Campus clubs and organizations try for a cut of Super Bowl profits. Page 3 ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ^Copyright. State Press. 1995 Tempe, Arizona MgiPfti An Independent Summer Weekly Campus News Weather Outlook Scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Highs near 105. lows near 80. Movies Where To Find It ...........18 ASASU’s newest VP Love and H um an R em ains hopes to increase student peers into the confusing participation inprogfam s and sometimes twisted by promoting awareness. world o f Generation X relationships. C om ics...................... .......... .15 ........... 12 Horoscopes ..........................19 ..............6 ........... 12 Sports B riefs....... ,...¡...,.12 College L ife............. ............ 13 People ,„..„....17 State P ress T uesday, Ju ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 Page ASASU VP seek s to In crease p ro gram turn outs Student awareness vital for success, new official says B y P a tty Kin g S t a t e P r e ss The Associated Students of ASU’s newest executive officer said awareness is die key to the success of ASASU’s services. “Increasing ... awareness gets to my end goal, and that’s to increase student participation in the events and die pro­ grams that we offer,” said Andrea Van Bemmel, ASASU’s recendy appointed campus affairs vice president. ASASU president Chris Weber selected her for the posi­ tion after former campus affairs vice president Eddie Lopez resigned May 18. Lopez did not publicly disclose reasons for his resignation. Van Bemmel was officially sworn in on Friday. B randy A guilar, who h eld the post during the 1994-95 academ ic y ear, serv ed as in te rim cam pus affairs vice president from May 22 until July 10. Weber made his decision July 10, and members of the ASASU senate voted unanimously last Tuesday to approve Van Bemmel. Van B emmel The senior communication major said she hopes to increase student awareness of services such as the bike co-op, Counseling and Health Advisory Committee and Off-Campus Student Services through the use of low cost media, such as fliers and ads in local news­ papers. She added that she plans to place the fliers in packets given to Freshman Year Experience and orientation students, as well as putting them in campus d u b and dorm mailboxes. Another of Van Bemmel’s goals is the creation of a new campus affairs program within a year, which would offer students financial aid advice. “We could be a reference service and maybe have peo­ ple trained to answer those types of questions,” she said. Weber said that ASASU began accepting applications for a new campus affairs vice president on May 22. Four candidates applied and Van Bemmel was the most quali­ fied, he said. She served as assistant director of ASASU’s state rela­ tions department last spring. Weber said that Van Bemmel has excelled in all her campus leadership roles. “I’m fully confident that she’ll excel as campus affairs vice president,” he said. 30 German grad students study business, American style B y P a t t y K in g S t a t e P r e ss T h irty g ra d u a te stu d e n ts from Germany will spend five weeks at ASU learning about Am erican business and social systems. “The G erm an stu d e n ts fe e l th at America is a key ally and business part­ ner and will become even more so in the fu tu re,” said John S chiacter, an ASU marketing professor. “Since these students are quite likely to be the business, political and military lead­ ers of the future, they feel that the more exposure they get to our economic and social system, the better partners we will be in the future,” he said. The students are all cadets at the Universities of the German Federal Armed nized jointly by ASU’s College of Business Forces, which are located in Munich and and marketing department and the University of German Federal H am burg. The Armed Forces in cadets arrived at 1 Munich. It is spon­ ASU on June 28 and I want to see a different sored by the German w ill attend classes culture, meet different people. Armed Forces. through Aitg. 4. ASU has partici­ They are taking I like the laissez-faire attitude pated in the program courses such as o f Americans. since 1990, and a strategic marketing and international ; --SR ioger S pech t, group o f Germ an students attends the management. While p ro g ra m p artic ip a n t second summer sesat ASU, they are sion each year. e x p e r i e n c i n g —------- — ■ ... __________ __ B arbara Z elle, American Culture by visiting such places as Mill Avenue and Fat an assistant professor of business and eco­ nomics in Munich, said that the cadets want Tuesday. The C ultural exchange p r o g r a m is o r g a - to study in America so they can see how another educational system works. “(They) get a better understanding of business administration and economics by knowing both systems,” she said. Roger Specht, a participant who attends school in Hamburg, said his American stud­ ies offer him a more hands-on approach than what he experienced at home. “In Germany, you are learning more about theoretical parts,” he said. “Here in America, you are making more practical projects and working with companies and enterprises.” He added that he enjoyed being part of the program because he likes the American way of life. “I want to see a different culture, meet different people. I like the laissez-faire attitude of Americans,” he said. S t a t e P r e s s P o l ic e R e p o r t s - R e a l c o p s . R e a l re p o rts . R e a l stra n g e . $ f < K O i** * TUESDAYS Hottest Niteclub) I presents ....¿à ' **Mei CARÜIN JONES BAND 10pm-Close Dollar Daze *]°°m esticDrafts*w e,,s,Burfiers’ fri & sa t Tacos. Machos, Fries & Wines DANCE FACTORY T; The M ighty Lizard D Iap in s the H ottest Techno, Fnnk, Top 40, Hip Hop & Disco Dance Mix in Scottsdale u n til 4:00am. WEDNESDAYS *1 su n DOLLAR PITCHERS REGGAE SUNSPLASH with :^ Grantman and The Island B eat 9PDI-11:30pm | v , Drink specials every nite includes $1.75 domestic draft, $2.50 well drinks & $3.25 Long Island ice teas from 8:OOpm to 10:00pm! GECKOS’ AgTICRHOITRfl GRILL nerves ;sliders, exotic juices & coffee, . along With theSC/ill-EisT DAJfrCP| | g | ¡|! untiT&OOani on ££1 ./SAT. for the ig± PJtfjTY.CROWH: | m J k A *- 4 H M i A fte r h o u r s to 4 :0 0 a m F r i/S a t 7316 E . S te ts o n D r. • S c o tts d a le * 947-1000 DOMESTIC 480Z. PITCHERS |M THURSDAY Burner Madness FRIDAY Mi SATURDAY BAND SUNDAY JASON & THE JELLYBEANS ^> Bureer Madness 1/2 lb. bureer. fries or salad $3.25 MONDAY Acoustic Night RAYMOND 7115SOUTH McCLINTOCK • TEMPE, AZ 85281 • 966-1911 • Booking Info 784-2206 Page 3 Tuesday', Ju ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 St a te P ress Study: 15% o f students w ith o u t health insurance B y P a tty K in g ST a t e P r e ss Tim LJaRocca. an electrical engineering graduate student, will be on his parents’ health insurance plan until August and then will purchase his own. “I just think it’s the responsible thing to do,” he said. “If I didn’t have insurance, I’d be worried about walking across campus.” But LaRocca’s sentiment is hardly uni­ versal. According to a survey, nearly 15 percent of ASU students do not have medi­ cal insurance. The Student A ffairs R esearch and Evaluation office conducted the survey ear­ lier this year after it was commissioned by the Student Health Center staff. Along with determining how many stu­ dents have health insurance, the study showed what types of insurance plans they have and their reasons for using or not using Student Health Services. According to the survey, four out of 10 ASU students who have insurance are cov- ered under their parents’ health plan. Out of the 82.5 percent of undergraduates who have health insurance, moró than half are covered under their parents’ plan. The survey was based on 423 interviews with undergraduate and graduate students. The survey showed that 17.5 percent of undergraduates and 9.3 percent of graduate students have no health insurance coverage. Of those with no health insurance, 81.5 per­ cent said they couldn’t afford it, and 13.8 percent said they didn’t need insurance. Dale Bowen, director of Student Health, said the survey provided his department with some useful information, but no immediate changes are planned based on the results. “We don’t know a way to get cheaper insurance that’s going to provide as much as (the current plan),” he said. Kristin Putnam, a junior accounting major who is covered under her father’s health plan, said she feels fortunate to have insurance. “It’s nice not to have to worry about that Can't afford Insurance Don't need insurance Don’t understand coverage Uninsurable Have pre-existing condition Source: Student Affaire Research arid Evaluation Office This chart breaks down the reasons A SU students do not have insurance. Nearly 20 percent of the student body is uninsured, according to a survey. until after I get out of school,” she said. The 19-year-old said she didn’t think she could afford to purchase insurance herself while in college. “I spend most of my paycheck on my car insurance,” she said. ASU’s clubs try to cash in on Super Bowl w indfall B y D a n M il l e r S t a t e P r e ss A world of merchandising opportunities await Tempe when it hosts Super Bowl XXX in January, and ASU’s clubs and organizations are hoping to cash in on the profits. According to a recent plan, one of the vendors selling ,NFL-licensed merchandise at ASU will give a percentage of profits to the University and, after expenses are deduct­ ed, a yet-to-be-determined percentage will be given to the Student Organization Resource Center to be distributed among clubs and organizations. The NFL has already sent a request for proposal (RFP) to potential vendors. During the week prior to the game, one of the companies will be named the University’s exclusive ven­ dor and will sell products on campus Jan. 25-29. “I think that this is an opportunity for students by bring­ ing in an exclusive vendor,” said Steve Miller, the director of fiscal and administrative operations in the Office of Institutional Advancement, who is helping coordinate the effort. “It increases revenue potential. We felt it was important to protect the campus environment as much as possible.” In addition, ASU’s Super Bowl committee has requested that the vendor consider students for employment during the week it will be on campus. Miller said a plan is in the works to allow any student organization to submit sales requests to Student Affairs by Dec. 15. “It is a great opportunity, first of all, to just get involved with the Super Bowl spirit and sell their own non-licensed merchandise,” said Erica Calhoun, the program coordinator for the Student Organization Resource Center. In die meantime, the NFL sent the RFP to vendors it has dealt with in the past such as Hazelwood’s, Foot Locker,* ARA, Fine Host Crap. and TransAmerica Sprats. A final deci­ SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU I.D.