Greg Louganis speaks out on A ID S in Tempe. Page 9. © Copyright, State P ress. 1996 Tem pe. A rizo na * M onday, A pril An Independent M orning Daily Voi. 79 No. 125 24,1995 Bom bing b ack lash hits Tem pe M uslim s Assumption o f attacks link to Islamic terrorists leads to rash o f harrassing calls receiving calls concerning the Oklahoma bombing because no suspects had been named In the days following the Oklahoma City yet at die time of the calls. “We could understand the calls if Muslims bombing last Wednesday, “frustrated” local Muslims said they have faced racism and were tied to it (the bombing),” Khan said. “It harassment linking diem to the deadliest terror­ still isn’t justified, but we would understand.” People at the center believe the calls were ist act ever committed in the United States. The Islamic Cultural Center, located at 131 made by more than one person, Khan said. He E. Sixth St. in Tempe, received at least four said die overall feeling at the mosque concern­ harassing, anonymous phone calls the day after ing the calls is frustration. “We feel frustration more than anything the bombing, according to Firasat Khan, a vol­ unteer at die center. The phone calls continued else,’’ he said “No fear... maybe a little anger. “Who could imagine that Islam could sup­ Friday with the last reported call made at 12:50 port such an act? No religion could support am., he said. The calls consisted of racial and religious such a barbaric, inhuman act.” Khan added that an entire religion should slurs, comments about Muslim women and accusations of involvement in the bombing. not feel the brunt of acts committed by people The center received the calls before two non- associated with it. “Why do Muslims even come up?” he said. Muslim Americans were named die prime sus­ “It was an act of an individual and should be pects. “It was basically a lot of nonsense... a lot of treated as such. The name of no religion biased comments,” Khan said. “They (the should be attached to it. The very fact that callers) were saying things like, ‘You Muslims Muslims are being attacked about die bombing are busy bombing buildings in Oklahoma.’ is insulting.” Khan also said that if a Muslim commits a They also made insulting attacks on Muslim women. I’m too embarrassed to mention what terrorist act, according to the religion, he or she is no longer considered a Muslim. they said. It was really disgusting.” “According to the religion, to kill one inno­ Some of the calls also took on a threatening cent person in the eyes of God is to kill all of nature. “They made threats to close down the humanity,” he said. “If a person says they are mosque. They also said things like, ‘Why are motivated by Islam, it is pure nonsense. It’s like the KKK using the Christian Bible to sup­ you here? Get out of America!’” Khan stud. The calls were reported to the Tempe port their acts.” People need to be educated and learn to tol­ Police Department, but police do not consider the center to be in any danger, said Toby Dyas, erate other cultures in order to stop the harass­ ment Muslims face, Khan said. Tempe police spokesman. “We need to constantly work to educate “No actual threats were made against • them,” he said. “Just some off-color remarks each other,” he said. “We claim to be civilized, slamming them and saying they are probably but we have to have an attitude of acceptance and tolerance for each other. Until then, we are blowing people up in Oklahoma.” Khan said die center often receives similar uncivilized.” The harassment of Muslims, such as the calls whenever there is a terrorist attack, but he added that he was surprised the center was T urn to M uslims, page 2. B y Ke n n e s B o u g S tate P ress phone calls after last Wednesday’s bombing in OMahoma City. The calls, which contained racial and religious slurs, continued until Friday when two non-Muslims were named as the prime suspects 10 A S U stu d e n ts g e t N S E P gran ts to stu d y abroad ASU ‘extremely successful’ in award process, prof says B y K athleen G ilbert S pecial t o th e State P ress Bridget Gersten speaks six languages: Czech, Slovak, Spanish, German, Italian and English. So maybe it’s not sur­ prising she plans to have a career in languages. To assist her in dial goal,Gersten, a Ph.D. candidate in cur­ riculum and instruction, was one of 10 ASU students awarded a grant by die National Security Education Progam to study lan­ guage and culture abroad. G ersten, who spent several years in the form er Czechoslovakia cm a Fulbright scholarship and worked at die American embassy in Prague, will return to Slovakia. “The grant enables me to lock at the bilingual question in Slovakia, between the Hungarian minority and the Slovaks,” she said. The NSEP grant will pay for Gersten to spend a couple of semesters in Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, for research related to her dissertation in affiliation with Slovakia’s Comenius University. “In Eastern and Central Europe, education issues such as bilingualism and bilingual policy issues are extremely novel since the fall of the Berlin Wall. I want to be one of the first to go in and look at issues in bilingualism in Slovakia,” she said. ASU applicants enjoyed remarkable success with NSEP applications this year, according to Bill Weidemaier, director of die ASU national scholarship office. Of the 28 who applied for NSEP awards, five undergraduates and five graduate students won scholarships, grants or fellowships. ‘T in extremely pleased. We have had 10 out of 28 win, and that is an extremely high percentage of success, higher than most (schools) across the country,” Weidemaier said. Todd Taylor, a graduate history student, won an area and T urn to N SEP, page 2, 2 3 -y e a r-o ld ASU student dies in rollover on M a r ic o p a jlo a d about this country's high rale of traffic fatali­ ties when drey lost a family membra'. The Mendonca family’s son, Jose Manuel An Angolan family that moved to Phoenix eight year* ago has learned much : Mendonca, a 23-year-old international busi­ ness and marketing major at ASU, was killed abom America since their arrival here. § Lait week they found out tfee th id m p in a single-car accident on April 15. | By To dd Kelly S a m P ress IN S ID E STATE PRESS W eather Outlook Mostly sunny. High 90, low 64. W orld/ N a tio n President Clinton outlines a new counterterrorism {dan in the wake of tbe bombing of the Alfred Murrah federal buildingWedneaday in Oklahoma City. Page3 On April 14, Mendonca went to Firebird Raceway, 20000 S. Maricopa Road, with three of his brothers. Shortly after midnight, he had them get out of his vehicle, a 1989 Ford Mustang convertible, and he started driving down Maricopa Roaflg; V S ports The ASU baseball team failed to complete its sweep of UofA over the weekend losing to the Wildcats 7-6 Sunday at Sancet Held in Tucson. Page 15 “We dunk he was kind o f showing off,” said Detective Tim Lockwood of the traffic investigations unit of the Maricopa County Sheriffs Office. As he was turning onto Queen Creek T urn to Rollover , page 2. Where To Find It Classifieds.........................-..17 Comics............... 14 Crossword...........................12 Horoscopes ......................... 19 Opinion................................. .4 Police Report.........................8 Sports................................ ,..15 Today's Activities................ 2 World/Nation................ .......3 S t a t e P ress Monday, April 24,1995 ¡e 2 M uslim s TODAY C ontinued ¡Ü The Today Section is a d a ily ca ie n d a r o f events printed a s a service to the A S U com m unity. R equests are accepted on afttm -o o ra a, first-se rv e d b a sis a n d ern p rin te d on a sp a ce -a va ila b le C am pu s ciu to a a n d o rg a n iza tio n s m ay subm it w ritten entries to the State P re s s M the b ase m e n t o f M atthew s C arrier, Boom 15. R equests wiff not be taken o v e r th e phone. F axe d e n trie s triao writ not be accepted. Entries m ust contain the fult nam e o f the d u b o r organbatdon, a description o f d ie e ve n t, d a te , tim e a n d th e fuM address o f the location. A ff requests am subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity, incom plete o r illeg ririe entries writ be discarded. D eadline fo r requests is noon 0» day before publication and entries w d n o tb e accepted m ore titan three working days before publication. O nty one en try p e r organization p e r day is perm rited. • Department of Foreign Languages * A llia n ce Fra n caise o f G reater Phoenix — Free lecture on the French in Louisiana; ASU French professor David Wetsel is the speaker. 7:30 p.m., MU La Paz Room 223. • M UAB M arketing Com m ittee — O pen m eeting. 5:15 p.m (H i Conference Room 2A, third floor. • Knightly Devils C hess Club — Open club meeting and four-round blitz tour­ nament. 6 p.m., MU Room 307 A and B. • ASU S tudent Life end Residential Life — interracial Dating Program facili­ tated by Associate Dean of Student Life J e s u s Trevino. 6 p.m ., Cholla Recreation Room. • S o lis O iaboti C la s s ic s C lub — Lecture: “Women at Ancient G reek Sanctuary Sites,’ by UofA professor Mary Voyatzis. 1:40 p.m., Art Building Room 220. • KASR Video — Interviews with Mike Watt, Wayne Kramer and Henry Rollins. The controversial Slayer ’slashing’ video and the hectic ASU W est 12:30 a.m., Channel 22. C ontest Line 9654163. from page 1. phone calls received by the center, is a com­ mon occurrence, said Samir El-Ghazily, the. adviser for the ASU Muslim Sfudenf' Association. He said he blames die intolerance of Muslims on the media. “In general, we do face these things in soci­ ety,” he said. “Some irresponsible people in the media cause this. Each time something happens by someone that associates himself as a Muslim, people label the entire-religion. “Most likely the person arrested will belong to a religion other than MusJim.iWhat will tire papers say? Will they label his nSigioti by his act? Why do we get labeled because of the act of one person? But if the media keeps saying it over and over, more and more people believe it” One of the goals of the Muslim Student Association is to break the stereotypes of Islam to end society’s prejudice and harassment of Muslims, El-Ghazaly said. “The students bring lecturers and speakers to the MU to show the correct picture of Islam, but is that enough to combat CBS, NBC ... CNN and all the newspapers? That is difficult to do.” NSEP C ontinued from page 1. language doctoral fellowship package worth $75,000 to study Kazakh in the former Soviet Union. Four other students won graduate enhancement awards worth up to $10,000 a semester plus $2,000 for study in the U.S.: • James Frusetta, a graduate student studying Eastern European his­ tory, will go to Macedonia; • Brian McCormack, studying political science, will travel to Indonesia; • Christina Stage, a graduate student in communication, will go to Thailand; •Gersten, an education graduate student, will study in Slovakia. Five undergraduate students also received grants to study language and culture: • Peggy Bamey-O’Neill, a sophomore majoring in Russian, will go to Russia; • Ron Birks, a senior majoring in Russian, will go to Russia; •Dax Hansen, a junior majoring in Japanese, will go to Japan; • Jason Mainka, a junior majoring in history, will go to Russia; •John Trent, a junior majoring in history, will go to Macedonia. The NSEP graduate applicants were judged on their academic records, proposals for study abroad and a series of faculty evaluations chaired by Weidemaier. Stage, a Ph.D. candidate in the department of communication study­ ing intercultural and organizational communication, plans to leave for Thailand at the end of May. She said she developed an affinity for Thailand when she served in the Peace Corps five years ago and has continued to study Thai in preparation for conversing on a business level. “I’m going to be looking at American subsidiary organizations and businesses in Thailand,” Stage said. “I would like to develop an exper­ tise in Southeast Asia in general and Thailand in specific.” Stage’s award for $20,000 covers transportation to and from Thailand, as well as fees at ASU and Assumption University in Bangkok. Stage said she will also be working with the M.B.A. program at Chulalongkom University in Bangkok. David Proffitt o f the State Press contributed to this article. R o llo v e r C ontinued from page 1. Road, Mendonca lost control of his vehicle and was thrown from it, Lockwood said. The car then rolled several times and caught fire. Mendonca was pronounced dead at the scene. Sandra Mendonca, Jose’s sister, said that he had only had the car for about four months. She said he was driving it very fast down the road when he lost control of it Lockwood said that the turn in the road is safe to take at about 50 miles an hour — the posted speedlimit — but that Mendonca was ‘’probably going closer to 100.” He said Mendonca wasn’t wearing a seatbelt, but added that neither alcohol nor drugs were fac­ tors in the accident Lockwood said that Maricopa Road — about 10 miles south of the 1-10 and Highway 60 interchange — is more traveled than many people think and is becoming dangerous. “ This will be the fourth fatality accident (on this section of road) in the last two years” he said. Sandra was the second oldest child in the Mendonca family behind Jose. She said that he was someone who Was “very dedicated to all of his brothers and his family.” “He Was a very good example. He was hard-working,” she said, adding that he often sent money to family still living in Angola “And he was a dreamer,” she added. “He had lots of dreams and one of them was to own a Mustang. So I guess he went with one of his dreams.” Unpack Only Once This Year. „TH E „ GOM M ONS |T meMBERSÓNLY^P| Make the Move Up To The Commons on Apache. AN NO UNCING A N EASY WAY TO M AKE MONEY: ■ fully furnished ■ spacious 2 bedroom s, 2 full b ath suites • ■ large heated pool w ith jacuzzi ■ washer & dryer in each suite ■ ■ large kitchen w ith microwave, dishwasher & disposal ■ regulation sand volleyball court • ■ racquetball court, w eight room & sauna ■ planned social activities ■ ■ room m ate m atching service ■ walking distance to cam pus * Spacesavailable startingat*290permonth Ask aboutour SummerMove-In Special! It's called b uyb ack at A SU Bookstore. NowAcceptingApplications for Summer& Fall '95 HURRY! Limited Availability! ASU BO O K STO RE HOURS: Io ORANGE MALL H 8am -6pm M on.