©Copyright. State Press, 19 Tempe, Arizona W ednesday, Septem ber 27,1995 An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 80 No. 25 Fratern ity blam es other fo r house dam age By G reg Z emeida State P ress Members of the fraternity that battled student govern­ ment president C hris W eber’s house at a local bar on Thursday told police that he w asn’t the only Pi Kappa Alpha member involved in criminal acts that night. Pi Kappa Alpha members reportedly broke into Sigma Phi Epsilon’s house and smashed two windows, broke a leg on a pool table and assaulted a member of the fraternity, according to statements made in an ASU Department of Public safety report. Weber was arrested and charged with assaulting a woman after an earlier brawl with some Sigma Phi Epsilon members that same night at the Dash Inn, 731 E. Apache Blvd. Chris Ward, a member of Pi Kappa Alpha’s alumni advi­ sory board and spokesman for the fraternity, said the board is looking into the incident. He said he doesn’t know yet if Pi Kappa Alpha members were responsible for the break-in. “W e’re not saying members didn’t do it, we’re not saying members did,” Ward said. “We don’t know at this point.” He added that he didn't know if the break-in was related to the fight at the Dash Inn. According to the police report, Mark Coleman, a mem­ ber of Sigma Phi Epsilon, told police that just before 1 a.m., Pi Kappa Alpha members broke into his house after the fight at the Dash Inn. Another unidentified member told police that about five Pi Kappa Alpha members came in, kicked him in the stomach and then tackled him. The man said he could not identify his attackers. Both Coleman and the man told police they did not want to press charges. Coleman stated that he wanted a report taken so his house could get reim bursed for dam ages, which are estimated at $1,000. Lt. Kay Gojkovich of the ASU police said because no one wanted to press charges in the break-in, there would be no fu rth er in v estig atio n o f the incident. She said she believed members of both houses have agreed to work out the incident themselves. “That is not unusual for two houses to do that in the University system,” Gojkovich said. ASU Chief of Police Lanny Standridge said he doqpnot know if Pi Kappa Alpha members are responsible for the break-in. He said all police know is what the witnesses of the incident told them, but not if it is true. A fter the break-in, about 40 to 50 m em bers o f both houses gathered on A lpha D rive, betw een Sigm a Phi Epsilon’s house, 615 Alpha Drive, and Pi Kappa Alpha’s house, 620 Alpha Drive. Police were called to the scene and broke up the crowd. They also arrested Weber at this time after the woman he reportedly hit and other witnesses iden­ tified him as the assailant. W eber has denied punching the wom an, saying that Sigma Phi Epsilon members pinned the assault on him to get back at his fraternity. . Jeff Adams, president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, said that isn’t true. He said the fraternity m em bers who pointed out W eber did n o t know th a t he is the p re sid e n t o f ASU’s student government. He also said Phi Kappa Alpha members committed the break-in at his house. It was done in retaliation for the fight T urn to Fraternities, page 2, Report: ASU students Life after ASU staying longer, taking more credit hours B y T im B axter State P ress Students are coming to ASU earlier, staying longer and taking more credits, according to a recently released report. The Arizona Board of Regents 1995 Enrollment Report places freshman enrollment at 5.383 students — the largest freshman class on record at ASU, said registrar Lou Ann Denny. < , -U : iaa»j| "You could say (recruiting freshmen) is the goal, especially with pro­ grams like the Freshman Year Experience and Campus Communities trying to retain freshmen when they get here." Provost Milton Click said the school has traditionally relied on the com­ munity college system as a “feeder” for ASU. but the school is trying to bring lower-division students in and retain them. “We think different students are better served by going to the communi­ ty colleges first and others are better served by going to the University (first). We try to be student specific," he said. Click attributed the credit hour increase to better class availability. “We have worked at making more classes available and increasing accessibility. We have five degree programs that you can complete entirely in the evening now.” Denny said she was also pleased by the increase in students’ credit hours. , v Robert Anderson/State Press Hundreds of students file through the Career Fair Tuesday in the Memorial Union. More than 200 compa­ nies seeking new recruits attended this year’s fair. T ürnto Admissions^ page 2 . . T ib e ta n m o n k s reach fo r ‘h e a lin g ’ th ro u g h a rt By D avid J . Kovacs State P ress Paul Besing/State Press Lobsang Dhargye (le ft), and Palden Thinley create a “mandala” made of colored granules of sand at th e S c o tts d a le P u b lic L ib ra ry Tuesday. INSIDE STA TE PR ESS Weather Outlook It is silent except for a gentle scraping noise coming from a table in the center of the room. H unched over the table, three monks coax grains of brightly-colored sand out of slender copper funnels to form an elaborate sand painting. A group o f Buddhist monks from the Tibetan Drepung Loseling M onastery in Tibet are creating a sacred sand painting, c a lle d a “ m a n d a la ,” th is w eek at the Scottsdale Public Library. It will take 10 of the monks four to five hours a day for four days to complete the process. And then they’ll throw it all away. The painting will be poured into a brook in the Indian Bend Wash Friday at 10 a.m. as part of the ceremony. “In the Medicine Buddha Mandala field, (the mandala) reflects integrity in a visual a rt fo rm ,” said G esh e D ad u l, one the T ibetan m onks. “ It is m eant to instill a strong realization of impermanence.” The monks are visiting the Valley this week to raise awareness of the religious persecution of Buddhists in Tibet and also to promote “world healing.” They are taking part in the week-long 1,000 Lights of Peace celebration put on at the Scottsdale P ublic L ibrary, 3839 N. Civic Center Blvd., which began Tuesday. Events include lectures on peace initiatives, as well as concerts and ceremonies empha­ sizing world healing, said event organizer Linda Tokarchuk. “W e need to work together to extend healing into our future,” she said. “The World/Nation Sports Marcia Clark distances the prosecution from Mark Fuhrman as closing arguments begin in the O.J. Simpson trial. Sophomore comerback Jason Simmons and the rest of the ASU football team get ready for the No. 5 USC Trojans Saturday. Page 3 Page 11 Sunny and breezy . High 97°. low 70°. I significance o f having the monks here is that we can start to connect deeper and share with our hearts.” T he V alley m irrors m any o f to d a y ’s societal problem s, T okarchuk said. For example, many of the week-long programs are designed to address problems of youth alienation. Geshe said he hopes people leave the m andala w ith a sense o f h ealin g and a renewed connection with one another. “I w ant them to com e aw ay w ith an understanding of the interdependent nature of life — how each sand particle forms to hold the whole. “That’s exactly how life is.” The exhibit is on display a t the Scottsdale Public Library through Friday. Adm ission isfree. For more information, call 966-8897. Where To Find It .......D .......10 Crossword.................... ........ 9 .......15 .........4 .........6 ..;.... 11 Sports............... 7 Today’s Activities....... World/Nation....................... .3 Page 2 Fraternities T oday C ontinued ThqToday Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the A$U community. J Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and ate printed as space permits. Campus dubs mid organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement of Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Entries must contain the fuH name of the dub or organization, a description of 0 » event, date, time and the full address of the location. All requests am subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries wi8 be discarded. DeaeMne for requests is noon the day before publication and entries wMnot be accepted more than three woddng days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily cam ­ lower level, Women’s Student Center. pus meeting. Noon to 1:1S p.m.; Newman Center, Aquinas Hail in die basement. • M aricopa Com m unity C ollege District — Phyllis Frelick, first o fthe hon­ • Alpha Epsilon Delta Pra Mad Honor S ociaty— V ideo p re s e n ta tio n : “T h e Making of a Doctor.” 6:30 p.m.; L S E 104. • ASU Cycling Club — Meeting for d u b activities and racing. Everyone welcome. 8 pirn.; Fountains south of the MU. • ASASU —• S uper Bowl XXX question a n d a n s w e r s e s s io n fe a tu rin g S te v e Patterson of the Host Committee, Steve Miller of th e ASU Planning Com m ittee and ASASU President Chris Weber. 7:30 p .m .; MU lo w er lev el, P ro g ram m in g Lounge. • Communication SltidoititA*W*el«iioi» — All communication majors welcome to CSA weekly m eetings on W ednesdays. 3:30 p.m.; MU Coconino Room. • E c k a n k a r — Discussion: Karma, the spiritual form of die physical law of cause and effect. For more info, call 965-2860. Noon; MU Graham Room. • 4XArch — Architecture mentor group and phat tire phun. All “skins" welcome. 6 p .m .; A m erican Indian In stitu te Conference Room. • Hawaii C lub — Meeting to discuss what to bring to picnic. 6 p.m .; MU Najavo Room. • Kundalini Yoga Club — Our classes are growing. Come join us every Monday through Thursday a t 5:30 p.m.; Check monitors for nightly locations. 5:30 p.m:; MU 222. • L e s b ia n a n d B is e x u a l W o m e n ’s D is c u s s io n G ro u p — F re e ongoing weekly discussion of issu es for lesbian an d b ise x u a l w om en. T o d a y ’s topic: Dating rules. 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.; MU o rs forufn speakers, presents “Signs of _ Understanding.” S h e will draw from her experience a s an actress who won Tony and Emmy awards. 7:30 p.m.; Radisson Tempe Mission Palms Hotel, Ballroom. • MUAB Film Committee — Shaw shank Redemption. 3 p.m.; MU lower level, cinema. • MUAB Special Events Committee .•* Meeting. Everybody welcome. 3:30 p.m.; MU third floor, Conference Room 1A. • NATAS —• All-member meeting. New and old members welcome. Guest speak­ e r Bill Ottinger, creative services director for C h a n n e l 3, a n d p re s id e n t of th e Arizona chapter of NATAS. 6 p.m.; MU Cochise Room. • Pre-V eterinary M edicine Club — S peaker from Colorado State University concerning requirements for application to veterinary school. 7 p.m.; AGB 301. • R ecreation Major S tu d en t Association — General meeting: discus­ sio n o f e v e n ts . 9 a.m .; MU S tu d e n t Lounge. • S tudent Life L earning R eso u rce Center — Free reading skills workshop: SQ4R, 1 1:40 a.m.; MÜ Navajo Room. • S tu d en t Life Learning R eso u rce Center — F ree com puter skills work­ shops: Microsoft Excel, 10 a.m .; Using the Internet, 1 p.m.; Open to all students and staff. SSV 361 A. • Women in C om m unication — Ice cream social. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.; MU Santa Cruz Room. • The W ritin g C e n te r — W orkshop: P ractical gram m ar. 1:40 p.m . to 2:30 p.m.; LL A202. TOP TEN REASONS I State P ress Wednesday, September 27,1995 TO JOIN ONE OF ASU S BEST RUN STUDENT ORGANiZATIONS! from page 1. at the Dash Inn, Adams said. Pi Kappa A lpha m em bers adm itted to breaking into the house and their alumni board agreed to pay for the damage, he added. W ard said no ag reem en ts have been made. He said he, along with Greek Life Coordinator Tim Bills and ASU fraternity adviser Peter Leighton, met with the frater­ nities Tuesday night to discuss the incident. Bills said a Greek Review Board hearing will be held at a future date to handle the issue. The board may take into considera­ tion any informal resolutions taken by the two fraternities before handing down any possible sanctions, he said. He would not comment on what the sanctions may be. M att D eP ew , p re sid e n t o f Pi K appa Alpha, said his fraternity is very competi­ tive on the athletic field with Sigm a Phi Epsilon, but the two groups get along fíne. “There’s no hard feelings ... (we have) n o th in g b u t re s p e c t (fo r S ig m a Phi Epsilon),” he said. L eighton said he d o e sn ’t b eliev e the b re a k -in w as p a rt o f an o n g o in g feud between the two fraternities. “I would say this is an isolated incident at this point,” he said. Leighton and other Qreek leaders will take the proper measures'to handle the inci­ dent, he said, adding that he doesn’t expect any future conflicts. Besides W eber’s arrest and the break-in a t S igm a P hi A lp h a, a n o th e r fra te rn ity member has been involved with police this semester. On Aug. 21, a Sigma Chi member was charged with aggravated assault after allegedly beating a black man outside his fraternity house. L eighton said these w ere all isolated incidents and not indicative of normal fra­ ternity conduct. “I am very confident that isolated indi­ viduals don’t make up (fraternity) chapters,” he said. “I think that there’s no doubt (that the break-in is) something that we need to address and help our students learn from these incidents.” ■ - Admissions Continued from page 1. “Our hopes are that students are finan­ cially able to take more hours. Instead of working full-time and going to school parttime, maybe they can shift that a little. “We’re hoping they can go to school more and graduate in a more timely fashion.” ASU Main enrollment dropped 160 stu­ dents from last year to 42,189, while overall enrollment rose by 163 students to 45,929. Glick said the slight drop in main campus enrollment was unimportant, adding that main campus enrollment was expected to continue to grow slowly over the next few years. “We still have room for growth in the evening, and we still have room under the 39,000 student enrollment cap.” The enrollment cap applies only to full­ time day students. Current m ain campus ASASU FALL M a m o rla lU iiio n A c tiv itie s BARBECUE 4 * 0- 6:00 B o a rd 1. 