Smith, supporters Take Back the Day Same-gender officer assistance for rape victims becomes DPS policy B y P atty K in g S ta te P ress Jim Poulin/State Press A b o u t 6 0 p e o p le jo in e d L a u ry S m ith (c e n te r ) in s u p p o r t o f W e d n e s d a y ’s T a k e B a c k th e D a y m a rc h o n c a m p u s . S m ith , w h o w a s ra p e d in d a y lig h t la s t F e b ru a ry o n th e to p le v e l o f P a rk in g S tru c tu re 1 , a s k e d A S U D e p a rtm e n t o f P u b lic S a fe ty C h ie f L a n n y S ta n d rid g e to m a k e a u to m a tic s a m e -g e n d e r o ffi­ c e r a s s is ta n c e fo r ra p e v ic tim s a n A S U D P S P o lic y . H e d id . Pressed in a blue T-shirt and black pants, a determined looking Laury Smith approached the podium. “I have a message,” the 26-year-old graduate student said. “My message will not change and my stance will not change. I’m not going to stop until it’s heard.” Smith scanned the audience and located ASU’s Department of Publis Safety’s chief of police. “Lanny Standridge, I see you in the crowd, sir,” she said. “I want a same-gender officer at a crime without (it) being demanded and I want that to be policy,” Smith, who was raped Feb. 21 on campus, voiced her dissat­ isfaction with ASU’s Department of Public Safety’s handling of her case at Wednesday ’s Take Back the Day march on cam­ pus. “I hope they ’ve paid attention to this since they haven’t paid attention to anything else,” she said afterward. “Maybe they’ll be forced to take action now.” Standridge said that as of today, ASU police have imple­ mented a new written policy that requires a same sex officer to assist the victim of a sex crime. E d u c a tio n b ills n e a r d e a th in L e g isla tu re Bv K im W atson Sta te P ress The Arizona Legislature is cleaning house of virtually dead bills in an attempt to wrap up the session by next week, with university education issues being swept under the rug according to Paul Allvin, exec utive director of the Arizona Students Association. “U nless som eone tells ALLIVIN them (legislators) to support education; we will just see a continual erosion for support of the education and the system,” Allvin said. “The public has to wake up and see what their elected officials are doing.” Even though the session is almost at an end and none of the three ASA-drafted bills have passed, there always is the possibility of a “striking-every- He added that until today, DPS operated on a promise — but not a formal policy — outlined in its “Sexual Assault and Acquaintance Rape” brochure that provided a same-gender officer only when requested. The promise carried the same weight as a policy, Standridge added. About 60 people marched from noon to 1p.m ., walking from the Memorial Union to Parking Structure 1, where Smith was raped, and back to the MU. Flanked by DPS officers, the crowd rounded a comer onto Lemon Street. Sarah Juno, the march’s director, began chanting with the audience as TV news crews jockeyed for position in front of her. “We are women. We are strong,” she shouted to the audi­ ence. “Violence against us has lasted too long!” Marchers waved signs and cheered as they walked along the sidewalk. “Have a say. Take back the day!” they yelled. “What do w e want? No rape! When do we want it? Now!” Juno said she felt the march allowed participants to vent their concerns about campus safety, including the .rape. “The event is definitely a form of empowerment,” she said. T urn t o M arch, pag e 2, N avel tr a in in g thing” amendment breathing new life into- them. A strike-everything amendment guts out a bill that is still in the process of being approved, and fills it in With the amendment. ASA’s bills could still be passed if this occurs with any of them. ASPIRE, or Arizona Student Program Investing Resources in Education, seeks to help low-income, at-risk elementary students get collège educations. The plan calls for students to sign an agreement to stay in school, to keep a clean record of behavior, and to get good grades. If they achieve those goals they are guaranteed four years of scholarship money . The work study plan calls for placing students in private sector or campus jobs related to their field of study. Salaries would be comparable to non-student entry-level rates, with half paid by the business and half paid by the university. Rep. Mike Gardner, R-Tempe, said ASPIRE and weak study programs have a lot of support T urn to Bid s , page 2. M e d ia c o n fe r e n c e to fo c u s o n h a rm o n y , p o s itiv e n e w s B y A n g e la M u i j . Sta te P ress A trend toward emphasizing harmony and posi­ tive news will be among the topics discussed at Friday’s “ Cultural and Media Messages: Response and Responsibility” conference. “Communitarianism is a new movement with the idea of journalism that brings people together rather than instigates controversy,” said John Merrill, a retired University of Missouri-Columbia journalism professor who will address the topic as die conference’s keynote speedier. The conference is scheduled from 9 to 11:30 a m in the Education Lecture Hall. It is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by the AntiDefamation League and several ASU organizations including the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Telecommunications and the Hillel Jewish Student Center. INSIDE S T A T E P R E S S Weather Outlook M ostly sunny. H igh 89, low 57. In addition to Merrill’s keynote address, ques­ tions from audience members will be taken by mod­ erator David Bodncy, a former editor of New Times. There will also be a panel of 12 media representa­ tives and community leaders including Channel 12 reporter Wallace Reynolds and Channel 8 News - Director Michael Wong. The panel will examine three hypothetical situations involving different Cul­ tures and how the media covers them and the deci­ sion-making process of the news media. Wong said conferences such as these are impor­ tant for professional media and students looking to enter the profession. He said the conferences can raise their awareness and sensitivity of cultural diversity and stereotypes. “These conferences are good on a continuing bajis, not just because of some incident or the times we live in,” he said. T urn to C onference, World/ Nation New York Senator Alphonse D’Amato is blasted by Japanese-' American groups nation­ wide after be lampoons Judge Lance Ito using a fake Japanese accent. Page 3 page A S U a lu m n a C h r is tin e M il,Ia n m e s m e riz e d o n lo o k e rs w ith a b e lly d a n c e p e rfo r­ m a n c e W e d n e s d a y a fte r n o o n ’o n C a d y M a ll. M llla n , w h o p e rfo rm s u n d e r th e s ta g e n a m e A z h ia , h a s b e e n s tu d y in g M id d le E a s te rn d a n c e fo r fiv e y e a r a n d h a s b e e n a p ro fe s s io n a l d a n c e r s in c e 1 9 9 3 . 2. Sports Sophomore Sergio Elias downed UofA’s Sten Sumberg 6-3,6-3 Wednesday to help lead the Sun Devils past the Wildcats 5-2 at Whiteman Tennis Center. Page 11 Where To Find It Classifieds...........................14 Comic?................... Crossword..... ......... ...10 6 Horoscopes ..................... 15 O pinion.................. .4 Police R eport.........................,6 Sports......................................11 Today's A c t i v i t i e s ...2 World/Nation.... P age 2 March Today C ontinued from page 1. 7?» Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis and are prim ed on a space-available basis. Campus dubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room IS. Requests wS not be taken over toe phone. Faxed entries w it also not be accepted Entoes m ust contain the tu t name o f the dub or organization, a descrip­ tion o l the event, date. time and toe tu t address o f the location. A ll requests are subtea to edtm g fo r content, space and clarity. Incomplete o r degtoie entries w d be discarded. Deadline fo r requests in noon the day before publication and entries wd not be accepted more than three worktog days before publication. Only one entry pe r 'organization per day is permitted • Counseling Training Center — Counseling available at the Counseling Training Center at ASU. Free to hit-time students and {acuity, CaH 965-5067 tor information or aw appointment • MUAB Special Events C om m ittee — Meeting, everyone welcome. 3:30 p.m., Corterence Room 1A, W J Wrd floor. • MUAB Re creation Committe e — Meeting, everyone welcome. 3 p m , Conference Room 1A, MU thW door. • Financial M anagem ent A ssociation — General meeting Speaker. Susan Stocks, Ftrst Interstate Bank. 4:40 p.m., MU La Par. • KASR — DJ Solon«» begins hie musical tribute to toe “Dung Beetle* and begin hiri extensive search for the Supermodel. 9 p.m.-midnight, KASfi, 1260 AM. • MUAB N m Com m ittee — Free screening oi T h e Great Muppet Caper." 