Student accuses DPS o f police brutality Claims officer threatened to ‘kick (his) ass’ B y G reg Z em eid a S tate P ress An ASU student arrested for disorderly conduct earlier this month claims ASU police officers used excessive force in his arrest. Michael McVerry, a junior exercise science major, said ASU Department of Public Safety officers threw him to the ground and slammed his head into the trunk of their patrol car Aug. 20, injuring lus jaw and leaving bniises on his head and left arm. He also said one officer threatened to “kick (his) ass,” ASU Chief of Police Lanny Standridge said he was unaware of the alleged incident, hut said he would look into the matter. He would not speculate about the allegations. “There are two sides to every story,” he said. “I take complaints against officers very seriously. S tu d e n t leaders p u sh to p u b lish p r o f evalu atio ns “There’s (either) a misunderstanding or something is wrong; that’s the way I look at it.” Police will not release the report on the incident because it is under investigation. The incident occurred at about 1 a.m„ McVerry said. McVerry and two roommates were getting a ride home from an acquaintance after watching the Tyson-McNeely boxing match at a friend’s house. Near the intersection of McAllister Avenue and Lemon Street, ASU police pulled the car over for failure to stop at a stop sign. McVerry said he and his roommates, ASU students Dan Pandaru and Dave Palmer, were told to get out of the car, then frisked and told to sit down on the grass. During this time, the car’s driver was arrested on an outstanding war­ rant for possession of marijuana. After sitting down; McVerry said he discovered that the grass was wet, and stood back up. He said police told him to sit back down, but he refused, saying he didn’t want to get wet. “1 put my hands behind my head and (said) I just want to stand here like this,” McVerry said. “The ground was wet.” One officer came over to him and tried to trip him, he said, adding that he didn’t resist, but tried to keep his bal­ ance and stay up. “Then about four of them were on top of me,” he said. “They banged my head into the ground and twisted my arm back. “One of the officers handcuffed me, picked me up, dragged me over to his patrol car and smashed my head into die trunk of the car.” McVerry said the arresting officer then spoke to him. “He said something like ‘We’ll take you down’ or ‘We can take you somewhere and kick your ass.’ His exact T urn to C omplaint , page 14. Z o o m to th e m o o n B y K im W a t so n S tate P ress ASU officials and student leaders are joining in a con­ certed movement to publish teacher evaluations — a move thar they say would allow students to get more for their tuition dollar. . Paul Allvin, executive director for Associated Students of Arizona, said the debate over whether or not to publish the assessments has been going on for several years, but that this is the first time student leaders from all three state universities are working together in a concerted effort. “The arguments against publishing the evaluations are that they are not scientific and that it will be a popularity contest,” he said. “Faculty are afraid that easy professors will get good evaluations and tough professors will get low ratings.” Students are given the opportunity at the end of each semester to evaluate the instructors’ preparation for class, knowledge of the subjects taught, whether or not the syl­ labus was followed and usefulness of the textbook. Allvin said publishing the results is a simple request by students so they can decide which instructor they want before enrolling in a class. ASU President Lattie Coor said he believes the eval­ uations should be available and that he has respect for students’ ability to determine if they are getting a good education. “Our position is if the University trusts students to do the MNymnawsm* mw Christian Lenz, a member of the A SU Moon Buggy Team , takes the vehicle out for a test ride. The team will com pete in the Third Anual Moon Buggy Race this spring in Huntsville, Alabam a. See story, page 12. T urn to E valuations , page 2 . Percent o f Super Bowl profits to create Tempe youth center By A ngela M S t a te P ress ull The players can rest when the fourth quarter of Super Bowl XXX ends, but the Host Committee will still have a few plays left to execute. One critical play is working with the N ational F ootball League to create an A rizona NFL Y outh E ducation Town Center. One million dollars of Super Bowl XXX’s projected revenues of $170 million will go toward constructing and staffing the center, and whoever receives the bid to run INSIDE STATE PRESS W eather O utlook Hot and humid with widely scattered evening thunderstorms. High 105°, low 83°. the center will match the $1 million, said Carlette Hower, a business development m anager with the S uper Bowl Host Committee. Shirley Allen, director of the NFL Youth Education Town Center in Compton, Calif., said the center offers young people many opportunities to get involved in something positive in the community. She added she is glad the NFL is creating the center, which will be the third in the country. “A lot of people talk about giving back to the community, but you rarely see an World/ Nation Fearing a violent reception upon returning to their hom eiaod, Rwandans w ere suprised by a warm w elcom e. P ag e? ■ organization that does give back,” she said, adding that some members of her youth center are opening up “The NFL Chill Zone,” a store that will sell NFL-licensed clothing. The NFL requires the Super Bowl Host Committee to set funds aside for the youth centers, mainly from the NFL Experience and the NFL Charities Golf Tournament, Hower said. In addition to the youth center, various Arizona charities will receive money from the A rizona S uper B owl C h arities Sports Head football coach Bruce Snyder has reached final d ecisions on several position battles. Page H Foundation. The foundation was created to maximize the charity dollars and to ensure that the bulk of these dollars remains in the state, said Joe Rhein, a consultant for the foundation, “The goal is to dem onstrate that the playing of the game is going to impact as many different parts of the state as possible, and one of those is definitely the charity area,” he said. The Charities Foundation and events’ promoters will not choose the charities until T urn t o NFL, page 2 . Where To Find It C la ssified s ........... .................. 21 C om ics......................... 16 C rossword...........................„....6 H oroscopes ..................... ..... 23 O pinion..... ................................ .4 P olice R eport............................ 6 Sports.......... ...........,......„¿«<.,17 T oday's A c tiv itie s .................2 W orld/N ation.....’.....,........;,,..3 Page 2 Tuesday, August 2 9 ,1 9 9 5 E v a lu a tio n s T oday C ontinued from page 1. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the base­ ment o f Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or viafax. Entries must contain the full name o f The club or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the fidl address o f the location. AU requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. • ACTIVE Community Sorvioo I • Kundallnl Yoga C hib — Get focused early this year. Join us for classes held Monday through Thursday. 5:30 p.m,; MU Apache Room ^21), • Mortar Board — General meeting. 6 — ASU Sorvos! Volunteer Fair. The fair is open to anyone interested in volunteer opportunities. 10 a.m . to 2 p.m.; MU Ventana Room. • Alpah Kappa Pel Business Fraternity p m ; Alumni Lounge (202). • M UAB FBm Com m ittee — Everyone welcome for toe meeting. 3 p.m.; MU third floor Conference Room 1A. • MUAB Gallery Committee — Meeting, everyone welcom e. 5:30 p.m .; MU Hauasupai Room (2080). — Bowling on campus. Also see the rush table on the Dean's Patio. 6:30 p.m.; MU basement at the bowling alley. • Baptist Student Union - - Fun, fellow­ ship and worship. 8 p.m.; BSU Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. • C a m p u s A m b a ss a d o rs C h ris tia n Fellow ship — ‘Campus Ambassadors • M U A B R ecrea tio n al Com m ittee — Everyone welcome for the meeting. 4 p.m.; MU third floor Conference Room 1A. • O m ega D elta P h i — ASU’s first Hispanic-founded fraternity is having Rush Week. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. through Saturday; Cady Mall. • R e-Entry C o n n e c tio n — B usiness meeting and everybody is welcome. Bring lunch and a friend. Noon; Re-Entry Center in the lower level of the MU. • SaHe D ia b lo Fencing Club — Training and practice, equipment provided. 7:30 p.m. SRC, small gym B. Tuesday Night.’ Music, drama, discus­ sion. 7:30 p.m. MU La Paz Room. • C om in g O ut D is cu ssio n G rou p — M eeting. 6 p.m.; M ulti-Cultural Lounge in the Student S ervices Building. • Delta Sigm a Pi — C o-ed profession al b u s in e s s fra te rn ity re cru itm e n t w eek. C a d y M a ll a n d the D ean ’s P a tio at the C olleg e o f B u siness. • Delta Sigma Pi Professional Business Fraternity — Recruitm ent event. 6 p.m, to 9 p.m.; P o p Peron i's P izza , 10th Street and M ill Avenue. • MUAB Recreation Committee — First com m ittee m eeting. W ill plan for C ollege Bow l, A C U - I G am es and general pro­ gram m ing. 4 p.m .; third flo o r M U in the M U A B offices. • Gun Devils — W eekly m eeting. 5 p.nri.; M U, Room 219. • KASR 1260 AM — T h e Liquid B laineO Show ” features m u sic from the sum m er's best concerts. 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. on K A S R . • Knightly Devils C hess Club — F irst semester meeting of toe new A SU chess dub. Anyone is welcome. 6 p m ; MU Room 341. ■ ■ ■ S t a t e P ress ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ • Society for Creative Anachronism — ■ W eekly m eeting and anyone is w elcom e. 7 p.m., M U Y avapai Room , • U niversity T o a s tm a s te rs — O p e n h o u se fo r A S U ’s p ro fe s s io n a l sp e e c h dub. 6:30 p.m.; M U C oconino Room . • Vital Im pact!— M eeting with live m usic and dram a. 7:30 p.m.; M U Program m ing Lounge. • Women’s Soccer — Try-outs. 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.; Band Practice Field. ■ evaluations in die first place, then why not’ allow thepi to be published,” he said. Allvin said the issue is only in the plan­ ning stages at this point. A student commit­ tee will be established once school gets underway tb investigate how other states handle publishing the evaluations, he said. He added that one method might be to provide evaluation results in the class bulletin or have diem readily available to look up. Provost Milton Click said the Academic Senate will debate the issue and privacy concerns will have to be resolved, but he believes it is a good way for students to learn more about instructors and get more out of a class. “Those against (publishing students’ evaluations) say if only one student is quot­ ed, then the evaluation won’t be valid,” Glick said. “We are trying to move towards a portfolio evaluation that will include ... a holistic view o f a professor’s teaching.” NFL C ontinued from page 1. February or Match, Rhein said. The Host Committee is currendy completing a formal application form for die charities to be dis­ tributed within the next few weeks, Rhein said he cannot project how much of the Super Bowl’s net proceeds will go toward charities because guidelines are still being formed. He added that he will have a better idea closer to game day. The foundation’s money will come from sanctioned events and the H ost C om m ittee’s rem aining budget after expenses are paid, Rhein said. Sanctioned ev e n ts are ongoing, such as the NFL Experience, or one-tim e, like T em pe’s Super Bowl Block Party. The foundation will collect about 50 percent of the net pro­ ceeds from the one-time events and a lesser,: undetermined percentage from the ongoing events, he said. “It’s going to be a major benefit to the charities that are able to get grants,” he said. “Everyone, whether it’s the host com­ mittee or the people in the state, can take pride in it.” Hower said the foundation is a wonder­ ful way to add funding to the community. “It’s funding that never would have been here if it wasn’t for the Super Bowl,” she said. ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY S tate P ress In t e n t i o n a l m is u s e o f t h is p r o d u c t MAY CAUSE SER IO U S INJURY. ■ G et H A! Invol MUAB is having a Lunch time comedy from your ideas. general member meeting for new members. Find out w hat MUAB is all about. B arren M in d Improvisation F a rce Side Every Thursday Join one o f the seven exciting committees. S ketch C o m e d y Thursday, August 31st, 5:00 1 2 : 1 0 - 1 :0 0 MU Programming Lounge B e t t e r t h a n a s t ic k in t h e e y e ." E v e r y F r id a y Lower Level SE Corner 1 2:40-1:30 B rin g a F rie n d ! M U P r o g r a m m in g L o u n g e L o w e r L e v e l ■ SE C o r n e r MUAB • MEMORIAL UNION, 2nd floor of the Union 218 PIMA ROOM FREE Food! Bring your roommate. D O N T BE LEFT OUT! MU • 965-6822 < IHR. Hi !!!¡’*1 m s v i 'm Com edy / N ^ ,,.JG|iNery V* S p e c i-a l E v e m ts M a r k e t-j-ójg W orld/Nation State P ress ____________ ________________ _____________ Tuesday, August 29,1995 ________________ ______________________ P ag e 3 Senators get different view o f Grand Canyon GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK (AP) — Arizona’s congression­ al delegation Monday learned of a dif­ ferent Grand Canyon, where employ­ ees live in 30-year-oki trailers dubbed ' "Dumpsters” and cars overflow the parking lots and choke the roads. ‘‘Protecting this great place has bee» on the minds of people in this country for a long tin»,” said park superinten­ dent Robert Amberger. “But our facili­ ties are antiquated and outdated.” Amberger and others testified at a field hearing of the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources held just a short walk from the rim of Arizona’s most famous tourist attraction. The hearing was called by Sen. Jon Kyi, a committee member, to air problems at the park, which will get more than 5 million vis­ itors this year. Traffic has gotten much o f the attention in discussions about a pro­ posed plan to revamp operations. Less well known are crowded living condi­ tions for park workers. Before the hearing, reporters were taken on a tour of accommodations, including portable hovels known unaffectionately as “Dumpsters” left over from construction of the Glen Canyon Dam in die 1960s. Sarah Gale, a shop desk, lives with a roommate in a 12- by 25-foot trailer with a foot-wide bathtub and a door so warped the place floods every time it rains. “It’s pretty bottom of the barrel. I know some people who get a job here and then decline it when they find cnit about the housing.” Kyi said he’d heard housing was bad. But after seeing the trailers first­ hand, he said he believed improve­ ments should be made a priority. Amberger said the park service doesn’t expea Congress to appropriate much for improvements, and that ; mosey would probably go to easing traffic problems. “Creative” solutions like public-private partnerships and corporate donations will be explored to fix foe housing, he told the hearing. Traffic problems are extensive: A holiday weekend can bring 100,000 visitors and a miles-long traffic jam at the entrance; foe visitor center draws 9,000 people a day yet has only 133 parking (daces. Yuma get»-$92>500 grant to figh t drag crimes YUMA (AP) — The city’s housing authority has been awarded a $92,500 grant to fight drug-related crime in public housing. The funds are part of more than $2 million in grant money awarded mound Arizona to help right drug-related crime in federally subsidized housing. Yuma’s grant will be used for such em it as uniforms and equipment far a volunteer resident patrol program and a part-time investigator to help prevent veaMeats foam denting drags, said Aimfifa Lopez, an im al dfanctor e f foe city housing authority. T he grant, w hich is part o f the Clinton afonimstration’s anti-crime efforts, will be officially presented Tm day ia Chaedhtr. O h u fsd pfaats o f pfoBr housing funds were the Phoenix Housing Depsrtmcat. Tec son’* Community Sendees D efm tapM , H gat County Division of Housing, Maricopa County Hnmriag Pspmtssaat rad foe WMfa—i Homing Authority Agioctifd Press A group of Hutu refugees walks toward the Tare City Hall, 25 m iles north of Kigali, Rwanda, w h o a they will be registered before going back home. They are among the hundreds id Hutus who had been expelled from Zaire last week. After days of going from transit cam p to transit camp, they arrived to the hom es they abandoned in July 1994, fleeing the advancing Tutsi rebel army to seek refuge in Zaire- P e a c e w e lc o m e s r e fu g e e s a t h o m e plate of potatoes. “As soon as I got back, I saw everything was OK.” said Bazik, 60. “It’s everything 1 MUYUNEGE, Rwanda (AP) — Chased hoped for.” Bazik and many of the 15,000 Rwandan out of Zaire by soldiers, Antoine Bazik and thousands of other Rwandan Hutus expect­ Hutus expelled from Zaire have found that ed to be killed back home. Instead, some­ leaving isn’t so bad. Many denounced the Hutu extremists thing even more startling awaited Bazik when he reached his village Monday: a who used terror to keep them in refugee camps, and were surprised to rind peace warm welcome. As he got out of the car, first one neigh­ after the ethnic genocide last year that bor, then two, then a dozen ran over to killed 500,000 people, mostly minority embrace Bazik. They dragged him into the Tutsis. . “This could be a good thing if people town bar, slapped a liter of banana wine into his hand and sat him down to a heaping can come back and they are not harmed and word gets to the other side,” said Peter Rwandan Hutus surprised by warm reception 35 die in Sarajevo attack Market shelling threatens efforts to end war SARAJEVO, B osniaHerzegovina (AP) — Jeopardizing the most promising peace talks in 3 1/2 years of war, a mortar shell tore through a crowded market Monday, killing at least 35 people and sling­ ing limbs and scraps of flesh across storefronts. More than 80 people were hurt. It was the same market where 68 people died last year in a similar attack. The morning attack came as a U.S. delegation led by Assistant S ecretary o f S tate R ichard Holbrooke arrived in Paris to meet Bosnia’s president and representa­ tives of other countries trying to end the war. The Bosnian government blamed Serb gunners and suggested it might withdraw from U.S.