Mill merchants mixed on Super Bowl Bars, restau ran ts biggest w in n ers over w eek en d B y K k u .y W f.ndei State P ress Super Bowl weekend left many Mill Avenue merchants dancing like Deion Sanders in the end zone, but like any game, there were winners and losers. “There were parts of this event that were definitely a mixed bag, but this is typical of any special event,” said Rod Keeling, executive director of Downtown Tejnpe Community Inc., a non-profit organization that markets Mid Avenue. “Certain special events benefit certain seg­ ments of the downtown merchant economy more than oth­ ers. Overall I would say business was pretty good. Some sectors did poorly, but others did OK.” Big winners in the race for tourist dollars were down­ town bars and restaurants, many of which reported phe­ nomenal business over the weekend. “We did extremely well, it was the best, two days we ever had,” Said Matt Maurel, manager of the Mill Avenue Cue Club, 607 S. Mill Aye, “We had lines outside the door, and we were filled to capacity most of the time from Friday on!” Maurel said any merchant in downtown Tempe selling alcohol did really well. However, merchants selling products with less of a kick reported mediocre business. . “Unfortunately, we sell coffee, and football fans like to drink beer,” said Alex Stephans, manager of Java Road, 11 E. Seventh St. “The game seared away a lot of local cus­ tomers, and many businesses did not get the return they expected.” Gayle Shanks, co-owner of Changing Hands Bookstore, 414 S. Mill Ave,, said she is just glad the whole thing is over. “We did not do well during the Super Bowl and wish to never have another one,” she said. Shanks said media reports of crowded streets and lack of parking kept people away. “ It was crazy,” she said. “Our customers essentially stayed far away, so we didn’t see any of our regular cus­ tomers for two weeks, and (we) lost thousands of dollars.” T urn t o Sai .es , page 2 . Weber recall vote set to begin today Taking a bow B y T im B axter State P ress Robert Hendricke/State Prese Eric Sabo, 21, a sen io r m u sic m ajor, w arm s up h is fingers while playing his double b a s s o u trid e th e Music Building T uesday afternoon. S ab o p rac tic e s five hours a week in preparation for his sen io r recital and said he h o p es one day to play in a sym phony o r sta rt a rock band. Chris Weber's day of reckoning has arrived — again. The recall election to decide the fate of the Associated Students o f ASU president will be held today and Thursday. The election was originally scheduled for Nov. 28 and 29 but was postponed after complaints concerning the election’s timing. Election results should be available Monday. Two polling sites — one in front of the Memorial Union and another at the intersection of Palm Walk and Tyler Mall — will be open from 9 a m. to 9 p.m. An additional two — at the Business Administration building and at Neeb Hall — will be open from 9 a.m. to 2 p,m. Weber said he felt confident he will not be recalled if people are concerned with his job performance rather than personal difficulties. “If the core issue is doing your job and doing your job well, then I’m going to win this election in a landslide,” he said. “If people want to worry about political cartoons and people’s accusations and allegations ... then I’m going to have a real problem.” Kevin Bielfelt, the recall drive’s leader, said he is glad the election is here but will be relieved when it is oVer. “I’ll be there, and I hope everyone else will be,” he said. “I’ll be glad when I can become just a student again. I’m really tired.” Angelo DeSimone, ASASU executive vice president, said he is prepared to step into the job if Weber is recalled. “That’s part of my job -— the possibility of that happen­ ing anytime,” he said. “That’s part of the package.” Manzanitas parties hurting residents’ GPAs, study claims The participants for K erner’s study included 659 freshm en who lived in Living among Manzanita Hall's party­ Manzanita, Sonora, Palo Verde Main, East like atmosphere can spell academic trouble, and West, Best or Cholla Halls during the according to an ASU student researcher. 