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU'LL O H A T h is ye ar w e're doing it again! E ve ry Sunday (but O N L Y o n S u n d a y), M ike Pu los o f Th e Spaghetti C om pan y will give you one F R E E dinner* for each din ner you order! It's o ur 2-for-1 S U N D A Y A S U S P E ­ C IA L . And its good for the w hole year at o ur Tem pe, P h o enix and Scottsdale locations. S o , dollar fo r dollar, w hen you're hungry and you need a break, you can't beat T h e Spaghetti Com pany! E S P E C IA L L Y O N S U N D A Y S ! W ith 2 din ners for the price o f I I A n y day of the w eek, for lunch o r dinner, T h e Spaghetti Com pany is known fo r a great m eal at an affordable price. But the S U N D A Y A S U S P E C IA L m akes our already terrific prices o v e n b etter! O ur din ners in clude a full-course m eal with a ll the trim­ m in gs - from salad to dessert. O PEN A T 11:00 A.M. TO 11:00 P.M. SU N D A Y SI OPENAT10 A.M. ONGAME DAYSI » ■ i:a T i e « S p a g l i t i G>«*!P»*U RESTA U RA N T PH O B«X SC O TTSD A LE South o n Central Ju et P a sta M cD ow ell 7373 N . S cottsdale R d. Just N orth o f in dtan B e n d x T -* m OLD TOW N TEM PE 4th S t. A M V sion on which vendor is chosen is slated for later this month. “We’re looking at how students can get involved and how students can benefit from m erchandising,” said Associated Students of ASU President Chris Weber, who was a member of the committee that worked to develop A SU ’s proposal. “W hat would be ideal is w hatever arrangements are made be preferential for students.” Calhoun added that students and the campus community as a whole have been the primary concern in the planning process. “As long as I’ve been involved, students have always been die beneficiary,” she said. “The task team’s job is to make sure the entire campus community is considered and kept in the forefront.” Calhoun said an advisory committee will be formed by the beginning of the fall term to review any requests to sell merchandise during Super Bowl week. P a ge 4 State P ress T uesday, Ju ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 R e f u g e e s r e c a ll h o r r o r s o f B o s n ia n W a r More than 600 former Yugoslavs have resettled in the Valley since 1993 B y K elly W e n d e i. § § § É p ,fj S t a t e P ress “War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it." — Gen. William T. Sherman, 1864. F or m ost A rizo n an s, the c o n flic t in the fo rm er Yugoslav Republic is a distant war that appears briefly on the evening news, causing a momentary emotional ripple before the next tragedy is reported. But for Mubera Bucaj of Sarajevo, the war has been an all to real part of everyday life. For two and a half years, she watched as the city of her birth was turned from a beautiful town full of parks and churches into a hellish death zone, raked by snipers and artillery fired from the surrounding hills. “There are no trees, no anything. Everything is abso­ lutely devastated," Bucaj said. The people of Sarajevo have been reduced to burning furniture to survive the, cold mountain winters of Bosnia. Bucaj now lives in Phoenix. She and her family were evacuated by the United Nations last year after her father was wounded and paralyzed from the neck down. No one in Bucaj's family wanted to leave, but medical treatment for their father was a family priority. The politics of survival are w hat m atter m ost in Sarajevo. The people of the besieged city have cast away ethnic and religious differences and cooperate in the daily struggle to stay alive. “We have people in little circles who work together and just try to survive,” Bucaj said. “They are fighting for their lives. “I have neighbors that are Serbs and Croats, and even though it is war, you have real people and real friends who have stayed in the city.” Since the war began in 1991, Sarajevo’s population has dw indled from a h a lf o f a m illion to less than 200,000. More than 300,000 Sarajevans have fled the city. Many ethnic Serbs in the newly independent countries of Croatia, Bosnia and other regions of the fractured for­ mer Yugoslavia have taken up arms in what they view as a legitimate bid for sovereignty. Although the war has made life extremely difficult, Bucaj said Sarajevans are taking it in stride. “It is unbelievable, but people are getting used to this kind of madness,” she said. “After two years, 1 really didn't care. Bullets and shells are all around you, but it’s like an everyday thing.” Bucaj faced a daily 20-mile commute through artillery and sniper fire to attend school and visit the hospital where her father lay wounded. Although she was never injured during her trips, she saw many others killed. “There were many times when people who were far- Kelly Wendel/State Press Members of the Bosnian-American community protest Sunday at Patriot’s Square in downtown Phoenix, catling for the lifting of the UN imposed arms embargo. The people of Sarajevo have adopted a fatalistic atti­ tude about the mayhem that rules their lives, Bucaj said. “We have a saying — everybody has a bullet. If there is a bullet out there that is yours, it is going to gel you.” Bucaj’s 11 -year-old sister learned that hard lesson one day when she arrived two minutes late to school and found her classroom pulverized by an artillery shell. “She came into the classroom and saw her teacher’s brain on the blackboard,” Bucaj said. “Can you imagine that? She is only a little child, but that becomes a normal situation. You have to pick up the pieces, because if you don’t, the dogs will come and eat them.” The trials o f living in a war zone have toughened Bucaj, who is in her mid-20s. Coping with daily routines of death and pain made her realize she was a lot stronger than she thought. “I didn’t know I was that strong until 1 got into this particular situation.” And despite the emotional pain and suffering from the war, Bucaj maintains a positive attitude and holds no grudges. ■ “I was taught not to hate.” Providing refugee assistance Since arriving in the United States, Bucaj has turned to helping other refugees from her war-tom country. As a caseworker for the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Phoenix, Bucaj has helped Serbs, Bosnians and Croats resettle in the Valley. The IRC rinds the refueees housing, employment and k group of wounded and sick Bosnian Muslim refugees in the Srebrenica enclave Sunday wait in the Srebrenica hospital for reatment. The Bosnian Serb army overran Srebrenica last Tuesday driving out more than 20,000 Muslim refugees. aids in obtaining everything from legal and medical ser­ vices to providing translators and transportation. Since refugee status was granted to people from Yugoslavia in 1993, more than 600 refugees have reset­ tled in the Valley. In addition, Phoenix was the first city in the United States to receive refugees from Bosnia. One of those refugees is Zineta Hruni. At the age of 16, she has witnessed far more devastation than children should. Forced to flee her home in Prijedor, Zineta, her mother and grandparents left only with the clothes on their back and a few personal possessions. “Serbs came to my town and told us that if we didn’t go, they would kill us,” Hruni said. “They killed my neighbor and all the men over 16 so they wouldn’t fight.” The Hruni family joined hundreds of thousands of other refugees on a mass exodus to a safer place. They first wound up at a Croatian refugee camp. “There was not enough food, and there were 17 to 18 people per room,” Hruni said. “We only got two meals a day, and we had to have permission to leave the camp.” Hruni and her family left the camp, arriving in the United States just over a year and a half ago. Yugoslavia’s turbulent history They are the newest arrivals to a community with more than 5,000 Americans o f Yugoslav descent. To them, names like Mostar and Sipova aren’.t places on another planet; They are towns and villages spread out across the eth­ nic patchwork quilt that is the former Yugoslav Republic. Places where they played as children, prayed as a family and lived in a multi-ethnic community, where religion wasn’t that important. But religion and ethnicity are part of the fabric woven into the lives and history of the country. Yugoslavia has always been an occupied land. After the Ottoman invasion and subsequent occupation in the 15th century, many Serbs converted to Islam, some for personal reasons, others to m aintain their wealth and privilege, while many were forcibly converted. By 1882, the Ottomans had lost control of the area and were replaced by the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which ruled the Yugoslav region until 1919, when the empire was dismantled. Cobbled together from parts of Serbia, Montenegro and Austria-Hungary, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was created. Unfortunately, the unification had little support among the states of Bosnia, Croatia, Slovenia and Serbia. This would become glaringly obvious with the German invasion of 1941, as the Nazis manipulated group against group in their bid to control Yugoslavia. One man who knows well how World War II affected his country is Serbian-American Vladimir Brodich. The Scottsdale resident, who came to the United States 46 years ago, w itnessed how the Nazis used groups of Croatian fascists and Muslims to do their dirty work. As he thumbs through the 26-year-old book Catholic Terror Today, the tall, trim retired chemist pointed out a photo of an uncle. The man was tortured to death while grinning tormentors mugged for the camera, the heart of Tuesday, July 18,1995 St a t e P r ess Uncle Milos in their hands. Another uncle suffered even worse, as his family and young Brodich watched. “They strip p ed him naked and nailed horseshoes to his feet, put him in chains, put a crown of barbed wire on his head and marched him to a region in Ljurica. By then, blood poisoning had formed. “They took him to a cave that had been formed by a series of underground rivers, and where they had pushed thousands o f others over the edge down into this big cave, still alive. That is where my uncle finished.” Many of his relatives died in a mas­ sacre at a Serbian Orthodox Church, bru­ tally ripped apart by the knives o f the Ustashi, a paramilitary group of Croatian fascists. W§? have a saying — everybody has a bullet. I f there is a buffet ou t m ere that is yours, it is going to get you. — M u b e ra B ucaj o f S arajev o gious problem s beneath a jack-booted heel. Brodich tried numerous times unsuc­ cessfully to escape Yugoslavia before suc­ ceeding in 1949. “The communist regime was totally unacceptable to me,” he said. Although the current war in Yugoslavia is a long way off, Brodich has kept up on the affairs of his homeland since he fled. Books w ritten in C yrillic and English detailing the Serbian struggle line his oakpaneled den. While thumbing through the books, it’s clear he holds no anger toward Croats and Bosnians. “You cannot hate Muslims or Croats,” Brodich said. “We are all just people.” He said the break up of the Yugoslav federation in 1991 left the Serbs no choice but to take up arms. “When this unravel­ ing took place, the atrocities o f 1941 began all over again. “When the Serbian people saw what started happening they said, ‘OK, we could live with the Bosnians and Croats in Yugoslavia. We could live with them in the United States. We could live with them on Mars. But we cannot live with the Bosnians and Croatians in their state,’ ” Brodich said. “They killed one-third of us in 1941. They plan to kill the rest of us now.” Page 5 «sir Media bias? “Some of my remaining family mem­ bers witnessed it, and they said the blood ran down the steps of the Serbian Church like a river and into the street,” Brodich said. Others relatives died by torture, of star­ vation, in concentration camps or were m urdered. More than 600,000 Serbians w ere the victim s o f C roatian-B osnian Muslim genocide, including 47 members of Brodich’s family. O nly an u n cle, three co u sin s and B ro d ich h im se lf su rv iv ed the fa scist onslaught in Yugoslavia during W orld War II. In the massive confusion following the end of the war. many of those responsible for the genocide were able to slip out of the A llied dragnet. Brodich said many C roatian fascists escaped to Chile and Argentina, aided by the Collegio Croatoa, a C ath o lic -C ro atian in stitu tio n in the Vatican. Yugoslavia