2. 3. 4. It's free and it's fun. Make new friends. Looks good on resume. Find out what MUAB letters stand for (Memorial Union Activities Board). 5. You can try something new. full-time day enrollment is 26,357. Denny agreed that the decrease in main campus enrollment was not a problem. “Some programs are moving.” Denny said. “I think head count will continue to go up.” The biggest grow th is expected at the branch campuses, Glick said, especially as the size and number of programs offered grows. “ (A SU ) W est h a s a fairly fu ll set o f program s,” G lick said. “(ASU) East will only have programs really beginning next year. Right now they don’t really have any programs.” ASU East offers only “extended educa­ tion” classes — classes taught by TV. mail o r th ro u g h the In te rn e t. N ext fa ll, the schools of technology and agriculture are moving to ASU East. S T U D E N T S E R V IC E S LAW N C e le b r a t e L a t t ie C o o r w i t h a n d P r e s id e n ts C h r is W e b e r PREVIEW UPCOMING PROGRAMS & EVENTS! 6. 7. 8. 9. MAB does not sound right without U. We help you turn your ideas into reality. Leam job skills, experience for your major. We are fat-free, low-calorie, full of energy, and we come in fun-size. 10. If you join, you can decide on the 10th reason. JO IN U S TO D AY ,0™ C / t ll 965-6822 SUPERBOW L Q & A SESSION TO NIG HT 7 :3 0 -9 :3 0 MU PROGRAM M INO LOUNGE ui ) . , - (lo w e r level) : Have questions about the Super Bowl? Ask them tonight! C o m e talk with Steve Patterson, President of the Super Bowl Host Committee; Steve Miller, Chair of ASU Planning Committee; and Chris Weber, ASASU President. W o rld /N a tio n State P ress __________ ________ Pag.ie 3 Wednesday, September 27,1995 round rfizona a Pr*s«anplioi) of üv»oc*nc« of Proof ! Mesa fire officials order temporary TR W closure MESA (AP) — City fire officials o rd ered th e te m p o ra ry sh u td o w n Tuesday o f an automobile safety air bag plant that has been the site o f 17 explosions in tire past 12 months. Mesa Fire Chief John Oliver noti­ fied TRW V ehicle Safety System s Inc. that it must immediately halt all its operations related to the process­ ing of sodium azide, a volatile chem­ ical used to deploy air bags. TRW will be allowed to resume operations after it submits a plan that ensures the safety o f its employees and city residents. Thom as W. Cresante, vice presi­ dent of operations for TRW ’s plants here, said the company would com­ ply w ith the o rd er and h o p efu lly resolve the issue with the city within the next few days. H e sa id th e sh u td o w n w o u ld affect about 1,300 employees in the passenger-side air bag operations at one plant. The 1,750 em ployees in TR W ’s d riv er-sid e a ir bag opera­ tions are not affected by die shut­ down, according to Cresante. H igh school student dies in bus collision WELLTON (AP) — One student was killed and three others seriously injured Tuesday when an Antelope V alley H igh School bus collided with a rock-hauling dump truck at an intersection, authorities said. The accident occurred about 8:30 a.m. just south o f Interstate 8 near W ellton about a half-mile from the s c h o o l, a c c o rd in g to th e sta te Department of Public Safety . T he tru ck ; w hich w as h auling larg e b o u ld e rs, ap p a re n tly had a brake malfunction and slammed into the bus as it was making a turn at die intersection o f Avenue 36E and Old Highway 80, investigators with the Yuma County S heriff s Department said. . The im pact dem olished the rear o f the bus, w hich was carrying 29 people at die time. State health officials issue rabies advisory P H O E N IX (A P ) — T h e sta te D e p a rtm e n t o f H e a lth S e rv ic e s issued a rabies advisory M onday, u rg in g p e o p le to a v o id b ats and other wild animals. ADHS officials said 12 children and nil» adults have received-anti­ rabies vaccine this year following a trite or contact with a rabid bat, and 10 of die children were exposed to bats on school grounds or dining school trips. They said there have been 39 confirmed ceaps of animal rabies in 11 counties this year. Rabies is a viral disease that attacks the central nervous system and can be fatal if not treated promptly with a vaccine. You wiiytee J h a t the defendant ~has been proven guilty, easily beyond a reasonable fd o u b t. UHG -v . -prosecutor Marcia Qurk Prosecutor Marcia Clark shows Jurora a chart showing the parameters of the burden of proof during closing argu­ ments in the O.J. Simpson double-murder trial. Associated P r a u Clark disavows Fuhrman Prosecutor urges jurors to ignore defense ‘distractions’ LO S A N G E L E S (A P ) — A fu rio u s windows and let die cool air blow out the defense assault on Fuhrm an, C lark told Judge Lance Ito blacked out TV coverage sm okescreen th a t’s been created by the ju ro rs she understood if they feel “angry o f th e O .J. S im p so n tria l fo r an h o u r defense, with the cool wind o f reason, you and disgusted with M ark Fuhrman, as we Tuesday, then reopened the camera’s eye as will see that the defendant has been proven all do.” But she insisted such outrage was not a a prosecutor assembled a picture puzzle for guilty, easily, beyond a reasonable doubt.” T he flap that threatened to term inate reason to acquit Simpson of the murders of jurors showing Simpson as a killer. Prosecutor M arcia Clark, delivering a w o rld w id e co v e ra g e o f the m o st p h o ­ his ex-wife and her friend. “Did he lie when he testified here in this tographed trial o f all tim e closing argument that built in e ru p te d w hen th e ju d g e courtroom saying that he did not use racial p o w er thro u g h o u t the day, Is he a eribist? noticed the television cam­ epithets in the last 10 years? Yes,” she said d isav o w ed Her ow n p o lice era focusing on Simpson’s of Fuhrman, posing a list of rhetorical ques­ witness as a racist, ridiculed a Yes. Is he the hands taking notes during tions th at the predom inantly b lack ju ry defense contam ination-con­ worst LAPD h as C lark ’s presentation. T he might ask. sp ira c y th e o ry as “ f a r ­ “Is he a racist? Yes. ju d g e said it violated the fetched” and said blood evi­ to offer t Yes. “Is he the worst LAPD has to offer? Yes. defendant’s attorney-client d ence m arks S im pson as a “Do we wish that this person was never privilege. murderer. — Prosecutor Marcia C la rk ’s b o ss, D is tric t hired by LAPD? Yes. Should LAPD have ' P ic tu re s o f shoe p rin ts, stra n d s o f h a ir and fib e rs Clark,-referring to A tto rn e y G il G a rc e tti, ever hired him? No. Should such a person be a police officer? No. from the carpet in Simpson’s Mark Fuhrman ru sh e d to th e c o u rtro o m “In fact, do we wish there were no such along with media lawyers, Bronco were pieces in a puz­ and the ju d g e ev en tu ally person on die planet? Yes,” she said. zle, which fit together to form Clark walked a fine line as she jettisoned agreed to turn the cam era a portrait of Simpson’s face. Fuhrman’s racist views but clung to his tes­ W ith S im pson listen in g intently and back on. H e fined a media group $1,500. Clark tried at the outset to wipe the poi­ timony about finding a bloody glove and often reactin g to h e r statem ents, C lark accused his lawyers o f raising distractions sonous stain o f racism from the trial, by other evidence on Simpson’s estate. “The fact that Mark Fuhrman is a racist rather than facts and leading jurors down quickly bringing up retired Detective Mark dead-end “false roads” to keep them from Fuhrman and confiding to jurors that she and lied about it on the witness stand does wished “there was no such person oh the not m ew that we haven’t proven the defen­ seeing the evidence. dant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,” she “At the conclusion o f all o f our argu­ planet.” In a pre-emptive strike aimed at a certain said. ments,” she said, “when you open up the Bosnia factions reach agreem en t! Still split on cease-fire NEW YORK (AP) — Prodded by the U nited States, B osnia’s w arring factions agreed Tuesday to guidelines for elections and a future -government for their ethnically tom country, but remained far apart on how to stop the fighting. All sides hailed the agreement as a step toward peace, but their varying interpreta­ tions of what it meant highlighted the ardu­ ous work that lay ahead in ending the 3 1/2year-old war. “There is no guarantee o f success, but today’s agreement m oves us closer to the ultimate goal b f a genuine peace,” President Clinton said in a brief W hite House news conference. T he m ain issue at the talks was how m uch pow er should be given to central a u th o ritie s in a B o sn ian sta te d iv id e d betw een rebel Serbs and a M uslim -Croat federation. Bosnian Serbs rebelled in April 1992 against the Muslim-led government’s deci­ sion to secede from Serb-dom inated Y sgodtvk The Bosnian Serbs, who want to eventu­ ally u n ite th e ir lan d w ith n e ig h b o rin g Serbia, had opposed a strong central gov­ ernment. The Muslims, who hope to keep Bosnia intact, wanted to make it as power­ ful as possible. Bosnian Prime M inister Haris Silajdzic in S arajev o said the p rin cip les d rafted T uesday provided the “ m inim um o f the institutions’’ needed to continue “die legal existence of our state.” Y e t B o sn ia n S erb le a d e r R ad o v an Karadzic hailed the agreement as “a confir­ m a tio n o f th e e x iste n c e o f R e p u b lik a Srpska,” which is what the Serbs call their territory in Bosnia. A ssistan t S ecretary o f S tate R ichard H olbrooke, the lead U .S. ¿negotiator fo r Bosnia, called the agreem ent “one m ore im portant step on the road to peace” but warned: “W e still have a tong and difficult path ahead o f us.” J§ A t the start o f Tuesday’s talks, held at the U.S, M ission to the United Nations, Secretary of State Warren Christopher urged die parties to seize “die moment in history” to reach a cease-fire. That did not happen. H olbrooke said later that a cease-fire was discussed but the two sides were too far apart. H o lb ro o k e and h is team w ill fly to Sarajevo on Thursday for another round of shuttle diplomacy, but Holbrooke said he! did not expect to secure a cease-fire soon, “based on. what we were hearing today.” Asked if he was satisfied with Tuesday’s agreement, Holbrooke replied, “W e can’t be satisfied, the war is still going on.” The negotiations were the first since a U.S.-brokered agreement was clinched in G eneva on Sept. 8. T hat agreem ent pro­ posed keeping B osnia’s external borders intact while dividing the state roughly 5050 betw een Serbs and the M uslim -Crbat federation. Tuesday’s agreement calls for,democrat­ ic elections to be held simultaneously in the B osnian Serb and M tislim-Croat parts o f the country at an undetermined date, after fighting ends and “social conditions per­ mit.” ] International observers will determine exactly when tilings have improved enough for the elections. O pin ion Page 4 " . \ ' vyr. * V'•. .: Wednesday, September 27, 1995 . STATE PRESS State P ress aitonal B Alpha Drive Blues It’s no fun to be an ASU Greek these days. Stereotypes o f fraternity members have been float­ ing around for a long time '- r but this year, at least at ASU, these stereotypes are apparently being rein­ forced. Aug. 21: Sigm a Chi m em ber Brian Southard is charged with severely beating a black man outside the fraternity house. Police are still undecided on whether or not to level hate crime charges against Southard. Sept. 21: Members from the Pi Kappa Alpha and Sigma Phi Epsilon houses clash in the Dash Inn — and a woman is hit. After being thrown out of the bar by bouncers, the combatants cany on the melee in the parking lo to f Rother’s Bookstore. Later in the evening, die Sigma Phi Epsilon house is invaded a pool table is damaged, and a man is a ssau lted . No ch arg es are file d , b u t S igm a P h i Epsilon members claim die invaders were “Pikes,” and seek monetary compensation for the damages. It is obvious that there are problem s on Alpha Drive. But it would be unfair to say that the two incidents are in d ic a tiv e o f w id e sp re a d m a lfe a sa n c e on F raternity Row; that a predilection to violence ts ingrained into any young man sporting Greek letters. The concept o f a fraternity remains a noble one. It gives young men a sense o f belonging, a sense of pride, a sense o f cam araderie.: £ C For many young men and women entering college and leaving home far the'first time, we can flunk of no better place to start d u n a fraternity or a sorority. Pride » one’s group is a g o o d thhig — provided it is not carried too far. ,, -*< Carry it too far, and you may begin to see things as a “us against diem” scenario. B ut fraternities are hardly universal in domg this — and hardly alone. , During die week preceding the ASU-UofA foot­ b all g am e, m any stud en ts g e t a seriouS case o f M oodlust _ *"'*** Band members from die visiting school c m expect a hail o f randomly-thrown objects