-spon­ sored talks that started in Paris on Monday unless NATO retaliated for the deadly shelling. The United Nations said air raids remained a p o ssib ility — but not before it established who fired. Holbrooke, the head o f the U.S. m ission, pledged not to let the attack derail his peace work. “ It will only make us redouble our efforts,” he said. Bodies, some without arms or legs, lay in pooled blood outside the battered, early 1900s building that houses Sarajevo’s largest indoor market. One old man’s head was split open and his motorcycle still rested between his legs. Some bodies fell apart as rescuers loaded them into cars. Many o f the dead were chil­ dren and old people. “Oh God, isn’t there someone who can help us?” an unharmed, weeping old man pleaded at the marketplace. “Isn’t there someone who can finally stop this butchery and allow us to live like the rest of the world?” U.N. spokesmen said the shell was a 120-mm mortar fired from the south, but that a radar detection system had not picked it up and they could not immediately deter­ mine who fired it. Suspicion fell cm Bosnian Serbs, who have besieged Sarajevo for 40 months and rejected previous peace efforts. Donovan of the Irish aid group Concern. “It depends on how the government behaves.” In addition, some 173,000 refugees — including Hutu extremists accused of atroc­ ities — fled into the Zairean countryside to escape repatriation, and it wasn’t clear what sort of reception they would receive in Rwanda. Many refugees are reaching home only after a week of stopovers at transit camps, where they were screened for involvement in genocide, registered and taken to their home districts. Bazik, who lost touch with his wife in the H utus’ panicked mass flight from ; T urn to R wanda , page 13. Imm igrant population reaches 50 year high WASHINGTON (AP)— U.S. residents who were bom in another country made up 8.7 percent of the population last year, the highest proportion of immi­ grants since World War II, a new Census Bureau study shows. Tbat means 22.6 million people —■nearly one in 11 U.S. residents — were foreign-bom, and one-third of them lived in California, according to the study released Monday. One-fifth of the immigrants, or 4.5 million people, arrived here in foe last five years. The 8.7 immigrant percentage of the population is up from 7.9 percent in 1990 and nearly double the 1970 level of 4.8 percent. The census findings, which cover legal and illegal immigrants, come amid fierce debate over immigra­ tion p o licies, both in C ongress and among Republican presidential hopefuls. Congress is consid­ ering a number of bills that would cap rates of legal immigration and seek to slow illegal immigration. More than 4 million people are believed to be in the United States illegally, with some estimates reaching 5.4 million. About 1 million people were admitted to the country legally in 1994. The Clinton administration is planning to qdmit 20,000 fewer refugees next year — an 18 percent reduction in refugee admissions — despite a steady increase in the number o f people forced to flee their homes because of war, famine or other causes. T urn to Immigrants, page I3. _____ ______ ;______ - .• ________ i Opinion P age 4 _____________ __________________________ _____ _________ " ¥ 7 ¡__________________ Tuesday, August 29, 1995 ___________ STATE PRESS State ta P ress itOfial Teacher evaluations tld Want a good definition of “a shot in die dark?” Try class registration time. Every semester, we offer up prayers to whatever academic gods loom over us that the instructor in the class we’re signing up for is a good one. Occasionally, word will filter down from some friends that a certain professor is fantastic, or d u t another one is a sadistic authoritarian with whom you’ve got about die same chance o f getting an A as you do of winning Lotto. * But most of the time, you haven’t got that luxury — and you’ve just got to wait and hope. The A rizona S tudents A ssociation w ants to change that The student body presidents of ASU, UofA and NAU are trying to im plem ent a plan that would require the three universities to publish the results of instructor evaluations in die back of each semester’s bulletin — a program that would, in effect, allow stu­ dents to know exactly what they’re getting into. While this {dan is still very much on the drawing hoard, it is an idea whose time has come. Universities today must be considered an invest­ ment. Students invest massive quantities of time and money into a university in order to achieve a result — a degree, and a shot at a more lucrative career. Viewed in this way, the idea of publishing student evaluations is a valid one. When investors wish to invest in a company, they will first do their research. They check to see which companies perform herd in the marketplace, «kick give a high return on investment dollars — and which ones are like pouring money down a giant ra&mfe. Professors can and should be evaluated in the s o w way. Some professors ace very much worth our time and money. We can all recall professors that challenged us to M ak and to learn professors who expanded our horizons, and profoundly influenced our lives. We can also all recall instructors who had no busi­ ness teaching at a major university. We’ve had t i m ­ es where you learned mote by sleeping through class than yon did by paying attention. Students should have the right to know what they’re getting before they jump in. It would save the University lots o f time and trouble — drop/adds would probably sharply decline. There are dang a s we must watch out for, howev­ er. There is the danger of taking student evaluations too seriously. Many students do their evaluations conscientious­ ly. But too many others out there see theta as simply a waste of time, and fill them out without putting much time and thought into the process. E ven w orse, som e stu d en ts actu ally p re fer “breeze-through” classes — classes where you don’t learn much of anything, but you can get an easy A '4 and when they have to work for a high grade, they lashout against the teacher with a poor evaluation. Students need to be told which classes have foe highest educational value— not which classes n e foe easiest way to straight A’s. ■■■1** c Publication of student evaluations is a good idea — but you’ve got to take them with | grain of tab. They can be a helpful piece o f information when making out a class schedule, but they shouldn’t be the only consideration. I S iSTATE PRESS TAFF AWUHUII/ M il w e n . H I) R epublics coverage of hate crime shameful Once again I wonder where editors >rs get their news judg­ picked up the Republic and started to read an article titled ment from. “Black teens resisting allure of cigarettes.” I never got past the first quote. I wonder how one paper — the fHRISTINA A 15-year-old girl was talking about how guys prefer M esa Tribune — could run a BAILEY girls who don’t smoke and was quoted as saying, “They be front page story about an alleged like, ‘Don’t be a draggin’ lady.’ ” hate crim e and how the other ilgprion E ditor How stereotypical. m ajor p ap e r — The A rizo n a For most papers, if a quote is grammatically incorrect or Republic — could bury it on the contains broken English, the general consensus has been to inside o f Valley and State, the clean the quotes up so people don’t sound illiterate or second section of the Republic. stupid. If you can’t do that, then it shouldn’t be run at all. I don’t think it was the fact And I don’t know how many times in the past week I that they buried it on an inside have glanced at the front page to see Rep. Mel Reynolds, page that made me so angry; it D-M., another black man, staring back at me. was what they ran on the front Is he getting plastered all over the front page because he page as its top story instead that put me over the edge. It was entitled: “Hoops star who admitted sex crime is a congressm an convicted o f sexual m isconduct or because he is a black congressman convicted of sexual coining to Mesa.” The hoops star was, of course, black, and yes, his mug misconduct? was parked right next to the article. The unfair coverage of minorities isn’t blatant. But its I couldn’t believe that some no-name ballplayer, going subtle, everday occurrences scream to me that there isn’t a to a relatively small school, could get front-page play over committment to be more sensitive to the minority coman alleged hate crime that happened on a campus that sees munty. 40,000 students on a daily basis. And we wonder why racial tensions and hate crimes like Maybe it didn’t go on the front page because it was an the one that transpired this weekend continue to grow. The “alleged” hate crime and details were a bit sketchy, like disproportionately negative coverage of what minorities do representatives for the paper said when I called to tell them wrong is a good place to start looking for those answers. I how upset I was with the lack of coverage. But I am You can’t tell me that white people don’t com m it inclined to believe if it had been a white male beaten up by crimes. You can’t tell me that minorities aren’t doing anything a black fraternity member, it would have been plastered all positive. over page 1. What you can tell me is that the news judgment of the Over the past couple of years I have spoken to many editors about the seemingly negative treatment of minori­ Republic is still lacking in color and needs to be held ties by the press. I have found that many papers are trying accountable for its actions or non-actions. Until the Republic takes a more sensitve approach to to be more sensitive and fair in their coverage of minorities by hiring more minorities and speaking with leaders within minority issues, it shouldn't be read. They may he the the community. After reading the Republic, I seriously Arizona's largest paper but if it loses enough readers, maybe they'll make the necessary changes to become a true doubt it is one qf those papers. For instance, on my first day back from Cleveland, 1 public service. c DAVID STROW, Editor GARIN GROFF, Managing Editor MICHELLE MARIE SHEETZ......................... NighC Editor DAVID PROFFITT...............................................City Editor RENNES BOL1G.. ............... CHRISTINA BAILEY............ BRYN CHANCELLOR............ JIM POULIN............................... DIANNE R BARTSCH............ DAN MILLER............................ DAMIAN SHAW ....................... JOSH KRIST............................... .................Magazine Editor ADRIANNA GARCIA...................... Asst. Magazine Editor R EPO R TER S: Brian Anderson, Cody A ycock, Tim Baxter. Ruth Ann Hogue. Patty King, David Kovacs. Angela Mull, Dan Siegel, Timothy Tail, Kelly Wendel Greg Zemeida. SPORTS REPORTERS: Lisa Eskey, Dustin Krugel. Ron Maiejko, Dawn Wagner. COPY EDITORS: Andrea Healey, Kim Hermán, Liz Montalbano. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Sara Abbott, Robert Anderson, Paul Besing, Tim Hacker. " COLUMNISTS: Enrique Chaurand, Betty Fairish, Steve Forsberg, Tina Holder, Delia Maldonacjp, Liz Montalbano, CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, Steve Tansley. v PRODUCTION: Aaron R. Brutchef, Jodi Goldblatt, Diana Kessinger, Jeremy Meyer, Prashant Sampat, Skip Schrader, Eloise Young. SA L E S R E P R E SE N T A T IV E S: Naomi Cobb, Cari Dewald, Dan EHstrorh, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Nickelle Kastein, less Rankin, Shane Siren, Unsigned editorials reflect die views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion o f die Stott Press staff as a whole. Board members include: DAVID STROW Editor GARIN GROFF Managing Editor CHRISTINA BAILEY Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizóná 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 ÁSU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Inform ation............. .965-7572 N ew sroom ............... .965-2292 M agazine...................965-1695 A dvertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds.................965-6735 Opinion P age 5 Tuesday, August 29, 1995 State P ress F o rgive o r fo rg e t M ike Tyson? While talking with my father on the phone recently, he asked me what I thought about the Mike Tyson-Peter McNeely fight. “How about that, Lizzy (my dreaded family nickname),” he said.