V o l. 80 N o. 13 Frid a y, Septem ber 8 ,1 9 9 5 A n Independent M orning D aily 1 h u rt in 4-car a ccid en t 2 colleges prepare for Fall ’96 move to ASU East for Arizona State University, long term,” he said. ‘‘You don’t very often get a chance to have 600 acres, The agribusiness and technology schools will be at a brand-new campus practically given to you.” However, some students packing their bags in antici­ are less than thrilled with pation of a Fall ‘96 move to the move. the new ASU, East campus, “I d on’t like its” said located at the form er B rian Gray, a ju n io r Williams Air Force Base. agribusiness major. “I have The U S. Air Force has classes here on the main begun to turn over 1.5 mil­ campus, and I work here, lion square feet to ASU “at too. It’s (ASU East) close to a cost of absolutely zero,” where I live, but 1 would like said Chuck Backus, director to stay on the main campus.” of academ ic program s at Backus said ASU hopes ASU Fast. “We think that to minimize the impact of this is an unusually good the move by moving entire tax break for the taxpayer.” schools (agribusiness and The former air base has technology) and making the more than 550 homes and necessary classes available six dormitories that will be to students at ASU East. utilized by ASU for on“We are hoping we don’t campus housing. The State' have people going back and Legislature allocated $1.5 forth between the east cam­ m illion to change other pus and the main campus,” buildings into classrooms at he said. the new campus. Backus Plans are also in the said the location is “an works for a shuttle service exciting thing.” between the main campus “We will be able to offer and the new east campus. a big university education in Kelly Wëndel/State Press The ASU East Campus a small-town setting,” he The school of Agribusiness will be moving 'said..'. 4 j-. . ^' from its current hom e in the Agriculture will offer both lower and upper d ivision classes, Although there is some Building (above) to ASU East next fall. including graduate programs resistance to the move by faculty members, Dr. Eric Thor, director of the in agribusiness arid technology. A study is also cur­ School of Agribusiness, said the move is beneficial rently underway to evaluate the potential of offering general studies classes at the new campus. to the University. “We all believe that this is by far the best move T u r n to ASU E ast, page 2. B y Kelly W S t a t e P ress An EMT assists a Tempe Fire Department Paramedic in placing Sarah Biel on a stretcher following a four-car accident at the intersection of University Drive and Forest Ave. at approximately 11 a.m. Thursday. One witness, architecture graduate student Doug Leventhal, said the front three cars were at a stop when Biel’s car hit the rear car and start­ ed a domino effect. He also said it appeared Biel’s head struck the windshield. Biel, a non-student, was transported to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital for treatment and was released, Biel was not cited at the scene of the accident. Tempe Police said the investigation is continuing and enforcement action is pending. en del ASU educators blast D ole’s p u sh for official English B y D a v id J . K o v a c s S t a t e P r ess Republican presidential candidate Robert Dole’s recent attack on bilingual education in his English-only campaign is drawing fire from ASU educators. According to an excerpt of his speech to the American Legion on Aug. 31, Dole said making English the nation’s official language would help immigrant Americans adapt, allowing them equal access to opportunities. He said he favored school instruction in a foreign lan­ guage only if it is for the teaching of English. However, Miriam Muniz, assistant professor of bilingual education at ASU West, said Dole’s position fails to recog­ nize that many students, even at the junior high level, are not proficient in their own language. For foreign students to learn in an English speaking class, they must first be literate in their own language, she said. “Politicians do not understand how children leam,” she said, adding that once students are proficient in their own language, their skills are easily transferable to an Englishspeaking classroom. Muniz said the success story of the immigrant grandpar­ ents coming to America fails to mention the grandparents were already literate in their native language, which differs from the situation of many of today’s foreign students. “ The parents of these students were often illiterate them­ selves,” she said. “It all boils down to one thing — if you already know how to read and write in your own language.” Muniz, who prepares student teachers for bilingual class­ es, said these courses teach students traditional subjects such as math and sciences in their native language while they also leant English. Frank Reyna, program coordinator for Dole’s presiden­ tial campaign in Arizona, said Dole does not want to take away immigrant students’ opportunities to leam by elimiT u r n to E n g l is h , page 2 . Transit cuts mean higher Tempe bus fares, official says By A ngela M S t a t e P r ess u ll Proposed federal budget cuts for trans­ portation program s could cost Phoenix more money than Tempe, but Tempe citi­ zens could still feel the effects in a bus fare increase, a city official said at a city council meeting Thursday. Mary O ’C onnor, city transportation planner, told the city council a higher bus fa re fo r T em pe is lik ely b ecau se if Phoenix loses federal funding, Tempe may have to compensate for bus service serving both cities. INSIDE STA TE PRESS Weather Outlook Hot and humid, with scatered evening thunderstorms. High 103°, low 82°r “It depends on what options there are for service cuts and streamlining services,” she said. Congress proposed about a $400 million cut in federal operating subsidies for mass transit. If Congress passes the proposal in September, Phoenix will lose $1.5 million in transit funds for fiscal 1995-96. Tempe would lose about $28,000. Tempe Mayor Neil Giuliano agreed that Tempe would be affected by Phoenix’s budget cut. “The lion’ s share of the reduction is to Phoenix, but that has a ripple effect • ‘ W orld/ Nation , Sen. B ob Packwood resigns one day after the Senate Ethics Committee unanitpousiy recommended his expulsion. Page 3 on us, so we do need to be concerned,” he said. However, O ’Connor said the city has already budgeted for such a loss. In addi­ tion, the city is working on a proposal for a transit sales tax. If the council approves it, the current sales tax of 6.95 percent could increase by as much as .05 percent. A .05 percent increase would also increase the Tempe sales tax of 1.2 percent. Tempe could also compensate for budget cuts by requesting money from the city’s general fund, O’Connor said. In other business, the council discussed plans to paint the Old Mill Avenue Bridge. Although the bridge is scheduled to be cleaned and painted by Nov. 15, council members expressed concern about painting an historic landmark. “We would like the bridge to retain as m uch of an historic nature as possible,” Giuliano said. “We don’t want it to look like a brand new bridge.” Howard Hargis, assistant city engineer, said the city can choose the paint Color. “It’s not going to look new,” he said. “I guess it’s a matter of opinion whether it’s going to look bad or not.” W hereto Find It Juniors Keith Poole (3), Traivon Johnson and the rest o f the Sun Devil football team take on U T E P in their home open­ er Saturday night. C lassifieds.......... ................ .1 3 , Com ics....................¿.i......... 10 Crossword.............fe................8 Horoscopes .......................... 15 Opinion....................................4 Police R eport............... 9 Sports.................................... 11 Today’s A ctivities............ ,...2 W orld/Nation.................. 3 & S tate P ress Friday, September 8,1995 Page£ ASU E ast T oday C ontinued from page 1. The Today Section is a d aily calendar o f events printed as a ser­ vice to the A S U com m unity. Requests a re accepted on a first-com e, first-served b asis and are printed a s space perm its. Cam pus d u b s and organizations m ay subm it written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f M atthews Center. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone o r via fax. E n tries m ust contain the fu ll nam e o f the d u b o r organization, a description o f the event, date, tim e and the fu ll address o f the lo ca­ tion. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and d a rity. Incom plete o r ille g ib le entries w ill be discarded. D eadline fo r req u ests is noon the day before p u b licatio n and en tries w ill not be accepted m ore than three w orking days before publication. O nly one entry p e r organization p er day is perm itted. • African Student Association — General meeting. 6 p.m.; MU 209. • AIESEC — First general meeting. Everyone welcome to a unique way to leam about global perspectives. Stay with for happy hour. 4 p.m.; MU Yuma Room. *, A lcoholics Anonym ous — Daily campus meeting. Noon to 1:15 p.m.; Newman Center, Aquinas Hail in the basement. • Alpha Phi Omega — National co-ed service fraternity. Volleyball and barbecue at Jaycee Park on 5th Street and Hardy. 6 p.m.; Jaycee Park. • Asian Bible Fellowship -—Bible study, fellowship, sharing and fun. 7 p m ; MU Coconino Room. • Baptist Student Union — Free food, fun and fellowship. Please join us. Noon; 1322 S. Mill Ave. • Baptist Student Union — Friday Fun Night with bowling. 7 p.m.; BSU Center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. • Farce Side Com edy — 12:40 p m ; MU Programming Lounge. • Golden Key National Honor Society — Campus awareness table. Membership information and Kaplan test prep info. 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Cady Mall. • Hispanic Graduate Student Alliance — First general meeting. 5 p.m.; MU Mojave Room. • Lambda League — Retreat. Planning for academic year and recep­ tion. 1 p.m. retreat. 5 p.m. reception; MU Turquoise Room. • NABO — Meeting: Discuss picnic for 4:30 p.m. Saturday at Daily Park. Free food. 3:30 p.m.; All Conference Room. • Progression — (Gay, lesbian and bisexual graduate student net­ work). Diner and meeting. 6 p.m.; MU Turquoise Room. “We are planning to be able to offer, from day one, most of the courses out at the east campus,” said Thor. “A person can actually live on the east campus and complete their degree on the east cam­ pus in agribusiness and the School of Technology.” This increased space allows the agribusiness and technology schools to offer more programs of study. The University is also organizing a new pro­ fessional golf management program in conjunction with the Professional Golf Association and new options in food and manufacturing programs. “Our needs (for space) exceed what we have here at the main campus,” Thor said. Although architec­ tural plans will not be finalized for another three weeks, Thor said the move to the east campus will “about double” the square footage currently available to the School of Agribusiness at the main campus. “This is an exciting opportunity for ASU,” Thor said. “T his w ill enable ASU to serve all of Maricopa County.” E n g lish C ontinued from page 1. nating what he considers ineffectual programs. Reyna said current programs deter students from entering the English-speaking culture. “He’s taking a positive approach that Americans and immigrants have an opportunity for assimila­ tion, instead of having programs that are non-transitional,” he said. However, the idea that immigrants do not want to enter the American culture is a commonly held Saturday: • Alpha Phi Omega — National co-ed service fraternity. Meet at MU Information Desk for a service project. 8:30 a.m. • A SU Student Foundation — Orientation. Meet members and eat free food. 4 p.m.; MU Alumni Lounge. misconception, said D. Letticia Galindo, a socio­ linguist and assistant professor in the department of language and literature at ASU. He added that Dole’s English-only policy is a form of immigrant bashing. “I think the politicians and others have a linguis­ tic fear or rejection of anything foreign,” Galindo said. “I think the whole thing’s been blown out of proportion.” State P ress UeH&rf fa //*To former LAPD Detective Mark Fuhrman. Pleading the Fifth on the stand was the act of a cow­ ard, Mark. Suddenly the concept of the planted glove doesn’t seem so far-fetched. O.J. is probably already planning his welcome home party. s TAFF __________________________ T hese ewirbnwewtal laws iw s t be eased.they ere oos Sc D ra v o s STATE PRESS ■ ■£ i 4 J I , 1 ' \ ffipwVmrd of 4he House if . ■ ■" •'. • j I Spftatan, oCChoking 4o d en tt).