-T hurs. 8am -5pm F rid ay 10am -2pm S atu rday o a a i profeuMMÜy aaaifcdby 865-7928 V A L U E a n d C O N V E N IE N C E O N Y O U R C A M P U S Call Us or Stop ByToday (602)8294)933 H U E Apache Tempe, AZ 85281 W o rid /N a tio n P a g« 3 Monday, April 24,1995 S t a t e P ress C lin to n o u tlin e s a n ti-te rro rism p la n OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — President Clinton led an anguished nation Sunday in prayers for victims of die fed­ eral office building bombing and outlined a series of broad steps to give the government new powers to fight terrorism. He said the bombers should be executed. “If this is not a crime for which capital punishment is called, I don’t know what is,” Clinton said in an interview on CBS’ 60 Minutes after presiding over a nationally tele­ vised memorial service. Clinton also directed his administration to replace the office building devastated by last Wednesday’s blast and appointed Attorney Gen. Janet Reno to oversee a 60-day high-level review o f the vulnerability of federal buildings. There are more than 8,000 such structures in the country. He said Americans may have to exercise some “disci­ pline” in their freedoms in order to allow law officers to prevent terrorism at home. On a day he designated a national day of mourning, a solemn Clinton told a nationally televised memorial service: “Those who are lost now belong to God. Someday we will be with them. But until that happens, their legacy must be our lives.” “ In the face o f death, let us honor life ,” he told Oklahoma City mourners. Clinton also denounced paramilitary groups and those who g lorified the Branch Davidian cult members who died in, a bloody standoff S ee related w ith fe d era l agents two years ago. stories , “T hose people m ur­ PAGES 1 2 AND 1 3 . dered a bunch of innocent law enforcem ent officials who worked for the federal government,” Clinton said. He said there are potential problems in trying to crack down on paramilitary organizations. “I don’t want to interfere with anyone’s constitutional rights,” he said. However, he said that no one has the right to violate laws against life and property ; . Among the steps announced on Sunday by Clinton: • Legislation to establish a Domestic Counterterrorism Center to be headed by the FBI; creation of a special fund to be used for infiltrating suspected terrorist organizations and other means of combating terrorism. • Legislation to give the FBI increased authority to comb through hotel and motel registers and to Search phone logs, greater access to credit card records. » Pressing for passage of the administration’s Omnibus ■Counterterrorism Act, which would give the government more power to fight terrorism greater authority to protect die confidentiality of sources in official proceedings. This provision has been criticized by civil liberties groups. “We have got to take steps aggressively to shut it (this kind of violence) down,” Clinton told 60 Minutes. “I’m going to do everything in my power to do just that.” Associated Press Sherri Bowen, 10, is held by Becca Bowen as they wait in line to enter the prayer service Sunday at the Oklahoma State Fair Arena in honor of the victim s of people killed and injured in the car-bombing attack on the Alfred P- Murrah building W ednesday. Agencies accepting donations for bombing victims: B y T h e A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s Organizations accepting donations for victims of the Oklahoma City bombing: The American Red Cross Disaster Relief Fund, P.O. Box 37243, Washington, D.C. 20013. Credit card dona­ tions can be made by calling 1-800-HELPNOW or 1800-842-2200 (English) or 1-800-257-7575 (Spanish). The B’nai B’rith Disaster Relief Fund, 1640 Rhode Island Ave., NW. Washington, D.C. 20036. Catholic Charities USA — Oklahoma Explosion, Disaster Response Office, 1731 King St., Alexandria, Va. 22314. Church World Service, Attention: Oklahoma City Explosion Response, P.O. Box 968, Account OC-2, Elkhart, Ind. 46515. Credit card donations: 800-7620968. Federal Emergency Management Agency, 1-800284-0609. Number will be in operation from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. each day. , Feed the Children: 405-942-0228 or 800-741-1441. Send donations to 333 N. Meridian, Oklahoma City, Okla. 73107. Salvation Army, 1-800-SAL-ARMY. Also Box 12600, Oklahoma City, Okla. 73157. Phone 405-270-7800. Must specify funds are for explosion disaster relief. Southern Baptists 1-901-272-2461. Cash donations may be dropped off at Oklahoma City-area Sonic Drive-Ins; at any area BankIV or mailed to the bank at P.O. Box 1255, Oklahoma City, Okla. 73101. • Building materials, including plastic sheeting, screw guns, screws, sheetrock, drywall tape, drywall screws and nails, paint and glass, may be dropped off at Drug Recovery Inc. at 8th and Hudson in Oklahoma City. Phone:405-232-7215. To check on relatives: Red Cross: 405-232-7121 St. Anthony Hospital: 405-231-3003 or 231-3006 T h o u sa n d s flee after 2 ,0 0 0 k illed in R w andan cam p GIKONGORO, Rwanda (AP) — Tens of thousands of people, most wounded or sick, fled along muddy roads Sunday from the refugee camp where at least 2,000 people were killed by Rwandan soldiers or tram­ pled in stampedes a day earlier. Soldiers buried the bodies in shallow graves and pit latrines at the Kibeho camp, about 12 miles south of Gikongoro and 55 m iles southwest o f the capital, Kigali. Hillsides that had been strewn with crapses were cleared by the end of the day, aid workers said. A 10-mile line o f panicked refugees streamed out o f Kibeho toward the provin­ cial capital of Butare, 20 miles east, or the border with Burundi, which lies beyond. Most were sick or wounded, according to a team from the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees that visited the camp- A U.N. relief agency set up medical treatment cen­ ters along the way . “They have thrown away all of their belongings, sacks of maize, plastic sheeting, A Hulu chHd stanch amid a crowd of refugees wNte a soldier from the Rwandan Patriotic Aim y stands guard In Butare, Rwanda, Sunday. Rwandan sokSera opened Are on the N beho refugee camp west of Butm Sefcedey night, kM ng2£00. Tens of thousands of others have fled for their Rvee. personal effects,” the team said in a report. “The road was piled high with these aban­ doned goods.” Rain turned the road into a nearly impassable quagmire. Trucks and buses sent to help evacuate the refugees were stuck 10 miles away. R ain also apparently touched o ff Saturday’s massacre. Most of the refugees are ethnic Hums who fear Tutsi reprisals for die slayings of about 500,000 people — mostly Tutsis — that occurred a year ago. The refugees fled last duly when Tutsi-led rebels overthrew the Hutu-dominated government. Kibeho, with about 120,000 refugees, was the largest of the camps initially set up by the French in the area for some 250,000 displaced people. The French withdrew last year and the new government sent soldiers to begin clos­ ing camps on Tuesday, claiming they shel­ tered militias loyal to the former govern­ ment. On Saturday, camp residents, apparently seeking cover from the rain, tried to run through a cordon of soldiers surrounding i t “This spooked the soldiers, and they started firing into the crowd,” said Kay Wilkinson, UNHCR spokesman in Nairobi, Kenya. W hen Hutu m ilitiam en in the camp apparently returned fire, the soldiers responded with heavy mortars, the United Nations said. Other U.N. reports said people were killed by machetes, bayonets and rock­ et-propelled grenades. “As confusion then became total chaos and panic, a large number of people, mostly women and children, were tram pled to death,” Wilkinson said. A Doctors Without Borders worker who was in the camp Saturday, Etienne Quetin, said refugees may have attacked each other with machetes, but much of the killing was done by soldiers from the Rwandan Patriotic Army. “What we did see with our own eyes was that the RPA was shooting into the backs of people who were fleeing,” he said Sunday in Gikongoro. “That was old people, women. We also saw m any shooting into the crowd.” Francois Musoni, 25, lay in a hospital tent in Gikongoro, an intravenous drip in his arm and a bullet wound in his right foot. He claim ed the soldiers were not provoked. “The RPA came and told us that we had to go home,” he said. “And we looked up and saw soldiers surrounding us on a hill and they fired.” So many corpses were strewn about the camp after the shooting that a Doctors Without Borders team could not drive out, Quetin said. “We had to go walking over the bodies.” However, aid workers said Sunday the bodies had been all but cleared. The United Nations initially put the casu­ alty toll at 5,000 dead and 2,000 wounded. But Sunday night, Lt. Kent Page, the U.N. military spokesman in Kigali, sharply revised his estimate downward to about 2,00Q killed, with an estimated 600 more injured. O p in io n S t a t e P ress Monday, April 24, 1 9 9 5 1 P a g¡e 4 State Press B — rr V ditoriai i& 'lM Blood in the water jack«al (jsic’ 61)«. I. A v a r^ < rf< lq p fe e ia B ttth ^ rous mammals found to Africa and Asia. 2. One who aids to base or evil «feeds. 3, A member o f toem edia to the wake o f the Oklahoma City bombing, as we’re pounded by repetition after repetition o f the same information, toe same fwtoiresofe dead and toe same descriptions, one might begin to won­ der — why all the fiiss? - i. Why is every newspaper, television station and radio station running constant coverage o f the crisis? I b he sure, it is a major event with no itole impact, to those with fttencb or loved oaeS in toe area. But why d o lo ad sew s stations need to send repottoto? Wouldn’t the, oh, hundreds o f otoef a e # s h » m s there be enough to cover the disaster? Disasters and conflict and killings, oh my! Pick up a paper, flick on the tu b e o rsw ttd ia n that radio, and j welcome to bad news central. After all, a story’s not a story unless someone had an unhappy endi ng, right? Jo u rn a lists h a v e k e y e d in o n th e fa c t th a t Americans like to slow down as w e drive by neel-> dents. A nd there’s m oney to ire m ade from this, « in ch is no small thing. Because journalism today, particularly broadcast journalism, isn’t simply an issue o f being “public ser­ vants” o r “finders o f the truth,” as journalism schools like to expound. Nope, it’s also a business o f m aking cool, hard cash —■boosting circulation, increasing ratings and selling m ore advertising tim e after the f i r s t tw o results are in. The fourth branch o f government privatized some time ago, folks. And the men and women who are supposed to report the news,-somewhere down the line, began making to Somewhere down toe line, the human element has been to^R epottec8,like^iafkS v«caniiM ou*ibteed| in the water &om miles away. Like hyenas, by woto-j tog in packs they can drive away those who com e tare close to the stories. And like jackals, they feast on the dead. A nd the new s stories are n o longer about the human beings who triumph, suffer o r just m uddle along —¡- they’re about whether o r not th a t triumph, suffering or muddling can make a few more d g f e s for the media entity in question. That to why you see, say, toe O J. Simpson the Oklahom a City bombing o a T V day -a jte 'd a y after day. Those are toe stories we*re supposed to -te interested to, so by gosh, toe media gives toem to u s. Ironically, the worst b io o d a m ig o re a re u su a lly missed, since they usually entail danger to journalists.^ For every photcjournalist who’s willing to venture into B o a t» , toere are far more who s t ^ b d d d b e ritaring to wade into battle until the last body topples, to areas like Algeria, where the rebel movement usually shoots journalists cm sigh*, we see just about no eoveis^e— it's bad for fire ptofft margin, no mat­ ter how important it m ightbe. Too b a d because once journalism ' sum that really made a difference. Governments were shaken, corruption uncovered, and toe truth, above d lto to lto H Ibday, truth is spelled with a dollar sign. And the bptoea s up on a » TV aeree». STATE PRESS TAFF gB> .'.'.OKLAHOMA, WHERE THE WIND COMES WEEPING DOWN THE PLAINS” Media s depiction of tragedy exploits essence of humanity As yet another senseless act of terrorism occurs on U.S. soil, it’s LIZABETH A. now frighteningly apparent that MONTALBANO terrorism doesn’t just happen in other countries and cities with names we can' barely pronounce, and that when it does happen, the results w reak havoc upon the human body . ^ V And far be it for-the broadcast media to let us forget how grue­ some that havoc can be. When I turned on the televi­ sion the morning of the Alfred Murrah Federal Building bombing in Oklahoma City, I was expecting to enjoy some mindless a.m. entertainment while I ate my breakfast. Instead, in the wake of the disaster, I saw a repetitious loop of video footage focusing on human carnage and grief — a dead man, his bloodied face frozen in surprised pain; a young child being Carried by a distraught woman, a bloody gash on the dazed child’s head; a woman on the ground being comforted by another woman, the camera zooming in on the injured woman’s bloodstained face and dress. Can you say sensationalism? I’m convinced that no one will ever understand human beings’ macabre fascination with grisly death. We all have it, even those of us who don’t want to admit we possess a “dark side.” How many times does traffic slow because car drivers stop to witness the extrication of victims from a smashed car (which occurs far too often in and around Tempe)? How many times does an entire neighborhood (not to mention anyone in the nearby vicinity) stand out­ side to watch the drama of a fire unfold, the majority of them there only to gawk rather than help? It’s that same tendency that causes the news media, tele­ vision broadcasters in particular, to aim the camera at the most grotesque and anguished victims they can find when E a tragedy of cataclysmic proportions occurs. And the hor­ ror of Oklahoma City did not escape their sadistic eyes. I understand the need to report the news, and acts of ter­ rorism, no matter how disturbing and bloody the conse­ quences may be, are important events worthy of coverage. Life is rarely pretty; it’s impossible to portray an accurate picture of human existence without getting one’s hands dirty. But how much is too much? Isn’t it enough to show the gutted remains of a building nearly leveled by a terrorist’s bomb, or does accurately reporting the news require a broadcast reporter to hold a microphone to the face of a sobbing woman in a wheelchair, and then, when it’s obvi­ ous she’s in no condition to speak, to the young school-age child in her arms? I’m not a broadcast reporter, nor do I ever hope to be one. I’m not, nor will I ever be, in a position to make such moral decisions. 