while passing in fro n t o f th e rival student section, not to m ention obscene words and gestures. Truckloads "of students cruise between Tempe and Tucson, seeking to vandalize each other's schools in an attempt to propagate “school pride.” A nd, y e s, th ro n g s o f A S U and U o fA fan s inevitably brawl every year before, during and after “The Game.” “But it’s just a football game!” Sure it is. But that doesn’t change the fact that it arouses a tremendous passion within students from both universities. Fraternities share a similar passion — and some within their ranks express this passion in less-thanappropriate ways. But fraternities would be wise to be especially vig­ ilant in preventing future “incidents.” Every future brawl, every future act o f vandalism, will only serve to further reinforce the stereotype. ' We would especially advise members o f th e two feuding houses to cool it. Tensions are obviously high between the two fraternities — but, in the end, it is pointless. K eep this rivalry a “friendly” one. In the end, you’re hurting n o 0 1» but yourselves. TTTYT I"I A L L E -m a il p ro v id e s m o r e o p e n p o in ts o f v ie w Surprisingly, none o f them have been sent back. I have made a discovery. It is The second thing that happened is on a more somber possible to have the perfect rela­ D elia note. I found I had a perfect relationship right under my tionship. It is possible to have MALDONADO nose. Unfortunately, Twill never have it again. your way all time, to start a con­ This is going to sound silly, but my cat disappeared last versation when you want and to Columnist Saturday night. Y es, my cat. H ey, people have w ritten en d a con v ersatio n w hen you columns on things much less pertinent than this. So cut me want. There are tw o ways you some slack on this one. can have fais. Bumper, my cat, likes to go out and roam the streets at The first is by using e-mail. night. He has been known to hang out with some neighbor I made the discovery about a cats for a day or two. So when he didn’t come home for a year ago, but I had never taken couple o f days, I didn’t think it was such a big deal. But advantage of the social aspect. now it’s been over a week and I have to face the fact that Then about a week ago, som e­ either he found a place he likes better than mine, or some­ th in g h ap p e n e d to m e th a t thing bad has happened. Neither thought is more pleasant changed the way I feel about talking to real people. „ I received a letter via e-mail from a guy who had read than the other. Bumper and I moved here from New York at the same my column on affirmative action. He told me how much he appreciated someone voicing his side, a side a lot o f white time. We both had the same attitudes toward life. We would men can’t openly admit to having. His letter made me real­ like to be kept, but realize that eventually a certain amount ize just how amazing e-mail really is. We can say so many of work will be required for us to remain fed and clothed. In things without having anyone judge us or condemn us. I his case just fed, though I did buy him a collar once. The was a little worried that my address was so accessible, but next morning I woke up to find he had managed to twist it in to h is m outh and had th e n 1 re a liz e d I w ould spent the entire night with never have heard from this his mouth completely open. guy if it wasn’t. I th in k a b o u t my JqMn Doe opened my eyes to this. H e also He n ev er w ore the c o lla r again. columns a little differently opened my eyes to the beauty o f e-mail OK, talk in g to my enow. I know there are least m ail p a ls an d o b se ssin g three or four people who because aS soon as I got his letter, 1 1|§| about my cat do not make a c tu a lly read th em and quickly forw arded it to 20 or 30 w / » y ¥ for the perfect relationship. have th o u g h ts on them . B ut there is som ething to Sure, I ’ve overheard my closest and dearestfriends. # be said fo r n o t h aving to name in the same sentence deal with people on a regu­ as an expletive or two, but lar basis. No one ever rearmore often then not people ends you on the inform ation superhighway, and my cat simply appreciate an opinion that is not often heard. John Doe (not his real name) opened my eyes to this. He never asked to borrow m oney.. On the other hand, there are no hugs in cyberspace and also opened my eyes to the beauty o f e-mail because as soon as I got his letter, I quickly forwarded it to 20 or 30 of Bumper rarely got up out of bed to bring me a beer. • *•; M aybe the perfect relationship is actually one that my closest and dearest friends. “Look,” I told people, requires hard work, a strong commitment and rewards you “They like me, they really like me!” Most o f the notes were returned to my account. It seems with love and understanding. Then again, maybe not. many of my friends have not been keeping faeir accounts active. But that’s OK. I also printed about 50 hard copies and sent one to each o f my relativ es, dead and alive. D elia M aldonado is a graduate student studying journalism . DAVID STROW, Editor GARIN GROFF* Managing Editor MICHELLE MARIE SHEETZ. . ................ Night Editor COPY EDITORS: Andrea Healey, Kim Herman, Liz DAVlbt/PROFFITT..........City Editor Montalbano. KENNES BOLIG.......*1,»»-. .....Asst City Editor PHOTOGRAPHERS: Robert Anderson, Tim Hacker. CHRISTINA BAILEY........... ......... Opinion Editor COLUMNISTS: Enrique Chaurand, Betty Farrish, Steve BRYN CHANCELLOR ....... ......................Copy Chief Forsberg, Tina Holder, A. Marjory Kaminski, D elia fflif FOUUN Maldonado, Liz Montalbano. DIANNE R. BARTSCH ..Asst. Photo Editor C A R TOO NISTS: Drew AqUilina, Brian Fairrington, DAN MILLER........ ........ ................. Sports Editor Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, Steve Tansley, Hayden DAMIAN SHAW ......Asst. Sports Editor Williams. JOSH KRIST................................................ Magazine Editor PRODUCTION: Aaron R. Brutcher, Jodi Goldblatt, ADRIANNA GARCIA.....,«...,^......Asst. Magazine Editor Diana Kessinger, Jeremy Meyer, Prashant Sampat, Skip Schrader, Eloise Young. R E PO R T E R S: Brian Anderson, Cody A ycock, Tim SA L E S R E PR E SE N T A T IV E S: N aom i C obb, Cari Baxter, RuthAnn Hogue, Patty King, David Kovacs, Dewald, Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Angela Mull, Timothy Tait, Kelly Wendel Greg Zemeida. Nickelle Kastein, Mike Logan, Jess Rankin, Shane Siren. SPORTS REPORTERS: Lisa Eskey, Dustin Krugel, Ron Matejko, Dawn Wagner. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff a s a whole. Board members include: DAVID STROW Editor GARIN GROFF Managing Editor CHRISTINA BAILEY Opinion Editor The Store Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room IS, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. St P a te h o n e N P ress u m b e r s Inform ation............. ..965-7572 N ew sroom .................965-2292 M agazine.................965-1695 A dvertising.............. .965-6555 C lassifieds.............. ...965-6735 O pin ion STATE P ress __________ ■■ - Wednesday, September 27,1995 Page 5 ' ASU perfect example of critic s theory I f T h o rs te in V e b le n w ere body in general. In Septem ber o f 1990 the State P ress alive today he would be thrilled reported that the average basketball GPA was 2.07. At that S teve to o b s e rv e A riz o n a S ta te rate, it w ill only take about 126 years for the basketball FO R SB ER G U niversity in action. This uni­ team’s academics to reflect those o f the university at large, Columnist and that will probably be due more to declining standards versity, you see, is the culmina­ tion o f a process that Veblen saw than athletic department improvement. In the 1990 issue, beginning in the early part of Jerry Kingston, the then-faculty athletic representative, this century. warned that the “competitive balance” could be placed in Veblen was an economist and jeopardy if standards at ASU were raised. So naturally they haven’t been raised very m uch. M oney is m uch more so c ia l c ritic w ho w ro te and tau g h t around the turn o f the important than academic achievement. As one T.A. explained to me, the university produces not century. He is often m entioned education but credit hours. The more students that can be in th e fo o tn o tes o f econom ic texts as the man who came up with the term “conspicuous squeezed into a class, the more credit hours that can be pro­ consum ption,” My interest in his writings began when 1 duced for the fixed cost of the professor, etc. That would was told that despite being considered one of the century’s explain the (supposedly) upper division ethics course I took better minds, he had never been able to get tenure as a pro­ last year. Shoehoming 300 students into a class with one fessor, This was due in large part to his habit of telling professor and one T.A. is a good way to save money. Of things as he saw them, not as the college presidents wanted course Veblen probably wouldn’t be able to suppress his to hear them. laughter at an upper division philosophy course that required His book H igher L earning in A m erica, published in no written work, since there wasn’t enough staff to grade it. 1918, o u tlin e d a com ing sea o f change in education. ASU is apparently a Research 1 school that hopes the ethical Appropriately enough it was subtitled A M emorandum on dilemmas its graduates face will not be tqo tough. the Conduct o f U niversities by Businessmen. Veblen fore­ Sadly enough, the drive for money that Veblen foresaw saw the end o f an era, the on the part o f school offi­ replacem ent o f the values cials has infected the stu­ o f scholarship with the val­ dent body as well. A t one A to n e tim e a large proportion o f people u es o f b u sin e ss. M o n ey tim e a large proportion o f would become an end unto went on to higher education because they people w ent on to higher e d u c a tio n b e c a u se they itself, and schools would wanted to learn. In this day andqge it become more like factories w anted to learn. In this day seems th a t m ost people go because they than families. He predicted and age it seems that most m any o f the c o m p la in ts fe e l they have to in order to m ake money. people go because they feel c u rre n tly b e in g h e a rd th ey h a ve to in o rd e r to m ake m oney. C lasses are about major universities. packed with students who, Veblen’s warnings were dismissed by most o f the mainstream education establish­ though bright and capable o f college level work, really ment. For example, he had predicted that schools would don’t have any great interest in what they are studying. soon be lowering their academic standards for athletes, They lack the intellectual Curiosity and enthusiasm for since athletics could rake in big money and it was money, learning that has traditionally made university level teach­ not scholarship, that school officials would value. Who had ing such a joy. Professors are increasingly faced with rooms heard of such a preposterous thing? full of bored, disinterested and sometimes downright sullen The ASU catalog states that athletics were begun at ASU students who, having little interest in the subject, expect the as a way to make money. Not as a way to foster “ student prof to turn class into an entertainment experience. For most of these students the university is just a big job athletes” or “sound minds and bodies,” but as a way to training program, less a place to pursue an education than a make money, period. Veblen would chuckle at the academic history o f the place to purchase a degree. Maybe, one day, the university will be for those seeking ASU basketball team. In October o f 1981 it was reported in the S ta te P ress that the average GPA for the basketball enlightenment, not dollars. team was 2.0 and that special assistance to athletes would attem pt to raise it to the approximate 3.0 of the student Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history. State Press unfair in its portrayal of Greek system In resp o n se to T u e s d a y ’s “W hat is up w ith th a t? ” colum n, w ritten by C hristina Bailey, I m ust say that I disagree w ith her outlook. It is imperative that one know all the facts before they “run­ neth off at tiie mouth,” especially when the overflow reaches the mass population of America’s fifth-largest university. Far be it for an adult male to choose to belong to a Greek organization in college. A t this point in time, you run the risk o f being labeled as an individual who is a blood-thirsty animal, driven only by the quest for beer. This is simply not the case. With more than 3,000 people involved in the wellgoverned and highly-regulated Greek life on this campus, you cannot and should not take the actions o f a few individ­ uals and brand a large portion o f the student population with the same label. In both instances the actions o f the individuals were wrong, and with that I do agree. One must take into account that there are also about 100 members in each o f the organi­ zations that you have named. W hat about the people that were not involved in this behavior? Is it fair for those that abide by the regulations of this institution to come under fire for those that do not? So often the Greeks on this campus are thrown into the spotlight for negative things, The media, including the State Press, takes pleasure in portraying Greeks as those o f years past. M$. Bailey, what do you really know about Greek Organizations besides the myths and stereotypes that you help to perpetuate? L e W e r* H H e z J ih r I can attest to the fact that it is like getting “blood from a rock” to