| Whatever happened to the real MTV? Something incredible hap­ pened to me last night. S teve 1 swear that it is absolutely forsberg true. I was flipping through the cable channels and landed on 29, C o lu m n ist MTV. And there, much to my astonishment, a music video was playing! Not news, not cartoons, not a stupid show about kids sharing a house, or an even more Stupid show about kids sharing an RV. They were showing a music video! You know, where a group performs a song in front of a camera. Of course within five minutes they were running a dat­ ing game show, which was to be followed by a documen­ tary about sex or religion or whatever other nonmusical subject they could dream up. If I sound bitter it is probably because I am old enough to remember when there was still a glimmer of hope — a no-frills, no-nonsense, non-corporate music channel is what we were looking for. And now what we’ve got, to put it bluntly, is sanctimonious, hypocritical crap. A few years back, MTV ran an ad campaign bragging about showing 1,000 videos a week. Suppose an average video lasts four minutes, and that you followed it with two 30 second commercials. If MTV did that they could show more than 2,000 videos per week. One is left with the impression that half their time is spent on something other than music videos, and watching for a while confirms it. Did you miss Beauty and the Beach the first 90 times it was shown? Well, with luck, it will probably be on again tonight. Even worse is the blatant hypocrisy. For example, MTV states that it is strongly opposed to censorship, yet for some strange reason the lyrics you hear on MTV are not what you hear when you buy a CD. For instance, Tom Petty’s song sounds like “Let’s get to the point — Let’s role another Jhmhmhm.” On the CD those lines actually rhyme. Perhaps MTV is just living up to its own (intermittent) anti-drug policies. A more striking example is a love song by a black artist who in the song is worried that his girlfriends fattier will see him as “just another nigger from the streets,’’ The song was tasteful, and that particular line was the crux of the song, revealing as it did how he feared that the label “nig­ ger” could cost him the love of his life. Don’t bother listen­ ing for that line while watching MTV. Without it the song ends up sounding like a joke without a punch line. Then there is a song that says: “1 want to f—k you like an animal.” Somehow the MTV censors were left the dis­ tinct sounds of the first and last consonants for everyone to hear. Of course, MTV, which denies that the videos shown influence kids, refuses to show violent rap videos because, well, kids might emulate them. Sex, however, is OK, even if the documentaries that MTV airs do say that abstinence is .best,; . MTV video jockey Kennedy once explained that she was hired after sending in tapes of herself on the radio, but that she had to stop by and see her prospective boss, Who had to make certain she wasn’t a “fat pig.” So, anorexia is appar­ ently OK, but the opposite is not. The point is that MTV tries to appear as though it is dif­ ferent than network news. It’s not. MTV likes people to notice that on its Singled Out pro­ gram there is no overt race discrimination — a Caucasian may hook up with an Asian or a Latino with an AfricanAmerican. Yet there seems to be another rather severe kind of discrimination. People who are overweight, or just dam ugly, never seem to show up. In all my years of watching The Grind dance show — albeit only 20 seconds at a time while I am flipping stations —- I have never Seen ¡a downright “fat” or “ugly” woman on the show although there appears to be more leeway given to guys. But isn’t that just the kind of thing that MTV, with its goody-goody-two shoes public front, is sup­ posedly fighting against? I want my, I want my, I want my Music Television. Not the corporate, bland, baloney-spewing stuff we’ve been hearing, but the real thing. Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history. DAVID STROW, Editor GARIN GROFF, Managing Editor MICHELLE MARIE SHEETZ . . . . . .. Night Editor DAVID PROFFITT .. .... . ....... KENNES BOLIG........ CHRISTINA BAILEY ............. BRYN CHANCELLOR........ ... JIM POULIN..... ....... DIANNE R. BARTSCH........... DAN MILLER................. ..... DAMIAN SHAW..................... JOSH KRJST...:..... ................... ADRIANNA GARClA.,...........;;.;....Asst. Magazine Editor R EPO RTER S: Brian Anderson, Cody Aycock, Tim Baxter, Ruth Ann Hogue, Patty King, David Kovacs, Angela Mull, Dan Siegel, Timothy Tait, Kelly Wendel Greg Zeoieida. SPORTS REPORTERS: Lisa Eskey, Dustin Krugel. Ron Maiejko, Dawn Wagner. v COPY EDITORS: Andrea Healey, Kim Herman, Liz Montalbano. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Robeit Anderson, Tim Hacker. COLUMNISTS: Enrique Chaurand, Betty Farrish, Steve Forsberg, Tina Holder, A. M arjory Kaminski, Delia Maldonado, Liz Montalbano. CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, Steve Tansley, Hayden Williams. PRODUCTION; Aaron R. Bratcher, Jodi GoldbUtt, Diana Kessinger, Jeremy Meyer, Prashant Sampat, Skip Schrader, Eloise Young. SALES R E PR E SEN T A TIV E S: Naomi Cobb, Cari Dewald, Dan Ellstiom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Nickelle Kastein, Jess Rankin, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: DAVID STROW Editor GARIN GROFF Managing Editor CHRISTINA BAILEY Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing die academic year, exceptholidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room IS, Arizpna State University* Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the otdy newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o n e N um bers Information..............965-7572 Newsroom.............. .965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising..............965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6735 -••v"i ’ TE Opinion St a t e P ress P ag e 5 Friday, September 8,1995 Kiddie-porn or just sign of the times? There’s been a whole lot of hullabaloo lately about two media events that involve American teenagers: Calvin Klein ads displaying pubescence in sexually provocative poses, and the release of director Larry Clark’s controversial movie Kids. The two have, at their core, an issue in common —- an issue that, even in this day and age, many people still have difficulty discussing openly. • It’s teenage sexual behavior. By now, most of us have seen the ads: scantily clad teenage boys and girls in sultry posés advertising Galvin Klein mer­ chandise. The ads are undeniably sexy; the models are proba­ bly not old enough to vote. P o in t And even if you haven't seen the movie Kids, you’ve cer­ tainly heard the hype. Larry Clark's cinema vérité spares no detail in portraying the sexual promiscuity of teenagers, partic­ ularly the habits of a male character named Telly who deflow­ iz . ers virgins — unknowingly and indiscriminately spreading the MONTALBANO HIV virus at the same time. C o lu m n ist Last week, Calvin Klein announced he would pull the ads that have been denounced by some critics — among them The Catholic League, Morality in Media and Agudah Israel of America — as “kiddie pom.” And since Kids was slapped with an NC-17 rating, it pre­ vents the very audience Clark’s movie targets from being per­ mitted to see it. Because of the heated controversy surround­ ing the flick, only certain theaters around the country will even allow it cm their sfcreens. Much ado about nothing? W ell... not exactly. In case no one has checked die latest statistics (or walked down die haüs of a local high school recently) let me clue you in to à few obvious facts: Teenagérs do know about sex, they are having sex, and sometimes, they forget to wear condoms or otherwise protect themselves from unwanted pregnancies or sexually transmitted diseases. I looked up the most recënt statistics 1 could find concerning, teenagers and sexual b eh av io r in the state o f , ■/>*-.*:' Arizona and in Maricopa County. In both instances, o ccu rren ces o f births to teenage girls, reported cases of sexually transmitted dis­ eases and diagnosed cases of HIV infection and AIDS among teenagers have risen between 1990 and 1993. Though these statistics are not representative of the en tire country, they are indicative of a behavioral tren d — one that lands smack in the middle of our backyards. I wasn’t terribly shocked at the resu lts of my research. Then again, T m only 23 years old, and can easily recall what it was like to attend high school. For those in the country who are a little older, or more conservative, and who may be in Hpnial about any type of sexual behavior among teenagers, this may come asa bit of a surprise. Maybe Klein went a bit too far for shock value. Though I don’t believe that placing teenage models in provocative poses makes Klein as a pedophile, I do think the ads were in bad taste, and that Klein have chosen a marketing ploy other than sex to sell his merchan­ dise. And maybe, as some critics have argued, Clark’s Kids overemphasizes teenage sexual promiscuity to drive his point home. Certainly all teenagers aren’t misinformed or ignorant about the risks of unprotected sex (in one scene, a male character claims that AIDS doesn’t even exist because he doesn’t know anyone who died from it), and certainly many have pastimes other than those of the kids in the movie. But sweeping the dirt of teenage sex under the proverbial carpet is not going to make it disappear, and blaming the media and imposing censorship won’t alleviate the problem, either. Klein and Clark are not inspiring teenagers to have sex — instead, they are reflecting behavior indicative of much of today’s youth. I, for one, think it’s about time parents wake up and smell the spermicide. It’s clear that many parents still have difficulty talking to their children about sex — I know this from personal experience, and almost anyone who was raised in a typically con­ servative, rural area of the country will probably agree with me. But if parents won’t teach their kids the facts about sex, who will? Educators may seem a logical answer, but let’s not forget that there are still Biblethumpers who don’t want their children to learn sex education in public schools. O urehes are not necessarily the best role models either. Many still {»each blind absti­ nence without convincing results, especially since they fail to instill an appropriate sexual value system within the jaded minds of today’s youth. So teenagers turn to each other for their codes on sexual behavior. The media reflects that behavior, and preys on teenage desires to give the kids what they want to see. It’s a vicious circle, and I, for one, am not prepared to provide a solution to the problem. But until parents, educators and legislators can find a way to make sex safer -— and more sacred — for their teenagers, they should not be so quick to cast the first stone at the media. Liz M ontalbano is an M.F.A. student studying creative writing It has been proven time and time again that exposing children to violence increases violent behavior. So doesn’t it ELIA stand to reason that exposing children to sexy pictures of ELIA other children will pique their interest about their sexuality? M A LDO NADO Yes, obviously it does, and this is exactly what the Calvin Klein bus ads did. The pictures, which feature half-dressed teens set in what appears to be a cheaply paneled hotel room with shag carpet­ ing and stark lighting, were, according to Klein, meant to enforce positive messages of the spirit, independence and inner worth of today’s young people. In reality, they were immoral, seedy, degrading and insulting. Pulling them was the right thing to do, but only because the designer should never have been allowed to run the ads in the first place. The ads aren’t just offensive-and rude, they are socially destructive. The fact that Klein has prospered while exploiting sexual deviance is a sign that we as a culture are in serious trouble. • Children today are surrounded by negative imagery. Sex and violence have permeated our society through movies, television and even video games. This may be in answer to the demand for such products, but as adults we have to take some responsibility for the products young people can access. Klein has, over the years, been allowed to slowly invade our sense of decency without any negative repercussions. Starting with the Brooke Shields’ commercials, in which she professes, “Nothing comes between me and my Calvins,” and leading to the topless, almost anorexic, Kate Moss spread across the tops of buildings in Times Square. Klein is dictating the increase in tolerance and disguising it as progress. The most recent pictures of children in sexually alluring positions were plastered on die sides of buses which then passed children in playgrounds and children on their way to school. They didn’t éven have a choice in the matter. Feeding these sleazy portraits to our young people is not_ progress, it’s coercion. The ads are a culmina­ tion of a campaign aimed to shock and offend. It’s time for consum ers to show advertisers that they have to take responsibility for the forces they encourage in a culture that is increasingly on the edge. ■ Some might argue that kiddie porn already exists and is available at any mag­ azine rack. There are 14year-old super models who pose in bikinis on the covers of major fashion magazines f every month — so w hat’si the difference? To be honest,there isn’t any. The reason child weir fare advocates don’t go after the magazines that exploit these young models is because they can’t. The fashion industry is. so saturated with teenage girls that to eliminate them would be to wipe out the industry. Regulating them is impossible because regardless of what they advocate, fashion magazines are protected under the law just like any other media outlet. Calvin Klein doesn’t have to worry about the law. He can serve up sexually explicit images disguised as art as long as he wants or until we, as consumers, say, “No, you can’t do that — not with our children.” Eventually Klein pulled the so-called “kiddie-pom” ads himself and ran a full-page ad in the New York Times explaining his decision. In doing so, Klein may appear to have egg. on his face, but advertising gurus would hardly call this a disaster. “It’s my conjecture that (Klein) accomplished