2.40 p.m.. MU Cinema, lower level. • Cam pus C rusade fo r C hrist — Thursday Night Live. Open Bible study, music and 6 » . Greg Grimstad will be speaking on Matthew S: "Salt and Light." 7:30 p.m., Physical Science B-wtog, Boom 151. . » Society o f IWapanle Professional Engineers — General meeting. AS paid members invited to hear candidate speeches and vote for new officers. 43 0 p.m , COB 250. • G raduate W om en's Netw ork — Coffee Dialogue: informal discussion. 8:30-10 a.m ., W om en's Student Center. "Learning to b e Assertive." Presented by Tania Israel, faculty associate, women’s studies. 5-6 p m . Women's Student Center. • Canterbury-Episcopal Cam pus M b iis tiy — Worship seivtoes. dinner and book study. 6:30 p m , S t Augustine's Church; northeast comar of Broadway and Cottage. • PRSSA— BS-monWy meeting. 4 3 0 p m . Startler Hatt Rearing Room. • U niversity Toastm asters — improve your speaking skiBs at our weekly sessions. G uest speakers: T e rri P otfoereski, C hase B ank: and P a u l Brunoforte, Habitat Corporation. 6:30 p m . M l Coconino • Sigm a Tau D elta English Honors Sociaty — Open meeting. 4:30 p.m , Casey Moore's Oyster House; Ninth St. and Ash. • A ll Saints C atholic Newm an C arrier — Fr. R Clements, vocations direc­ tor for the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix, w9 be at the Newman Center to answ er questions about religious vocations. All day Thursday, 230 E. University Drive; norttwestoomarof Cottege and Univeistty. • T H E M — Science fiction and fantasy dub m eetirg. 4:30 p m , Anthropology Building Room C l 13. • In terv a rs ity C h ris tia n Fellow sh ip — Weekly meeting: Bible study in 1C?-. State Press T hursday, April 6 ,1 9 9 5 Romans, praise and worship. Everyone welcome. 7:30 p m , M l Apache, Room 221. • Student trie I earning fleeoutce Center — Free goal ootting/mottvation workshop. L ean tips on how to motivate yourself to reach realistic goals in Me. Open to all ASU students, faculty and staff. 11 a m , MuMcidtural lounge, Sudani Services Building. Free computer workshops. Learn survival DOS commands, a s wett a s basic skills in Windows 3.1 and Won! Pertaet 6.0. Macintosh workshops also avattable. Seating ttmtod; caS 965-6658. Student Services Buttdng. Room A 361. “I think a march like this is important because you do get to express some of the anger and you get to make noise about it.” Juno said that she felt that the march got the attention of DPS and other administrators. “Lanny Standridge was there and he went out of his way to tell me that he wanted to be there and believed in what we were doing,” she said. “He wasn’t there as a guard. He wasn’t there as the police. He was there to participate.” Safety issues will be the focus of an upcoming forum planned by the Women’s Student Center. The forum is tenta­ tively scheduled to take place within 10 days. “The test will be how DPS responds to the forum ques­ tions,” Juno said. Joanne Buffington, a nursing sophomore who participated in the march, said she felt empowered by it. “The march brought the issue of rape to the forefront in my mind and it made me feel powerful that I had some effect on the administration and safety at A SU " She said she would have liked to have learned more about campus crime at the march. “It may be nice to find out some real statistics about the ASU campus,” she said. Bills C ontinued from page 1. “I think they would have gotten through if there had been more time, but the problem is the session is too short to get them through the process.” The tuition pre-payment plan is called Arizona TRUST, Tuition Reserves for University Students of Tomorrow. The plan aims to establish a tuition prepayment program that would allow families to pre-purchase years of university or community college study through monthly payment plans. Rep. Andy Nichols, D-Tucson, said he will work on die bill again next year. “It is something I believe and support because it promotes savings.” Nichols said education is so important that a state-assisted sys­ tem is needed to ensure people have access to it “We took the appropriations off of the bill and will look for it later,” Nichols said. ‘W e will have it because it is the right thing to do.” However, Rep.-Bob Bums, R-Glendale, said there is no reason for government to set up such a program, which will create more bureaucracy. Sea Carol Springer, R-Prescott, said there is always a system of priorities, and that many programs were involved in the weed- ing-out process. “Revenues for next year and a new review process to deter­ mine if existing programs should be retained, eliminated or modi­ fied will influence whether or not die bills survive the next ses­ sion ” she said. Allvin said dial a comfortable majority of legislators support ASA’s bills: just not the legislators who control tilings. “Most of the legislators say the programs are sound; wellthought out, and necessary, but there is a small group at the top saying our programs are not worthy,” he said. Springer said there is no question that education is a priority. “Education always takes a majority of the funding, and in terms of percentages it got a majority of the new revenue this year,” she said. „ Allvin said that Sen. Gary Richardson, R-Tempe; Rep. Laura Knaperek, R-Tempe and Mike Gardner, R-Tempe, have been highly supportive of university issues. “If it were not for them we would not have gotten as far as we did. And it is not just knee-jerk support — they have publicly stood up against leadership for what they believe.” Conference CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1. However, Conference Coordinator Fran Matera said original plans for the conference were sped up because of a November incident involving a fabricated column in the State Press. “I coordinated ethics conferences for the University of Miami and wanted to pursue them here, (and) certainly the (Mary Leigh) Summeiton incident served as an impetus for die conference,” said Matera, also a journalism professor. Former ASU journalism major Maiy Leigh Summerton wrote a column for the Nov. 15,1994 issue claiming that she saw Jews stone to death a European Jew at die Western Wall in Jerusalem. Summerton, who said she witnessed the incident during a trip to Jerusalem last summer, alleged that the man was killed because he used an electric wheelchair on the Sabbath, a day when elec­ tricity is prohibited. PRIESTHOOD UnpackOnly Once This Year. Come and see what we found... 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Clements, Director VOCA H O N OFFICE FOR DIOCESAN PRIESTHOOD C A TH O LIC DIOCESE OF PH O EN IX 400 East Monroe Street Phoenix 85004, Arizona (602) 257-0030 W o r ld /N a t io n P ag;e 3 T hursday, April 6 ,1 9 9 5 S t a t e P ress O rder in th e court? ^ \ r o p ild th e W o rld Tax cut legislation nears House victory W ASHINGTON (AP) — In a final flourish for the “Contract With America,” thè House pushed toward pas­ sage Wednesday of Republican tax cut legislation blending a $500-per-child tax credit with reductions long sought by business.Dem ocrats battled the measure to the end as too generous to the rich. “Under the Democrats, tax increases were the answer to every question,” , said Rep, Bill Archer, the conservative T ex an w ho h ead s th e ta x -w ritin g W ays and M eans Committee. “When this bill is passed, the tax-raising legacy o f President Clinton and his party will officially be over.” Clinton, who backs a sm aller tax reduction, said the G ÒP’s $ 189-billion measure marked a return to "trickledown economics,” Republicans, he said, want to cut Head Start and education “to pay for a tax cut for the wealthiest, Americans.;.; That is wrong.” A final House vote was expected after nightfall. But the outcome seemed pre-ordained after Republicans prevailed on a m id-afternoon procedural roll call, 228-204, that demonstrated their command of floor proceedings. Associated Press A L o s A n g e le s C o u n ty S h e r iff’s d e p u ty e s c o rts a s p e c ta to r fro m th e g a lle r y In th e O .J . S im p s o n m u rd e r t r ia l In L o s A n g e le s W e d n e s d a y . T h e m a n , d re s s e d in g a u d y m is m a tc h e d w o m e n ’s c lo th e s , w a s e x p e lle d a fte r y e llin g lo u d ly d u rin g p ro c e e d in g s th a t a fe llo w s p e c ta to r h a d s la p p e d h im . Clinton vows U.S. will not use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear powers W ASHINGTON ( AP) — President C linton pledged Wednesday not to launch nuclear attacks against countries that have no nuclear weapons and agree not to acquire them. Sim ilar assurances will be offered by the leaders of Russia,. Britain and France, Secretary o f State Warren Christopher said in a statement drafted for presentation to foreign diplomats at the State Department. ..And he sajd China wpqld provide similar assurances as .