was also tom by political strife as the Yugoslav communist party struggled for power, led by Marshal Tito. T he en su in g com m unist v icto ry en a b le d T ito to put a stranglehold on Yugoslavia, crushing any ethnic and reli­ H Although the international media has p o rtray ed the c o n flic t in the form er Yugoslav Republic as an explosion of reli­ gious and ethnic hatred, a representative o f the B osnian S erb P ro v isio n al Government said the reasons behind it are actually political. “The real cause of the war has been the refusal of the Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia to subject themselves to the rule of Croats and Muslims, following the refusal of the Croats and Muslims to stay under the joint fram ew ork of Y ugoslavia,” said Srdja Trifkovic, president of the Serb National A lliance o f Great Britain and a form er chief of staff to Crown Prince Alexander of Yugoslavia. Trifkovic said the war began on the negotiating tables of the European Union, formed in 1991 to turn Europe into one common market with one common curren­ cy- : “The Yugoslav Republics were told by the E uropean U nion that unless they applied as sovereign and independent states now, they wouldn’t be able to apply later on,” said Michael Stenton, a profes­ sor o f B alkan S tudies at C am bridge University in England. I M u s lim s IW m C r o a t s I I Se rb s A u stria Kelly W encM/State Press Vladimir Brodich thumbs through a 26-year-old book, Catholic Terror Today, which describes facist atrocities committed in Yugoslavia during WWll. A picture of an uncle of his who was tor­ tured to death appears on the left page of the book. “T his ac celerated the b reak -u p of Yugoslavia, as states proclaim ed their independence, and were in turn recog­ nized by the European Union,” Stenton said. Both Stenton and Trifkovic recently visited the Valley as part of a national tour to present Serbian concerns about the war in Bosnia. Trifkovic criticized the media for turn­ ing a complex issue into one of right and wrong. “The black and white treatment of the problem by the American media presents part of the problem of the analysis and intelligent debate about Yugoslavia,” he said. “Every newspaper and TV station in the United States is taking broadly the same line. The Serbs are the aggressors, and everybody else is fighting for perfect­ ly legitimate rights, while there isn’t a sin­ gle Serb right which is legitimate.” Members of the local Serbian commu­ nity have also taken offense to what they view as media bias. “The new s m edia is d e fin ite ly not objective,” said the Rev. Janko Trbovic, a Serbian O rthodox p riest at St. S av a’s Church in Phoenix. “The media is one­ sided, and they are definitely on the side o f the Muslims.” Trbovic also blames the UN for not doing m ore to save the Y ugoslav Republic, and says “outside influences” ig n ite d the flam es o f n atio n alism in Croatia and Bosnia. “Unfortunately, foreign powers have interests in helping one side or the other, but no one is helping the Serbs,” he said. Serbian aggression? An e x p lo d e d view of Bosnia (above) show s the ethic diversity in the war-torn country; The figures are based on a 1991 c e n s u s o f the region. Souroa: UnhwaMy at Baly d« Graphic by Mark Kramar/Stata Praaa To Ily as D ed ich , p re sid e n t o f the Bosnian-American Cultural Association, the conflict in Yugoslavia is not a civil war over self-determination. “It’s a war o f aggression from Serbia, and a war of aggression by certain Serbian fa c tio n s,” he said. “The o b jectiv e o f Serbian aggression is to create a Greater Serbia,” He also calls the righting an attempt to gain territory for the Serbs, “They basical­ ly want to eliminate the Muslim popula­ tion, take over all the land from Serbia proper to the borders of Croatia.” Dedich also downplays the ethnic and religious aspect of the war as portrayed by the international media. “Look at the Bosnian Army. It consists of the same percentages as the population itself. Roughly 50 percent Muslim, 20 per­ cent Croat, and 30 percent ethnic Serb,” he said. “This isn’t a religious war. The seco n d -in -co m m an d o f th e so -called Muslim-led Bosnian Army is actually an ethnic Serb.” “I can tell you this — the people fight­ ing for Bosnia are righting for their home­ land, for their homes. They are fighting for their pieces of earth.” 1 0 a wag o f aggression from and a war o f aggressim rb y cwftain Serbian fa c ­ tio n s. The o b je c tiv e o f Serbian aggression is to cre­ ate a Greater Serbia. — Ilyas D edich^ ^ idejgM |the B osnian-A i^K an Cultural jP ^ s s o c p n o n The large military balance in favor of the Serbs enabled them to capture 70 per­ cent of the territory and right the war on their terms, Dedich said. “There isn’t a whole lot of hand-tohand combat going on. It is mostly civil­ ians getting hurt, in a shopping mall or in open market. They are getting cremated by shells lobbed from miles away,” he said. ■ '. Despite the rebel Serbs advantage in military hardware and territory captured, Dedich still feels the Bosnian Army can win if the international arms embargo is lifte d . He b lam es G erm any, F ran ce, B ritain, the U nited States, R ussia and T urn to Yugoslavia, page 8. O p in io n Page 6 State P ress T uesday, J u ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 S t a t e P ress »‘A time to heal’ ditorial The Vietnam War finally ended last week. Twenty years after a chopper airlifted the U.S. ambassador off the roof of the besieged American embassy in Saigon, President Clinton announced that an American ambassador would return to Vietnam. After 20 years, the United States extended its hand in friendship to its former enemy, announcing that it was “a time to heal.” This wound is one that needs healing. The nation was tom apart in a domestic firestorm triggered by Vietnam, and still hasn’t com pletely come back together. Never mind that this war was fought in die 1960s and ‘70s. Images still remain strong after 20-plus years. S tudents m owed down by Ohio N ational Guardsmen at Kent State. Protesters sending draft cards up in flames. Recendy-returned veterans being spit on as they returned stateside, the words “baby killer” ringing in their ears. A naked girl, crying in pain, amts held out to her sides; an inadvertent victim of a napalm strike. A Viet Cong guerrilla, grimacing as a bullet fired by Saigon’s police chief slams into his brain. Few things can tear apart a nation quicker than a lost war. And this one tore us apart viciously, perhaps worse than anything since the Civil War. Finally, thankfully, we can begin to heal. With the normalization of relations with Hanoi, we can close die book on one of the darkest chapters in American history. But the wound is still open, and for some, trying to d o se it is painful. Many Vietnam vets are under­ standably upset about Clinton’s action. They see it as kowtowing to a nation that waged a war o f aggres­ sion against a U.S. ally, a nation that still hasn’t folly accounted for the 2,204 Americans still classified as missing in action from the Vietnam Conflict. Through all this, though, we should listen to the voice of Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who spent nearly six years in a North Vietnamese POW camp after being shot down. McCain, of all people, has the right to be angry at V ietnam . A fter being to rtu red by his N orth Vietnamese captors, we would not be surprised at all if McCain lashed out against the government that held him against his will. The senator acknowledged that the MIA issue was not frilly resolved yet, and that the United States con­ sidered it far from closed. Yet he also agreed that now was a time to begin the healing process. Hanoi is far from a model government. It remains unabashedly Marxist, and told Washington that it would not reform its human rights record, normaliza­ tion or not But Vietnam has made significant process on the MIA issue. T rying to account fo r M IAs is an extremely difficult task. McCain has noted that one of the ugly facts about war is that “a lot of people are not always accounted for.” Yes, 2,204 MIAs is a significant number — but pales next to Korea’s 8,000 MIAs, or World War II’s 78,000. The comparatively low number of remaining MIAs from Vietnam is evidence that good faith efforts are being made to account for our missing ser­ vicemen. And there is hope that, through open trade, we can help move Vietnam down the path to a more demo­ cratic society. Our 20-year-old embargo against Vietnam certainly hasn’t done the job. Perhaps one day, Pepsi and American Express can bring about what the United States Army could not — a unified, democratic, open Vietnamese Republic. Coke beats napalm any day. STATE PRESS 5 TAFF Dante should’ve gone to the movies Ever spent two hours trapped V like a damned soul writhing in I— I _ c— the pits of Hell? I ^JA M ES And paid for it? FRUSETTA You must not be hitting the | — movie theaters much, then. C all it a ritu a l, but I ’ve alw ays en jo y ed ca tc h in g the summer blockbusters. A chance I to spend c a tc h -u p tim e w ith I friends, a nice place to take a date, something to do with the I fa m ily — w hat c a n b e a t a I movie? And on a collegiate bud- I get, I ’m not always able to take in the latest films during the school year, a fact I attempt to remedy during break. One wonders why, since I usually look back thinking, “Gah. I wasted money to see these bombs?” Maybe there’s subliminal messages in the TV pre­ views, addictives in the popcorn butter or the ushers are hypnotists — but I still seem to drag back to the theater for another year of disappointments. Oh, but there’s still fun to be had at the movies. First is the joy of attempting to park in the local mul­ tiplex’s garage. One can quickly learn three things about American movie culture this way: 1) If the theater seats 300, it has parking for 200; 2) If directions are posted (“Exit Only,” “No Right Turns,” etc.) you can be sure that everyone but you will ignore them; and 3) No matter how early you leave home, after you find a spot, you’ll have to run to make the previews. Ever wonder why crazies in Los Angeles shoot each other on the highways? Because they’ve just attempted to park in a movie garage. Once you’ve finally found a space, you’re looking at shelling out more than $7 apiece for the movie, and the words “special engagement” are slapped on anything the theater thinks it can get away with. And have you seen what’s playing these days? You’ve got your choice between the few Predictable Rom antic C om edies, the score o f Action Adventure Sequels, a couple of Poorly Conceived Science Fiction Movies, the Decent Matinees (come in many varieties) and, yes, the Occasional Classic. Frankly, there’s not much point in seeing them in their entirety, since you’ll see the good parts in the pre­ view. And, since theaters started running ads before the show , i t ’s p re tty m uch the sam e as w atch in g TV, although at home you don’t have to suffer through the insipid Channel 12/Harkins promo. Sadly enough, the ads are still probably better than the movies. C’mon — no matter how good of a review Congo, Batman Forever, Bridges o f Madison County or Judge Dredd got, they’re still terrible (OK, Dredd was just pretty bad, but then I’m a Dredd fan). You might as well proceed directly to Free Willy 2 — at least you know that’s going to be bad. All these film s w ill become the M ystery Science T heater 3000 fodder o f the next decade — me, I ’m dying to see Star Trek: Generations on that Comedy C entral m idnight slot. (If you h av en ’t heard about MST3K, ask your geekier friends — one will know.) Theoretically, the media is supposed to warn us about this. Unfortunately, since i t ’s gradually become bad form to give bad reviews to bad movies if the movies are trendy, popular and w ell-connected (and if the reviewer got neat stuff from the company and a cool junket), reviews aren’t necessarily full of good advice (one exception: the New Times reviews are often better than the m ovies they review ). I usually open up the Republic reviews and head straight for the movie with the worst record. TV is even worse, since good coverage = commercial time = $$$. Unbiased broadcast media, my ass. (Hey! I’ll bet 5 cents this gets edited! Any takers?) Oh, and there’s that movie food issue. I’ve never quite understood this. If you take about a quarter’s worth of popcorn, a 59-cent candy bar and about three cents worth of your favorite carbonated bev­ erage and put a movie screen in front of them, it’s per­ missible by law to inflate their value around 1,000 per­ cent. Elsewhere, it’s something called a trust. Can I do this myself, or it is a special privilege of those who own theater chains and. bathe in money? One hint: jackets with large pockets work wonders. And ya know, the quickie mart charges a lot less ... Sure, maybe movie going used to be fun. But times change, prices rise and the letters “VCR” were finally made into an acronym. And it’s a lot cheaper to say, “Gah, I paid money to rent this?” James Frusetta is a 'graduate student studying Eastern European History. , G R E G Z E M E ID A , Editor D A V ID ST R O W . M anaging Editor DAN MILLER .............................News Editor KELLY WENDEL.w........ ..........................„....Life Editor PATTY KING ..... General Assignment Editor PHOTOGRAPHER: Mark Kramer. COLUMNISTS: Dan Blanco, James Frusetta. A. Marjory Kaminski CARTOONISTS: Stacey Holmstedt, Steve Tansfcy R E PO R T ER S: Tim B axter, RuthAnn Hogue, Lee Newman PRODUCTION: Donna Bowring. Aaron Brutcher, Joe Corrao, Aydee Garcia, Teresa Szy roanski. S tate P ress P h o n e N um bers SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of th e Stffte Press staff as a whole. Board members inçiude: GREG ZEMEIDA DAVID STROW Editor Managing Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam peri­ ods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Information............... .................965-7572 -Newsroom.......... . ................ 965-2292 Advertising................................965-6555 Classifieds........ ........ ......... .......965-6735 T uesday, Ju ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 St a t e P r e ss (DM-(Du Î E iiS i® # / Summer Fun in the MU! Tuesday Tunes • Free Luneh Hour Concerts Weekly at 12:00 Noon in the Mtl Programming Lounge this week featuring the classical music duo Arpeggio • Tuesday,July 18 Tuesday, July 18: E v e r y t h in g Y o u A lw a y s W a n t e d To Know About Sex .... Noon • R a in M a n 7 p .m . Sedona Redrock Pushing the Lim its Saturday, July 22 Arizona Designer $ 1 0 p e r p e r s o n , tr a n s p o r t a t io n o n ly Craftsmen Annual D e p a r t 7 : 3 0 a .m . 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M c C lin to c k • 9 4 7 -2 4 7 0 I (next to Big Surf) E x p ires 8 -1 5 -9 5 “everybody else” for the continuing horror in Bosnia. “The people of Bosnia have their hands tied behind their back and cannot defend themselves. It makes no sense to me that they will not allow people to defend themselves.” While Serbs, Croats and Muslims may disagree on many things, they are united against outside interference“Nobody want U S. forces to go into Bosnia,” Dedich said. “As a matter of fact, they don’t want the United Nations forces there. Why not get the hell outta there, lift the arms embargo and let people defend themselves?” With casualties in the hundreds of thousands, the polit­ ical hierarchy in all the newly independent states have gained the most, using the war as an excuse to maintain a solid grip on power, according to Steven Batalden, an ASU professor of Russian an Eastern studies. “There is a manipulation of popular opinion by the political elites, who have stooped to Using demagoguery, creating enormous violence,” he said. “I don’t trust the leadership in Croatia, Serbia and Bosnia.” Longing for home 111 C o i i i 100 Min. - 872 x 11 While Paper • Expires 8-31-95 M A ILB O X ES E T C It's Not W l ^ P e Do. It's How We Do It-~ 903 S. Rural (south of University) il Tempe • 967-1414 4 1739 E. Broadway (at McClintock) /" 1110 S. Ahn« School Rd. Temp* >829-ÎWWj Mom *946-1001 Summer Weekly Take u» for everything we’ve got' Despite the hatred, agony and destruction her country has suffered, Bucaj longs to return to her home, but is unsure of what awaits. “1 would like to go back, but who knows when this thing will end, and what the situation will be when it is over.” Bucaj said she thinks constantly of her homeland and the relatives she left behind. “We asked them if they wanted to come, but they didn’t. They said they were going to stay in their country until the end.” For Bucaj, the war has transcended politics, religion, and ethnicity, “There are good guys and bad guys,” she said. “The good guys are standing in the same lines for bread and The St. Sava Serbian-Orthodox Church in Phoehlx is the reli­ g io us, cultural and so c ia l center for m uch o f the Valley’s Yugoslav community. water. The bad guys are in the hills. After my father was wounded, it was our Serbian neighbor who was the first to come and help. “We are friends forever.” Ill 1 1 1 1iiUtB v il ia q : APARTM ENTS U n d e r sta n d in g th e B ib le A Thursday Noon Bible Study & 2 B E D R O O M M O V E -IN S P E C IA L S Sponsor; Place: Memorial Union B u M n g S e * room M o w or check tieT V Montar tor CSC Subject Jam es & Peter ----- a | k . | U u a J mmnmtryor ra m n i  S u m m e r S e s s io n w ith J a m e s a n d P e te r Date Room LUXURYAPARTM ENTFEATURES: Dim; 12:40—1.30pm Cpeetmr BO Freeman, Subject Book & Chapter ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Free h o t w ater Mini/Vertical blinds Brass ceiling fans Private balcony/patio Security alarm systems available My 20 27 8/3 10 V k im a B II__ __ H ow to C a n to r Y o u r In n e r D ie P in al/215.... ..... T h e D eepest M eaning of Suffering M o n ito r.......... Living Between G od and the D e v i Yuma/211 __ ... 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I CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL | _ _ _ _ _ 9 6 7 ;1 1 1 4 _ _ _ _ _ j Page 10 S t a t e P ress T u esd ay, J u ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 % \v l Can t beat the heat But you can BEAT FALL PRICES NOW! * *3** •Backpacks‘BookBap >Briefcases •Jackets • Hals Wallets •Parses •AndMore! Rock-Bottom Prices OLD TOWN TEMPE r H K i THE ARIZONA CENTER I I 3/4 lb. MONSTER TACO $1.99 6 th St. & Mill-894-0499 3rd St. 216 E. U niversity ju s t e a s t of F o re st T em p e *829-6026 | 3 -lb . burrito fille d w ith re d a n d I g reen c h ile , d o u b le -w r a p p e d in fre< ! to rtilla s, le ttu c e , to m a to & cheese ? C h o ic e o f th ic k e n o r b eef. Van Buren#253-8949 Phoenix Locations: 12th St. & Van Buren, 253-1511 Central & Southern, 276-7531 , 32nd Ave. &Van Buren, 272?3239 59th Ave. & Bethany Home, 934-6635 I b ra n a A T K . One coupon per «Wow OLD TOWN SCOTTSDALE 7225 E. 1st Avenue«945-2784 Located in The Arches Plaza M -TH Fri. 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He was not able to post bond and was booked. • A female ASU employee lost three keys belonging to the University. • A woman not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for speeding at 1000 E. Rio Salado Parkway. » Person(s) unknown stole a Macintosh lap­ top computer worth $1,200 from Best Hall A SU p olice reported the follow ing in ci­ dents last week: • Person(s) unknown stole a Mitsubishi big screen television worth $3,200 from the T heta Chi fraternity house at 410 E. Adelphi Drive. • A woman not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for driving on a suspended license at 950 S. Terrace Road. • A male juvenile not affiliated with ASU was arrested on an outstanding warrant C-wing. • P erson(s) unknow n stole alum inum adjustable riser legs, worth $10,000, from Sun Devil Stadium. • Person(s) unknown damaged the Pepsi machine at Physical Science F-wing. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest* ed, cited and released for theft of services and trespass at 725 E. Adelphi Drive. • A man not affiliated with ASU was con­ tacted at Apache Boulevard and Sunset Drive while riding a bike and carrying two extra tires. He was turned over to Tempe Police. * Two juveniles were contacted $ Parking Structure 1 while rollerblading. They were advised of rules on campus and left the area. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest­ ed, cited and released for fraudulent use of a driver’s license at Rural Road and the Red Mountian Freeway. Compiled fro m sta ff reports. S ports B riefs ASU inks tennis player to letter of intent Ex-ASU football player hired by ICA ASU has signed Oscar Bustes, a native of Santiago, Chile, to a letter of intent, the University recently announced. Bustes comes to ASU from Anderson Community College in Anderson, S.C. During his time at Anderson CC, Bustes won the Rolex National Small College championship. “Oscar is a talented player who has the ability to step in and help us immediately,” said Lou Belken, men’s tennis head coach. Bustos has one year of eligibility remaining. Form er ASU football standout Jean Boyd has returned to thè University — this time, as an Athletic Department Management intern. Boyd graduated from the University in 1994. He let­ tered twice playing at defensive back, and was third on the team in 1993 with 63 tackles. After graduating, Boyd played briefly for the New England Patriots, as well as serving a stint with the London Monarchs of the World League of American Football. Boyd’s hiring marks the second hiring of a former ASU athlete by the athletic department in the past two months. Nathan LaDuke, a 1990 graduate and former Sun Devil safety, was recently hired as an assistant to the head coach. Tyson tells kids: I’m no role model NEW YORK (AP) — Mike Tyson may have consid­ ered himself a hero before he lost the heavyweight title to Buster Douglas in 1990. He may even have considered himself a hero before he was sent to prison after being C R O SSW O R D MA M 1 E O H A R E by T H O M A S J O S E P H ACROSS 1 Some football players 6 Raw-bar choices 11 Rig 12 Illumi­ nated 13 Paris thorough­ fare 15 Helium, for one 16 Put on 17 C hess pieces 18Rom eCarthage’s — Wars 20 Open the aspirin 23 Indian class 27 Actor Connery 28 Fishing aid 29 Make up lines 31 Scintillate 32 Egypt’s capital 34 Belief 37 Hit show initials 38 “Nova" airer 41 London thorough­ fare 44 “Cabaret" director 45 Sample 46 Affirmative answers 47 Available D O Z E N E R o S M E N .| J MA C R A Z G L 1 T Z L O N A N G E L D E U C E a s P O T DOWN 1 Floe 2 Blue shade 3 Actor's prompts 4 Make fun of 5 Acceler­ ated 6 Health center 7 Actress Ullmann 8 Physics concern 9 Pack animal 10 Whirl 14 Actor Silver 18 Frenzied fear 19 Monte — 20 Patriotic 1 it 13 tS ¿ L A S T ■ ingdeadline for o u | j thé •WhèreTo Guide" is August e great® opportunity to reachnew -and feturning students ajpvell as their parents} Cal! t o d a y s ir K > r e ^ r -p fafiatforif965-6555. ’ f * ' l g H July llt h 's Answer publishers 34 Up in the air 35 Gin variety 36 Disorder 38 Nuisance . 