just what he set out to do,” said Marian Salzman, director of emerging media and consumer insight for Chiat/Day advertising in New York. “In fact, I think this is one of the great marketing stories of this decade. Am I personally offended by this campaign? Yes. But they have taken this clothing and put it on the market and on the map.” In the world of fashion magazines, teenagers are used to promote sexy clothes, perfume, cars, soap, jewelry, make-up and just about everything else as long as they look like adults. This is a fact of life that is not likely to change any time in the near future. But when the teens look like teens, it’s a completely different matter. The Calvin Klein ads blatantly advocated sexual activity among or with teenagers and for this he should be boycotted. I understand that some teenagers are going to have sex before they are ready regardless of what is advertised on die sides of buses but, like any social dis­ ease, it can’t be ignored. We have die power to nurse our Our right to an education society back to health. We can do this by promoting the posi­ supersedes his right to be a tive and fighting the negative. long-winded pompous ass. We have to do this because if we don’t, we will die. P oint uotaBCes... D elia M a ldonado is a graduate student studying journalism. — anonymous ASU student, whispered after a 5-minute spiel by another student in class Page 6 S t a t e P ress Friday, S eptem ber 8, 1995 S p i r i t D e v ils C a s h i e r s H e a t h e r F u l l e r (left) a n d W e n d e ll D e L o n g d e c o r a t e t h e C a s h i e r i n g o f f i c e in t h e Stu d en t S e rv ic e s B u ild in g T h u rs d a y after­ noon. T h e d e c o r a t i o n s w e re put up to s h o w th eir e n t h u s ia s m for the S u n D evil fo o tb a ll * t e a m . T h e f o o t b a l l j e r s e y s w e r e l o a n e d to th e staff by the a th le tic d e p a rtm e n t. A S U m eets U T E P S a t u r d a y in t h i s s e a s o n ' s h o m e o p e n e r . Photos by Sara Abbot/State Press State P ress O pinions Your passport to a magic kingdom, including Adventure Land, Tomorrow Land and Fantasy Land. There is m ore to life th a n news, w eather an d sports. C h eck o u t th e COMICS. r n n mm \ nummm s m ^ i n z s . „.saubd^ S h o w s b . e. . .f. o. r e 6 P -M . • A _____ d v a n c e T_____________________ i c k e t S a l e s m • ___________ S t e r e o____ S vphmi u rro u n d o n L a r g 'e ■■ P■'o p c' o r■n 6 L a r g e■ D r i n k • ü B efs it o f— P h o e n ix G o u r m e t S n a c k B a r^ fa 3 5 0 e fill t r a rE E- -R------ Showtimes good for Friday, September B-Thursday, September 14 £23 zazzzzznzE : M ill a n d U n iv e r s ity . 9 6 6 -6 6 5 5 R u r a l «»nel J /Oafr) 1120.220.4:40.7:45,1025 (1220 am Fit Sad I T h e T ie T h a t Bi n d s „ 6 1 ( M M 1230,220.520,820.1030. (12:40 am fit Sad U n m , s E N i Q R T R i p ^ :4a 1f lB I La s t BASIC Ik THE WATER (K.À J — —^— ----- '-------- — — ^— 2— L- B ] 1220. & & 4:55,7 Ä L IMO: /Mbn -T h u n i 758-425. 7:».1020 (Daffy) 7:45.10:10 -_ I ffrft/fl) 1:00.42Q,7;00.9;5Q; (Mo n -T lw e) 4;QP. / TOQ^giSQ AMAZING PANDA ADVENTURE (pot BEYOND RANGOON m APOLLO 13 pot. CLU ELESS , t w o B S P fjfo * 2 AAovtts fà r tm frie r o fo a t! & NINE MONTHS m CO H Q O TOMMY BOY ipoi» WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING (pqi FIRST KNIGHT (Pol* 2:50.7:10 12:40.5:25,10:15 320.7:40 220,720 11:45.4:45.9:55 2:40,7:00 12:30.4:55.9:10 1220.5:15,10:05 2:30,720. S ’ Fa sh io n S quare 7 ' Inside the mad S c o tts d a le £• Cam etaack 4 2 3 -1 4 0 0 T h e T ie T h a t B i n d s . . 1220,220,520,7:40.10:10 . 10.&00. 7:40,10:10 lÄHSüft. SENIOR TRIR. A ___ R1120,1:45,4:15,7:00,9* B ____ „ J 2R0™ :45.4:15.7 ~' DANGEROUS MINDS m (Fri-Sun) 12:10.2:30.4:50,7:50 10:15 ftfen-niure)2:36.4:50.7:50.10:lA PtfclTWC / c r i - O o n 11:30,220,4:30,720,9:55; i n - m o -n n i m 7 - o n o -c e (Fri-Sun) (M on-Thursi 2 2 0 .4:30! 7:20, 9:55 ( F ri- S u n )ll:\5 ,4:öö, 7:10,10:00; WATERWORLD traisi (Mon-Thurs) 1:30, 4:15,7:10,10:00^ THE PROPHECY* n.'of Cametoack 4 2 3 4 9 0 0 AHarbinsExclusive! m d h m m M rn & t (Daffy) 120.4:15.7:00.920.112:15 am Fri. S at) DANGEROUS MINDSr (Fri, S at) 11:45, 2:30,5:1020,10:25; 11:45! 2:30. 6:1K 8:00,10:10: ¡20,1( (Mon-Tl ^ Y à -T l. 1520 S. Longmore w e t o f Fiesta Mai S 3 6 -9 6 0 0 _ a s t the D o g m e n m a THE USUAL fl WA«lM2:40. 3:00,520, 8:00,1030; (U on -T tiu n ) 3:00,6:20,6:00,10:20 THE POSTMAN (IL POSTINO) trai + + r . (Fri-Sun) 11:30,2:00,4:30,7:00,9:20; ^ -A Z R E P (M on-Thursfl 1:30,2:00,4:15.720,9:20 1H& ‘a Largam iA u d ito riu m -600 B aatal , ‘S ä j m . S E N l O R T W P a A (Fri-Sun) 12:00,2:30, 5:30,820,10:10 (M on-Thun) 11:40~i:50.420.720.9: T h e H e T h a t B in d s ’l i .’JÄ^Sun) 12:15,2:45,6:15,7:45, lE l| '_ A.AA 4.4C T .4A 4IM M IHX DIS1TRL 1120.2.-00,4:45.725.1026.12:30 am; (F l, I ■. A lm a S c h o o l 8 3 5 - 1 1 11 t r mInside Y thenTrtOty r - Man K 444 a 0800 i a & & • • ' . southern & 11:45,2:15,450.7:10, 9:40, (12:10 o n Fri, Sat) 7:15.948.112:15 am FA S t) O l f i m . 1 TH E USUAL SU SPEC TS tb? /Dae) 12:10.2*0.5:10.730.10:10,112:40am fit Sat) ^ I THE PROPHjgCgy Ô 122ST235.525,7:35,955, (123Q8n FA S I A WALK M THE CLOUOS w »(Fri-SunL Wed) 11:50, t 2:25. 5:00,7:25,9:50. (12:15 am Fri. Sat); I (ru e*. T h u n ) U :á ¡, 2 2 5 , $20, iftlú . ' L ... (Sat, S un ) 11:50,2:30, fe:10, y:50,10:30 W Ë i£ p fD U & Z HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMANDI A ilA a M O PANDA ADVENTURE rw /Daffy) 1230.2:45. SilS (F riM on-Thun)ISO.430; (SaLSun) 1120,1Æ0,4:30 A P O L L 0 13 ITO» (Daffy) 7:15,10:10 pm. (D aily) 1:30,4:20,7:20, (10:40 pm Fri, Sat) l /PaRfl 1120.226,430,7:00,930,(12:10pmF itR rif T O n s iT I I L LORD O F ILLUSIONS „ ( M M 11:40.2:30,5:10,720,1020, (12:45 am fftSaQ P lB lT flL . ' - K. (Fri- Mon-Thurs) 1:40.4:20: (Sat Sun) 11:05.1:40.4:20 CRH a ti.» - r>r*.>hn.f / f it Mon-Thurs) 2:30.5:10.7:50.10:30; iB B S iH 5 D o g m en to▲ I I W S P fH A P O in— — U n i v e r s i t y . ____________ BEYOND RANGOON * (D aily) 8:00.10:15 WATERWORLD eo« (D ativi 1:00.4:00.7:00.10:00 /Daffy) 7:30,10:00 SOMETHING TO TA LK ABOUT*) THE SHOW m A (D aily) 12:40.320i 520,7:40.10:10 IBXoicitsl 1220! 2Ì2Ò! 4:45! 7:4Ó! ÌÒ2Ò " feil. f t o d . V ü ) TÄOS&iT^ H i Sa(M1:30,2:15,5:00,7:4«, 10:15,1225 am; . {Sun; 11:30,2:15,5:00.7:45,10*15: (Mon-Thuñ) 12.-QÒ, 230,5 Ü Í, 7 A Í. IQ lO i (Fri-Sun) 11:45. 2:15,4:45.7:15,9:30; iia i^ i^ ja o ^ s THE BROTHERS McMULUEN «1 AMyUwIÿçanefrer ^ ^ ^ ( F r ñ u n ) 1220.2 :Æ 520.7:30,9:45: ^ SundJneaïïm Fèaam i (M on-Thura) 12:ld, 22(1.4:4Ö. 7:ld. 93Ö, ofScoascWeRd 4 9 -5 2 0 0 /D6*v) 1220.2.15 (M on-, »OMETHMO HI TA LK AM S WATERWORLD ira« IBEYOND RANGOON» a T O M . S n h in ; S h o w tim e s s u b ie c t to c h a n g e . P le a s e t a ll t h e a t r e to v e n t (PP»M:4ÿ.7:3Q (PD r) 52Q. 7;4S /DaW) 12:15.2^6.5:15.820 (Daffy) 11:45,220 State Press Page 7 FridaVjj5e£tembe^j^99^ K P ack w ood . V P G o r e c la im s ‘h u m a n e * C ontinued from page 3 . said. “He was the man who carried the ban­ ner for women’s reproductive rights.” P ack w o o d sh o o k th e ir hands or em b raced them all a fte r they spoke. When the accolades ended, he stood in aislé for more intimate exchanges with his colleagues, frequently wiping his eyes. Ethics committee member and fellow Republican, Sen. Larry Craig, of Idaho, buried his head on Packwood’s shoulder in an extended embrace. Lpson C ontin u ed from page 3 . since Jan. 11, were told the defense would rest its case Monday and die prosecution’s rebuttal would begin immediately. The judge indicated deliberations could begin in about two weeks. Jurors never looked worse than they did when the judge broke the bad news. Jurors had dazed expressions. Some clenched their jaws, Some frowned or were grim-faced; one woman in the front row smiled broadly. Fuhrman’s lawyer, meanwhile, publicly apologized for the former detective’s racist comments, made during interviews with an aspiring screenwriter from 1985 to 1994. “All I can tell you is that Mark Fuhrman regrets the inconvenience and harm that he has caused a lot of innocent people to suf­ fer,” attorney Darryl Mounger told KCBSTV. “That’s all I can really tell you.... He’s sony, and I don’t know if that’s enough.” And across the country, the U.S. Justice Department opened an inquiry into whether Fuhrman and fellow officers manufactured evidence and targeted blacks for arrest, as his taped conversations suggested. Clark, denied the opportunity to crossexamine Simpson, at one point said that if Ito allowed Fuhrman to retake the stand, the judge should instruct jurors that Simpson as well invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination by evading the witness stand, “That’s outrageous,” Bailey fumed out­ side court. “Marcia Clark wants to throw out the Constitution because she’s in a bad mood,” Jurors were told at the start of the case that Simpson was under no obligation to testify and didn’t even have to present any defense. The burden of proof in criminal cases is on the prosecution. Clark also argued that the defense had played unfairly when they asked Fuhrman if he had planted evidence, knowing he would be forced to stay silent once he had refused to answer previous questions. “I d o n ’t stand in defense o f M ark Fuhrman. But you’ve got somebody on the ropes,” she said. “He’s taken every hit he can. And they get up and ask him a ques­ tion they know he can’t answer.” Defense attorney Gerald Uelmen said the jury has a right to all information that would help them assess Fuhrman’s credibil­ ity, and Fuhrman’s refusal to testify was critical. Fuhrman’s witness stand appear­ ance came during a hearing on a defense motion to suppress a bloody glove and other evidence collected by Fuhrman and other detectives the day after the bodies of N icole Brown Sim pson and R onald Goldman were found. Ito rejected the defense bid first thing Thursday, saying Fuhrman’s explanation for entering Simpson’s estate without a warrant can still be trusted because it was confirmed by other detectives. “The testimony of Fuhrman ... is corrob­ orated by the testimony of other witnesses,” Ito wrote in a two-page ruling. a É É ) i i d g e H Cabinetsecretfoies, small business owners and corporate executives. Am ong th e changes in clu d ed in report was the closing o f 200 weather stations, the consolidation of 60 ' ; programs and the elitninafion of Oceanic and Atmospheric s’s fleet of * J o b Cuts h ave so fa r been accom ­ '■ to plished through attrition, buy-outs and ....... ended eady retirements, the afoauiwtration said. o f pages of fed eral “I don’t believe, frankly, fold if some of the Republicans on die HiU have their Tiie recom m endations am ount to way, that the government will shrink in nearly $70 billion in savings, die vice as orderly and hum ane a w ay,” said S| ‘This blueprint represents ¿,'an alter­ Blame Kamarck, senior policy adviser to i native to the slash-and-burn extremist Gore- H ? M any o f th e cuts and operational kind o f approach,” Gore stkid in a thinly veiled reference to the congressional changes need to be au th o rized hy R ep u b lican s’ proposed regulatory Congress, Kamarck said. But the Republican-led Congress has reform s and budget cuts, particularly its own plans for scaling back the federal reducdo^m edocarion spending. J | | H g Gore’s National Performance Review government, including shifting social bad set a goal two yews ago o f saving service programs to the states, a sweep­ $108 billion end cutting 252,000 federal ing overhaul o f rule-m aking and the elim ination o f several C abinet-level positions by 1999. :k ‘ In announcing Thursday that 160,000 departments. The adm inistration, diam etrically job cuts and $58 billion in savings had already been “locked in” by executive- opposed on all three points, frequently branch decisions, P resident C linton holds up its N ational Perform ance boasted of “more than half the savings Review as evidence of substance behind foe rhetoric o f smaller government. promised in less than half die time.” W hite House press secretary Mike “These are the kind of cuts that will allow us to balance die budget without M cCurry jo k in g ly acknow ledged as cuffing the single most important invest­ much when he cracked to reporters, ment we can make in our future — edu­ “We’re going to reinvent government — cation,” C linton told an audience of for about the third time.” R u b y R id g e C ontinued from page 3 . at his 1993 trial — it was entrapment.” On Wednesday, Weaver told the Senate Judiciary Committee’s terrorism subcom­ mittee that the ATF informant pressed him over a three-year period to supply a sawedoff shotgun, and that Weaver acquiesced in a moment of weakness because he needed the $450 from the sale to buy groceries for his family. Of his tape-recorded comments, Weaver conceded that while he probably said some­ thing of that nature, he realized after mak­ ing them that they were silly, and that in any event, he never supplied foe weapons. SNIPES 5th &Ash • Tempe, AZ 966-5600 WE'VE SHOWN EVERY NFL DANE LIVE SINCE I9SS . . . AND WE STILL DOI SATURDAY AT9:00AM TEXAS TECH VS, PENN STATE NEBRASKA VS. MICHIGAN STATE NOTRE »A fti V*. m m ;S ESN VS. CiEMSON AT6:90PM COLORADO STATE VS. COLORADO TONIGHT AT 7-9PM WALSH'S WAGERS • KDKB "SPORTS THAT DON'T SUCK UP" McDUFFY S O FFE R S DAILY: OFF-T R A C K BETTING ON HORSE & DOG RACING • OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY at 9AM W H M 11IIK M USSH i QHSPi "SSWB »SHfflWFUIUM Slilffil Hi B iffili '" « M M "-M H ! -iapH R *AMBUN FG èuMÌfosMlissiti » 9 