“ Knocked him out in less than two minutes.” “Well, Dad,” my answer was, “I really didn’t pay too much attention to the fight. The man’s a convicted rapist.” My father, a lovable man but not one known for his sensi­ tivity to women’s issues, responded, “Yeah, but that girl had no business going up to his hotel room in the first place.” v ^ Since I love my father dearly and didn’t want to anger him, I told him that I refused to discuss the issue further, said good-“ P o in t bye and hung up the phone. But his all-too-familiar response to the subject of rape left me bristling. Why is it that a typically male response upon fiZ hearing that a woman is raped is that she, in some way, “had it MONTALBANO coming?” Why is it that even in 1995 women still cannot spend time with a man aloné in a room without their simple presence near a mattress implying an invitation to sex? Furthermore, why does the only angry response to the Tyson-McNeely fight seem to be that someone wasted $49 for pay-per-view on a fight that lasted only One minute arid 29 seconds, rather than that a man who was convicted of raping a then-18-year-old woman is still permitted to box professional­ ly and earn $25 million for doing little more than stepping his big toe into a boxing ring? Let’s review some well-known facts. In July, 1992 Mike Tyson was in Indianapolis to promote the Miss Black America pageant. He “spent time” in his hotel room With contestant Desiree Washington, who later accused Tyson of rape. The rest, as they say, is history. Tyson denied the accusation. Nevertheless, he was convicted by a jury of his peers on rape charges and faced a prison term that could have incarcerated him until the year 2055. He was sentenced to six years; he served only three. Mike Tyson’s much-heralded, post-prison comeback is earning him more money and press than ever, Other athletes have been banned from their respective sports for lesser crimes. Baseball player Pete Rose, for example, was banned from baseball for the non-violent, and arguably lesser, crime of gambling. Mike Tyson committed rape, a violent crime violating and scarring a woman for the rest of her life, yet is still earning big bucks and publicity. True, boxing and baseball are profoundly different sports. Boxing is a sport based solely on violence, a sport whose par­ ticipants are facing-potentially fatal consequences every time they go to work. Though being paid to pummel an opponent with your fists seems a perfect way to unleash aggression and make an obscene amount of money at the same time, it should not constitute any special bending of the moral codes for its participants. Tyson himself was in a school for juvenile delinquents when he was a teenager — violence, it seems, was in his blood. Boxing, a specifically masculine spent of domination, seemed the perfect arena for him to redirect his anger. Unfortunately, it wasn’t enough to prevent him from lashing out against an innocent woman, Tyson’s conviction and subsequent incarcer­ ation seemed to be a victory for the stand against sexual abuse of women. But how is one to learn from past mistakes if he is not suitably punished for them? Sure, Tyson spent three years in jail, but by the looks of his freshly pumped biceps, it seems his body suffered little physical deterioration other than the natural toll three years o f living will take on a human being. No one can be sure exactly what transpired during Tyson’s three years of confinement — they were probably not easy ones— but does a convicted rapist’s reparation for his crime end when he is released from prison? In my opinion, it should not. And in my opinion, Tyson should be banned from the spent he disgraced as a constant reminder of the crime he committed, rather than praised and paid for the same strength that forced Desiree Washington to have sex with him. Scars from rape do not easily disappear- Women who have been victimized in this way do not ever forget the violation committed against them. They are the innocents — yet they will always feel the repercussions of the violent act forced upon them by a male offender. Mike Tyson, as the perpetrator of such a: crime, should be sentenced to the same fate. L; My brother John is in jail. H e’s scheduled to be released in December after serving almost seven years. He ELIA didn’t rape or kill anyone but he did commit a federal crime, so he had to serve his full sentence without any time off for MALDONADO good behavior. Columnist The details of his crime are unclear. It seems a team of federal officers were parked in front of a house down the street from my brother’s apartment. The officers were on sòme type of stakeout, so they had been sitting in their car for some time. My brother, who is not the brightest guy in the world, decided to start some trouble with the officers. The men tried to dissuade John because they didn’t want to bring any attention to themselves, but my brother would have none of that. The rest depends on whom you believe. Version 1 (John’s): My brother flashed a gun at the officers to show them that he meant business, at which time the officers jumped out of their car and struggled with him, leading to a discharge of the gun. No one was hurt. P o in t Version. 2 (the feds): My brother, having had too much to drink (which is usually the case.) walked across the street and began having target practice with the officers’ car. Version 3 (mom’s): My brother was possessed by the devil. Version 4 (guy who lives next door): My brother was kidnapped by aliens. His evil twin, the true perpetrator of the crime, can now be found on the planet Zolton or by calling 1-800-COLLECT. Seriously , I know what nay brother did was stupid and he deserved to go to jail. He’s the type of guy that has been in trouble all of his life. 1 can only hope his time in jail has finally taught him right from wrong. Some good things have already happened. While serving time he got his GED and began taking college courses in computers. I truly believe, with the proper skills, he can be a productive member of society. When I catch myself cursing at the sight of Mike Tyson free after only serving three years of his six-year sentence, I stop and think of John. Though their crimes are very dif­ ferent, they are both very violent men. Tyson is a fighter because it is all he’s ever known. John was a fighter because he didn’t know any better. Tyson did whatever he wanted because he never had a father to tell him not to. John did whatever he wanted because my father allowed it. My father had eight kids, five of which were boys, so if only one was getting in trouble, it was a good week. Tyson has trouble dealing with women because, as an early article pointed out, he tends to settle disputes with women as he would his male friends. Using his fists, intimidation and threats, John has trouble keeping a girlfriend because he has never loved anybody as much as he loves himself. Tyson’s time in jail has taught him how to control his anger. He appears to be more articulate and reasonable now that he has seen the conse­ quences of his actions. John’s time in prison has humbled him. He How understands that the world does not revolve around him. Tyson will never be the same fighter he was before. The world will now be looking at him through a magnifying glass. His achievements will be portrayed as larga: than life. But then, so Will his mistakes. John’s days as a reckless teenager are behind him. But he still has a lot to prove to his friends, his family and, most of all, to himself. In our eyes if he fails, so do we. I guess what I’m trying to say here is that some people might feel that my brother does not deserve a second chance. The wives and families of the federal officers would probably like to see him locked up for the rest of his life. I understand their anger. I feel the same things when 1 see an interview with Tyson or a promotional spot for one of his upcoming fights. He is getting on with his life and it makes me crazy. I would like to say no, this is not fair. How can we praise this man — this rapist? What about the victim, foe woman he raped? Is she getting on with her life? I would like to protest the release of Tyson but I can’t. Tyson’s return to boxing may be unfair and unjust. But I want these same things for my brother. I want my brother to be free. I want him to be able to live among us, and that means forgiving him for foe crimes he has committed and giving him a second chance. Tyson will go on to be a multi-millionaire regardless of how I feel. His fans unii still pay thousands to see him fight and some people will always believe he is innocent. John, on the other hand, does need my forgiveness, my support and my love. I know he will never make $25 million for 90 seconds’ work, but I would be happy to see him make just one honest dollar. ■ , - Delia Maldonado is a graduate student studying Journalism- Liz Montalbano is an M .FA. student studying Creative Writing. Q u o ta è U s. . . W OtL W hen you don't know when you have been spit on, it does not m atter too m uch what else you think you know. — R uth Sh ays AUDSfeASUVM.INRE.ASU B ip i AUDST@ASÜACAD M a ilin g A d d re ss: State Press Box 871502 Arizona State University 'Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Page 6 Tuesday, August 2 9 ,1 9 9 5 S t a t e P ress P olice R eport R A SU police reported the follow ing incidents Monday: » A female student was arrested and later released for pos­ session of marijuana at 909 S, Terrace Road. * A male juvenile was arrested for shoplifting at Tower/ Records in the Tempe Center. He was released to his mother. * A male student was contacted at Sahuaro Hall for suspi­ cious activity. He was working on his bicycle in the bike racks. ■ * Two male students were arrested, cited and released for underage drinking at 350 E. University Drive, * Someone stole a male student’s car, a 1988 Suzuki Samari, from Parking Structure 1. The vehicle was later recovered. * Two bikes were reported stolen. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Monday: * A man attem pted an armed robbery o f M anuel’s Restaurant, 2350 E. Southern Ave. The suspect entered the business through an unlocked back door, grabbed an employee and demanded money. He became frightened when told the safe could not be opened and fled without getting any money. The suspect is described as a black man in his early 20s, about 5 feet 9 inches tall and between 140 and 160 pounds. He covered his face with what appeared to be a shirt sleeve. • A 26-yeai-old man drowned in his backyard swimming pool. Peter Defonce was found at the bottom of the pool by his roommate. After being pulled from the pool, CPR was attempted and the Tempe Fire Department was called, but he appeared to be dead at the scene. He was taken to Desert Samaritan Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Drug paraphernalia, m arijuana and equipm ent for inhaling nitrous oxide were found at the scene and may have been a contributing factor in the death. • A 21-year-old man was arrested for assault after he punched the manager of Gibson’s, 410 S. Mill Ave. The man had climbed an 8-foot fence and was confronted by.the manager in front of the club. He then hit him in the face two times. Compiled by State Press reporter Greg Zemeida E S I D E N C Y Every Wed. & Thurs. 2-3 p*m. Student Services Amphitheater SI MOON m There is more to life th an news, w eather and sports. Check out the COMICS W E L C O M E ! ... W h e th er retu rn in g to A S U , o r com in g h e re fo r the first tim e, T R I- C IT Y M O B IL w ish e s y o u a g reat, sa fe -d riv in g fall s e m e s te r. #1 in s e r v ic e fo r A S U stu d e n ts, fa cu lty a n d s ta ff - y o u can d e p e n d on T R IC I T Y M O B IL to fix y o u r c a r w ith q u a lity w ork a t a p ric e to fit y o u r b u d g et! Terribly C om fortable, A w fully Practical, W onderfully Inexpensive SHOW YOUR ASU I.D. EX TR A 10% O F F LA B O R T h e F u to n F a v o r ite 2604 W. 1st St. #S4, Tempe • 804-1554 NOT TO B E U S E D IN CO M BIN ATIO N WITH O TH ER C O U PO N S/D ISC O U N TS. • D o m e s tic & F o re ig n V e h ic le s •T ra in e d T e c h n ic ia n s • C o m p le te A u to m o tiv e R e p a ir s •F u ll & S e l f - S e r v i c e G a s Tri-C ity M o lili Justafew minutes from ASU! Scottsdale Rd. & McKellips (Southeast Comer) 947-9655 "«’ô ï l "«"f î l t ë r 195 $13! 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Wjres&PCV «Addbonal PartsExtra TRI-CITY MOBIL Q g Most C a rs & Light Trucks Valid with Coupon thru 9/30/95. , TRI-CITY MOBIL V-- - — - - - - - I will not walk to school. ■ will not walk to school. I will not walk to school. Regularlyl • L ife tim e W arranty o n F ra m e and F o rk • 1 Y e a r F R E E A d ju s tm e n ts (B ra ke & G earJ |W M° OFF IIi $7* kT S lim e S h o t* ^ 00"!” J with $ 1,000 Guarantee I & carrying bracket i per whed Protect Your Tires From Flats! | With coupon. Void on any otter oilers. Exp. 9/3Q/K WSh coupon. Void OBary other otters. Exp, 9/30/95 967-7700 967-7700 L ............— D Ö N Ü äiks CYCLING 1004 S. M ill Ave. Tem pe, A Z 967-7700 r e d wm S M FLASHING LIGHTS Be Seen! VWKOupon. Vbid on 1a other Oders. Exp. 9/30/95 «iw l B in « a w 967-7700 Student Discounts Financing Available Layaway J University l Outdoors ACROSS 1 City in France 4 Person who resembles a noh-human primate 7 _ Valley 12 Airborne, abbr. 13 ________ Franklin 14 Transient cessation of respi­ ration 15 Collection of things wrapped or boxed together 17 Marked by smartness in dress and manners 18 Gets 19 Gas usage measurement 21 Fish eggs 22 Of crab and lobster 24 Dekalitre 25 What one is dealt 26 Whale (Norweigian) 27 Melon 29 Grand_ 31 Smooth 35 A woman who has received a degree from a college or uni­ versity 37 Equal, prefix 38 Old Irish alphabet 41 Degrees 42 Large burrowing rodent of S and C America 43 Something curved in shape 44 student, learns healing 45 An ugly evil-looking old woman 46 Asian defense organization 48 Temporarily inactive 52 Having ears or earlike appendages 53 Make imperfect 54 Bravo! Bravo! Bravo! 55 A vertical member in a door or window frame 56 What we hear with 57 The length of time some­ thing (or someone) has existed 10th St. p Ù Apache DOWN 1 Drivel 2 A fabric woven from goat and camel hair 3 Make free 4 Outer garments ; 5 A wooden pin pushed or driven into a surface 6 Cures 7 Something of little value • 8 Environmental Protecion Agency 9 Bone cavities 10 Great _ mountains 11 With straw 16 Samuel Haya._a, US Senator 20 Great_of the Midwest 22 Reciprocal of a sine 23 A linear unit 24 A European river 25 Vietnamese currency unit 27 A saddleback 28 Worn by women to support their breasts > 30 Sweet potato 32 _ Falls 33 A monetary unit 34 Arrived extinct 36 A woman of refinement 38 Green regions of desert 39 Relatively large in size or number; larger than others of its kind 40 Mite 42 Cancel or discharge a debt 44 A manner of performance 45 German courtesy title 47 Cablegram, abbr. 49 The cry made by sheep 50 Annoy constantly 51 One and only S tate P ress Tuesday, Aueust 29.1995 Cheap travel an option for flex ib le fliers B y T im B a x ter S ta t e P ress W ant to get to Europe for less than $300? Students seeking inexpensive travel may not be familiar with two of the cheapest options of all — courier program s and stand-by services. Courier programs arrange for cut-rate tickets in exchange for travelers giving up their luggage space to documents or mer­ chandise. Stand-by services buy up Unused seats on international flights and resell them. “The courier companies basically pur­ chase the tickets in the courier’s name at a severe discount,” said Byron Lutz, editor of the Air Courier Bulletin and a frequent courier. “The couriers can sometimes fly for next to nothing.” Couriers allow companies to send docu­ ments overseas quickly. Overnight shippers such as Federal Express often use couriers, Lutz said. “People think Federal Express does all their own shipping, and they do not,” he said. “When it absolutely has to be there in a few hours, they’ll use a courier.” John Leffue, a 34-year-old Scottsdale Community College commercial photogra­ phy student, said flying as a courier allowed him to see the world, but he recommended packing light. “I’m a shoestring traveler,” Leffue said. “If I fly to Singapore I take a couple of shirts, shoes and whatever. It’s carry-on only, because they are using your luggage space.” C ouriers are usually lim ited to two carry-on bags. Leffue said he had been a courier twice. W ELL W IN E DRAFT 8 - 11pm “The first time I flew out to Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand,” he said. “Then L flew out to Australia.” Courier flight prices can range from a discount of a few hundred dollars to free flights. “I’ve seen flights from LA to Tokyo for nothing. Sometimes they have trouble get­ ting people into Tokyo,” Lutz said. “I have a listing for New York to Paris for $150 round trip.” L utz added that flig h ts booked in advance generally cost m ore than last minute flights, but the last minute trips left little time for planning. “Sometimes the last minute stuff is Only a week away,” he said. : , Stand-by services plan ahead to take advantage of last minute, unsold seats, but they require travelers to have some flexibil­ ity in exactly how they reach their final des­ tination. Nilsa Bickel, director of west coast oper­ ations for Airhitch, one of the largest stand­ by services, Said Airhitch clients may not fly to their actual destination, but the ser­ vice would help them get there using local transportation. Airhitch offers trips from Los Angeles to Europe for $269. “We get you to Europe within a five-day window,” Bickel said. “What we do is try to get them to their final destination, end we try to help them get around when they get there.” Airhitch can also help with Eurail pass­ es, buses and other local transportation. "...totally EASTPAK.” Bags made to last a life­ time, designed to hold more stuff, fashioned to look great. Nobody has it totally together like EASTPAK. " rtfr i mmwur*Mm. 11j ••»»m u ab&s«•"'L <*.