1994-95 academic year. Grade point aver­ A ccording to research er Cam eron ages of all freshmen living in the targeted Kemer, freshmen living in Manzanita have dorms were collected from ASU computer generally lower grade point averages than databases. A random sampling from the students living in other dorms. GPAs was taken for each dorm. In a study com pleted last sem ester, Kerner found that the average GPA at Kerner said the large number of “distur­ Manzanita was 1.67 while the average for bances” at Manzanita contribute to the poor all other halls was 2.14. study conditions. - According to the report, the average "It was hypothesized that students living GPAs for Palo Verde East and West were in a disruptive atmosphere would have a close to Manzanita’s at 1.8 and 1.7, respec­ lower grade point average,” said Kemer, a tively. Kemer attributed the similarities to former Manzanita resident. “The police the location of the Palo Verde complex. calls, the party atmosphere — that is what “Due to their close proxim ity to Manzanita Hall, their behavior patterns may we attributed it to.” B y T im o t h y T a it S tate P ress INSIDE STA TE PR E SS Weather Outlook Cloudy with rain. High 65°, low 53°. be similar,” he said in the report. Dean of Student Life Jim Rund said a hall the size of Manzanita will be “problematic.” “It is too large. There are too many peo­ ple, too many floors,” he said. “One-fifth of the students living on cam pus live in Manzanita.” The dorm has 15 floors and houses approximately 980 residents. Rund said efforts are being made to make the hall more academic. “The reputation o f M anzanita was earned at one time,” he said. “That is not true today.” However, Kemer said students living in Manzanita are not provided with equal aca­ demic opportunities. “It seems unfair that different dormitories T u r n t o G P A , page 2 . W orld/Nation Sports G reece and T urkey threaten to d o b attle o v e r A egean islet. Bill F ried e r a n d com pany are in a m uch be tte r m ood after w inning th e ir first tw o P a c -10 gam es. Page 3 Page 11 Tim H acker/S tate Press M an zan ita’s p arty-like a tm o s p h e re m ay be hurting re sid e n ts’ GPAs, a recent Study su g ­ g e sts. The average GPA of a Manzanita resi­ d ent for th e last academ ic year w as 1.67, com ­ p ared with 2.14 for all halls usecTin the study. Where To Find, It C la s s ifie d s ............................... 12 C om ics....'..................................IQ C ro ssw o rd ............ .....7 H oroscopes ............................. 15 O p in io n ..................... A P o lice R e p o rt..................... . ,fjt S p o rts.,..... ...s..:........................11 T o d a y ’s A c tiv itie s ..................2 W o rld /N a tio n ............................ 3 P age 2 rp S t a t e P ress W ednesday, January 31,1996 Sales 1 T oday C o n t in u e d from page 1. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. Campus clubs and organizations may subm it written entries to the State Press in the basement o f Matthews Center. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone o r via fax. Entries m ust contain the fu ll name o f the d u b o r organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the fu ll address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and darity. Incomplete o r illegible entries w ill be discarded. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries w ill not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry pe r organization per day is permitted. • A lcoholics Anonymous — Daily cam pus meeting. Newman Center, Aquinas Hall in the b a s e m e n t; noon to 1:15 p.m . C a m p u s W omen’s Group m eeting. Newman Center, Aquinas Hall in the basement; 10 a.m. • Alpha Phi Omega — National co-ed service fraternity information table. Cady Mall; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. • A m erican A s s o c ia tio n o f A irp o rt Executives General meeting. All aeronauti­ cal m anagem ent technology stu d e n ts wel­ come. Engineering R esearch Complex 593; 5:30 p.m. • Aslan Business Leaders — General meet­ ing. New members welcome. MU Yuma Room 211; 3:30 p.m. • CSA C o m m u n icatio n S tu d e n ts Organization — General meeting. Form Com­ • National Society of Black Engineers — G eneral meeting. Come se e what we have planned for the semester. AH majors welcome. Engineering Center G Wing 316; 6 p.m. • Office of the Dean, College of Education — American-lndian Education Display. Payne Hall B16; 11 a.m. to noon. • Omega Delta Phi — Rush week for ASU's first Hispanic fraternity. Cady Mall; 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. • Phllippine-American student Association — G eneral m eeting, MU H avasupai Room 208D; 4 p.m. • Rainbow Alliance — Spring welcome-back reception. Bring a friend. MU Chrysocolla Room 206; &:30 p.m. • Religious Studies Club — Open discussion: “W h at is ‘M odern’ R elig io n ? How Is It Traditional or Nontraditional?” Everyone' wel­ come. Refreshm ents available. Engineering Complex A Wing 371; 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. m itte e s to p la n u pcom ing e v e n ts . MU Chrysocolla Room 206; 3:30 p.m. • Cycling Devils — Mountain- arid road-biking d u b and team meeting. Everyone Welcome • Student Life — Learning Resource Center from beginner to expert riders. Life Sciences E — Free computer skills workshops. Student Wing 104; 8:30 p.m. Services Bldg. Room 361; EXCEL 10 a.m.; • Eckankar —- Discussion: ‘D ream s are a s MSWord 11 a.m.; Superpaint 2 p.m.; Using the Real and Valid a s th e Waking S ta te .’ MU W eb 3 p.m,; Internet 6 p.m.; W ordPerfect 7 Graham Room; noon. p.m. • Gun Devils — Weekly meeting. MU Playa • Students for AZ4NORML — General meet­ Room; 5 p.m. ing. Everyone welcome. MU- Coconino Room; • M .E .C h.A . — S pring.opening reception. ,7p.m . Come find out what th e Moviemiento is all • Travel and Tourism Student Association about. Free food and drink. Everyone wel­ — G uest speaker: Victoria W agner, Tem pe come. MU Turquoise Room; 3:30 p.m. Convention and Visitors Bureau. MU Room • M U A B — Recreation Committee meeting. 215; 3 p.m. MU Conference Room 2A; 3:30 p.m. Gallery • Ultimate Frisbee Club — Meeting and prac­ Committee m eeting. MU C onference Room tice. Come rain or shine. Call Dave for further 1A; 4:30 p.m. Special Events Committee meet­ information. Band Fields, Rural R oad and ing. MU Conference Room 1A; 3:30 p.m, Sixth Street; 6:30 p.m. Other downtown businesses also report­ ed slower-than-average store traffic. “Our patrons felt that downtown Tempe was going to be very crowded, so they stayed away,” said Martha Raisanen, owner of Babahatchie Beads, 411 S. Mill Ave. “The people that were here for the game tended to be really focused on the game and not on the type of products we sell.” Raisanen added that m ost fans were interested in Super Bovvl memorabilia such as T-shirts and commemorative items. Despite thè problems, most Mill Avenue merchants welcomed the national exposure. “This will be a showcase for a lot of cor­ porate people to look at the Valley,” said Jake Nelson, owner of the Shoe Mill, 398 S, Mill Ave. “Although there were some slight draw­ backs ... it was a good trade-off for the amount of advertising and exposure, and I think the payoff will be in the next weeks and in the future years,” he said. GPA C o n t in u ed from pa g e 1. on campus provide completely different aca­ of his data and his conclusions. demic experiences for students,” he wrote. “I think it is extremely accurate,” he Although Rund did not know if Kemer’s said. “If we did it again this semester, we findings were correct, Denise Schoenherr, would find the same thing.” Although students living in Manzanita teaching assistant for the Research Methods in Psychology class that Kerner was enrolled admit the hall is a party palace, they said grades cannot be blamed on the atmosphere. in, said the data and results are sound. “I can see how people would think that,” “The information came from a reliable source,” she said. “All he had to do was said Manzanita resident Kathleen Lopez. “It is hard to study here, but if you want to analyze the information.” Schoenherr said she saw no reason for avoid it, you can.” Lopez said Manzanita’s conditions are Kerier’s findings to be incorrect; however, she added that greater research is warranted. perpetuated by the dorm’s reputation. “This is the top party school, and this is “These findings are significant and important, but this is not the end-all,” she the top party dorm,” she said. said. “More research is needed.” Hayley Schlesser, a freshman psycholo­ Dr. Holley Belch, coordinator of student gy major also living in Manzanita, said affairs research, said flaw s or researc study conditions depend largely on the floor. method omissions can skew results. Belch said the failure of the researchers “Some floors are real, real quiet,” she to consider previous academic achievement said. “I’ve visited other floors, and I would and how the data was obtained could result hate to live on them.” S chlesser attributed the differences in misleading results. “You need to ask more questions,” she between floors to residence assistants and. said. “The level of expertise is different at how strictly they enforce quiet hours. “If there is a party going on, you can find different levels.” Kemer, however, stands by the integrity it in this dorm,” she said. California Casualty Rated *1 Auto Insurer In