f" U n eUHIMVERSMCmrSlimM ill« -# iaCtMMJNENIU'MMNT.MC •• PREVIEW“TOWONGF00, TRANKS FOREVERYTHING, JULIENEWMAR” ONTHEINTERNET(http://www.mca.coin)! STARTSFRIDAY,SFPTFMBFR8THATATHFAIRFNFARYOU. State Press Page 7 M da^Segtembe^^995 ¿J. P ack w ood . e c la im s ‘h u m a n e ’ a la n c e b u d g e t C ontinued from page 3 . said. “He was the man who carried the ban­ ner for women’s reproductive rights.” P ack w o o d sh o o k th e ir h an d s or em b raced them all a fte r they spoke. When the accolades ended, he stood in aisle for more intimate exchanges with his colleagues, frequently w iping his eyes. Ethics committee member and fellow Republican, Sen. Larry Craig, of Idaho, buried his head on Packwood’s shoulder in an extended embrace. S im p so n ._ C o ntinued from page 3. since Jan. 11, were told the defense would rest its case Monday and the prosecution’s rebuttal would begin immediately. The judge indicated deliberations could begin in about two weeks. Jurors never looked worse than they did when the judge broke the bad news. Jurors had dazed expressions. Some clenched their jaws, Some frowned or were grim-faced; one woman in the front row smiled broadly. Fuhrman’s lawyer, meanwhile, publicly apologized for the former detective’s racist comments, made during interviews with an aspiring screenwriter from 1985 to 1994. “AH I can tell you is that Mark Fuhrman regrets the inconvenience and harm that he has caused a lot of innocent people to suf­ fer,” attorney Darryl Mounger told KCBSTV. “That’s all I can really tell y o u .... He’s sorry, and I don’t know if that’s enough.” And across the country, the U.S. Justice Department opened an inquiry into whether Fuhrman and fellow officers manufactured evidence and targeted blacks for arrest, as his taped conversations suggested. Clark, denied the opportunity to crossexamine Simpson, at one point said that if Ito allowed Fuhrman to retake the stand, the judge should instruct jurors that Simpson as well invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination by evading the witness stand. “That's outrageous,” Bailey fumed out­ side court. “Marcia Clark wants to throw out the Constitution because she’s in a bad .mood.” Jurors were told at the start of the case that Simpson was under no obligation to testify and didn’t even have to present any defense. The burden of proof in criminal cases is on the prosecution. Clark also argued that the defense had played unfairly when they asked Fuhrman if he had planted evidence, knowing he would be forced to stay silent once he had refused to answer previous questions. “I d o n ’t stand in defense o f M ark Fuhrman. But you’ve got somebody on the ropes,” she said. “He’s taken every hit he can. And they get up and ask him a ques­ tion they know he can’t answer.” Defense attorney Gerald Uelmen said the jury has a right to all information that would help them assess Fuhrman’s credibil­ ity, and Fuhrman’s refusal to testify was critical. Fuhrman’s witness stand appear­ ance came during a hearing on a defense motion to suppress a bloody glove and other evidence collected by Fuhrman and other detectives the day after the bodies of N icole Brown Sim pson and R onald Goldman were found. Ito rejected the defense bid first thing Thursday, saying Fuhrman’s explanation for entering Simpson’s estate without a warrant can still be trusted because it was confirmed by other detectives. “The testimony of Fuhrman ... is corrob­ orated by the testimony of other witnesses,” Ito wrote in a two-page ruling. : recom m endations am ount to nearly $70 U flk n in savings, the vice president said. ¡¡¡“This blueprint represents m alter. native to the slash-and-bum extremist kind of approach,” Go«s said in a thinly veiled reference to the congressional R ep u b lican s' pro p o sed reg u lato ry refonhs and budget cuts, particularly reductions in education spending^:.. | | ; Gore’s National PerformanceReview had set a goal two years ago of saving $108 billion and cutting positrons by -; In announcing Thursday that lb0,000 job cuts and $58 billion in savings bad already been “locked in” by branch decisions, P resident C linton boasted of “more than half the savings promised in less than half die time.” v “These are the kind o f cuts tiiat will allow us to balance the budget without cutting die single most important invest­ ment we can make in our future — edus cation,” C 1inton told an audience' o f Cabinet secretaries, small business owners and corporate executives. Am ong th e ch an g es Included in Thursday’s report was die dosing o f 200 weather stations, the consolidation of bO housing programs mid die elimination of thè National Oceanic and AhiloSpberic Administration’s fleet of ships. glob cuts have so tsii been accom ­ plished tiuough attrition, buy-outs and early retirements, die administration said. ’1 don’t believe, frankly, (hat if some of the RepUblicans on thè Hill have their ; way, dud die government will shrink in i s orderly and hum ane a w ay,” said S am e Kamarck, senior policy adviser to Gore * ’ vL'a " -/v “ M any o f the cuts and operational changes need to be authorized by Congress, Kamarck said. But the Republican-led Congress has its own plans for scaling back the federal government, including shifting social service programs to die states, a sweep­ ing overhaul o f rule-m aking and die elim ination o f several C abinet-level departments. jT *, <*£■ < The adm inistration, diam etrically opposed on all three points, frequently holds up its N atio n al Perform ance Review as evidence o f substance behind the rhetoric p f smaller government. White House press secretary Mike M cC urry jo k in g ly acknow ledged as much when he cracked to reporters, “We’re going to reinvent government -rfor about the third time.” : R u b y R id g e C ontinued from page 3. at his 1993 trial •— it was entrapment.” On Wednesday, Weaver told the Senate Judiciary Committee’s terrorism subcom­ mittee that the ATF informant pressed him over a three-year period to supply a sawedoff shotgun, and that Weaver acquiesced in a moment of weakness because he needed V the $450 from the sale to buy groceries for his family. Of his tape-recorded comments, Weaver conceded that while he probably said some­ thing of that nature, he realized after mak­ ing them that they were silly, and that in any event, he never supplied the weapons. SNIPES TM 5th &Ash • Tempo, AZ 966-5600 WE'VE SHOWN EVERY NFL GAME LIVE SINCE 196« . . . MS WE STILL SOI SATURDAY AT9:00AM TEXAS TECH VS. PENN STATE NEBRASKA VS. MICHIGAN STATE NOTRE NAME VS. PURGHE FSH VS. CIEMSON AT 6:30PM COLORADO STATE VS. COLORADO TONIGHT AT 7-9PM WALSH S WAGERS • KDKB "SPORTS THAT DON'T SUCK UP" McDUFFY S O FFE R S DAILY: OFF-TRA C K BETTING ON HORSE & DOG RACING • OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY at 9AM PREVIEW“TOWONGF00, THANKS FOREVERYTHING, JULIE NEWMAR” ONTHEINTERNET(http://www.mca,com)! SUMSFRIDAY,SfPTtMBfR8THATAIHtATRt HEARYOU. Page9 Friday, Septem ber 8 ,1 9 9 5 St a t e P ress P olice R eport ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Thursday: • Someone stole a female employee’s vehicle from Parking Area 3. It was later recovered in Tucson by the Arizona Department of Public Safety. The vehicle was not driveable. • A male student was contacted at his room in Palo Verde East after someone smelled marijuana in the room. He was advised of liquor and marijuana laws. • Someone damaged a concrete trash can on Tyler Mall, just north of Matthews Center. • Som eone broke in to a vending m achine in the Engineering Research Center and stole $100. • Two male students were involved in a non-injury car/bike accident at Sixth Street and Packard Drive. • A male student was contacted at the Art Building while skateboarding. He was advised of ASU policy and left the found laying next to the man. Police said it was an apparent suicide, since the man had been suffering from an extended illness and there were no signs of foul play. * A 32-year-old man was arrested for possession of mari­ juana and misconduct involving weapons after he was found to have a concealed handgun, two large knives and a small amount of what appeared to be marijuana. He was arrested at Clark Park, 1730 S. Roosevelt St., and was taken to the Tempe City Jail to be booked. • A 24-year-old man was arrested by Chandler police on an outstanding warrant for failure to appear. He was turned over to Tempe Police and was booked into the Tempe City Jail. Compiled by State Press reporter Greg Zemeida area. • Someone broke into a male student’s vehicle at 706 Alpha Drive and stole a CD changer, valued,at $400. • A female student reported receiving harassing phone calls in her Manzanita Hall room. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for misconduct involving weapons at Parking Structure 4. • Someone stole 125 CDs from a female student’s room in the Sonora Center. They are valued at $1,875. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested for trespass­ ing at the Danforth Chapel. • Two bikes were reported stolen. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Thursday: • A 31 -year-old man was found dead in his backyard from an apparent gunshot wound to the head. A handgun was / ^ «»non» DID YOU MISS SORORITY RUSH? I % IT S NOT [T O O LATE See if you 're mentioned in the C O M P L E T E BIRTH C O N T R O L C A R E . D e p o - P r o v e r a , Birth C o n tro l Pills, IUD, M o rn in g A fte r Pill P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G N o a p p o in t m e n t n e c e s s a r y A b o rtio n w ith Tw ilight S le e p E v e n in g & S a t u r d a y A p p t. A v a ila b le G Y N E C O L O G IC A L EX A M S SISTERHOOD INTRAMURALS • SOCIAL FUNCTIONS ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE • PHILANTHROPES PERSONAL GROWTH LEADERSHIP DEUELOPMENT P a p S m e a rs . In fe c tio n c h e c k s , STD e x a m s . F A M IL Y P LA N N IN G IN S T IT U T E TEMPE SCOTTSDALE PHOENIX 2334 N. Scottsdale Rd. 2525 S. Rural Ret. #7C 7806 N. 27th Ave. For more information call 784-8038 • Ask for Heather 968-7471 9 4 5 -4 9 99 997-7493 C fflH E IsDI r R E G I S T E R Here's your chance to make a difference! T O D A Y ! A U N D E R C O N STR U C TIO N S "L E A D E R S in P R O G R E S S LEA D ER SH IP CO N FER EN CE Join the staff of the 1995-96 Sun Devil Spark yearbook. D Applications for the following positions are being accepted: „ ✓ Photo Editor %/ Section Editors: • Sports • Greeks • Student Life • Organizations • Residence Life • Academics */ Photographers Y Copy Writers a m - S i i t e l i M e m o r ia l U n io n Every stu den t com es to A SU w ith a u n iq u e co m b in a tio n o f skills and experiences w h ich has co n trib u te d to h is o r h e r g ro w th . T h is co n fe re n ce & w ill id e n tify d ie co m p e ten cy areas cru cia l to effective feedershjp. T h is con feren ce is sim p ly o n e o f th e m a n yp fo g ra m s a n d experiences 'Jig availab le to assist y o u in d e ve lo p in g a rid re fin in g these im p o rta n t skills. • M U L T IC U L T U R A L JS M * M ANAG EM ENT * H U M A N R E LA T IO N S * CAREER D E V E LO P M E N T • S E R V IC E 1 E W IC 5 * ¡ ¡ ¡ § $ 1 ^ •,\ f | WgmmmSIIS EXPLORE YOUR LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES! REGISTER NOW ! r a I a a Name: a I Telephone: i ■ |: College: ■ § m 7 Address:. E-Mail: Conference Fee: $10 IS 1 1 % . IJe&tbooL „(Circle One) FR SO JR SR „Orgariization(s) affiliated with: §• B available at the State Press reception desk, Student Publications, M atthews Center. r e s s THE CHOICE IS YOURS TO JOIN A SORORITY Applications are P ó t a t e or No affiliations Method of Payment: Check R E G IS T R A T IO N F O R M S S H O U L D B E T U R N E D IN A T T H E R E A C H D ESK , 3R D F LO O R , M U , BY SEPT. 15 m m m m k Cash Comics Page 10 by Sbuy Hcbtoite/Z £nC rA ti# N H e X c I U O ñC U State P ress Friday, September 8,1995 R U B ES ® By Leigh Rubin IM Y POUT seen tv umr /remos ukí ne, oeoeee.