«■•, * ;i* * • o i f » .» -« id * »»,*■.m t*n M o v ie o p e n s n a tio n w id e S e p t. 1 -wmisiipM n«r 'h m tu fn t t m t o (» • iin a m tom i S GET A $5.00 OFF EASTPAK COUPON TODAY AT ASU BOOKSTORE! CHECK OUT THE GIANT BACKPACK IN FRONT OF ASU BOOKSTORE TODAY! It's three times bigger than your little brother! Hurry - offer good thru Sept. 8 while supply lasts! H CU RS: W eek of August 28 M on-Thurs 8 - 6:30 9* : S B j 8§ È ì ; Page 8 Tuesday, August 29, J995 S t a t e P ress Business advising office one of best in U.S. B y P atty K in g S tate P ress Thé Undergraduate Programs Office in the College of Business hàs been named one of the best advising programs in the country; The program w ill accept the 1995 Outstanding Institutional Advising Certificate of Merit from the National Academic Advising Association Oct. 10. at the association’s national conference in Nashville, Tenn. “It’s the sum total of the programs that we have that were the reasons we won this award,” said Adela Gasca, senior academic adviser in the Undergraduate Programs Office. Bobbie Flaherty, the executive director of the National Academic Advising Association, said the organization hands out two categories of national awards each year. One is for outstanding advisement programs and the other is for out­ standing advisers. Carol Dallas, the coordinator of academic advising for Undergraduate Programs, said one of the college’s most innovative services is the Business Advisery Committee. Once a month, about five students meet with the coordinator of academic advising to voice concerns and discuss topics related to advising such as increasing the hours advisers are available for students. “It provides them with a forum to express their concerns and it also gives them an opportu­ nity to work in a team,” she said. During the spring 1994 semester, students who took part in the committee said they would like to be assigned to a single adviser who would remain with them for the entire duration they were in school. As a result of that input; advisers are now assigned to specific majors and students work with the same adviser throughout their school experience, “It would be hard to get input from the large number of the students at the school, “ said. Marcus Lerman, a marketing major. “You feel like a number sometimes. It’s probably the only way to get feedback from the students individu­ ally.” Kim Jones, an academ ic adviser in the Undergraduate Programs Office, said the college also offers mandatory probation workshops three times a year for people who are having academic difficulties. Dallas said that the workshops Cover topics such as good study skills, University grading policies and time-management skills. Kay Fans, the director of undergraduate pro­ grams in the College of Business, said another noteworthy program in the business college is the Majors Fair. It is held each fall on the dean’s patio and stu­ dents can talk to representatives from each of the college’s eight majors, including accountancy, real estate and computer information systems. They can also meet with people from the M.B.A and Honors programs and representatives from ASU Career Services. Paris said the Undergraduate Programs Office also offers services such as individual, telephone and counter advising for students. Sean Nelson, a business advertising major, said he was pleased with the college’s advising service, “ They told me what was really going on and what I needed to do,” he said. “Once I got that information from them, things were working out.” USA S tu d en t Getaways. San Diego San Francisco $ 54* New York The 1995-96 Sun D evil Spark Yearbook to d a y ! Located in the Arches Plaza & M -Th Fri Sat U n iv e rs ity FIRST-TIME CLIENT SPECIAL 9-8 9-6 9-5 95 9 Groom Humons Hair Studio 966-5462 CONSULT • SHAM POO CONDITION . CUT Toronto Council Travel Drop by for a FREE Student Travels magazine 130 E. University, Ste. A Tempe, A Z 85281 located at Forest and University (directlyacross fromASU.) 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Cad for otherwbrkVade destinations. 966-3544 In The Arches Shopping Confer Reg. sl6B/sl8’5 $178* Boston $178* Washington, DC $178* MAKE AN INVESTMENT IN YOUR LIFETIME O rd e r your copy o f $ 34 f e e .) T ru e S a v in g s an d save 25% to Anybody, Anytime, Anywhere in t h e U S A . Life can b e co m p licated AT&T T ru e S a v in g s is sim ple. Ju st sp en d $10 a m onth o n long distan ce and w e’ll subtract 25% off yoür AT&T bill* Spend $50 a m onth, g et 30% off. G uaranteed. T his special offer en d s soon, so you’ve g o t to call 1 8 0 0 TRUE-ATT to enroll by S eptem ber 15. No fees. No lists. A nd n o circles. That’s YourTrue C hoice AT&T. | P age 9 Tuesday, August 29,1995 S tate P ress Spin Doctor Experience One o f Life'* Greatest Adventures on the campus of ASV... EXPERIENCE VITAL VITAL Im pact is all about liv in g ou r liv e s in such a w ay that w e m ake a difference— a vital im pact! W e w an t to w elcom e you to com e and check u s out. W e offer a p lace w h ere friendships are m ade, w here liv es are changed, an d excitem en t and fun are in great supply— w e'd lo v e for you to join us! LIVE THE ADVENTURE ON THE CAMPUS OF ASU: Or«una / Impact! Tuesdays 7:30pm in th e M em orial U n io n P rogram m ing L ounge (b en eath T aco B ell) I GRACE C O M M U N IT Y C H U R C H "A P la c e W h e re L o v e Grow s* Robert Anderson/ State Press U n d e c la re d graduate stu­ dent Victoria J o h it s o n u s e s a p o tv tery wheel to m old som e “ te st-tile s” for glazing in pottery cla ss Monday. 1200 E. S o u th e rn A v e , T e m p e For a d d itio n a l in form ation call u s at 894-2201, e x t 205 I1 I I I K I T O m n 1 # M A R G A R IT A 3-lb. b u rrito fille d w ith red end . green ch ile , double-w rapped in fresh ! to rtilla s, lettuce, tom ato & cheese. J C h o ice o f chicken o r beef. * w /a n y B u r r it o o r C o m b o D in n e r L im it 1 • N o t g o o d w ith o th e r offers. Exp. 9« 1 9 * 9 5 and/or 3/4 lb. M O N S T E R T A C O $1.99 ^ E xpires 9* 19*95 One coupon per customer .per visit^ J 216 E. U niversity ju s t e a s t of F o rest T em pe • 829-6026 ©1995 ATST ‘Certain exclusions apply Available in most areas. P age 10 S t a t e P r e ss Tuesday, August 29, 199S C oor: K e e p U n iv e rsity d iverse B y C o d y V . A ycock S tate P ress Despite the national debate over affirmative action, cul­ tural diversity Wiil remain a fundamental goal of ASU, University President Lattie Coor told a group of faculty leaders Monday . “(Diversity) is a core value of this University, in our students, in our faculty, in our programs, and we are going to pursue that,” he said at the first Academic Senate meet­ ing this semester. Coor said he is not sure where the Arizona Board of Regents stands on the topic. : “One of the issues that is not yet clear from the Arizona Board of Regents’ context is the issue of diversi­ ty. or as it has been put into code word, affirmative action,” he said. Coor expects the broader issues of diversity to be dis­ cussed at the next Regents’ meeting scheduled for Sept. 28 and 29 at ASU, he said. “The agenda has not been set y e t... but there is a real S t a t e P r e ss interest in exploring die issues ... so I believe there will be some form of discussion of the larger diversity issue,” he said. Norma Salas, Regents’ assistant for public affairs, said if the issue of affirmative action is raised in September, it will probably take place as an informative discussion. Affirmative action on college campuses was thrust into the national spotlight after the University of California’s Board of Regents eliminated gender and race-based admis­ sions policies. Coor said Arizona’s affirmative action debate is differ' ertt because the three state universities accept all qualified Arizona residents. The University may need to evaluate the tools used to instill diversity, but creating a campus representative of society is “the most important value,” said ASU’s Provost Milton Glick. “If the methods used to achieve (diversity) need to be re-evaluated, then (Regents) can do that, but diversity needs to be the main focus,” he said. Rain or shine, cheer or whine, we're there! f Crosswords MEASURE YOUR TOE • • • • • W IState P ress TH E L ow d ow n p aym en t M on th ly p aym en t p lan s 24-h ou r cou n try w id e claim serv ice Im m ed iate coverage F ree n o -o b lig a tio n ra te q uote C all us today or stop by o ur local office: COOL a ' Since 1936, G E IC O has been saving good drivers good m oney on th eir car insurance. F ind o u t how m uch you m ay save. C all us today. G eico offers yo u . . . For th e cruciverbalist in y o u . ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ^ Looking for Auto Insurance? Call G E IG O at State P ress ,J L T : J JE W E L "I told you, you should have stayed in b ed ." -S ta te Press Horoscopes Toe Rings _____ Ankle Bracelet?'. "N. Nose Rings nT (Fake Nose Rings) Hoops, Cuffs, Studs and Lots of Single Earrings 6 0 2 -9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 In th e classified section. L o o k in g fo r a c h a lle n g e was a gift (from her ex). Available at Exchange. and a paycheck? The Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the editorship of the 1995-96 Sun D evil Spark yearbook. A pplicants for the position o f editor: TEMPE, 227 W. University, 968-2557 • PHOENIX, 724 E. Understanding the Bible A Thursday Noon A S U Bible Study hristian Students Fellowship is sponsoring a weekly Bible study anCrueial Questions About the Christian Life. This semester we will look into the Gospel of John, the Epistles of John, and John’s bode of Revelation. Each fellowship will focus on a different question related to the Christian life. / 'I Speaker: Bill Freeman, Ministry o f the Word Place; jM U - Thursdays, 12:40-1:30 P.M. Fa ll Semester — Answering Life’s Most Crucial Questions D ate Aa*. 31 Sept. 7 14 21 Room *' Lapoz/223 Lapaz/223 Lapaz/223 Lapaz/223 Subject What Is it to be Born-again? What Is the Meaning of the Universe? What Is Life? What Is Faith and Believing? F o r in fo r m a t io n a b o u t o t h e r r e g u l a r A ll ar e w elcome ! GATHERINGS FOR FELLOWSHIP DURING THE BRING YOUR OWN ‘BROWN BAG’ LUNCH. WEEK, PLEASE CALL CSF AT 921-7270 _ BEVERAGES & DESSERTS PROVIDED — ✓ ✓ M ust be a student at A SU in good academ ic standing. M ust have a m inim um o f tw o years yearbook or m agazine experience. ✓ M ust possess strong leadership, m anagem ent, organizational, com m unication, graphic design, production and w riting skills. ✓ M ust be proficient in M acintosh M S Word— QuarkXPress proficiency also preferred. ✓ M ust not graduate prior to the com pletion o f the term o f appointm ent. The appointm ent is from Sept. 8 ,1 9 9 5 to M ay 1 ,1 9 9 6 . Applications and information on the submission and selection process are available at the front reception desk of Student Publications, M atthews Center, north basement. Please direct questions to , Julie Knapp, Associate Director o f Student Publications, 965-7572. 1\ -ii, « i. .• Deadline for applications: Noon, Friday, Sept. X ~TlieQinGivil f j W M H iiC \ S tate P ress Tuesday, August 2 9 ,1 9 9 5 P a g e lli P a g e l2 Tuesday, August 2 9 ,1 9 9 5 S t a t e P r e ss Moon Buggy Team takes off-road vehicle to unearthly dimension B y K elly W en d el St a t e P ress The ÀSU Moon Buggy Team is design­ ing the ultimate off-road vehicle — one able to traverse the m oon m ore than 230,000 miles away from the nearest road. The team is currently gearing up for the T hird Annual M oon Buggy R ace this spring at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight in Huntsville, Ala., and is looking for students interested in designing and building the next entry for the competition. Last year’s entry finished sixth in the competition, despite a tight design and pro­ duction schedule. “The team had very little time —- four months to do the whole thing, and I think the kids did an outstanding job,” said Helen Reed, director of the Aerospace Research Center at ASU. A SU ’s en try was the only th re e ­ wheeled entry in the event, which consist­ ed of twelve teams from schools such as Texas A&M and the Georgia Institute of Technology. Other schools used a more conventional four-w heel design in the race. All entries in the race were human pow­ ered, primarily to keep expenses down and enable colleges to compete in the event. The 1.5 mile race subjected the team s’ vehicles to a variety of track conditions, from simulated lava and ridges to crevasses and crater rims. “We are trying to get an early start on it this year to make sure, we are going to have something that will win the competition this year,” said Craig Haglin, a zone sales manager for Isuzu Motors. Isuzu M otors, along with Biddulph Isuzu, is sponsoring and providing funding for the ASU team. “This competition gives students an opportunity to put their skills to work as members of a team by designing, construct­ ing, testing and competing an originaldesign vehicle that meets predetermined specifications,” said Dr. Frank Six, the moon buggy competition coordinator at the Marshall Center. ASU students Mark Hoffman and Summer Locke gear up for the Moon Buggy com petition held last A pril. ASU placed sixth in the 12-team com petition. S tate P ress Classifieds The bargains are in the back. Best if used by 8 -2 9 -9 5 STUDENT SPECIALS CHECK IT OUT! NO CONTRACTS 1/2 Mile From ASU Campus 'Com e Be A Part O f Arizona's ____ #1 Training Facility! GYM 1301 E. U n iv e rsity D r., Tem p e, A Z • 921-9551 r Can't Get Rug Burn Without C A R P E T in Your Dorm! We’ve brought long distance together with internet access to offer you one bill for both! That's right, jaw on the phone...surf the net.,.it’s easy with Student TeleCom Services, and-you don’t have to figure out who made what cajl because fREMNANT SALE * $49 & UP W e in d iv id u a liz e y o u r b illin g ! P re tty c o o l, e h ? HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM LONG DISTANCE t T ake it w ith y o u se r v ic e N o m in im u m s N o m on th ly fe e s N o p er c a ll ch a r g e s Low rates! 1P * I CARPET ONE STORES W ith the Buying Pow er of O ver 500 Sto res N ationw ide HURRY WHILE SUPPLIES LAST!! V . 9 6 7 -8 8 7 7 on Apache east o f M cClintock ..... !... ÌIMiB^ÌÌBBBMBÉÌÌÌ!!!BÌW!léj§MlM 1920 E. APACHE J mm INTE RN ET ACCESS R ates startin g from 8 5 .9 5 per m on th All softw are provided SU P /P P P an d T ext a c c o u n ts av a ila b le 2 8 .8 k a c c e s s L ocal a c c e s s n u m b ers S t a t e P r ess Tuesday, August 2 9 ,1 9 9 5 Pag R w anda C ontinued from page 3. and gas cans into a truck, appeared unconcerned with Ndera’s history. The refugees bounced along for 12 miles in the back of the buck, emptied their sacks of com at an army weapons checkpoint and finally arrived in their home districts, where many Were greeted by friends and relatives. Bazik took the first car toward Muyunege. “I don’t know what I’m going to find,” he fretted as the village of 50 souls came into view. His wife, he learned, had spent two weeks in the Zairean camps last year, then came home. She was away Monday to attend her mother’s funeral. Im m ig r a n ts C ontinued from page 3. California Gov. Pete Wilson, formally kicking off his GOP presidential campaign Monday, denounced illegal immigration as ah example of unfair burdens borne by lawabiding Americans, a theme that helped him win re-election as governor last year. Five states w ith large im m igrant populations — Arizona, California, Florida, New Jersey and Texas — have sued the federal government, accusing it o f not enforcing U,S. borders and seeking reimbursement for edu­ cation, health care and prison beds used by hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants. F ederal ju d g es have dism issed the law suits by California, Florida and Texas. California officials have said they planned to appeal the ruling, and similar appeals could be made by Florida and Texas. The Census Bureau study showed that immigrants who arrived in this country since 1990 are more likely to receive The M public assistance than people bom here —■5.7 percent vs. 2.9 percent — but those who arrived before 1970 are less likely to receive it — 1.4 percent. The study, titled “The Foreign-Born Population: 1994,” also showed that of the 22.6 million foreign-bom people living in the United States in March 1994,6.2 million Came from Mexico. The Philippines was the homeland of the next largest group, around 1 million, followed by Cuba, 805,000; El Salvador, 718,000; Canada, 679,000; Germany, 625,000; China, 565,000; the Dominican Republic, 556,000; South Korea, 533,000; .Vietnam, 496,000; and India, 494,000. The study also found that more than two-thirds of the foreign-bora residents are white, about one-fifth are Asian or Pacific Islander, and one of every 14 are black. Nearly half— 46 percent — are Hispanic. of the Year!!! Calculator t Expo 95 August 3 10 3 or 31 Great Prizes! eminars Stop by & registerfor drawings & surprizes!! A u g u st30 & 31 6:00b/:00 pm Memorial Union m ms mmm M e e t t e c h n ic a l r e p r e s e n t a t iv e s ^ Hewlett Packard & Texas Instruments mm m G rea t S a v in g s 77-85 ^ only $99.99 & 10% off all Sparcom Accessories VALUABI F COUPON SAVINGS! IDS I RIP I HIS STRIP, C l IP THEM APART AND SAVE BUCKS! Rwanda last July, has lived since then in a fetid camp near Goma, Zaire, wondering if he’d ever see her again. He wanted to leave but was intimidated by thugs in the camp. Last week, Zairean troops invaded the camp, driving out the Hutu gunmen and trying to round up refugees to send home. Bazik couldn’t run fast enough to escape and was cornered by Zaireans who asked if he wanted to go. He agreed, but asked for 10 minutes to retrieve his jack­ et. No, they said — go now. He crossed into Rwanda with only the clothes he wore. He received some sacks of com and two straw mats from aid agencies before leaving the Ndera transit camp, the last stop on his trip home to Muyunege. Bazik and his 54 fellow passengers, loading their sacks 13 S t a t e P r ess Tuesday, August 29, 1995 Page 14 ASU junior Michael McVerry displays bruises he alleges he recieved from ASU DPS officers during his arrest for disorderly conduct August 20. McVerry has accused the four officers of using excessive force. O R E N T R E E SA L A D (lim it 2 p e r o r d e r ) G o o d O nly At T em po ( S .E . c o r n e r of S o u th e rn & M ill in V a lle y Fair) 9 6 8 -1 4 6 4 V a lid thru 9/30/95 O n e cou po n p e r visit. Not go od with a n y other oMar or coupons. ¡1111 Expires 9-19-95 100 Min. - 872 X II White F ETC MAIL I t 's N o t w k a P e D o l t fs H o w W e D o I i." Jim Poulln/State Press 903 S. Rural (south o f University) "-^ p np e • 967-1414 , m Com plaint___ 1739 E. Broadway (at McCNntock) Tempe « 029-3900 1110 S. Alm a School Rd. Mesa • 946-1001 C o n t in u e d MAGIC TOUCH CLEANERS li H I f " O ff H w * 8aptaMtSUiMlOeri.t9M I ‘ ~ ib*m*mm* MmTUMPDWnniPpi IttIMSne ||K PR E S E N T CO U PO N WITH O RO E R Q | I PR E S E N T CO U PO N WITH O RD ER SBsrœwsFSWswïBPaîW! ( Scott»daisRd. AMcKellips 946-7587 Mon - Fri. 7am - 7pm 'pm uam m i mmm mam ttmm m¿m*wtí¥nt_ I -J J4B4NESE FOOD Fast, delicious and reasonable. W elcom e Back ASU! your total bill j^ 14 E. Apache Blvd.