have the State Press cover a Greek event. Where was all the hype when Greeks were one of the main sup­ porters for AIDS Awareness W eek? Where was the hype when we collectively donated more than $300,000 to chari­ ty in the last three years? Where was the coverage when more than 300 Greek students went out Valley wide as par­ ticipants in the Christmas in April community service pro­ ject for the last two years? Or for “Into The Streets” partici­ pation, or being virtually the only participants in ASU’s Homecoming event, or staging self-defense classes that are open to die public? The list goes on and on. I f Bailey chooses to lump all individuals into groups based on the actions o f a few , that would mean that the entire population housed in residence halls, for example, would be a group o f pot-smoking, paraphemalia-wielding, underage drinkers. That is not the case. As a journalist, and as a paper, you have a responsibility to report the events o f this campus for the student popula­ tion. That does not give you the right to target one group of individuals and continually cover diem with a tabloid-style slant. If one wants to discuss those things that are “ unac­ ceptable,” let’s start with “yellow journalism Sean Rankine Senior Sociology E -m ail: S T P R E S S @ A S U .E D U Problems can be solved by solutions) not condemnation I’m writing in reference to Tina Holder’s column in M onday’s State P ress. She claims that no one cares about important issues and that no one is will­ ing to act unless they themselves are the Ones who are suffering. This criticism is both prejudiced and unwarranted. Her prejudice is obvious in the phrase “everyone wants to stay in their lily-white castles.” Yes, I’m Caucasian, a member of the majority ethnic group. Am) I ’m as proud of my heritage as Tina is of hers. Yes, some Caucasians are bigots, but apparently so are som e N ative A m ericans. I ’ll use T ina’s own argument against her — don’t brand me as a selfish racist simply because of the color of my skin. A perfect work), would have no prejudice, no vio­ lence, no hunger. A less than perfect world would have more man enough people dedicated to justice to overcom e any d efects. H ow ever, the se rio u sly flawed world we actually five in cannot be made per­ fect. Although a lot o f people do what they can to alleviate the m isery o f others, injustice in all itS! forms still exists, and probably will continue to exist to some degree despite people’s best efforts: I ’m concerned about m any global problem s: domestic violence, famine in the Third World, Oizone and ra in fo rest d ep letio n , d isappearing political activists, war and epidemic diseases, to name a few. On a more personal level I’m faced with other prob­ lems: rising tuition, diminishing financial aid, class scheduling conflicts, admission to graduate school and homesickness. O f these two lists, one seems hor­ rifyingly trivial when compared to the other. But this is the “real” world. W e all have to deal with prob­ lems of varying magnitude, from inconsequential to life-threatening. We cannot, as individuals, remake the w orld, but every actio n we take can m ake a degree o f difference. I m ay n o t choose m ilitan t activ ism , but that doesn’t mean that I’m not trying to ease some of the troubles that confront me on a daily basis. I may not c h o o se to b e in v o lv e d in the fig h t fo r N ativ e A m erican rights, but that doesn’t m ean that I’m unaware of the problem or unconcerned about it. I do what I can with the resources I have, but I have my own priorities and methods for achieving my goals. It’s unfair to assume that people don’t want to get involved or don’t care just because they have made different choices. By this point, anyone who’s read Tina’s columns knows that Native Americans have suffered injus­ tices, that many are plagued by economic hardship, prejudice and a host o f other problem s. Now it’s time to tell people what they can do, who they can contact, what support they can offer. If she wants the ASU community to “do something” about issues that . are important to her, she should offer specific ideas for actio*. She should be • leader, not merely a sto­ ryteller. But most o f all, d ie needs to spend less time condemning people who don’t share h er priorities. ’ *- “ ‘ " Ì Julie Driver Junior Asian Languages uotaSCes. . . Q: Life is like an overlong drama through which we sit being nagged by the vague memories o f having read the reviews. ■ John Updike State Press Wednesday September 27, 1995 Page 6 P olice R eport ARIIOHA ITATI UIITEIITTT A SU police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday: • Someone damaged the Palo Verde East elevator. • An unknown man attempted to rob a woman who was walking on Orange Street. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for loitering at 51 E. Tenth St. > Som eone broke into a vending m achine a t C ow den Family Resources and stole $80. • S om eone b ro k e in to a v e n d in g m a c h in e in the Anthropology Building and stole $75. • Three bicycles were reported stolen. Tempe police reported the fo llo w in g incidents Tuesday: • A 25-year-old woman was arrested for disorderly conduct and assau lt a fte r b ein g in v o lv e d in a fig h t w ith her boyfriend at the Q-N-BreW, 3400 S. Mill Ave. She was upset with him because she thopght he was Seeing another woman so she threw a glass at him . The fight i#oVed out­ side, where shë then pushed h u boyfriend/hit hfin on the arm and punched him in the head. ^ SÊ È & • A 19-year-old woman was arrfsted for assault after biting her live-in boyfriend’s arm, scratching his neck-and threat­ ening to stab him with a 7-inch kitchen knife.; -A. • A 19-year-old mart was arrested for possessioif erf marijuanarilnd possession o f drug paraphernalia, aftibr police found a small baggie containing a green leafy "substance in the door o f his truck. A search o f his poCfcetsifrevealed rolling papers. • A 21-year-old man was arrested for thfft after stealing two cans of carburetor cleaner from his workplace. 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M I L L A V E . • 9 6 6 - 2 0 2 0 2 f o r i any drink till 10pm Ige-cuttfng alternative dance music 75< drinks alt night GILD RIVERORSINO RND HZON RADIOPRESENT O cto b er 14,1995 TH EBO O EH NS•TH ESAM PLES TtieFreddijJonesBand• SonnyLandreTh Gates O pen at N oon » Tickets o n Sale Now at Ticketmaster Listen to KZON 101.5 FM for Details Page 8 St a t e P ress Wednesday, September 27,1995 U n d e r s t a n d in g t h e B ib le A Thursday Noon ASU B ible Study O P E N I N G S OON S le e p I n n h r is tia n S tu d e n ts F e llo w sh ip is sponsoring a w eekly B ible V - " study on Crucial Questions A bout the Christian Life. This semester we will look into the Gospel of John, the Epistles of John, and John’s book o f Revelation. Each fellowship will focus on a different question related to the Christian life. A irp o rt A c co m m o d a tio n s/F e a tu re s • Queen Rooms • Double Rooms • Non-Smoking Rooms • Connecting Rooms • Fax Machine • Copier • Free Cont. Breakfast • Hotel Spa • Outdoor Pool • Tour Bus Parking » Free Airport Shuttle • Handicap Accessible Rooms • Remote Control Cable TV with ESPN, CNN, HBO Speaker: Bill F reem an, M inistry o f the W ord Place: M U - T hursdays, 1 2 :40-1:30 P.M. Fall S em ester— A nsw ering L ife’s M ost Crucial Q uestions Room D a te Sept. 28 Oct. 5 12 19 F or S u b je c t Pima/218 Lapaz/223 Lapaz/223 GoldRoom/203 information about other regular -GATHERINGS FOR FELLOWSHIP DURING THE WEEK, PLEASE CALL CSF AT 921-7270 W hat Does I t M ean to be P erfect? What Is Sin? What Is it to A bide in Christ? What Is the Bible? A re a A ttra c tio n s A ll are welcome! B ring your own ‘brown bag’ lunch. - BEVERAGES & DESSERTS PROVIDED - - • Sky Harbor Airport - 2 miles • Arizona State University - 3 miles '• • Convention Center - 6 miles • Sun Devil Stadium - 3 miles • University of Phoenix --1 mile 2621 South 47th Place Phoenix, AZ 85034 (602) 967-7100 Fax: (602) 921-7400 (800) 631-3054 IE5 H H H 0 I ACURA| CAR SPECIALISTS Evo' IN D E P E N D E N T >C om plete P arts D epartm ent • FactoryTrained T echnicians to Y o u ? P eople W ho K now U se V aiv q ü n e t JUST ASK IKE TM ...Coming Boon To The\ s e r v ic e Fair P rices O ne-D ay S ervice on M ost R epairs $ 1 4 .9 5 O IL C H A N G E & O IL F IL T E R (Includes up to 4 quarts) Check Our Low Price on 15,000 & 30,000 Services 968-5989 TW O LOCATIONS TO SERV E YOU 9 5 4 -79 2 3 1820 E. APACHE BLVD. TEMPE One-way trips to ASU 3039 E. THOMAS RD. PHOENIX S o m e A c h ie v e B y L eaps and B o u n d s. . WE ACHIEVE BY LEAPING BOUNDARIES. A t C isc o S ystem s , m a k in g respectable progress isn ’t g o o d e n o u g h . W e always g o BEYOND THE EXPECTED, ALWAYS IN THE DIRECTION OF WIDE OPEN POSSIBILITIES. THAT’S HOW w e ’ve MANAGED TO LEAP SO MANY BOUNDARIES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF HARDWARE, SOFTWARE, AND CUSTOMIZED INTERNETWORKING PRODUCTS. VERY SOON, VIRTUALLY EVERY INDUSTRY WILL ' RELY UPON INTERNETWORKING. THAT MEANS THEY WILL RELY UPON ClSCO. See us at our on campus Presentation , Wednesday, November 8. Cisco Systems representatives will also be interviewing on campus Thursday, November 9 for the following position: • B uyer/ P lanner W hat d o e s rr take t o p e r f o r m at t h is l e v e l ? P e o p l e w h o a r e irrefutably t h e BEST AT WHAT THEY DO. TECHNOLOGISTS AND STRATEGISTS OF THE HIGHEST ORDER. AND WHAT HAPPENS WHEN SO MUCH TALENT COMES TOGETHER IN ONE COMPANY? A LOT OF MILESTONES. Check with the Career Placement Center for a detailed listing of positions and other dates we will be on campus. A LOT OF SUCCESS. W e BELIEVE IN BEING THE BEST. ClSCO IS AN EXCITING, PROGRESSIVE COMPANY. WE SEE A CHALLENGE AS SOMETHING TO AIM FOR— -THEN SURPASS. OUR PEOPLE NOT ONLY USE THE LATEST TECHNOLOGY— THEY CREATE IT. WE BRING TOGETHER EXPERTS FROM DIVERSE LIFE EXPERIENCES AND OFFER THE IDEAL ENVIRONMENT FOR THEM TO REFINE THEIR TALENTS, PERFECT THEIR SKILLS AND PROMOTE THEIR STRENGTHS. If unable to arrange an interview w ith us, please fax your resume to (800) 818-9202, Attn: Human Resources. E-mail address: collegeccisco.com. No phone calls, please. EOE. A “COMPANY” DIDN’T MAKE US SUCCESSFUL— PEOPLE DID. For further information on job descriptions and qualifications, preview our home page on the Vforld Wide Web at: http://www.cisco.coin/public/einplayiiient.iitinl C i y n S ystems , I n c is th e le adin g global supplier o f enterprise n etw o rk s , in c l u d in g ro u ter s, LAN so ft w a r e . ( C isc o and ATM s w it c h e s , d ia l - u p a c c e ss servers a n d n e t w o r k m a n a g e m e n t T h ese p r o d u c t s , in t e g r a t e d by t h e C isc o I n t e r n e t w o r k O perating S ystem IOS™) u n k h ea d q u a r ter ed in LANs, WANs.a n d IBM n e t w o r k s . C isc o is is t r a d e d u n d e r t h e NASDAQ sym bol CSCO. g eo g raph ically dispersed Sa n J o se, CA a n d E 11 * I I V f i l l Y Wednesday, September 27, 1995 St a t e P ress POTHER’S BOOKSTORE Page 9 Jobless TRW workers shout down Sym ington "YOUR COLLEGE BOOKSTORE" • S tu d y A id s >L a b B o o k s >B a c k p a c k s •S c h o o l S u p p lie s >J a c k e t s & C h i l d r e n ’s W e a r _F a c u l t y S ta ff B y C ody V. A ycock State P ress 1G r e e k I t e m s 1S w e a t s h i r t s 1T - S h i r t s 1C a p s 1S h o r t s D is c o u n t w it h v a lid I .D , Open 7 days a week 6 2 5 E. Apache 8 6 7 -5 4 4 5 SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Hound trip from Phoenix CABO SAN L U C A S ........272 M AZATLAN .................. 300 H O N O LU LU ..................357 DES M O IN ES....... ...... .198 KANSAS CITY....„......... 113 SEATTLE....... . . . . . . . . . . 2 0 2 SAN FR AN CISCO ...... ...138 DENVER.......... ................ 98 ST. LO U IS ......................208 C A N C Ú N ...................... 356 PUERTO VALLARTA.....272 V A N C O U V E R ... .......... 198 COLORADO SPRINGS .......98 SALT LAKE C IT Y ............128 O M A H A ........................106 P O R T LA N D .................. .196 INDIANAPOLIS. ........ .198 CH IC A G O .............L........188 Other Cities Available MILL AVENUE TRAVEL 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 D isc o u n ts A lso A v a ila b le T o Faculty & Staff Restrictions Apply. Subject tq Availability. by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS DOWN one - 26 Removes 29 Drain of energy 30 Inlaid art 32 USC team 34 Interstice 35 Bowling place 36 Enterprise officer 38 Actors’ goals 39 Kitchen knife 40 C ease 41 Disorder Stäte P ress 1 Make a ball out of 2 Cleared 3 Straight 4 Krazy — 5 Aspirin's target 6 Actress Bassett 7 Feel bad for 8 Secret meeting 10 Chinese noodle flavor 11 Espy 16 Continu­ ally 18 Shaker fill f;r; Y e s te rd a y 's A n sw er 21 Davenport 28 Frightens 23 “College 29 Marquee Bowl” nam es question 30 The Say 24 Home of Hey Kid some 31 Boxes lemons 33 Army 25 Moon transport mission 37 Scenery 27 Calculate chewer 6 8 18 _ ■20 8■ 2 4 C AO G E COOL JEWEL 1 S. Mill A ve #121 I ind The Spaghetti, C o m p an y ) J 829-1127 / 29 . 32 ■ 33 35 ■ 30 " 31 ■ A 38 40 36 m 37 34 LIAD Q u ality A p artm en t H om es & T ow nhom es at A ffo rd ab le Prices G E T T H R O U G H F A S T E R & A S U E A S IE R Ask about our Special! Bring in or mention this ad and we'llwaive $25 application fee. Furnished and Unfurnished Studios 450 sq. ft. and 600 sq. ft. 1 Bedroom 522 sq. ft. and 760 sq. ft. T#S 0 OAT10N 2 B e d ro o m 740 sq. ft. a n d 800 sq. ft. A d van tagll 2 Bedroom / 2 Bath 1000 sq. ft. PU XO G FK J E University Properties G RAD U ATE B Y D E S IG N ini II MMl'lNll lltflimiliilliiiftfi Vr'ai '■ifflfrmiiftliTlVi ii ■■M*.taftYgjiY IIII! iH.n mi..li» n.mm.u.i,.. 