•'part of a United Nations resolution. Christopher, in his prepared statement, said the presi­ dential declaration would be released later. 6th juror dismissed from O.J. trial LOS ANGELES (AP) — The trouble-plagued O.J. Simpson jury lost a sixth member Wednesday, intensifying fears that a complete panel w on’t survive the stresses of thé trial long enough to deliver a verdict. “It's a concern that we have; that we’ll be able to keep a pool all the way through,’’ said Jo-Ellan Dimitrius, a jury consultant for the defense. . The ouster of the 38-year-old black woman, reportedly for failing to disclose her own experience with domestic abuse, left only six alternate jurors half of the original number. If the alternative pool is exhausted and the num­ ber of jurors falls below 12, a mistrial would be declared unless both sides agreed to continue. The dismissal delayed resumption o f testimony by a key prosecution witness for 70 minutes while lawyers and the judge met in chambers. Senator mocks Simpson udge Use of fake Japanese accent infuriates Japanese-Americans ' NEW Y O R K (A P ) — In a m ock Jap an ese accen t straight out of a Mr. Moto movie. Sen. Alfonse D’Amato accused Judge Lance Ito o f botching the O.J. Simpson .c a s e ,. D ’Am ato’s remarks on a nationally syndicated radio program Tuesday infuriated Japanese-Americans, and New York’s Republican senator later apologized. “If I offended anyone, I’m sorry,” he said. “I Was mak­ ing fun of the pomposity o f the judge and the manner in which he’s dragging the trial out.” D'Am ato’s pidgin English was so over the top that even the show’s often outrageous host, Don Imus, warned him to stop. “Let me stop you before you w ind up on the front page of the Dai/v News,” Imus interrupted. Imus’ warning came too late. “D ’AMATO MOCKS ITO,” the Daily News’ headline read. “Even Too Much For Imus,” New York Newsday said. D'Amato launched into his imitation when he and Imus were discussing reopening Senate Banking Com m ittee hearings on Whitewater. Imus suggested that D ’Amato, who is committee chair­ Survey: 54 ,% of freshmen binge drink during first week of college BOSTON (AP) — More than half the freshmen attend­ ing colleges where drunken parties are a way of life go on a binge during their first week on campus, according to a sur­ vey released Wednesday. “We anticipated they would drink a lot, but these find­ ings surprised even us,” said researcher Henry Wechsler of the Harvard School of Public Health. “We found they start ; drinking early, and they do it often.” The study, conducted at schools where binge drinking is common, was designed to examine what happens to fresh­ men who enter this drinking culture. An e a rlie r re p o rt by th e sam e team , p u b lish ed in D e c e m b e r ih th e Jo u rn a l o f the A m erican M edical Association, sampled 17,592 students at 140 colleges in 40 states. It found that at one-third o f the schools, half the stu­ dents go pn drinking binges, meaning they down at least four or five drinks in a row. In the new study, the researchers questioned 720 fresh­ men at 13 o f the same heavy-drinking colleges. They found that 68 percent o f new students had binged by the end of their first semester, 54 percent of them in their first week at school. Researchers did not identify the heavy-drinking schools. WHUSlSfTSW Be has hfesfehtedthe freshm en data to conferences o f college deans and trustees. He decided to make the results public now because high school seniors are deciding which colleges to attend. Many freshmen seem to view drunkenness as just anoth­ er aspect of going to college. The study suggests that colleges with party school repu­ tations are especially likely to attract students who already like to drink. Although most students said they picked their school because of its academic reputation, 54 percent said another factor was its active social life. Nevertheless, nearly half the students ended up drinking more than they did in high school, and few drank less. Among the survey’s other findings: • During the first semester, male apd female freshmen binged almost equally. • Every freshman questioned said alcohol was very easy to get on campus and 96 percent said school drinking rules had no effect. • While 84 percent called alcohol a problem on campus, just over half considered it “appropriate” to get drunk at parties or with friends. • More than half of those who binged regularly said they sometimes forget what they do while drunk or regret things they remember. man, wouldn’t attract as large an audience as long as the Simpson trial is under way in Los Angeles. “Judge I|o will never let it end,” D’Amato said in a fake accent. “Judge Ito loves the limelight. He is making a dis­ grace of the judicial system. Little Judge Ito. ... Judge Ito will keep us from getting television for the next year.” C yril N ishim oto, d irecto r o f the M anhattan-based Japanese American Social Services, denounced D’Amato’s remarks as “racist and completely insensitive.” “This inability to distinguish between Japanese and Americans of Japanese ancestry is exactly the kind of atti­ tude that put Japanese-Americans in concentration camps during World War II,” Nishimoto said. Ito is a third-generation Japanese-American whose par­ ents were put in an internm ent camp in W yoming and whose father later served in the military intelligence ser­ vice. Ito has no trace of a foreign accent. Through a court spokeswoman, the judge declined to comment on D’Amato’s remarks. Democratic Rep. Norman Mineta, who was held in a cam p w ith h is Ja p a n e se -A m e ric a n p a re n ts, c a lle d D ’Amato’s behavior “outrageous.” “I d o n ’t know w hat we, as A m ericans o f Japanese an cestry, have to do to be able to prove th at we are • T urn to Ito - D ’Amato, page renamed for First Lady DHAKA, Bangladesh ( A P ) T h e 500 residents of one village Hillary Rodham Clinton visited during her South Asian tour decided to remember her by ; changing the name of the town. “Hillary Para” is the new name o f Rishi Para village. Mrs. Clinton met there Monday with poor women who ran small businesses with loans from a rural bank. On Wednesday, M rs.'C linton concluded her 12day tour o f Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. “pach country I visited offered unique insights into G T Supersoft,,»-' Saddle. rhl W einm ann A lloy R im s and D ual Purpose Tires. / C O M P L IM E N T A R Y G T O UTPO ST TR A IL FO O D B U FFET *229* • Shi m ano A ltus 2 1-S peed/ Com ponent. Í264.9S Lifetim e Warranty/1 Year Free Adjustments $6 °° O FF iAny U-Lock With coupon. Void with other offers, r Exp 4-30-95 Domenics Cycling 967-7700J MANYOTHERMODELS SALEPRICED! At nd In v e n t o r y R e d u c t io n S a le Many other -GT models priced jto n io v e ii Hurry in for best selection. f|P D0MENIC5 CYCLING Live Entertainment 8pm-12pm Student Discounts with I.D. 9 6 7 -7 7 0 0 1004 S. Mill Ave., Tempe Open 7 days a week Layaway • Financing University 1 10th Street 4" ^ Apache N 430N. Scottsdale Rd • 894-0533 St a te P P age 9 T hursday, April 6 ,1 9 9 5 ress erRerMcfc>ipi'ry ARTS CRAFTS FAIR ATLANTA (AP) — Jimmy Carter got a sneak preview of his screen biography and pretty much liked what he saw. The former president said he enjoyed “about 90 percent” of the TV biography to air on the A&E Télévision Network next Tuesday. “I think it’s a good historical film as well,” Carter said after seeing a preview Tuesday. PARIS (AP) — Dustin Hoffman and Lauren Bacall are the latest American actors to be inducted into the presti­ gious French Order of Arts and Letters. Culture Minister Jacques Toubon honored the stars at a ceremony Tuesday, designating Bacall a commander in the order and Hoffman an officer. NEW YORK" (AP) — Brian Dennehy and Dana Delany will be out of a job come Sunday. Translations, the Brian Friel drama in which they star, will close after only a three-week run on Broadway. The play, set in Ireland in 1833, got mixed reviews. Friel, Ireland’s best-known living playwright, won a best-play Tony Award in 1992 for Dancing at Lughnasa, which had a one-year run on Broadway. NEW YORK (AP) — Tom Hanks is the highest-ranked actor on a list of Holly wood’s 100 most powerful people. The Forrest Gump star was No. 6 on the annual “Power List” in Premiere magazine’s May issue. Last year he was No. 29. Tom Cruise was No. 7 for the second year in a row. Topping the list for the second straight year was Steven Spielberg. He was followed by super agent Michael Ovitz and Disney chief Michael Eisner. ■ The top 10 also included form er D isney executive Jeffrey Katzenbcrg; Sherry Lansing, chief executive of Paramount’s Motion Picture Group; and MCA executive Sid Sheinberg. Lansing is the first woman to make it into the top 10 in the six years Premiere has been compiling the list. There is more to life th an news, weather and sports. Check out the comics. WTUl)a£gxee^cx. U ÊÊK The P harm acvÄ ^A m erica Trusts Mill & Broadway, Tempe Store Phone 921 -9 002 P h a rm a c y 921 -8 0 1 3 S to re Hours: 8 a .m . - 1 0 p .m ., 7 D a y s a W e e k CLOSE TOASU! O N C A M PU S T H R U F R ID A Y 8 A M -5 P M M U W EST L A W N A i F E A T U R I N G : r \1 SHOE PURCHASE FREE D a ily E n t e r t a i n m e n t ■ Acoustic guitarist ■ Belly dancing "Food ■ Barren M ind Im prov Troupe fe—j Exp. 4/12/95 HIS rpnr 16 Oz. Good thru 4-13-95. 