------ « ¡ensefismve '» cm une ne. 1 Calvin and Hobbes AND IF I DO AU- MV HOMEWORK, WE SET TO STM OP m EXTRA HALF HOUR TD PLAV CALVINBALL.' by Bill Watterson HERE, VCU CAN OCWBLE-CUECK m MATH PROBLEMS WHILE I START ON MV HISTCRV WE'VE SOT TO SET THIS DONE V VERE HERE TOHAVE A NICE DID NOV) HEAR THAT ?? IT SCUNDHMAKE ANOTHER TIME. TRV NOT TO THINK A8WT ALL THE TROUBLE CALVIN'S GETTING INTO K— FINISHED D oonesbury by g a r r y tru d ea u as relaxing as he had hoped. S t a te P ress Page_H Friday, S eptem ber 8, 1995 S u n D e v ils w a n t to b u r y M in e rs « a rts K IC K O F F 7 p m. at Sun D evil Stadium N/A Radio K TA R 620 AM Latest Line A S U by 26 Coaches ASU (0-1.0-1) - Bruce Snyder 15-19 at A S U (4th Season) 83-80-5 O verall (15th Season) 0-0 vs. U T EP in his career UTEP <0-1.0-01 - Charlie Bailey 3-8-1 (2nd Season) 15-28-3 O verall (5th Season) Series Record 31-13-3 A S U leads series la s t m eeting - A S U w on 35-16 at Sun Devil Stadium in 1987. Key to ASU Victory J im Poulin/State P re ss Juniors Keith Poole (3) and Traivon Johnson will be in action Saturday when the Sun Devils open their home season with UTEP at 7p.m. at Sun Devil Stadium. UTEP has not beaten ASU since 1974. B y D a n M il l e r S t a t e P ress They haven’t beaten ASU in Tempe since 1974. They have won only 12 games since 1990. They were thumped 45-17 by New Mexico State last weiek and their quarterback situation is shaky at best. Needless to say, the UTEP Miners are not bastions of confidence heading into Saturday’s game with ASU at 7 p.m. at Sun Devil Stadium. But the Sun Devils, who are well over a three-touchdown favorite to win and are still perturbed over a bitter defeat in Seattle last week, aren’t taking anything for granted, said Head Coach Bruce Snyder. “They’ve got to show up. They can’t do what they did at Washington,” he said of the Sun Devils (0-1, 0-1 in the Pac-10), who sw allow ed a 23-20 loss to the Huskies in their season opener. “We weren’t nearly physical enough and we didn’t hustle enough (last week). So for us to be as good as we want to be, we bet­ ter start now.” With national powerhouses Nebraska and UjSC still on the September slate, now might be as good a time as any for ASU to step it up. Besides, Snyder said letting down against the Miners is not an option. “I will not allow them to do that,” he said. “...They’re going to count this game every bit as (much as) the Nebraska game when it comes to selecting a bowl so this is really important. “And we have to establish that this is a really hard place to play. We’ve got to start that now no matter who comes in here.” The Sun Devils will have history on their side. They have won six straight against the Miners and 23 of the last 24 games in the series dating back to 1957. UTEP, which was 3 of 13 on thirddown conversions against the Aggies last week, used two quarterbacks, who com­ bined to throw three interceptions. Redshirt-freshman starter John Rayborn and junior back-up Leonard Lilja, both of whom lack significant game experience, will be the signal-callers. A preseason excerpt from UTEP’s media guide states Coach Charlie Bailey “could be as busy as a one-armed traffic cop at a nudist colony open house going over details for his passing game.” Due to a suspect passing attack, Miners’ senior tailback Toraino Singleton may have to assume the bulk of the offen­ sive responsibility. “H e’s a lo ad ,” Snyder said of Singleton, who stands 6-foot-3, 230 pounds. “I think that’s where we better start to center our attention. But it’s the play-action pass that caused the 14 points in this last game. We’re going to get that. They’re going to fake it to him three or four times in the game and come back with the ball and try to hit the post (pat­ tern) so we need to get that solved.” Either way, Sun Devil junior quarter­ back Jake Plummer believes ASU is in control of its own destiny. “They could play us strong or we could roll over,” he said. “It’s all up to u s .” NOTES: • Redshirt-freshman safety M itchell F reedm an, who has a thigh contusion and has seen limited practice, is question­ able for Saturday. Snyder said Freedman has wanted to play in Sun Devil Stadium all his life and the staff will make a deci­ sion during pre-game warm-ups. “We want to be smart because he’s got to play • A SU m ust not h ave a mental letdown after an em otional lo ss to W ashington , last w eek, •The S u n D evils’ running g a m e must be consistent. Jeremy Steln/State Press all season,” he said. • Senior left comerback Lee Cole, who has been slowed with a hamstring injury, will start Saturday.• Senior right cornerback M arcu s Soward, who is sufferring from a groin injury, w ill not dress, Snyder said. Sophomore Jason Simmons will get the starting call again. • Snyder said freshm en receivers Ricky Boyer and Lenzie Jackson could see as many as 15 to 20 plays depending on ASU’s formations. Freshman wideout Kenny Mitchell could see action, Snyder said. • U T E P’s 6 -fo o t-3-inch freshm an Michael Hicks, the starting left comerback and anchor of the secondary, is injured and will not play. Rodney Ryan, a 5-8 sophomore, will start in his place. • ESPN was at the Sun Devils’ practice Thursday film ing a feature on ju nior receiver K eith Poole and his brother M arc, who is confined to a wheelchair. The date o f airing has not been announced. • Snyder said over 50 players saw action last week and he will dress close to 70 on Saturday. R unners get start at N A U B y D u s t in K r u g e l S t a t e P ress The ASU m en’s and wom en’s cross country teams won’t have to travel too far for their first meet as they travel to the Northern Arizona Invitational in Flagstaff Saturday. & The Sun Devils await a stiff test from NAU, which placed first overall in last year’s invitational. The Sun Devil men placed second and the women captured fifth. “Were going to be running against the best,” junior Ari Rodriguez said. One o f the big gest challenges on Saturday will be fighting the high altitudes. “It’s a little tough running at 6,000 or 7,000 feet,” Coach Ken Lehman said. “I’m sure it’s going to effect us.” Sophomore Debbie Stieber said, “I don’t w ant to really set any goals because Flagstaff is a lot different. You hear all the horror stories about Flagstaff.” The runners said they will treat this year’s invitational more like a practice run. “We just use it to warm up,” Rodriguez said. “Nobody remembers what we did at the beginning o f the year. They only remember what happens at the end of the year (Pac-10 trials).” Last year, the Sun Devils thought they may have come out too strong, which even­ tually hurt them in the end. “We don’t want to peak too early ,” Rodriguez said. “We came out real hungry (last year), but we’ve learned from our mis­ takes." Turn t o C ro ss c o u n t r y , p a g e 12. The woman's cross country tsam trains at Papago Park Thursday afternoon. Both ths man and woman wlH traval to NAU Saturday for thair Wrirt mast of tha Reason. Page 12 S t a t e P r ess Friday, S eptem ber 8, 1995 No. 18 ASU volleyball team to invade Texas By D aw n W S t a t e P r ess Diannë R. Bartsch/State Prass Freshman outside hitter Mindi Larsen and the IMh-ranked volleyball team head to the Sheraton Inn Classic in Lubbock, Texas this weekend. kills this season. Last year, ASU defeated Texas Tech. 3-1 in the Hilton/Sun Devil Challenge. Sun Devil outside hitter Christine Garner, who has posted 41 kills so far this year, is expected to combat the agner When the ASU volleyball team travels to Lubbock, Texas this weekend for the Sheraton Inn Classic, it W ill be aiming to add to its 3-0 record. To do it, ASU coach Pâtti Snyder-Park said they will two threats. focus on improving their current weaknesess. Gamer and senior middle blocker Holly Sones have “We definitely need to sm ooth out our offense,” . SnydertPark said. “We need to make sure we have defi­ been two key players on the court for ASU this season, nite running plays and setting plays. But throughout the freshman Jolynn Faatulu said. , year, the offense is Usually the last to gel.” “S h e’s (G arner) a leader. She and H olly b o th ,” Freshman outside hitter Jen Lucero said the only con­ Faatulu said. “They’ve both been doing a really good job. cern the Sun Devils have in competition is the lack of They afe both a really positive influence on us.” experience playing together. Snyder-Park added that ASU’s defensive play is fight However, she still isn’t worried. where she likes it. “We may be young, but we are athletic,” Lucero said. “In all areas we’ll do good. We got better every game “Overall, I am impressed with the team ’s defense,” last weekend. I think we have put together an awesome she said. “We’re looking to get a few more blocks and team.” better serves. We’re still ironing out some small details.” The Classic, hosted by Texas Tech University, will pit / This weekend will also mark the first time the Sun the Red Raiders, Eastern Michigan and Arkansas State Devils will play both Eastern Michigan and Arkansas against the No. 18 Sun Devils. Texas Tech, is 2-1 after competing in the Doubletree State. The Eagles have yet to compete this season and the Classic in Tucson last weekend. The Red Raiders are led by Jill Slapper and Brande Brown, who both have 25 Lady Indians are undefeated at 4-0. C ross c o u n tr y ^ C o n tin u ed fr o m fa c e 11. j . . V -f For many of the runners, this will be tim r first competi­ tive run since last spring. “I’m real anxious,” stud Rodriguez. “We haven’t com­ peted against anyone -except ourselves. H k whole summer we’ve been running endlessly. Now we’re lboking for pay­ back. We want to show eurselves that it was worth i t ” Rodriguez edged A tt0 Repak with a time of 25 minutes, 27 seconds for the men’s top finish last year. Rodriguez and Repak will run with Andy Carusetta, John Tyrrell, Tom W eber, T ravis A nderson and C hristian A levras this Saturday. : *, “We have several guys that if they have the race that they’re capable of, they should be right up there,” said Repak, who placed firsts among Sun Devils in four out of six pivitationals last year. . ' Kirsten Stocker, Kihs Barrett, Phaedra Kohlahaus and Deborah Stieber will make the trip for the women!' Stocker finished last year’s 5,000meter race in 22:36. “I’m looking forward to seeing how the girls d o ,S tieb er said- “We’ve picked up the pace quite a bit. W ekiitd of cam ejnto the season in nof too good of shape, but our sbapdhas just gotten a lot better.” fo r many of the girls this will be their first collegiate "'V“> ■ ’ '• .* i: m Ui “Pin sure it’s going to cause a lot of nervousness but I m e e t .. think that’s where the more experienced girls come in,” Stieber said. “Not only do ybtf take on your own nervous­ ness, you take on theirs as well to help them out. Ask For Today's Sno Flavors including • watermelon strawberry • pineapple cherry • lemon SUB SANDWICHES CHECK IT OUT! All served with provolone cheese, lettuce, tom atoes, onions, choice of white or w heat sub roll and pickle. Chips included. 1 2 ’ Subs. 1ST 4.95 4.9 5 4.8 5 4.8 5 4 .9 5 4.6 5 4.9 5 4 .7 0 4 .7 0 Corner of Lemon & Rural 967-1114 GOODROOD GM NT SUBS-You choose the ingredients....... 24 00 SNACKS 2.25 ...... Das B 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 call because (12 oa.) 1.10 P Chips .................. Frozen Candy Bars KS n . j. M, We individualize your billing! Pretty cool, eh? LONC DISTANCE Take ¡fwith you service No minimums No monthly fees Nò per call charges Low rates! INTERNET ACCESS Rates starting from $5.95 per month All software provided SLIP/PPP and Text accounts available 28.8k access Local access numbers $1 .0 0 OFF $ 5 .0 0 OFF ANY 1 2 ” SUB Party t ic k e t of Sno Coupon good through 1 0 /6 /9 5 . Not good with any other offer. Coupon good through 1 0 /6 /9 5 . Not good with any other offer. CORNER OF LEMON A RURAL CORNER O F LEMON & RURAL 967-1114 FREE 967-1114 _______ “2 for l n SNO SALE LARGE SODA & CHIPS Buy 1 SNO-Get the 2nd SNO of Equal or Lesser Value I Coupon good through 1 0 /6 /9 5 . Not good with any other oner. Coupon good through 1 0 /6 /9 5 . Not good with any other offer. Not valid with Party Buckets. | CORNER O F LEMON & RURAL | _ 9 6 7 -1 1 1 4 _ _ _ _ _ _ J with purchase of arty 6" sub corner of lemon a Rural 967-1114 FREE Page 13 Friday, September 8,1995 State P ress STATE PRESS SPORTS “ PICKS OF THE W EEK” A S U (0 -1 ) vs. U T E P (0 -1 ) DawnWagner Dustin Km gd Dan Miller Damian S a w Sports Editor A sst Sports E d Reporter Reporter Reporter Reporter Record'(0-3) Record (2-1) Record (2-1) Record (1-2) Record (1-2) Record (1-2) ASU 33 UTEP17 ASU 49 UTEP14 ASU 31 UTEP13 ASU ’41 UTEP17 ASU 38 UTEP17 ASU 17 UTEP14 Roa Mattem LisaEskey C ardinals (0 -1 )vs. Cardinals 24 Cardinals 20 Cardinals 20 Cardinals 22 Philadelphia 20 Cardinals 20 P hiladelphia(0-0) Philadelphia 21 Philadelphia 20 Cardinals 13 Philadelphia 13 Philadelphia 17 Philadelphia 14 U pset P icks* Tampa Bay 20 Cleveland 18 LSU 17 Miss. St. 14 N Y Giants 20 East Carolina 24 Tampa Bay 21 Texas Tech. 49 Cleveland 20 Penn State 3 Kansas City 17 Syracuse 23 *A c o lle g e o r N F L p ic k w h ich is a t to a st a six -p o in t u n d erd o g Zl Home EH Away All times are Arizona times. State P ress If y o u ' r e r e a d in g t h is in c l a s s , y o u ' r e in b ig t r o u b l e . C lassifieds Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. Fee more infbnnation and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau a i 264-1721. HOMES FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 4 BEDROOM house, $800 month, lg family room and backyard. 1 mile from ASU; 12th & Hardy. New carpet, stove, & washer. 968-1172. ROOMATE NEEDED 2br 2ba love pets n/s n/d must be clean/ hip w/housework $350/mo Southem/Lindsey 807-9810. IBM COMP. PC 20 mb/hd 640 kb $200. Panasonic dot matrix printer $50. Brother typewriter $50. KLH speakers $ 100/ pair Sansui receiver $50. Call 8386621. SCOTTSDALE 3BD House, has garage, w/d, dishwasher, etc. Hayden/M cdowell $995,437-1048 WALK TO ASU, 4bd 2ba tile floors, pool, $ 1200/mo 8940288 TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR RENT $WHY RENTS ANNOUNCE­ MENTS ASU STUDENTS! The best $10 you'll ever spend. (Y our parents will approve, too!) Leadership Conference, September 23, 9am-5pm. Memo­ rial Union. Learn the six com­ petency area crucial to effectiveleadership! Register today in the Reach office« 3rd floor, MU. H urry! Deadline is S ept. 15. (Cash and checks accepted) $10 registration fee FREE FINANCIAL Aid! Over $6 billio n in private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eli­ gible regardless of grades, in­ come, or parent's income. Let us help. C all Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. FS9181 HAIRSHOW MODELS Need­ ed!! Mere & Women. Looking for a new style? Participate in a local hairshow and recieve free colors, cuts, perms, highlights. Show up at a *pre-screening on Sunday, Sept. 17; 5-7 p.m. at Making Waves Salon, S.E. corner o f Dobson & G uada­ lupe. '"Actual show dates 10/110/2. Info - Sandie at 9685803. NEED MONEY For college? Funds go unused every year. Com puter resources can help you. 1-800-887-0716 PARK ON 8th S t? Please paik as close to the car in front of you as possible. The more cars we fit in, the shorter the walk for everyone! / RELIGIOUS STUDIES club! Majors, minors, or merely curi­ ous? Jeff, 649-2009 for info. APARTMENTS BEAUTIFUL NEWLY Reanovated com plex 1/4 mile from ASU. Studios and o n e bed­ rooms starting a t $405. New carpet and tons o f am enities. For info call 968-0101. Invest in your fiittire. Quiet and affordable single level end unit 3bd 2ba, fireplace, ju st min. from campus Comm, pool/tns erts/spa. Century 21 All Star Realators Ron Crawford 831 2221. 