both pedestrians and other bikes. It would be nice for a bicyclist to reach their destination in a reasonable amount of time; I have the same concerns. My personal strategy is to try to walk in a straight line at a constant speed, so that I appear as predictable as possible to any oncoming bicyclist. I also make a habit of always looking behind me before I change direction. The few times I haven’t almost always resulted in some heartstopping moments, if any cyclist was nearby. It’s a rule to live by, as a pedestrian coexisting with bicyclists! I wanted to comment on Liz’s remark regarding “ ... some elephantine-moving pedestrian who refuses to yield.” Not all of us are able to move quickly all thé time, or want to —we do have the right to walk at any speed on campus. It’s also possible that we didn’t sec you on your bike in time to move out of your way. Many are the past occasions when I’ve been walking at a normal pace, only to see a bicyclist heading directly toward me at a fairly fast speed. I have three choices: step right, step left or freeze in my tracks, hoping he/she will safely pass by roe. I usually do the latter, figuring that at least the cyclist knows that 1), I have seen them, and 2), they can pass me on either side, their option. Still, the experience can be unnerving — for both of us. At any rate, Liz makes a lot of valid points, but bicyclists, remember you too are pedestrians at least part of the time! Bikes on^ampus are very popular, but walking is even more, so. To end on a pedestrian note: People have a right to ride their bikes on this campus. But would I enjoy walking across these same grounds,, feeling comfortable enough to study my notes for a test without glancing around or behind me each time I even think I hear an approaching bike? Yes, I would. Patrice Stewart Junior Com m unication Studies State Press *' ... le tte r s t o •j tita te e d i t o r .ytm Siau Press response from our reader« on ./ say topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and go longer then two pages 8 to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing, , major (or any other affiliation with the University) end ¡* an e n ro * e r. i g m a t f t t m will b e considered fo r pwMtyeflmr Requests for anonymity will ’. be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject w editing by the opinion page editor tor factual errors and print space availability. Letters con­ taining obvious factual errors will be rejected. AH letters must either be brought ' in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement of the M atthews C enter, or addressed to State Press, Box ¿71502* Arizona State University, Tempe Ariz., 85287-1502. No faxes, please. State P ress Thursday, March 23, 1995 Page 6 ACROSS ISTt by THOMAS JOSEPH 1 EX ER £ T E EN HE L D ■u TOP 1A A N KL E SA FE H A C KS A W E R R Vl 1E ¥ rw E O u 1 E N A ME L S U R N SIT A G N A KE D S E S A Me H R A G 1 N G Z O O’ T A Z A L E A A L UM BE LLE s P ET E wE > < CROSSWORD A R C A D R E E L 1 4 3 K athie 1 Fite folder Lee's co-host features 4 4 "Broadway 5 Visit Bound" briefly playwright 1 0 In the 4 5 Skilled vicinity 4 6 B ear's 12 Dress lairs type DOW N 13 M int Y esterday's Answ er 1 Circus output of the 9 Fitted em ployee 14 M int audience inside 2 S u p erio rto output 27 Corral another 3 R eadied 15 G enesis 2 8 African 11 K ey in the fi$h character expanse text 4 T ake to 16 C heap 17 Sym bol of 3 0 Conceit court criticism 33 Elf’s kin m ight 5 A gree­ 18 P art of 19 D rain of 34 W ore m ent Egypt’s 35 Som e strength 6 C ries for border tourneys 2 2 G reets the 2 0 Binary 37 Faux pas the m atador digit 3 8 Nuisance général 7 Tiny 21 Invites 24 Steered 4 2 D isen­ opening 2 3 W ent cum ber 2 5 In front 8 Chants ahead 2 4 Church 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 3 leader • 12 to 2 6 “G rey" stoke" 14 1Í extras b_ 1 « 2 8 Coveting, 15 ■ eg. 20 19 18 2 9 S tart for v vision or 2, port 9 ■ 1 26 27 31 Capp, "1 ■ Pacino ■ ■ 29 30 28 and 1 34 1 others 31 —— 32 Eager ! ■ 39 36 -- -\ 37 38 3 6 S ite of ■42 fighting 40 3 9 Forty U 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; must have completed a minimum 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; . R O TH ER ’S ¡B O O K S TO R E “TOOK t f ö t e ö i BOO ¿STORE *' rI “• Study Aids 1 r Lab Books Backpacks School Supplies Jackets & Children’s Wear : §• i • * 1 « Faculty Open 7 days a w eek M s I.D and S taff Discount with valid 6 2 S £ . Apache 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 O llC O V tR l AMERICAN EXPRESS The PharmacyB^AmetieaTrusts Mill & Broadway, Tempe submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the State P ress or another newspaper; Store P hone 921 -9 002 P h a rm a c y 9 2 1 -8 0 1 3 and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State P ress 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 Greek Items Sweatshirts T-Shirts Gaps Shorts Store Hours: 8 a.m. -1 0 p.m., 7 Days a Week CLOSE TO ASU! 4 I / V WalgreensCoupon Mill & B roadw ay only 99* SN APPLE 3 2 OUNCES R efreshin g F lavo rs S V 1 .6 9 SNACKW ELLS REDUCED FAT A ssorted C o okies and C rackers Good thru 3-30-95. t t V 4 .9 9 THURSDAY-SATURDAY MARCH 23-26 SINGLE USE 3 5 M M CAM ERA TEMPE STORE ONLY HERE'S THE STORY: We're caught with entirely too much inventory. As a result, we have twice as much mer­ chandise as we should have. Our bookkeeper flatly said, "Something DRASTIC must be done AT ONCE!" After serious consideration, we've decided to stage this GREAT ALL-OUT SALE! Clear the shelves ahd clothing racks. DON'T WAIT . . . you cannot afford to miss this event. W itho ut exaggeration, this is the biggest and most necessary sale University Sporting Goods has ever conducted. We know the people of Tempe and surrounding areas will respond to an honest, legitimate sale! HATS & T-SHIRTS U 70 OFF EVERYTHING IN THE STORE SHOOT FREE THROWS FOR ADDITIONAL SVJt* DISCOUNTS $goo EACH H U G E S E L E C T IO N C O L L E G E • N B A * N FL B A R G A IN TA B LES & RA C K S O U TS ID E M ill & B roadw a' on ly __ OUR BIGGEST SALE IN YEARS! á WalgreensCoupon W a lg re e n s D ispo sable C a m e ra 2 4 E xposures Good thru 3-30-95. 