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Eyro-Styled 2-Speed Here's w h a t to do: Using Word, put 25 things that drive you crazy on a disk. (Crazy m ight be a room m ate w h o never does the dishes or o n ly watches O.J., etc.) O nce y o u 'v e num bered 25 crazy things on your disk, bring it to the in fo desk o f the State Press in the north basement of Matthews Center by 5 pm Tuesday, April 25. Be sure to include your name and phone num­ ber. Students and staff are welcome to enter. All entries w ill be published on a space available basis. A team of very crazy student judges w ill deter­ m ine th e 3 w in n in g entries. First place w ill receive a $25 g ift certificate from M onti's La Casa Vieja. Second place is $20 to a local store and third place is a State Press coffee m ug! Good luck. Best wishes. GO CRAZY! Questions? Call 965-6555. Mill & Broadway only WalgreensCoupon *9 o n e Please call 619.534.4364 code #24 or mail the coupon below to be sent a free UCSD Summer Session Catalog in April: A Good thru 4-13-95. S Good thru 4-13-95. á I f V M ina WalgreensCoupon B roadw ay only 99 Twizzlers Strawberry Twists 16-Oz. Bag Good thru 4-13-95. WalgreensCoupon - mm a Broadway only 69* V V S A L E ! Walgreens Nail Polish Remover 4-O z. Lemon or Regular Good thru 4-13-95. C om ics Page 10 iCrAtÌ#N HeX óÍ b y Ç tüC y H cV iïviteA t ..AND GOD TOLDADANANDEYE, 'EATANYTHING W THEGARDEN EXCEPT THE F/tOrr Of THE THEE OFKNOWLEDGE JUST WHAT'S THE NATTER WITH* THE TREE OFKNOWLEDGE? IT'S ALWAYS A TREE THArS FLAMED, ISN'T n ? n ■ ■ J RUBES © •AHEM; AND GOD SAID, *EAT ANYTHING IN THE GARDEN EXCEPT THE CHEESEBURGER OFKNOWLEDGE. By Leigh Rubin .. a n d ih e h after 11 3>2 'single-handedly suying 'Five DRAGON5,1 RESCUED ADAMSELIND51R£S6ylAONA iODUSTWHILEBUND-FOLDEDAND LSlia HADTiMETDPULLA SWORDFROMASTONE. V Calvin and Hobbes VÊ DONT VALUE CRAFTSMANSHIP MV MORE.' AIL’ Vit. VALUE K, RUTHLESS EFFTCTENCiV, AND. I SAVWE DENT OUR OWN HUMAN(TV W M WM.' L ä by Bill Watterson VHTHOUT AN APPRECIATION KR GRACE. ANO BEAUTV,'THERE'S NO PLEASURE \N CREATING THINGS ANT) NO PLEASURE TN UAVTNG THEM.' OUR UWES ARE made drearter. Rather THAN RTCUER' _ i, HOW CAN A PERSON TARE PRVPE \N H\S WORK WHEN SKILL AND CARE ARE C0NS\0ERET> LUXURIES.' HERE NOT MACHINES ! WE HAVE A HUMAN NEED TOR CRAFTSMANSHIP.' - W 'J! Dominating the round table with tales of exaggerated chivalry and unbelievable heroics was the most tiresome of all medieval Knights, Sir Brag-a-Lot. TIGHTCORNER Doonesbury yousee, youcant cooka t JUSTTAKE PHOTOS, THOUGHT francisc a .you must catch tuo ONN W M , IMPOSE TINYHA!PS : youruhu-On tuo sem e: onmspópe­ ARMS... o by Ken Grundy and Malcolm Willett BY GARRY TRUDEAU U K SID ID in hub, mBern, INTHOAMAZON BASIN,ONTHE sm esopM ÍRPA/N0,INTHO PU/NSOFOLim DZBHZKAZGAN! YOWPOUKO sombstar CROATURO, poeepTKtNCAIP,SOMO SHAMAN! I'M ONe OF TUBLAST COWBOYS. ONOPAY, COMPUTBRSANPROBOTS BULLRUNOVORŸTHING, RACHBL CARBONHAS RIGHT. SOWORE JOHNMUIRANP ALPOLtCmO! / HIS OPINIONS, so Deep, SOVIR­ ILO... SEEN THE LIGHT? :SM; Students. Has a Liberal A rts and Sciences advisor (College or de-partm ental) provided you w ith academic guidance th a t illuminated the path toward your college education? Take a few m inutes to identify an academic advisor who exemplifies th e College com m itm ent to prom ote educational excellence. Nomination form s are available a t the reception desk in Social Sciences 111, CLAS departm ent offices, and the MU Information Peek. Or you can send le tte rs o f nomination and inquiries through e-mail to (iacrnvfr0asuvm.inre.asu.edu). Help us see the lig h t so th a t we can recognize outstanding advisors and salute them w ith a— College o f Liberal A rte and Sciences Excellence In Advieing Award Nominations close April 7,1995. S p o rts St a te P P ag;e 11 T hursday, April 6, 1995 ress Belken works magic as ASU flattens ’Cats 5-2 B y D a n M il l e r S t a t e P ress A S U s o p h o m o re s e c o n d s in g le s p la y e r S e rg io E lia s b a n g s a fo re h a n d d u rin g h is m a tc h w ith U o fA s S te n S u m b e rg W e d n e s d a y a t W h ite m a n T e n n is C e n te r. E lia s w o n th e m a tc h , 6 - 3 ,6 -3 , w h ic h h e lp e d th e 1 6 th -ra n k e d S u n D e v ils ta m e th e W ild c a ts , 5 -2 . All was calm prior to the UofA-ASU m en’s tennis match at W hiteman Tennis Center Wednesday. That is until Sun Devil Coach Lou Belken revealed what he had up his sleeve. “I'v e been thinking about doing it all seaso n ,” said B elken. w ho spoke with assistant coach Steve Bickham after the California match on April l about the con­ fidential matter. “We both liked the idea at that point. We pretty much had made the decision aside from testing it in practice.” Belken'.s bold maneuver worked. After switching the pairings and order of the doubles tandems, the 16th-ranked Sun Devils (10-6) seized the pivotal doubles point, two matches to one, and eventually ran the Wildcats (4-12) out of town 5-2. “W e did that really to co u n ter them (UofA),” Belken said. “They really have a . strong (No. 3) team-. We needed to be more competitive with three doubles teams and the balance of being able to win at all three.” Junior Dave Critchley, who has been paired with sophomore W olf von Lindenau at No. 2 all season, moved to first doubles and jo in e d No. 1 singles player Sargis Sargsian in an 8-5 route of Sten Sumberg and Vuk Tapuskovic. “We felt like, especially with Critchley T urn to T ennis, page 12. Sun Devil softball back on the road again By D amian Shaw State Press They were here for one day and they’re already leaving again. The Sun Devil softball team, coming off a weekend road trip against the Oregon Ducks and Oregon State Beavers, are once ag ain h e a d in g o u t: th is tim e to sunny California to face St. Mary’s, Santa Clara, Stanford and California. ASU is two games back of .500 in the Pac-10 with a record o f 4-6, but Coach Linda Wells isn’t looking past non-confer­ ence foes St. M ary's and Santa Clara. "1 think at this point w e're just going to take them one at a time," Wells said. “We have four non-conference teams to play,, and it’s im portant for us to pick up wins against those teams. Those games are on the schedule because we think we can stay competitive with those teams." ASU plays doubleheaders against each . o f its next four opponents, meaning the Sun Devils have eight games in just four days: Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The Pac-10 may be the toughest confer­ ence in the nation, with h alf of its eight team s ranked in the USA Today !NSCA coaches top-25 poll. Stanford is unranked, but Cal, which is matched up with the Sun Devils on Sunday, is perched at No. 10. “Cal is ranked in the top 10, and it. will be a tough challenge for us. I'm glad that they’re last," W ells said. “Hopefully we can get a couple o f games under our belt and move in and meet the challenge.” Sophomore shortstop Tanya Hermosillo, who has started every game this year and has a batting average of .284, knows the importance of the upcoming games. “I think that this is where we need to really step it up. These are very important g am es b ecau se o f the fa c t th at w e ’ve played so many games already that -were non-conference. This is really crunch time for us,” Hermosillo said. Hermosillo isn’t looking past the non­ c o n fe re n ce gam es e ith e r, but ch o o ses instead to use them to warm up for the con­ ference games. . “f look at them as a tune-up. I think it : just keeps us going,” she said. “This sport is a lot of repetition, so the more we play the better we’re going to do.” S op h o m o re c e n te r fie ld e r L isa Dacquisto gained one more stolen base last weekend to push her Pac-10 leading total to 23. Dacquisto isn’t intimidated by the Pac10 or California’s ranking. “The teams in the Pac-10 are completely beatable,” Dacquisto said. “W e’ve always T urn to Softball, page Í2 . J u n io r S te p h a n ie C o ttie r , s h o w n h e re s a fe ly 's te a lin g s e c o n d b a s e a g a in s t M a s s a c h u s e tts , w ill h e lp le a d th e A S U s o ftb