1BD/1BA NEWLY repainted, w/d incl. College & Curry, $625/mo. Owner/Agent 9471481. / ■• : / 2BD/3BA FOR rent; 15 min. walk from ASU, furnished. $900/mo + clean. A sec. dep. 966-5809. 2BDRM PAPAGO PK Pool side, $800. 2 bdrm Questa vita master suites pool side, $750, rnCl. all appliances. Realty Exec Bob Bullock 998-2992. ROOMATE NEEDED to share 3bd townhouse $375 a mo incl. util. 777-8965 Mandy, Tesha, Mara ROOMMATE WTD clean, ma­ ture m/f $250 + 1/3 Util. Walk to campus. Call Mitch 9688480, SHARE ROOM For rent $295/mo, on Lemon St. Fur­ nished, good condition. Fe­ males 831-7673, SPOTLESS 1BD/1BA, avail in spacious 2bd/2ba apt. Large balcony; covered parking, pool, + amenities. Resp. grad student looking for same. Call Veronique @ 994-3182. TWO BD in quiet 4-plex close to ASU; faculty or grad student prefered $475 585-5159. ROOMS FOR RENT ROOM FOR rent $250 + util. 1 mile to ÀSU, Sept 1. 9474027.4 bdrm house. ROOM IN house, w/d; garage, yard, 3 mi from ASU. $425/mo. incls e'thing. Laura 921-2640. HOMES FOR SALE B1KE/WALK TO ASU. Tempe. 3bd, 2ba, fenced yárd, Á/C, avail, now $675 +util 9912388 GOV'T FORECLOSED homes from 5%. Delinquent tax. Repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll free (1)800-898-9778 Ext. H1676 for current listings. HERMOSA PL, 2bd 2ba con­ do, avail SeptlO, w/d, pool; nr ASU, 510 W.Univ,$635,9660987. GOV'T FORECLOSED homes for pennies on $1. Delinquent Tax, Repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext. H-1676 for current listings. IMMACULATE 2BD/ T ba Frnshd. Incl util/phone. Univ A Dobson. $700/mnth 8386621. TOWNHOMES/ CONDOS FOR SALE RENTAL SHAR|NG__ 3: MI TO ASU, 4 bdrm house with w/d, cable. $180 + 1 /4 util. pref. clean n/s. 413-1070. FEMALE HOUSEMATE wanted to share large 3bdr/2ba house 1 mi from ASU dogs ok $330+ m m call Sarah at 804-0268. FEMALE ROOMATE to share 2bd lb a apt 3mi from ASU $235 + 1/2 util Call Rebecca 439-4068 FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 3 bdrm 2ba Condo 3/4 mi. frm, ASU. $250/mo. + util. CaU 966-5374 MATURE NS, ND to share home in Chand. 1 bd, bath & den. Util. pd. $360/month + dep.Call Laura after 5, 9409414 RMTE WANTED, fern., rej sponsible, A clean. $205 + 1/3 util. CaU Kristen at 897-7382. FURN. CONDO, Price/Univ. $79,900, 3bd/2ba, appliances. Owner/broker, 894-0920. 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. WHY RENT when you can own. 3bd/3ba $84,500. Questa Vida. Rebecca Ponte,Rlty Ex 996-9910 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE ASU ALUMNI Selling all of the needed supplies for apartment move in; couches, tables, sil­ verware, etq. $400/obo. Call 800-864-5865. EXOTIC Cocktails & shooters. 96 excit­ ing recipies. Send $5 A your address to P.O. Box 11690, Costa Mesa, CA 92627. COMPUTERS MOTORCYCLES 486 COMPUTER - 4MB Ram, 17ÖMB drive, $800. OBO 8941699. 93 HONDA CBR 900 RR, mint cond., only 6500 mis., new tires A brakes, one owner. Black, red, & grey. $6,700; 813-0566. COMPAQ 386DX25 4mb ram 80mb hard drive, VGA moni­ tor, great for students. $440 w/ warranty call Scott 929-9544. PIONEER 50X50 + watt amp box w/ pyle, 10 Infinity 6x9 90 watts ea. Thule bike rack $200. Make offer for stereo, 858-1822. IBM COMPATIBLE computer w/monitOr & Epson printer $500. Troy 921-1278/ FURNITyR|_s_ PEARL JAM affordably priced September 13. Tickets for Less 678-0932. BED SETS in factory wrappers with free frame. Twin $69« Full $79, Queen $99, 5 draw er chests $49; can deliver. 2567675. CALIFORNIA KING sz mattress and box springs $150 obo Em­ ily 858-0511 leave message. COUCH/ LOVE Seat $250 white wash wall unit $200 Glass/brass end & coffee table $100 good cond 545-4373 FILE CABINET 2 drawer letter size wood lam inated with Wheels $40.00 807-3106 FUTON FA VE All prices, all models, we de­ liver. CaU 804-1554. LIQUIDATORS. OVER 200 of­ fices o f furn. to sell. Desks, files, chairs, book cases, comp, tables A more. Arizona Office Liquidators 5064 S. 40th St. Phoenix ( 1/2 mi. S of Broad­ way) 437-2224* PEOPLE FOREVER auxiliary sale. Sat. & Sun., Sept. 9th & 10th. 8am-4:30pm. Complete households of furniture, w/d, vacuums, dishes, knick knacks, etc. All must go. Scot­ tsdale Airpark, 1405 N. Hay­ den, Ste. 340, next to Bank One. REFRIGERATOR COMPACT with freezer 4.4 cubic feet $125 #807-3106 SOFA SET $295, Queen bed $85, King $180, day bed $135, Dinette $160, futon $180, Sleeper $265; 3513031. Stata tri» Classifieds Matthaws Cintar Baaamant 965-673S New Furniture Sale Sofas • hide-a-beds > •loveseats • chairs • Large selection o f fabrics to choose from . W e also reupholster furniture, Cars, boats, bucks, & etc. Bill's Upholstery a n d Mfg. Co. 997-9568 TICKETS HELP WANTED$6 PER HOUR Outgoing, energetic appoint­ ment setters for Universal Por­ traits. Call James or Carey, 4968029. 94 KAWASAKI Ninja 250R, 3400 mi, 2yr warranty; $3000. CaU 835-5733 or 491-2205. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. 1 specialize in quick departures. Most places worldwide. I also buy transfer­ able coupons/awards. 968-7283 PEARL JAM TICKETS $200 for one pair 345-0057 or 921 6865. •■ - PEARL JAM Lighting coi- needs responsible stuiient for ft day assembly work. Electronics background desirable. $7.50/hr Scottsdale Air Park. Call Teiry. 998-0325. PEARL JAM tickets for sale. Call Anthony 491-8787 leave message. PEARL JAM A MEDICAL office .in Scot­ tsdale needs p/t front A back of­ fice person, will train. Good ad­ vancement potential. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste 108. Please apply in person. Tickets, Sept. 13th. Free deUvery. 253-3800. SELLING 2 Pearl Jam tickets Sept. 13 th $200 obo for both. 496-5935. *$7/HR + CASH!* Set fun free appts., for health services. Friendly office, near FieSta Mall in Mesa. Eves & Sat. or f/t. Join our team now! Call 649-9580 anytime! ♦♦ASSEMBLY JOB! Tickets $375/pair obo; 3039706. PEARL JAM, VAN HALEN, REM, Bon Jovi, Tommy Chong, George Strait. 2543300. $8 OO/HOUR AFTER 90 days! RPS is looking for loaders/ure loaders for our 2am-7am shift. Must be 18, able to pass 501b weight test A available. Monday-Friday. Apply in person at 2850 S. Roosevelt, Tempe. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ARTIST NEEDED For murals at new restaurant in Chandler. Brian at Smoothees 917-9794. AUTOMOBILES 1980 PORCHE 924 TURBO white w/ black leather CD am/fm radio 90k mi. Great con­ dition runs well Extra set of tires $2,700 #598-0917 1987 PONTIAC 6000 LE, sil­ ver; original owner, good me­ chanical condition; $2450 or best offer. Call496-8620. 73 CADILLAC COUPE Deviile, white w/ black top, Xlnt cond., $2000 obo. C all 967-2705. 85 SUBARU GL, 4x4 wagon, good condition, $2500 obo, good for road trips, 804-0602. 85 VW SCIRROCO, 2nd own. New a/c, t - belt, brakes 72k mi, $3250 obo, 258-8840 all records. 87 HONDA CIVIC, 4 dr, great condition, automatic, bargain price $3000; Call me! 3509355. 94 CAMARO, like new, 14k miles, auto, alloy wheels, am/fm cass. $13,900 obo. 807-9190. MINT. COND. 73 super beetle, 95% restored, new tires, new brakes, new sound system. Motor tuned $2900,951-7604. $CASH TODAYS I buy all used cars, trucks, mise, items. Call Al 994-4369 DIALAMERICA MARKETING, CREATE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE w e r e f Le X ib l e PART-TIME • C re a te a sh ift betw een the h ou rs of 5:30am and 9:00pm (W e're to ta lly flexib le) S8.00 g u a ra n te e d p a id •ain in g , a v e ra g e S9-S11 •WeeWy paychecks • No experience necessary • HelpM, friendy tnaineis • Non-sbessiii, fan, Wendy environment Please call today to schedule a confidential interview. 894-0264 OowtoASU Page 14 State Press Friday, Septem ber 8, 1995 HELP WANTEDGENERAL ACTRESS ft model types for flex, f/t &p/t positions no ex­ perience necessary but prof, at­ titude & depend., a must. Exc. money, study while at work. Close to campus. 447-8732. ARIZONA COUNTRY Club hiring p/t food servers, banquet servers, bus help, parking lot attendant ft snack bar attendant no-exp. necc. Apply at 5668 E. Orange Blossom Ln. Phx (56th St./Thomás) E.O.É. ASSISTS:, CLASS m . ft after school, in Montissori toddler and 34> programs. 730-8886. ASU STUDENTS in search of one of the best p/t jobs, look no further.the ASU Telefund is still hiring. Associates contact alumni Sc parents to úpate info, inform them about advance­ ments and ask them for finan­ cial support, We require assoc to Wfk only 10 hrs/week Sc you choose the evening & wknd shifts yóú would like to' work call 965*6754 BAKERY HELP Local Tempe bakery needs cake decorators • or artists to do designs on cakes/will train. De­ livery drivers also needed. Flexible hrs. , Call fen interview; 967-5541. : BUSY MILL Ave,, cafe now hir­ ing for all positions. Apply in person at Cáffe Boa; 709 S Mill Ave. BUY YOUR Own business. M obil . DJ Service nets 30k/year. Work 3 nights/week* Pete 263-8555, -"s ‘ /- CAMPUS CHEVRON Cashier/ Sales. Must have au­ tom obile, knowledge. p/t f/t. Wage DOE. Apply in person SW corner of Rural/Apache. CAN'T STAND litter bugs? Help ¡keep bur campus tidy; Now hiring students to pickup State’ Press inserts that fall to the ground. Flex hrs btwn 8am4pm. Work, is sporadic-. Xlnt compensation. Apply at. State Press Info Desk, Matthews Cetiter/Basement. A SU STU D EN TS Earn m oney on the side while gaining sales experience. Sell MCI long distance to businesses and residences on your own time . Com m issions are paid in HELP WANTEDGENERAL CH EE R LE A D IN G /G YM NAST1CS POSITION avail. $1015/hr. p/t Weekends. Call De­ sert Devil Gymnastics 941• 3496, V-; CHILD CARE leaders needed-^ for YMCA after school pro­ gram, starting at $6-7/hr Apply at Mesa Family YMCA 207 N Mesa Dr or call 969-8166. CITY OF Scottsdale is looking for volunteer tutors for Jr. High/High School students in all subjects. Program runs M-Th from 3-6pm. Call 994-2483. COURT COURIER f/t p/t flex hours. Start $5.00 hr & twenty cents mile reimb-your Car clean dl a must ft know nix area 2580225 & 937-5567 (wkends) DATA ENTRY. Tempe MFC Company has an opening in ac­ counts recievable dept. 10 key. accuracy^ Flex. 20-25 hrs/wk. apply to Karla at 967-2678. DO YOU have Iots of energy Sc love working w/people. We are looking for you to twist bal­ loons at restaurants & parties. We Will train you. All you need is reliable transportation. Pt/flex hrs.Great money. Call 486-5879. DOOR/SECURITY HELP need­ ed Exp hlpfl/not nee Cal!/ apply Club Rio 430 N Scfsdl 890-0333 V : HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL LOOKING FOR riders to comm­ ute from Tucson T, Th. Arrive ASU campus 8:30 am Leave ASU campus 8 pm. Please call 520-648-2911: . PAYLESS CAR Rental is now hiring f/t and p/t. Call 2319226. Hiring for lot attendant, customer service & shuttle driv­ er. Car rental exp. a plus. LOT ATTENDANTS needed En­ terprise Rent-a-Car Apply in person 44th/Wash. 225-0588 MALE QUAD, needs p/t fill in attendant for nights. Tim 831‘ 0916. MANAGERS, CQOKS needed at Gumby's Pizza. Leave mes­ sage at 655-9803 or call Todd or Toby at 921*3278. MARKET RESEARCH Interviewer.Pt/Ft 1 l/2mi. from ASU; no sales, no exp. req. 967-, 4441. MARKETING INTERNSHIP! Get Real Work Experience! Macintosh Exp. Req. Fax Resumme & cover, Atn: Mr. Brammer. Active Marketing 5967747 MARKETING/SALES MGMT. $ 100/$400/wk, p/t, + tuition assisL We train all majors FreshSenior. Work on & around cam­ pus. Poss internship credit. Call 1-800-567-6247 NATL INStnTJTES ctf Health Mate volunteers needed for re­ search study: 18-24 yr. old lean, health, non-smokers $670 offered for time and participa­ tion, Call Chris at 220-0299 or leave a message. F/T, P/T positions available providing assistance to adult individuals. with mental Sc physical disabilities. Paid ben­ NEED EXTRA MONEY? efits Sc training, no exp. nee. Telemarketing pos. avail., flex Call 431-9511. ■ : *: hrs, opp, for advancement & GYMNASTICS COACHES comm.: Fun Sc casual, all you wanted, enthusiastic instructors need is a friendly voice Sc be needed for all levels. Growing comp, friendly, Call for inter­ program needs energetic new view. Beginright Temporary people for our Mesa/Chandler Service, 1131 E- Highland gym^ Call 892-7023. ■ > Ave. Phx, 277-4050. HARKINS CENTERPOJNT Cin­ ema is hiring floorstaff and aSst. ONLY THE BEST managers; Apply in person. Great pt job for all students 710 S. Mill Ave, Tempe. am/pm pos. no exp ness, will train. Must be money bound HELP WANTEDl Easy work! no selling at all! $150 plus Excellent pay! Assemble pro­ wkly near campus. Call for ducts at home! Call (504); 429, your interview 303-0939. 