4 I Y V WalgreensCoupon M ill & B roadw a only 9 9 ^ 7 9 9 1/20FF SUNGLASSES ASSORTED STYLES SELECTED JACKETS BATS BASEBALL GLOVES WEIGHTS FREE POPCORN U niversity sporting goods 1 0 3 8 S. Mill Avenue • Tempe • 9 6 8 -7 7 2 5 • Across from Gammage G re a t Buy! M an y S tyles-C o lo rs •Good thru 3-30-95. I t V WalgreensCoupon — I B roadw a on ly J L _________ _________ —- I I______________ . á urn & WalgreensCoupon J L --------------- _ _ --------- ^ J L Good thru 3-30-95. M ill & B roadw ay on ly 10% OFF ALL BANANA BOAT SUNTAN PRODUCTS Just in T im e fo r S u m m er. Good thru 3-30-95. Thursday, March 23,1995 P ress Grab your Quarters and Head for Rio! P age 7 College o f Engineering to get new dean after interviews, forums held Hawaii, could not be reached for comment, and Altenkirch was unable to comment As ASU approaches the 21st century, because he was leaving for Arizona. The position opened last summer when three candidates approach ASU for a dean’s position that one candidate feels is David Chang resigned to take the job of crucial to the University and the metropoli­ president at Polytechnic University, for­ m erly B rooklyn P o ly tech n ic. Dan tan Phoenix area. “It’s a huge challenge to steer a large Jankowski is serving as interim dean. engineering college through to another cen­ Robert Barnhill,, chairman o f the com­ tury in a metropolitan environment,” said mittee and vice president for research and Peter Crouch, electrical engineering depart­ strategic initiative, said a decision will be ment chairman and candidate for the dean’s made as soon as possible. He added that it position at the College of Engineering and was difficult to narrow the search to the Applied Sciences. “It’s also an important final three candidates because the dean’s challenge for the economic development of position is so crucial to ASU, the Valley.” “It’s such an important position for the A search committee is conducting inter­ University and the community because of views for the final three candidates today the outreach by that college to local and through April 4, and Provost Milton Click will make the final decision based on the national industry,” he said. In addition to formal interviews, candi­ committee’s recommendations. dates will also engage in question-andThe o ther candidates are R obert answer forums for faculty, staff and students. Altenkirch, Mississippi State University’s College of Engineering dean and John All student forums are scheduled from 4 L loyd, a M ichigan State U niversity p.m. to 4:50 p.m. in the Engineering Center G-wing. Altenkirch’s is today, Lloyd’s is mechanical engineering professor. Lloyd, who is attending a conférence in March 30 and Crouch’s is April 3. By A ngela M ull State P ress TH URSDAYS 7 - 11pm 's i 25$ Beers 2 .0 0 32oz. B eers 2 .0 0 Long Island Iced le a s \ o C L A S S IC ALTER N ATIVE N IG H T Vo® 0*> / fcj \ c SMACKDAB 430 ViScottsdale VUL* 804*0533 P olice R eport ASU police reported the following inci­ dents Wednesday: • A male student reported that someone broke into his vehicle and stole stereo equipment while it was parked in Lot 59. • A male student reported that someone broke into his vehicle and stole the parking decal while it was parked in Lot 59. • A male student reported that someone broke into his vehicle and stole stereo equipment while it was parked in Lot 59. There was reported damage to the driver’s side door lock and the interior console. • A female student reported that someone stole art equipment from a storage locker in the Old Architecture Building. • Two men not affiliated with ASU were con tacted at the north side o f the A dm inistration Building after m aking “inappropriate comments” to women in the area. They were advised of trespassing, loi­ tering, harassment and panhandling and left the area, • One bike was reported stolen. Compiled by S tate P ress reporter Todd Kelly State P ress Thursday, March 23, 199S P age 8 Sta te P ress S p o r ts We write from the field, the floor and the locker room. Ì ASU CHANNEL 2 V .m m - 'T h e j \ ve\v e .s f M o v i e s • r-yVo KL H M P P*-V’-; ;I Call 965-3161 for more info. F | $ I I w it h c ii t $J95 ■ ■ ■ I i I n mKÊM I & Not good with any other offer Not good wMh any o tte r offer ft» sene service. I ■ m i I Expires 4 -13-95 a s e a | _ 3 Œ » Expires 4-13*95 mene FflmiLY HAIR CUTTERS' I ■ Ad ■ ■ t t H — f t t t t IWHeilrr tto d n d s ' REDKEN B B B K Ü I g S A d m in I V I for same sentodr ÿoori- |WÒUCE I g U niversity & Rural Cornerstone Center Coupons not valid with any other specials. A g ft D H O Q U O O 'O U U O r B e y o n d D r i v e n 8 0 4 - 0 9 9 9 THURSDAYS: $ 12" One-Item Pizza, Garlic Bread and a Soda Italian Grinder or Kilowatt's Klub ... *3** 16" One-Item Pizza ... *8^ 6M I mm {Loagftair& . specialty wraps extra) a «k i l o w a t t s P izz e r ia & D eli r FREE S H A M P O O [D E S IG N E R P E R M ! WAREHOUSE PRICES ^ eus -3+w«éint pPogi*à«iHijhfl -KjASH Rctclio -¿^rectF CmfoPmnftoi.v I ■ Free D elivery M o n - F r i 1 1 -8 There is more to life than news, weather and sports. Check out the comics. Hours: M on.-Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9 -7 Sun. 10-5 Y our In d iv id u a l H oroscope = f F a A N C t'5 D rA K E = s = s FREE GAME of BOWLING \ W ith this ad and A SU 10 NeVJ Expires 4*28-95 autoi"»"® i O ffer vo id w ith other coupons ^ s c o t e * 8^ < M e m o r ia l U n io n R e c r e a t io n C e n t e r Æ 4 For Thursday, March 23, 1995 ARIES (March 21 toi April 19) A look around you will tell you that you need to do som e m ajor housecleaning; set aside the coming week­ end. A problem on the jo b turns out to •be minor. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) It’s time to stock up those cupboards. Y o u ’ ve b een sp en d in g to o m uch money on things that are convenient. Y ou need to start c o ntrolling your budget more diligently. GEMINI (May 2 i to June 20) Your mind has a tendency to wander, but there is nothing pressing going on. This allows you some room to breathe and relax. Make an effort to turn in early.’ CANCER (June 21 to July 22) A loved one’s news is surprising but happy. Feel free to openly express your joy with other family members. A situation at work can be resolved at a later time. LEO (July 23 to Aug, 22) A hobby u n d e rta k e n can lead to a whole new vocation. However, its a good idea to educate yourself further about it. A loving partner is support. ive. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Don’t give in to the temptation to be bored.; I f you look c lo se ly , th e re ?s plen ty to keep y ou o ccu p ied . You need to take some tim e to prioritize tasks and then tackle them. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You find yourself looking forward to the coining weekend with much antic­ ipation. A certain social situation is h e a tin g u p . H o w ev e r, a v o id d a y ­ dreaming on the job. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Spend som e tim e re tu rn in g phone calls and answering correspondence• You’ve been neglecting certain peo­ p le , and th e y ’re m ore th a n a b it annoyed. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) While yod’re not pleased with a co­ worker, being peevish and nasty isn’t the solution. You need to meet him or her one-on-one and speak openly. It- is . unlike you to be so childish. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) O thers perceive you as being a bit mysterious. You, however, are merely being withdrawn and keeping to your­ self. Try not to become too isolated. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You become involved with a problem a close family member is having. It’s best to avoid being overly protective. Your relative appréciâtes your input but not your interference. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) You’ve been neglecting your intellec­ tual needs. Take some some to catch up on on your reading. W hat,you learn can be useful soon. YOU BORhT TODAY love good food, physical com forts and relaxing sur­ roundings You are always eager to enjoy the sensual experiences of life and you have a strong desire for close­ ness, affection and security. You com­ pete m ost effectively w hen you are outwardly patient, persistent, thorough and stea d fa st. You tend to choose fields which bring the most monetary -rew ard, regardless o f any particular interest. ♦ B irth d ate of: C haka K han, singer; Amanda Plum m er, actress; Princess Eugenie o f Britain. ©1995 King Features Syndicate, Inc. I J Y J j 11 B P age 9 Thursday, March 23, 1995 S tate P ress i Ì f M I I I f T T t j 1 I l f 1 i PH 1 V« f v Photo courtesy AP rt ofgthe Sun Devils iDü|al it happens IT from the ÜfflSW sífp A c tiv ity Center f Æ F' Æ W **i f # |» a t 7 P-Jwffi E a lm i s s i o j i " ! stands w i l l b e o p e n R Ä S U P ifb lic Comics Sta te P ress Thursday, Match 23,1995 P a re lO { n C ritÜ N HeX 7» keer you a u o v e r and happy, t’ye wsrnvrEb A 97- ntN T Ctmv£ M THE LAST EXAM By Leigh Rubin b y S ta c y H cL ttvtU /X óÍ M otaba moaos, yov ALL ea r AN "AT ANT avEsrroNS? ! J /NSC'S 51* 'S MOSES NOM MM! A0AT? THAN AHNET hk 'J ìmiiAà m y£ASf Np VAGdltHQo IS GETTÜE PIN G -fm BALL IN THE BOW L,LAW TATST M ) The KID'S «rbuRS O Z C jA u 1 1 Calvin and byBill Watterson Hobbes is Trtvs tWR ‘filfe ORANGE SURPRISE 2 DOGGONE \T, HQB8E5Í ftDKt-TCU «WNCE?*' HERE'S '(CMR USER. WE W S B'f TWE DOC*. j j r VMCTS m im rm waio, Susie It’s >Enjoy th e relaxed, com fortable atm osphere o f th e B ouider cam pus • Choose from over 500 courses * Selectfrom fire-, eigh t-, and ten-w eek term s or intensive courses • Hove tim e to w ork, travel, o r ju st have fun Plan now to nuke the Summer o f 1995 a Boulder one! T erm A : June 5-Iuly 7 T erm C June5-July 28 Term B : July li-August 11 T erm D : June5-August 11 iSbo(t(r,iateasii«csiBses^ao available. CaB or write for your free CU-Boukkr Summer Session Catalog. Office of Admisriow*itegmt Administrative Center 125 «Campus Box 30 University of Colorado «t Boulder • Boulder, CO 80309-0030 9 6 7 -7 2 8 2 2090 E. University, #115 Mon.é l. 7:30 A - 6:00 PM liu x fe y s 118:00 PM Opening Approximately May 1 at EMot &Priostl 7144 S. Prioat, •101 Cat 346-1177 DOCTOR D O YOU NEED HELP PAYING OFF SPRING BREAK? REMEMBER THOSE BILLS COME IN 30 DAYS. THE ASU TELEFUND IS NOW HIRING!! U niversity o f C olorado at Boulder Yes, send me the free 199S Cll-BouUcr Summer Session Catalog. Nam e Address. . State. C ity . D ate o f B irth . M ail tax -T- .Z ip . . Sodai Security N u m b e r*. •For record-keeping and identification o f students only Office o f A d m iss io n s Regent Administrative Center 125 Campus Box 30 Unlw n lty of Colorado at Boulder Boulder, Colorado 803000030 (3 0 3 ) 492-245 6 Affinnolh r Actkm/Equal Opportw iity Institution •5.50 TO START + BONUSES •ONLY REQUIRED TO WORK 10 HOURS A WEEK •CHOOSE YOUR SCHEDULE CALL 965-6754 Page 13 ThursdaVjMarch^^^^S S ta te P ress the alternative the alternative the a l t e r n a l i v A M l l B r n a l i v e the a l­ ternative the a w B ^ h L e the alter­ n a tiv e th e ^ y p i ^ l v n h e a lte rn a ­ tiv e th e a lt e A a t ^ B B e ia lt e r n a t i^ th e a l t e r n a t e ^ ^ » N r r t a t i v e tUfe a lte r n a tiv e th e a lt e r c a t i ve the^S* te rn a tiv e th e a lte rn a tiv e th e ait«J* n a ti v e t hC'sil te rn a tiv e th e a ite r n # tiv e t h é l t ^ m a t ^ e J^ujpUer native th e a l t e B a t É a B e l É J y t ì v e t i # M en’s sw im team heads to N C A A s F ro m Sta ff R e po r t S ta te P ress The ASU men’s swim team begins competition in the NCAA Championships today in Indianapolis. Six swimmers will compete for the Sun Devils. Juniors Felipe Delgado will swim the 50* and 100-yard and freestyle, Mike Melley will swim the 500 and 1,650 free and Nelson Vargas will swim for the relays. Seniors Richard Bera will swim the 50, 100 and 200 free, Eduardo Piccinini will Swim the 100 and 200 butterfly and Robert Smith will swim the 200 free. The Devils are currently ranked 13th in the country and finished 14th at last year’s NCAA Championships. Last year Bera finished fourth in the 100 free, and Piccinini finished second in the 100 fly and fourth in the 200 fly. The cham pionships begin today and run through Saturday. \'hative*the a lte r n a tiv e I ^ ^ E i t e r n * MAKE A N INVESTMENT IN Y O U R LIFETIME south 1 S>a lte rn a t m ill ave O rd er your copy o f The 1994-95 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook te m p e cen ter today! Ite rn a tiv e th e Kagitiye th e a lt B b e a lte rn e ^ ***% Ie the alternative copy shop Matthews Center basement, Rm 50 965-6881 10% O ff Southwest Comer McDowell & Hayden 8 2 9 -7 9 9 2 OPEN 7:30 A.M. MON-SAT. ^ Offers goodfor most cars. Weaccept most credit All Non-Advertised Services with ASU I.D. Not to be combinad with any other coupon otters. 1-ST0P REPAIR SHOP Prices G ood Only With C oupon thru 4/5/95. fa x : 8 2 9 -8 0 0 9 FOR DOMESTIC & FOREIGN CARS 994-3343 SERVING ASU FOR 16 YEARS AT SAME LOCATION C lassifieds N otice to o u t readers: B efo re responding to any advertiseirient . requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for die validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-172 i.. Farming is the first and most respectable of all the arts. -Jean-Jacques Rousseau ANNO UNCE­ MENTS WE BUY & SELL USED LEVI'S! BES JEAN • BUYER C a ll fo r D etails 947-8245 • 1810 Scottsdale Rd (between Curry & McKelHps) 5 minutes from ASU! • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. ANNOUNCE­ MENTS __ __ D Y N A M IC H EA LTH fo r the 90’s. Heatlhy living and N utrilio n s u c c e ss sem in ar by Dr. Jac k P fe ife r, M D, S atu rd ay , M arch 25, 1995, 9^ J pm , A ri­ zona Biltmore Hotel. Cost $10. To rsvp and for more info call 829-7071 LIVE COMPUTER CHAT * GAMES N ine lines for your needsl 1 4 4 0 0 Baud. T hr Im Mfim BBS Can w ith your modem III- 0025 • 24 hours APARTMENTS A $U AREA stu d io , $295 not in clu d in g u tilitie s . Pool. 966-8838 BEAUTIFUL LARGE 2bd a p t, walk to ASU, pool; laundry rm, 1 b lk s o . o f U niversity on JBth St. C a p e ^ o i Apts, 968^-5238. • SUMMER SUBLEASE wanted in Tem pe. 2bd 2ba fo r June-; Aúg. Call Doug at 962-1969. HOMES FOR RENT 3BD I BA wood floors, walk to ASU. $800/mo, avail. 4/1. Tim 8944)298 HOMES FOR RENT SA BATICAL HOME in Scot­ tsdale. 2bd plus office. Furn or unfum. 1-800-3824)755. • RENTAL IH A R IN G ^ ^ ^ . FEMALE ROOMATE needed in Tempe, Mill/13th area. 3bd 2ba house. 897-1894. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE ■. 3BD 2B A c o n d o ,_near pool. 510 Alma School, Mesa. 8 min. from A SU . A vail A p ril J 5 ., S750/md. 4234)571 DUPLEX, ASSUM E/NO qual. loan, $12,500 CTM . M ay c ar­ ry , pos, cash flow , n ic e are a 841-4916 . . 3B D 2B A condO .across from pool. 510 W U niversity Tem ­ pe, $875/m o. A vail: A pril 1. 