* 894-6883 • Exp 9/8/95 j 15 %o ff r ÿ v T v ’ ü '" " " o x y g e n In - T i n e , . •Q Q ^ S K A H R E N T A L ■ PER H O U R ^ * - 5 t * UNIVERSITY * FARMER ■ Iraida Tampa N ta ■ TEMPE» (60® 965-2399 ■ 4400 NORTH SCOTTSDALE R O A D A cró ss fro m th© © cderka ; SCOTTSDALE • (602) 994-4945 } ™ | fr o m pag e 1. ■ “If we have a violent confrontation with someone, the officer will only use the force necessary to control him,” he said. “It may involve pressure points or other methods.” After the incident, McVerry went to ASU DPS headquar­ ters to complain. He said an official there “totally didn’t want to deal with me” and he left frustrated. McVerry did pick up a complaint form and he gave it to his lawyer. Later, M cVerry went to Student Health to get his injuries checked. Besides the bruises on his head and arm, he said his jaw may also be injured because it’s making a clicking sound. McVerry has hired an attorney, Richard Tolman, to rep­ resent him. Tolman said he is investigating McVerry’s accusations and if they and other witnesses’ statements prove true, he will file a lawsuit against the police and the University. ' / • “From what I’ve seen so far, those constitutional rights guaranteed to McVerry were violated t>y ASU police,” he said. Tolman said the suit, if filed, would charge ASU police with violating McVerry’s civil rights, including use of excessive force, illegal arrest and unlawful search and seizure. He said he has not decided on the amount or types of monetary damages tc seek. Tolman talked to one witness so far and is looking for others, he said, adding he will make a decision on whether to file the suit within the next two weeks. McVerry has a court date for the disorderly conduct charge on Sept. 17. Tolman said McVerry has hired a sepa­ rate lawyer for that charge. McVerry has been visibly shaken since the incident. He said it has changed his opinion about campus police. “I keep going over and over that night in my head,” McVerry said. “It’s brutal. I ju st think this is unfair. They’re talking about safety oh campus when they’re the ones who are supposed to be protecting me. “ The whole situation disillusions you.” words were ‘kick your ass,’ ” he said. McVerry was arrested, Cited and released for disorderly conduct. • During the entire arrest, McVerry said he put up no resistance to police. “I would never retaliate against an officer,” he said. “I know that would be foolish.” Both Pandaru and Palmer said they didn’t hear what the officer said to McVerry, but they back up the rest of his story. “He wasn’t being violent in any way,” said Pandaru, a senior exercise science major. “You don’t need four guys to hold someone who’s not resisting.” In addition, he said while officers had McVerry down, they punched him in the head and stomach. “After that, I got really verbal,” Pandaru said. “I was like, ‘Oh my God, I just saw police brutality. I can’t believe what I just saw. 1just witnessed you beat up my friend.’ ” Pandaru said he asked one of the officers why they were being so violent with McVerry and was told that they didn’t mean to hit him in the head, but were just going for pres­ sure points. He said he then asked the officer if the head and stomach were pressure points, “He.was like, ‘No, no, but sometimes we m iss,’” Pandaru said. He also said an officer told him that police were “a little on edge” after learning about the shooting death of Arizona DPS officer Bob Martin. Palmer also said that McVerry didn’t put up any sort of a struggle with police. He said he saw police hit McVerry in the head, but he didn’t see the stomach blow. “They hog-tied him, handcuffed him and put him in the back seat (of the police car),” Palmer said. Standridge said he could not say if excessive force was used unless he was there. He said his officers do what is needed based on each situation. Free M icrosoft Office w /Academ ic Specials! Complete Systems Starting at *995 B O W L 1 F R E E G A IVI E P w ✓ C fie c lt l/s Academic System Specials! 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P entium* Processor , M o th erb o ar d s : • 4 8 6 dx2 - 6 6 w / 1 2 8 k * 1 9 9 • PrntwmI*75MHz • PwnuM* 120MHz M em ory : • 4/8mb 72pm Simm *148/*298 Q[>0* d< a m»* _0 *179 *219 *279 M u l t im e d ia K its : • Sound BUsirr«* C om pu ter S yste m s 968-8585 *299! M üt cs&s «♦ ¡¡ili , '399 *699 H a r d D r ives : > 540md EIDE • 850mr EIDE • 1.08od EIDE "W j | Lcsss 1505 W. University Dr. Ste. 103 Tempe, Arizona 85281 Page_l5 Tuesday, August 2 9 , 199S S t a t e P r e ss S y n c h r o n iz e d s p in n in g can p ick up Robert Anderson/State Press Members of the ASU Auxiliary rehearse their flag routine at the band practice field Monday. This year's corps of 29 m embers is the largest flag line ever assem bled at ASU , said senior Bridget Butler, flag captain. The flag line began practice two weeks ago. During the school year, the group rehearses 2 \ h o u rs a day, five days a week. They w ill perform during halftime at all home football games. If you didn’t get a “recycled” State Press in one of your classes, you can pick your copy up at: O m C ampus Administration Building Alumni Center ASU Bookstore ASU Visitor Center Business Building, ea st side Campus Police ChoKa Hall Engineering Research Forest Mall kiosk (by Payne) Gammage Auditorium Hayden Library Law Library Mail Services Manzanita Hall p Manzanita kiosk Mariposa Hall Memorial Union Irrto Desk Murdock Hall %, * Nobel Library North Cady Mall Noth Cady Mall kiosk North Forest Mall Ocotillo Hall Orange Mall (by MU) Orange Mall kiosk (by fountain) Orange Mall kiosk (by MU) Palo Verde: East, West, and Main Palo Verde kiosk (between PV East s PV West) Physical Plant PS 3 ,4 Sonora Hall South Cady Mall kiosk (by Business building) South Cady Mall at Lemon South Forest Mall (by Farmer) Sun Devil Stadium Student Health Student Publications Student Recreation Center Student Services Building Tyler Mall, Cady Mall kiosk gS Tyler Mall, east Tyler Mall, Forest Mall Tyler Mali, Palm Walk kiosk University Activity Center ‘ University Club University Relations You’v e paid full price on everyth in g this w e e k . 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S ta n s Metro Deli Sub Stop Sunny's Pizza Sun Stop Food Shop Temps Police Station Tower Apartments Tower Records Vine (The) W algreens W endy's Whorehouse Records 6th Street Newstand G ay • L e s b ia n • B is e x u a l S t u d e n t S o c ia l O r s a n iz a tio n JO IN TH E B R O TH ER S O F .... DELTA LAM BDA PHI T H E GAY F R A T E R N IT Y ON C A M P U S Now's the time to join the national social fraternity that was established to provide purposeful and meaningful sodal interactionamonggaymen. Com m itted To: ▲ A c a d e m ic E x c e lle n c e A L e a d e r s h ip ▼ C o m m u n it y S e r v ic e ▼ P e rso n a l D e v e lo p m e n t G ro w th CALL NOW! 965t9756 RAINBOW ALLIANCE invites you to 5>S8 W ELCO M E RECEPTION W ED., AUG.30 7:30 - 9 :3 0 pm MU MOHAVE ROOM C O M I N G O U T D I S C U S S I O N G R O U P T O N IG H T . C A L L 9 6 5 - 9 7 5 6 F O R IN F O Comics Page 16 Tuesday, August 29, 1995 ^ S ^ E n C rA titN H eX ed Calvin an d h f S ta c y H o U h jte d t Hobbes I D BUILD A RAFT FOR TWIS POND, 9 J T I DON'T HAVE A PLACE S tate P ress by Bill W atterson TVE ALWAYS SAID YOU'RE A FRÆND WtTHODT PtER NOTHING. 1 GUESS W R E UNDER A LOT OF PIER PRESSURE.. % "D o n 't p la y in n o ce n t w ith m e! I know y o u 're se e in g so m e o n e e lse !II W h e re is h e ?!" : // : " D oonesbury S ta te Press IN tem et by g arry trudeau © o a .t e W&M W id te Wok http://aspin.asu.edu/provider/StatePress/ Sports State P ress Tuesday, August 29, 1995 Page l 7 Sun Devil football battles for positions M a rtin , B a ttle to sh a re b a c k -u p ta il­ back; Farlow to re d sh irt, S nyder says B y D an M iller “ Sta te -Press Nebraska and Penn State have them. So does Florida State. Every year the finest football programs in the nation stage countless battles for starting spots. With game day inching closer, Coach Bruce Snyder said he has been pleas­ antly surprised with the way his team has responded in some of the best dogfights for positions he’s seen in years. “One of the things that has happened this fall that has not happened in the previous (seasons) is that we did have some battles,” he said Monday in his first press conference of the season. “That’s a positive. Some of those kids don’t think it’s positive, particularly if they think they’re on the losing end of i t ... but all the really good programs around the country have battles, and so we needed to make sure that turned into a positive.” One of the more notable battles in camp has ended in a draw for two men. Snyder said sophomore tailbacks Michael Martin and Terry Battle will both be in uniform for the season-opener at Washington Saturday, sharing the back-up position. Senior Starting tailback Chris Hopkins held off chal­ lenges from M artin, Battle, redshirt freshm an Brian Singleton and sophomore Marlon FarloW. Singleton will also make the trip and could see action at tailback, flyback and/or special teams. Farlow, who carried 45 times in the last four games of 1994, will likely redshirt, Snyder said. T urn t o Football, page 18. Head football coach Bruce Snyder addresses his players after an intersquad scrim m age at Cam p Tontozona two weeks ago. Snyder has reached final decisions on several position battles C y Y oung Aw ard w inner assumes role as p itch in g coach “ W e coached a lot with each other (in the major leagues) but not actually coaching-coaching,” Welch After 211 wins in the professional ranks, ex-major said. “I just know I’m a baseball junkie. I love baseball.” leaguer Bob Welch wants to give ASlJ’s pitching staff a Welch looks forward to sharing his baseball knowl­ boost. edge and h elp in g A S U ’s p itch ers reach the m ajor “Pitching is what I know best,” Welch said of his new leagues. responsibilities as pitching coach at a press conference “What he (Murphy) expressed the most is guys at this Monday. “T hat’s lev el having an what this program o p p o rtu n ity to is asking me to m ake a larg e do. T h at is one im p act at the area 1 do know m ajo r league th e m ost about level and where I and (I’ll) be able c o u ld ac tu a lly • A l l - A m e r ic a n a t E a s t e r n M ic h ig a n to pass that on in pass on some U n iv e r s it y a way that these things,” he said. guys (the players) . W elch w ill • FIRST-ROUND DRAFT PICK OF L O S ANG ELES can grasp onto em p h asize th e im p o rtan ce of without overload­ D o d g e r s in J u n e 1977 ing them.” changing speeds • 211 CAREER W INS, 146 LOSSES A dding 17 on p itc h e s, an years o f m ajor area in which he • 17 YEARS IN THE MAJOR LEAGUES league experience excelled. • CAREER ERA OF 3.47 w asn’t too d iffi­ “The m ost c u lt o f a choice important thing in • w o n 1990 N a t i o n a l L e a g u e C y Y o u n g fo r ASU C oach oiir profession , a w a r d w i t h 27-6 r e c o r d , 2.95 ERA, 238 Pat Murphy, who college or what­ was ela te d over ever, is the abili­ i n n i n g s , 127 s t r i k e o u t s a n d t w o ty to th ro w a Welch’s addition. “ W e fe lt lik e baseball,” Welch SHUTOUTS. h e ’s a re ally said. “When you un iq u e guy and can do that and change speeds to th at he cares so much about player developm ent,” Murphy said. “He go along with that, you can be successful (at) whatever cares so much about the player as a person and as a play­ level you are.” er. We felt with his wealth o f experience, he could really One o f W elch’s firs t assignm ents may be getting be a plus.” ASU’s talented freshmen ready to pitch next spring. Welch retired in 1994 after playing for the Oakland “They had a big decision to make and it was really Athletics and the Los Angeles Dodgers. Welch’s best neat to see how they responded to the questions I asked them the o th er season cam e in 1990 w hen he d a y ,” said Welch, referring won a Cy Young to his in q u irie s Award after post­ ing a 27-6 recbrd “We coached a lot with each other (in the major ab o u t why the p lay ers chose and a 2.95 ERA leagues%but not actually coaching-coaching, I ju s t college over the for the A’s. “Any guy with know I'm a baseballjunkie. I love baseball?