1 can, however, turn off the television. But someone directly making these decisions has to have empathy. Someone has to decide where compassion fits into the big picture. Someone has to decide between getting the shot that will shock the senses, and respecting the victim’s right to privacy and basic human dignity. A news camera cannot differentiate between a physical body and the actual person inside. A camera does not see that the dead man with his arm dangling at an odd angle from a stretcher, already set in rigor mortis, had a wife and three children, liked to walk his dog in the evenings, coached baseball for his son’s elementary school. A camera can’t decide how much is too much. A televi­ sion can’t make moral decisions. But you can, and I can. And the members of the televi­ sion news media can. Elizabeth A. M ontalbano is a graduate student studying English literature. JASON OWSLEY, Editor DAVID STROW, Managing Editor NICHOLAS BACON ............- ............. Night Editor KRIS FRIDRICH..,............................... Night Editor GARIN GROFF........................ :................ - ........ City Editor GRÉG ZEMEIDA........................................ A sst City Editor DAVID LASPALUTO........................................News Editor A. MARJORY KAMINSKI........... ....... .— ..Opimoo Editor J M POULIN ...... ,..... ............... ............J M p Bdinir MARK KRAMER.....................................Asst. Photo Editor JEREMY STEIN....... ................ ;.......... - ......... Sports Editor DAN MILLER.......¿™......AMt. Sports Editor KEN COLLINS..;.-.......... Magazine Editor ANNA IttB flC H _____________„...Amt. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Kennes Bolig, Lisa Cary, Lome Cohen, Dawn D eC hristina, Patty K ing, Todd K e lly , Betty M ihglopoulos, Angela Mull, D avid-Proffitt, N. Scott Trimble, Kim Watson. SPORTS REPORTERS: Lee Newman, Damian Shaw, Heather Snow. C O PY ED IT O R S: Bryn C hancellor, Kim Herman, Elizabeth Montalbano. PH OTO G RA PH ERS: Dianne R. Bartsch, Samantha Feldman, Lance D. Terry. EDITORIAL WRITER: James Frusetta. C O L U M N IST S; Brian A nderson, Tim Baxter, Dan Blanco, Tori Evans, James Frusetta, Tina Holder, Barry K elley, David Luna, Diana Lopez, Jim Mahin, Delia Maldonado, Greg Nigh. CARTOONISTS« Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. PRODUCTION: Mark Abromorivitz, Aaron K. Bratcher, :Beth French, Adrianna Garcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. SA L E S R E P R E SE N T A T IV E S: E m ily Berger. Dan EHstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jelium, Christine Porreca, Shane Siren, BiU 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 whole. Board members include: JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor. Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, sw ept holidays and exam peri­ ods, at M atthews CentotJ R oom IS, A rizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 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 o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Inform ation.....;....,...965-7572 N ew sroom ................ 965-2292 M agazin e.........965-1695 A dvertising............... 965-6555 C lassifieds................. 965-6735 O p in io n :!T: ■~ S t a t e P re ss _________ Monday, Aprii 24,1995___________________ ______ _ j a g e _ 5 in n o c e n c e lö s t in e x p lo s io n there. Yet, tins is easy since they all know your nante The smoke rose above the »ad greet you with a smile as you enter toe store. In structure to fill the blue skies ASON many ways toe advanced technology of the world hits with black. passed Oklahoma by. My hometown cable company had Those b lu e skies w ere MAINKA r less than twenty-five channels and no MTV. (Yes, it’s aw aiting m e. W ith only a {tossibie to Eye without it to toot* once you get past month left in the sem ester, my ticket for a plane ride to Oklahoma was on ¡ttw ayT l! toe withdrawal you realize you a m think on y ew onto.) I rememlxa'toe termamty and the mutual respect that could smell the fresh air of a world u n p o llirte d ^fa i^^ te layered toe so ciety -life was not about getting o ff of — unpolluted in many ways. I remember the last visit to isy home o f fifteen year». work or setf-centoied promotional rittltodesi but about On a chilly winter day, 1 was waiting tom e when the | helping other humans. It seemed that when 1 returned to butcher of the local grocery store offered me a ride the Oklahoma each time I had changed drastically, but that test of the way, for no reason at all, except that it was ll h id MB, t i f e ««*•&!> d<>W-£PU>g. C*8? *”4 4 cold. 1 remember needing to get one last ingredient on People in Oklahoma want to lire this way; to be left Christmas Eve to finish the pie Grandma had started and arriving at the store five minutes after they had closed, out o f the hustle and bustle of rooderniife; They all hut being allowed in anyway, instead o f shutting us out want to have the freedom to leave a house key under the as would he expected, they welcomed us is with open rag far naespected company, or just io lam e toe dour arms. 1 remember my girlfriend’s shock that we ccmld j open. Singe they ail want this freedom, they respect e a c h other enough to allow it to continue, j go into toe stores without locking our car There is something pure rmd clean in everything paranoia that inflow s/1''' Off course, not everything about Oklahoma’s person­ about OklafcqftuL its p e o p l ^ ^ ^ ^ É ^ t t a d its atmo­ ality is charming. There were the uKrmv«3deK ^-«ff iae sphere. TtMp .Pitto that had to be dealt with. The gax|tomp$ stiftoftetih&ye ished the semester; Just a few days out of toe game of «totoáéiátoce of stoat retd W e is. It’s ttfiip i the rotating numbers instead o f toe digital read out, and when yew go to toe grocery store they still punchthe its basics, happiness achieved at ail costs — not the rat numbers in the register instead off using a scanner. This ■tiMfer . L r ^ Yhét has an changed no»..?, ¡ H f f i H g ;v-,j forces you to actually converse with the people working 1 Harmony w ont happen if racial words continue This letter is in response to an incident that occurred not too long ago near Sun Devil Stadium. I was walking home from a track meet and I had to pass by a fraternity house. As I neared toe part of the house that has a little dark hall­ way connected to it, I heard a male voice shout, “Nigger!” I continued walking because I could not believe it. Then 1 stopped .and walked back to the place where I heard the voice to see if he would show himself and he was nowhere to be found. All I want to know is why didn’t he stick around for my reaction? Since you didn’t get a chance to see my reaction, now you and the rest of you friends who feel this way can see it. I’m sorry to disappoint you if you were expecting a riot I don’t want to fight you, 1 want to educate you. I merely want to knock some knowledge into that small-minded brain of yours. These are not the “old" slavery days, you are not “superior,” and I do not feel the need to cower in fear at the very utterance of that word. Do you consider yourself intelligent? Well consider this: Have you ever taken time out to research what the word “nigger” means? No, it does not mean a black person, it means an unintelli­ gent, low life and, in my opinion, you fit that description to a tee. But did you see me hiding behind something, waiting as you passed by to yell at you? The sad part of this is that you don’t know any better. You had to learn it from someone because ignorance breeds ignorance. When I heard you say that, I wasn’t angry or offended — I felt pity for you because when you have children they will learn whatever you teach them. But it doesn’t have to be like that. If you wanted to, you could learn that it takes so much energy to hate someone and less than nothing to love. Racism is a part of everyday living and we say we want it to, stop but we aren’t doing enough to see that this hap­ pens. I’m not even going to say, “Why can’t we just all get along?” because it’ll never happen. We can learn it fay edu­ cating children from the crib. As for the one who yelled at me, you may or may not have been speaking on the behalf o f a fraternity — that’s irrelevant since one apple can spoil a bunch. The only thing I have is a suggestion. Before you decide you want to call me a nigger, educate yourself and maybe you’ll dunk twice. Jennafah M ehu Freshm an C hild Developm ent ib p onw « * § ■ I W M i Cmwr. rmversinr mÈ As th e black Cloud elim inated the purity o f the ■Oklahoma Gity skyBne, it crashed much more than toe; concrete and cars and human lives o f the building. Ifj crushed the spirit that makes Oklahoma. Now toe people down the street will think twice about leaving that key outdoors and people less o p en to their inward IjlM - .• Uy"> \ H t o toe people in Phoenix and other large cities have already done, Oklahomans will begin constructing their safety. N t o w i f l X be offered aj tid e hauMt 'tot M people will begin going to work, then withdrawing into their ,personal S mB." ;‘ ' " ■ been shattered. Now, i t is typical But the Oklahoma spirit will keep itself alive. I hope thepeople th erew illrealize what they had and what they can still protect: the humanness of Oklahoma. This humanness was seen from the beginning o f toe bomb­ ing. Imnje ■„ . .. • A juvenile not affiliated with ASU was found to be in possession of a fake ID at College Street and Sixth Street“* • Three male students were contacted at Palo Verde W est w hile in p o sse ssio n o f a lc o h o l. T hey w ere warned about being minors in possession and dumped the alcohol out. • A man not affiliated with ASU was contacted at Danforth Chapel while sleeping. • A rear bicycle tire was impounded for safekeeping from the north side of the MU. • Two bicycles were reported stolen. Compiled by State Press reporter Todd Kelly State P ress C ro ssw o rd s They aren't harsh words. They're just across-words. ■ frm rcira n è a c u r a í CAR SPECIALISTS IN D E P EN D EN T S E R V IC E •FREE Estim ates •Fair Prices •One Day Service on Most Repairs •Complete Parts Department ■FactoryTrained Technicians P e o p le W h o K now U s e y X u te u N E ' $ 1 4 .9 5 954-7923 Orie-way trips to ASU 3039 E. THOMAS RD. PHOENIX TH E CO O L p* JE W E L Toe Rings ■SsT,:;T,~ C.' , Ankle B ra c e le t? ' \ N ose Rings (F ake N ose Rings) . Hoops, Cuffs, Studs a n d Lots o f Single Earrings (L O W E R 4 8 ST A T E S O N LY ) “| W e R e n t I n - L in e S k a te s , B ik e s , a n d T a n d e m s B o b 's B ic y c le B a r n Check Our Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services 968-5989 MEASURE YOUR TOE PACK-N-SHIP YOUR BIKE HOME u n (Includes up to 4 quarts) 1820 E. APACHE BLVD. TEMPE S W E W IL L OIL C H A N G E & OIL FILTER TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU La IN TH E C O R N E R STO N E M ALL 9 2 0 E. U N IV E R SIT Y , D -1 0 3 894-6852 / It’s One Of The Most Useful Credit Cards On The V i a n e t . U n l e s s Y o u ’v e S to le n I t . Your MasterCard® is stolen. You panic, get angry, panic some more. Then you call and cancel it. Now the thief is in possession tm m of, oh, about seven cents worth of stolen plastic. (Maybe he can use it as a coaster when he entertains at the hideout.) So relax. You only have to pay for stuff you bought, and you can get a new card the next day* It’ll be accepted at millions o f places, one of which *Certainconditionsapply C1995MasterCardInternational Incorporated must sell wallets. MasterCard. It's more than a credit card. It’s smart money I P age 9 Monday, April 2 4,1995 State P ress Louganis speaks In AIDS forum in,Tem pe gravity, read Newton. To avoid getting weighed down by student loans, call us. Samantha Feldman/State Press Greg Louganis, the first man to win double gold m edals for diving in two consecutive O lym pics, spoke Sunday at the Red R iver O pry in Tem po a s part o f a forum called “Talkzone Live," hosted by television star Alan Thicke. Louganis, who is HIV positive, and four Arizona people who are HIV positive or have AIDS, answered questions posed by audience m embers and questions sent over the internet. PRIESTHOOD Gome and see what we found... Find out about A m erica’s Tuition Plan™ and how you can spread the cost o f tuition out over several m onths ...in terest-free! No large, lumpy tuition payments. No borrowing. No hassles. No fooling! We even pay for the phone call. C all to ll-free1 - 8 0 0 - 3 4 8 - 4 6 0 7 . O r v isit the A rizona State Financial A id O ffice. A . C m m O t c A '• ' À T u IT to N P O R A I i IST A M C i A T l O N a U S A G R O U P com pany 8350 Craig Street Indianapolis, IN 46250 Rev. Fr. R. Clements, Director VO C A TIO N OFFICE FOR D IO C ESAN PRIESTHOOD C A T H O L IC D IO C ESE O F P H O E N IX 400 East Monroe Street Phoenix 85004, Arizona (602) 257-0030 P age 10 S t a t e P ress Monday, April 24,1995 Czyz to give humorous view on dealing with breast cancer B y P a tt y K in g S t a t e P ress Joann Czyz suffered through a mastectomy in 1985, but she did not despair. Instead, she pondered the fate of her missing breast. “I wonder if they’ll find it with Jimmy Hoffa?” she joked, Czyz, a professional speaker and former cancer patient, will discuss the value of humor in battling serious illnesses at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Nursing College. “Humor gives people another concept for dealing with fear,” she said. Czyz said she will focus on her own experiences with ¿ T »,i;OK,jr*Tt im¡YE,s:i> otate cancer. She will discuss how she used humor to prepare herself emotionally for grueling bouts of chemotherapy, surgery and radiation. “I laughed in the operating room,” she said. “I laughed on the way to the operating room. That was my way of reducing the stress of what was ahead of me.” She added that she will give other examples of the way she used humor to deal with her disease, including her reac­ tion to a doctor after the mastectomy. “(I said) the least you could have done is moved my one breast to the