423-0571: LOS PRADOS- 3bd, 1ba townhouse. G re a t 2 -sto ry place. $73,500, Call Elise, 966-7789. M RMTE needed to share 2bd 2ba in Q uads w /fem ale, 53,00/mo beg. M ay 1. V alerie 921-3756 A QUESTA Vida, 2 mstr suites, 2 ba, f/p , w /d, m icro. O v e r­ looking pool, spa, rqball, wgt rm , sauna. A vail 5/15 $750$795.829-0902. ^ NEEDED- MALE to share 3bd 2ba luxury apt w /2 fem ales. Near campus, beg May 1. Must be studious but fun. 967-1567. HAYDEN SQ., beautifully fum. 2bd 2ba. U pstairs. $1100/mo. Short or long term. 968-5002. RESP N/S F rmte-asap! 2hd apt G lb rt/M ain . M ust lik e dogs, $30Q/mo incl util. 668-9530 HERMOSA PL., 510 W. Univesity, 2bd 2ba condo nr ASU, pool, w/d, fans, $635. 966-0987. RO O M S FOR RENT Q U ESTA V ID A 3bd 3ba, 2 pools, ja c u z z i, ind. ra q c t., c. fan s, m icrow ave, w /d. $900/mo. Greg 941-6847. ROOM 4 RENT in house close to ASU pool w/d cable all util. incl $315mo. Kelly 838-4849 ROOM FOR rent in house for su m iner. W a s h e r/d ry e rja c uzz i,a v a il fu rn ish e d .C a ll 3509865 ; ) . : . ROOMATE WANTED 2br 2ba? luxury condo, near McClintock and University. Papago Park II. N /S, ASU stu d en t p re fe rred , avail now . $325/m o in cludes water & elec. Scott 951-2624 Slat* h m Clttiifiadt Nattlmn Cattar la m m t MS-47IS HAYDEN SQUARE C ondos available 8 /1 /9 5 . 2 & 3 B edroom 940-6027 TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE D UPLEX ASSU M E/N O qual. loan, $12,500 ctm . May carry, pos. cash flow , nice are 8414916 HOMES FOR SALE _____ LOS PR A D O S-H A R D Y /13TH St. 1/2 m ile to campus $70k 2 story 3bdrm/3bath. $54,900 patio hm 2 bdrm 2 bath 3pools/spas, tennis, vllyball, bsk tb all. Call today Connie, John Hail Asso­ c ia tes 840-5176 o r 948-0550 *3986 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE AUTHENTIC SU R G EO N 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 $2.9 5 S&H to: M D G S a le s PO B ox 332 N .Y ..N .Y . 1 0 0 1 8 C O M PU ^R ^ B u y O f T he W eek 3bd House, pool, d o s e to cam pus, nice neighborhood. $96.500. Bob Bullock Realty Executives M AC PE R FO R M A 475, new com plete color system , loaded w /add'l softw are. G reat buy at $1100: Mark 706-0448. FURNITURE C O UCH SET $173, G el m at­ tress $190, Desk & C hair $35, 413-1418 SOFA SET, $265, Q ueen bed $80, Full $70, Chest of Drawers $40, Dinette $125.234-5729. S O FA /L O V E SE A T . O FFW H ITE . N ew - s till in w rap. C o n tem p . B th p c s $499. B ill 996-6933. FIND IT in the Classifieds! ON E W AY tk t to NYC m ust usé before 4-5-95 call 460-1176 ST U D E N T TR A V EL C lub! ! $75 o ff first tick et purchase ! $99 W orldw ide A irfares. D is­ counted E u ro p e/In t'i Fares. Youth Hostel Guide, and more. Jo in today !! (919) 929-4398 ext. T1015. LAPTOP 1386 85mbHD, VGA mono, DOS 6.2 & Windows 3.1 Tons of software $750obo 9463230. 998-2992 TRAVEL NOVELL NTWRE Y 3 .11/3.12. Documentation, manuals. Study guides. New, iii box. Must sell! B/O takes all! Eric, 345-1869. TICKETS PA G E & PL A N T . T kts $60$100. B ob o r Je ssic a 831 9324. TRAVEL ~ DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. ! specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. AUTOMOglUjS^ NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tion vehicle. Som e w ork OK. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. P ag AUTOMOBILES 83 VW Q uantum . M ust sell. M aroon w /tan c lo th in t., pw , pd. AC n eed s fix e d , lo ts o f miles but in good cond. inside and out. O nly a sk in g $1500. M ust see to apprec. Call 4933747. M OTORCYCLES" 92 YAM AHA Jag 50cc. low miles, orig ow ner, great cond. $1000 949-8625. 93 NIN JA 600R 3k m if like new never ride,; black, teal & purple. $5500 Erik 491 -2709' BICYCLES MTN EfIKE: Schwinn Sierra, ex­ cellent cond.. low miles. Extras: Krypto Lock, Rack. B ar ends. New T ire s. T ubes. C a ll 9678342. Jaymz $225 obo HELP WANTEDGENERAL $20-$25 AN HOUR P a rt-tim e , stu d en t m an ag ers needed. AZ High School grads only; Lim ited p o sitio n s. C all 990.8861 for qualifications. $6 PE R HR. PLUS Setting app. for Premier Pblng. 15-20 hrs./w k work at h o m e. Call Cutt at 996^7265. $7P/HR. $150 signing bonus. AMS. located at Broad way & -Mill is h irin g 20 p /t telem arr keters. Set y our 4 >wn schedule. *work as feW as 20/hrs a week or more. You wiH receive $7p/hr f bonus, paid training, casual dress, daily incentives. Call 894-9816 ♦M ARKET RESEARCH phone interview ers, no sales;. Tempe Days ¿xr eves. Susan 967-4441. A MEDICAL office in:Scottsdale . needs pt/ft front and back office p erso n ; W ill tra in . G ood a d ­ vancem ent potential j 4020 NV Scottsdale fed. S te l0 8 .A p p ly tn person, AAA A MALE/FEMALE coun­ selors. program directors. Camp TatiVee. J une 4rA ug 5 W hite. Mts.- A pps. placem ent; in te r­ views, Job Fair March 29 Cady Mall 275-2604 Margaret White. A N SW ER IN G SERV ICE, all day Saturday. Scottsdale, 9 4 14890 A hw atukée Foothills YM CA HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL APT MGR. Mature couple or indiv. to manage an apt. complex c lo s e to A $U . A d m in /o ffice skills & maint/handyman exp. ; pref. 967-1600 ARENA CANTINA/TRIBECA now h iring serv ers. A pply in p erson M o n-T hurs. 1420 N Scottsdale Rd- 423-8499 CLOSE TO ASU Dash Designs is now hiring and training for its busy summer sea­ son; quality inspectors, shipping cleiks, sewing operators, and cus­ tomer service representatives. We also need a part-tim e Foxbase (Foxpro) programmer and a cadcam operator. Salary range: $57/hr. Close to ASU a friendly en­ vironment. Call Bonnie for easy directions: 967-2678. ASU GRAD students; the ASU Telefund has a great opportun­ ity for you- We arc presently DASH DESIGNS is now hiring hiring Grad, students to contact for its busy sum m er season: alumni of the Graduate College. q u a lity in sp e c to rs, ship p in g We u pdate in fo rm atio n , te ll clerks, sewing operators & cus­ them about advancements here to m e r serv ice reps. W e also at ASU and look fo r financial need a pt Foxbase (Fox pro) support. This Would be a great programmer and a cad-cam op­ wav to enhance your netw ork­ erator. Salary range: $5-?/hf. ing O pportunities and have a C lose to-A SU r friendly envi­ very flexible part time job. We ronment, Call Bonnie for easy req u ire a sso c iates t-O' w ork a min; of 10 hours a week & you , directions: 967-2678. chdose the evening & weekend DASH DESIGNS seeks sénior shift. Call 965-6754. level undergrad'.(3.0 6r better) or grad student in operation« ASU STUDENTS! mgmt. program to assist in vari­ ; ous facets Of mánf, dept; pur­ Quick cash! G ood pay. A tten­ chasing. sourcing, scheduling, dant needed;- Must be reliable & inv. mgmt.. etc. Local* Tempe • flexible. 2 hdurs/daiiy. :3,times/ cd , close to A S U . Call Bonnie week. Adam. 784-8330. 