44 9-27 C A Live Next ToCampus ^ 919 E. Lem on St. Tem pe, AZ 85281 602-966-9000 “ X I O L Every Wed. & Thurs. 2-3 p.m . Student Services Amphitheater C A SU BLOCKBUSTER EVENT CRYPTOQUOTE XUTM F Toe Rings t Ankle Bracelets-” - ' Nose Rings (Fake Nose Rings) Hoops, Cuffs, Studs a nd Lots o f Single Earrings 19 Ê ■ ■ [28■ ■ 23 22 25 ■ O ne letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for th e three L's, X for th e tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e len g th and form ation of th e words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different. LI JR Z I N F O R M A T IO N S E S S IO N 16 , ■ DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W 9-27 JE W E L " ,3 12 Sat 9-5 C O O L It T f 17 9 6 6 -5 4 6 2 M-Th 9-8 Fri 9-6 AT THE 5 14 0 Humons Hair Studio MEASURE YOUR TOE 3 . University 0roomi 4 9 NW CORN ER OF FOREST & UN VERSITY This coupon is good fo r one free copy of CROSSWORD 1 Noted TV bandleader 5 Divide 9 La Scala songs 11 Less bananas 12 “Divine Comedy” author 13 Miss — ot the Muppets 14 Purpose 15 Oklahoma team 17 Field worker 19 Permit 20 O'Neill Création 21 Used a bench 22 Slowly, in music 24 Manx, lor An angry crowd of more than 500 people disrupted Gov. Fife Symington last night at a Mesa meeting to dis­ cuss East Valley issues. , . Employees of TRW, the world’s second-largest manu­ facturer of driver- and passenger-side air bags, shouted questions and talked over the governor as he tried to address the crowd. Symington was able to answer a few direct questions; but left after 20 minutes, unable to quiet of disperse the group. The employees were protesting the 3 p.m. announce­ ment by Mesa city officials that they were temporarily closing part of the plant located southeast of Tempe. The plant’s more than 1,600 employees were out of work as of Tuesday. City officials decided to close the plant because of recent explosions at the facility, said Steve Reding, who works in the accounting department at the plant. Mesa offi­ cials could not be reached for comment. “I have to try and find a way to feed my four children,” said Donald Wilson, a production worker who has worked at the plant for 2 1/2 years. Symington vowed to help resolve the disputes between Mesa officials and TRW management, but said the dispute is between the City of Mesa and the plant, not the state. “I will do everything I can to help you,” he said. “You have my word on it. My purpose is to see 1,600 people go back to work.” Em ployees said the plant “goes above and beyond” what is required to ensure their safety. “We feel safer at work than we do on the streets of the city. “ said TRW employee Dan Noakcs. “The safety features are absolutely tremendous.” Reding added. “Everything works exactly the way it is supposed to.” ■ ■ ■ TRW supplies airbags to Ford, Chrysler and General Motors. Employees are hopeful the economic impact of the closure will force officials to reopen the plant. “This is going to have a national impact,” Reding said. Azide and iron oxide, two highly explosive chemicals used in the manufacturing of air bags, have been the cause of the recent explosions at the facility, said a member of TRW ’s emergency response team who asked not to be identified for personal reasons. The chemicals cause the air bag to expand on impact. Employees blame recent bad publicity about the explo­ sions and “irresponsible journalism” for the city’s decision to close the plant. “Every time we have an explosion, the media comes in and dogs us,” Reding said. He added that journalists only focus on the explosion at the plant, but when they are asked to look at the safety measures in place they are “not interested.” Employees plan to hold additional rallies tomorrow, but are optimistic the plant will not stay closed. “Personally, I don’t think the plant will be closed more than a day,” Reding said, adding that he was hopeful the national economic impact of the closure will force officials to reopen the facility. Q AR IO F LU P IJ M FG AR.— H AU G H A CA G RO G F K I O X Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE REASON SOME OF US FIND IT DIFFICULT TO THINK IS THAT WE HAVEN'T HAD ANY PREVIOUS EXPERIENCE.— SOURCE UNKNOWN O tS flS by King fM tu rs s Syndicate. Inc. Studios $350 to $450 1 Bedroom $395 to $595 2 Bedroom $495 to $695 2 Bedroom 2 Bath, Townhomes / Flats Free Utilities $725 Unfurnished $825 Furnished Pool &Laundry on Each Property Features •Dishwasher «Microwave Oven •Frost-Free Refrigerator »Plush Carpet •Vinyl Flooring «Self-Cleaning Oven m J l m e a t ASU Man»: Telephone Address: Workshop Fee: $29(early*), $39(late) * Postmarked by September 30 C U T T IN G -E D G E L E A R N IN G G R A D U A T E B Y D E S IG N P.0. Box847, T e rm AZ 85280 Payment Check □ Cash □ 804-1098 Com ics Page 10 Sta te P ress Wednesday, September 27,1995 '[nCrAtitN HtXed H c L n v ite Á t you N €€P ) U/6CL . ACTMUy, M E? l lNCe af OOR Ca r . ! H ATE P U B L IC TRANSfOmnOti. ß 9 w w . - s I a 'rune '*£A¿9 / 7 ^ 7 7 1 1 By Leigh Rubin ALWAYS WATCH •Vouf? \ 1- B® RU B ES STEP! 7 C a lv in and H o b b e s by Bill Watterson AND SO, AFTER. A THREE MINUTE DOWNPOUR, HE BECAME ludicrously ATTIRED FOR THE REST OF THE DAX. Safety Awareness Week gets off to a bad start on the plantation. D o o n e s b u ry BY GARRY TRUDEAU mPRENcrr G a N 6 T O ter THeSHZRIFPTAKe YOU, PAP1NOm y ! i eorevewcNE PUMPS?, TOTALLY y State PiessINtemet pim > ! Green pieces D rew A quilina O n the W orld W id e W eb http://asp in .asu .ed u /provider/ StatePress/ HDSBA RLI5I5KR CHECK HI Harmed Hrmlhood'I^^H ofOttimiandNorthernArizona m fta n n e d P a n e n tt Professor Smith tan speak seven languages. Now he's fluent in life insurante. Today, every educator should get an education in life insurance. Call th e T IM Life Insurance Planning Center. W eekdays, SAM to 8PM, E.S.T. 1800223-1200 Dept. 726 This offer is available to faculty, staff, administrators and their spouses. SM S $ 5 ß 0 o ff your n e x t purchase d ffà& éìoexl One check per customer, placm. G e t t h e f a c t s ! C a ll o a r 2 4 - h o u r I n f o r m a t i o n L in e a t 2 7 7 - 7 7 2 2 Kwi3ra}f»Hill£iä AH hhhìmum« mm§JgV&rlW m Wtofmemonon oonaams Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association 730 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017-3206 Ensuring the fu tu re fo r those who shape it.“ Sp o rts Page 11 Wednesday, September 27,1995 State P ress Sun Devils can only hope to contain Johnson Snyder says he will alternate coverages on Trojan receiver By D ustin Krugel State P ress 1 The Sun Devil football team w on’t be able to stop USC’s Heisman Trophy candidate Keyshawn Johnson Saturday when ASU faces No. 5 USC, but can only hope to contain the lanky wide receiver, said Coach Bruce Snyder. “W e w o n ’t stop K eyshaw n,” Snyder said Tuesday. “We are just trying to limit what he does, trying to keep him under control. He gets his stuff. That’s what he does.” A SU w ill be w ith o u t its top c o v e r c o rn e r, se n io r M arcu s S o w ard , th is S atu rd ay w hile Soward is recovers from a nagging groin injury. Soward, who did not dress last week, has missed two of ASU’s first four games and played spar­ ingly in the other two. Snyder said redshirt freshman comer Lamont Morgan will see his first significant play­ ing time of the year and could even start. Morgan has good size at the comer position (6-foot, 192 pounds) and may match up well against the 6-foot, 4-inch Johnson. “Lamont Morgan has earned the right to play more,” Snyder said. “He’s practiced well for a couple of weeks. He’s earned that right. I wish 1 would have played him more this last game.” . Snyder said instead of playing one man exclusively te if! • on Johnson, he will mix up the coverages. “You can’t double him all the time, otherwise the rest Dianne R. Bartsch/State Press of the team will kill you,” Snyder said. “You’ve got to Sophomore right comerback Jason Simmons pummels Oregon State quarterback Don Shanklin during ASU’s 20-11 win last change it up — try to play some tendencies and take Saturday. Simmons and the rest of the ASU secondary are gearing up for USC’s star wideout Keyshawn Johnson, on track to. som e c a lc u la te d ris k s ... T urn to Football, pace i 3. be a Heisman Trophy candidate this year. H ill I ■ U S C ’s R o b in s LOS A N G E L E S (A P ) — John R obinson had pro m ised S outhern C al would be a national power again. T ru e to h is w o rd , the T ro ja n s are rank ed No. 5. Just w here it ’s leading, however, Robinson can’t say. “If (the team) stays the same, it proba­ bly will play in the Cotton Bowl or the Holiday B ow l,” he said Tuesday. “If it continues to im prove...” Asked if that meant USC isn’t a Rose Bowl quality team , he said: “I doubt it. It’s early. ... We have too many emerging players not to feel that way. They’re not veterans.” Robinson pointed out his quarterbacks, Brad O tton and Kyle W achholtz, have lim ited experience. He then ticked off some other positions where the Trojans o n : T r o ja n s n have new players. “1 felt all along that the potential has been very good,” he said. “Proving it is som ething else again. People say, ‘Oh, you won again, this is how good you are.’ I don’t buy that.” He said he docs like the players’ atti­ tude. “I think they ju st want to p lay,” he said. “My firsi experience with that here was in 1972, when I thought, ‘Hey, these guys just like to play the game.’” Robinson was offensive coordinator John M cK ay’s staff that year, and the Trojans won the national title. Robinson went on to become the USC head coach from 1976 to 1982, then left to coach the Los Angeles Rams, finally coming back to the Trojans in 1993. o t y e t R o s e B This fall, the Trojans are 3-0 after a 3110 win over Arizona in their Pacific-10 opener. USC routed a pair of overmatched opponents in its first two games, beating San Jose State 45-7 and Houston 45-10. “T h a t w as a g o o d gam e fo r u s ,” R o b in so n sa id o f S a tu rd a y ’s w in at Tucson, Ariz.- “That was our first test of the season and we passed. Now we can look forward to a lot of others.” The Trojans will be heavily favored in each o f their next three games, all in the conference. They play Arizona State on S a tu rd a y at th e C o lise u m , th en face C a lifo rn ia an d W a sh in g to n S ta te . Afterward, USC begins a tough stretch, playing at Notre Dame and Washington. T hen it’s hom e against Stanford and a game at Oregon State before closing out o w l c a lib e r against UCLA. Robinson, however, doesn’t believe the Trojans have clear sailing until they play Notre Dame. “It’s clear we can be beaten by any one of the other three teams,” he said. “I don’t think anybody even has to make that case. ... Detroit beat San Francisco last night.” Robinson has continued to rotate quar­ terbacks, with Wachholtz upstaging starter Otton against Arizona. Wachholtz threw J o hn son three touchdown passes and completed 8 of 9 for 138 yards. “I ’m not g ettin g a lo t o f q u estio n s about it,” Robinson said o f the job-shar­ ing. “ I think everybody’s com fortable with it now.” ASU volleyball team’s recent skid ¡drops it to No. 16 in national polls leads the Pac-10 in kills (3.97 per game) and service aces (0.50 per game). She is sixth in overall hitting percentage Losing to a pair o f Pac-10 teams last weekend didn’t at .307. only d rop A S U ’s re c o rd to 7-2 (1-2 P a c -10), it also Freshman setter Jo ly n n F aatu lu is third in assists at dropped its national ranking. 12.29 p e r gam e w h ile The Sun D evils were dropped five sophom ore o u tsid e h itte r slots from last w eek in the V olleyball T e rri Cox is second in digs M agazine national poll to 16th. This C h r is t in e with 3.81 per game. drop brings ASU close to the No. 18 GARNER/ASU’s senior • A fte r u n d e rg o in g outside hitter currently ranking projected in the preseason. ASU knee surgery three w eeks leads the Pac-10 in kills .Coach Patti Snyder-Park said the polls k «f l u ago, junior middle blocker have no effect on the team ’s spirits. A ft* per game (3.97) and aces K irstin M attso n played in (.50). "It’s all publicity,” she said. “It gives h er firs t gam e S a tu rd a y an idea for the people in town and at ag a in st the H u sk ies. She ASU of the strength of .the team.” had five kills and four block NOTES: assists in her return. • Seven Pac-10 teams are currently ranked in the top 20 Snyder-Park said she was generally satisfied with her nationally, the most of any Division I conference. While debut performance. ASU is ranked sixth in the Pac-10, it leads the conference “She fatigued at the tail-end and she d id n ’t do that in team digs per game with 17.82. much offensively, but we probably didn’t give her enough Individually, senior outside hitter Christine G arner B y D aw n W agner State P ress ». rW T urn to Volleyball, page 13. Mark Kram w /SM * Prp M Senior captain Holly Sonea (12) and freshman Jolynn Faatulu go up fo r a block against the W ashington Huskies last Friday. The No. 16 Sun D evil volleyball team next plays C alifornia Friday at the Harmon Arena in Berkeley. Page 12 St a t e P ress Wednesday, September 27,1995 | A S l FOOTBALL FANS; IT S WEEK FIVE Septewsber/O ctober As a reminder, the State Press sports d e p a rt mcnt is ^poitsoriiigfhe weekly *W CK IT AND . W IN ” contest for ASU football games. Last week’s lucky winner was sophomore political science major Leo Altman. To win, contestants must correctly predict the winner and final score of the ASU football games on Saturday. The Sun Devils’ next game is Saturday against the No. 5 USC Trojans in Los A ngeles. ASU is cu rren tly a 20-poinit underdog to the Men o f Troy. Do you have the guts to pick the Sun Devils in an upset? The weekly w inner receives: an ASU cap courtesy of The Cap. Co. on 6th and Mill, an autographed Jake Plummer poster schedule of c o u rte sy o f A SU a th le tic s, a h e a d sh o t in Monday’s State Press sports Section, an ASU sports calendar and a bonus prize! If none o f the contestants in a given week predict the exact score, then the winner will be determined by which contestant comes closest. In the event o f a tie, the w inner w ill be drawn out of a hat. Entries m ust be either faxed to 602-9658484, “A ttn: S ports E ditor,” or dropped off at the State Press o ffices in the basem ent o f Matthew’s Center. Valid entries should include full name, student #, year in school, major and daytime plume # where you may be reached. Winners will be contacted the Sunday after the game. ^ gsgj The entry deadline each week is Thursday a t 5 p.m . Entries received after the deadline will not be considered. Telephoning the State Press is not a valid form of entryJ Monday Tuesday Today Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 2 3 27 28 29 30 1 Pick hand WINCONTEST WINNER ANNOUNCED Football use Pick hand WINCONTEST DEADLINE 5 P.M. LA . C oliseum 4 p .m . ABC TV W om en’s V olleyball Calhornu Stanford Harmon abena Maples Paviluon 7:30 p.m. 7 P.M. Grand Canyon Invitational Cross C ountry . □ H om e D Phoenix 10 a.m. A ll t im e s a r e A r iz o n a t im e s . A w ay B a lb o a Cafe B e d S p in s W E D N E S D A Y S E P T E M B E R 2 7 th 10pm $ 1 .0 0 C u e rv o BedSpins. . .D o n 't Go H o m e W ith o u t T h em ! NOTE: AH ASU faculty and staff mem­ bers are also encouraged to join the coldest 1/1 P R IC E HAPPY HOUR ANY DRINK ANY APPETIZER4-7m ,200 COORS LIGHT BOTTLES 7-CLOSE A — y DAM GOOD DRINKS... DAM COOP FOOD... DAM GOOD TIME W ho Needs; The Weekend To Unw ind!?! I University □ Maloney's 1001 E.8TH STREET TEMPE 350-9888 ■ Terrace L a d ie s p 8th Street I . 