middle so I could be more balanced,” she said. W . P ress . See ifyou rementioned inthe police report. GO FAR IN THE AIRFORCE. Learn how far the Air Force can take vou. I you're a college you. If graduate, you m ay qualify for Air Force Officer Training School. After com pleting Officer Training School, you can becom e a com m issioned Air Force officer with: Serving Lunch and D inner 7 D ays a Week * M AM A ROSA'S • Safe Pregnancy Termination ■ Birth Control Services Depo-Provera, Birth Control Pills, I.U.D., & M orning After Pill ■ Pregnancy Testing No A ppointm ent N eeded ■ Gynecological Exams Pap Smears, Infection & STD exams • HIV Testing 1/2 PR ICE DINNER AIR FORCE OPPORTUNITIES 1-800-423-USAF _ _ W ith th e p u rch a se o f o n e d in n e r o f e q u a l o r g re a te r v a lu e , N o t g o o d w ith a n y o th e r o ffe r o r d isco u n t. O ffe r g o o d a fte r 2 p.m . E x p ire s 5-2 -95 . M esa 2023 W. G uadalupe ~ H ap p y H ou r B u ffet (Southw est Corner DObson & G uadalupe) ' 4-7 p.m. Monday-Friday I caule, I saw , I w o r k e d . .. th e Status S t a t e P re s s ) Pres sum Caesar the m o m e n tw o rk fo r the State Press. Tfie State Press is currently accepting applications for reporters, sports reporters, copy editors, photographers, columnists and magazine writers for the fall semester. Applicants mUst be reliable, highly moti­ vated and able to work on deadline. Experience from journalism classes or working for other publications is preferred. Include at least five clips, writing samples or other relevant materials. Applications are available at the State P ress in the Matthews Center basement. Call 965-2292 for more information. Deadline is 4 p.m,, May 5. rEÜBË"-"ÔfLFUTTERT • T ire s • Alignments • B rakes • Shocks/Struts • C u stom W h e e ls 2033 W. University 644-1201 (Dobson & University) UNIVERSITY I Savory Black Beans FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS ^ Lu b ricate y o u r v e h ic le & ch a s sis, drain o ld o il, a d d up to 5 q ts. o f new o il and in s ta ll a new o il filter. D ie se l extra. M o st ca rs and lig h t tru cks. In clu d es a 17 pt. v e h ic le m a in te n a n ce in s p e c tio n . P lu s $ 1.7 5 o il d isp o sa l charge. E x p ire s 5-24-95. r . Fabulous Fajitas - Beef * Shrimp • Chicken ■ Steaming Sides of Fresh Vegetables I Incredible Fish Tacos I C o m p le te R e p r o d u c tiv e Health Care Since 1976 (Shrimp) Go far in a career as an Air Force officer. Call By C h o ic e ... Not by C h a n ce Traditional Sonoran M exican Food Recipes Are Sim ply the Best! ■ Camarón Ranchera and Diablo • great starting pay • medical and dented care • 30 days vacation with pay per year • managem ent opportunities (for Czyz will be speaking as part o f a graduate-level nursing course on wom en’s healthi Part of her speech will be geared toward the nursing students. “What they want to learn from me is, ‘How did I feel?’” she said. “They want to know how they can relate to their patients and how they can make them more comfortable.” Czyz, who lives in Cave Creek, has also written the book D on’t Count Me Out: A Different Perception o f Fear, which is due out in May. Anyone interested in attending thé speech must call 9653244 to reserve a space. COMPUTERIZED ’ WHEEL BALANCE & 4 TIRE ROTATION • C h e c k in fla tio n on aH tire s •C o m p u te rize d , b a la n ce on 4 tire s >F o u r tire rotation * M o st c a rs a n d lig h t tru ck s N ot to be com bined w ith another o n e r on sam e product/service o r u se d # reduce outstanding debt. E xp ires 5-24-05. ^ T em p e 9 6 0 W . U niversity (N ortheast C o m e r . U niversity & Ffardy) 9 6 6 -0 8 5 2 -----—- ’V . Saturday & Evening Appts. Available ' v 3amily PUnning institute Phoenix 7806N: 27thAve. (I blocksouthofNorthern) 997-7493 H Scottsdale 2334N. ScottsdaleRd. (ScottsdaleOakPlaza) 945-4999 S ^Tempe 2525S. Rural#7C UniversityMedicalCenter 968-7471 Monday, April 24, 1995 S t a t e P ress Lawsuit dem ands backpay for ‘Lost C om m andos’ in secret V ietnam War WASHINGTON (AP) — In 1959, the United States began a covert intelligence and sabotage campaign inside North Vietnam with young men recruited mostly in South Vietnam. In the next 10 years, many wound up as prisoners of war. To help conceal the effort, U.S. officials eventually halted payment to the families of captured Vietnamese commandos, claiming they were dead, according to recently declassified documents. . Some of these POWs languished in prison for decades, then made their way to the United States only to discover the government they served refused to admit they exist. Now a lawsuit to be filed in Washington on Monday is demanding that recognition in the form of back pay for 281 surviving commandos. “We left them. Then we swept it under the rug,” says Miami lawyer John M attes, who’s fifing the claim. “Everyone hoped they would die off.” The State Department has said it would help them obtain Visas, but Mattes said the pleas for back pay — amounting to only $2,000 a year each — were ignored by the CIA and Defense Department. That led to the lawsuit. Spokesmen for the two agencies did not return calls from The Associated Press. Details,of the operation -— so sensitive it was financed first by the CIA and then secretly through the Joint Chiefs of Staff — have emerged from a recently declassified 1970 summary. The secret war was called OPLAN 34A under the CIA and changed to MACSOG (M ilitary A ssistance Command-Studies and Observations Group) when the m ili-; tary took over in 1964. Beginning in 1959, long before the United States official­ ly geared up for the Vietnam War, military authorities were recruiting Vietnamese citizens, many out of high school, for the secret operations. Teams of commandos of up to 10 members were formed “to execute special operations or unconventional warfare missions” on enemy territory, according to the summary quoted in the lawsuit. Each team received a code name, such as Ares, Tellus or Swan. Some sailed into North Vietnam in junks specially built to resemble native craft. Others parachuted from planes with special fuel tanks for long-range flights, or landed by heli­ copter. : ' “These aircraft operated all the way to vicinity of the NVNChinese border,” according to the MACSOG summaiy. But the results were disastrous. Not a single commando was recovered from North Vietnam, the summary says. The operation was finally terminated in 1969. P age 11 Cosell dies at 77 C o sell NEW YORK (AP) — Howard Cosell, whose caustic “tell it like it is” personality made him the world’s most celebrated sportscaster and turned Monday N ight Football into a national institution, died Sunday. He was 77. C osell, who un d er­ went cancer surgery in 1991, died o f a heart embolism at New York Sell Your Textbooks Back to Rotner’s Highest Prices Paid • Fast Service CASH FOR BOOKS Plenty o f Free Parking ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE "Y o u r C o lle g e B o o k s to re ” 6 2 5 E. A PA C H E BLVD. « TEM PE » 9 6 7 - 5 4 4 5 Looking for a challenge and a paycheck? T he S tu d e n t P u b licatio n s A dvisory B o a rd is now soliciting a p p lica tio n s fo r th e e d ito rsh ip o f th e 1995-96 Sun Devil Spark y earb o o k . A pplicants fo r th e position o f ed ito r: ✓ M ust be a student at ASU in good academic standing. ✓ M ust have a minimum o f two years yearbook or magazine experience. « / M ust possess strong leadership, management, organizational, communication, graphic design, production and writing skills. ✓ M ust be proficient in M acintosh MS Word— PageMaker proficiency also preferred. 1 ✓ M ust not graduate prior to the completion o f the term o f appointment. The appointment is from June 1,1995 to M ay 1, 1996. Applications and information on the submission and selection process are available at the front reception desk of Student Publications, Matthews Center, north basement. Please direct questions to Julie Knapp, Associate Director of Student Publications, 965-7572. Deadline for applications: Noon, Friday, April 28 UlSmtid r IJeatbool University’s Hospital for Joint Diseases, grandson Justin Cohane said. He was the strident, colorful voice of ABC radio and television from 1953 to 1992. It was a period o f phenom enal grow th and change in A m erica’s pastim es, spurred by television’s cascading millions and increased greed among athletes and promoters. Cosell chronicled it that way, revolutionizing a broadcasting industry more used to parroting the party line. “Howard Cosell was one of the most original people ever to appear on Am erican television,” said ABC News President Roone Arledge, who was head of ABC Sports dur­ ing Cosell’s heyday. State P ress Monday,,April 24,1995 fttg e 12 o iitie s exp lore lin k betw een eigit a n d recent A rizona dressed in customary Ariz. (AP) - - Mohave County authorities hfeVeigh, said *1» possible 'folks between QitlaJioma City . fatigues, walk into a field near the trailers rod, open fire : Timothy McVeigh and a house bombing with a semi-automatic weapon at an unknown target McVeigh worked ait overnight shift at the tracking comtpear the ate*, Mich i 1 about 25,;j)(iids from the p a ^ until late 1993,'’l^ )^ A iB 0 W O o d , a fellow empioyfoccupied bouse, Mew its Wroifows out but ee. But he quit after $ supervisor told him he couldn’t fin the blasUlHthorities sakfc' ' ' Watch television on MS' shift. A ^M cVeigj£*ho turned T f Sunday, lived in this ntorth‘T thought he hadgone b ack in the military, because westem Arizona town in a trailer park from February to that’s all he ever talked about doing,” Arrowood said. June of 199taad listed a Kingman mail drop as his address A native o f the Buffalo suburb o f Pendleton, N.Y., in court documents filed in Oklahoma. McVeigh served in the Army in the Gulf War, and appar­ Deputies don’t know whether he was there during the ently drifted in with anti-government paramilitary groups in house bomb. Michigan. Acquaintances have told the FBI he was angry Those who knew him at the Canyon West Mobile and about the siege of the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, RV Park said he was a troublesome tenant, blasting music, Texas, in 1993, a rallying point for groups that believe the and refusing to. get rid of his dog or his wrecked car. government is intent on depriving citizens of their right to Park operator Bob Ragin said Saturday he recognizes the man charged in the Oklahoma City bombing as the bear arms. Agents are combing the area searching for other possible McVeigh he evicted from a $240-a-month trailer in June links between McVeigh and paramilitary group activity. 1994. Members of one group in the area, called the Arizona Ragin described an angry young man who favored cam­ ouflage pants, boots and T-shirts while living in the park, Patriots, were arrested in 1986 for allegedly plotting to which sits in the desert amid creosote bush and swordlike hijack an armored car across the river in Laughlin, Nev., and use the proceeds to build a training camp outside yucca plants beside historic Route 66. , Kasey Burton, who lived two trailers down from Kingman. DUI • Criminal Immigration Personal Injury AHWATUKEE ORAL and MAXILLOFACIAL SURGERY Gregory P. Edmonds D.D.S. Ahwatukee Professional Building 10827 South 51st Street, Suite 204 ¿ fe IMPLANTS, WISDOM TEETH, TM), JAW SURGERY - Twilight Sleep and General Anesthesia available. FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE Form er C o u n ty P rosecu tor FREE CONSULTATION A SU C H A N N E L 2 M o v ie s -^)o Com m ercials -3 +udei'vI Programming - K A S R R a d ip -CvreaL •information . 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C ALI NOW! ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ BARTENDINGACADEMY 921-9925 9 0 8 -8 1 1 8 1250 E * APACHE #108 £> For more information call Salima at 965-1243. c O 0 A■ TAF T H 1 R E R A 0 AMS I RENE R0 R EM RO N S P A R KL E DUC Ko UT C 1 A T HAR P C HAR VE T B0 0 D E AG WA T C 9 1 N N Mo N S O o N E V t D E N T■ L0 0 T 1 L E 0 * Aw A K E S E L MA M 0 T E L ■ s A 1 « ■ WE D S 1 Scour 8 Not quite shut 10 Yonder items 11 Greasy spoon 13 Tears apart 14 Mirror sight 15 Small bill 16 Golf need 18 Jar feature 19 TV series featuring Paul Reiser 22 Baseball’s Cey 23 Has no existence 24 Baseball’s Trilto 27 Gaggle members 28 Opera solo 29 Museum contents 30 1990 film featuring Paul Reiser 35 Equip 36 Greek vowel 37 Pos­ sessed 38 Track shapes 40 Fire byproduct 42 Indian • gown 43 Con­ sumed 44 Falls behind 45 "Let’s Make a Deal” choices DOWN 1 Senator Thurmond 2 Beijing's nation 3 Wandered 4 Take ad­ vantage of 5 Gaffer’s assistant 6 Parting word 7 Athlete Thorpe 8 Study, Biitishstyle Friday's Answer 9 Areas 12 Fame 17 Long, long time 20 Ball’s TV co-star 21 Link with 24 Computer keyboard shortcuts 25 Coming 26 Falls for lovers; 27 Kind of lightning or pig 29 Fitting 31 Okays 32 Snapshot 33 Magic Johnson, before retiring 34 Utopias 39 Chair part 41 Noted chairman ■ 37éSH 1 2 3 À" 12 10 11 i 1 14 té; J ir ■ té 15 ■ 21 20 19 23 22 ■ 25 í P■ I ■ 28 . ;■I m 32 31 30 38 35 ■39 40 I41 37 38 ■ 1 43 42 ** ■ 4-24 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 4-24 CRYPTOQUOTES VB E ECJ F SSJ Y'TT HEYTRWB — PCRDB 1255 E. University Drive, Tempe, Arizona 85281 S.E; c ^ n e r p l U niversity St Rural Applications and job descriptions are available at the Student Publications' inform ation desk — M atthew s C enter basem ent, HFR office — Matthews Carter basement, and the bulletin board located across from room 325 in the Language and Literature building. TSLBW Free cable TV-37 stations! 