967-2678. CASHIER. G ÉN ERAL office, EXEC’S ASST: Immed opening com puter 10 key exp, help­ ful. A fternoons & Sat.'s. 893for p/t asst to real estate brokers 6884 -y \ ■ :/ in N.E. Valley. Must be an Or­ ganizer. & excellent communi­ CHILDREN’S SUMMER camp cator (both w ritten & phone), in Oracle. AZ is looking fw ac­ have M ac in to sh C om puter tivity area specialists: arçhéry, knowledge & have dependable rifiery. arts & crafts, nature, rap-1 transportation to run occasional pelling. challenge course, life­ errands. Pis fax resum e & in­ gu ard s, and w ran g lers. A lso dicate salary desired Fax # 602looking fo r kitchen supervisor 585-0105 and staff, &. AZ R .N ; and nurse’s assistant. Good salary & FOR A fun & cool summer job e x p erie n ce p lu s room - and teaching, yo u n g c h ild re n to bpard: YMCA Camp, 602-884sw im please c a ll Sue at 8406816 aft. 3pm. WSI or Lifesav­ 0987. ing req. DATA ENTRY & purchasing po^ , ; .siiionS ft & pt, $8/hr + bonus & in c e n tiv e s & b en efits. 4 0 1K. Flex hrs ./A utom 5226 S, 31st s tu d e n ts lo r p / t s e cu rity w o rk . Place. 243-5200. S ta rtin g w age b ased o n e x p e ri­ MASCOT NEEDED Localradiostation isseekmg 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 infomutioii. e n c e. M ust h ave p h o n e an d re lia b le tr a n s p o r t a ti o n . H o u r s av a ila b le 2 4 - h r basis in c lu d in g w eek en d s. O n e lo c a tio n 2 m iles f ro m c a m p u s . C a l l 9 6 1 - 1 1 6 1 e x t. 3 9 4 , a s k f o r G r e g C la u s , " a m - 5 p m . M - F o r le a s e m e s ­ sage at 4 2 0 -1 1 9 3 a n y tim e. GET PAID FOR VOUR OPINIONS A n atio n al m arket research com pany lo cated in S c o tts d a le is loo king for A D U LT M A LES 2 1 -2 9 yrs. to p artic ip a te in a con sum er product discussion group. T h e s e groups fill fa s t so call now . If you qualify an d participate; you will be paid for your time. A pply at: 3233 E. C handler Blvd. Phoenix Part-time evenings •Paid Training •Work around school schedule Apply in person to 86SS £. Vi* de Ventura, 8Ì00 Scottsdale, or Fax resume to 991-2826 W S tate P ress Thursday, March 23, 1995 e 14 A lam ol R ent A Car ' Looking for P/T W ork ? N ow H iking for 'C ustomer S ervice R epresentatives! C u r r e n t l y S e e k in g C a n d id a t e s T h a i H a v e T h e F o l l o w in g Q u a l if ic a t io n s : • M u s t be A ble t o T ype 3 0 w pm • I n terperson al C o m m S kills • P r e v io u s S a i .e s / C ust S e r v ic e E x p a P l u s ! } • M u s t be A ble t o W o r k Saturdays C all K elly S ervices T oday ! 838-8405 T e m p e L o c a t io n KELiy SERVICES Call 941-0048 Ask for CHIP Free Child Care While You Donate ! The Valley s BEST plasma donation co tter will begirt providing FREE childcare (during donating) effective Monday, Fpbruaiy27th- (Some restrictionsapply:) This will be offered 10am-4pm Mon-Sat & 10am-3pm Sunday. We have 54 machines to serve you better!! This is your perfect opportunity to perform a vitally needed service and earn $150-$185 per m onth at the same time! It couldn’t be easier! New donors earn $2$ CASH theirfirst donation! Open 7 days a week for your convenience! Open Monday-Friday til 8 p.m.! Associated Bioscience, Inc. . 1334 E Broadway, Suite 102/Tempe BroadWay & Dorsey (Across from Native Neu> Yorker) HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL GET A summer job now! Attend the Summer Job Fair ’95 Wed., March 29 Càdy Mall. Meet with dozens of potential employers! LUXURY GUEST Ranch now hiring for summer season! Serv­ ers, childrens counselors, wran­ glers, culinary students, fíne din­ ing waiters/waitresses, wine ste­ ward, outside maintenance, flow­ er & garden, & others. Send re­ sume & GPA (Picture requested) to W it's End Guest Ranch, 254 County Rd. 500, Vallecito Lake, CO 81122. National conceit promotion /mar­ keting co. based in LA seeks re­ sponsible, outgoing, Music /Mar­ keting Intern, based in Phoenix /Tempe. Sophomore or above in -college, know your market well & be very into new music. For more info call (213) 368-4738. G R EA T P/T jo b . 4-8pm M -F $6.25/hr. Call Kelly between 95.894-9442 GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. Enthusiastic gym nast to teach c h ild re n ages 5 -11. M ,T ,Th 2:30-4:30. $7-9/hr. 955-7805. I N EED S tu d en ts to sell Tshirts! M ake $2 for each sold. Call Kelly 929-9142 IF YOU have the d e sire to succeed, w e have the desire to meet you. Our co. offers a salary of $7/hr + commission. Your re­ sponsibilities include conducting promotions for businesses in the Phx area. Bus. & Comm, majors encouraged to apply. Please call 921-7755 to schedule apptKENNEL WORKER needed p/t Must be neat, dependable. 7311 •;E- Thomas, Scottsdale 945-7692.. LAW LIBRARY shelver posi­ tio n to shelve, re triev e item s and other duties fo r mornings M-F. jo b #7869 at Student Employment. 965-7114 for info. l a w n s e r v ic e Needs p/t help. $6/hr. 966-3269. LOOKING TO earn some seri­ ous cluckin' m oney? C luck-U is now re c ru itin g m arketing majors to create innovative mar­ keting ideas. A pply in person 855 S R ural R d. 1 b i t S o f University. $350-$400 PER WEEK OR MORE! People Needed To Do Fun, Easy, Respectable Pan or Full Time Work At Home. 24 Hr. Msg Gives D etails CALL NOW! 1-809-474-2821 NOW HIRING Int'l Ld rates apply. M arriott's M ou n tain Shadow s has an opening for pool attendant positions. Part: tim e a.m . & p.m . h rs available, GPR certifica­ tio n required. M arriott M o u n ta in Shadow s is committed to a drug free w orkplace. A ccepting apps Mon-Thurs, 9 a.m.Noon & 1:30-4 p.m. 5641 E, L incoln Dr. S cottsd ale EOE Meet representa­ tives from different companies, hotels and summer camps at the S u m m er f l JO B FAIR 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 2121 S. Mill, Suite 210A Tempe, AZ 85282 HELP WANTEDSALES C o m e b e a p a rt o f D ia la m e ric a ’s d iv e rs e te a m ! WE OFFER: • Paid Training a t $7.50 per hour guarantee • G reat Pay $8-$12 average p6r hour Highest Earnings up to $19 per hour! • Flexible Hours to work w ith your school schedule • Bonuses... $ • Professional/Com fortable Environment • Sharpens C om m unlcation/C areer Skills/Resume Builder • N earby Location a t 1100 E, University in the University C enter D ia l A m e r ic a M CADY M ALL •Rewarding Advancement Possibilities ; »A Chance To Utilize Your Talents NO SELLIN G ! survey hom eow ners, Flex, hou rs. S a la ry MAH-KEE-NAC FORBoys/Danbee for G irls. C ounselor posi- • plus co m m issio n . C a ll John 949-9353. lions for Program Specialists: All Team Sports, especially Base­ PAUL’S ACE Hardware is ac­ b a ll, B ask e tb a ll, G olf, Field PT NON paid intern to Super cep tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r full Hockey, Roller Hockey, SocCer, B ow l XXX co m p u ter exp* & Volleyball: 30 Tennis openings; time salesperson and part-time tra n sp o rta tio n re q u ire d .8 9 4 also Archery, Rifiery, Pioneercashier. H ardw are exp. a plus 2227 ; • : : ing/Ovemight Camping, Weights for positions. Applications will ATTENDANT FOR quadriple­ /Fitness and Cycling; other open­ be acc. at our Tempe location, gic mate.Some lifting req. M-F ings include Perform ing Arts* 1153 W. Broadway. mornihgs 2hrs.John 967-0495 Fine Arts; Pottery, Figure Skat­ ing, G ym nastics, N ew spaper, PERM A N EN T P /T p o sitions. RESEARCHER, LIST compiler Photography, Yearhook, Radio Minutes from ASU & ideal af­ for local publication. Flex. hrs. Station, R ocketry, R opes and ternoon hrs for students* Perm, p/t Call $08-8984 ; , Rock Climbing: All Waterfront telephone reps needed to provide A ctivities (Swimming, Skiing, SODASTOCKERS info; & instructions to credit card S ailing. W indsurfing, CanoeCustomers, with office located @ • Needed immediately! Two shifts in g /K a y a k in g ). G reat salary, a v ail to sto c k .g ro ce ry sto re Pointe S outh M tn. No c o lle c ­ room, board and travel. June 18th w/beverage products. $5/hr plus tions or sales!! Shift hrs 2-6pm -August 18th. Inquire: Mah-Kee28£/mile. If you are reliable, de­ M-F with some a.m. shifts avail­ Nac (Boys) 190 Linden Avenue, tail oriented, have good math Glen Ridge, N J. 07028. Call: 1able also. Base rate o f $6/hr with sk ills,, & ow n tra n sp o rta tio n ■ 800-753-9118. Danbeé (Giris) 17 ‘ incentives.C all Pefsoiinel b et­ please call today! 838-8405* We Westminster. Drive, M ontville. encourage a diverse Workforce, ween 8am-3pm at 431-9309. Kelly Services* Never an applic­ NJ, 07045' Call: U800-392-3752. ant fee. EOE. PHONE SURVEYS, not salesM ODELS - C alendar models Market Research Co. located near needed. E xp’d m ale/fem ale. I- 10/Baselihe needs p/t shift MAladdin Ent., 40440856. $ 6 /h r +, g u a ra n te e d to s ta r t. Th, 5-9pm & Sat. 9-3. Must be de­ Phone vefifiers/short surveys. pendable & enjoy phones. Office MODELS: NYC, Toyko, Paris, Ft/pt. No cold calls. High hour­ exp. desired. $5/hr. Emily 443Milan, Local scouts want you! ly avg, flex hrs. 7$4-227b. 8883. Scottsdale, 941-6922. EARN RETAIL SALES OPPORTUNITY These break-through opportunities offer: CONSULTANT N atio n al firm has im m ediate o pening fo r p a rt-tim e entry level field rep. based in Phoe­ nix area. (No Sales) Good com­ munication skills, experience in d e a lin g w ith the p u b lic , p ro ­ fessional appearance* Spanish speaking a plus. Som e travel. R esum e to: P.O . B ox 1500, Rowlett, TX 75030. M ODELS - C alendar m odels needed. E xp’d m ale/fem ale. Aladdin E n t. 404-0856. MARCH 29 •Full-tim e Office M anager •Full tim e Supply/Clothing Sales Associates •Full-tim e Shipper/Receiver •Part-tim e Cashiers/Sales Associates PRESCHOOL AT 56St. & In­ dian School hiring enthusiastic care given for summer, flex hrs, work is play. Call 947-5645 START NOW CLUCK-U 968-6139 We are now accepting applications for the following positions in our soon to open college retail store: MUSIC INDUSTRY HELP WANTED- a r k e t in g j d m C A L L 89443264 FOR INTERVIEW HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDSALES A Fantastic Opportunity Are you motivated and anxious to earn $B-$10/hour N0WP Waste M anagem enJ^Fortune 30 Company, needs energetic people FT/PT who want to be a part of a professional sales team. Bonuses, career advancement possible. New position has been created, needs to be filled ASAP: Inside Sales/Telemarketing CaH tod ay. Jason Baer, Marketing Manager. 417-0400. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES STATE PRESS C lassified Ad Dept, needs an articulate stude n t(s) to an sw er p h o n es and h elp w alk -in custom ers, w ith classified ads. Must be able to w ork a fte rn o o n s. M ust be a good speller and have skill in typing. Call Bridget or Beth to­ day. %5-6735. VALEO INTERNATIONAL, an en v iro n m en tal co. is look in g for several sales reps as well as a few in d iv id u a ls w /m gm t skills. No exp nec. Will train. Call for an interview 940-3804. SUMMER CAMP Counselors: C oed re sid en tial cam p seeks live-in counselors and instruc­ to rs: A rchery, Art» Dance* D ram a, F en cin g . F ish in g , H orseback Riding. M usic.' Riflery* Ropes, Swimm ing, Ten­ n is and m ore! B rush R anch C am p s. PO Box 5759, Santa F e , NM 87502-5759*( 1 -800.722-284?).. y , '/ -. SUMMER JOB- M aine sports camp. All land, water, adventure & in d iv id u al sports. O utdoor sum m er w orking w /c h il dre n . Great facilities available to coun­ selors. Fun summer!! Call now. 6 1 7 -2 7 7 -8 0 8 0 . C am p C edar, 1758 Beacon St., Brookline. MA 0 2 146. ' HELP WANTED- £ S ! ^ k = : C O M PU TER O PERA TO R S Parttim e, entrylevel positiohs. Am hrs. $om e schedule fle x ­ ib ility . No ex p n e ce ssa ry we will train. Duties include Doc p rin tin g , d ata tra n sm issio n , b u rstin g , and d e co latin g . A p p ly at T h e A d v e rtisin g Checking Bureau Inc. 1919 W Fairmont Dr. Ste 7, Tempe 4382320 ceo M /F / ", RECEPTIONIST P/T pos avail, w knds & poss;:w kdy aft/early eves. Phone exp; com puter lit­ erate & professional appearance. $6/hr. C entury 2 1 A M Realty. 831-1114. Barbara. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE TACO JOHN'S BANDERA Excellent restaurant m anage­ ment opportunities are available Scottsdale, is lo o k in g fo r ex ­ with America's $econd largest perienced, energetic people to M exican quick-service chain. fill open positions in our din­ We are seeking highly, m o ti­ n e r h o u se. P o sitio n s av ail: vated Area M anagers, Restau- vServers w/at least 2yrs. full sve, rnat General Managers and Àsexp. B arten d ers w /2 y rs é x p ., • si slant Managers. We offer com­ C aptains w / ly r. host/e$s. exp. p e titiv e salary plus b o n u s ,: Cooks w /culinàry bkgrhd & a flexible work schedules.: group désire for a culinary future. If insurance and paid vacation. If you w ant a solid inicome in a you have re stau ran t m an ag e­ great restaurant environ, apply ment experience and growth exin ; p erso n 2-4pm . 3.821 N . ; cites you. pick up an applica­ Scotts. Rd. tion at our Ternpe or Mesa res­ taurant, or request one by cal­ CLUCK-U ling 1-800-543-5222, Resumes Looking for a fun cluckin' job? can h e -se n t to r T aco Jo h n 's Come join, the- Cluck-U-ChickH ead q u arters- AZ. 808 W est ën team ! We are now h iring 20th S treet, C h ey en n e. WY drivers,- cooks, bouncers, cock­ 82001’ Equal Opportunity Em­ tail servers, and chicken mas­ ployer. cots. A pply rn p erson 855 S. Rural Rd. TAKEOUT EXPRESS O rder taker,. $5/hr to start. De­ livery driver,$8- 10/hr, flex eve hrs: N Scottsdale- Scott 494V 9974 days* Jim 951 -9 1 4 4 afe 5pm. TH E LITTLE Gym is looking for a piano instructor for child­ ren 3-10, p/t hrs. some m usic exp helpful. Call 413-0015. VALET ATTENDANTS needed for morn. & aftn: shifts. Must be responseble. clean c u t. polite, clean driving record (no DÜTs), S7 9/hr DOE. 955-Si 25 Iv msg VÀLJET PARKING attendants 34 nights/week. Must be willing to drive to Phx, Scotts* PV. etc. Avg $8/hr. 861-9182. yMCA C A M PIN G S erv ices (Sky>Y C anip & C haiincey Ranch) located in Prescott. AZ is now h iring d edicated , funloving.' creati ye. caring profess s to n als to w ork w ith eo-ed cam pers between the ages o f 7 & IT in a residential camp- set­ tin g . C om e be a p art o f the magic & share in an experience that will last a lifetime. Camp­ ing season begins