9227 ext. H 5057 24 lys. ' LAWN SERVICE needs p/t help, no experience necessary, $6/hr. 966-3269. P /t SHOP help, Apache & MeCl in lock Firestone. Ask for Ron or Terry, 966-7206. EOE. call 957-2733 and ask about our M CI program. HEY SPORTS FANS! M aking PEOPLE PERSON Excitement, fun; cash, shop­ ping. Full Time/Part Time. Call 967-0222 P E R F E C T JO B Advertising for major oil ft tire co. P/T, $300-$500 a week 4:30pm-8:30pm Mon-Sat. Will train» not phone sales. Call for appt, 831 -8208, 810-8512 or 964-3087. If no answer, lv msg. PHOTOGRAPHY/ SALES/ re­ sort exciting career no exp. ness, p/t ok Sports Shots 9221146 PLAY & LEARN Schools Inc. After school enrichment pro­ gram. Assistants, substitutes needed 2:00-5:30 M-F, Work­ ing with groups of children K6. Art, games & P.E. $5.75* $6.25/hr, N. Scots Iocs. Co­ ordinators needed 1:306:00pm, $35-40/day. Call 3149669. Ask for Cindy. POOL CLEANING Co. needs pool cleaning tech. Must have trans, only hard & eager work­ ers need respond. PA work, ar­ ound school schedule. Please call Man at 840-9518. PRESTIGIOUS LAW firm seek­ ing person for temp p/t am pips, to assist with storage project. Applicant must be able to lift a # of heavy boxes f t must have a valid driver’s license. Please call Christine at 279-5900. RECEPT., C.S. rep , typing, gen. off., f/t, hrly. for const. Co. Acctg exp. a plus. Exp'd and mature, send resumes to DRC 17 S. Roosevelt, Chandler, AZ 85226. Fax 961-0648. SEC U R IT Y / B A RB AC K S , A P P L Y in p e r s o n . M - T h 114 p m . 1420 N . S c o tts d a le R d ; 4 2 3 -S 4 ^ 9 . ... ;; SEEKING APLLJCATIONS for Page positions at Arizona House of Representatives for up-coming session. $6.23/hr., full-tim e. Call Shannon o r Jenny 542-3656. t h e d if f e r e n c e $7.25/hr + commission The Difference Is 'The B est P a y In The Industry" for solicitation & phone survey -1 0 minutes from campus - flexible days & hours il lookinq for studenti to «orli approximately 20 lioort per week If interested please cali Call G regg 8 6 1 -2 2 7 7 SUN DEVIt TICKETOFFICE SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flexible hrs/wk. Call Mike for irit., 921, 8282. ' "' TELEMARKETERS Excellent custom er service skills & phone voice are re ­ quired for this non-sales posi­ tion. F/t Sc 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. TENNIS INSTRUCTORS Need­ ed. Instructors needed for youth clinics offered at Phoe­ nix JCC, Clinic runs Tuesday ft Thursday afternoons. Call Rachel Pear at 992-1832. Good pay ! TENNIS SHOP attendant $5/hr evenings, weekends, flexible p/t. Must b e 19 yrs +, 946■7509. v /.■ /.> THE TEMPE YMCA is current­ ly accepting applications for Af­ ter-School Site Directors, Coun­ selors, Enrichment and Intramural Instructors, Must be 21 years of age, current CPR/F1RST AID Certified and have proof of a negative TB test. Pay range, $6-$ 15 per hour, varies depending on ex­ perience and education. Apply in person at the .Tempe YMCA, 7070 S. Rural Road, Tempe, AZ. 85283. Ask for Anthony Garcia. VINTAGE MARKET gourmet market Sc wine bar located at Biltmore Fashion Park currently hiring day/even. servers. Apply in person 3-5pm, 2442 E. Caraelback Rd. Suite B HELP WANTEDSALES A PEA In The Pod, Biltmore is seeking p/t sales assoc. Salary + commission. Call 957-2414. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY ! Sales position women retail. Full time, part time North Scot­ tsdale 948-6450 HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE EXPERIENCED SALES person wanted for radio network. Will help build from the ground up. Commission. Send resume to G/S, 350 S. Mill Ave B202; Tempe 85281. BARTENDER WANTED: Fuft neighborhood bar, sports knowledge a must, $7-12/hr 2032hrs/wk, apply WoodshedI 38p.m. 19 W. Baseline. GREAT SALES positions avail, for high energy people at Scot­ tsdale Fashion Square. Call John at 494-4260. START NOW BLIMPIE Help wanted wknds; days, nights. P/t 20-30 hrs. Blimpie 911 E. Broadway. Apply in Person. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL MAKE A difference and a liv­ ing. Non-profit educational publisher needs a conscien­ tious f/c bookkeeper. Resume to Box 27568 Tempe. 85285. NEWSPAPER RECORDS in­ tern Arizona Capitol Times needs meticulous, dependable individual for p/t internship m aintaining newspaper sub­ scriptions, advertising files; phones, gen'l office. Must type at least 55 WPM. 4 days or 30 hrs/wk. $7/hr pius benefits. Of­ fice near downtown. Send re­ sume and cover letter to: Records intern Az Capitol Times Box 2260 Phx 85002 RECEPTIONIST P/T, for com­ puter training co. 7am-noon MF, 1 mile from campus. Call John Anderson 894-8644. WE WILL tm . you to process advertising claims. Basic math skills req. Flex, schedule ft ca­ sual dress. Office hrs M-F 6:00am to 5:30pm. F/T or P/T avail. Apply at AÇB 1919 W Fairmont dir., ste 7, Tem pe. 438-2320; EOE/MF. LO A D IN G 8c U N L O A D IN G UPS Offers Students: • S8-9/hour • 15-20 hours per week •Flexible Work Schedules - Weekends Off •Paid Vacatons, Holidays & Medicài Insurance • Promotional Opportunities •Student Loans up to S25,000 per year •A Workout While You Work Jtr m art inform ation, contact the (am pus Student Call 894-9816 Today! An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Y O U R F U T U R E B E G IN S T e m p e , A Z 85282 Y O U R F U T U R E WITH INSIGHT B E G I N S WITH INSIGHT In sig h t is a T e m p e - b a s e d d ire c t m a r k e t e r of c o m p u te r s , h a rd w a re a n d so ftw a re , with o v e r $ 2 2 5 m illio n in a n n u a l Insight is a Tempe-based direct marketer of computers, hardware and software, with over $225 million in annual sales and over* 500 employees. We are a publicly traded company oh the Nasdaq national market and are seeking team-oriented professionals looking for great opportunities. In order to offer valuable “ on the job” experience we have opened up part-time positions to the students of ASU. individuals who We are seeking responsible,, motivated i tgSm are looking' for for an “internship” opportunity in a fun, fast-paced, professional environment. s a le s a n d o v e r 5 0 0 e m p lo y e e s . W e a r e a p u b lic ly tra d e d c o m p a n y o n th e N a s d a q n a tio n a l m a rket a n d a re se e k in g team -o riented p ro fe ss io n a ls loo king fo r g re a t opportunities. In o rd e r to o ffer v a lu a b le "on the jo b 1 e x p e rie n c e w e h a v e o p e n e d u p part-tim e p o sitio n s to the stu d en ts of A S U . W e a re se e k in g re sp o n sib le , m o tiva ted ind iv id u a ls w h o a re looking fo r a n " in te rn s h ip " op p ortunity in a fun, fa s t-p a c e d , ▼ Part-Time (tentttaehouse environm ent. Lo o kin g to fill 1 0 part-tim e p o s tio n s in o u r distribution center! P re v io u s g e n e ra l w a re h o u s e e x p e rie n c e is p re ferred (shipping, re ce iving , picking o rd e rs, etc..), Part-Time Salas Rapa R esponsibilities include taking incom ing calls, developing relationships w ith custom ers, setting up accounts, closing sales, a n d assisting full-tim e sales representatives. • $8.50/hour guaranteed, plus incentives • Flexible evening and weekend hours • internship possibilities • Sales training Apply in person M-F from 8am-5pm, FAX (602) 902-1157 or mail resume. Please sped fy position you are applying fot No phone calls will be accepted Smoke-free workplace. Mandatory dmg testing. BOE tWDWv 1912 West 4th Street, Tempe, Arizona 85281 : WORK SCHEDULES 4th 3rd Shift M o n d a y , W e d n e s d a y , F rid a y 4 p m -9 p m CLUCK-U Come join the Cluck-ll-Chicken team. Now hiring delivery drivers. Earn $8-12/hr. Coun­ termine help, cooks, bartenders, cocktail servers* bouncers. Apply in person. 855 S. Rural, Tempe. 1 block south of Unit versjty. CORK N CLEAVER Accepting apps for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability f t person­ ality are important. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. T.C Eggingtons Exciting breakfast & lunch restaurant Ls hiring: * Server Position Need availability - 3 days per w eek including w eekends Apply in person 1660S. Alma School, Mesa HELP WANTEDGENERAL Graduate Student proficient in both high school Chemistry and Spanish, needed to work 2-4 days per week from 1:30-8:30 pm at a Scottsdale teaching facility. Must have a 3.0 GPA and be willing to adhere to a dress code, Please call 9 5 3 -3 0 7 0 for more information only if you are proficient in both subject areas. fmployment Office in the Student Services Building. 2 0 2 0 S . M ill, S u ite 2 0 0 965-238$ BLIMPIE Help wanted - Delivery driver. Wknds, days, nights. P/t 2030 hrs. Blimpie 91 I E. Broad­ way. Apply in person. HIRING FOR Prom otional sales. We've got a fun, part time job for you...flexible evening hours, convenient Tempe loca­ tion. Expect $12/hr to start. (Our exp reps earn over $25/hour). those interested in sales and marketing careers en­ couraged to apply. Please call 921-7755 for personal inter­ view. U n ite d P a r c e l S e rv ic e h a s im m e d ia te o p e n i n g s f o r PERMANENT PART-TIME JO B S iUDSl W A N T S YO U ! Ho* would you like to «forte «Hioro it all (imus? Tho Sheren Meany Sun Devii Ticket Office . ., PA TR IO T P E S T & TER M ITE C O N TR O L N C M , Inc. advance. For more information, j HELP WANTEDGENERAL ' "N . Shift T u e s d a y & T h u r s d a y 4 p m -9 p m S a tu rd a y 9 a m -3 p m (S ) * B a s e p a y $6.5Q/hr. • B o n u s P la n - u p to a n a dditional $1/hr • 1 5 h o u rs a w e e k A p p ly in p e rso n M - F from 8 a m -5 p m , F A X (602) 9 0 2 -1 1 5 7 o r m ail re su m e . P le a s e sp e c ify p o sitio n y o u a re a p p ly in g for. N o p h o n e c a lls will b e a c c e p te d . S m o k e -fre e w o rkp la ce. M a n d a to ry d ru g testing. E O E m/f/h/v 1912 West 4th Street, Tempe, Arizona 85281 The Pointe — / Resorts Resort o n South M ountain BANQUET SERVERS BANQUET SET-UP The ideal jo b for a flexi­ b le sc h e d u le ! W e o ffer e x c e lle n t b e n e fits such as: dental and m e d ica l/ p a id v a c a tio n , 401 (k), resort discounts and trav­ el d e s tin a t io n p e rks. Gom e w ork for us during this excitement filled sea­ son! A pply in person: Human Resources Department 7776 S. Pointe Pkwy, Suite 138 Ciocktow er Corporte Center Monday, September 11 8am-3pm For information on other positions call our Job Hotline: 438-9303 W e support a drug-free work environment through pre-employment drug testing. EOE M/F/V/H S ta te P ress HELP WANTEDFOOt^ERVICE DOC 'N EDDY'S Need 2 P/T cooks, no exp. riec., will train, flexible sched­ ule; $5.50/hr. + tips & meals. 909 B. Minton, cross streets Baseline & Rural. 831-0635. DOMINO'S PIZZA Gome join the excitement with the #1 food delivery team for the ASU area. With the addi­ tion of subs & hot wings, this Domino's is one of the top cam­ pus stores in the country; We need more f/t & p/t drivers to help us safely deliver all these orders. Drivers make $7-$10 per hour including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also lie earned. We are very flexible & can work around your school schedule. We sup­ port a drug free work envi­ ronment. Apply in person after 11 am at 903 S. Rural, Tempe, or call 968-5555. EQE FUN CAJUN Restaurant locat­ ed in Camelback corridor is seeking a hostess & a busser. Pay. will vary on availability; Please call Shannon, M-F be­ fore 11:30 a.m . or after 3:00p m. 955-0011. G REA T JO B AWAITS! Local Co. seeking energetic resp. ihd. to operate hot dog cart program w/ Home Depot. Flex, shifts M,W,F or T, Th, Sat & Sun. Full & p/t hrs., up to $9.00/hr. Call 561-6253. HELP WANTED front counter & delivery person. Days & evenings, call 273-9148 Immed. openings LOOKING FOR Energetic Indiv. F /T ,.P/T Food Service Clerks, Flex. hrs. M-F, apply @ Country Glazed Ham 6107 N. Scotts: rd. (Hilton Village Shopping Center) or contact Desiree or Ellen @ 951-9786. P/T DËLÏ W orker flex, hrsv Apply in person at Southwest corner o f Mill & Southern. Capistrano’s Deli. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE WOODSHED II. Wait staff, 3-4 shifts/wk, sports oriented, great money. 430 N. Dobson. HELP WANTEDCH ILD CAR ^ = $4.50/HR A d a s One 6yr/old child, usually Fr. & Sat. nights. M ust have good refs.; near 44th str. & Camelback. 8407447. BABYSITTER NEEDED, Scot­ tsdale, m ust have own trans­ portation. Call Robin 4239440 or 447-4114. IN PRIVATE Home; T A TH 2:30-6:00p.m., 1 kindergartner; pick up from school A light housekeeping. $5/hr., near 56th str./Greenway. 493-0852. STOCKBROKERS ASST tele­ phone appt. setting, client con­ tacting $5/hr. + $500 quart, bonus based on performance. Call Mark 461-5011. P/T BABYSITING for 4 year old boy. Variable hrs. $5/hr Please call 254-9153. RESTAURANTS/ BARS PRECIOUS 10 MO. old seeks Permt. P/T Nanny for 2 prtL days A sòme Sat. eves/wk, Scotts. Children oriented mjrs. a +, Exp A Refs a miist; 6616021. FREE in exchange for very light child care and housekeeping. Must he very dependable. Call Kevin or Jennifer at 840-8188 • 10 mins, from ASU • car required • big house w/pool JOB OPPORTUNITIES $257,000 MY 2nd yr income. 2yrs out of college. Let me show you how. Free info. Call 926-3870. $35,000/YR. INCOME poten­ tial. Reading books. Toll Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext! R-1676 few details. $35,000/YR. INCOME poten­ tial . Reading books. Toll Free ( i) 800-898-9778 Ext. R-1676 for details. CRUISE SHIPS now hiring Earn up to $2,000+/month working on cruise ships or land-tour companies. World travel. Seasonal A full-time em­ ployment available. No experi­ ence necessary. For more in­ formation call 1-206-634-0468 ext. Ç59181, INTERNATIONALJOBS Earn up to $30$5QH-teaching basic conversational EngSsh. Work in S. Korea, Japan, Taman, Etc. For more detals cal (310)2884)212 E xt J48801 BE YOUR OWN BOSS. E xcitin g opportunity to Join fa st grow ing toio com m unicB tions co. O tters great incom e p otential w ith la ss o ffice how s. C hoose fuN o r part-tim e and g at p aid to train others! CaH now! CHILD CARE Givers needed to wrk resorts A res. homes days, eves, A «lends, flex hrs. Great for college students. 