3 pools, 2 spas Covered parking Laundry facilities Large exercise room * Certain Restrictions Apply IDA PROGRAM DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: April 28. (Return applications to Student Publications infor­ mation desk, Matthews Center basement.) LMSK LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Editors are chosen for a one-year term or two issues. Work on the magazine is on a volunteer basis. ACROSS 9 4 5 -8 0 1 6 / S le W e s t To apply you m ust be an ASU student in good standing with at least a 2.5 cumulative grade index, and be available from May 1995 through May 1997. by TH O M AS JO S EP H Attorney at Law -~ U l\é A SU 's n ational literary m agazin e is accepting applications for poetry edi­ tor, fiction editor, and art editor for th e F a ll/W in te r 1996 a n d S p r in g / Summer 1997 issues. C R O SSW O R D Robert A. Dodell (6 0 2 ) 5 9 8 -3 0 0 6 Positions available on staff of Hayden's Ferry Review ECJ F W E I YS R L LMSK XSR E WSIPCB Friday's Cryptoquote: IT (LOVE) IS LIKE A CIGAR, IF IT GOES OUT YOU CAN LIGHT IT AGAIN BUT IT NEVER TASTES QUITE THE SAME. - LORD WAVELL 0 1995 by King Footuroo Syndicate, Inc. Monday, April 24,1995 S t a u P ress P a g e l3 Param ilitary groups oppose governm ent th rou gh ou t A rizona KINGMAN (AP) — They’ve plotted to bomb Arizona dams, power plants and tax offices. Armed and angry, these anti-government groups have made the state a breeding ground for their cause. The state has long been a hub o f fast-growing militia movement, but as federal investigators comb the area around the northwestern town of Kingman for evidence linking Oklahoma bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh to the movement, these once-clandestine groups have grabbed center stage. FBI officials were unavailable for comment Sunday about details o f the investigation. In Arizona and elsewhere calling themselves “ freemen” and “sovereign citizens,” these paramilitary groups have filtered into several counties throughout the state, resisting taxes and touting gun ownership. “There are militia-type groups in Arizona and they are in various parts of the state,” said Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods. “We have always felt that they could be dan­ gerous because they have this anti-government attitude. The Arizona Patriots, considered a forerunner of modem militias, have toots back in the 1980s with several members involved in government protest groups. In-1987,. three patriots went to prison and two others were plated on probatioi frit plotting to rob an armed car near Laughlin, Nev., planning to use the loot to start up a param ilitary training camp outside Kingman, said Joel Breshin, regional director for the Anti-Defamation League in Phoenijf: “These groups, they believe they need to arm and defend themselves against what they call the tyranny of the U.S: government,” Breshin said. The group has also plotted to bomb Arizona dams, poijver plants, Internal Revenue Service officers, syna­ gogues and abortion clinics, The Arizona Republic reported Sunday. FBI surveillance tapes of Arizona Patriots meetings in 1985 included the voices of former television actor Ty Hardin, best known for his role of Bronco Layne in the late 1950s series “B roncho,” and form er Phoenix police sergeant Gerald “Jack” McLamb, the newspaper said. McLamb is active in anti-government activity and hosts a shortwave-radio talk show with William Cooper, who publishes a militia movement newspaper in St. Johns. McLamb, founder of the New World Order, also is a business associate of James “Bo” Gritz, a 1992 presidential candidate who ran under the Populist Party. Both attempted to negotiate the surrender o f white supremacist Randy Weaver during a standoff in Idaho with U.S. authorities in 1992. Weaver’s wife and son were shot in the standoff. Two Arizona Patriots who trained at a camp outside Kingman later were involved in the slaying of a Phoenix motorist during a traffic dispute. Both claimed self-defense and were acquitted. “Kingman is kind of a hotbed for this kind of anti-gov­ ernment activity,” Breshin said. “It’s a community of peo­ ple who are independent and a lot of them have different views on government.” • Sgt Dwayne C ooper w ith the K ingm an Police Department estimated there are about 100 members of paramilitary groups living in the area, but they mostly keep to themselves. “I believe it’s more widespread than people think in Arizona as well as across the country,” Breshin said. Robert Brown, editor of “Soldier of Fortune,” magazine, said there were no accurate statistics on how many Americans participate in such groups but guessed the figure was in die tens of thousands, “which is very spooky.” Delicious & Delivered. Free. Free delivery to ASU campus, dorms and area. 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I I |w i« > S if » f ig Ñ i^ t6‘ 11BFW W ■ Call THE 967.1480 PRINCETON *25®?® REVIEW AtjmZ9 Princeton Review is not affiliated with Princeton U. or AAMC Hours: 11 a.m.-6 p.m.. M onday-Friday P r in t in g P o lic y : F irs t 5 pages free, a ll others 100 each (exclu d in g banner pages) S erv ices A vailable: W ordPerfect 6.1 to r W indows, M icroso ft O ffice, E le ctro n ic Forum , P IN E E -M a il, Internet A ccess A S IJ X P . R E Q U IR E D S p o rts State P ress ____________ A SU gym n asts retain status as A ll-A m ericans Monday, April 24,1995 ' P age 15 ASU baseball comes up short in attempt to sweep Wildcats F r o m S taff R epo rts B y J eremy Stein State: P ress ASU gymnasts Tina Brinkman and Katie Freeland both successfully defended their All-American status on the vault over the weekend at the NCAA Championships in Athens, Ga. Brinkman captured third on vault in Saturday’s individual finals, while Freeland finished sixth. Freeland was also named second-team All-American in the all-around, where she posted a career-high 39.225 (The top eight finishers in each event and the all-around earn All-America honors, while the next eight finishers earn second-team honors.) “I was happy with it, but I could have done bet­ ter,” Freeland said of her showing at nationals. “1 did really well, especially on vault,” Brinkman said. “I did a vault 1 had never competed before. I was kind of heartbroken 1 didn't make the floor finals though.” Both gymnasts earned the right to compete in Saturday’s finals by tying for fourth on vault with a 9.95 in the preliminary competitions Thursday and Friday, which is also when the team preliminaries were held. This year’s NCAAs marked the final chapter in Brinkman’s career and the end to what turned out to be a grueling senior season. “I’m thankful 1 even got to compete this year,” said Brinkman, who’s season was in jeopardy follow­ ing an automobile accident on Jan. 13. “It’s been an up and down season for me.” Despite missing the entire first half of the season recovering from injuries, Brinkman still feels satis­ fied with the way her gymnastics career ended. “1 had to face more struggles than 1 expected, but I think I’ve done everything I wanted to do in gymnas­ tics,” she said. “I’m finishing happy and looking for­ ward to getting on with the rest of my life.” ASU senior right-hander B illy Neal fires in a pitch during the Sun Devils’ 7-0 victory over UofA Friday night at Packard Stadium . Neal pitched a completegame shutout to earn the win. The ASU baseball team was unable to complete a three-game sweep of UofA Sunday, as it fell to the Wildcats 7-6 at Sancet Field in Tucson. The Sun Devils, who beat UofA 7-0 Friday in Tempe and 6-4 Saturday in Tucson, saw Sunday’s game slip away in the bottom of the ninth inning, as UofA scored two runs Off sophomore pitcher Kaipo Spenser. ASU fell behind early when the Wildcats, scored three runs off Sun Devil starter Mike Corominas in the bottom of th e first. The Sun D evils cam e back though, scoring six runs and taking a 6-5 lead into the bottom of the ninth inning. ASU ju n io r Josh D eakm an, who relieved Corominas with no outs in the bottom of the first, held UofA to only two runs in 7 2/3 innings of work. Deakman struck out four, while walking four and giving up five hits. At the plate, ASU was led by senior Damon Lembi and junior Robbie Kent. Lembi went three for four, including a solo home run, while Kent was one for two with three base on balls, a double and two runs scored. Sunday’s loss dropped the Sun Devils to 32-16 overall and 12-12 in the Six Pac, while UofA moved to 18-30-1 overall and 5-19 in the conference. In Saturday’s game, ASU sophomore pitcher Jason Bond threw six innings, giv­ ing up just four runs on four hits and walk­ ing nine. Spenser pitched three shutout innings, while giving up only one hit to collect the save. Juniors Travis Flowers and D arren T roilo led the offense, as Flowers went two for three with an RBI and a run scored, and Troilo went one for four with a two-run double. In Friday’s action, Sun Devil senior pitcher Billy Neal stole the show. Neal pitched a five-hit, complete-game shutout and struck out six, while only walking two. Schad leads Sun D e v il ten n is team to sw eet revenge Maes 6-1,6-0. “Usually, she just makes people go crazy with her game,” Schad said of Maes. “She can slice it all day long.” A fluke? Maybe. Schad had Maes questioning her sanity as she set up a On March 28, the UofA women’s tennis team bulldozed ASU 5-1 in Tucson. The Sun Devils won only one singles firing range from the baseline and quickly sent the Wildcat on her way. match and the doubles matches were not even played. ASU freshman Reka Cseresnyes answered a gut check What a difference a month makes. The seventh-ranked Sun Devils (14-8) made their last late in the third set of her match with Eva Marie Schurhoff match with the No. 4 Wildcats (16-6) look like a fading and held on to win 2-6,6-2,7-5. “(Coach) Sheila (Mclriemey) told me that we were up 3memory, as they clobbered UofA 6-3 on Saturday at 1 and I felt like I had to win this m atch,” explained Whiteman Tennis Center. Cseresnyes.. “I was trying everything and I just went for ASU senior Joelle Schad was nearly flawless. “It was just my last match and it was against UofA, so every ball.” Kara Schertzer, who was sidelined all week with the flu, that already pumped me up,” said Schad, who stepped into the No. 1 singles slot because senior Kori Davidson is. lost in straight sets at No. 3 but showed her senior leader­ ship by just suiting up. recovering from a knee injury. M ■ “She was a trooper,” Mclnemey said. "She only prac­ Schad made the transition look easy, pulverizing Vicky B y DAn M iller S t a te P ress ticed one day this week. She felt weak. Plus the other girl played very well to beat her.” A makeshift breakfast almost came back to haunt ASU freshman Stephanie Lansdorp at No. 4. Lansdorp, strug­ gling to find nourishment prior to the match, munched on raw carrots. During the second set o f her match with Angela Bernal, she wished she hadn’t. “I played really well in the beginning,” said Lansdorp, who took a 5-2 lead in the second set. “When she came back 5-4, we were having some really long points and I thought I was gonna to.throw up. I’m really glad I ended it then.” Lansdorp, suffering from dry heaves, opted to take extra time in between points by tying her shoes, despite ASU assistant coach Krista Amend’s reminders that she was flirting with gamesmanship. “I couldn’t hear anything,” Lansdorp remembered. “I T urn to T ennis , page 17. Cornerback Newsome tops list of drafted Sun Devils B y D a n M iller Sta t e P ress SMixnM»« n idiw im n F u n Commbacfc Craig Nmw oma, «hown lu w ln a 1993 game again«* Oklahoma State, was the first Bun Devil taken in the NFL draft held over the weehsnd. Newsome was eaiecled by the Omen Bay Paokare with the laet pick ot the first round. ASU cornerback C raig N ew som e, who improved his draft status immensely in the Senior Bowl, topped the list of five Sun Devils picked in the NFL draft over the weekend. Newsome was drafted by ¿he Green Bay Packers with the final pick of the first round (32nd overall) on Saturday. The 24-year old, 6-foot, 185-pound bruiser made two interceptions, forced one fumble and recovered another in the Senior Bowl, lifting him from a second or third-round projections into first-round contention. He is expected to make an immediate push for the Packers’ starting job, especially with the exit of former starting corner Terrell Buckley, who has been an NFL bust since his storied career at Florida State. Newsome may end up competing with former Sun D e v i l L e n n y McGill for the position. The Packers, who originally had the 22nd pick of the first round, traded that selection to the Carolina Panthers to obtain an extra pick in the third round. Besides Newsome,-four other former Sun Devil players were taken on Sunday in the seven-round draft. In the fourth round, the Seattle Seahawks used the 126th overall pick to draft Sun Devil linebacker Jason Kyle. The 6-foot-3, 235-pound walkon, was Pac-lO’s leading tackier last year. “I was told that I was solid in the third round. I' was expecting New England might take me,” Kyle said. “I got a little discouraged when things started (Sunday). I didn’t know what to expect.” The next ASU product taken was offensive tack­ le Jeff Kysar, who went to the Los Angeles Raiders in the fifth round with the 154th pick. Kysar said the tension was mounting as the day wore on. “I was getting pretty antsy. The whole thing is T urn to ASU draft, page 16. P age 1 6 S t a t e P ress Monday, April 24,1995 N o. 2 UofA fle x e s m u sc le s a t ASU’s e x p e n s e B y D a m ia n S h a w Sta te P ress Sun Devil Junior Kerry Moloney connects with a Nancy Evans' offering in the bottom of the fourth Inning of UofA’s 12-2 win over A S U Saturday night at Sun Devil Club Stadium. ASU d ra ft C ontinued from page 15. such a crapshoot,” said Kysar, who is 6-7 and 325 pounds. “Teams like Cincinnati and San Diego were talking about the third and fourth round, but it turned out to be just talk.” Defensive tackle Bryan Proby will join former ASU star and All-Pro Dan Saleaumua on the Kansas City Chiefs, who drafted him in the sixth round with the 202nd pick. “They’ve got a lot of people who’ve been in tile league a long tim e that I can learn from like Saleamua,” said the 6-5,275-pound Proby, who didn’t play at all for ASU last year. “They will be looking for guys to come up and replace their veterans someday, and that is the challenge that I’ll hopefully be up for.” Another Sun Devil drafted that didn’t play a down in 1994 was receiver Johnny Thomas, who was taken by the St. Louis Rams in the seventh round (240th), Receiver Clyde McCoy, safety Eddie Cade and running back Parnell Charles were among the most prominent ASU players undrafted. Each will try their luck in the free agent market. The UofA softball team is the second best in the nation, and this weekend against ASU it played like it. The Wildcats beat the Sun Devils on Friday 4-2 and 10-0 in Tucson, and on Saturday 12-2 and 9-0 at Sun Devil Club Stadium in doubleheader action. ASU Coach Linda Wells was inspired that the Sun Devils played a close game on Friday and some good innings on Saturday. “We felt good playing them close in die first game (Friday). Down here (Saturday) I felt good in the second game that we hung for most o f the game,” Wells said. “In the first game we were able to play them close for at least three or four innings, which was