a ll te a m o n its fo u r-te a m , e ig h t-g a m e ro a d tr ip b e g in n in g to d a y a g a in s t S t. M a ry 's in M o ra g a , C a lif. MLB players, Colangelo don’t care about fans Baseball is back! Let’s throw a party. C all the caterer. Tap the AMIAN keg. G et som ebody to work the SHAW d o o r., It’s hard to describe this over­ whelming sensation that I’m feel­ ing right now. Just thinking about baseball being back brings out in me this tremendous, uh, apathy. As far as I’m concerned, major league baseball has pretty much the sam e appeal as golf. W hen I’m having trouble sleeping, I can just switch on the old baseball game. At least the feeling is mutual. I care about baseball about as much as your average major leaguer cares about me, the potential fan. Im petuous baseball players thumbed their noses at fans to fight the battle o f martyrs. How many times did you h e a r them say in g “p o o r u s,” all at the fa n s ’ expense? Playoffs? Gone. World Series? Forget it. Players clearly stated they could not play w ithout a collective agreement, a contract clearly stating what owners and play­ ers will receive and expect in terms of compensation and restrictions. Owners gained an injunction saying the players were not bargaining fairly. Players got it rem oved and low and behold, they’re playing again without an agreement. The sole reason they went on strike in the first place was they had no agreement, so now once again without an agreement they’re going to play. Although they have callous disregard for the fans, it’s just possible that they realize who pays the bills. Not that they’d return for the love of the game. Maybe better recent news is that the cohorts of gluttony “ aw ard ed ” a b aseb all team to P hoenix. G ee, thanks. Luckily, we’ve got Jerry Colangelo on our side making sure that Diamondback baseball doesn’t emulate the aforemen­ tioned greed. Recent Colangelo moves include shoving a tax down our throat that we’d already voted down. I said “our” because i t ’s us in Tem pe, too. In fact, everybody in M aricopa County gets to pay for this one. C olangelo also struck down a separate deal with Bank One to put their name on “our” stadium. The only thing is the money from Bank One is earmarked for Jerry’s pockets; not to offset the cost of “our” stadium. Then there’s the 87-year-old woman who has lived in the same Phoenix home her entire life. Tom, er, I mean Jerry, is evicting her to build a parking lot for “our” stadium! I’m sure she appreciates the greater value o f baseball. Maybe he’ll be able to work out some cool pay-per-view deals like the ominous ones he was “forced” into with the Suns. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t want to sound like a total pessimist. Baseball’s not all bad. 1 enjoy watching college ball filled with players who play for free and the enjoyment o f the game. Baseball’s not back, it’s always been here. Besides, I’d still like to throw that party. I’d still like to tap the keg and find somebody to work the door. Think o f the money w e’d make. Uh-oh, I’m starting to sound like the major league baseball players. Pag« 1 2 St a t e P ress T hursday, April 6 ,1 9 9 5 T e n n is C ontinued from page Are y o u alw ays right? Is ev ery o n e else alw ays w ron g? 11. serving well, that he could hold serve at No. 1 Belken said. Then ASU’s normal No. 3 combo of junior Paul Reber and freshman Tsolak Gevorkian moved into the No. 2 slot and stomped on Chris Jenkins and Jack Enfield, 8-2. The third team o f sophom ores Sergio E lias an d W olf von Lindenau came up short, 8-5. Critchley, a 6-foot-5 transfer who serves cruise missiles, unleashed his wrath on Tapuskovic, 6-0, 6-4, at fifth sin­ gles. Critchley rocketed eight aces and cracked overheads from the baseline, all while fighting off a fever h e's suf­ fered from since the beginning o f the week. “T hat’s the best I’ve played all year in the first set,” Critchley said. “I’m moving a lot better at the net.” W hile attem pting to put the finishing touches on the struggling W ildcat, Critchley endured shouts from UofA hecklers seated in the bleachers nearby. “That just made me want to stick a volley right down the guy’s throat,” Critchley said of the ‘Make him volley cries’. “He’s got to get my serve back to make me volley.” . Sargsian. ranked No. 1 in the country, quickly ushered Jan Anderson off the court, 6-2, 6-3, behind torpedo-like serves and an effortless exhibition of court coverage. “I was serving well,” Sargsian said. “He got him self frustrated by yelling and throwing his racket. I need these wins to get my confidence back.” ASU No. 2 player Sergio Elias was a brick wall in his match with Sumberg, as he frequently utilized slice fore­ hand approach shots during his 6-3,6-3 victory. “W ith my game, it’ s just a matter of being patient,” Elias said. “I talked to Steve (Bickham) yesterday and he gave me some very good counsel. I’m proud of him. It was very good coaching.” Gevorkian was down 5-2,40-15 in the third set of his No. 4 match with Enfield, but the freshman boy-wonder some­ how saved both match points with backhand topspin lobs. “I was actually lucky the wind held the ball back on his side a little b it,” said G evorkian, who rattled o ff five straight games and triumphed 7-5. “I fight all the time. I knew I had nothing to lose.” Von Lindenau was upended 6-0,6-4 by James Rey, an old acquaintance who just simply had his number Wednesday. “James played very well,” said von Lindenau, who confessed to trying to oveihit and showboat a bit “He told me afterward that he had a great day. He apologized for playing so well.” Jenkins rose to die occasion against Reber, ranked 79th in the nation, bouncing him 3-6,6-1,6-3 at third singles. W rite a letter to th e editor! I n s t r u c t i o n s a re o n p a g e 5. WE BUY & S ill used« ; SHORTS, PANTS & JACKETS. ALL COLORS, DENIM & CORDUROY. Softball C on tin u ed from page 11. • SCOTTSDALE 1810 Scottsdale Rd. (Between McKellips & the 202 FWY) 5 Min; from ASU • Open 7 Days a Week / played Cal well as a team. We ju st need the pitching to come through because they have really tough hitters,” Wells is also expecting good things from the team this weekend. “This series is pivotal and it’s important that we get in the win column. I don't think we want to go into this week­ end and come back with a split," Wells said. “Obviously we want to win them all. but realistically we want to come home with at least six wins.” N o te: T he Sun D evils w ill be ta k in g sophom ore catcher Jodie Pirtle on the trip. Pirtle, who will only help out with her bat as the designated player, has thus far m issed the entire season due to a broken bone in her hand. Freshm an Jessica Shapiro, who has been strug­ gling since com ing back from a back injury, will not travel with the team. 947-8245 Our Summer Rates Sizzle $850 Your Own Room — The Whole Summer One Price — May 28 -r- August 5 U tilities Included* COMMONS *up to $120 per condo per m onth See if you're mentioned in the P o l ic e R e p o r t ! p r e s e n ts ... A Student Forum Friday,April 7, m s GuestSpeakers-. • Wesley Huntress NASAAssociateAdministrator for Space Science, NASAHeadquarters COB 152 • 11-11:50 a.m. It .Col. WilliamGregory MFg r e a t c l a s s e s . 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Order your copy of The 1994-95 T H E HEAT Sun Devil Spark Yearbook TH E CO UPO N today! 3 1 2 -3 6 2 -5 7 4 9 Matthews Center * basement, Rm 50 965-6881 V A N D ASK FO R IS QNI IN F O R M A TIO N R E TU R N BELOW TODAYFAX AB OU T Taste^ OF DePAUL SUM M ER C L A SSE S A T DEPA UL. O R CALL 3 1 2 -?6 2 -6 7 0 9 . R lease rush me information about Oe'Paut’s Su m m er Program. SSN ham Current School School Addi«« School Phoae City HomeAddress State Zip Hoae Phoae City State Zio NASAAstronaut, Pilot, Space Shuttle Mission CanratYear □Frednua □ Sophomore □ Junior □ Senior PSF173 • 3:45-5:00 P M Mail this couponto DePtal University, flamarr SchoolAdadsdoa, 1EastJnehaoaBird., Boom9100, Chicago, H 60604-2287 -. ,.. Sta to P r ess T hursday, April 6 ,1 9 9 5 Page 13 It's Free! It's Free! It’s Free! 1t§F ree! ;.,. Its Free! It's Free! It's Free! It’s Res! It’s Free! It’s Free! It's Free! I t’s Free! It’s Free! It’sFree! clts cpreel It's Free! It's Hve! ifrlv e e ! It's Free! rrSFBEE! 3 ts JFm! 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C la ssifie d s 'N o tice to o u r readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity 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 264-17,21. / r p a s s ! o n is ^ \ I that state which shows people a t their sheerest. It is the antonym o f fake. -Eugene E. A j£ R T M |N T |_ CAMERON CREEK 1 bd apt, su b let to Aug. 1st. $50Q/mo (new leases are $6 0 0 !) 