last week of M ay arid ru n s th to u g h early August. C all for application & information at 254-^1571, HELP WANTEDSALES A D V ER TISIN G SA L ESPER ­ SON needed fo r Tem pe area, fle x . hrs. F o r ap p t. c a l i 8088984 y .' ARM O U R SW IFT E ck rich . a D iy . o f C onagra has an o p e n ­ ing for a p/t temporary sales rep from M ay to August. This p o ­ sition Could possibly become a p erm anent p/t one depending on jo b performance & company e x p an sio n . The p o s itio n in ­ volves the selling & m erchan­ dising o f our items in retail gro­ cery sto re s, it is p e rfe c t fo r someone who is planning a ca­ reer in sales & w ould like to gain v ia b le experience w ith a major packaged food comipáfty. C om pensation is hourly wage plus m ileage allowance. Please send resume to: A; Svetly - unit m an ag er, A SE, 5025 S. Ash Ave #B2, Tempe. AZ 85282. GRAD STUDENT w/Marketing background for p/t sales - Car al­ lo w an ce, sala ry , co m m issio n DOE Call V P ac.921-3QP3 SALES REPS needed for immed hire. No exp nec. Flex hrs. Call 1-800-925-3524 tor info. Page 15 Thursday, February 23, 1995 State P ress CORK *N CLEAVER Acc. apps. for lunch host(es$j* lu n ch food se rv e r & 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, DELIVERY DRIVER Mon-Fri 510 p.m. Apply in person, Blimpie, 9 11.'E. Broadway. : GRAND CANYON Staff- Spend the summer at the b re a th ta k in g G ran d C anyon! M ulti venue o p e ra tio n seeks kitchen staff, cashiers and run­ ners. Exp. preferred, com peti­ tive wages* housing available & a great working environment!. Please call (602 ) 63S-0182 ;or 956-0257. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE SUM M ER JOB- Ft child care (minimal) in my home for 9 yr old boy, 6/1-8/18. Use of pool & exercise equip. Lgt hskping. $165/wk. 814-0126 after 6pm. TE M PE LITTLE Gym has an immed. opening for pt help. Pre­ school gymnastics WSI instruc­ tors needed. Must enjoy children. .Call Kim at 413-0015. TO D D LER & PR ESCH O O L C areg iv ers needed im m ed. W onderful w orking e n v iro n ­ ment. Inquire at Light & Life C h ristia n P reschool, 6430 E ., Boise, Mesa. 985-0221. RESTAURANTS/ BARS (iRATEFI'I, DEAD XIGIIT 10C WINGS DRAFTS S1 with E X T R A T I C K E T Featuring Don Young *^very Thursday!* ell BOSTON'S A ii-C lin to c li & C u rry • 921-7343 OflCAOIE'S I 2 fo r 1 HAPPY HO U R | Buy any food item at the regular ■ pricefit receive the second item ■ of equal or lesser value FREE! | Valid 4-£pm daily, all day Sunday ■ 825 W . University * 894-8387 SE Comer of Hardy 5th St. & F orest INTERN AT Merrill Lynch. Get a fast start on your career in in­ vestm ents. Looking fo r e n e r­ g ized & hard w orking ind. ready to work. Call Barry Bayat at 481-2748. N A TIO N A L PARKS H iring Seasonal & full-tim e em ploy­ ment available at National Parks, Forests & W ildlife Preserves. Benefits + bonuses! Call 1-206545-4804 exL N59182. “ FUNDRAISING TONIGHT! ■ THE ^ CHIMERAS^ PERSONALS TALL BEERS JAGERS C A SIN O N IGHT! W in prizes and have lots o f fun, 2nd floor MU, Friday 7-11pm ta 9 p.m. p For a Good Time cad 966-1300 Balboa Cafe V FA ST FU N D R A ISE R - R aise $500 in 5 days - Greeks* groups, clubs, m otivated individuals. Fast, easy - No financial obliga­ tion. (800) 775-38?l e x t 33. 50* PIT C H E R S!!! B ladder Buster at Flakey Jakes Thursdays! Home of the 99* Weekend!! H 99B 4M S. M » Ave., Sute 101 C R U ISE SH IPS now hiring *; Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour com panies.. W orld travel. Sea­ sonal & full-tim e em ploym ent available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. CS918S. LOOKING FOR a musical com­ poser for a pop project. Must be talented in keyboard, guitar, bass, & drums to create music at a high­ e r level* C all a fte r 7pm 2451289. Mon-Fri 247-8008 TA N ZA N IA N PA SSPO R T n o ,A 0 0 3 3 104 S uleim an A bas R ashid C all 966-9831 or Ternpe Police Department ALASKA SUMMER jobs. Earn up to $6000+/mo-Fishing indus­ try. Free transportation! Room & board! No exp nec. 818-774-1199 e x t A48845. CRUISE SHIPS & vacation re­ s o rts hiring. Earn up to $2500+/mo. W orking for these companies. World travel & exotic re s o rts . Free tran sp o rta tio n ! Room & board! No experience nec. Call. (818) 705-3416. M488 BREWPUB FREE LOST/FOUND Tamp* ’ CONGRATULATIONS ALPHA C lass for a successful Mid-Re­ view. Keep up the good work! Love the KAX Actives DELTA UPSILON / O b e NewlyRemodeie^\ p i a i B A R eu < 9 R IL .tÆ NEW MENU NEW STAFF NEW ATTITUDE Would like to thank Alpha Phi fo r the help in Lake H avasu and also fo r p u ttin g up w ith our crap DELTA UPSILON w ould like to con g ra tu la te Amy Tillis on being elected the DU Sweetheart, Your the Best AKE-HOPE you’ve been prac; ticing! Sign in today Sc Friday for Rack'em Up! © -your £ £ £ coaches FEVER IS com ing, girls look out, don’t miss it. •aaaAMUMtti8aek Daily 8-10:30 ajn. «Espresso Bar • {3J2S Daily Lunch Specials •Happy Hour DaHy4-7 p.m. T o n ig h t : AZZ IZZ Laotes A lways G et In Free BLIM PIE Comer of Fomt kaneUntMnity, Tenpi > FR EE P IZ Z A ? You betcha! Enter the Sun Devil Spark Year­ book's Photo C ontest and win a free Domino's pizza a week for a year. H urry! C o n test ends April 14th! GET A summer job now! Attend the Summer Job Fair '95 Wed., March 29 Cady Mall. Meet with dozens of potential employers. HELP WANTEDC H J L D ^ A R |_ _ MOTHER S HELPER wanted for m ornings M on-Fri. Trans, re^ q u ired , H elp w /son in N orth Phoenix home. 569-9545. M OTHERS HELPER to drive kids aftersch p o l T & Th. Dep mid sz car a must Refs req. NE Scotts Pima/Shea 451-0941 MOTHERS HELPER/ child care wanted. After school aprox. 2:305:00, M-F. Full time summer an option. .2 children 11 & 12. Must have safe, reliable transportation. 952-9051 / \ . ;• - SP R IN G '95 G ra d u a te s ! The deadline to apply for Spring 95 graduation is Friday, March 31. Do it today! ST JUDE Novena. Thank you; JI. TO THE women o f AT- Happy Founder's Day! V £AT. A D O T O O N ^“ ADOPT Family Doc & Family Therapist long to adopt an infant. Happily married. Desire to give your child a secu re, jo y fu l and $ stab le home. C all after 7 p.m. 1-800279-0026, LOVING CA couple w ants to build family by adopting baby. C an you help ? C all c o lle ct, Laura or Eric at 510-254-0563. SERVICES CASH FO R C ollege 900,000 grants available. Qualify imme­ diately* 1-8 00-243-2435.(P ro ­ cessing fee $79 if you qualify. N o fee, i f ,you d o n 't q u a li­ fy.)? 1500.00 guaranteed. D IR E C T EX PRESS w eekend shuttle. Phoenix to Tucson, $10. For reservations call 746-3578. GUARANTEED $$ Scholorship money, no GPA re­ quirem ents,' no incom e re ­ quirements, $100 no risk guar­ antee. G u a ra n tee d at le a st 6 sch o lo rsh ip o p p o rtu n ities. Only $89. 898-5594. HEWLETT PACKARD Scanjet II cx scanner w/photostyler. All your scanning needs cheap! 9492765; pagejr- 229-2244. 