a good feeling because it leads us to believe that there may be light at the end of the tunriel.” In both games Saturday, which at times resembled a home run derby, the Wildcats were able to put up some good offensive numbers. UofA had five home runs in the two contests, with two going to Laura Espinoza and two to Leah Braatz. When the Wildcats weren’t hitting home runs they were cranking out doubles, with six differ­ ent players for UofA doing so. ‘It’s a little bit tougher here just because our field is bigger,” Wells said of Sun Devil Qub Stadium. “When they were hitting it to the out­ field there was just a lot more room to cover.” Junior Stephanie Cottier said while the Sun Devils weren’t intimidated by the Wildcats, they did know what to expect going in. “I thought we played well in the begin­ ning, but I think our incentive went down once we saw how many hits they were get­ ting,” Cottier said. “We weren’t afraid of them, but we went in knowing that these girls were good hitters, so once they started proving it I think it got to us.” Some highlights for ASU included a three for five performance by junior Alyssa Johnson on Friday. The Sun Devils also outhit UofA six to five in Friday’s 4-2 loss. Sophomore Tina Ruff and junior Kerry Moloney both had doubles on the weekend. Moloney would have liked to have seen the Sun Devils come through with more hits when runners were on base. ASU stranded eight runners in the first game and two in the second Saturday. “I felt that we could have done a lot more hitting. When we needed to clutch up we didn’t clutch up, so I thought we could have done better in that area,” Moloney said. G o lf looks to repeat as Pac-10 cham ps B y H ea th er S n o w S tate P ress The top-ranked ASU women’s golf team is hoping to retain its title as Pac-10 Champions as they begin play at the Pac-10 Championship today in Corvallis, Ore. “We are looking to repeat our title again this year, and whenever it’s a championship you always want to win,” Coach Linda Vollstedt said. “We’ve played well all year long and we’re looking for a good tournament.” Out of the nine Pac-10 teams that are competing, five of the teams are ranked in the top 20. The field includes thirdranked Stanford, fifth-ranked UCLA, 15th-ranked UofA, 19th-ranked USC, Oregon, Oregon .State, Washington and Washington State. According to Vollstedt, the biggest competition will come from Stanford and UCLA. “Stanford and UCLA will pose as the biggest tiireat far us,” she said. ■ Vollstedt will go with the usual lineup, with seniors Wendy Ward and Kristel Mourgue d’ Algue, junior Linda Ericsson, sophomore Heather Bowie and freshman Kellee Booth. Individually, Vollstedt expects Ward and Bowie to lead the way for the Sun Devils. “Wendy and Heather have been playing strong all year,” Vollstedt said. “They have the best records.” Ward finished last year’s tournament in a tie for first, and in 1993 she won die tournament as a sophomore. So this being her last Pac-10 Championships, Vollstedt said she’d love to win it all. “Being her last season for ASU, Wendy would really like to win this tournament again,” Vollstedt said. Along, with Ward and Bowie, Vollstedt also expects a good performance from Booth, as well as the rest o f the squad. “Kellee has also been playing real strong,” Vollstedt said. “Overall I’m expecting good performances from all five players.” Vollstedt said this championship will start the team’s post-season play. “The conference championship is what we always con­ sider the beginning of post-season play,” Vollstedt said. “This tournament will set the pace for our final two. tourna­ ments,” The championships begin today at 9 a.m. at the Try sting Tree Golf Course and will run through Wednesday. State P ress State P ress State Ppss S T À ffift& S S SMSftffTtìss St REP S tM i Stat Surprise your When you stay awake in class, you tend to learn more. (Unless you have an uncanny talent of learning through osmosis.) So don't let fatigue get in the way of your A, Revive with Vivaria». One tablet has the same amount of caffeine as about two cups of coffee. And it's just as safe. Hey, anything is possible, if you're up for it. 01995 SOC ontum f Hesithcsrw Use o n y as directed. ^ | in | T r | f f 8 Revive «vitit Vivane! e State State P ress P ress P ress S t a t e P ress P age 17 Monday, April 24,1995 Womens track excels against in-state rivals The A51T tinea's icnnis high note with a narrow UofA, at Robson Tennis Center in Tucson on Saturday. The teams Sun Devils (12-8,3-7 in die Pac-10) swept tfl three doubles matches to pocket the valuable doubles paiaL ASU senior No 1 player S u g ic S a p sia a ' led die assault with a 6-3, 2-6, 6-4 -vifchigr odfar$a)| AadgaNMi Sun Devil From Staff Reports The ASU women’s track and field team dropped both UofA and NAU, while the men’s team split with the two schools Saturday at Sun Angel Stadium. On the women’s side, the Sun Devils squeaked past the Wildcats, winning 85-82. The two squads were tied head­ ing into the final event, the 4x400-meter relay, where A SU ’s team o f seniors Jacqueline G ayle and Lade Akinremi and juniors Tike Jackson and Lorieann Adams easily outran the Wildcats 3:35.12-3:44.68. The women easily surpassed the Lumbeijacks, downing NAU 96-56. Lade Akinremi, Adams and Gayle led the Sun Devils against both UofA and NAU, each collecting two first-place finishes. Akinremi won thé 100-meter dash (11.80) and the 400 hurdles (57.03), while Adams captured first in the 800 (2:09.77) and die 1,500 (4:36.23). Gayle took first in the 200 (24.03) and the 400 (53.55). As for the men, they beat NAU 97-73, but fell to UofA 117-73. The Sun Devils were led by senior Charlie Cohen and junior Ivan Jean-Marie. Cohen set a school record in the javelin with a throw of 238” 1’, while Jean-Marie fin­ ished first in the 200 (20.82) and the 400 (45.84). The Sun Devils now prepare to travel to Philadelphia for the Penn Relays on April 27-29. iJ r C ontinued from pag e 15, - f iS IBS AMERICAN EXPRESS spot and nearly knocked off Betsy Miringoff 3-6, 6-2, 7-6 (4). Coppinger said she had wished Miringoff just stayed at the baseline like she did in the first set, but unfortunately for Coppinger, she didn't. “She started coming to the net and that was working for her,” said Coppinger, who felt her footwork was the best its been all season. “She put me on the run and I had to start throwing up balls and hitting lobs.” Coppinger and Schad teamed at No. 3 doubles, dispos­ ing of Bernal and Miringoff 6-2, 6-3. Coppinger, who was still wired from the end of her singles match, said she was oblivious to pain and fatigue and playing the doubles match on pure adrenaline. Cseresnyes and Lansdorp won a straight-setter at No. 2. "Before we were always kind o f scared to make a move,” Lansdorp said. "We’re getting more guts.” had everything blocked out.” ASU sophomore Anna Moll stymied Melody Falco 6-3, 6-0 at No. 5 and improved her team-best record to 25-8. “She really hated my game,” Moll said of Falco. “She was getting really angry. She didn’t like how I was hitting a lot of slice and drop shots. I think I played tactically very well. “She probably hates me now, but I don’t care.” Moll used the sage advice of Schad, who is one of Falco’s closest friends, prior to the match. “She told me I should mix it up because she hates that kind of game,” Moll said of Schad’s words of wisdom. “She told me she would get angry inside but not show i t ” However, Falco did show it, frequently smacking balls into the net after points were finished. Sun Devil junior Julie Coppinger stepped into the No. 6 G re a t fo o d at g re a t p r ic e s B u r g e r s • S t e a k s • S a n d w ic h e s F re s h b a ked g o o d s D a ily s p e c ia ls ^ A lot more than just textbooks! Ï S B H stopping Steq Sumherg 7-5, 6-4. Not to be outdone, junior Paul Reber had Chris Jenkins for lunch, 6-1,6-2. . la doubles action, the No. 1 team of Üargsian and junior Dave Critchley drilled Jeokiit$ and Stumberg 8-3. Reber and freshman Tsolak Gevorkian went the distance i l ^ ^ l l ^ t t ^ S d '/ F d w a r d ; Schwartz atsecoadtejfeles before putting die final naitin the coffin at 9-7, and Elias and sophomore Wolf von lindenau tag-teamed on James Rey and Vuk Tapuskoyic to win 8-6 at No. 3. The woeful Wildcats fell to 7-15 and 0-10 in the Pac-10. T e n n is For Speed & Review m in litter ‘Cats F r o m Sta ff R e po r ts cSfiMenf* 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 704 S. C ollege O pen 11am Mon-Fri 4 3 0 N. Scottsdale Rd 894-0533 C lassifieds N otice to our 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 die validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more uiformatkm and assistance regarding the investigation o f an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. Passions unguided are lor the most part mere madness. -T ho m as Hobbes A N N O U N C E­ MENTS WEDDING WORKSHOP, semi­ nar, fashions, luncheon. Win a trip Sunday May 7 10am-4pm. Gala Centre 1848 È. University Te mpe. $39.95 major CG.. Call for res. 967-5255. State fra ti Classifieds Matthew* Cantar Basement 965-6735 A N N O U N C E­ MENTS WE BUY & SELL USED LEVI'S! in n s j e a n H EA D ERS AMD ADVERTISERS BUYER Call for Details 947-8245 AN N O U N CE­ MENTS ____ FREE FINANCIAL Aid! Over $6 b illio n in private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are e li­ gible regardless o f grades, income, or parents income. Let us help. C all Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F59A85. M ODELS, OPEN Minded for exciting hair production. Call 649-0789. STUDENTS! INTERNSHIP Sc job -search strategies, mktg. techniques; resume, cover & ref­ erence letter writing ideas, time mgmt, interviewing tips, guar­ anteed results, 1-day response. Send payment to Ace Business Strategies for $19.95. 602-5610 9 6 6 , 21941 N, 68th A ve. Glendale, AZ 85310. Oar last publication of the daily Stete Prêta fer thin semester is Friday, April 28. BBT The yread finale edition ef the Spring '95 State Press is on Taesday, May 2. So... Readers, don't forget to reed the very faa finale edition, and •dvertiaers, don't forget ta advertise ia it! C a U fm rim fe 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 * 1810 Scottsdale Rd (between Curry & McKellips) 5 minutes from ASU! 3208 W. Glendale Ave. APARTMENTS BEAUTIFUL LARGE 2bd apt., walk to ASU, pool, laundry rm, 1 blk so. o f University on 8th St. Ca^>e Cod Apts. 968-5238. MOVE IN $399 Studios furnished. $385, 1 bd $485, near ASU util incl -Rio Salado Apts 423-7300ext 302 ask for Brian, under new mngmt. EL DIABLO APTS. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT poolside all electric kitchen w / W/d. Partially fur­ nished. $801 month. 9668187. 3 t5 L) 215A , HERMOSA PL ACE. 510 W. University, walk to ASU, pool, w/d, a/c,$635, onsite Manager, 966-0987 1201 S. McClintock Dr., 9210699. Quiet, luxury livin g, 1 br's from $440. HOMES FOR RENT NEAR ASU 2bd 1/2 rent Sc 1/2 deposit. Smokers encouraged. Call Jim or C liff 7am to 7pm 929-0720. OLD TOWN Tempe 3bd lba, $700 month. 3/4bd house $1000 month. Others available for summer also. 894-0288. SPA CIOU S, 2B D , Im i S J ASU, cov'd parking, w/d hkup & ac $445, 968-0413 & 9677542 RENTAL SHARING TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 1BD FOR rent in 2BD house. OK for 1 or 2. Nice place. Farm­ er Sc 11th. $350 mo. A vail. 6/1. Call Dennis at 964-7077, HAYDEN SQ.. beautifully fum. 2bd 2ba. Upstairs. $1000/m o. Aug-Dec. or May. 968-5002. FEMALE PREFERRED for house rental sharer, 3bd 2ba, near ASU $2p0 +, 1/4 util.4311824 APARTMENTS APARTMENTS *Bring ACandle* Please add your voice and presence to th e thousands of caring people who will protest die vivisection industry's burn­ ing. blupdiag, drugging, poisoning, ad d irta g . shocking irradiating, to r t a r ing, dissection and su rg ica l m utilation of teas o f B u llio n s of innocent animals. M I W fE V T B O T E S .K U O ® N/S MALE, 2 1-f, upperclass­ man or grad student preferred to share 2bd 1ba apt. 3/4 m ile from ASU $270/mo Call Chris 968-7246. Leave a message. SHARE 3BD 2ba condo- Pool, covered parking, 1 mile/ASU. $240+1/3 util. 804-0218. ROOM S FOR RENT SUMMER SUBLEASE in clean 2bd apt on M ill A ve. 225+i/2util call Brian @ 7319305. SUNSCAPE APTS. Recent grad looking to share a spac. 2bd, 2ba apt. in Scots. Prefer female. $315/mo. Avail. 5/15 Kathleen 947-1131. HOMES FOR SALE $ 82 .0 00 . B o b B u llo ck R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 MISCELLANEOUS FO R ^ L| _ _ BLACKJACK STRATEGY Cards- Play the odds. Send $5 to:Naylor, 614 Langdon Street, Madison, Wt 53703 RESUME PREPARATION kit, easiest, most affordable, as low as $20. Call 4 3 1-8362 M-F 9am-5pm. FURNITURE BLACK CONTEMP. couch & loveseat. 1 yr old. Great cond. Must sell asap. $200 713-9176 ENTIRE BEDROOM! Qn bed Sc extras incl. Almost new. $250 Call Melanie 929-9936. FOR SALE daybed, no trundle, white washed w icker, only 9 months old, originally $350 now $150, for info call 8589690 HELP WANTEDGENERAL TRAVEL FURNITURE QUEEN SIZE bed and box spring mattress + black onyx headboard $ 130-obo 897-1588 COMPUTERS "DISCOUNTED SOFTWARE for students, faculty* and staff. M icrosoft o ffice professional $14*95 Wordperfect &1 S8?l Autodesk collection $199. Call HASColegiate Express HAS 1800-332-1 lOO.ext 5." ^ DATABASE MANAGER/ Com­ puter Operator p/t even in gs 340-9617. •• ••; .. ■■■_[ : IBM 4 8 6 /3 3S, DOUBLE disk dr. color monitor, and printer $l400-obo Michele 897-1588. MAC COLOR C lassic, 4/80 stylewriter II printer, great for term posers & resumes, software incl. $950. 266-4940. ¡SOFTWARE! Microsoft Office $134.95 Microsoft Works : $67.95 PhotoShop $198.95 Illustrator $97.95 •many, many others! Student/Faculty ID or class verification required C o m p u ter R oom Technologies, Inc. 113.0 East-University Dr. Suite 205 • Tempe 85281 829-3137 Hours 10 am to 5 pm ¡H A R D W A R E ! ¿¡W|LRY_ S t a t e P ress Monday, April 24, 1995 P age 18 x_ JEWF.LERY M ADE w / old pocket watches. Business con­ s is t o f button coven* pins, boloties, old watch parts. Chris 970-0959 AUTOMOBILES$CASH TODAY!$ I buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call Al. 994-4369. '90 CÁMARO- air bag, at, ac, am/ftn sir cass, pwr win & leks. Rally w hls, red- l-ow nr AZ. $49 0 0 Lorrie Sheehan 2342134. j '• JEEP 81' CJ7, red, custom int., chrome, lift, a/c bigger rim s/tires, xlnt cond. $5750. Call 996-4849. $QUICK CASHS Sell Your Auto To Me Brian 246-3499 24 hrs/lv. description ADC Has free cars avail, for most ar­ eas. Gas allow, auto drive away co. Call 952-0339. ATTENTION GRADUATING Seniors...Congratulations from Leisure >Tours-International! Say good-bye to Spring Break and hello to ... Mardi Gras 1996! Party in New Orleans February 16-21. This ad w ill run Today only! Call now for free info @ 1-800-838-8206 DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. 