* pros. W elch can m ajor le a g u e exp e r ie n c e —ASU pitching erach Boh Welch actually relate to should help out,” th e new com ers ju n io r p itc h e r because he was K aipo S p en ser in the sam e said. “How can you turn down advice from a Cy Young predicament after he graduated from high school.. Award winner?” “I went to college and had a chance to sign out of Welch’s limited background in coaching includes a high school — not some of the dollars they’re being stint as an assistant with Scottsdale Community College offered now — but I had that same opportunity too,” he last spring. said. B y D u stin K rugel State P ress Welch's career at a glance Cy Young award-winner Bob W elch, pictured here in his 1994 Fleer Ultra baseball card, is the new ASU pitching coach. E x -A S U p la y e r hits 2 nd round Sargsian to face C assia’s Medvedev at U.S. Open By D i M an M il l e r i K ¡¡ii§j| Form er A SU tennis star Sargis Sargstan outlasted TJd uraaked M ichael Joyce in a grueling fiv e -se t match in the first found of 1995 U .S. Open men’s tennis cham pionships in Flush ing ile a d h w . N .Y . Monday. Sargstan advanced to the second round with a 76(1), 2-6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 victory on court 20 of the USTA National Tennis Center. His next opponent will be Russia’s 16th-seeded Andrei Medvedev at a yet-to-be announced time on Wednesday. “I was pretty nervous in the beginning,” said Sargsian, who earned an automatic wildcard berth into the tournament by winning the 1995 NCAA men’s singles championship in May. “He hit good grounders and good returns and that’s about it.” Hie three-and-a-half hour match was Sargsian’s first taste o f Grand Slam-caliber tennis and the best three-out-of-five set format “It feels pretty good,” said Sargsian, ASU’s first national tennis champ, who compiled an 82-17 record at No. 1 singles in his two-year college career. “It was a pretty tough match.” State P ress Tuesday, August 2 9 ,199S Page 18 F o o t b a ll____ _________________ ___________ C ontinued from page 17. “That’s what we would like to do and I think that’s What situations. Marlon would like to do,” he said.;“You never know what “The guy never ceases to amaze me on what he’s done might happen in terms of injury and that sort of thing ... He - and how he’s done it,” Snyder said of the overachieving has concurred that (he will) redshirt, let (Hopkins) move on Dragoo. and open up the battle next spring.” Sophomore quarterback Jason Verdugo will take over Snyder also pointed out healthy competitions at right for junior starter Jake Plummer if the situation arises early, comerback and strong safety in what appears to be one the However, Snyder said Verdugo’s second-string status was deepest secondaries the Sun Devils have seen in years, not an absolute yet. _ Senior right comer Marcus Soward, whose camp has been “We have decided who will go in the game second, but I slowed with a groin injury, has sophomore Jason Simmons still believe that that competition will be ongoing for a and junior Traivon Johnson breathing down his neck for while and it’s not clearly defined ‘who No. 2 is’,” said the start. Simmons has worn the special black jersey given Snyder, who said he would like to put redshirt freshman to the defensive player who is having the best practices on Steve Campbell in a game situation as soon as possible to several occasions in recent weeks. provide a better gauge. Meanwhile, senior Harlen Rashada has a slight edge on Notes: redshirt-freshman Mitchell “Fright Night” Freedman at • Junior starting center Kirk Robertson, who strained his strong safety. But Snyder maintained significant playing anterior cruciate ligament during a scrimmage at Camp time is imminent for Freedman, who is the only man in the Tontozona two weeks ago, is reporting improvement in his secondary who can play both strong and weak safety equal- condition. Snyder said he hopes Robertson will be able to ly as well. play w ithin a few w eeks. R edshirt freshm an Grey Sixth-year senior linebacker Justin Dragoo has dodged Ruegamer, who can play both center and right tackle, will any pushes for the starting job by his sheer détermination start at center Saturday. on the field, said Snyder, who added Dragoo will play » Only 11 out of the 60 players traveling to Washington about 60 percent of the snaps and sophomore Pat Tillman will be seniors. ASU may start six of those men and as few would play the other 30 to 40 percent, especially in passing as four at the opening snap. A S U S p O R Monday A u g u s t/ S e p te m b e r 2 8 X Today 2 9 c s Æ I . E Wednesday Thursday , Friday 3 0 3 1 1 N A D Saturday 2 R Sunday 3 W ashington Football Alumni Game UnivosityActivity Cents ,7.pm. Women's Volleyball Cl Home CAMPUS DEPARTMENTS AND ORGANIZATIONS C] Away HuskyStadium 12:30p.m. SunDevil/Hilton SunDevil/Hilton Challenge Challenge UniversityActivity UniversityActivity Cents Grater Allday Allday All times are Arizona times. No free lunch but close! If you're listing names, please have them typewritten to ensure proper spelling. If you have a definite idea of how you w ant your ad to look, sketch it on a piece of paper. W e have "clip art" on file that you may use to make your ad more appealing. If you w ant a logo to appear in your ad, please pro­ vide one unless w e already have one on file. W e will assist in layout, type selection and design, as well as advising you regarding ad size and publication schedule. The best advice is to ask questions and never assume! Stop by our offices in the south basement of Matthews Center or call 965-6555 and ask for Jackie Eldridge. Ad deadline is two business days prior to publication date at 10 a.m . A hard copy of your P 09, check, cash or credit card payment is needed by the ad deadline. Great Savings at Great Places State P ress JPagel9 Tuesday, August 2 9 ,1 9 9 5 S o f t b a ll d u o t o c o m p e t e f o r O l y m p i c r o s t e r B y D a m ia n S h a w S t a t e P r e ss photo courtesy of ASU Media Relations A S U assistant softball coach Ann Rowan (above) and center fielder Lisa Dacquisto have been invited to the U.S. Olym pic trials. Here's your chance to make a difference! Join the staff of the 1995-96 Sun Devil Spark yearbook. Applications for the following positions are being accepted: T orn to O lympics, page 2 0 . PREMIERE FOOTBALL SELECTION SERVICE • 8 2.6% win rate over last four ye ars. • All top college/pro football selections • P A C —ID gam e of the ye ar • C ollege gam e of the year • T?pp gam elof the week/month • Bowl and- playoff gam es Call Now For Free Info 759-1001 HURRY - REFORE F00TRALL SEASON STARTS! Prem iere Sports Selection S en d ees Photo Editor V Section Editors: • Sports • Greeks • Student Life • Organizations • Residence Life • Academ ics § / Photographers ✓ Copy Writers Applications are 7 % 3 m tU available at the State Press reception desk, Student Publications, M atthews Center. A lot of current and former ASU ath­ letes are trying to m ake various U.S. Olympic squads this year, but it’s not always the case that players and coaches are competing for the same roster spot. That’s almost the case this year, with softball assistant coach Ann Rowan and center fielder Lisa Dacquisto both leav­ ing Wednesday to attend the Olympic team tryouts. But don’t expect it to be an unfriendly competition. Rowan believes the duo can only help the Sun D evils’ recruiting. “I think it’s good that we’ll both be there,’’ Rowan said. “We hear so much about A rizona and UofA, but we also have people coming out o f ASU who are Capable of playing at the national level, so I think we can open other people’s eyes about the other Arizona school.” Dacquisto is also looking forward to having Rowan around. “She’s going to be pushing me; she’s a real good inspiration for me,” Dacquisto said. “I hope to God she makes it because she deserves it. She’s really someone I look up to because she’s been there and she’s done that.” While Rowan at 26 could easily make a vie for the 2000 Olympic team, she has already decided this will be her last run at p lay in g fo r the n atio n a l team . However, Dacquisto, at 20, is much clos­ er to the beginning of her career in terms o f international play. “Last year at the Pan Am trials was the first time that I ever played with the more experienced girls,” Dacquisto said. “I had never played in a women’s major, but this last summer all I did was play against them, so I ’m going to go into these tryouts less intimidated.” Dacquisto was part o f a team this past sum m er, that took second place in the Canadá Cup. B ut no one is k id d in g th em selves about their chances o f making thé team. W hile Rowan is a veteran o f several national teams, including a gold-medal­ winning performance at the Pan Am games last spring, she isn ’t a shoe-in. However, she c e rta in ly is a favorite to make the team as a shortstop or a utility player. D a cq u isto , on th e other hand, will have a m uch m ore d ifficult time making the DACQUISTO team because of the bevy of older players in front of her. Since this is the first year softball will be an Olympic sport, ASU softball coach Linda Wells believes that will make a lot o f the o ld er q u ality players give the national team one last shot. “There are a lot of players who have been hanging on,” Wells said. “Maybe if it had been a medal sport for a long time a num ber o f U.S. players w ould have already played and been done, but they’re h an g in g on b ecau se th is is th e firs t djpportuhity that they have had:” Rowan, a former shortstop for the Sun Devils, received a bid for one of the 60 TUESD AYS upstairs in the ra fte rs CARUIN JONES BAND lO p m -C lo se n | ^ $100 DRINKS Dollar Daze *l Domestic Draffs, Wells, Bumers, Tacos, Nachos, Fries & Wines 5:00PM to CLOSE Playing high-enow Texas Blues and favorites by Hendrix. Vaughan & Clapton 715 SOUTH McCLINTOCK • TEMPE, AZ 85281 • 966-1911 • Booking Info 784-2206 State P ress Tuesday, August 29, 1995 P age 20 O ly m p ic s ______ __ C ontinued from page 19. tryout spots because of her former national experience as well as her play in sum m er leagues. D acquisto received an at-large bid for her play in the national tour­ nament this past summer. Former Sun Devils Suzie Gaw (1979-82) and C hristy S erritella (1989-1992) also received at-large bids, giving ASU players and alumni three of the six at-large bids extended by the softball selection committee. For Rowan, the best part of the Olympics is that they are being held in Atlanta. “It means so much more being in our own country, but it means more than the obvious reasons,” Rowan said. “If I make it, my fam ily’s going to go and my boyfriend's family is going to go. If the Olympics were t's t's t's is t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's t's CO t's t's t's t ’s t's t's t's t's t's t's free. tre e . free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. free. fr ee. fr ee. fr ee. fr ee. fr ee. fr ee. fr ee. fr ee. fr ee. free. free. free. free. free. free. State'P ress being held in another country I don’t know how realistic that would be.” Dacquisto isn’t looking that far ahead, though. She just hopes to be recognized next time. “I don’t expect to make anything,” she said. “I just want to be seen and have them remember me for the future.” Wells acknowledged that while Rowan’s career isn’t quite over, Pacqiiisto’s is just beginning. “ It isn ’t to say that Anne, who is fa irly young, couldn’t hold on for other games, as opposed to Lisa, who i s only a junior In college and who will be in a much better position in four years.” Rowan, however, is ready to hang up the spikes after this Olympics. “This will be my last chance,” Rowan said. “I’m not going to try and stay around for 2000. I don’t want to worry about the stress of tryouts and traveling, I want to get to where I can focus on my job here and spend more time with my family and friends.” Rowan, who has been playing softball for more than 20 years, is looking forward to doing everything other than playing softball after the ’96 Olympics. The players who do make the squad will stay an extra week to complete paperwork for the American Softball Association. Then they will m eet once in October to work out diet and exercise programs before the team meets for good in April to prepare for the games. There is more to life than news, weather and sports. out C h eck COMICS. th e DO YOUR PARENTS A BIG FAVOR Send them the State Press ^ every day. Let them know what's happening on your campus. SIGN UP N O W FOR YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO ASU'S MORNING DAILY NEWSPAPER (Talk about brow nie points!) ---— < ITS YOUR NEWSRAPER DO IT NO W AN D SAVE! ) ------- -— - Fill out this form and mail it with payment to: State P ress Subscriptions, Box 871502, Tempo, AZ 85287-1502 or stop by the State P ress subscription office in Matthews Center basement. State Press SUBSCRIPTION □ A S U ’S M orning D aily N ew spaper Serving A S U sin ce 1890 d d FALL SEM ESTER only $39 (69 issues) SPRING SEM ESTER only $39 (67 issues) FALL, SPRING & SUM M ER $74 (146 issues) .ii B ES T BET ALL, S P R h (i ND SUMM, ONLY S 7 4 T a lk ab o u t arown/e points For first cla ss mail, add $35 per sem ester to above prices. PA R EN T NAM E ----- ------ d C H E C K E N C L O S E D Charge my A d d re s s , C ity Phone State- Z'P O V isa d M asterCard d Am erican Express C ard Num ber _ Expiration date Signature ____ N E E D M O R E I N F O ? C A L L O U R S U B S C R I P T I O N D E P T . A T ( 6 0 2 ) 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 Classifieds S t a t e P r ess Page 21 'Tuesday, August 29, 1995 N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate die company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistant» regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721, A gossiper is a person who puts two and two together- whether they are or not. -Mary McCoy cr A N N O U N CEMENTS FREE FINANCIAL Aid! Over $6 b illio n in private sector grants & .scholarships is; now available. All students are eli­ gible regardless o f grades, in­ come, or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: I -800-263-6495 ext. F59181 NEED MONEY for co lleg e? U N IX aimed scholarships avail. Recorded m essage g iv es de­ tails 786-0327 ext 7. APARTMENTS 1 BDRM $495, 2 bdrm $585, 2 bdrm, 2 bath $650, util incL Apt Renters 649-0077 2 BDRM W /D , garage $650 Apt. Rentes 649-0077. 3 BDRM $715, 2 bdrm $475, 1 bdrm $475. P ool, Tennis co u r t/C a ll A pt Renters 6490077 ; ■. BEAUTIFUL NEWLY Rennovated complex. 1/4 m ile from A SU . Studios and one bed­ rooms starting at $405. New carpet and tons o f am enities. For info call 968-010L STUDIO WALKING distance to A SU , pool $380. Apt Renters 649-0077. HOM ES FOR RENT REMODELED 3 BDRM. 1 1/2 ba, p o o l, walk to A SU, S1075/mo. Tim 894-0288. REMODELED 4-5 BDRM, 21» w /pool, tile floors, $12S0/mo. Tim 894-0288._________ WALK TO ASU. 4bd 2ba tile flo o r s, p o o l. $1200/tno 8940288 m LK TO A SU Apartments 1 bd/1 ba $375/mo 2 bd/1 ba $45Q/mo Houses Small mansion • 30d0sqft • 25'x35‘ living room • 3bd/2ba • Uptown Phx • $775/mo Secluded cabin • in forest with creek • 45 min to ASU • $375/mo 967-6000 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2 BDRM PAPAGO PK Pool side, $ 6 9 0 & $800. 2 bdrm Q uesta vita m aster suites pool sid e, $1 7 5 0 . in cl. all a p ­ p lia n c es. R ealty Exec Bob Bullock 998,2992. FÎND IT in thé Classifieds! TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT BIKE/WALK TO ASU. Tempe. 3bd, 2ba, fenced yard, A /C , avail, now $675 +util 9912388 GREAT STUDENT Condo, 2br2ba Questa Vida, sub-rent 2 beds & make your home pay­ ments. Gene Baird, Realty Ex­ ecutives; 998-2992-See value increase. QUESTA VIDA lux condo 3bd/3ba, 2 stry, vltd ceilings, sky lights, w/d, dish, micro, 2 po o ls, spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU, avail immed., $1100/ mo 829-0902. RENTAL SHARING 3/4MI FROM ASU, quiet, pool view, nice apt. Male n/s to have own rm $350/mo + 1/2 util, or share a rm for $ 180/mo + 1/3 util: Call 968-1038. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom apt. Please call Maijie or Nicole, 968-2101. COMPUTERS NOTEBOOK COMPUTER, printer & 14.4 fax/modem: color 486D X 2, 4/200 Toshiba 1950CS w /leather carrying case, HP DeskJet 500 (Hinter, & fax/m odem or new notebook battery. Great for class! $1500 obo Dan @ 553-3137 AUTOMOBILES 1988 VW CABRIOLET red w /blk top, loaded, ac, c c, 5 spd, phone, fog Its, sheepskns, new tires, batt, 53k m i., orig ownr. $7 5 0 0 obo 481-9050. Great car! 85 VW SCIRROCO, 2nd own. New a/c, t - belt, brakes 72k mi, $3250 obo, 258-8840 all records. RED 1991 Shadow conv., éxç: cond., new top, ext. warr., auto, ac, p/w, am/fm, low miles, $6950. Call 831-7113. MAJESTIC CAR CO. Q uality used cars & trucks Financing avail. T h is week: H onda Preludes: 3 to choose from MATURE NS female 2bd/2bath apt. near ASU Prefer Japanese, but w ill Consider oth ers.' $273mo + 1/2 util. 966-8615. MALE RMTE. Wntd/pref. stdt. N /S, clean; $ 2 05+ 1/3 utl. @ cam creek; Joe or Rich 967' 2184. . : .V-/ ROOMMATE NEEDED, Marlgoraough Park townhom e, bdrm for $350/m on. and big loft for $325 plus 1/3 utilities. Call Jeremy at 874-1445, Ive mess. MISCELLANEOUS RÁYB AN SUNGLASSES; the hottest and newest styles at low prices direct to you, call for free catalog. Visions 800-248-5499. BOOKS Ju st north of 202 on Scottsdale Rd. 267-1820 M OTORCYCLES 94 KAWASAKI Ninja 250R, 3400 mi, 2yr warranty; $3000. Call 835-5733 or 491-2205. SCOOTER/1987 YAMAHA 200Z. Black w/hlm t & lock. Very nice cOndition-$1200 264-1072 (Pàt). ALL CYCLES ECE 313. ECE 334, ece 340, ece 352, phy 361, rea 394, mgt 301 $35-$55 obo. Weiidy @ 858-0709. sales • parts » service New Scooters from $ 7 9 5 °° FUTON FAVE KING SIZE Waterbed w/heater & headboard; $225. Call Greg at 596-1442 LIQUIDATORS OVER 200 of­ fic e s o f furn. to s e ll. D esks, fries, chairs, book cases, comp, tables & more. Arizona Office Liquidators 5064 S; 40th St. Phoenix ( 1/2 mi- S o f Broad­ way) 437-2224. SLEfsPER SOFA w/queen size bed. Good shape, brown. Ask­ ing $200 or best offer. 43,1 0381 SMALL REFRIG ideal for rm & off. exc copd $95 #829-7762 no evenings. Iv msg if neces. SMALL REFRIG ideal for rm & o ffic e s. Exc cond $95 8297762. No eves,, hr msg if neces. SOFA & LOVESEAT(w/inclmer), light green. Like new orig. $1200 now $500,497-9370 TABLE AND chairs new black (tint glass top $145.00. Mike 921-2233. • Affordable Transportation • Easy To Park • Used Scooters & Motorcycles open 7 days a week 1850 E. University Dr. 829-7111 731-9003 TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick depastures. M ost places, worldwide. I also buy transfer­ able coupons/awards. 