955-2654. • INT L EMPLOYMENT • FREE RM/free food + salary. Female caretaker needed for fam­ ilyw /2 sm children. Near ASU West call 561-5802. a x c e t rs Make up to $25-$45/hr. j K1 JOBS ; H e s o its ar*» now h irin g lor w in te r se a so n . Call Ve r tic a l E m p lo y m en t G roup today! (206) 6 3 4 -0 4 6 9 e x t. V 59181 DO YOU know how much you pay for long distance? You don’t! For flat rates or free calling, call Rich 949-6871. BODY WAXING • Facials* • Glycolic Treatm ents • ►Specializing in acne treatm ent* ELECTROLYSIS BY Degna. Multi-probe A blend methods. Rural/Southem area. 921-1146. S kin Etc. 829-7500 ASU Students get 10% HUNDREDS A THOUSANDS of grants A scholarships avail­ able to rail students. Let our years of research benefit you. Immediate qualification, Call 1800-270-2744. by 3 » î M ARCONIS î lil( A i 9 p.m.-12:30 a.m. -N O C O V E R v || 3 1 8 BANDERSNATCH 5th Si &Forest BREWPUB UNIQUE PAW NBROKER - BUYS OR LENDS CASH li J I lMlJj 968-7481 1315 W. $2 per workout plus $10 membership or yearly membership $200 CO-EDS, ATHLETES, lite night studiers. M edically ap­ proved herbal product that is sweeping the nation. If you need to lose a few lbs, increase your strength & energy level, or improve mental alertness call 1-800-839-1924. MID-SCOTTSDALE. WORDPROCESS., lazor printer- term papers, resumes, Lianne 9484275 AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast turnaround. Townsend W/P, Maureen, 955-0969. O N YOUR GOLD, DIAMONDS, FIREARMS, ART, COLLECTIBLES. ROLEX AND VINTAGE WATCHES. J TYPING/WORD P R O C | g lN G _ _ $$2/FG, S15/RES. Proofed. Laser. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. t e m p e 's 966-6621 HEALTH & FITNESS TYPING/WORD PROCESSING N EED CASH ? H t I p : / / W W W . I a d 1reet.com/WWW/Statpro/WebPG1.HTM or 837-1999. LIVE MUSIC! U n iv e r s it y T em pe ASU AREA. APA/MLA exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6, transcription Charts/graphs 966-2186 any­ time. CUSTOMIZED RESUMES, start at 5/$25, professional & prompt. Call for info 569-5282. TUTORS ~ I NEED BOT108 tutor to help me prepare for tests and under­ stand my lecture notes 9948288. RELIGION TUTOR! Having trouble figuring your dharma from your karma? Can't stand Buber? Call Jeff, 649-2009 $8 hr WANTED HAIR MODELS Needed for Matrics/Logics hair show. Free hair services. Call 392-2404. WE BUY musical sound equip­ ment, PA's-mikes-EQ's-etc.-cash. Call Chaney 968-6324. I*I/./.A ¿V FA SI A I I I I I ELECTROLYSIS $ 2 oo P e rm a n e n t h a ir re m o v a l 20% o ff ASU s t u d e n ts OFF 829-7500 Skin Etc. ANY P IZ ZA m JBIliiPiì m H H J |i 'i : ' S yd ney O m a r r -r i:i' T ï" ii ' ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by SydMy Omarr Friday, Saptembar 8,1995 GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED B Y PRIVATE SECTOR BILLIONS O F DOLLARS IN | GRANTS. TO QUALIFY QVLL: 800-400-0209 968-6666 1301 E. University . ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! 12" o r 1 6 ” 1 Coupon P e r P iz z a D in e -I n o r P ic k - U p L W ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST Certified, A ll M ethods J 2 LARGE BURMESE Pythons, baby boas A baby ball py­ thons $50-200. 926-4424. FREE, ADORABLE kittens.One black, one calico. Please call Peter at 921-2018, FREE t o |T £ F O y N D _ FOUND OAKLEY sunglasses on west side of Computing Commons, Thurs., 8/31. Call to identify 813-9310. P g R S O N A ^^ COLLEGE FRESHMAN Sur­ vival guide now on video! Get freshman year off to a great start! Free catalog w/purchase. • Send $29.95 + $3.00 S/H to: Pacific Programs, 25846 Oak str., Ste 14, Lomita CA 90717. Money back guarantee. CONGRATULATIONS TO the DDD Fall New Members: Lori; Jen B.; Rhiannon, Ciz* Shan­ non, Jenn, M elissa, Carrie, Alisha, Svea, Jessica, Mel, Les­ lie, Mary, Susan, Stephanie, TaTa, Eva, Jamaica, A C.C.!! HAVE YOU been clucked yet? , Cluck-U-Chieken is now open til 3am, Th-Sat. nights. Dine in, take out, or delivery. Pinball, pool, darts, till 3am. « ri ;j, DUI or DWI ARREST DO YOU WANT THAT? I C A N H E L P Y O U A V O ID A R R E S T . LA W E N F O R C E M E N T O F F IC E R H A S O V E R 2 5 Y R S . O F E X P E R IE N C E $2.00 per. m in. charge: M inim um ca ll 3 m in. M axim um c a ll 5 m ins. 18 yr. ag e m inim um required, and T o u ch T o n e phone is a ls o required. C A L L : 1-900-388-9090 EX T : 750 Should legislation b e en a cte d to O U T LA W THE H O M ELESS from soliciting donations or selling on the sidewalks & street intersections? $2.00/min YES: 1-900-388-7070 Ext 105 Ayg caB ì min A vg cost $2.00/Maximum cost $ 10,00 $2.00/min NO: 1-900-388-7070 Ext 106 Avg coll 1 min A vg Cost S2.00/Maximum cost $10.00 RESULTS PO StED DAILY S2.00/mm CALL: 1-900-285-5050 Ext 359 Avg c d l Vmirv A vg co st $2.00/Maximum cost $10 00 Mem bers o f AZ legislature will b e sent a report o f the final results Touch-tone req'd, under 18 ge t parent's permission Strauss Ent. Carm el. C A (408) 625:1910 Looking at October: Some months •re (hade for people, other times these same Individuals lie low. Arles people will be under pressure during October In connection with storing agreements, partnership, marriage. Aries, the pioneer, Is searching, delving deep into spiritual matters, almost shouting, MI want to know why I am hero and what to do abont It?* Television talk show host Conan O’Brien and former California Gov­ ernor Jerry Brown are but two Aries who w ill bo making news. ARIES (March 21-April 19): F i­ nally it arrives! Attention revolves around home delivery, music, family+ member who brings messages of love. Taurus native says, "1 found w hat you wanted and here it is!" TAURUS (A pril 20-M ay 20): Check Aries message. Define terms, look behind scenes, know th at 'im ­ possible’’ is a word used by fools. You’ll do the impossible! Psychic im pression co rrect, play hardball with big leaguers! GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You’ll be quoted correctly, talent, aspira­ tions come to attention of Pisces person - has your best interest a t heart. Focus on authority, organiza­ tion, meeting deadline. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Trip once postponed is now “get bags packed!” Focus on distance, lan­ guage, foreign soil, cuisine. Stress universality, no need to be concerned about far away and long ago. Aries represented. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Make inquiries, demand rights. Someone gives you key. says use it as you like. Emphasis on possible inheritance, in v e s tm e n ts , o w n e rsh ip -m o ra ls clause. Aquarius, another Leo in­ volved. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Rela­ tionship involves older woman, pos­ sibly m other, you need to break free, to follow intuition and heart. Hidden resources could be made available. Don't give up ship! LIBRA (Sept. 23-OcL 2 2 k You knew w hat should be done, but State P re s s C la ss ifie d s lacked materials. Puzzle pieces fall into place, allies apparently in hiding appear almost as if by magic. Gemini plays role. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): L u­ nar aspect highlights physical attrac­ tion, creativity, style, panache, sex appeal. Adventure of discovery high lighted, you’ll be saying, “I am no longer dead from neck up!” SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 22-Dec. 21): Published material could change course of your life! Family member cautions, '’Don’t jump too far too fast!” Decision m ade on moving, change of scene. Virgo figures promi • nently. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Scenario features tender-loving care, flowers, music, domestic enlistm ent that could include where you live, marital status. Be gentle, don’t force issues— Libra is in picture. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): W hat was taken from you will be returned — légal procedure, govern­ m ent policy involved. Business asso­ ciate says, “This was a good lesson, I’m glad you won!" Cancer native involved. PISCES (F eb. 19-M arch 20): G ive-and-take competition involves Aquarius. You pack wallop, know it, proceed w ith confidence. Individual previously indifferent joins your team. Capricorn declares, “We’re on winning side!” IF SEPTEMBER 8 IS TOUR BIRTHDAY: Power could be your middle name — you seldom back down, you most certainly don’t buck­ le down to authorities. You shine where others are dull when pressure is applied you possess an almost metaphysical understanding of time. You have had your share of slings, arrow s,'you are vulnerable to love and refuse to be disillusioned. Capri­ corn-, Cancer-born persons play sig­ nificant roles in your life. Musical chairs in October •— changing qf the guards, marital status. e 1995, LosAngelesThinsSyndicate A S U Box 87150 Tempe: A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-8484 M atthew s C en ter, B asem en t O ffice: 965-6735 C la ssifie d A d O rd e r Form INTERESTED IN Bringing a new Latino-founded fraternity to ASU? Get involved w/ something hew. Call Marcos Voss at 777-9219 or Steve Per­ ales at 966-3969 for more info. All ethnicities encouraged. TTS A girl! La Familia of KAX proudly welcomes its newest addition Christina. Love, Your Big Sis. KDCHI NEW Members Oaudia and Sonia: A sea o f wonders awaits you. Love, your Big Sis. THANK YOU to Dr. Snow, chairman of the Sociology De­ partment for locating, and se­ curing my lost ring. Thanks-aiot, Tim Tail. teaching basic conversational En^jlish abroad. Japan, Taiwan, ind.S . Korea. For more . * S éfim k'-a* 4»,•&***■* ■- — SERVICES STATISTICS? R O O M & BOARD 835-7802 CHILDCARE for 4 yr & 8 iso old, M on’s 12-5 ni y home. Must have car, refs. 912-0406 SERVICES SKI RESORTS Now hiring for the winter season. Earn up to $2000/month working for ski resorts. Call for more info, 310-285-0085 ext Z48801. AFTERSCHOOL NANNIES A sitters. Set your own schedule. Days, eves &/or wknds. $4.25$6.70/hr. 460-1200. CHILD CARE givers needed fo r reso rts and res. homes. Days. eves, and wkends. Flex N hrs Grt 4 college students! PS5 2651. ' ' v ^ JO B OPPORTUNmES GOOD PAY babysitting service looking for energetic, caring people. Choose your own hours. Must have own trànsp. Cdl 277-6645 M-F, after J p.m. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Students Needed! fishing In­ dustry. Earn up to $3,000PHX LIVE! 3 night clubs & 1 $6,000+ per month. Room and restaurant under the sameroof, Beared! Transportation! Male is accepting apps. for all posi­ or Female. No experience nec­ tions. Apply in person M-F 104 pm 455 N: 3st. #301 Phx.essary. Call (206)545-4155 ext AS9181, '-Vv 5 AKURA OF Japan now hir­ ALASKA JOBS- Earn up to ing, excellent opportunity with $3000 -, $6000+/month work­ a growing company- Assistant ing in the fishing industry. Managers & cashiers needed for Transportation, room & board! days and eves. F/t & p.t posi­ Male/female. No experience nec­ tions avail. @ Scottsdale Fash­ essary ! (310) 285-0085 ext ion Square and Fiesta Mall in A48801. Mesa. Positions for our new store @ Scotts.Rd/Shea Blvd CRUISE SHIPS A vacation re­ Will be avail, in November. sorts hiring - Earn up to S tart your new career today. $3000+/month. World travel A 941 -8789/834-2323 Ask for exotic resorts. (Hawaii, Mexico, manager. Carribean Islands, etc.) Trans­ portation, room A board! No SANDWICH PREP/ DELIVERY experience necessary! (310) Apply a t Brown’s on 6th. 570 271-4147 ext. Ç48801. S C ^kge. WANTED SERVERS & Cooks, good atm osphere, great tips. Apply in person at Tommy’s Billiards and Sports Bar. 7700 S. Priest Drv., Tempe. 5988611 P age 15 Friday, S eptem ber 8 ,1 9 9 5 A LOVE fill pur home. David long to adopt y. Call collect 201Expenses paid. PI— ee b e aure to ótréck your ad. M a k a aura it raada exactly a a you wteh M to appear In tha S ta te P ress, including punctuation. Plaaaa dhack your a d tha firat day it app— re-the liability of tha S ta te P r e s s ahaN not e x c e e d the c o st o f t a a d a n d credit m ay b a given for the lArat inaertlon only. Minor apaHing errore do rHpt qualify fpr makajte. N o rafun— wHi b e piven. but if ybu n e é d to c an cel your e h aaredit v b e heM o n account for future edN— teting%•’ Commarclal 1 day. $2.20 par Nne 2-4 days. $ 1.65 per Nne. per day' 5-9 days. $ 1.40 par lina, per day 104- days, $ 1.25 per Une, per day ~ .3 Nne nUnimum. Addnjboid hqadiina for the coat o f 2 Unes. Î I CES ATTN ALL Students! Grants A scholarships are ofrd by pvt sector. Qualify regardless of inc or grds. Few more info call 1-800-400-0209. P r iv a t a P a r t y i -4 days, $ 1,36 per line, par day 5-9 days, $ 1.30 per Nne. per day KH- days, 51.15 per line, per day 1 % CtaaafftaaHnn Wame/Numbar: H m n eo n Card Expiration Data. ' 4T .‘Ï ■' •/ Sorry, w e ean n ot aooapt peraonal ad ath rou p h tharwaH. Page 16 Friday, September 8,1995 S tate P ress crossw ords Go ahead ... do them in ink. &La Sneaky Pete's Sports Bar & Lounge HAPPY HOUR SEUEN DAYS A WEEK' 11:30am - 7pm Daily Drink Specials >- 14 Pool Tables. 5 Dart Boards Uideo Gam es and Fusbad 2155 E. University Cat PriceJ 350-9328 R ccbok adidas b a s ic s P E R F O R M A N C E F O O T W E A R B e t t e r L o c a t i o n ! B e t t e r P r i c e s ! B e t t e r F it! ^ O f f i c i a l R e g is t r a t io n L o c a t io n Any Shoe Purchase Autom atically R egisters You to W IN a FR EE Trek Mt. Bike HURRY. . . Store Drawing Sept. 13,1995 fo r th e N e w $ T im e s P h ò e n ix T O -ÍC ☆ 7 Off Any Shoe Purchase With This Ad thru 9-13-95 Not Valid With Any Other Offer •ÍFree V id e o A n a ly sis o f R u n n in g G a it ! ----- IN T H E C O R N E R S T O N E N.E. Oorner Rural & University 8 2 9 -7 4 7 3 State P ress