1 also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. STUDY SPANISH/CULTURE in Guatemala. Several options for June 95. Call Richard Mor­ gan (520) 795-6499. Backpacking Through Europe this Summer? W e c a r r y o v e r 130 lig h t-w e ig h t tra v e l p ro d u c t s fro m p a c k s to s le e p s a c k s . W e w a n t to m a k e y o u r trip a s u c c e s s . C a ll fo r o u r 1995 T ra v e l G e a r C a ta lo g , a n d w e w ill in c lu d e a c o p y o f o u r P a ck in g G uide a n d Foreign C urrency G uide F R E E . Bitter Root Call 800 688-9577 HELP WANTEDGENERAL $40,000/Y R. INCOME poten­ tial. Home Typists/PC users. Toll free 800-898-9778 ext. T1676 for listings. $6 PER HOUR Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Universal Portraits. Call Rachel or James, 496-0255. ♦SINGLES* Do you lik e health, wealth, travel, and Fun? Pt & f t 808- 9105.; ' • ,r;V/ A MÉDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office person.- W ill train. Good ad­ vancement potential, 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Stë. 108. Apply in person. ADMIN ASST entry level. The worlds lgst. student & youth travel agency seeking energetic, detail minded, cust sve oriented ihdiv for seasonal employment. $275/wk. Fax resume & cover attn. Robin 922-0793 AGGRAVATED? SIMOTIVATED People to earn what you're worth! Grwg co needs u! Fabulous resort rsvtnts needed, nr ASU 3030939 WE HAVE A NEW CAR WAITINC FOR YOU. ABC NISSAN Phoenix WEST VALLEY NISSAN Glendale SMITH MESA NISSAN Mesa SCOTTSDALE NISSAN Scottsdale BROWN B BROWN NISSAN Tempe ALW AYS LOOKING for su­ perb exp. M obile DJ's for re­ cep tions & co. parties. Your equip, or hrs. Earn $15-30000 yearly on weekends. Reception bands also needed C all M-F 6pm-9pm 966-2929 Mr. Citron. ASSEM BLY JOB! Lighting co. needs responsible Student for ft day assem bly work. Electronics background desirable. $7/hr Scottsdale Air Park. Call Dori between 10am2pm. 998-0325. ASU STUDENTS wanted. Sur­ vey s/clerical/sales: Excellent base + bonus. Start now. 1 block from ASU. 784-2270 ASU SUMMER School stud­ ents here is the chance to insure yourself a position for summer employment; Acquire your po­ sition now and don't start train­ ing 05/1 5 /9 5 . We presently have 70 students on staff and we need more for the summer. Associates call ASU Alumni to update’ in fo, inform Alumni about advancements & ask for financial support. This is a great job for the summer! C hoose your own evening & weekend shifts; we only require you to work up to 32 hours. Put a position on a resume that will bAve some substance. Get some great networking Oppor­ tunities and learn about ASU. Call 965r67S4. ATTN: ACCOUNTING Majors: Local co. seeks accounting majors for light bookkeeping duties. Approx 15-20 hrs per w eek. $6-7 per hour. Som e computer exp. necessary: Close to ASU Call Chuck 267-0864. CAREGIVER FOR special needs teenager. Pt/ft, liv e in possible. Lots o f free time for studying. $7/hr. Lynda or Bill 926-1937 or 272^6581 CU$T SVC Reps needed pt for growing Tempe Manuf. Data entry exp helpful. Good bene­ fits. Starting salary $6-7/hr. Apply in person 8:30am-5pm. Mon-Fri. Call Bonnie for direc­ tions at ■96 7 -2 6 7 8 . Dash Designs 600 W. 24th S t Tempe DO YOU like to travel? Sales internships, 95% job place­ ment, all majors welcome. Aver­ age summer pay $518 a week. 1-800-424-6205, ask for Deb­ bie. ENJOY TALKING on the phone, flex p/t hrs, no selling. Public opinion p o lls only. A pply fo r your summer job now, call Deona at 258-4554 betw een 10-8 pm. Behavior Res. EXPERIENCED GYMNASTIC inst. Part-time, $10 per hour. 40th Street & Indian School. Carrie 957-0046 HELP WANTED swimming in­ structors at client hom es in your area. Price range is $12-14 per hour WSI and strong exp. fix, sched for summer, Happy Swimmers, Shane #967-2099 HELP WANTED- need a cheer­ ful, energetic person to work 2 0-30 hrs/wk at Surf City Squeeze inside the Western Re­ serve Athletic Club. Great sum­ mer job. Contact Steve at 9666 5 li . ; ^ .. :. MODELS: NYCi Toyko, Paris, Milan. Local scouts want you! Scottsdale, 941-6922. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! VISA BICYCLES 20" CHERRY RED Giant Peri­ gee street racing bike, hardly used, excellent condition w/extras. $200 obo. Chris 9686094 leave message. RETAIL CLERK needed for local auto parts co., exp. help­ ful but not necessary. Will train right person. Mornings 25-30 hrs per week. Call or apply in person, Red Desert Auto 5450 E Washington, Phx. 267-0864 VERY BUSY front desk. Data entry exp a must. Work alter­ nating wkends, afternoons 48pm, contact Mrs. Burne :S>41-0500 KENNEL, LIVE-IN, Caretaker Apt for services. Animal knowl­ edge & references required. 9667379 ' LIFE GUARDS summer staff needed. Must apply in person at Concord Village: 631 E. Lex­ ington. All applications must be received by 4/25/95. Must b$ WSI accredited. Please no phone calls. . , '. .... . ’ LOCAL TEMPE Co. seeks busi­ ness student w /good kn ow l­ edge o f purchasing and/or Bus. Administration for various pro­ jects. Part time 20-25 hrs/wk. Call Brad 967-2678: LOOKING FOR individuals for f/t & p/t work for household & industrial moving. Days, even­ ings & weekends avail. Apply in person 4048 E, Superior, Phx, ask for Kevin. LOT ATTENDANT needed for Enterprise Rent A Car. Hours vary. Inquire 829-3970. MARKETING ASST, p/t days 15-25 hrs/Wk, flexible, $7/hr to start. Merrill Lynch . Call Russ Jacobson 483-483$. MECHANICAL TECHNICIAN ft/pt. Som e mechanical exp. deired, minimum o f Iyr in col­ lege desired. Starting pay $6-8 hr w/advancement. 956-8200 NEED CASH? Work 5/4 (Read­ ing Day) co llectin g microfridges $7/hr. cash, call Wayne 464-8462 NOW HIRING all positions. Cook, door & wait Apply in person M-F after 3pm. Minder Binders 715 SMcClintock. OPPORTUNITY STUDENTS needed to sell Col­ orado R iver Beach Club tshirts. Pay on a progressive scale; Call A l or M a rty 4395868 PAUL'SjflEMPE Hardware is ac­ cepting applications for pt cash­ iers. Hardware exp. a + for po­ sition. Applications will be ac­ cepted at 1153 W .Broadway Tempe. PHONE RECEPTIONIST for portrait studio. Däys/evenings. Rachel, 496-8029. SEWING OPERATORS, QC in­ spectors, shipping clerks need­ ed dfi 2nd shift(3pm-11:30pmj for summer. Close to ASU. Call or apply in person: Dash D esign s 6 00 W. 24th st. Tempe 967-2678. SODA STOCKERS Needed immediately! Two shifts avail to stock grocery store w /beverage products. $5/hr plus 280/mile. If you are reli­ able, detail oriented, have good math skills, & own transporta­ tion please call today! 8388405. We encourage a diverse workforce. K elly S ervices, Never an applicant fee. EOE. SUMMER WORK Start at $10.25 Local Branch of Int'l corp. has 52 ft/pt open­ ings. N o exp. N ec. Scholarships/lnternxhips avail. Cond exist. Adv. opp. Apply Now, start after finals. 968-4797 TANNING SALON P/T help needed, must be out­ going, friendly & ready to make people look & feel goodl Low stress environm ent. 937 E. Broad way Suite2, Brdwy/Marketplace. Apply in person. TANNING SALON P/t help needed, must be out­ going, friendly, & ready to make people look & feel good. Low stress environment. 937 E. Broadway Ste. 2, Brdwy/Mar­ ketplace. Apply in person. ARIZONA REPUBUCAN PARTY NEEDSYOUI PART-TIME HRS. S6-WHR. MAT SUUIYAN 957-7770 M esa • 8 3 3 - 4 4 3 6 R e d L io n ' s L a P o sa d a R e so r t Sc o ttsd a le COME JOIN OUR TEAM at Red Lion's La Posada Resort. W e are looking fo r guest-oriented in d ivid u als th at enjoy a great w orking environm ent as w ell as advancem ent opportunities. Call our job hotline at 840-9767 for job openings and interview hours. HELP WANTEDSALES LOOKING FOR energetic & per­ sonable sales clerks to help w/ overflow calls & learn our pro­ duct line. We are a young & growing co. manufacturing au­ tomotive accessories. Call Mark at 371-1956. START NOW HIRING FOR Promotional sales. We’ve got a fun, part time job for you...flexible evening hours, convenient Tempe loca­ tion and above average earn­ ings four exp reps earn over $25/hour) those interested in sales mid marketing careers en­ couraged to apply. Please call 9 2 1-7755 for personal inter­ view. C L U C K -U Come join the Cluck-U chicken team. We are now hiring deliv­ ery drivers. Earn $8-12 per hr. A lso hiring cooks, counter help, cocktail servers, bouncers & chicken mascots. Apply in person 855 S. Rural Rd.. B L I M P IE Help Wanted days & w eek­ ends, 4-6 hrs/day. Apply in person, Blimpie, 91 i E. Broad­ way. JOHNNY ROCKETS Now hiring morning cashiers, supervisors & assistant mgrs, ft/pt. Fashion Square Mall. Apply in person 423-1505. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch servers. Apply in person M-F 10am-5pm, 5001 E. Washington. East of 48th St. WANTED HOST/ESS part time $4.50/hr plus 1% total sales. Baby Kay's Cajun Kitchen. Contact Theresa at 998-0279. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE BABYSITTER WANTED to take care of 2yr old girl w/ light housekeeping duties. M,W, every other F. 7:30-3pm , call Ana 496-6126. CHILD CARE PriesVUniv. Mom 15 yrs exp. Refs. Fenced yd, no smoking, no pool. 967-5904. EXP. NANNIES wanted. We care about your needs. Li/Lo, ft/pt $200-500/w k . •♦♦C C A 840-3556*** MAC ADOBE illustrator de­ signer pt flex hrs. The Sign Fac­ tory 894-6055. Univ./McC.lintock SUMMER JOB-Nanny 1/i I/o for 1 toddler Jun-Jul $500$700mo. 44th &Camlbck 5539832 lv msg THE STATE PRESS Classified department needs an articulate people-person student with good math and spelling skills to work 11 to 2 M on-Friday. A ply in person to Pat at the State Press info desk in the north basement of the Mathews Center today! We need you to start now! Questions? Call Jack­ ie Eldridge 965-6555. PT RECEPTIONIST/ pd intern small Scotts. insur. agency. Di­ versified Concepts 945-5444. PA R T-TIM E EV E N IN G S •Paid T raining W e W o n A round Y o u r S ch ed u le SUM M ER JO B S TEACHER ASSISTANT (tod­ dlers) for Montessorri School in S, Scottsdale p/t & f/t 945-1121 Tlie valley’s finest mar­ k et research firm is look­ in g for interview ers. We offer flexible sch ed u lin g a n d a p r o fe ssio n a l s e t ­ tin g , sta r tin g a t $ 6 per hoür. Excellent advance­ m ent possibilities. CaU Manny at M B 7SS - Higginbotham A ssociates Are YOU looking for a JOB this SUMMER*? I'm looking for someone who likes kids and would like to be a companion to my 8 year old son from 7am to 3pm. You have to love swimming, tennis, rollcrblading, and o ther active sports. M ust have a car and be willing to have fun while I am working. I need som eone Mori-Fri. during July, August, and first week o f September. Gall 460-3851 NC M , Inc. W E S T E R N T E M P O R A R Y S E R V IC E S 7 7 7 W . S o u th ern # 2 1 5 YMCA RESIDENT summer camps seeking counselors to work with children between the ages o f 7-14. Located in Pre­ scott and Mayer. P lease call 254-1571 for an application. F O O D S g V lC I^ LIVE-IN nanny for summer, 3 children, NE Scottsdale. Kim 661-6398. No Selling THE W O R K O U T S ID E . Meet new people every day in Tempe sunshine. Looking for well groomed, outgoing person to work for progressive down­ town management organization as tourist greeter & street am­ bassador. P/T weekends. If in­ terested, call Ken at Downtown Tempe Community, 921-2300. Leave message. HELP WANTED- HELP WANTEDCLERICAL and leave message. excellent customer service abilities. TEMP to hire positions with paid training. Tempe location. Apply immediately! 8970 INTERNS P/T Journalism/ Com­ m unications major to assist publisher & editor- Mac knowl­ edge a must. Scuba interest a plus. Fax res to 955-9608. MERCHANT ASSISTANCE SEE OUR DISPLAY A D IN TODAY'S PAPER. 89 KAW NINJA ZX600R, full jet kit stage 3 w / yosh pipe, new tires & tags, 9k miles, light scratches, $2150 obo, 949- HELP WANTEDGENERAL Center, in partnership with Western Temporary Services is now hiring full time and part time customer service reps. These posi­ tions requite 35 wpm, computer with windows experience and 1988 HURRICANE 1000 Kerker exhaust, Metzeller tires, looks & runs great. $3600 obo. Rob 970-1066 HELP WANTEDGENERAL GREAT CHANCE TO HAVE FUN AND GET PAID ASK ABOUT OUR FIRST TIME BUYER PROCRAM M OTORCYCLES HELP WANTEDGENERAL If you are looking for a full-time or part-time job, here are T at Mora good rea­ sons, just in from our home office in Tempe AZ.wtiy you should call NCM, Inc. TOP TEN LIST #10 Y o u r C re d it C a rd B ills A re M o re T han Y o u r T u ition #9 S e t Y o u r O w n S ch ed u le #8 Y o u r P a re n ts N ew N um ber is 1-800-K ID -LO A N #7 W ow! T h e G re a t C o-w orkers #6 Your TV Remote Has A Pet Name #5 $7/H our G u aran teed, P lu s B o n u ses #4 T h e A T M A ctu a lly Lau gh ed A t Y o u Y esterd ay #3 O n e M other O f A S ig n in g B on u s #2 P a id T rain in g. N o E xp e rie n ce N ecessary #1 It's StHI A F re e C a ll 894-9816 HELP WANTEDF g O D JIW IC ^ GOURMET COFFEE Cart/ Zona Cafe, downtown, w ill train, flex hrs, $5.50-6.50/hr., please come in between 10 & 2 M-F. 201 N. Central Concourse W e are hiring for a variety o f temporary position s in th e Phoenix, Scottsdale and E. V alley areas. If you have office skills such as typing, word processing, reception, data entry, clerical, etc. w e can put y o u to work for our m an y professional c lien ts. Work 1 day, 1 w eek or all summer! Please call for an app ointm en t. Phoenix T em pe Scottsdale 264-4582 966-1100 948-2225 STIVERS TEM PO RARY PERSONNEL - INC. . CONTRACT RECRUITER MicroAge, a19 year old Tempe based company with 20Q0+ employees is expanding its outttound telemarketing reps. To assist in this effort we are creating the position of contract recruiter for the ASU Campus. Candidate must be self starter with an entrepreneurial spirit. Understanding of business a plus. This position is extremely flexible and can be adjusted to your schedule. Income is determined by the quantity o f qua! ified candidates recruited. This could be your future business you can start today. NC M , Inc. C all 829-3640 2020 S. MW,Suite 200* Tempe, AZ85282 MicroAge •Work around school schedule Apply in person to 8655 E. Via de Ventura, H300 Scottsdale, or Fax resume to 991-2826 Visit our booth at the Collegiate JobFair April 29th. E xcellent E m ploym ent O p p o rtu n ities Wè offen ■Career advanawt ojiportantíes »Flexible hourstailored to fit yooj sthedak *Paid trainiag per howto start •Valuable customer emito tninag C all T oday fo r m o re infoi 602- 731-3151 P a g i;e Monday, April 24,1995 State P ress HELP WANTEDCH1LD CARE JO B OPPOOTUNITIgS^ NANNY NEEDED prefer Uve in references required. Must be ex­ cellent w/ toddler willing to do some light cooking and house­ keeping n/s flex w / nanny’s schedule C all for appt. 8381346 M-Th 967-5908 F-Sun. VETS OFFICE -p/t mornings, outgoing personality wanted for super clinic/staff. Duties in­ clude front & back. Computer­ ized. Salary DOE 997-6313 TYPING/WORD PERSONALS P R O C g g lN G ^ you nave a wonderful birthday! You are an awesome Sigma! £ ? & mine, Tanya W TYPING/WORD P R O C | g jN G = MISCELLANEOUS WRITE STUFF. Fast, profes­ sional, reasonable WP and D IF services. Terln papers, theses, resumes, etc¿ APA/MLA. Beth 963-3537. r F iller tryouts being held on Apr. 25-27 at 5:15 PEW Gym. Pick up info at MU info desk or the SRC 9 6 5 -3 5 9 6 / 4208928. SWIM INSTRUCTOR wanted for mobile swim program. WSI, cpr & first aid. P/t, teaching ages 3 -10. $ 7-9 per hr., doe. Please call 971-3993. JO B OPPORTUNITIES AGGRESSIVE SPORTS Nutri­ tion & Training Go. in Chan­ dler. Immediate openings. 