968-7283 RENTCHOLLA Bay/Rocky Pt. 1 & 2 bd houses. $40 & $50 for 4 people. Additional persons $5 extra 968-8009. HELP WANTEDG g N g jh * L _ _ _ $6 PER HOUR O utgoing, energetic appoint­ USED BED & Furniture sale. ■, ment setters for Universal Por­ traits. Call James or Carey, 496Student discounts. K ings, 8029. Queens, Fulls, Singles; very in­ expensive. Call 788-8633. *$7/HR + CASH!* COMPUTERS 486/DX33 COMPUTER 8 meg ram . 230m b hd. D os, W in, Word; $800 phone 203-4651.. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL **ASSEMBLY JOB! EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Service has immed. opening for P/t operator, 11pm - 7am, Fri. + Sat. $8.50/hr. Must type 45w pm , know 10 key by touch. Have com p. exp. call 264-4000. GECKOS, SCOTTSDALE Now hiring doorstaff and cocktail wait staff.. Doorman must poss. knowledge o f liquor laws and ID'S. P/T, 7316 E Stetson, 1/2 block East o f IMAX. 947- LICENSED AGENCY seeks m/f 18-30 actors/m odels for 4 month promotion, Sat. & Sun. only, $10/hr. If seriously inter­ ested call Jessica 966-1102. Lighting co. needs responsible student for ft day assem bly work. Electronics background desirable. $7/hr Scottsdale Air Park. Call Terry. 998-0325 100 DOLLARS to keep home­ opathic journal for six weeks. Healthy people needed. Call 274-1340 M-F mornings only. A BIG CHECK Hey telemarketers! Tired o f working in boiler rooms? No freedom? Need a good p/t job w hile you go to sch ool? No sellin g ! Great pay $ 200/400 wkly. Near ASU 303-0935 AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS YMCA is seeking recreational supervisors, pre-school and as­ sistant teachers, enrichment in­ structors, intramural coaches. F lexib le hours $ 5-10 dollars/hour. Apply at 3233 E. Chandler Blvd., Phx. . AHWATUKEE FOOTHILLS YMCA is seeking recreational supervisors, pre-school and as­ sistant teachers, enrichment in­ structors, intramural coaches. F lexib le hours $5-10 dol1ars/hour. Apply at 3233 E. Chandler Blvd., Phx. ASU TELEFUND is now hir­ ing, choose your shifts. Call 965-6754. ATTENTION STUDENTS: Why not enjoy a relaxed & casual at­ mosphere w hile earning $500+per mo. in our advertis­ ing dept. M-F 4:30-8:30 p.m. Call Dan at 894-9442. C A M PU S C H EV RO N Set.fun free appts., for health services. Friendly office, near Fiesta Mall in Mesa. Eyes & Sat. Or f/t. Join our team 64995 m S ta l« P r a tt C la ssifie d s Matthews Center Casement 965-6735 CUSTOMER SUPPORT. Must have exc. oral & written comm, skills. Prefer psych, comm, or business major. Comp. lit. Call 966-819!. DOORKNOCKERS Get paid for everyone you sign up for a free grocery drawing. The more sign-ups- the more m oney. N ights & weekends. Car nec. Call 829-4962 3-6 pm. Paid! 3 college credits! Senior bus. majors. Position in finan­ cial services. Call Life Inves­ tors 967-6619 Mr. Goodcents Subs & Pasta now hiring pt/ft positions. All shifts, flex hrs. Lunch & wknd d elivery drivers. 894-6065, 528 W. Broadway. B ta sd o nce, Inc. ! W hy donate plasm a? • PART TIME, flexib le hours;, no sales. C lose to ASU, $5 50/hour. Call 966-2301. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! n • • P/T EVES/WKNDS, outgoing/ good phone v o ic e . No sales! $6/hr + bonus. Call Mr. Allen, 838-4333, ext. 24. LEARNING CNTR. Inst. & Gypi Sup. for after school program,3-6 M-F, 897-6247. HOUSEKEEPER NEEED make own hrs. 1 blck from Asu. 9664918. • • • NEED EXTRA MONEY? Telemarketing pos. avail., flex hrs, opp. for advancement & com m . Fun & casual, all you need is a friendly voice & be comp, friendly. Call for inter­ view . Beginright Temporary S ervice, 1131 E. Highland Ave. Phx, 277-4050. INTERNSHIPS FLEXIBLE PT/FT Help save lives Earn up to $185 each month Sipetvfeed care area foryourchldran to piay Wateh your favorite movie wrtiieyou donate We have manyASU donors! Extra bonuses po6sfcletfyou've had your Hepatite A shot New Extended Hours M-F 7A)am-8pm Sat 8am-4^0pm Sun 10am-4pm 1334 E. Broadway Rd Su»e 102 (across fromtie Native New Yotker) I c A c i i i c R E C E IV E ! W ith this coupon, new donors will receive $25 for their first donation!! i (Call for New Donor Hours) I FdrabrAed tin e exty, New Donors , receive $30forIheirfirst donation!! (Sm daysO nfy) 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 Cashier/ Sales. Must have au­ tom obile know ledge, p/t f/t. W age DQE. Apply in person SW comer of Rural/Apache. CASHIER & frill serve attend­ ant, dependable, p/t, flex hrs. Scotts. ChevnHi. 941-8899. IMAX THEATRE FANTASY SPORTS i MARKET RESEARCH Interviewer.Pt/Ft 1l/2mi. from ASU, no sales, no exp. req. 9674441. Welcome back ASU! Come join our team! The Imax Theatre in Scottsdale is looking for en­ thusiastic, smiling faces to fill hosting positions, 15-30 hours per week. All shifts. Call 9493100x204. Now hiring p/t 15-25 hrs/wk. Flex, day hrs. Near ASU. Must know pro sports. $ 6 / hr to start. CaU 967-2300. M Local Production Company needs young men 18*30 for m agazine layouts and cards; Call David for an interview. Extra! Extra! 391-2329. GYMNASTICS TEACHER, en­ th usiastic, happy, in shape. Teachers who love to teach 3- : 12 yr olds gymnastics. Central Phx area, $6-9/hr. P/t 9557805. FAMILY AMUSEMENT park­ seeking daytime cashier & out­ side ride operators. A pply in person 1155 W. Elliot Rd. J U MALE MODELS 1000. F/T, P/T position s available providing assistance to adult individuals with mental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ efits & training, no exp; nec. Call 431-951L ASSISTS., CLASS rm. & after sch ool, in M ontissori toddler and 3-6 programs. 730-8886. COSMIC PIZZA hiring delivery drivers p/t f/t Apply within at 1523 E Apache Rd. 2 BRENTWOOD LOVE seats. Good cond. $100 each. Round kitchen table, pedestal base; $30. Call after 8pm 981-7249. Natural comfort special. 2604 W. 1st St. #34 804-1554. HELP WANTEDGENERAL $ 7 .0 0 PER HOUR + INCENTIVE FULL BENEFITS Zales Regional Credit Center is seeking motivated individuals for: P/T COLLECTORS CHILD CARE (1 child) & gen, asst., PT/S. Tempe. $5.75/Hr; refs req.; leave mess. 838-5357. FURNITURE CLEAN DORM carpet for sale. L/t gray, 12x 14, ex cond. $60 obo 554 -9 3 8 7 8 -5 , 786-5763 '•eve.' ' / '' HELP WANTEDGENERAL HOURS: M-F 5-9 p.m.& 2 Saturdays per month 9-lp.m. AIL POSITIONS offer excellent paid training and a competitive salary and benefits package through: ZALE CORPORATION the world's largest jewelry retailer. If you would like to become part of our success, we invite you to find out more about these opportunities. Apply in Person Jewelers 9a.m. - 4 p.m., M-F 'w M R r Financial 2035 W. 4th Street 'W r f »4r» Services North of University/West of 52nd Street Tempe, AZ » 829-5804 Equal Opportunity Employer * Drug-Free Environment DRIVERS 0 + phone help needed $10$ 15/ hr flex hrs. Call Tom De­ licious Deliveries 220-0000 7'dem arketingfar the im age Conscious P ro M a rk O n e M arketing S e rv ice s, Inc. DRIVERS NEEDED im m e­ diately Earn $10 to $15 per /hour. Call Dash and D ine at 967-7632 EARLY AM C leaning; ASU area, 3hrs/day, 7day s/w k, $6/hr. small truck helpful; 9513839. , EARN $ SELLING Music. P/T Flexible Hours, unlimited po­ tential. Call 922^4840. EARN $$$BIG$$$ MONEY! E xcellent opportunity in the m ulti-billion $ telecom m uni­ cations industry. Sell for us or become a distributor yourself. Call now 800-211-2493. ENERGETIC FRIENDLY peo­ ple needed to organize children for a photography co. Flexible hours, m ainly wknd morns. Own trans. nec. Call Erin 3039417 between l-5pm, ENTRY LEVEL Phope tech, support pos. w/the valley's leading internet provider. All shifts. Prefer some internet know. Must have comp. exp. Hiring ASAP. Call 274-0100. MANAGEMENT POSITIONS avail, for fun, fast grow ing re­ tail operation. Scotts. Fashion Square Call John 494-426Q. + NOW HIRING ♦ ProM ark One is now accepting apptications for our dynam ic,new Tempo Center. POSITIONS Full-time a n d Part-time 1» Health & Dental Benefits • Paid Vacations • Paid Holidays • Flexible Schedules • Professional W ork Environment • Prom otion From Within • No Experience Necessary • Paid Training • Advancem ent Opportunities • $ 6 .0 0 An Hour H u s Comm ission (Top Reps Can Earn $12.00+ Hourly) • Relocation Opportunities • C a ll T o d a y to S e t U p A n Interview • •777-0877 • "ProMark One is the 166th Fastest Growing Company in America" - INC 500 Magazine We are the 6th Largest, and 3rd Fastest Growing Telemarketing Firm in the Nation EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER , Tuesday, August 29,1995 P age 22 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/T HELP wanted for, cart at Scotts Fash Sq. M all run by ASU student. E ves wknds $5.50/hr. Call Glassalacart 9703415 - -- . : POOL CLEANING Co. needs pool cleaning tech. Must have trans, only hard & eager workers need respond. P/t work, ar­ ound school schedule. Please call Matt at 840-9518. TUX & TAILS is looking for enthusiastic people to work in a fun A challenging environ­ ment. Pit, fit positions avail­ able. Call Dave at 838-3193: P/T OFFICE work 20hrs/wk. Work own hrs. Job involves Acc A Data entry. Exp. helpful but not required. Leave msg. at 970-1270, days. PART-TIME Actors/Actresses wanted for pro­ duct dem os. D evelop con­ fidence, timing, people skills while making money. PM/ wee­ kends. Car nee. Teriipe loca­ tion. Call 829-8007 3-6 pm. PEOPLE PERSON Excitem ent, fun, cash, shop­ ping. F u ll Time/Part Time. Call 967-0222 PERSONAL CÀfcE Attendant Wtd. mornings/eves. Must be 2 l : or oyer w /good driving record. N o lifting req, Hrs. flexible Call Ellen 968-6284. «PHOENIX ZOO» A vailable imm., work weekends A flex, week days. »Admission/sales, ♦Custodians. $5.68/hr. Apply daily at 455 N. Galvin Pkwy. PHOTOGRAPHERS NEEDED for childrens sports photog­ raphy co. Flex: hrs., m ainly wknds. Own trans, nee. Call Erin at 303-9417 betw een 15pm. PLAN AHEAD Free Christmas or springbreak vacations at Mexican luxurious beachfront resorts. 483-8971. SECRETARY ON campus, morning hours, lite typing, $6.5Q/hr. Call 921-4204. PROPERTY MANAGER needs asst. Prefer AM hrs $6.50+ mlg. Alma Schl A Baseline.Contact Kent Remax Realtors 820-0500 PT/FT EVENINGS/WEËKENDS over 21 a jrius. W algreens on M ill A Broadway, Tempe Apply in person. STUDENT COURIER: Hours 15pm M-F. Previous driving exp. AZ driver's licen se re­ quired. Call ASU D istance Learning T echnology. 965- VALET PARKING attendants: for lunches on m,w,f* 11-3 or t,th 11-3. A lso valets for 2-3 nights/w k. A t least 20 years old, good driving record, clean cut, w illing to drive to Scotts, Phoenix, etc. A pply at 34 W. Dunlap m -f between 1:30-4:30. Directions to. apply from Tem­ pe: Squaw Peak Freeway north to Glendale, go left to central, go right to Dunlap, go left. American Valet C o. is 1 1 / 2 blocks up on the right. :6738- WE WANT WINNERS! SPORTS/ FITNESS natl co. ex­ periencing. m assive growth. Need innovative self-mot. peo­ ple for pt/ft to earn 1k-4k/mon. Call Len at 852-0604 for appt '■ : ■ - TELEMARKETERS E xcellent custom er service sk ills A phone v o ice are fequired for this non-salés posi­ tion. F/t & p/t immediate career opportunities. Must be able to work well as a team and follow specific instructions. Inquire in person at 2322 S . McClintock, Suite 2, Tempe. Ask for Barbara. THE BEST Here is a great pt. jo b for all students, am/pm pos., no exp. nec., training provided, no sell­ ing ! Earn an extra $ 180/300 wkly, call for your interview to­ day* near ASU, 303-0939. THE PICNIC Company Gour­ met Cafe. Now hiring delivery drivers, f/t-p/t, good day shift hours. 1415 E. U niversity, Tempe, 2blk E. o f Rural. NCM, Inc. M ak in g t h e d if f e r e n c e The Difference Is "The Best Pay In The Industry" $9.25 P er UNIV VET. Hosp. seeks p/t kennel help. 2 pos. avail, m-f, 7-11 am., or wknds only. Apply in person 925 W. Broadway, Tempei No phone calls please. Horn We have permanent FT & PT telephone sales positions available Call 894-9816 Today! 2020 S MM, Suite 200 Tempe, A Z 85282 NEED A JOB? WANT TO: Aggressive campus mrkt. comp. Hiring for attitude. Those not afraid o f earning a comm, will make $ 100-400/w k, p/t. Fr-sr. encouraged to wk on or around campus. 1-800-567-6247. HELP WANTEDGREAT SALES positions avail, for high energy people at Scot­ tsdale Fashion Square. Call John at 494-4260. PT/FT OU TSIDE sales p o si­ tions aval. 25-30hrs/wk. Must have reliable transportation. Mail work history or resume to Automotive Group c/o 2720 S. Hardy, Suite 4 T em pe, AZ 85282 or walk in applications betw een 8am-2pm. A lso in-d u d e days A hours aval, for work. State Press back issues can be picked up at the Inform ation Desk in the Basement o f Matthews Center HELP WANTEDSTART NOW HIRING FOR Promotional sales. We've got a fun, part time job for you...flexible evening hours, convenient Tempe loca­ tion. Expect 12 hrs to start. (Our exp reps earn over $25/hour) those interested in sales and marketing careers en­ couraged to apply. Please call 9 2 1-7755 for personal inter­ view. HELP WANTEDC L g R jC A U ^ — BILLING CLERK, construction co., flexible hours, 123 a must. $8-10, send resume to: 222 $. 52nd S t Tempe, 85281. DATA ENTRY clerk, must be fast on keyboard, job is for 2-3 months, approx. 20-25 hrs per w eek, afternoons only. $6.00 and up, doe. Call 275-4406, ask for Chen. INVENTORY CLERK, com ­ puter know ledge and good writing skills a must. Must be ph ysically fir. Some lifting, packaging req'd. 25-30 hrs/wk, $6.00. Call Sheri at 275-4406. RECEPTIONIST PIT, for com­ puter training co. 7am-noon MF, 1 mile from campus. Call John Anderson 894-8644. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CLUCK-U Come join the Cluck-U-Chicken team. N ow hiring delivery drivers* Earn $8-12/hr. Counter/line help, cooks, cocktail Servers, bouncers. Apply in per­ son. 855 S. Rural, Tem pe. 1 blocL south of University. DELI HELP and or drivers. P/t M-F, lunch hrs. Apply at 4707 E. Southern. 431-0011. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HAVE FU N - GET PAID Part-Time 9am -lpm or 5pm-9pm $6-$8 per hour + incredible bonuses Work after school, but get home in time to study! Established food service company looking for good telemarketers who are tired of the boiler room scene. We have FUN, earn BIG BONUSES, and have GREAT CONTESTS, at our Tempe office. Call (602) 894-2322 Ask for Mr. Taylor Repair Services is now hiring Telemarketing S ales Representatives in M esa. S e a rs O ffers: gpv\ DELI PERSON, full time & part time positions, flexible hours, apply in person. Capistranos Italian D eli, 655 W. Warner, Tempe, 496-9044. DOC N EDDYS Will hire 3 p/t bev. servers. Grt tips. Must have exp. A lots of personality. Flex. wk. sched. Apply Tues. and Wed. only at 909'E. Minton. Rural/ Baseline 831-0635. GREAT JOB AWAITS! PHOENIX ZOO A vailable im m ediately. Must work weekends. *Food Serv­ ice »Cashiers *Food Prep. •S h i ft Managers * Bartenders $5+up/hr. Apply at 455 N. Galvin Pkwy. SANDWICH PREP/DELIVERY Apply at Brown's on 6th. 570 S. College. KILOWATT'S SINCE Kaptain Kilowatt's arri­ val in the valley, the demand for Kilowatt's delectable deliv­ ery food has risen dramatically. Our super-powered hero can no longer handle it alone. Kaptain K needs a few good citizens to fill the follow in g positions: Delivery drivers, flyer distribu­ tors, and only the finest pizza Cooks Tempe has to. offer. Call the Kaptain's hotline at 8040999 for more information. F/T A P/T teaching pos. avail, at NAEYC. Accrd. child care center, near A SU , educ + exp req. 921-2737. BABYSITTERS A NANNIES, Set your own schedule. Days, e v es A /or wknds. $4.25$6.70/hr. 345-2433 CHILD CARE needed for 3yo for M, T, Th aftrs, 1 blk from ASU. Refs. req. 967-2772 eves. GOOD PAY babysitting service looking for energetic, caring people. C hoose your own hours. Must have own transp. Call 277-6645 M-F, after 1p.m. NANNY M-F, Sat.eves; 18-26 hrs, 2-6p.m. $6/hr. Ref. 56th A Camelback. 840-7818. NANNY/MOTHER’S HELPER needed for four young child­ ren; Arcadia area; eyes. A wee­ kends. Call 970-5372. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Students N eeded! fishin g In­ dustry. Earn up to $3,000$6,000+ per month. Room and Boared! Transportation! Male or Female. No experience nec­ essary. Call (206)545-4155 ext A59181. CRUISE SHIPS now hiring Earn up to $2,000+/m onth working on cru ise ships or land-tour com panies. W orld travel. Seasonal A full-time em­ ployment available. No experi­ ence necessary. For more i n i formation call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C59181. SK I JO B S S k i R e s o rts a re n ow h ir in g fo r w i n t e r s e a s o n . C a ll V e r t ic a l E m p lo y m e n t G ro u p to d a y ! (2 0 6 ) 6 3 4 - 0 4 6 9 e x t. V 5 9 1 8 1 FUNDRAISING_ FUND-RAISE OPP. Seek std grp for fall '95 fnd jrser. WCI has effective, packaged fnd rse for std grps. (800) 865-6554. AAA N ew members: Y ou've come a long way, baby! W el­ come to sisterhood. SEEKING RESP. Day care imm. for 17m o. o ld . N ights, my home (pref). 