9213369 DISCOUNT RENT Studios fur­ n ish ed . $385, 1 bedroom $485, total move in $399 near ASU titil incl -Rio Salado Apts 423-7300 ask forrBrian, under new management. TEMPE ASSM/ no qual., oasis beautiful, spacious 4 br, 2 and 3/4 ba, 400 sf master suite. Mar­ ble floors. Lrg p rivate c o u rt­ yard, lush c olorful landscap­ ing. Planters, fountains, pool, storage. $ 120k m in $20k dn. priv ate paradise* C ollege and Southern, 894-1658. 1BD 1BA g u est house. W alk to ASU 1 0 15 S. Farm er. $400/mo. Tim 894-0288. Other houses avail, for summer too. LOS PR A D O S- 3bd, 21/2ba townhouse. Great 2-story place. $73,500. Call Elise, 966-7789. 4B D ; 2BA, dbl gar, pool, lrg yd7 fire p i, U niv./Price, avail.; 4/20 $ 1050/mo. 8984)369 ° TEMPE PAPAGO Park Village II 2 br 2ba, appliances, Peggy Pearson 838-7772 : 4BD . 2BA, dbl gar, pool, lrg yd, fire pi. U niv./Price, avail. 4/20 $ 1050/mo. 898-0369 TOW NHOMES TEMPE BEAUTIFUL, spacious 4 br, 2 and . 3/4 b a, priv ate co u rty ard , co lo rfu l landscap­ ing. pool. $ 1 2 0 0 mo, ly r. -4 e » s e ftro lle g e and Southern,. 894-1658. FREE'FIN A NCIA L Aidi Over $6 b illio n in p riv ate secto r grants. & sch o larsh ip s is now WALK TO ASU available. AH students are e li­ 2bd 1ba at 1130 S, Farm er, gible regardless o f grades, in­ av ail June I . $695/m o. Open come, or parent’s income. Let us Thur. 4/6 4:30-6pm. Realty Ex­ h elp . C all S tu d en t F in an cial ecutives, Marc McDermott. Services: 1-800-263^6495 eat. F59185. •• ; • / ; '• ■ PARENT W/2 daughters look­ ing for; 2/3bd tw nhs o r apt. S ec.8 w ill pay $510 w /o util, $580 w/util; Melvin 233-9747. HOMES FOR SALE TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE HOMES FOR RENT GORGEOUS 3BD 2ha w/pool & pool h o u se . W alk to ASU. $1000/mo. tim , 894-0288. ANNO UNCE­ MENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3BD 3B A $900 mo w /d AVL. 6/1 Questa Vida #894-8527 3bd 3ba • $70,00 2bd 2ba • $54,900 Connie Roberts RENTAL SHARING "Your Colege Bookstore" HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR YOUR TEXTBOOKS Plenty of I -2 /F R m te(s) on 5-1. New 3 bd 2 ba fise w/2 .m ales. Rural/Chand. $275/mo. R efs req’d 940-5775. QUIET ÁREA, pool* laundry, o w n bath; b ik e to ASU* $250/mo.+ 1/2 util.- Vince 9679456 ^ SHARÉ 3BD 2ba condo- Pool, c oye red park i ng, 1 mi le/A SU . $240+ 1/3 util. 804-0218. RO O M S FOR RENT AVAIL. MID May, room in 2br, home, 1 mile from campus, jac u zz i, w /d, a v a il, fu rn ish ed . Call 350-9865. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $269 Anytime! If you’re a little flexible, we can help you beat the airline's prices. No Hidden C harges.:C heap Fares W orld­ w ide. A irhitch 800-397-1098. Internet: Airiiitch netcom.com SO FA /L O V ESE A T, O FFW H ITE. N ew - s till in w rap. C ontem p. B th pcs $499. Bi 11 996-6933. . COMPUTERS ¡SOFTWARE! Microsoft Office $134.95 Microsoft Works $67*95* PhotoShop. $198.95 Illustrator $97.95. many, many others! Student/Faculty ID or class verification required Computer Room Technologies, lac. 1130 East University Dr. Suite 205 • Tempe 852$ 1 829-3137 B uy O f T he W eek Q u e sta Vida, 3b d 3ba, perfect for room m ates. Call now $82,000. B ob B ullock R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 r o jy £ y L = _ = JET SKI 1989 Y am aha W ave Jamm er; sit dow n model, new seat, low h ours, xlnt cond. 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A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office person. W ill tra in . G ood a d ­ vancem ent potential, 4020 N* Scottsdale Rd. Ste. 108. Apply in pemon. , ' TICKETS SUNS: 1 seat Row 11 aisle. Face value. Free parking. Last 4 home games 661-1973. 84 HONDA PRELUDE red pb, ps, p moonrOpf* new clutch, new brks Dec. tag $1200 9664818 TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name- I specialize in quick departures. M ost places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. Backpacking Through Europe this Summer? We carry over 130 light-weight travel products from packs to sleep sacks. We want to make your trip a success. Call for our 1995 Travel Gear Catalog, and we will Include a copy of our Packing Guide and Foreign Currency Guide FREE. Bitter Root Call 800 688-9577 HELP WANTEDGENERAL APT MGR. Mature cqpple or indiv. to manage an apt. complex close to A SU. A dm in/office skills & maint/handym an exp. pref. 967-1600 ASÓ HAS plenty to be proud about & at the ASU Telefuiid we c all alum ni to te ll them about how ASU is advancing. Acquire a job that will add ex­ perience to that resume and yes* you d o need it, R éqüired to w ork a m inim un o f 1 0 hours bu t you have the op tio n to w ork m ore; fu rth erm o re, you choose the evening & weekend shifts you w ant to work. Pay: $5.50 + bonus to start & yóü can w ork yo u r w ay pp to $6.50 + bonus. Call 965-6754. HELP WANTEDGENERAL tsb A part ot a team ! bveryone shares varied-office work, data entry, and a lot of fun. Must be comfortable w/basic PC app. & enjoy the challenge of learning new Is. Close to campus. Flexi­ ble hrs. Fax resume 894-8885. WAN jb D : K tSP U N S , outgo­ ing mgt trainees for busy e s­ presso/ gourm et hotdog carts. S c o ttsd a le /P h o en is. B ase + bonus + tips..Call 561-^253. NATIONAL MUSIC Mgmt Co. seeks pt asst great exp 4 pro­ fe ssio n a l student. C all 80HYPER GALL NOW!! To reserve your seat in a beau­ tiful office near ASU setting res­ ervations for a local resort. $510 hourly pay. No selling! Call today, sta rt tom orrow 3030939 Joel. O FFIC E A SST, p/t, flex hr«, com m unication skills, organ­ ized. Near ASU. 437-1048. PERSONAL A SSISTA N T for male wheelchair user in Tempe. P/t* $7/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting required. 804-0300. CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted Trimdown fitness, coed camp. All sports, crafts, lifeguards, of­ fice, many others. Camp Shane, RETAIL SALES person wanted. Exp p re f,p t M ust be here fo r sum m er. C actus Sports 9211278 V;., Femdale, NY 12734 (914) 2714141 ... ; DASH DESIG N S seeks com ­ puter program m er in Foxbase (Foxpro)in Unix environment. Close to ASU. Part time. Call Karissa 967-2678. SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to sta rt at 15-30 fle x ib le hrs/wk. Call Mike for iftt, 9218282. GOLF ATTENDANT host/hostess exp a plus to operate club cleaning service great m oney and great hours 922-8794. SUB SH O P h iring sandw ich maker & counter help. M-F pt., days, no exp nec. 921-7827 GROCERY MERCHANDISING Several p /t openings $7.00p/h expedience needed. R eliab le transportation necessary. Flexi­ ble hours. Please call 92Ì-2138 SUM MER JOB- M aine sports camp- All land, water, adventure & individual sports. O utdoor sum m er w orking w /children. Great facilities available to coun­ selors. Fun summer!! Call now, 612-277-8080. C am p C edar, 1758 Beacpn St., Brookline, MA 02146. H H .P WANTED General Ware­ house. Pt/ft $5hr to start. Total Fulfillm ent 2850 S. Roosevelt Suite 102 Tem pe 85282. Apply in person. HELP WANTED, career oppor­ tunity, f/t or p/t. Payless Shoe Source, m /f equal opportunity em ployer, a div isio n o f M ay D epartm ent Store C o, M arcie 844^9776, ■■ • VETERNARY TECHN ICIAN Wanted, aftn, eve & wknd hrs: P t/ft avail. Exp p ref, but not nec. Close to ASU, biking dis­ tance. Dr. G uss or Sue 9689275.' MAH-KÉE-NAC FOR Boys/Danbee for Girls; C ounselor posi­ tions for Program Specialists: All Team Sports, especially Base­ ball, B asketball, G olf, Field ASUSTUDENTS E nvironm ental m arketing & Hockey, Roller Hockey, Soccer, training co. has ft/pt pos. avail, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; flex hrs Pt $1K, Ft $2K+ Call also Archery, Riflery, Pioneer840-4098. ing/Ovèmight Camping, Weights /Fitness and Cycling; other openASU STU D EN TS! 65 em ­ ployees are presently working . ings include Perform ing Arts, Fine Arts, Pottery, Figure Skat­ at the best jo b on cam pus but in g ; Gym nas tic s,. N e w s paper, we need 20 more! The ASÓ Tel­ efund is looking for associates ; Photography, Yearbook, Radiò whp want to call up alumni to S tation, R ocketry, Ropes and update info, inform them about Rock Climbing; All Waterfront advancements & ask for finan­ Activities (Swimming, Skiing, cial support; We require you to Sailing*.W indsurfing, C ànoew ork 10 evening or w eekend ing/K ayaking); G reat salary, hours during the w eek, you room, board and travel. June 18th choose the shifts. Put a job bn -August 18th. Inquire: Mah-Keeyour resume that has substance, furthermore the pay $5.50 hr + ; Nac (Boys) 190 Linden Avenue. Glen Ridge, N.J. 07028. Call: 1bonus. Call 965-6754. 