3452514 ask for Tyler. ALASKA SUMMER jobs. Earn up to SbOOO-f/mo-Fishing in­ dù st ry. Free tran sportat ion , room & board! N o exp nec. 818-774-1199 ext A4884S. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUY THE business that put me through college. Arts and crafts business for sale, best offer. Chris 970-0959 START YOUR own p/t busi­ ness. Earn 10,000+ per month. 24 hour message 926-8874. SPORTS & RECREATION ASU GOLF course- g o lf in­ structions Sat, groups, juniors, and women programs starting 4/22. Call 784-4839 early sign ' up receives xtra discount. COPYWRITER/CUSTOMER Sve Rep Tempe marketing com­ munications firm looking for entry level Copywriter with cus­ tomer service background. Send resumé to: PHP Creative Supvr, 2323 W. 14th St. #409 Tempe AZ 85281. PRE-HEAT SHOOTOUT CRUISE SHIPS & Vacation re-sorts now hiring! Earn up to $2500+/m onth working for thesecompanies. World travel &exotic resorts. Free transportation, room & board ! No experience nec. 818-705-3416ext#C488 A A CRUISE Ships Hiring! Earn big $$$ + free world travel (Car­ ibbean, Europe, Hawaii, etc.) Summer/permanent, no exp nec. Guide. (919)929-4398 ext C l 015 April 29-30,1995 4612 N. 28th Street in Phoenix D ivision Types: Championship, Men’s Open. Men’s 6 f t and Under, Young M en's (15-18 yrs.), Co-Ed, W om en's Open and All New Individual Grouping Entry Forms available a t: ■ Participating Oshmans Sporting Goods, Indian School Park Clubhouse, Houlihan's Restaurant . (Biltmore Fashion Park location only), and Bally's Health and Fimess (40th Street St Indian School Road) o r Leave a Message at 2 7 4 4365 o r m ail to: KNS Events, P .0 , Box 45001, Phoenix, A Z 85064 EARN MONEY reading books. High income potential- For de­ tails call 202-298-1051. GREAT PT/FT summer job in ‘travel industry. C hoose your location . Income to $ 10000. For information write LeisureTyme, 3850 E. Flamingo Rd., Suite 164, Las V egas NV 89121. INVESTMENT CONSULTING firm moving to N.Scottsdale in June. Looking for 2 people di­ verse clerical & research duties. Knowledge o f n/oir facility w/ investments & computers a +. N/S office. Resume to Sentinel Pension Institute 140 Prospect A ve Hackensack NJ 07601 or fax to 201-487-1133. NATIONAL PARKS Hiring Seasonal & full-tim e em ploy­ ment available at National Parks, Forests & W ildlife Pre­ serves. B en efits + .bonuses! C all 1-206 -5 4 5 -4 8 0 4 ext. N59183. A LA SK A JO B S Fisheries. Earn up to $3,000-$6,000+ per month. Room & Board ¿¿Transportation! Mate or Female. No experience necessary! (206) 545-4155 e x t A59185 A S I2 ON A Ä s CAMELBACK HIGH SCHOOL CRUISE SHIPS hiring- Earn up to $2Q00/month. WOrld travel. Seasonal & full-time positions. No exp. necessary- For in fo .’ Call 1-206^634-0468 ext. C59186 : ' ADOPTION PREGNANT? Hispanic / Caucasian couple would like to open their hearts & home to your newborn-’2 yrs old. Please call 800-7594145. WARM & LOVING profes­ sional couple seeks to adopt infant. Comfortable home, play­ ful puppy, summers in CA & Italy w/large extended family. Pis call Ellen & Mauro collect at 916453-861L SERVICES ASTRAL IN SIGHTS -KNOW your friends & enem ies. Prof prepared personality pro­ files. Amazing accuracy,send $12 dob,time&place of birth {if known)to 4-3,8458 1$. McDon­ ald Ste. 258 Scottsdale, AZ 85250 CASH FOR C ollege. 900,000 grants available. Qualify imme­ diately. 1-800-243-2435.(Prpcessing fee $79 if you qualify. No fee, if. you don’t quali­ fy.)^! 500.00 guaranteed. P resented by IM I» ® i w TO THE guy in SOC that never takes notes, you have die most beautiful eyes ! have ever seen! Student Ree. Center Put your team together now before the heat h its Du courts! D eadline: A p ril 24,1995 HEALTH & FITNESS W N A N W N ! r reports, theses, resumes. Fast turnaround. Laser quality. Townsend W/P, Maureen, 955, 0969. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. N eed it fast? Cidl Jessie, 945-5744. RESTAURANTS M R |_=¡±_ ¡_ A SU AREA, APA/M LA exp. IBM /laser, W P5/6, transcrip­ tion. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime GOLF ATTENDANT host/hostess exp a plus to operate club cleaning service great money and great hours 922-8794. WHY TYPE it yourself? Let a prof. Secretary/ASU grad, han­ dle your papers, th eses, and class notes w / TLC, Laser, fax, rush orders ok! Theresa 9241976. C a ñ a r F k lr ‘HS Gat a ]a m p a n th a cn m p a titu n a d th a -1 1 p m i i j n q m l rm tm tM : 1 NATURAL PROGESTERONE therapy available for PMS & menstrual irregularities. Call ."Always A Woman", Madeline Kasian, NP, 732-9744. in a Friendly A tm osphere! 1 M onth UNLIMITED O N U N IV E R S IT Y J u s t 2 B lo c k s E a st o f R u r a l 10c W IN G S D R A FT S S1 1301 E. U n iv e rsity ^ ( N e x tto B e a u v a ls ) Bud. Bud Light Mon-Thur 3-7 p.m. Sat T1 a.m.*5 p.m. Sun 12-9 p.m. “ BANDERSNATCH 5th.Si & Forest BREWPUB Come jo in Tempe's best happy hour 3-7PM M -F koochooloo I Hom e Phone B usin ess Phone A ddress City, State Zip Live M usic W anted: W ait staff SPMS P A V IA Friends Don't Let Friends I $2 OFF ANY PIZZA If^ou believe you meet these requisites I “ * 807-2800. I 1 2 ' o r 16" 1 C o u p o n P e r P iz z a D in e -ln o r P i c k - U p Eat Burgers 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 Nam e Friday. Saturday. Sunday O ur standards and requirements are dis­ cerning. In return, you are well compensated, includes benefits. I ASU Box 8 7 1 5 0 2 Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds w ili be given, but if you need to can­ ce l your ad a credit wtt be held on account for future advertising. 411S. M ill Ave. V 921-3505 _j P IZ Z A & 829-1737 your mate. SCORPIO (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) Okay, your time has come to be a little frivolous financially. So go out and treat yourself to that new suit or dress you’ve been eyeing. It is also a good idea to get out and be sociable. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec 21) I f you gam ble, you are most certainly a loser. Instead, a little trip to the bank and a smart investment will have you beam­ ing in the winner’s circle in the near future. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Your tendency toward tardiness could severely hurt you and a brewing opportunity. You’re in a phase where you feel you’re in a rut. The best remedy is to join an organization that w ill enliven your social life. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Family closeness is very impor­ tant, so initiate a social gather­ ing of family members in your area. D on’t ignore any unfin­ ished chores or you will regret . it. Work first and play later, PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) You’re spending too much tipie worrying and working on your job. Please don’t neglect family responsibilities at this time, and most importantly, don’t neglect yourself. Y O U B O R N T O D A Y can make your personal relation­ ships more com plicated than they need be. Be sure to let oth­ ers know how you feel. You’re quite perceptive in social issues and would make a good critic o f the community and its val­ ues. Politics, arts and sciences are ares in which you excel and which appeal to you. You also make an excellent teacher or counselor. Birthdate of: Richard M. Daley, politician; Eric Bogosian, actor; Shirley MacLaine, actress. © 1995 King Features Syndicate, Inc. •Daily d rin k specials •1/2 Price appateasers ZOE Pre-Rush dinner Monday, May 1st 6pm. Welcome to eve­ ryone. Get to know the hros be­ fore next Fall. Questions please call Jason Shapiro at 990-0648. I F r a n c k D ra k e = = State Press Classifieds M atthew s Center, Basem ent SERVICES. N C » W e ore seeking qualified individuals for P-T/Perm. in-home child care positions. SAVANNA ROSANNA is a cool kid, ste Waves and knows ter multiplication tables. Classified Ad Order Form Be strong & let time teal things out v Ejazeh v RESTAURANTS/ BARS Call for Great Specials! $3495 PERSONALS e INTERGROUP RELATIONS Theatre Troupe Rehearsal spon­ sored by Leadership 2000. Monday, January 30, 5: 30 p.m. MU Programming Lounge Lower L evel. N o experience: necessary. A ll students w el­ come. Join us in making a dif­ ference on campus. Call Trey Manning, 784-9369 for more info. k - GREAT TAN RESTAURANTS/ BARS M IV H SERVICES Get■A AFFORDABLE SECRETARIAL-Desktop publishing, p/u & dlvry, color, 7 days/eves.921-8328 FREE MOVIE posters while sup­ plies last! State Press Classified Advertising Dept. Matthews Cen­ ter Basement. MALES 18-24 lean, healthy, nonsmokers, wanted for a stu­ dy. $600 offered. Study re­ quires 4 short hospital stays. Call Nicole 945-8923. FR EE TA N w ith a n y package $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP, Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. „ WANTED Release Your Stress from the D a l TYPING/WORD PROCESSING AO KIM B and Cari M Happy Birthday - Love your Sisters sssb s For Monday, April 24,1995 ARIES (March 21 to April 19). You are entering a transitional period and must be willing to. make changes and sacrifices. More importantly, you must be w illin g to com prom ise fairly both on the job and at home, TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You and your mate have a mis­ understanding-in the making, so keep the Tines o f communica­ tion op en . D o n ’t be em bar­ rassed to discuss intimate prob­ lems. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) A shadow from your past is lurking! Whether it be a former employer or lover, do be very careful how you receive this person. Your penchant for stub­ bornn ess w ill w ork in your favor. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You have accom plished a lot more than you realize during the past six months and your life is in for a very big change. It’s time to work out a schedule and plan a possible move, per­ sonally or professionally. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) There are times when you are your own worst enemy, but you must remember to be your best friend instead. Don’t allow this c o n fu sio n to sh ow in your improving romantic life. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) A dqar friend o f yours is very depressed and it is imperative that you become aware o f this. H ow ever, you are pushing yourself physically and your health could be in jeopqrdy. Pay more attention to this. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Your penchant for a very cre­ ative mind will impress some­ o n e w ho is grow ing c lo se to you, so don’t be afraid to use your imagination. A little spicy surprise will absolutely impress State Press back issues can be picked up a t th e Inform ation Desk in the Basement o f M atthews C enter SERVICES LATIMER Y o u r In d iv id u a l H o ro sc o pe CUSTOMIZED RESUMES, start INSTRUCTION at 5/$25. Professional & prompt. Call for info. John 482INTERIOR DECORATING- Be 9325. ■ - ' • an interior decorator in ju st 6 months. American Institute of I W ANT IT NOW! Interior Design. Classes starting monthly. 946-9601 Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. On campus! 966-1984. ^ r t u r e Y îu r KINKO’S COPY Center makes (M u sical g o u f the grade! Get reports, resumes/ & flyers fast! Color copies, Mac­ •guitar lessons* intosh & IBM rental & much 966-9721 more! Open 24 hours! Rural & John Knowlton University, 966-2035. T h e W r ite R é su m é ■HP 9 1 7 -3 1 5 5 M LOSE WEIGHT fast! Natural, safe, effective herbal drops. Call Cheryl 8144308. CHILDREN'S W A PPU K U A H Lb- l tK M papers, MISCELLANEOUS ASU CHEER i i H b k fc S Á : H O P b 19 1301 E . U n iv e r s ity i LI Il l i l ¡I # ..... ......... pdvefstonse# □ OS q H A 1 Private Party 1 4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 104- days, $1.15 per line, per day s Commerciai 1 day $2.00 per line 2 4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 perline, per day 104- days, $1.00 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. m □M Prit» per Day # ol Days Total Bank Cam Number !l Mama an Caed I I I l 0 J Classification Name/Number: ’ Expiration Date 098 066 010 020 061 064 061 077 064 ^ 0B6 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Autom obiles 1, B icycles Books Business Opportunities Com puters FreeLost/Found Sorry, we cannot accept personal ad s through the mall. 068 082 049 101 074 Fundraising Furniture G arageSsles Health & Fitness Help W anted-Chiid Care 072 H elp W anted-Clerical 073 070 071 030 Help W anted-Food Service H elp W anted-General H elp W anted-Saies Homes for Rent 040 102 107 103 066 076 015 120 050 045 Homes for Sale H oussdeaning Instruction Insurance Jew elry Job Opportunities Legal Notices M iscellaneous M iscellaneous for Sale M obile Homes 063 062 090 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 M otorcycles M usic Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling R eal Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Room s for Rent 100 061 058 031 041 060 067 108 105 115 Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condos for Rent Townhomes/Condos for S als Transportation Travel Tutors Typing/W ord Processing Wanted P age 2 0 Monday, April 24,_1995 State P ress