39 Kind of waves 40 Rung 42 Language suffix 43 Cam­ paigned initials 21 Actor Beatty 22Goolidge nickname 24 Envision 25 British brew 26 Shade tree 30 Moistens the turkey 31 Cave 3 3 1040 s— 7— S- 9 1¿ 4 • 4 3 H U T E Y M 1C E ■ O R A L. S P A T 1O N O w A B 1 T s L E P S E D F A N S t V E L 1 X 1R 1 L 1 A O K E N T S E D G Ei convicted of rape. He sure doesn’t any more. “I feel kids can find somebody better to look up to than me,” Tyson told the New York Daily News in Monday’s editions. “I’m no one to look up to. If I had to tell them to look up to someone it would be Michael Jordan, Hakeem Olajuwon or Shaq O ’Neal and those guys.” In an interview from his home in Southington, Ohio, Tyson said he recently spoke with rap star Tupac Shakur, who is serving a 1 1/2 to 4 1/2-year sentence for sexually abusing a woman in 1993. “He’s going through the same thing I did,” Tyson said. “I like that guy. He has so much potential. Not because of his acting or rapping but as a man and an individual. “I know exactly what he’s been through and what he’s going through. I guess I can say I was like Tupac.” S T A T E P R E S S A D V E R T IS IN G “Nothing talks to ASU like we do" 10 SPECIAL ORIENTATION ISSUE >1 i 14 Í7 . 16 •■ IP 1^ 21^ 2 ^ 27 29 : “ 5T • 30 * P ” 41 44 1995 State Press Where to shop ■ eat ■ drink ■ play and live! A R IZO N A STATE UNIVERSITY P " AUGUST 14, IW 5 ORIENTATION WEEK * 46 1 i DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — H ere's how to w ork it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for th e three L's, X few th e tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. S ii CRYPTOQUOTE DZIO YLRH P GO , ZH JPE JPE U RJ LRIO. CO HP CO H HOQ MPUOH LRG HLZGB.— SPGDTOSSPY July 11th C ryptoquote: THE MEN OF ACTION ARE, AFTER ALL, ONLY THE UNCONSCIOUS INSTRUMENTS OF THE MEN OF THOUGHT. HEINRICH HEINE 0 1994 b y K ina Featu res Syndicate. Inc. S tate P ress 1 99 5 “W h e re T o“ G u id e iilS IIlS B lil- yo u r m orn in g daHy new spaper Arizona Slate University gig li St a t e P r e s s Page 13 T u e s d a V jJ u l^ lS j^ r^ ^ M o v e over, R o o n ey , a n ew g i r l ’s i n to w n H o e are a few bizarre rambiirigs my mind has M ar J o r y produced during the sum­ m er. These Andy KAMINSKI Rooney-like questions are just things to sit mid think about t o a few seconds. Give it a shot. • Why do they draw such anatomically incor­ rect people in those Disney movies? I suppose there are a few people who have tiny waists and very big pecs or chests, but not enough, lust once I’d like to see the hero or heroine sing about how much it stinks to be overweight or have a zit or a wrinkle or something, then actually show it. • Staying on die entertainment note, how come a lot TV shows represent just one major race? There are Friends and Seinfeld t o the white audience, and then there's Martin and Living Single t o the black audience. Don't they know how to combine the two? Let me at it and I’ll show them. • Aren’t you getting tired of watching five differ­ ent local stations hying and failing to find a unique angle for their 10 p.m. news reports? I head die news in the morning. I watch the news is the evening. I ’ve had enough by the time night rolls around. Try putting on some more sitcoms instead. Lighten ugl A. Kelly Wendel/State Press Students begin filing into the 225-seat Union Cinema, in the basement of the Memorial Union, to catch a showing of interview with a Vampire. Memorial Union Cinema provides free movies for students in search o f cheap entertainment IhM it is "cracking down'* on reckless drivers? I’m sure it has done something like this before, but according to the stats o f accidents caused by ram­ bunctious drivers, the numbers have gone up with the heat Does it take a certain number to have this typo o f special program7 "Ob, there were six car deaths this weekend. When there’s seven, w e’ll announce a plan. OK, guys?” • How come there is such a rush to go see a movie on its opening weekend? You have to deal with long, annoying lines, Ju Ju Bees on the bottom of your feet and a good $10 out o f your pocket Why can’t people just wait until the video, or the cheap theaters, or even the next weekend? • Doesn’t it take a lot o f nerve to even think about cutting die Disabled Resources free campus trans­ portation? These students are here to learn and if they get to class late, that’s ju st another bit they won’t learn. Isn’t that the prime reason t o ASU’s existence? Find something else to do, like canceling die $46,000 check for the new ASU logo. • Why is Hugh Grant’s recent conduct such a shock? It happens in Hollywood all the time; we just don’t always find out about it. I think people should be more concerned about their own significant others than the conduct of an actor t o y don’t even know. • Am I the only one here who thinks Bill Clinton is a very handsome man? Judging from the contorted looks I get from the people 1 tell, I guess so. Just put aside the ridicule he’s gotten and die sex lawsuits and just lock at him physically. President or not, Billy is hot B y K elly W endel S t a t e P r e ss After most college students pay their monthly bills and stock up on Ramen noodles, they have little money left over for entertainment But instead of watching re-runs of Gilligan’s Island on the boob tube, there’s a place they can go on campus to see popular movies — and it’s free. It’s Union Cinema, in the basement of the Memorial Union. Offering everything from sneak previews to exotic for­ eign films, movies at the MU provide a little something for everybody. “I really like putting on something that people enjoy going to,” said Golondrina Timewell, the Memorial Union Activities Board film chair. “I like to put on movies they might not see anywhere else.” She said the theater is the only student-run, studentoperated theater in the state. “We’re in complete control.” Although the film budget has been shrinking and firstrun movies and blockbusters are beyond the meager means of the MUAB, it doesn’t stop Timewell from securing great entertainment. Recent movies at the MU included Interview with a Vampire and Four Weddings and a Funeral. “The most difficult part of my job is finding money to pay for the movies. It is hard because we are on such a limit­ ed budget, but you want to give people good programming,” Timewell said. “We want to get the most bang for our buck.” Costing anywhere from $100 on up, Timewell must not only pay to rent the movie, but also the copyright of the movie to show the film in a public venue. First-run movies are typically out of financial reach for Timewell and her $2,800 yearly budget. Students also have an opportunity for sneak peaks at unreleased movies. Production companies occasionally send uncut versions to the U niversity, were they are screened and audience reaction is gauged. The 225-seat cinema is also slated for some major upgrades. A recent agreement between the University and Network Entertainment Television (NET) will bring in $150,000 worth of new equipment to the theater within the next few months. NET will broadcast special events such as concerts and sporting events in the theater. While those programs will cost patrons money, the upgraded sound and video system (which includes a high-definition television) will also be utilized for the free movies and events. “It’s a really great deal,” Timewell said. “NET gets all the profits from their events, and we have the ability to use their system.” Timewell also has ambitious plans for a facelift of the movie house. “We are hoping to repaint the inside in something a little more up to date,” she said. “We would like to do a nice design, and then paint scenes from famous movies on the wall.” ■ Union Cinema was recently voted Best Revival Theater by New Times. A revival theater is a movie house that doesn’t show first-run movies. “I think this is an excellent summer program,” said the­ ater patron Robert Layton, an employee at Facilities Management. “It’s a good idea, and the price is right.” Staffi 7o Do 7~(u's Iá/ m Í , A rt: “Redefining the Figure,” through July 30 at the Tempe Arts Center, Mill Avenue and First Street. “Latin American Women Artists”, through Oct. 1 at the Phoenix Art Museum. For more info call 257-1880. “Mixed Media Photography” by Carol Panaro-Smith, through Aug. 31 at the ASU Downtown Center Galleria. Admission is free. For more info call 965-3046. Arpeggio, performing classical music, noon today at the MU Programming Lounge. Spunk, with Zeke, Friday at the Nile Theater. For more info call 649-3076. Dead Hot Workshop with Lemon Krayola, Friday at Hayden Square. For more info call 967-1234. Monkey Meet, Friday at Gibson’s. Call 967-1234 for more info. T heater: Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh, through Aug. 20 at the Herberger Theater. Tickets are available at all Dillard’s or the Herberger Box Office at 678-2222. Absolute Madness, Thursday through Sunday at the Tempe Improv. For show times and ticket info call 921-9877. Bye Bye B irdie, T hursday through Aug. 6 at the Herberger Theater. For more info or tickets call 252-8497 or 678-2222. “Pushing the Limits,” through Aug. 3 at the MU Gallery. Music: Peter Murphy, today at Hayden Square in downtown Tempe. Call 967-1234 for more info. Corrosion of Conformity and Mpnster Magnet, today at the Electric Ballroom. All ages welcome. Tickets $15. To charge call 784-4444. Horace Pinker and five other bands, Saturday night at the Nile Theater. For more info call 649-3076. The Refreshments with the Beggars and 3F, Saturday night at Gibson’s. Call 967-1234 for more info. Boogie Knights, Sunday night at Gibson’s. For more info call 967-1234. Free Movies at the MU: Everything you Always Wanted to Know about Sex, noon today and 3 p.m. Wednesday. Rain Man, 7 p.m. tonight, noon Wednesday and 2 p.m. Thursday. Calendar com piled by S tate Press reporter Kelly Wendel Page 14 St a t e P ress T uesday, July 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 Love and Human Remains takes a deeper look at G en X ers’ lives B y D a n M ill e r S t a t e P r e ss Love and Human Remains Sony Pictures ★ ★ ★ (out o f five ★ ) “Everyone bom after 1965 is incomplete somehow ...” That’s life according to David, the lead character in Love and Human Remains, a dark comedy about twentysomethings in the ‘90s. David's (Thomas Gibson) facetious theory is the foun­ dation for the latest cinematic venture into the cluttered minds of Generation Xers. Internationally-acclaimed direc­ tor Denys Arcand — doing his first film in English tackles issues of relationships, sex and love and arrives at the same realization: The only variable that remains constant is confusion. The film, which was based on Brad Fraser’s successful stage play entitled Unidentified Human Remains and the True Nature o f Love, puts the imperfections and complexi­ ties of relationships today under the magnifying glass, v The story intermixes the lives of seven individuals in an emotionally critical time in their existence. David, a cynic$l actor-tumed-waiter, believes there is no such thing as love. While he is convinced he never had any acting talent to waste, David relies on waiting tables to provide him with artistic satisfaction. As he realiz.es how unfulfilled he is with his homosexu­ al promiscuity. David encounters a rich, naive 17-year-old busboy named Kane (Matthew Ferguson), whose parents use material gifts in place of caring. Kane counters by looking for love in all the wrong places. In the meantime, David’s childhood friend, Bernie (Cameron Bancroft), an unhappy businessman and woman­ izer, serves to impede his emotional clarity. His friendship with David provides a stable home base for an obnoxious inner child. D avid's best friend is his roommate and ex-lover, Candy (Ruth Marshall), an insecure, hopeless romantic whose negative book reviews reflect her emptiness inside. In her feature film debut. Marshall’s comic Hair and gen­ uine style highlight the film, which starts slow but ends strong. . Candy is fed up with the emotional shortcomings of men and is ready for change, even if it means seeing what it’s like on the other side of the fence. Her relationships with Robert (Rick Roberts), the local bartender, and Jerri (Joanne Vannicola), a lesbian school teacher, lead her into unfamiliar, complicated territory — and also into more confusion. After factoring in the psychic dominatrix (Mia Kirshner) who aims to please, one has the makings of a miniature soap opera with characters mirroring guests on the Jerry Springer Show. However, within Arcand’s depiction of modern-day societal decay lies a realism that will strike a chord with anyone who has ever questioned the intrinsic value of their relationships. While Love and Human Remains is as humorous as it is politically incorrect, its content and subject matter may be offensive to some people. Above average performances bring the depth of the story to life, with the resolve left to just what you might have guessed. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Love and Human Remains stars (clockwise): Thomas Gibson (David), Joanne Vannicola (Jerri), Rick Roberts (Robert), Mia K irsh n e r (B enita), Matthew F e rg u so n (Kane), Ca m eron Bancroft (Bernie) and Ruth Marchall (Candy). RESIDENCY IN F O R M A T IO N SESSIO N ■ MEXICAN FOOD W Serving Lunch and D in n ei 7 D ays a W eek Every Wed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m. M A M A R O S A 'S Student Services Amphitheater T raditional So n o ra n M e x ic a n F o o d R ecip e s A re S im p ly the Best! 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C a ll u s t o d a y o r s t o p b y o u r lo c a l o f f ic e : THE PRINCETON REVIEW The Princeton Review is noi affiliated with Princeton University or ETS. 9 6 7 -1 4 8 0 931-0766 C’kncm»Kni T:mplt>)vc^ |hsui;«HV Co. * GEICO General Insurance Co. * GEICO Indemnity Co: • GEICO Casualty 0p. C om ics P a g e 15 State P ress T u esd ay, Ju ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 EnCrAtMn HeXei Calvin and L y $ t* c y H o L tto te /t Hobbes TIGHTCORNER by Ken Gvndy andMalcolm Willett by Bill Watterson NOTHING IS PERMANENT. EVERYTHING CHANGES. THAT'S THE ONE THING h e know f o r V SURE IN THIS » if \ BUT IM STIUL GOINS TO GRIPE ABOUT ff. I w orld. C 1WS WatunwvDts». by Unhet—i Prua SyuOca» TlPosy s M . f ’¿ s Mr. Whitliff, C IA (Ret.), finds old habits die hard. HOW CAN SOMETHING SEEW 3D PLAUSIBLE AT THE TIME AND SO IDIOTIC IN RETROSPECT ? T ig A m iO N  s t a t e u m » m » i T y S t a t e B P r e s s -Ig r / "I told you, you should have stayed in bed. " - S tate Press H oroscopes In the classified section. OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH SERVING THE BEST HOT WINGS IN TOWN! ICY COLD FOUNTAIN DRINKS Coke Diet Coke Mr. Plbb Sprite Lemonade 12 Wines $3.75 36 Wines $9.99 50 Wines $11.99 FAST, FR EE DELIVERY A ccepted Upon' Delivery 829-0064 LUNCH SPECIAL 12" C H E E S E PIZZA & 1 S O D A 11AM - 4 P M Mon.-Fri. (90c per topping) “ " DINNER FORTW O r " “CARbrNAL'S"' SPECIAL SUN DEVIL SPECIAL 12" 1-TOPPING PIZZA S 12 WINGS I I .I 16" 1-Henri pizza with 24 wings 12" Pizza with 2 toppings & 2 free sodas TWO 12" PIZZAS j ! TWO 16" PIZZAS ADD A D O Z. WINGS ' TO ANY ORDER \ / FOR » i MONDAYMADNESS SW C o rn er o f Scottsdale Rd. & M cD ow ell • 423-8499 TUESDAY SPECIAL WILD WEDNESDAY \ Page 16 tie ---------- - - By D a v id St a t e P ress T uesday, Ju ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 m ■ Strow S t a t e P ress Think you’ve got absolutely no use for the Internet or the World Wide Web? (Well, probably not, or else you wouldn’t be reading this column.) If you love to shop, think again — electronic retail outlets are popping up like strip malls in Valley suburbs. Within a few years, you’ll be able to buy just about anything, from groceries to cars, using only a credit card and your home computer. While you can’t buy cars on the Web yet, you can buy a lot of other neat stuff — stuff that you actually might need. The only requirement is a major credit card. But be warned — not all Web pages are “secure.” Whenever you transmit information using an “insecure” Web page, the information (your credit card number, in this instance) can be intercept­ ed by a hacker. Translation: Don’t ever Send your credit card number through cyberspace unless you are positive that the page you are using is secure. The other warning: caveat em ptor —t let the buyer beware. Be sure the company is a legitimate one before you send any order to them. Usually, the first thing you should look for is a 800 number that you can use as an alternative to the Web page for ordering. If they can’t be reached by a toll-free number, I wouldn’t order from them. Go by your instinct — if anything seems funny, don’t use it. In tern et Shopping Network A ddress: http://www.internet, net/ The Home Shopping Network ventures onto the ‘Net. This company, a Subsidiary of HSN. offers a pretty siz­ able selection of items, ranging from “home” items to com­ puters. When you’re interested in an item, it allows you to check out the specifications of your product, along with any reviews that have been written about it. (I kind of doubt they’ll run any bad reviews, though.) The prices seem to be kind of steep here. You can order directly through the Web site. They do require that you be a member, but joining is free. This Web page is secure, so shop without worry. Shopping 2000 Address: http://www.shopping2000.coni/shopping2000/shoppingl.html This site is a collaborative effort of more than 60 com­ panies. The selection here is massive — much, much broader than ISN- Here you can order everything from flowers to airline tickets. Companies included at this site include Barnes & Noble, Delta Airlines, Nordic Track, Sears and Tower Records. There is a catch, though. The companies are all at one Web site, but they haven’t set up a system for ordering items directly over the Web. Think of this as a sort of electronic mail order catalog; you find what you want, write down the item numbers, and order via the toll-free number provided. If I had to choose, I’d have to say I prefer this site over ISN. I liked the depth of selection better, and besides, it still gives me the creeps to transmit my credit card number over a Web page I’ve never seen before. Southwest A irlines A ddress: www.iftyswa.com/lUvkome.html For some reason, very few U.S. airlines have turned to the ‘Net to help gain an edge in the competitive air travel market. The only three that I saw on my recent venture were Delta, Southwest and TWA. (TWA’s site isn’t really that great, either — mostly just a PR rundown of the company.) I’m providing Southwest’s Web page because of the amount of air traffic they handle out of Sky Harbor. At this Web site, you can check fares and schedules. You still can’t place reservations using this site — you have to find the flight number of the flight you want, then call Southwest or a travel agent to book the flight. There are rumors that Southwest soon will allow you to reserve flights using this site, so keep your eyes open. 2033 W. U niversity T urn 644-1201 Lubricate your vehicle & ch a ssis, drain old oil, a d d ‘up to 5 qts. of new oil and install a new o il filter. D iesel extra. M ost ca rs and light trucks. 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(ÀP) -— Gary Busey, charged with cocaine possession after a drug overdose, was ordered Monday to continue a drug diversion program for two years. “I’m on the program for the rest of my life,” the actor said after a judge ordered him to remain in the outpatient program. He spent 28 days at a drug rehabilitation center and has had outpatient care since a girlfriend found him slumped unconscious May 4 outside his Malibu home. Busey, 50, was hospitalized for four days. He was charged May 10 with possession of cocaine and other drugs, and being under the influence of cocaine. Thë charges will be dismissed if Busey successfully completes the diversion program, said his lawyer, Harland Braun; The judge scheduled a hearing in January for a progress report. angst series on ABC, will start working on the new show within the next few weeks, NBC program ming head Warren Littlefield said Sunday. Littlefield gave no specifics about content and said at a meeting of the Television Critics Association that the new series could be on the air by spring 1996. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ■ — The only place left to see stars is Planet Hollywood, according to Alice Cooper. “This is really the only Hollywood thing left, the only thing the stars go to”’ the rocker, a partner in the Hawaii Planet Hollywood, said at the opening of a new franchise. “It used to be premieres, but nobody ever goes to premieres anymore” Cooper was on hand Sunday for the opening of the 25th restaurant in the chain owned by Arnold Schwarzenegger, Brace Willis, Sylvester Stallone and many Hollywood partners. Schwarzenegger and Don Johnson, one of the partners, were joined by Wesley Snipes, Danny Glover and Luke Perry . LO S ANGELES (A P) — B ayw atch star Pam ela Anderson and her rocker husband Tommy Lee will try again for a baby after her miscarriage last month. “We want a family so we’re working on it,” Anderson told Entertainment Tonight in an interview for broadcast Tuesday. “It’s difficult for anybody to go through what Tommy and I went through, but it’ll happen when it’s supposed to happen and we’re working on it full force. I’m feeling good, it’s getting easier,” she said. Lee plays drums for Motley Crue. PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — My So Called Life already met its so-called death, but the producers will return to tele­ vision with a new drama on NBC. Scott Winant and Winnie Holzman, who were praised by critics but plagued by low ratings for the adolescent WWW. C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 16 . Sounds like something worth checking out, but I haven’t ordered tickets from them. R em em ber what they say about something that’s too good to be true ... The Flower Shop Address: http://www.deltanet.com/flowershop/ Y ou’re in Tempe. You’ve just had a fight with your girlfriend in New York. How do you get back in her good graces? This W eb page might be the answer. This FTD-affiliated cyberflorist claims that it can deliver your order “anywhere in the world!” The selection isn’t vast by any stretch of the imagination — it only offers maybe 20 bouquets here. The delivery July 18 - July 24,1995 electric ballroom SONYtECOKOMGACTSTS •CORROSION OF CONFORMITY* ASMRECORDINGARTISTS 8 9 4 -0 7 0 7 • •' •MONSTER MAGNET W / SEASON TO RISK* Hi AG^TKieMASTElWJQORS 7PM*SH0W8PM STOMA «M R. PIN • M Y MACHINE • LIZARD SHAKE and inform you that it can be observed by a third party while the information is in tran­ sit. (This is true for Netscape, but it may not be.true for other Web browsers.) It will then offer you a chance to cancel the transaction. If you see this message when you’re send­ ing your credit card number, cancel imme­ diately. charge of $7 for addresses in the United States isn’t too bad. Beware, though — your sweetheart won’t get your order for two, to three days. You can order directly over this Web site, but I don’ t know if it’s secure or not. If the site is not secure, the computer will beep at you when you send the information B a r G u id e PIAÏÏIME MAGAZINE'S 1 YEAR ANNIVERSARY PARTY 1 MS. SPRINGTIME BEAUTY PAGEANT UNPLUGGED FOR AIDS •OVER 20 ACOUSTIC AO S* PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT PHOENIX SHANT1 •INFORMATION 951-6986« HOSTEDBYKURTSEDDIEWEBBFEATURINGDR. RUTH CD RELEASE PARTY • d ish • ru sty J o n e s • frankly SCARLETT • AUDRA • SNAPPAHEAD TOEEDGE10A.3FMTBUDWEISERPRESENT. LIGHTNING FURY • GREAT CHEFS OF THE WEST • g ro o v y st ew • In flu e n ce THE RISING STAR SUMMER CONCERT SERIES • POLYGRAM RECORDING ARTISTS • GENE • IRS RECORDING ARTISTS* GREN • S3 IMADVANCE! • ALL AGES SHOW METMASTIR__________ 3F ALSO OUTSIDE IN HAYDEN SQUARE PETER MURPHY minder binders CARVIN JONES BAND $1 Domestic Draft, Wei Drinks, Burgees, Tacos, Nadros, Fries & Wings 5pmQose 966-1911 W /SfCTRlC SWING SET W/BURNIACKERS ONE MONKEY MEET THE REFRESHMENTS $1 PITCHERS RADICAL MIX 9-11:30pm Burger Madness CARVINJ0NES WARSAW KONGOSHOCK CHECK OUT OUR KILLER PASTA @ THE GRILLE aOOGIE KNIGHTS W /3F Acoustic Night JASON & THE JELLYBEANS RAYMOND Burger Madness Call 965-6555 to add your bar to this list. 70S GREAT HAIR’S NO HASSLE WITH THE RIGHT STYLING TOOLS. Y ou choose the right tools to build som ething great. W e use the right tools to give your hair m ore style. Like VaVoom * styling products from MATRIX* ESSEN TIA LS. There's Sham pooing and Conditioning to give hair a fuller, healthier look. And quick­ drying, hon-sticky Spritzing Spray to hold your style. C om e in soon Q HAIRCUT s8."