8521 E. McDowell Rd. Scottsdale STATPRO C O kPO R A T IO N Statistical analysis - Call for free estimate - 837-1999, VIDEO GAMES Codes, all com­ bos - All Moves* Killer Instinct, Primal Rage, MK2, Virtua Fight­ er. Send $5, Finish Him, Box 41344, M esa,AZ85274. Longest Tanning Hours in Tempe HPV H O TL IN E/SU PPO R T group. C all Share The Health Foundation for info. 994-8330. SPRING = bathing suits. Drop weight fast. Thermogenic herbal blend drops. Look & feel great. Guaranteed. Cheryl, 814-1309. WOMEN’S HEAjLTH care. Ho­ listic approach for infections, HPV, abnormal paps, birth con­ trol* gen health. Call Madeline Kasian, Nurse Practitioner, for a p e rso n alize d app ro ach . 7329744. Saturday appts. available, TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING $1.99 PG. Fast. Accurate. Laser. APA/MLA. Experienced editor. Rural/University. Jim, 967-2360. $2/PQ , $15 resum es. Proofed. L aser. F a st..S a m e day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987, A FFO R D A B LE SECR ETARIALDesktop publishing, p/u & dlvry, color, 7 days/eves. 921-8328 APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/W ord p rocessing. N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU A REA. A PA /M LA exp. IB M /laser, W P5/6, tra n scrip ­ tion. Charts/?raphs. 966-2186 anytime C U STO M IZE D RESU M ES 5/$25. Nxt day sve avail. Call for info. John 482-9325. Leave msg., ' . ; FA ST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses. MLA/ APA, las-= er, fax. Pat, 897-1741. R^sum^s W ith Results! Entry Level Experts. Special Student Discounts! Writing, Formatting, Printing. T h e W rite Resum e . 9 1 7 -3 1 9 4 I BUY CD'S! Win come to U. 800-835-7712, M ALES .18-24 lean, healthy* nonsmokers, w anted for a stu­ d y . $600 o ffered . S tudy re ­ q u ire s 4 short hospital stays. Call Nicole 945-8923. Won't you please let me tell you your HOROSCOPE? JEN - I had a g re a t tim e over Spring Break and am looking forw ard to S atu rd ay . Love, Adam PIZZA & PASTA M ARILYN'S SA N D W IC H PR E P /D L V R Y . Flex hours. Apply Brow ns on 6th- 570 S. College. LADIES OF Tri-Sigma get ready to Rack'em up! 6ÂM - Midnight Daily 8 9 4 -4 6 3 6 SWTS Servers needed fq rd in n er time. S7+ /hour. A pply in person, I324S Rural Rd. M R. GOODCENTS Aidet M obarak . . . . vGorbeh HEALTH & FITNESS Your grandmother did! P g .8 7 KOREAN GARDEN Subs & Pastas now hiring for day shift,- part-time hours avail­ able. Please apply in person. 528 W. Broadway between Mill and Roosevelt. JUNGLE FEVER, if you don’t go, you'll never know. HEY FRATERNITIES! Are you prepared to Rack'em up? - H elp ‘ W anted day s & w eeke n d s, 4 -6 h rs/d ay . A pply in person. Blimpie, 911 E. Broad; Way,- Mexican Restaurant now hiring h o st/h o ste ss p o sitio n s. W ait staff, cocktailers, bussers & a ll kitchen positions. FT/PT. Apps avail at 7001 N. Scottsdale Rd, & PV, 1263 I N, Tatum Blvd. JUNGLE FEVER, biggest party on ASU Campus at K £ House. KOUCHOULOU M USIC ■ | ■ ■ | ■ ALASKA SUMMER jobs! Earn thousands this summer in canner­ ies, processors, etc. .Male/ Fe­ male. Room/board/travel often provided! Guide. Guaranteed success! (919) 929-4398 ext, A1015. AA CRUISE Ships Hiring! Earn big SSS + free world travel (Car­ ibbean, Europe, H aw aii, etc.) Summer/permanent, no exp nec. Guide. (919)929-4398 ext C1015. Bud. Bud Light Mon-Thur 3-7 p.m. Sat 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun 12-9 p.m. S5S5I BANDERSNATCH JO B O P P O g n jN jT I|^ C O O L JOBS E m ploym ent Guide. Earn $2000-6000 a month + free tra v e l. Jobs on c ru ise ships, A laskan fisheries. Club Med. ski resorts, whitewater raft­ ing, Disney, national paries and US Forest Service. Guaranteed success. 617-334-4096. PERSONALS RESTAURANTS/ BARS Where ASU Goes for Pizza BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MAKE MONEY ON ■• l/U M V TV Yoor Voice Could § le Your fortune Dnlo^ fjin m n rto b 230 5368 *ÆÊÊ8tÈÊmËgÊÊËÈÈS THIRSTY THURSDAY $1 4 1 All 12 o z . B o ttle s B u d • A m s te l • S a m A d a m s • S t. P a u li H e in e k e n • B e c k s • C o o rs L ig h t M o ls o n • B a rtle s & J a y m e s 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 1 3 0 1 E. U n iv e rs ity ^ SERVICES Graduate Studies Database Psychology » Counseling • Social Work and Related Studies f 4 ,0 0 0 C oncentration Program s M o re th an 1 ,000 G raduate Schools O ver 300 C red en tiallin g Program s 5 0 0 Professional O rganizations Plus: School Catalog Service ...w e send th e catalogs to you! Why spend hours re-searching what school has what concen­ tration, in what area of the country. We have all the 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. Career Network A ssociates 2 21 0 M t. C arm el A ve., Suite 110 D ep t. A G lenside, PA 19038 (2 1 5 ) 5 7 2 -7 6 70 Fax; (2 1 5 ) 5 7 6 -8 3 54 SPORTS & R |C R |A T IO J ^ _ ASU KARSTEN G o lf C ourse presents golf instruction. After w ork/school program s, w eek­ d ays . 5 :3 0 -7 pm. b e g in n in g 3/27. To enroll/info 784^4839, LEARN W HAT the CIA , FBI and US Seal teams are training to d ay . Jeet Kune do concepts and Fili pi no martial a rts, con­ tact certified instructor D aniel Bissonnette 941 -2550 Stall Praia Cliuifiidi 965-6755 M A TR IX ED UCATION CENTER • "SIMON" C o rn e rsto n e M a ll • 968 466 8 St a t e P ress Thursday, March 23,1995 Page 16 Structure o f UGS UGS Council • Ten members comprise the council, one from each college. • Council members select a President, Vice President, Budget Analyst, and Membership Coordinator from the Council. • The Council will decide bn all legislative and fiscal matters for UGS. Caucus Assembly • The Caucus Assembly is designed to select the council members o f UGS. • Academic colleges selectn one member and one alternate member for the UGS Council. • No elections or campaigning will be allowed prior to the Caucus. • The Caucus Assembly convenes during the week prior to the beginning o f the fall semester. U G S will fight for TA, RA & GA stipend increases paid health care benefits affordable child care graduate student rights ,----------- ---------------- ------------ -— — — .— — --------------------- »I PROXY VOTE FOR GRADUATE STUDENT GOVERNMENT GRAD STUDENTS mmMm NAME: ■ ; -V- ; , SPUING ' ; SS#: (Vote is ineligible without this!) I SUPPORT A SEPARA TE GRADUAT E STUDENT GOVERNMENT CIRCLE ONE YES NO I SUPPORT THE STRUCTURE OF UGS AS PROPOSED YES NO 1 SUPPORT A FEE OF UP T O $6.00 A YEAR FOR THE NEW GOVERNMENT / YES NO Photocopy acceptable Detach and drop off on the 3rd floor of the MU or put in campus mail by April 7. ( FOLD) GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL C/O MELANIE SMITH ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY THIRD FLOOR, MEMORIAL UNION TEMPE, AZ 85287-1001 FREE PIZZA , SODA, BOW LING A N D POOL!!! _______________ I I H GET SOM E FREE PIZZA A N D FIND O U T GOVERNM ENT FROM & 30 T O 8:00 PM, MAYBE EVEN M EET SOM E TOP ASU ADMINISTRATORS!! AT 8:00 PM THERE WILL BE >POOL DOW NSTAIRS IN TH E ■ — IS FREE PIZZA AT f t POOL FROM 8 : 0 0 3 0 PM. COM E W ÈÈÊtÊÊ - - -■ ' ; J L umsMZà*,.m s mm § PROGRAMMING LOUNGE 1 6:30 TO 9:30 PM W B ^ m the Graduate Student Counci