800-753-9118. Danbee (Girls) 17 MODELS: NYC, Toyko, Paris, W estminster Drive, Montville, Milan. Local scouts want yóu! N J;07045. Call: 1-800-392-3752. Scottsdale, 941-6922. YMCA C A M PIN G Services (Sky-Y C am p & C hauncey Ranch) located in Prescott; A Z is now hiring dedicated, fUnloving, creative, caring profes­ sionals, td w ork w ith co-ed campers between the ages of 7 & 17 in a residential camp set­ tin g ; C om e be a part of- the magic & share in an experience that will last a lifetime. Camp­ ing season begins last week of M ay and runs through early August. C all for application & information at 254^-1571. HELP WANTEDSALES COMPUTER LITERATE indiv. needed for Scottsdale OfficeN ear A SU ; Call 949-1400 for appointment. EARN $350-$400 '^ A R I Z O N A A ssociated B ioscience, Inc. HELP WÁNTEDGENERAL A N N O UN CER FOR pt $6 hr depending on experience M o­ nica 273-1250 ext 50 LOOKING FOR A PART-TIME JO B THAT REALLY MAKES THE GRADE??? People Needed To Do Fun; Easy, Respectable Part or . Full Time Work At Home. 24 Hr. Msg Gives Details C A L L NOW ! 1- 809 - 474-2821 D1ALAMERICA MARKETING GETS STRAIGHT A'SIII Int'l Ld rates apply. $7.50/hr paid training SUMMER JOBS EARN $ 4 ,5 0 0 Part-time evenings DO EUROPE HELP WANTEDGENERAL PER W EEK OR MORE! HELP WANTEDGENERAL THI ¡HARDWARE! AUTOMOBILES MISCELLANEOUS fe . 625 E. APACHE IM PORTED RUGS, hand woven, w ool, one o f a kind, Kelim. Sumac, etc. W rought iroti lamps, cadleabras. Many other im ported goods. W holesale p rices s tartin g at $100. Rob 970-1066. Hours 10 am to 5 pm FREE Parking 967-5445 TRAVEL 8 4 0 -5 1 7 6 Stitt Pratt Classifieds Matthews Cantar Baatmaat 965-67ÎS HELP W ANTEDGENERAL FURNITURE John Hall & Assoc. KILLER CONDO First month free! 2bd 2ba townhom e; w /d, com plete kitchen, balcony,' pool, spa, tennis, vfball, close to ASU: $820/mO. (310)476-3012 CASH IN AT BOTHER'S BOOKSTORE State P ress T hursday, April 6 ,1 9 9 5 P age 14 ■ Fo rtu ne 500 A cete. ■ B onuses $1 C A I J V weekly paychecks A professional atm osphere A invaluable communication experience A convenient Tempe location A great management opportunities .FT/PT P ositions S taci Im m ed iately . Telesales P ositions ■ $ 7/H r. G uaranteed ■ F le x ib le S chedules -, A ‘ SIGNING BONUS! NCM 894-9816 NO FINALS!!!! : A.. ■■ . ' .An' . So b e a t t h e h e a d o f y o u r c l^ s s - r c o m e c h e c k o u t a p a r t- tim e p o s itio n w ith TH E NATION'S ^LARGEST TBLEMÁRKETÍNG FIRM: ; - - DIALAM ERICA M ARKETING - C a ll f o r a n i n t e r v i e w a p p o i n t m e n t 8 2 9 ^ 3 9 2 e x t. 4 3 8 . — HELP WANTEDSALES JOB OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS O PPO R TyN m gS_ ARMOUR SWIFT-ECKRICH, a d iv isio n o f C o n A gra Ink is looking for a summer sales in­ tern. This position will be full time running from mid May to mid August. We need someone w ho is h ig h ly m otivated & a self starter. Hourly compensa­ tion + m ileage & expenses paid. This, is a great opportun­ ity to get experience in the con­ sum er products/food sales in­ dustry. Please send resume to A .S vetly 5 0 2 5 S. Ash ave. Suite B2 Tempe Az 85282, A A CRUISE Ships Hiring! Earn big $$$ + free world travel (Car­ ibbean, Europe, H aw aii, etc.) Summer/permanent, no exp nee. Guide. (919)929-4398 ext CIO 15. NW D $30 B illion a year in ­ dustry. You can afford to start a business o f your ow n. Strong com pany, ex ce lle n t product, b e st c o m pensation! C all Y vonne for appt. 983-0558. HELP WANTEDC y g C A Page 15 Thursday, April 6,1995 S ta te P ress ^ _ _ _ G ROW IN G CO. seeks office clerk for data entry, filing,, light phones w/organizational skills, M -F 8:30-5pm. C all Lisa 4372888 for application. CRUISE SHIPS hiring- Earn up to $2000/month. W orld travel. Seasonal & full-time positions. No exp. n ecessary . For info. C all 1-206-634-0468 e x t. C59186. D E M O N S T R A T O R /S A L E S rep's from $100-2000 per wk. 954-7837. : • INTERN + $. Merrill Lynch in S cotts. is looking fo r several p/t p e o p lo L e a rn about stocks & bonds. Call Mr. Clark 4812716. RESTAURANTS/ BARS (jRATEFT-L DMAD XIGHT with E X T R A T IC K E T Featuring Don Young , 'Every Thursday!1 X BOSTON'S M c C lin to c h & C u r r y • 9 2 1 -7 3 4 3 O FFIC E H EL P, a irp o rt area, $5.50/hr,ft/pt,340-96l7, PA RT TIM E o ffice a ssistan t $ 6 .0 0 to s ta r t, only 1/4 to ASU! Flexible houis with grow­ ing T em pe software mail order firm. Duties include to process orders, maintain and reorder in­ ventory, answer customer ques­ tions and requests, maintain of­ fice files and records, file tax re­ ports, answer phones, fax, pho­ tocopy, run errands. Excellent com m unication skills, know l­ ed g e o f b o o k k eep in g and Peachtree for W indows a must. Call Jean at 921 -4288 today. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BO JOS IS now hiring for sum­ mer em ploym ent, all positions' available. Apply in person 829 S Rural Rd. RESTAURANTS/ BARS from Flagstaff ¡3 « , ci1 10c WINGS DRAFTS S1 Bud. Bud Light 1 Mon-Thur 3-7 p.m. 1 Sat 11 a.m.-5 p.m. S u n 1 2 - S p.m. m Ü Ü I BANDERSNATCH 5th S t & F o re s t BREWPUB TALL BEERS • • I M H c * .. 99# JA Q ER Si til 9 p.m. HBpS For a Good Time ca«.966-1300 n»B)0, f if t 404 S. Ma Ave., Suite 101 romp»-/ SPORTS & R g C g lA T lO N ^ A SU G O L F course- g o lf in ­ structions Sat. groups, juniors, and w omen program s starting 4/22. Call 784-4839 early sign up receives xtra discount. LEARN W HAT the CIÀ , FBI and US Seal teams training today. Jeet Kune do concepts and Filipino martial arts, con­ tact certified instructor Daniel Bissonnette 941-2550 FREE LOST/FOUND DOC & EDDY'S FOUND BEFORE Spring Break metal Celtic symbol on a string found in grassy m edian east o f Stauffer Com. Call 967-2215. GIBSON'S IS looking for ener­ g etic people to sta ff o ur new restaurant-The Grille. Positions av ail, food servers, fo o d run­ n ers; and h o st/e ss. A pply in person between 3-9pm, 4/6 and 4/7 o f 6-9pm, 4/8 and 4/9. 410 S, Mill Aye; ■ PERSONALS A4> W ILL run down the competion at I X Derby Days! A LO V IN G c ouple e a g e r to adopt, hope we can help each other. Please call to talk, Kathy & Chris 1-800441-6466. PAOLA, DORA & Rachel, you are the future. Welcome to AAA. You make me proud. A V Caryn K. - •, ' : QC- G ET ready fo r Shoot the H oops! Y our coaches Love A K ristin, thanks for taking care of us on Sunday. This was our best Ad> open yet!! O.J. at breakfast never tasted so good!!. Rat & Paul. NOW A C C E PTIN G a p p lic a ­ tions. For pt. competitive wages/flx hours apply Toshi's Teriyaki 403 W. University Tempe A4> WILL win I X D eity Days! ASU BASEBALL team - Good luck a g ain st USC this w ee­ kend! Go Devils! - A fan. SA N D W IC H PR EP/D LV R Y . Flex hours. A pply Brow ns on 6th-570 S. College. GRANDM A LOVES the first tw o and is ready fo r an o th er baby to spoil and love, and so are we. Fun loving, secure & dev o ted c ouple w ith tw o adopted so n s ages 4 & 5 are looking for an infant to com ­ plete our family. Medical & le­ gal. C all R ic h a rd & Tam m y, 897-0130. ¡ ¡ R V QUESTION: WHERE can,you witness belly dancing, laugh at crazy im prov, be serenaded, enjoy food w hile leisu rely s tro llin g through a very fun arts and crafts fair? Answer: At M UAB's Serendipity A rts and C rafts F a ir on the MU w est lawn, 8-5, now through Friday. SIGMAS-ARE YOU ready for retreat? It's going to be aw e­ some! STEPHANIE S., you truly be­ lieve in the ideals we hold spe­ cial. I'm very proud o f you. Av Caryn K. STEPHANIE YOU'LL always be a. sister to us, because we love you. Av Caryn K. & Roxanne^ TO D A R K -H A IR E D g irl in baseball cap and tank top and a big ole jeep, from worried, darkha i reck boy w ith red integra, W A plates, at Chevron on Ap­ ache last fall: dumb me. Hi. TO THE men of KA- Congrats on your new house! ©-The la­ dies of Tri-Sigma. TRI DELTAS get psyched for initiation!!!! j C K ^ $$CASH$$ We'll buy anything! 415-9675. A ST R A L IN SIG H TS-K N O W your friends & enem ies. P ro f p rep ared p e rso n ality p ro ­ files.A m a z in g a cc u ra c y ,se n d $12 dob.time&place o f birth (if knowii)to 4-J,8458 E. M cDon­ a ld Ste. 258 S c o ttsd a le, AZ ' 85250 •; ■. ' CA SH FOR C ollege. 900,000 grants available, Qualify imme­ dia te ly . 1-800-243-2435.(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. HEWLETT PACKARD Scanjet II cx scanner w/photostyler. All your scanning needs cheap! 9492765; pager- 229-2244. 