„ Full set acrylic S 1I 9 . m " n(new clients) ^ for a hair care and styling consultation. Crispy Taco 59* Softshdl Taco* 69* Bean Purrito 79* 7H t University »Tempe (across from the stadium) •Price* Good on Beef Softshell Taco* Onlyl Good at participating Taco John's restaurants only. Not good with any other offers, coupons ^ W e d o m a g ic w it h h a ir . 'W lZ Z A R D S matrix HAIR STUDIO 903 S. Rural Rd„ Tempe 967-2360 H A IR -S K IN -C O S M E T IC S Taeo John'* Introduces... Hot New Prices on These Traditional Favorites; NAILS H lO lN lD lÀ l F tW lr tr t C A R SPECIALISTS INDEPENDENT SERVICE •F R E E Estim ates •Fair Prices •One Day Service on M ost R epairs •Com plete Parts Department •FactoryTrained Technicians P eople W ho Know ; U se V alvo un e- $ 1 4 .9 5 OIL CHANGE & OIL FILTER (Includes up to 4 quarts) C heck O ur Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services or discounts. Available fora Limited Time Only. 968-5989 18 20 E . A P A C H E B L V D . TEM PE T W O L O C A T IO N S TO S E R V E YOU One-way trips to A S U 954-7923 3039 E. T H O M A S RD. P H O E N IX Notice to our readers: Before * TO W NH OM ES/ FURNITURE responding to any advertisement requesting money be .sent or invested, C O N D O S FOR you may wish to investigate the LAZY- G’S Supply Co. can out RENT company-and offer. The Stair Press fit your apt. with cool, recy­ cannot assume respohsibility for cled, painted furniture, lamps, 2BD.1BA DUPLEX, a/c, yard, the validity of the often advertised ' avail end of July, $550, 1201. furnishings at affordable prices. in our classified section. For more E Weber, water paid. 966-0987. < Call Lazy G at 991-4491: information and assistance regarding MOVING OUT! Queen bed, the investigation of an advertisement, 2BD/2BA 1100 sf condo, 400 sofa, frill futon & frame, dinner please contact the Better Business yds from ASU, $625/mo, first, table set, coffee table, end table, Bureau at 264-1721. last deposit. 1-509-786-4088. dresser, 25 & 20 inch TV sets., CLOSE TO ASU 1 bd twhs; Call 225-0720. $449.00, 2 bd twhs $649.00,' MUST SELL everythingr TV A vacation is 1 bd + den $589.00, 1bd stand, entertainment center, full condo $385.00, 3 bd condo. what you take size bed, table & 15 speed $549.00. Call Maureen Farrell bike. Please call-464-4346. w hen you can 948-5554. no longer take $MALL REFRIGERATOR ideal HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd 2ba for rm .& offices. Pis call 829what you've condo $635. 3bd 2ba $845. 7762; Th, Fri. & Sat. 10amW/d, a/c, fans, pool, bike to been taking. lpm. ASU, quiet people pref. 966-E a rl W ilson . 0987. 7;. ■ " ' ; COM PUTERS AN N O U N CE­ MENTS WE BUY & SELL USED L E V I 'S ! E E S JEAN BUYER Call for Details 947-6245 • 1810 Scottsdale Rd {between Curry & McKellips) 5 minutes tram ASU! • 3206 W. Glendale Ave. a ^ r t m | nt| _ WANT AN apartment that you can live with! Large 2bd/2ba $460-$490/mo. Members Mesa Crime Free program. 1505 N, Country Club Dr 833-8014. 15 min from ASU & MCC. S339/MONTH W a lk t o A S U . .Q uiet, spacious, 1 b e d roo m , u nfu rn ish e d or fu r­ nished, A C , p o o ls id e apartments. George Ann A pts. 8 9 4 -2 6 2 0 S200 O FF! F R E E U T IL IT IE S ! W alk to ASU. Sp acio u s. 2bedroom apartments. A/C. f u r n i s h e d or unfu rnish ed avail­ able. F r o m S499/ m onth. B eautiful p o o l a r ea, l a u n d r y facilities available. FIEST A P A R K APARTMENTS 1224 E. Lem on 894-2620 H O M ESFO R 2 1 3 * « - = = 3B D 2 B A $ 8 0 0 /m o , 4 b d 2 b a SlOOO/mo. lb d Ib a $ 3 1 0 /m o . Tim 894-0288. TO W NH OM ES/ C O N D O S FO R RENT 1 BEDROOM twhs. fireplace, community pool, close to golf, ref., micro., dw„ gd., done to shopping, ft but near hy. pri. vale patio, call Joyce • 895- 2I2|., - ;/ . CLASSIFIEDS WORK! PAPAGO PARK twhms, 2bd/2 full baths, d/w, w/d, covered parking, pool, $775/mo. John @ 894-8440 or 945-1258. MACINTOSH POWERBOOK 100 $450 & Mac Classic w/laserwriter $800. Shaun @ 3791707 RENTAL SHARING AUTOMOBILE^ ATTRACTIVE RESORT con­ do, master bedroom $315, loft $225 + util ea resp. 351-8683. CALL 831-7198 fern rmte needed/my home. Clean, safe, quiet, own room, share bath/laundry. 15 min ASU Mesa $22Q/mo. CLOSE TO ASU, 15 min from campus, $350 furnished bed/bath & den, utils paid, in Chandler. N/S, D/F, mature col­ lege student, cleanliness im­ portant. Must like dog. 9409414. HELP W ANTEDa c c o u n t in g COLLEGE STORE Part time help needed. Remil ex­ perience desired but not re­ quired, We are an equal oppor­ tunity. employer. 1015 S. Rural 894-4400 ASU DOWNTOWN Center. Need Mover/Facility Assistant with good customer service skills to assist with room set-up for Conference & Meeting cen­ ter operations and classroom ac­ tivities; located, in Phoenix across form the Arizona Center. Must be able to lift 50 pounds. Hours needed; Mon-Fri 6am 12noon. Benefits include ASU tuition waiver. Ask for Cheryl, 965-3046. CAN'T STAND litter bugs? Help keep our campus tidy: Now hiring students to pickup after those who let inserts, with­ in the State Press fall to the ground. Flex hrs btwn 8am3pm. Work is sporadic. XInt compensation. Apply at State Press Info Desk, Matthews Center/Basement. NEED A good roomate fast? OVer 500 listings, Roomate Ex­ press 437-1048 or 968-2545. 24 hr info line. BICYCLE STORE B u y • Sell • Trade WANTED ONE female rmte to share 3bd townhouse in Tem­ pe. $250/mo + 1 /3 util. 9692655 R O O M S FOR RENT FREE ROOM & board in ex­ change for childcare & house­ keeping. C all Kevin @ 8408188 /899-Q88P. ■ — — 966-6070 GOV T FORECLOSED homes for pennies on $1. Delinquent Tax, Repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext. H-1676 for current listings. $ = = = = EXTENSION/UNIV. TRI-LEV­ EL, 3bd/2ba, fp, ceiling fans, ASU/ MCC, shopping n^inutes away. $68,500. By owner 461- HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL $10.25 TO START! $FUN SUMMER JOBS $7/hr + cash bonuses. Set fun free appointm ents for health services, Near Fiesta Mall, Mesa 649-9580. COUNTER PERSON needed f/t. 7am - 3 pm, M-F, some Sats, will train. South Scotts area. We allow study tim e, 7309970 ask for Gary. By Delicious Deliveries. Own car needed, flexible hrs, earn $8$15 per hour. Call 220-0000. RPS IS hiring loader/unloaders for our 2:00am - 7:00am shift. M ust be able to handle pack­ ages of varying size & weight (avg. 401bs). Females strongly encouraged to apply. 2850 S. Roosevelt, Tempe. FURNITURE FURNITURE A fford ab le Furniture with Students in Mind! ! ~ ~ FOR SALjB: Full size bed with frame $70, dresser $50, desk $45, couch $40, chair $20, cof­ fee table $12, microwave stand $8, Papazon chair $70, Juichea table $30, 6 chairs $5 each. CaMUz at 804-0413. MATCHING COUCH with 2 chairs $75. Bleaks down for • NOW HIRING student workers for facility set-up at the ASU Downtown Center, located across from Arizona Center in Phoenix. Need 3-4 able-bodied wotkers to start anytime. Varie­ ty of shifts available» 6a.m. 6p.m. Some flexibility with . class schedules accommodated. Own transportation a must. ‘ Primary duties: furniture, equip­ ment, and beverage set-up. $5.50-$6.25/ hr. Ask for Cher­ yl. 965-3046, Flex hours, no exp req., schol­ arships cond. exist. 968-4797. 9011. iM d * * 897-679?. THE STATE Press is now hir­ ing students to sell advertising. Great experience and great mon­ ey. Call Jackie Eldridge 9656555 today! SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flexible hrS/wk. Call Mike for int, 9218282. ' V STUDENT NEEDED 10 hours a week to typeset; edit: maintain files and indices. Computer ex­ perience preferred. Requires high degree of accuracy & an ability to work under pressure/ deadlines. Driver's license & car required. P/U application at ASB 112. Will call for interTEMPE MARKET research firm needs computer assistants, & phone interviewers 967-4441. _ Family Owned& OperatedSince I960 QucM y Furnitureat S tudent Prices TWO LOCATIONS NEAR ASU 2334W. Mur Mea«964-4773 t M77£lhiwnh HELP W ANTEDSALES HIGH ENERGY sales people for exciting sales position. Scottsdale Fashion Square. Call John at 494-4260. LEADING EDGETechnology is looking for a person to prom­ ote a new product for. the golf market. Must haVe good com­ munication skills, enjoy inter­ acting w/people, outgoing per­ sonality & salë$ experience a pltis. Job offers flex hrs. For m ore info please call Rob at 961-8800. HOT OPPORTUNITIES COOL JOBS full-hine • part-time • temporary clerical •administrative •accounting SELEC T C E LLU LA R support staff and more! & PAGING CALL TODAY! 952-9060 Staff Oae Search 2800 North 44th S t, Suite 340 4 8 3 -7 5 7 6 Create Your Own Schedule W e're Flexible! Part-TIme/Full-TIma * Create a shift between the houes pf 5:30am & 9pm. »guaranteed paid training; avg. $9$11 Air. * Weekly paychecks * No experience necessary * Helpful, friendy trainers * Norvstressful, fun, friendy environment C a ll today to schedule a confidential interview . 894-0264 Ext. 95 20 Y E A R S IN T E M P E f,llM. Why donate plasma? • RECEIVE $25 Help sav e lives Earn up to $185 each month Supervised care area for your chldren to play Watch yourfavorito movie whie you donate We have many ASU donors! Extra bonuses poe8iDle ifyouVe had your Hepetibs “A" shot NewExtondsdHours M-F 730am-8pm Sat 8am-40Dpm Sun 10am-4pm 1334 E Broadway Rd. SuKe 102 (across from foe Native New Yoihsi) With this coupon, new donors w ill receive $25 for their first donation!! (C all for New D onor Hours) Fora brAedSne only, New D onas rec»ve $30farther first donation!! (SundaysOnfy) 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 Y O U R F U T U R E B E G IN S WITH INSIGHT Insight is a Tempe-based direct marketer o f computers, hardware and software, with over $225 million in annual saies and over 500 employees. We are a publicly traded company on the Nasdaa national market and are Seeking team-oriented professionals looking for great opportunities. In order to offer valuable “on the job” experience we have opened up part-time positions to the students o f ASU. We are seeking responsible, motivated individuals who are looking for an “internship” opportunity in a fun, fast-paced, professional environment Chucker’s Furniture TO W NH OM ES/ C O N D O S FOR FURNITURE NEED HELP developing a data base, must know M icrosoft Word, Access & Excel. Pay ne­ gotiable. 230-5270 Jerry, lv msg. ; 966-7090 DRIVERS WANTED H O M ES FOR SALE SALES CLEfcK needed for children's. appareU. consignment store, Flex sched 949-9609 Scotts , G raduate Student in Elemehthry Education n eed ed to w ork 2-4 days GREAT P/T jo b . 