7p.m. start, incl. 4w k days A sat eves. 49165% JO B OPPORTUNITIES IF YOU are interested in join­ ing a national sorority please call 784-8852. PD. WORKER Needed for after noon shift at daycare ministry. Great hrs. for morning student. Light A L ife Christian Day Care. 985-0221. INT'L E M P L O Y M E N T ' Make Up to $25-$45/hr. tea c h in g basic conversational E nglish abroad. J a p a n , T aiw an, a n d S. K orea. F o r m ore in fo rm a tio n call: (206) 632-1146 ext. J59181 City of Scottsdale Paries and Recreation Division «* $¡257,000 MY 2nd yr income. 2yrs out o f c o lle g e. Let me show you how. Free info. Call 926-3870. GREEK RUSHEES: Tired o f w andering around aim lessly betw een new and old row? Then stop by the most respect­ ed international fraternity Delta Kappa Epsilon. We are lo­ cated off-campus at 210 South Roosevelt. Rush is almost over so don't m iss out! Call 6504793 for a recorded message. Stop by the house and hang­ out at 5:00 today. W e'll see you there. WANTED: COACHES A OFFICIALS Boys & Girls Flag Football Volleyball $6.68-$8.92 per hour A SU PUBLIC EVEN TS NOW HIRING Event Management: - Accounting Assistant II - Assistant IV to Program m ing Coordinator - O perations Assistant I to Events Coordinator, Sr. - O perations Assistant I to Scheduling/Rentals Coordinator - Prom otion A ssistants II (in M arketing Area) Gammage Auditorium: - Event A ssociates, Lead I, II, III (G uest Services) - Event Associates, Lead I, II, III (Security) - Team Shop Salesperson II - W arehouse Stock Persons III Mona Plummer Aquatic Center: Kerr Cultural Cantor (6110 N. Scottsdale Road): Monday - Friday 4-9, Saturday 8-5; Two Sundays per month 11-4 Apply ab 952 E Baseline ML, Suite 111, Mesa C ross Streets Stapley - Baseline LOOKING FOR energetic indiv. F/t A p/t food service clerk s, fle x . hrs. M-F apply Country Glazed Ham, 2501 E. Camelback/Esplanad. 9558069. AFTER SCHOOL Caregiver wanted for boy age 7 A girl age 11. M -F, A vg. 20hrs/wk; S6.00/HR. S Tempe area. Call or leave message 839-6542. - Lifeguards III - Locker Room Attendant I n B X u i n o tw eo e DELI HELP and/or drivers, p/t M-F lunch hrs. Apply at 4707 E. Southern 431-0011. O P P O R T U N IT Y RUSH GROUPS 5A6-CO0gratulations and good luck with your new houses! No mat­ ter what the letter we are all Greek together!!! SERVICES ATTENTION STUDENTS, free dental work, caU 451-3284 for more info. ATTN ALL Students! Grants A scholarships are bird by pvt sector. Qualify regardless of inc or grds. For more info call 1-800-400-0209. FREE $$ for c o lle g e, 1-900336-6181 ext, 1561. Average c all 3 m inutes $2.99 per minute, 18+. Procall Co. 602954-7420. HUNDREDS A THOUSANDS o f grants A scholarships avail­ able to all students. Let our years o f research benefit you. Immediate qualification. Call 1800-270-2744. ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED BY PRIVATE SECTOR. BILLIONS O F DOLLARS IN GRANTS. T O QUALIFY C A U : 800-400-0209 Stadium Management: FtpeHonieStudy Course ■ Employee Optical Discoiait Propali ' 921-9925 CORK N'CLEAVER E xcepting aps for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server, will train, pt time. Concern w/ the parents, reliability & per­ sonality are important. Apply in person m -f 2-5p.m . or by app. 5101 N. 44th st. 9520585, 7 YEAR OLD boy looking for babysitter to help my mom when she wants to go out with dad or needs to go somewhere w ithout me. They like to go out one night a weekend and som etim es during the week — alone. They also take some trips when you would have to take care of me until they came home. I think they pay pretty good. You'd need a car and for sure — don't sm oke. Call my • mom: 483-0060 or fax her: 4838051. W ell call you back. JO B - Box O ffice C lerks II - Patron Services W orkers II (Floor Manager) -Technical A ssistants II, 111, IV M d VàcaSûns& Holidays Rm I Advancement Onoortuntfee p iriN IM R n n l]ü iilM PilM iniir» BARTENDING ACADEMY CAFETERIA SERVICE attend. Good $, includes meals 126:30. M-F. 1/2 mi campus 9662884 For application infonnation contact the. Student Employment Office, Job referral #2967-J Applications will be accepted untill Friday, September 99+2408 SEARS * Work full or part time? HELP WANTEDCH ILD CAR E HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE Local co. seeking energetic resp. ind. to operate hot dog MID-SCOTTSDALE. WORDcart program w/ Home Depot. PROCESS., lazor printer- term Flex, shifts M ,W ,F or T, Th, papers, resumes. Lianne 948^ Sat A Sun. Full A p/t hrs*, up 4275 ' : y. ; ’ to$9.00/hr. Call 561-6253. * Earn $10 to $90 an hour? * Be able to work when you don't have class? State P ress m /f /d /v - Office/Box O ffice W otkers II - Rental/Event W orkers II - Technical A ssistants II FOR INFORMATION ABOUT THESE STUDENT JO B OPENINGS C A LL CARÒLE VOGT 9 6 5 -1 3 3 7 ■Rn »aOfcìlS!: :!9 r w » lí’É iV ,' ,:! p iB I I ji mm§ St a t e P r e s s SERVICES TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING TYPING/WORD PROCESSING Save up to 40% on long 'dis-tance phone calls. Free gifts. Idealdial. 483-8971. SS2/PG, S15/RES. Proofed. Las­ er. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. Near ASU Brian, 967-5987. HELP W ANTED' GENERAL $25+ RESUMES From Scratch in 1 visit, updates, 100% suc­ cess laser, 7 days, Tempe 9687735. AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast turnaround. Townsend W/P, Maureen, 955-0969. SAVE MONEY HELP WANTEDGENERAL APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. TUTORS TYPING/WORD PROCESSING TUTORING FOR all types of electrical engineering & math c la sse s, from basics to ad­ vanced. $10/Hr. Call Mftrk 244-1665. R fs a s fs That Get Results! Entry Levs! Experts. Spedai Student Discounts! Complete career support services. W A N T C D ^J^ USED VERBAL advantage cass. tape set - 24 au. tapes & work book. Call 864-6513; lve messg. t h e W r i t e R ia a — é CUSTOMIZED RESUMES, start at . 5/S25, professional . & prompt. Call for info 569-5282. REPUBLICAN PARTY NEEDS YOU! PART-TIME HRS. S&+/HR. MAT SULUVAN 9 5 7 -7 7 7 0 ASU STUDENTS Earn money on tie side «M e gaining sates oqKrience. S I MCI long dManoe to businesses and residences on yo u own Ime. Commissions are paid in advance For more intam iatoi. can 957-2733 and ask about o u MCI program. p Cum by's Pizza needs Delivery Drivers • Immediate Positions Available • Flexible Hours Call Todd or Toby 921-3278 A RECEPTIONIST PART-TIME Downtown Phx office needs professional recep­ tionist to work on Mon's & Fri's, 16 hours per week. Must have pleas­ ant phone voice and Knowledge of Word Perfect. Indefinite assignment. Call 264-4582. Stivers Temporary Personnel, Inc. STIVERS TEM PORARY PERSO N N EL 11/2 b its S. o f Broadway HELP WANTEDGENERAL N eed h o st(ess) • c a s h ie r • lin e c o o k s • se rve r P T 8am - 2pm M ust w ork w eekends + 1 or 2 days a week. C a ll9 6 1 -8 6 0 9 or apply in person Le Peep Grill C handler 6245 W. Chancier Blvd. PATRIOT PEST & TERMITE CONTROL WANTS YOU! $7/hr + commission Telemarketing & phone survey - 1 0 m inutes from cam pus - flexible days & hours 5T O L O G I C A L F O R C A 5T .Sydney VIDEO GAMES C all G reg g 8 6 1 -2 2 7 7 O mawi: right people. Youl! have good for­ tune in speculation - follow hunch. SCORPIO (Oct, 23-Nov, 21k Check Virgo message. Favors repaid. youH win friends and influence peo­ ple, what appeared a loss boomerangs in your favor. Scenario highlights music, style, domestic adjustment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Moods of despair dissipate. Stand tali; streamline procedures, look be­ hind scenes for secrets. Moon position coincides with popularity, fulfillment of love relationship. Pisces involved. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Another Capricorn states. “Let's go into business for ourselves1" Focus on organization, responsibility, aware­ ness of time limitation. Love rela­ tionship intense, controversial, re­ warding. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb, 18k Long-range prospects made crystalclear - examine possibility of im­ port-export participation. Travel in­ volved. don't stay still too long! You’ll be dealing with aggressive Aries. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Money you considered lost is re­ trieved. Third person becomes part of original duo. Emphasize entertain­ ment, showmanship, don't be afraid to use garish colors. Sex appeal abounds! IF AUGUST 21 IS TOUB BIRTHDAY: You are intuitive, con­ troversial. possibly changed your name on more than one occasion. You insist on quality, some term you elitist. If wanting the best of every­ thing makes you an elitist, then proudly declare, “Yes, 1 am one!" Cancer. Capricorn. Aquarius persons play significant roles in your life. Business transaction featured in Sep­ tember, marital status will also com­ mand attention. During November you make fresh start, love relation­ ship revitalized. #1999, LosAug#«TimsSyndicate Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. RESTAURANTS/ BARS Private Party Rates C A M P U S REP The nation's leader in college market­ in g is seeking an energetic, entrepre­ neurial student for the position of cam ­ pu s re p . N o s a le s in vo lve d - P la c e advertising on bulletin boards fo r com­ panies such a s Am erican Express and M icrosoft. G reat part-tim e Job earnings. Choose your own hours; 4-8 hours p e r week required. C a l: Cam pus R ep Program Am erican Passag e M edia Gorp. 215 W . H arrison, Seattle. W A 98119 m m & C o m m e rc ia l R ates 1 day, $2.20 per line 2-4 days, $1.65 per line/per day 5-9 days, $1.40 per line/per day 10+days, $1.25 per line/per day (3 line minimum) $ 2.34 PITCHERS Receptionist Part-time Experienced receptionist needed part-time for a busy department. Excellent com ­ munication/ telephone and organizational skills required, typ ing and computer skills helpful. Drug testing may be required. Apply in person to: 2727 N. Central Ave. Phoenix, AZ 85004 EOE U-HAUL IS A DRUG FREE ENVIRONMENT! pasta TANK UP TUESDAY (800)487-2434 E x t 4444 U-HAUL International 1-4 days, $1.35 per line/per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line/per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line/per day (3 line minimum) g U w y ’C W A N TED 60 oz. P e r so n a ls M iller Lite • Bud Light (Student rate, must show ID) $2 for 3 lines, $1 for each additional line Honey Brown $2.82 98« Pitchers of Soda D e a d lin e : 968-6666 Noon, one day prior to publication 1 3 0 1 E . U n iv e rs ity A S U Box 87150 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-8484 ’ Classified Ad Order Form Tuesday, August 29,1995 ■eyal Scorpio: G n tt Kelly, Star ■ yie letren wk* ktetmt “Her Sere« Hifkaess *1 Hence,'' wee e i eathusiostie follower el tttreiefy. Steryie planet is Pluto, letters of alphteet n oorletcl with Scorpio ate D, M, T. Deceaker will ke m et nemrakle, remaatk m ntk of U K let Srorpio •etivei. Iatlirit Fritce Charles, wke yreef ly displays ee kis apparel symkd ef kis z e tu n l iig». Srorpio: Eifklk s ip , m ot possioeote asi eeapetitive. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Deal is legitimate, partnership proposal seriously considered. You’ll be in public eye. those who thought you frivolous will do sudden about-face. Relationship intensifies. TAURUS (April 20-May 2D): Fo­ cus on distance, language, flirtation with fame and fortune. Work meth­ ods approved, funding available, look beyond the immediate. Search for soulmate should not be abandoned. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): New hope on horizon! Focus on creativity, style, exchange of ideas, physical attraction, sex appeal. A new. differ­ ent kind of love part of dramatic scenario. Leo figures prominently. CANCEE (June 21-July 22): intu­ itive intellect should be given free rein. Accent the unorthodox, utilize elements of timing, suiprise. Atten­ tion revolves around home, security, marital prospects. Aquarian involved. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll muse, "1 was optimistic, but never expected this joyous Tuesday!" Focus on popularity, prosperity, trips, visits, concepts leading to success. Gemini, Sagittarius natives in picture. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Previ­ ous obstacle becomes steppingstone toward goal. Financial picture brighter than anticipated. Scorpio native declares, “You have plenty on the hall, lam with you all the way!" URRA (Sept. 23-Oct 22): Pounce on opportunity for fresh start in different direction. Leo native helps you fulfill desires, introduces you to $5.00 o ff any nail service from Tracy, Van, or N ancy. Exp 10/31/95 ® 730-5992. HELP WANTEDGENERAL C lassifieds Matthews Center Basement 965-6735 NAIL SPECIAL State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basem ent Office: 965-6735 Tate a study break with TEEKEN N only one in AZ! at the MU Recreation Center in the lower level Now Opon till Midnight. St a t e P ress MISCELLANEOUS 2121 S. M ill #206 m Page 2 3 Tuesday, August 2 9 ,1 9 9 5 N am e Hom e Phone B u sin ess Phone A ddress C ity, State Zip P le a se print one letter per box, leave a blank box betw een w ords. R P le a se be su re to ch e ck yo u r ad. M ake su re it rea d s exactly a s you w ish |t to appear in the State P re ss, including punctuation. P le a se ch e ck your ad the first d ay it appears-the lia b ility o f the Sta te P ress sh a ll not exceed the co st of the ad and cred it m ay b e given fo r the first in se rtio n only. M ino r sp ellin g errors d o not q u a lify fo r m ake­ goods. No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to can cel you r ad a cred it w ill be held on account fo r future advertising. □ C h«ck#_ □ B E Please include Drivi*» Howl— t j E S Com m ercial 1 day, $2.20 per line 2-4 days, $1.65 per line, per 5-9 days, $1.40 per line, per : 10+ days, $1,25 per line, per 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Dal— you wish vour ad to run: Price per Day Q A Private Party 1-4 days, $1.35 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day .■ #otDays X c* M Bank Card Number T otal ili e« < R—alteaBBwNaB—Muwter: Name oh Card Expiration Date 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 054 1^086 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Free Lost/Found Sorry, we cannai accept personal ads through the mall. 088 052 049 101 074 072 073 070 071 030 Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help Wanted-Chijd Care Help Wanted-Clerical Help Wanted-Food Service Help Wanted-General Help Wanted-Sales Homes for Rent 040 102 107 103 056 076 Q15 120 05Q 045 Home for Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes 063 082 090 094 110 097 047 035 080 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rent TOO 081 058 031 041 060 067 108 105 115 Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condos for Rent Townhomes/Condos for Sale Transportation Travel tutors Typing/Word Processing Wanted P age 24 Tuesday, August 29,1995 Sta te P dent N ew for Fall r ess Health C enter "Finally! A Health Plan for O nly $ 5 0 - a Semester!" ASU Student Health Bridge Plan Bridge Plan: M edical C are A new pre-pay health care option for students with no health insurance or insured under out-of-state/out-of-valley H M O or Indemnity Insurance Plans. Bridge Coverage: WHEN YOU NEED IT... • A ll professional services of Student Health's General M edical Staff Where you • A ll services performed in Student Health Lab and X-ray • Student Health in-hoûse consultant visits with a $10® co-payment • A llergy injections (allergen provided by student) with a $ 5 - co-payment I B r id g e P l a n E n r o l l m e n t F o r m Student I.D. # Date of Birth: Perm anent H om e A ddress: Home Phone # I wish to enroll in the Bridge Plan at a cost of $50.00 per semester, Fall Coverage: Aug. 16, 1995 Jan. 15, 1996, and Spring Coverage: Jan. 16, 1996 - Aug 15, 1996. 1understand that medicines are not covered and there may be additional co-pay charges of *5® or $1022 for specialty services. Signature - . ' " . . ' Date '■' ■■ .■ This form must be returned by September 5/ 1995. M ail or bring to: Arizona State University Student Health Center Insurance O ffice Box 872104 Tempe, A Z 85287-2104 You may pay by check (made payable to the Arizona State University) or MasterCard/Visa. For more information call 965-2411. , ^ need it.