3 CC • >. < 0 CO rnifflr Apache « IflP B R B IN P H C S WEDNESDWS M DOLLAR PITCHERS 9pm -11:30pm DOMESTIC 48oz. PITCHERS 715 SOUTH McCLINTOCK • TEMPE, AZ 85281 « 966-1911 • Booking Info 784-2206 Live Music Upstairs Tonight— THE STUMBLES N ig h t (Nice Girls Shoot Pool, Too!) Tuesdays 7pm-1am Pool Only S4/hour/table fo r Ladies 15oz Drafts Only S I.50 Ball Breakers Only S2.00 And For The Boy Groupies... Felt Lickers Only S2.00! W e d n e s d a y N ig h t s Sake Bom ber Barrage 15oz Cells Raspberry and Ozeki Sake: $3.00 (Don't Laugh! It's Good!) 1/2 Gal Pitcher Cells Raspberry and 4 Shots Sake: $10.00 And W hen The Gong Sounds. .. BANZAI!!! St a t e Football * 1 Ü W nW S m TH E B E S T W I P H M Crf V R IB S IN i A M E R IC A ! H w J i c a C ontinued from page 11. 1 Wr K r s RESTAURANT & SPORTS LOUNGE 1 O u r a w a rd -w in n in g m e s q u ite -b ro ile d rib s w e re n a m e d b "B EST RIBS IN TH E U S A ” b b y th e ju d g es a t th e 1986 N a tio n a l Rib C o o k-O fF . b H A L F R A C K : $ 1 0 .9 5 f u l l r a c k : $ 1 4 .9 5 b Served with ourfamous Texas Sweet Sauce (Judged best sauce in America) and our Soup ana Salad bar (as served at rleximfflians). k •P Q U C K S C ontinued from page 11. ! b 1 RESTAURANT* SPORTS LOUNGE 1 (W ith this coupon. Expires 10/3/95) I ! ^ ,HoLAtUjSw»v: Phoenix-lanpe/ASU Rural Road at Apache Bhd.*968-3451 | 1 b ■ b Take Som e Home! ü 1^ RIBS TO GO b f W e’ll do both (single and double coverage).” m ay h a v e , b een so p h o m o re d e fe n siv e ta c k le Ja so n C raw ford M VP Reyrttflds, b u t he left the gam e early because o f ankle; After reviewing film from last.¿Saturday's 20-11 victory sprain. over Oregon State, Snyder said sophomore defensive end “Jason started out so fast that he got hurt,” he said. “He M alchi C ra w fo rd w as played very well when he was in there.” named defensive MVP. In ju ry update “Malchi’s graded out the On this week’s injury front, the L amont highest he’s ever graded,” Sun Devils will be without sophomore M o r g a n /A S U ’s redSnyder said. “He w as the left guard Kyle Murphy for at least three shirt freshman has good d e fe n siv e p la y e r o f the to four weeks. Murphy sprained his left size for a co rn er at 6gam e, so th at w as a real knee in the OSU game, Redshirt-freshfo o t, 192 p o u n d s. He good performance.” man Mike Barnes will fill that position, w ill see sig n ific a n t S n y d er said C raw fo rd S n y d e r Said, a d d in g th a t ju n io r P at action against USC and finished with seven tackles, Thompson may slide over from his right will possibly square off three of them for losses. guard position. with Keyshawn Johnson. “His technique improved Reynolds and junior defensive and his effort, sprinting to tackle Shawn Swayda are day to day with the ball,” Snyder said. ankle sprains. However, both tweaked their ankles in prac­ Senior defensive lineman Mike Langridge also stood tice, Snyder said. out, Snyder said: “It looks like Jason has a much greater chance of playing “Langridge made a lot of plays as a backup,” he said of effectively than Shawn does right now,” Snyder said. “It’s Langridge, who played 40 snaps against the Beavers. been hurting Shawn a long time and he’s really frustrated. Snyder said the best start of any of the defensive linemen Injuries are the worst thing. They are so frustrating.” Volleyball b ! Page 13 Wednesday, September 27,1995 pr ess opportunities,” Snyder-Park said of Mattson. W hile the Sun Devils are generally healthy, they are still nursing a few injuries, Snyder-Park added. Freshman outside hitter M indi L arsen has been utilized as a back row specialist until she recovers from an abdom­ inal muscle pull. Faatulu is rehabilitating from ongoing knee and back problems. • Cox has adopted an Elliot Perry-esque look to her game. Her knee-high socks can been spotted anywhere on the court. To boost her game, Cox has also decorated her shoes with ASU stickers, and so far it seems to be work- in®'.Cox has posted 122 digs in 32 games this season, while last year she had 238 digs in 99 games. • Even though the two losses to th e H u sk ies and th e C o u g a rs la s t, w eekend w ere h ig h lig h ted by Sun Devil inconsistencies, the gam e statis­ tics appeared otherw ise. Cox had a se a so n -h ig h 30 d ig s a g a in st Washington and senior outside hitter Cox Christine Gam er had a season-high 27 kills against Washington and Washington State. Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The Stette Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation erfan advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721.. ANNO UNCEMENTS M O D E L SEA RCH Fashion 1 Miami's Phoenix o f­ fic e is now accepting photo subm issions for fashion print . m odels. Women S^9"-5'l 1", size 4-6. Men 6,0T-6*2'\ suit size 40R -42L . Send non-re­ turnable photo, name, sizes and phone to: Fashion 1/S ign a­ ture, 20 £ . U niversity suite 308, Tempe, AZ. 85281. NEED MONEY For college? Funds go unused every year. Computer Resources can help you. 1-800-887-071 ft. ONE ON ONE Championships! Shaquilie O'Neal vs.' Hakeem Olajuwon, Saturday, September 30, 6pm ., MU Cinema. $6 w/A SU id, $8 without. See it liv e froin the Taj Mahal in Atlantic City on state o f the ait equipm ent, on campus. Get your tickets at M UAB- 3rd floor, M U (965-6822), -and at the door w hile supply lasts. Presented to you by Network Event Theatre and MUAB. ¿ANNO UN CE­ MENTS MODELING Enter die Miss Arizona Model of the Year Pagent ■ No Experience Necessary ■ No Height Regtirement ■Ages |I3 -I7 ) & (18-23) ■Agents w ill be present 1994 Winner Kathleen Fleming signed with Elite WE BUY & SELL USED L E V rS ! EES JEAN ■ BUYER Call for Details 947-8245 • 1810 Scottsdale Rd (between Curry & McKellips) 5 minutes from ASUt Call Today 994-0680 • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. ANNOUNCE­ MENTS__________ hKfcfc F i n a n c i a l Aid! Over $6 billion in private sector grants & scholarships is now available. AM students are eli­ gible regardless o f grades, in­ come, cn* parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext., F59181. APARTMENTS 2 BD 1 BTH for rent, Rural & Apache area. Avail immed. Call John 968-5086 HOMES FOR RENT WALK TO A SU , rem odeled 3bd/2ba ' w /pool, tile floors.. S850/mo. Tim 894-0288. LO O K IN G TO RENT OR BUYAHOUSE? Let me help! My setvioe iS FRFF. anH saves vn u tim e . 1-5 Bedroom Rentals New and Resale Home Sale, ASHLEE BOYD: 917-0292 NEWHOMEINFORMATIONCENTER TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3B D /2B A , PRICE & U niv., w/d, micro, $775/m o. + utils. Avail, immed, Call 961-5272. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd 2ba , w/d, pool,; near ASU, 510 W, University, $635. 966-0987. RENTAL S H A R IN G _ _ ^ _ 1-2 PERSONS to share 3 bed/2+1/2 bath house; garage, pool. Call Nicole 438-1031; FEMALE STUDENT wanted to ■share 2bd 1 3/4 ba apt. C lose to A SU . $260/m onth 1/2 util 649-9857 RMTE TO share spacious 3bd twhse. Bslne/ McClintock. Ma­ ture fem ale prfrd. P ool, w/d $300 + 1 /2 util. Call 756-0560. RO O M S FOR RENT MARLBOURGHO PARK townhome, room for $350, loft for $325/ month + 1/3 util. & de­ posit. C all 874-1445 or lev. msg. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE WHY RENT when you can own. 3bd/3ba $81,000. Questa Vida. R ebecca Ponte,Rlty Ex 996-9910 B uy O f T he W BEAUTIFUL 2BD/2BA Condo in PPV1, w/d, dishwasher, etc. $700/m o, ly r net lease 7599642 or (602)397-6114. CHEAP RENT, L ive-in land­ lord to. execute housing duties;, rent/gert. upkeep. 415 -6 7 3 4338. FOR RENT Town house, com­ pletely furnished. 2 large master bedrooms/3 baths. $850/mo + $600 sec. deposit. 966-5809. eek Marlborough Park 3 bd, 2 car garage just N. of campus simply immaculate $119)600 _ B o b B u llo c k R e a l t y c x e c u t iv e s 998-2992 FURNITURE BED, KING Size, includes mat­ tress, box springs, and frame. $139. 922-8227. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! FURNITURE AUTOMOBILES OFFICE DESK $25 and chair $5 - black sofa $100 - zebra rug $40 - tv stand $10 - dorm size frig. $60 - bar chairs $15. 966-1102. PLYMOUTH LASER, 1991, fully loaded, automatic trans., incl. 3yr/30k mi warranty, a/c, radio, cass. John 483-9117, SOFA SET $295 , Queen bed $85, K ing $180, day bed $ 135, D inette $ 160, futon $180, Sleeper $265. 3513031. $CASH T0DAY$ I buy all used cars, trucks, mise, items. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Call A l 994-4369 TRY BUYING at public auc­ tion. See the Auction Advisory Newspaper at the M ill Avenue N ew s on M ill and 6th 9944512. M O |O R C Y C y S _ C O M P U T |W ^ IBM COMPUTER 486SX 129MB 2MB Ram 2 yrs old 12 inch color m oo included 3,1 W indows $800 o b o M ickey 964-6029 MAC SE, 1mb, excellent cond. Perfect for papers, databs, sprdshts. Set up for student. $325,468-2438, Clayton. MACINTOSH SE, lmeg o f ram, 20m eg HD, keyboard, & m ouse, must sell, $180 obo. 964-5248. ROCK GARDEN BPS N o t fo r th e n o rm a l) 50+ linas, chat, games, files! •**. \ 222-3000 AUTOMOBILES f 1983 VHTSÜBÍSHI Tredia, 4d at., a/c, am/fm 100K miles Runs great $1150 obo 431-Q588 88 CHEVY Spectrum, auto a/c p/s p/brakes radio 51,000 ml. Origjowner Musiseli 831-6635 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL $6 P E R H O U R O utgoing, energetic appoint­ ment setters for Universal Por­ traits, Call James or Carey, 4968Q29. $CRUISE SHIP hiring! Stud­ ents needed! $$$ + free travel(Caribbean, Europe; Hawaii!) Seasonal/permanent, no experi­ ence necessary. Guide. (919)929^4398 ext, c 1050. *$7/HR + CASH!* 1993 HONDA Elite Scooter red only 6 5 0 0 mi dependable well maintained $950 obo includes helmet/lock. Stef 970-1887. 1993 SUZUKI Katana 600 blck/prpl.E xlnt cond. Only 2500 miles, garage stored. Ask­ ing $4000 obo. Call B ill 4944611. BICYCLES 20" TREK 7 0 0 0 Alum mtn bike N ew cond $550 new mogal front shock $ 150 m es 945-3159 B IK E -D I AM O N D B A C K CRUISER, perfect for campusindestructable! Clayton 4682438, TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name, I specialize in quick departures. Most places worldwide. I also buy transfer­ able coupons/a wards, 968-7283 Set fun free appts., for health services. Friendly office, near ^ Fiesta Mall in M esa. E ves & Sat. or f/t. Join our team now ! Call 649-9580 anytime! 100 DOLLARS to keep home­ opathic journal for six weeks. Healthy people needed. Call 274-T340 M-F mornings only. A MEDICAL Office in S cot­ tsdale needs p/t front & back of­ fice person, will train. Good ad­ vancement potential. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste 108, Please apply in person. AIRPORT GIFT shop, cashier/sales pos avail, e v e hrs. 2:30-9pm. $6/start, Full, medi­ cal benefis. Gall Tim 244-9904. ANSWERING SERVICE 3pm10pm Mon-Fri, 9:30 am -1:30 pm Sat. Scottsdale 947-7351. ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTS­ MAN - P/T, requires ink draft­ ing, som e cad exp. helpful, must have exc. ref, near ASU call 967-1766 HELP W ANTED- ASSEMBLYING/ CLERICAL jobs avail, now. For info, send $3.00 & sase to CLJ, p.o. box 531, Chand., A g 852444)531. BEST P/T job for students/ sales reps wanted/ 38 yr old compa­ n y / e v e s and w eek en ds/ Set your ow n schedule $6/hr+ Training and transportation can be provided. John 649-8130. ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPER. \ Tempe, non-smoking office CYMA systems, two seminars account- *-j ing minimum. Experience in a/r, a/p, p/r helpful. Fax resume to 7 3 1-9014 or m ail to CCA p.o. box 25286, Tempe 85282. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED- HELP W ANTEDGENERAL PT. Must be available between 8am Sc 1pm MWF or TTH. Apply in person 712 S. C ol­ lege. IND. CONTRACTORS For Tribune newspaper, wrk afternoons/wknds delivering the Tribune. $300-600/mth. 898-' 6328. ;' LOCAL RADIO station hiring for temp., p/t research pos. Late afternoons, evenings, weekend. No selling involved, call 7316505, EOE. ON-SITE VIDEO is seeking pro­ duction specialist for videography, pre & post productions. Strong academ ic background desired. See career services or caM Betsy 967-5062. RECREATION 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. JOHNNY tsdale now pervisors; Sq. M all. 423-1505 DIRECTORY INFORMATION operator, 30 wpm, good area knowledge, all shifts, $6.50/hr start, 225 -9 6 6 1 . Metro One, 5025 E Washington #110. KENNEL NEEDS experienced office and kennel person. Vari­ able hours, references 9667379 Ask for Marilyn. LOOKING FOR motivated peo­ ple with professional ap­ pearance to help the environ­ ment. Ft/pt positions-Directors, supervisors, managers, sales reps. For more info or interview call Troy at 618-2572 or 9678001. P/T BILINGUAL (Spanish) per­ son to work w/devetopmentallv disabled infants St toddlers. Exp. pref. in early childhood developm ental d isab ilities. Call 431-9511. HELP WANTED* 2 ¡ Ü I¡ £ L —— CAMPUS CORNER ROCKETS -S cot­ hiring cashiers, su­ pm shift. Fashion Apply in person, MOBILE DJS needed. No exp. nec., will train. Must have out going personality, be depend­ able, & have trans. 894-0531. LANDSCAPING Sc painting. $5/hr., flexible hours. Call Car­ rie at 491-7495. ELECTRONIC MARKETING is looking fo r á f/t inside com ­ puter product marketing rep. Base salary $ 1700/m o. + bo­ nus. Call Jay Jablonski 9172961. LIFEGUARDS - ARIZONA Country Club. Opening$ for fu ll/pt. Work imm ediately through school year. 56TH St. & Thomas- Call Ron <§> 9477666. FRESH BLEND Sm oothie & Juice bar in (Scottsdale)- Now hiring (Morning) shifts. Fun & clean environment. Opp. for • advancement, ft/pt. $4.75-5.25. Call Tony 905-1580. ; G uaranteed Jo b Within 48 hours Great experience for business, comm., & liberal arts majors. 1660 S. Alma School, Suite 201 9:00-1:30 & 4:30-9:00pm Flex 25 tars/wk guaranteed hrly wage + bonus. Must have personality and be willing to use it: Work for advertising agency setting appointments for resort vacations. MANAGER Gumbys Pizza is seeking 2 managers. Experience necessary. Competitive salary & bonus plan. Call Todd GYMNASTICS INST ex^) A en­ thusiasm a must, wrk w/children 10-24 hrs/Wk 940-4041 65 5-9 80 3 leave message. HANDY MAN business needs helper prefer experience w/hand tools, painting, concrete work & tile. Pay POE 964-3088. RESEARCH OFFICE/ CONSTRUCTION paid Internship available im ­ mediately. Large growing com­ pany new to Phoenix has open­ ing for student of junior or sen­ ior level with previous work or . volunteer experience, desiré to : succeed, professional attitude, computer knowledge, arid ex cel lent com m uniCation ski 1Is. Duties include providing sup­ port to recruiting staff by assesing personnel needed Tor on1 going and upcoming construc­ tion projects, placing help wanted ads, radio ads, cable TV advertising, and other m edia sources, assisting in recruitment drives, screening eniplpymeat applications, conducting back­ ground check s, payroll, data entry, and customer service. Ex­ cellent opportunity for anyone looking fór general business management experience. Posi­ tion could become permanent. Bi-lingual, helpful. ÉOE. Send resume to: Contractors Labor Pool, Inc., Attri:Intern, 2411 W. Northern A ve Suite 105, Phx. AZ 85201 or Tax 995- PHOENIX ZOO Camel-ride attendant OctoberMay: 20-40hrs; theater exp. a plus. Work w eekends, h oli­ days, and w eekdays. $5.68/hr„ apply daily 9-4 at 4SS N Galvin Paikway. POSTAL JOBS $15.90/hr & benefits, .on the job training. For application & info call 818764-9016 ext 5180. • Hours 7:00 am to 4:00 pm STUDENT REP. Fast easy mon­ ey: motivated individual need­ ed to head up marketing project on cam pus. (8 0 0 ) 862-1982 ex t 60 » Full ASU Benefits • Salary: TUTORS NEEDED for autistic child, flex ib le hours, experi­ ence preferred, w ill train. $10$2Q/hour. 922-6234 Teresa. WANTED LEGAL messenger. $5.50/hour + $0.25/m ile. 2531155 no experience necessary. TH E SIGNS OF SUCCESS Starbucks coffee and Host Marriott are working together to bring the finest coffees in the w orld to the busiest airports in the world. Immediate open­ ings exist àt Sky Harbor Airport for people with a visible passion for coffee and custom er service. RECEIVE $25 With this coupon, new donors will receive $25 for their first donation!! (Call for New Donor Hours) If yo u b e lie v e yo u h ave th e o u tstan d in g q u a litie s req u ire d to jo in p u r te am - in c lu d in g custom er serv ic e /re ta il e x p e rie n c e - w e in v ite you to ... ...A pply In P er so n A t : H ost M a rriott Sky H arbor A irp o rt Term inal 3, W est End at Level 3 M onday - Friday • 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Starting wage is $ 5.0 5-5 .50/hr,.H ost M arriott is an.equal opportunity em ployer. foainted timeaW,NewDoras receive $30 for their f e t donation!! (SundaysOrty) 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 H o st Ma r r io t t N C M , Inc. M a k in g t h e d i f f e r e n c e The D ifference Is 'T he O utstanding Products" If every customer senice job you hear of sounds about as exciting as doing your laundry;.. G U A R . $6-8/hr., with a lucrative GOURMET FOODS bonus will earn you over $1000/m o . Excellent working conditions. C hildren 's E ducational M aterial O W e have permanent FT & PT telephone sales positions available M r. Peterson •: C a ll 8 9 4 -9 8 16 T o d a y ! 894-2322 2020 S. Mill, Sujte 200 Tempe, AZ 85282 Office located in Tempe n O R N O W H IR IN G ! J f ir W v I i W Z X H - PACKAGEHANUBtS -HELP WANTED- UnOADmYPKXAOESYSmÊ All positions Apps accepted 10-5 PER HOUR. INOUUDülG TUIT Oil ASSISTANCE I d 945-4567 OlDTOWN TORTILLA FACTORY i . JPS: PER WEEK PER,VAN ENT PA R T TIME P0SITl0 t : he r u l e s , n o viel ke n d s W ANTED O P P O R T U N IT IE S notivated ASU students to irket new products to the • emx market. Call today for 804 tm ar| RESEARCH INFORMATION i£ ¡M « ia s ew uaN W ârw » : . l 1 1 L J L r Do you have strong communication skills? Are you available to Work varied work schedules? If so, our Mesa MegaCenter is the place for you! Right now, AT&T, a recognized leader in global communications, seeks Full and Fait-tiirie Account Representatives in Mesa. Using a computer terminal to input and retrieve data, you will handle customer service, billing inquiries and in-bound customer calls. In exchange for your talents and dedication, we offer: • Starting Salary o f $242.00 per week...with raises every 6 months * 10% night shift salary bonus • Raid on-the-job training • Company paid benefits package after 6 months o f employment * Free long distance call reimbursement Hours o f operation for our MegaCenter are Mon.-Fri., 7am-9pm and Sun., 5am-9pm. Hours o f operation for our Late Night Center are 4pm-6am, 7days/week. Full-time employees should be able to work any drift in either area. Fart-rime employees will be scheduled for a 25 hour woric week between the houraof 4pm -l lpm, 7 days/week. Term opportunities may last up to 3 years. J u st cmU our A p p lica n t Processing C enter 4w8Mk«fLeM«rSMfayW- 1-800-562-7288 Monday-Friday, 5am-3pm and refer to Rcnriting code 04239 when prompted. FEMALESRONGOf S ! I - B Are you customer ™ service oriented? Rm^fnrNtwCImUeng^ I Or. MhSLOOto: fiu n m i Worm AT&T iV O R K O U T i‘/ - m F Y O U W ORK N o t h in g B u t N a t u r e 8 0 0 -351-0222 ¿ O V ÍN C r r .'F M T BRAND MLK STATE 0> THE ART EACI'.I i Ta TFOHNO! OGV 5 9 0 -6 4 3 2 Largeat Library of kilormation In U.8.- a> »ubjocte OtewC«MogTed^ «NhVtaMcor COO POP. GRADS Sc STUDENTS envi­ ronmental co. expanding into Mexico^ Looking for funloving people w/focus on money. Pos. avail, in sales .mngmt no exp. necc. Full training/ travel op­ tions. For interview 808-9368. $14,849 ASU Employment Services P.O . Box 8 7 1 4 0 3 Tempo, AZ 8 5 2 8 7 -1 4 0 3 FAX (60 2 ) 9 6 5 -0 5 5 4 Deadline: 9 /2 9 /9 5 by 5 :0 0 pm AA/EOE o r call Susan 9 6 5 -7 1 1 4 $1000/Part Time ( 602) HELP W ANTEDSALES Submit resume, cover letter specifying job tiHe and jo b # 70072757, and names and phone numbers of Ihree professional references to: N ew Extended Hours Having trouble making ends meet? We have an excellent opportunity for 5 outgoing & persuasive people with d ear speaking voices to set appts for our Sales force. YOU CAN be a star! Additional actors are needed for Arizona's b ig g est and best haunted house, Silo X. Apply in person at Elliot Sc Hardy or call 5988713. To Apply; 7:30am-8pm 8am-4:30pm 10am-4pm 1334 EBrocdwayRd. Sufee 102 (across from the Native New Yorker) 9am - l pm or 5pm - 9pm QUADRIPLEGIC NEEDS care attend., $7/hr, p/t, m-f, aft/eve., w ill train. Call D ennis 9685295. credit toward or college degree TELEMARKETING Has immediate openings for an overnight store remodel crew. Shift runs Sunday through Thursday and pays up to 38.00/hr D.O.E Apply in per­ son at Ofticemax, 917 E, Broad­ way, Tempe. 968-1989. USA TODAY, Part-time Phone Sales, $6 per hour guaranteed + commission. Monday - Thurs­ day. 4:30 - 8:30. 110/E lliot area. Sell a quality product in a relaxed atmosphere. Training provided. C all 345-5814 To­ day! Deliro s a v e iv ë s Earn up to $185 each m onth Supervised care area for yoúr c h ito n to play W aich yourlavorie movie w rite you donate We have many ASU donors! Extra bonuses possfcte if youVe had your Hepatitis "A" shot 9 9 1 -5 8 3 6 PHONE SURVEYS, riot salesMarket Research Co. located near I-10/B aselin e needs p/t shift M-Th, 5-9pm & Sat. 9-3. Must be dependable & enjoy phones. O ffipe exp. desired. $5.50/hr. Emily 443-8883. using WordPerfect 5 .1 or 6.1 ; skill in oral and written communication. d î law library exp., knowledge o f automated circulation systems, Whydonate plasma? MF Sát Sun P/T WORK, F/T pay! Looking for people to fill outdoor ad po­ sition s. M-F 4:30-8:30 pm Wear shorts & tennis shoes. No exp. req. C all Steve @ 8949442. ’ QUALIFICATIONS I, Inc. France ■ Germany • Japan Hong Kong • Singapore . Malaysia Flexible hours and at-home work negotiable. If interested, please call Nicole at HELP W ANTEDGENERAL R e q r w fc h 6 mo. library or related clerical exp., demonstrated proficiency IN TER N ATIO N A L Established market research firm seeks bf-fcngual telephone marketers A successful candidate should be motivated and interested in international, computer-related business for: HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Responsibilities include: opening the library M on. thru Fri. at 7 :0 0 am, checking materials in and out using the on-line system, answering and directing patron inquiries both in person and by telephone, and providing clerical support using WordPerfect. D a v id NATL INSTITUTES o f Health Male 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. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ROSS-BtAKLEYIAWIBRARY ARIZONA STATE UMVERSIIY UBRARY ASSBTANT • ORCULAUON D B M R IM M 897-1676 HOUSECLEANING, NANNY’S & babysitters, p/t^f/t. Car/phone a must. Exclnt pay 641-5324. J O FFIC EM A X P/T POS. with Tribune News­ papers, must bave reliable trans. Afternoons/wknds. starting § $5.50/br. + mlg. C all 8986328. STOP F/T, .P/T positions available providing assistance to adult individuals w ith mental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ FIND IT in the Classifieds! efits Sc training, no exp. nec. Call *38-8617, ^ ; - j¡ •• '^°70 S tate Press Wednesday, September 27,1995 Page 14 V Ï } .J yw r State P ress HELP W ÀNTEDSALES LIQUOR CLERK,P/T flex hrs Apx 15-20/wk. upscale S. T em p e$ 5 /h r M ike/Tim 3459110 -V. NEW MULTI-LEVEL mrkt oppor. seeking a prof. team. No mòre long distance phone bills. Call for info. Tony 831-8557 or Mike 414-0669. HELP W ANTEDCLERICAL P/T GENERAL clerk in Tempe, duties inciti, copying, packag­ ing, filin g , & data entry. R e­ quirements inch some comput­ er, detail oriented, & quick learner. $5/hr., 1-5 pm., M-F. Call Dawn at 831-7774. RECEPTIONIST N eeded to work every other weekend in Scottsdale offices, position requires typing Of 30+ wpm, previous exp. on 8 or more incoming lines, arid good front Office skills. $6 .7 5 /hr. Call Katherine at Realty Exec­ utives 957-0444. TEMPE MISSION Palms look­ ing for data inputer. eves. & wkends., p/t. P lease send re­ sum e to: 60 E. 5th St. Tempe. AZ 85281 Attn, Mary Carder. HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE HELP W ANTEDFO O D SERVICE CLUCK-U Come join the Cluck-U-Chicken team. Now hiring delivery drivers. Earn $9- 13/hr. Counter/line help, cooks, bouncers. Apply in person. 855 S. Rural. Tempe. 1 block south o f Uni­ versity. FOOD SERVERS - Part time cocktail servers - fri & sat, bar back - fri & sat. Great $$$ flexible schedule; Pepin 7363 Scotts.- mall (in old town) 9909026. NOW HIRING W ait and bar staff. Apply thursday 2:00p.m. to 5:00p.m. at 1320 East Broadway, Tempe, on the corner o f Broadway and Dorsey. THE PICNIC Company gour­ met cafe now hiring counter/sandwich maker. Delivery drivers f/t p/t 1415 E. Univers­ ity 2 hicks east of Rural, Tem­ pe. 7337 E. 2nd St, Scottsdale COUNTRY GLAZED Ham, seek­ ing ft & pt food service clerks. A pply 2-4- @ 250 I E Camelback. P/T CHILD Care needed. Most­ ly driving, reliable transporta­ tion a must. M -F. 3-6 pm, PV/Ctrl Phx. area. 952-2896 eve., 942-1383 days. A STRO LO G ICAL FORECAST O marr PSYCHIC READINGS by phone. No time limit. Learn @ past, present and future. Helps in love, marriage & business. $29.95 Visa/M C 818 -3 3 1 9192, -v ; $257*000 MY 2nd yr income. 2yrs out o f college. Not multi le v e l, ju st an honest way to make good money. Call 9263870 for free info. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Students Needed! fishing In­ dustry, Earn up to $3,000$6,000+ per month. Room and Boared! Transportation! Male or Female. No experience nec­ essary. Call (206)545-4155 ext A59181. I AT- HAPPY SEPTEMBER birthdays to Charity, Christin, Anne, Corey. We love you all! WATCH OUT Kappa Sig! AXO is going over the top! YAY XÓ Traci Tyers the new Panhellenic President! You rock! Love, Chi-O ALASKA JOBS- Earn up to $3,000-$6,000+/m onth work­ AD O PTIO N ing in the fishin g industry, Room & board! Transportation! PROFESSIONAL CA Couple M ale/Fem ale. N o experience Necessary! (310)285-0085 ext. V .With arts background and much love and security to offer, wishA-48809 ¡. es to. adopt infant. We can CRUISE SHIPS & Vacation Re­ •help with medical, legal, .& liv­ sorts Hiring! Earn up to $3.200 ing expenses. Com pletely le­ per month working the travèl gal. We can offer your baby a industry. World Travel & Exot­ wonderful future. Please call ic Resorts. No Exp. Nec! Trans­ Dorothy collect at (213) 344portation, Room & Board! 0729. Thank you. (310)271-4147 ext, Ç-48809. by Sydney Oman Wednesday, September 27,1995 Whlloey Houilon Thii Jjnamk Lea sisger with Pi«« Amaliat will fothrough■period crilii this yetr, especiall; dtirioj December. Her tint, with Nik keyaote fill Man kirib patten, reveali math takemt, cwtnveny, fine n i fer­ tile. Wkltiey lleiitei, keaotifii, talented, tempenmeital itifer beduel, “Myfrtvett life b mile, yeu cei’t eitabliih i life li the piklk — theywill ripyeaajart!" ARIES (March 21-April 19): You might be ashing, “What's going on here’Tmk through confusion to­ night Earlier, play waiting game. Mystery, the occult figures promi­ nently. Piscesfiguresprominently. TAURUS(April 20-May20): Pro­ tect public image! Financial status of accountant, dose associate requires scrutiny. Takegreaterchargeofyour own fate, destiny. Love relationship intense,«ntroversial. OEXMI(May21-June»):Loi« distance rdationhip will work only so long - feeling, touching necessary. Eaploymetit picture requires revimooof sdwduk, enablingyouto travel. Arielplayskeyrole. CANCER (June 21-July 22): CheekAries, Gemimmeaaages Make tab Hast Mat to independence, abilitytoput fortherighml eowpte. Lsa eweniragea, “You lave every­ thingneededtobesuccemfuininpi- puttingpointsacross, havestatistical evidence at hand.. Scorpio native demandsfactsaboutmoney. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21): Dig deepforinformationinvolvingUfara. Cyclehigh, excellent timefordirect­ ingtrafficyourway. Passionateaffair of heart dominates, music involved Virgo, anotherScorpioplayroles. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You'll besaying, “I'vebeenhere before!” Perfect techniques, under­ take program of teaching, sharing. Participate in healingprocesa. Focus onhiddenvalues, expressionsoffaith, love. CARRKORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Obtain hint bom Ariel menage. Lunar positionhighlight! adventure, exploration, winningfriends and in­ fluencing people. High officials re­ ceiveyouincourtlymanner. Dreams! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Scenarioemphasiseshumerapriorities, organisation, intense retatkoo■hipnot without controversy. Even­ tual victory following competition, challenge. Chpricom, Cancerpermtu involved PllCn (Feb. 19-March 20): You’ll retrievewhat wasregardedn something to throw away - folk frompadreriorad Highlightuniverml appall review wfontaicei con­ cerningdutance,languageofaaUdei f H UE— S B YOUR IIR1ERAT: Youwe (toy, inspirational weil-tnveied fascinatedwith foreigntota, eubinei Semeofdra­ mawefl-honed-youareperceptive, aoritirc, pamtoude and when you fall mloveitb forkeepa.Arica,Ú n peno» play outstanding rain in your Life. Currant cycle highlights poarihiechangeof redden«, marital ataba. YouUfaedecorating, remodelin¡¡, changing appearance of home November wdl beyour moat memorabkmonthof1995. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Review Cancer mange Focus on direction, motivation, imtuMon Adhere to unarthodoK proetasru, highlight elemend of tutatg, emprise. Agree to speciil appearances. Doresearch! VIROO(Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Natu­ ral talent as writer surges forward Blend humor with et^laniliom, ex­ perience!. Flirtation lendi spice, eoridhebeginningofsomethingbig. Gemini, another Vigo figuremsceamto. LORA (Sept. 23-OeL 22): Plan carefully for recital tour of gallery, entertaining people you admire, h *tK, litAptaTimSpiral $25+ RESUMES From Scratch FREE HEALTH/FiTNESS inin 1 visit, updates, 100% suc­ formation and cash for women. cess laser, 7 days, Tempe 968Female volunteers are needed - /' ;.y; ; for two .research studies: 1) If ,. 7735. , ; you are a Caucasian, MexicanAFFORDABLE- TERM papers, American, or Native American reports, theses, resumes. Fast women between the ages o f 40 turnaround. Townsend W/P, and 55, you can earn $25 ih Maureen, 955-0969. two hours by participating in a study on Coronary Heart D is­ APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typease risk in Women. 2) i f you ing/word processing. N eed it are a Caucasian, non-exercis­ fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ing, not-currently-dieting woman between the ages o f 20 I WANT IT NOW! and 35, you can receive de­ D esktop Publishing: T yping,' tailed information about your resume service, charts & graphs. percent o f body fat, fitness On campus! 966-1984. level and dietary habits abso­ lutely free! Plus we'll put you on a supervised workout pro­ gram and pay you $25 to par­ ticipate. To obtain more infor­ mation or volunteer for the stu­ dy, please call 965-2736. Coffee distributors needed, set you own hours. 230-4180. TYPINGmm /W O R D ATTN ALL Students! Grants & scholarships are ofrd by pvt sector. Qualify regardless of ihc or grds. For more info call • 1-800-400-0209. P R ^ |^ I N ^ _ HUNDREDS & THOUSANDS pf grants & scholarships avail­ LOCAL ALT. sch seeks Az able to all students. L et.our state certified SpEd teachers to } years o f research benefit you. work w/ at risk youth. Apply at Immediate qualification. Call 1.1 7 0 0 E< Thomas Rd., Phx or 800-270-2744. fax your resume to 234-2975 SCH OLA RS HI PS /M O N E V; BUSINESS AVAILABLE for college-record- . ed m essage g ives details. OPPORTUNITIES (602)838-3123 OBTAIN N AT L 900# tó pay" college expenses, w/little time, : effort & $. No setup. 899-9362. $$2/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed. Las­ er. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. IN COUNTRY Vietnam Vets, pres, Guo .& Military; coll, show. Oct. 7-8 at Amer. Legion Post 2, 2125 S. Indus. Park, Tempe.' Sat. 9 -5 , Sun 9-4. B/S/Tr. knives, militaría, sport­ ing goods, & weapons. Free Parking, g ° o d in-house re­ freshments. Adm. $4,00 (Pro­ ceeds to charity). 898-3878 for info pr 984-9683. $ 1 off ádm, with this ad. . $2 pervyortout'. '.plus;. $10 membership or yearly. membership, $200. I- I //.A ENG/ WRITING tutor, exp. all subs.,ESL students. A lso the­ sis, project editing 829-6712 WANTED HAIR MODELS Needed for Matrics/L ogics hair show. Free hair services. Call 392-2404. MODELS NEEDED for adver­ tising, m /f 18-25. Call Man As Art Photogtraphy, pager 408-9787. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS LADIES NIGHT @ ) Where ASU Goes for Pizza CLUCK-U WACKY WEDNESDAY 6-10 pm CHKKCN CO. 70 • 1/2 price Breast Bites ¿ * $1.00 Test Tube Shots ^ YOU CALL IT! • Frozen Maigaritas 99g DRAFTS 12.81 P IT C H E R S Bud Light * Miller Lite 3pm ■Close C lu c k - U C h ic k e n C o . 968-6666 894-2112 1 3 0 1 E. U niversity 855 S Rural Rd. 1 bik S. o f U niversity TUTORS TUTORS M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117 A lg e b ra C a lc u lu s /P r e c a lc u lu s M A T 210, M A T 270, M A T 271, M A T 170 F in ite M a t h M A T 119 S ta tis tic s Q B A 2 2 1 , P SY 2 3 0 , S T P 2 2 6 P hysics P H Y 1 1 1 , P H Y 1 1 2 , P H Y 121 C h e m is t r y C H M 101, C H M 1 13, C H M 115, C H M 116 A d v a n c e d M a th M A T 272, M A T 274, M A T 342 We still have a few seats left in some of our classes -- call us today for information. Successfully helping students since 1980. Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • "SIMON" F ASU Box 871502 7 Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-8484 s t a t e P r e s s C lassifieds M atthew s C enter, B asem en t Office: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form FAST FUNDRAISER-RAISE $5Uu in 5 days-G reeks, groups, clubs, motivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obligation. (800) 862-1982 Ext. 33. | a e a iiA ■ ia PA S T A We offer tutorial for the follow ing classes: FUNDRAISING- a TUTORS ANYONE CAN C LA IM TO BE THE "BEST", BUT OUR REPUTATION SPEAKS LOUDER TH A N ANY W O R D S... DALMATIAN PUPPIES, chartlpion lin es, dues, shots, exc, markings. See parents.. 6 wks old; $506-$80Q, 945-3107. V L i & TUTORS TUTORS PETS FREE! FREE DOG to good home, 2 yr old cliow/m tx: friendly^ trained, & neutered fe­ male. Please call Will at 345r, 1935 5 S W Thorbecke's Gym 966-6621 **ASU AREA. APA/MLÀ exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6, transcription Charts/graphs 966-2186 any­ time. STOP SMOKING & chewing imm. no withdrawal Dr. recom. all natural 100% guaranteed Quick Quitz Program 213-4200. ELECTROLYSIS BY Degna. Multi-prob6 & blend methods. > Rural/Southem area. 921-1146. Ç EZ CASH TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING SERVICES SPORTS & RECREATION ASTROLOGICALFORECAST HEALTH & FITNESS PERSONALS CRUISE SHIPS now hiring Earn up tó $2,000+/m onth working on cru ise ships or land-tour com panies. World travél. Seasonal & full-time em­ 2 ENERGETIC; Well behaved ployment available. No expertboys(3yrs+18m). Need fun sit­ encè necessary. For. more in­ ter Wednesdays 8am-5pm. Hrly' formation calí 1-206-63470468 rate neg. NE Scotts. Call Kris­ : ext. C59181. . / ... ta at 661-0144. CHILD CARE 9 & 12 yr old; Approx 30hrs Afternoon & eve some Ovemite Barb 998-5812 S ydney JO B OPPORTUNITIES HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE CAFE PRIST A t Help for •breakfast, lunch, and pastry re­ tail. Scotts., exp. helps 9225722 . ntion! Page 15 Wednesday, September 27,1995 ■ * N am e H om e Phone B u sin e ss P h one A ddress City, State ¡¡Ijp ^ Zip _P le a se print o n e letter per box, le a v e a blank box b etw een words. $19.99 FOR a full ,set o f nails at Wizzards Hair Studio is an awesome deal. Dina,' 967-2360. BEST OF Luck pannellenic exec on a great term! Love AXO CLEAR YOUR calendars! AXO will be groovin' Friday nite at our disco date party! HEY GREEKS! Need a laugh? Schedule "The Farce Side" or "Barren Mind Improv" for as lit­ tle as $100 to perform for your house! Call 965-6822 to book your show. ONE ON ONE Championships! Shaquille O ’Neal vs. Hakeem Olajuwon, Saturday, September 30, 6pm ., MU Cinema. $6 . w/ASU id, $8 without. See it liv e from the Taj Mahal in Atlantic City on state of the art. equipm ent, on campus. Get your ticket* at M UAB- 3rd floor, M U (965-6822), and at the door w hile supply lasts. Presented to you,by Network^ • Event Theatre and MUAB. P lease b e sure to check your a d . M aks sure It reads exactly a s you w ish it to a p p ear in the S ta te P ress, including punctuation. P lease check yoU r a d th e first day it appears-the liab ility o f th e S ta ts P ress shall not e xcee d th e cost o f this ad and credit m ay b e given fo r th e first insertion only. M inor spelling erro rs do not qualify fo r m ake­ goods. N o refunds w ill b e given, but if you need to c a n c e l your ad . ' I credit w ill b e h eld on account for future advertising. Mmo4 Insluda T ita ' pmmm B « k cam ItaMèr .' 9 Sk ' Prtwratta 1-4 days, $1.35 per line, per day 6 -0 days, $ 1.3 0 par Hne, per day 10+ days. $ 1.1 5 per lins, per day C o m m e r c ia l 1 day, $2.20 per line 2-4 days. $1 65 per line, per day 5 -9 days, $ 1 .4 0 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1.2 5 per line, per day 3 Hne minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. B etas you w ish yo u r a d to ru n ^ • o f O sya P ric e p a r Day $ i . . •; ' À ' . ■ C lsasW ostien N am a/N um ber: S o n y , w e p an n o t accep t personal ad s throuigh th e m a li. T3K S t a t e P ress Wednesday, September 27 ,1 9 9 S PageJL ó n iM ld D U P O N S ! 9 2 6 EAST BROADWAY, TEMPE • LIMITED TIME ONLY I SA FEW A Y ' fífiÉ mm 1 mm f i l l iln f ilif ie r f o ir fa c t thdiode Safeway coupons or free coupons. Refund may not exceed value of tim e. Excludes liquor and tobacco products. L im it one coupon per item , w ith a maximum of 3 coupons of the same item. Each item requires coupon. Subject to stock on hand. No m inim um purchase required. Roast Beef Swiss Cheese • Alpine Cheesiu Farmer John Link Sausage Chiquita Bananas • 8 oz. Skinless Pork Jk • Golden Ripe • SAVE 98‘ on 2 IP i B a tie n v lt't dfact' : a z s jg & g B g . NOFATORCHOLESTEROL « ■ » w t o w w r s jp n a r in Safeway Crusty French or Sourdough Bread. 12 Pack Keystone White Rain Hair Care • 12 oz. cans • 11-15 oz. Shampoo and Conditioner • 4-7 oz. Styling Aids ■ ■ ■ • SAVE 40c • Regular, Light, Amber Light, or Ice ' K l SHAMPOO o ots Prices Effective: Se o CO ¡27 28 29 CM 1 C O N D IT IO N E R m cuu TT Ite;: and Prices are available at tlw Safeway Store at 926 East Broadway Road It reserve the right to limit quantities. While Supplies Last. No sales to Dealers. Not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors .' Ws reserve the right to correct all printed errors. ltd Phone WE MAKE LONG DISTANCE CALLING CONVENIENT. Look f o r our Talk n Toss Vending M achine a t th e —fro n t o f the store.