4-8pm M-F per w eek , beginning in $5.50+ bonus/hr. Call Jenn btwn 9am -noon or 4-8pm. 894mid-August, from 1:30 until ' 9442 ■ 8:30 at a Scottsdale teach­ ing facility. Must have LEGAL MESSENGER background in Elementary Pay hourly plus mileage. Must ■ E du catio n , a 3.5 G.P.A, have own car w/ins. 253-1155, adhere to a dress code and have tem porary or NEED GARDENER that knows substitute certification. sprinkler systems. Must have own yard equipment(mower, C all 953-3Q70 etc.). 1 day/wk-any day..$177/ for m ore information. ino. ParadiseValley 420-1864. BICYCLES U sed bikes from 49.00 New R aleigh M -20 on sale from 239.00 to 199.99 HELP W ANTEDG | N | ^ L _ ^ Highly motivated individuals needed for outside cellular phone sales. Make your own hours and work at your own pace. Excellent commission structure. $S0K t potential. Call M ate of Charles at EARN $8-$10/HR MF RMTE needed in Scotts. at Sycamore Creek furnished 2bd /2ba, $382 + 1/2 util. 9948288. ; HELP W ANTEDG EN ER AL PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe. P/t, $7/hr, no exp nee. Heavy lifting required. 8044)300. Eventz Extraordinaire is hiring "human directionals" to wave signs at various east and west valley locations on weekends. Must have car and telephone. Call 800-343-8368 ask for Russell. FEMALE N/S grad stud, to share apt. Own room & bath. F/p, w/d & patio. $365 + 1/2 util. 730-1355 or 813r2323. NEEDED IMMED. Female n/s grad. stud, to share spacious. 2bd /2ba apt in Mesa. F/p, w/d, full patio, located by pool. $350+ 112 util. 962-9464 pis. Iv. msg. OFFICE ASSIST. Part-Time. MicroAge, Inc. Mi­ croAge is a $2 billion informa­ tion technology leader that is ranked by Fortune Magazine as one of the largest and fastest growing service companies in the nation. We have an imme­ diate opening in our Investor Relations Department for a parttime clerical assistant with pro­ fessional office, phone, and communication skills. Prefer ac­ counting or finance back­ ground; must be experienced in Word Perfect arid Excel. Flexi­ ble schedule. $6.50 per hour. Send resume to MicroAge, Attn: HR/VG, PÒ Box 1920, Tempe, AZ 85280-1920, or fax to (602) 929-2429. Applica­ tions will also be accepted at 1620 W. Fountainhead Park­ way, Suite 190, Tempe, AZ, between 9 am and 4 pm. Mi­ croAge! supports a drug-free en­ vironment and is an equal op­ portunity employer. CONTESTANTS WANTED for a new Fox TV Show. Have fun. Make $$, i -800-343-8543. F RMTE wanted, 2bd/2ba, real close to ASU. Hayden Place, $260/mo + 1/2 utils. Call Christina at 921-1371. FEMALE N/S rmte wanted to share condo 3 blks from ASU. Own pm & ba. W/d, a/c, pool, $275 + 1/2 util: 668-8689 or 894-6264. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. Tempe area, $315/pao. + 1/3, Util., all amenities. 831-1680 Ma j o r s Tempe mfg company has two openings in' accounting and credit depte. GoocL detail A phdne skills. Previous cred-it/collecticihs "experience a plus. . Send rfesurie *to ''accounting Manager, Dash Desighs, Inc.,. 600 W 2 4 t h Street-, Tempe, AZ.&S2&1 ' 1988 SUBARU GL Wagon. Great engine, great body, white, new transm ission and tires. Power steering, breaks, windows & locks. Tinted wind­ ows. Service records incl. 74,000 miles. 28-38 mpg., runs like a dream. No a/c. $1850. Call after Spin, 4388960. HELP W ANTEDG ¡N | j t t L _ _ R esp o n sib ilities in clu d e takin g in co m in g ca lls, developing: relation sh ip s w ith cu sto m ers, settin g up a cco u n ts, c lo s in g sa le s, and a ssistin g fu ll-tim e sa les representatives. • • • • $8.5 if y o u a re p ro ficie n t in 997-4830 b o th su b je ct areas. CENTER FOR THE ARTS PRODUCTION ASSISTANT CITT OF CHANDLER $1,500.00 1-800-243-2435 RESTAURANTS/ BARS (iitm ini, m: hi vKiirr with E X T R A T IC K E T Featuring Don Young *Every Thursday!* BOSTON'S M c C lin to c li & C u r r y • 9 2 1 -7 3 4 3 TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING $1.99 PG. Fàst/ Accurate/ Las­ er. Exp'd editor. APÀ/MLA. Best bang for the buck. 9672360’ -y ; - ■ $$2/PG, $ 15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. $25-50 RESUMES From Scratch, cover letters created same visit, updates from any­ where rii U SÀI (B00#). Laser fast Tempe. M-Sun. 9a-9p. 968- SERVICES JO B OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA JOBS JO B OPPORTUNITIES INTL EMPLOYMENT Make up to $2,000-$4,000+/mo. teaching basic conversational English abroad. Japan, Taiwan, and S. Korea. M any provide room & board + other benefits. (206) 6 3 2 -1146 ext. J5 9 1 8 5 EOE HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE ç A prit f eST MEXICAN »¡Jf Gptestaurant c\\fe are nota Mg new chain. cWe are a fasy, fun, family run restaurant looking Jor att intelligent , hard working W ^ I c T s t^ . o i l C^prif-yn’s after 4pm to set up an Interview. 900,000 grants available. before July 25 (206) 54S-41SS ex t A 5 9 1 8 7 ; 4 4 5 -1 3 9 9 CASH FOR COLLEGE 1- 800- 635-0120 •APPljr: a tkfor (Heidi fih t ‘Horrible AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast turnaround. Laser quality. Townsend W/P, Maureen, 9550969. ______________ . The AMS Interest-Free Monthly Payment Plan at ASU gives you more time to pay. Spread all or part of your tuition bill over 10 months. The only cost is $50. It's easy to join-call AMS at Fisheries. Earn up to / $3,000-$6,000+ per m onth. Room & Board ¿^Transportation! Male o r Female. N o experience necessary! . HELP WANTED-1 FO O D SERVICE EXPERIENCE lfY PriO SlSW ^ 7 1 1 2 . Learn to hypnotize your­ self! Stop .smoking, weight con­ trol, phobias, emotional trauma, sex. dysfunction, improve Jeam -. ing ability, anxieties, anaethesia, enhance sport performance. TUITION HELP Temporary part-time, $8,50/hr. 30 to 40 hours per week including nights & week­ ends. Requires 1 to 2 years experience with sound, lighting, scenery and rigging systems in stage or event work. City application forms required. City of Chandler 25 S. Arizona place, Ste 201 Chandler. AZ 85225 786-2290 TYPING/W ORD P R O C g g |N G _ Stal* Fra«» Clsitifitdi MtHhtws Cantar Batamant 96S-67Î5 S6+/H*. 9 5 7 -7 7 7 0 SERVICES ****H0W TO get lucrative professional jobs! Get a jump on the competion! Learn the se­ HEALTH ft crets to uncovering the hidden FITNESS job market now! Smart tips to success. O rder booklet now! GENTLE RELAXATION mas­ Only $2 to: Bernal Publishing, 8491 Sunset Blvd. / Suite 478 . sage. Licensed massage thera­ pist Kim 423-9809. /L.A.CA. 90069. ADOPTION THE ‘ARIZO N A REPUBLICAN PARTY NEEDS YOU! FAST-TIME MRS. EOE S t a t e P ress T u esd ay, Ju ly 1 8 ,1 9 9 5 JULY 26,9-12 am Holiday Inn, Scottsdale Use the Internet to get ayob: Intended fo r anyone seeking a )t»b as well as recruiters & personnel agencies eager to tap into the limitless resources o f the Internet. Practical .and upn-tjechnicalj - Early roaenratioiia required, Cost $25.00 ;r ’ Call INTER-TECBBOBPx TEL 9 4 5 -0 0 8 5 . ASU AREA. APA/MLA exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6, transcrip­ tion. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime I WANT IT NOW! Desktop Publishing: Typing, resume service, charts & graphs. On campus! 966-1984. KINKO'S COPY Center makes the grade! Get reports, resumes, & flyers fast! Color copies, Mac­ intosh & IBM rental & much more! Open 24 hours! Rural & University, 966-2035. PROFESSIONALLY WRITTEN term papers per your specifi­ cations. Any subject, level, length. High Performance Pap eri (702) 737-4999. Every weekday, w e give you the State Press absolutely free. G reat news. G reat fea­ tures. Even a magazine. Crosswords and horoscopes. N ot to m ention the huge sav­ ings from all the coupons. W e do this for you every day. Will you d o something for us? G ood! Thanks! W hen th e State Press has inserts, they tend to flbp to y th e ground an d create a safe­ ty hazard as well as an e y e ­ sore. W ould you b e so socially correct as to bend over and pick an insert th a t m ight Slip o u t o f your State Press? Thanks. Sta te P ress C la s s if ie d s Matthews Center Basement 965-6735 Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Private Party Rates 1-4 days, $1.25 per line/per day 5-9 days, $1.15 per line/per day 10+ days, $1.00 per line/per day (3 line m inimum ) Commercial Rates 1-4 days, $1.50 per line/per day 5-9 days, $1.40 per line/per day 10+ days, $1.30 per line/per day (3 line m inimum ) Personals (Student rate, must show ID) $2 for 3 lines, $1 for each addi­ tional line Deadline: Noon, one day prior to publication W e appreciate your K elp.' And so does th e earth. Voua In d i v id u a l H o ro sco pe Francés Drake Tuesday, July 18,1995 SCORPIO (O ct 23 to Nov. 21) ARIES It’s best to show a more caring side (March 21 to April 19) It seems you ju st can’t escape con­ to loved ones. Sometimes, you can troversy, whether a t home or on the put people off by being too rigid. Be job. Despite the tem ptation to avoid aware of this and take steps to avoid saying anything, your opinion is ' doing so by being more receptive. SAGITTARIUS im portant. You have the solution. (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) TAURUS Youmust be careful toavoid losing (April 20 to May 20) You are drawn to new creative something which is valuable to you. pursuits. Some could explore a flair Perhaps it’s best to put this item in for the culinary arts. While your a safe place. Evening hours favor charism a is high, it’s best to avoid family togetherness. CAPRICORN social situations. (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) GEMINI You’re in a b it of a “lone-wolf (May 21 to June 2 0 )’ You are a t ease, puttw ing around, mood, which isn’tnecessarily a bad tending to domestic chores. How- thing. Take tim e to indulge this. ever, don’t neglect w hat m ust be W hat you discover by m editating done on the work front. Colleagues helps you in the long run. AQUARIUS look to you for your energy and direc­ tion. (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You feel alm ost overpowering CANCER yearnings to get in touch with some­ (June 21 to July 22) Someone close to you seems to be one from your past. Ib is person in a genuinely good mood, but don’t would love to hear from you, so go be fooled. There’s more behind th at rig h t ahead. However, avoid the smile and you’re ju st the one to find tem ptation to renew a romance. PISCES i t Be supportive. (Feb. 19 to March 20) Leo Instead ofbeing so judgmental and (July 23 to Aug. 22) Jum ping up and down and railing critical, it’s best to try a more patient about something doesn't change it. approach. O thers appreciate, you It’s a tim e for action. Toward th at more when you’re being understand­ end, seek out a trusted friend’s ad­ ing. Also, stop being so self-absorbed. YOU BORN TODAY are a mover vice. and shaker. You can tackle more VIRGO than one task a t a tim e and seem to (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Itseerns you’re tom inanum ber of execute these effortlessly. Your • different directions. However, don’t boundless energy and enthusiasm go offcharing these all down a t once. u s infectious to others around you. Prioritize’w hat m ust be dime ami Fields of interest include, business, real estate, construction and con­ follow th a t list. f 4?: : tracting, and teaching. Youleel most LIBRA ,V . comfortable in a committed relaV (Sep&23 to Oct. 22) ", Quality tim ew ith loved ones goes tionship rather than being a social “ , a long wdy toward bolstering your ^butterfly. B irthdate of: Lowell Weicker, poli­ thhod. A sticky situation a t work ’ looks bleak. Hbwevety this is coming tician; Jan et Jackson, singer; Debra Winger, actress. to an end soon. 0 1996 Kins Fattura« Syndicate Ine. 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