8521 E. McDowell Rd. Scottsdale M OONLIGHTER RESUME Prof, recruiter:will create the per­ fect resume. $25/same day/ laser/fax. Lv msg, 804-1588. TEACH AND travel the world! C o u n tries aro u n d the globe need qualified teachers. To re­ ceive school addresses & con­ tact people, select 3 countries and send $9 to: Iht’l G E T ready t o ro ck this w knd. in AAII S hoot the Hoops! U R the best! v -y o u r coaches A I 9 W ILL dominate the com­ p e titio n in A A n S hoot the H oops on S unday, v -y o u r coaches, EX P. N A N N IES w an ted . We care about y our needs. Li/Lo, ft/p t $ 2 0 0 -5 0 0 /w k . ***CCA 840-3556*** C RU ISE SHIPS A vacation re­ to r ts n o w h ir in g ! Earn up to $ 2 5 0 0 + /m o n th w o r k in g fo r thesecompanies. World travel A e x o tic resorts. Free transportation, room A board! N o exp erien ce nec. 818-705-3416 ext#C488 J 994 2pt. G rill Cooks. No exp nec­ essary. $5.50hr. + tips, flexible schedule. Apply in person 909 E. Minton, Ba&line/Rural 831 0635 ALASKA SUM M ER jobs. Earn u p to $ 6 0 0 0 + /m o -F is h in g in ­ d u stry . F ree tra n sp o rta tio n , ro om A board ! N o c a p n ec. 818-774-1199 ext. A48845. TONIGHT! "SOULCRACKER COSMIC PIZZA now hiring de­ livery, d riv ers, $8-$12/hr. We offer flexible hrs, great working co n d itio n s & a fa st track to mgt. A pply 1523 E. A pache Blvd. (No phone calls, please.) JO B O P P O g U N IT Ig S , G RADUATING STU DEN TS! Ready for discounts on cap & gow n, Jostens class rings, re­ sume services and lots more? Purchase yOur 1995 ASU Alumni Association Grad Pack at the Cashiers- Office or Alumni C enter, 601 E. A pache. C all 965- ALUM for details. EX-WATCH out for A4>-we'll be where you least expect! Come join the Ciuck-U chicken team, We are now hiring deliv­ ery drivers. Earn $8-12 per hr. Also hiring counter help, cock­ tail servers, bouncers, cooks & chicken mascots. Apply in per­ son 855 S. Rural Rd, HELP W ANTEDCHILD CARE ADO PTIO N SC-ADP IS ready to get down and derby with you! CLUCK-U WANTED EXP'D cook pt/ft for R ockw ells 966-4488. A sk for Rick or Pat bet. 9-4. PERSONALS S u n d a y N ig h t ' Fri. &. Sat. 4-7pm o m e s t ic i C PDitc hers $ 5 C o v e r . 8 - 1 I PM ATA-GET PS YCHED for Shoot the Hoop*! Y ou gu ys w ill win it a ll ! * your. Coaches. FR E E P IZ Z A ? Y o u b etch a! Enter the Sun D evil Spark Year­ book's Photo C ontest and win a free Domino's p izza a week for a y ea r . H urry! C o n te st e n d s s April 14th! H A V E Y O U b een screw ed by an A uto Repair Company? Call Brian at 967-6096. S/ C o rn e r R u rà l/U n iv . 966-5543 K O O C H O O LO O M iss you m ore & m ore every* d a y t^ a ie h v 15% Student Discount!! Providing the Finest in Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Boarding for Doga and Cats Professional Grooming Convenient to A S U campus one block east o f Scottsdale Rd. on Thomas 945-7692 Dl>ychology • Counseling • Social and Related Studies ,0 0 0 C oncentration Pro re th an 1 ,000 G raduate O ver 3 00 C red en tlallin g Program 5 0 0 Professional O rganizations Plus: School C atalog Service ...w e send th e catalogs to yoti W hy spend hours re-searching w hat school h a s ____— Iration, in anhirorea o f die country. W e have all the informa­ tion right ¿err, the moet extensive datehoie available, end we even mail you the catalogs from the schools you choose. Information pockets esc available for students end Resource C otton. 2210 Mt. Carmel Ave., Suite 110. Dept. A Glenoide, PA 19038 (215) 572-7670 Fax:(215)576-8354 HEALTH & FITNESS TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING WOMEN S HEALTH care. Ho­ listic approach fo r infections, HPV, abnormal paps, birth con­ trol, gen health. Call Madeline Kasiaiv, Nurse Practitioner, for a p e rso n alize d a pproach. 7329744- Saturday appts. available. REASO N A BLE R A TEfe-Lots o f W ord Procçsssing software. Pick-&del avail. 951-1106 TYPING /W O R D P R O C |S S IN G _ $1.99 PG. Fast. Accurate. Laser. APA/MLA. Experienced editor. Rural/University. Jim, 967-2360. $2/PG , $15 resum es. Proofed. L aser. F ast. Sam e day. D TP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports, theses, resum es. Fast turn aro u n d . »L aser q u a lity . Townsend W/P, Maureen, 9550969. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord p ro cessin g . N eed it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ASU A REA . A PA /M LA exp. IB M /laser, W P 5/6, tra n scrip ­ tion. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime ASU AREA. A PA /M LA exp, IB M /laser, W P5/6, tra n scrip ­ tion. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime W RITE STU FF. Fast, prpfessional, reasonable WP and DTP services. Term papers, theses, resumes, etc. APA/MLA. Beth 963-3537. R c M im c v W i t h lie s l i l t s ! W riting, I c>r ill u11i n g. 1tri h ti 11K. T h e W r ite R é su m é «% 155 tu to rsT ^ ^ H ELP N EED ED fo r CIS 515 m anagem ent inform ation Sys­ tems, contact Rata 921-9740 HELP WITH research, writing, editing skills & /o r typing pa­ pers by ASU M .A. 833-4099, Lori. PHOTOGRAPHY" WEDDING VIDEO: Spring spe­ cial mention ad when you call Pierce Productions 420-1447 WANTED I BUY CD’S! Will come to U. 800-835-7712. Every w eekday, yve‘give you the State Press absolutely free. C réât news. G reat features. Even a m agazine. Crosswords and horoscopes. Not to m en­ tion th e huge savings from ail the coupons. W e d o this for you every day. Will you d o som ething for us? G ood! Thanks! W hen the State Press has inserte, they tend to flop to thé ground and créate; a safety hazard as w ell as an eyesore. W ould you be so socially cor­ rect as to bend, oyer arid pick , an insert that might slip out of y o u rStatePress! Tharfks. W e appreciate your help. And so d o é s the éarth. Yout I n d iv id u a l H .i oroscope F rance5 D ra ke^ For Thursday, April 6, 1995 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Morning hours are best for continuing with that work project or for making bustness calls. G uard against unnecessary expenditures, Som ething com es up at hom e th at req u ires your attention. . TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) C oncentrate on m aking money rather than spending it. You could come up with som e good p rofit-m aking ideas. Fad-like purchases should be avoided. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Keep your financial plans to yourself. The less oth ers know about your business, the better) Tact and diplomacy are necessary qualities/ CANCER (June 21 to July 22) There’s nothing wrong with the Way you express your ideas, b u t some are not listening. Y our tim e is b est spent with people you can relate to on an intellectual level. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) . Entertainm ent is accented, but tow ard nightfall, your in te re st tu rn s to c a re e r endeavors. Don’t squabble w ith a loved one over money. It’s ju st not worth causing hard feelings. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) A last-minute gift idea is a good one. P a rtn ers agree about the use of joint funds. Family is uppermost in your thoughts come nightfall. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Do what you have to do for your career, but don’t argue about it. Although company could drop by, you needn’t change your plans for going out som ewhere special. In fact, socializing is a plus. = s=ss s = s = SCORPIO (Oct: 23 to Nov. 21) Your attitude toward money fluctuates. Try to avoid the extrem es o f extravagance and stinginess. Business and plehsure mix to your advantage during evening hours. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) H appiness com es through love. Despite one pressing fam ily o b lig a tio n , i t's a favorable tim e for you. Enjoy the companionship of friends and loved ones, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) A fam ily m em ber d o esn 't particularly care for a friend o f yours. I t ’s not the best time for household guests, although so cializin g is accented. Get out and about, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Financial negotiations could bet bogged down. Don’t let anyone take unfair advantage. With business partners, it's a question of give and take, PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) I f s certainly a good time for socializing, although there could be some concern over a domestic matter. Luck is with you, but remember to exercise in itiativ e,. Y our ideas and intuition are good, YOU BORN TODA Y are both idealistic and practical, but sometimes have difflculty reconciling those qualities. You like large enterprises and m ight be attracted to businesses a llied to the arts.W riting, law, medicine and teaching are other possibie careers for you. Put aside your doubts about others, and show them what a good friend you can be. Birthdate of: Janet Lynn, figure sk ater; A ri M eyers, actress; John Ratzenbcrger, actor, © 1995 K ing Features Syndicate, Inc. State P ress T hursday, April 6, 1995 * DRAFTS V Thur.-Fri.-Sat. 6-10 p.m. withl.D. I LIVE ON STAGE TONIGHT ;•' Ztg Zag Black w ith Plaidstone •. ■ P it i# # SPECIAL GUEST DJs Spinning AH W eekend ¡§ flj|H Happy Hour Daily 4 -8p.m. . $ 1. $ 2 W ELLS, SAT. m u p c o m in g M - »Super DJ Dimitry of Dee-Lite •David Alvarado •Gigi »John Howard * •J-Rush »Inertia »Gary m •Len Sobek :<-yjyssM m B liiliili ■ M «ma