nationwide Customer Survey RECALL ELECTIO N V O T E on W E D . È and T H U R S “Service, service and service” emerged as the three most important factors to customers in the 1995 Dalbar Ratings, a nationwide customer satisfaction survey. California Casualty not only ranked ^1 among the nationwide automobile insurance carriers surveyed, but also received a perfect 4.0 satisfaction rating from its customers. “T he Dalbar Ratings confirm that our Cj 1.R.E.S. (Customers Always Receive Excellent Service) Program is working and that quality service and total value are the reasons our policy­ holders select California Casualty and POLLING SITES, TIMES AND LOCATIONS SITE TIME LOCATION BAC/BA 9am-2pm MEMORIAL UNION 9am-9pm NORTH SIDE between planters PALM WALK 9am-9pm NE CORNER PALM WALK & TYLER MALL NÇEB HALL 9am-2pm SOUTHEAST SIDE OF NEEB HALL BAC PATIO AREA Any student enrolled.w ith at least one credit is eligible to vote. Bring photo I.D . CaliforniaCasualty World/Nation P age 3 W ednesday, January 31,1996 S t a t e P ress Congress to review secret satellite funds I? Associated Press TV cam eras capture a group of Greek w arships on patrol Tuesday in the Aegean Sea. Naval forces of the two NATO allies shad­ owed each other a s part of a dispute over a 10-acre islet, called Imia by Greece and Kardak by Turkey, claimed by both countries. A llies face o ff over A egean islet ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Warships massed in the and take^beirffég with them. eastern Aegean Sea on Tuesday, as Greece and Turkey ^___ TJje'iocks jut out of the sea about U nautical miles threatened to do battle over the right to raise the flag on a '^Tforn the Greek island of Kalimnos and just under four rocky outcropping that is home only to a few goats. miles off the Turkish coast. The crisis, the worst since the NATO allies nearly Greece calls the islet Imia; Turkey calls it Kardak. went to war in 1987 over Aegean seabed mineral rights, The countries have a history of territorial disputes, has been fueled by news reports in both countries that narrowly escaping a clash in 1974 over Cyprus. Turkey make possession of the islet a matter of national honor. has occupied the northern third of Cyprus since then. “The islet o f Imia is G reek,” Defense M inister Officials in Athens rejected calls for dialogue over the Gerasimos Arsenis insisted Tuesday. “It is the responsi­ Aegean standoff, saying the rocks were Greek under a bility of the armed forces to defend Greek territory, and 1947 convention in which Italy ceded the Dodecanese they are in a position to defend it.” islands to Greece. “We favor peace, but ... this country doesn’t have a Italy took them from Turkey under an agreement in single piece of stone to cede to other countries,” coun­ 1932, and Greece said Turkey had never before ques­ tered Premier Tansu Ciller of Turkey. tioned the agreement. Greece has sent seven ships to shadow a seven-vessel “I would advise the Turkish Foreign Ministry not to Turkish force at the 10-acre islet inhabited only by a m ake itse lf m ore rid icu lo u s," F oreign M inister small herd of goats. Theodoros Pángalos told reporters as he held up a Turkish and Greek fighter jets skirmished in the sky Turkish map of the area to back up his argument. ; * over the rocks Tuesday, twice engaging in air duels Turkish Deputy Foreign Minister Onur Oymen said meant to chase out the opponent, said Nikos Kouris, the rocks belonged to Turkey under international law and Greece’s deputy defense minister. said discussions could be held after Greek forces With­ Any actual armed conflict between the two neighbors drew. could prove disastrous. They are the most heavily armed Greek officials suggested Ciller was using the crisis to countries in the region. The confrontation began last week, when a Greek tele­ bolster her political fortunes following her party’s Dec. 24 vision channel reported that a Turkish ship had run electoral loss. Greece has seen its own political upheavals of late, aground near the islet in December and refused assistance from the Greek coast guard, saying it was on Turkish terri­ with the Socialist party forwarding a new premier this month to replace the ailing Andreas Papandreou. tory. Greek and Turkish news media both have been On Saturday, Turkish journalists.flew to the rocks by accused of blowing the dispute out of proportion to bol­ helicopter, took down the Greek flag and raised their ster ratings and circulation. national flag. “I have the impression that what we have here is a Greece sent in the navy, which brought down the media war more than anything else. It was started by Turkish flag. In Ankara, Ciller was adamant the outcropping was irresponsible people,” said former conservative Foreign Turkish. She demanded Greek troops on the islet leave, Minister Michalis Papaconstantinou. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Intelligence Committee will consider making the nation’s spy budgets public and giving the CIA chief greater authority follow­ ing a report that a spy satellite agency kept $2 billion in unspent funds. ' .. • Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., the Intelligence Committee’s chairman, said Tuesday he and the panel’s vice chairman, Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., are considering legislation that would end the long practice of keeping the budgets of the CIA and other spy agencies secret In addition, the panel will look at proposals by CIA Director John Deutch to increase the director’s power over some of the various intelligence-gathering agencies. “The more I see of this the more it becomes apparent that there is no solid reason for that secrecy,” Specter said. “It is in the context of public disclosure and media atten­ tion that we really figure out what is going on.” “We’re going to have to make some structural changes to give the director of central intelligence more authority over the whole intelligence community, including the N R O ,” S pecter said. He referred to the N ational Reconnaissance Office, the nation’s spy satellite agency, which was reported to have accumulated $2 billion in unspent funds. It was reported early last year that the NRO had a large pool of unspent money. But a new audit by the CIA and the Defense Department turned up a larger sum than previ­ ously known — either publicly or within the secret agen­ cy, intelligence officials said Tuesday. Deutch got personally involved in the investigation into the NRO’s financial practices, crunching the numbers at his own computer, said administration and congressional officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Deutch created a new financial management position at the NRO and oversaw the review of the agency’s finances, reporting the results to lawmakers. “In the course of this work, it became apparent that the NRO’s top managers themselves had no idea of the extent of the forward funding,” said Specter and Kerrey. Specter and Kerrey said $820 million of the unspent money will go toward U.S, operations in Bosnia. A con­ gressional staffer who sgoke on condition of anonymity said^about $600 million Of that will pay for the troop deployment, with the rest going toward aid to help recon­ struct the country. Congress last year took back $1.2 billion, using it largely for other Pentagon programs. Early last year die amount of the NRO overrun was reported at about $1 bilKoh. Later the figure escalated to $1.5 billion. VS “Apparently no funds were lost to the government and no funds were spent on items different than those either the Congress or the administration intended,” Specter and Kerrey said- in a joint statement. “But as long as all this spending authorttjrisat in NRO’s:accounts, it couldn’t be used by other agencies of the government or1to reduce the debt.” Deutch has made clear that although the more than $2 billion from the NRO’s accounts is now going to other agencies for use in Bosnia and on weapons programs, the reconnaissance office will eventually need that money to buy satellites and other equipment. Beginning next year, the Pentagon will gradually increase funding to the NRO to make up for the diverted funds, according to an intelli­ gence official. Yen drives Japans jobless rate to record high in ’95 TOKYO (AP) — Unemployment hit an all-time high in Japan last year, hurt­ ing young workers the worst as firms cut hiring to deal with the high yen’s restraint on exports. The 3.2 percent unem ploym ent rate announced today by the governm ent marked the second year in a row of record unemployment in Japan. Overall, about 2.1 million workers were jobless last year, the first time the count has topped 2 million, the government said. Many com panies —- including major manufacturers — have shifted much of their production overseas to cope with the yen’s rise against the U.S. dollar in recent years. At home, the companies have reduced their staff by encouraging early retirement and taking on fewer new graduates. There were 63 job openings for every 100 workers seeking employment last year, the Labor Ministry said today, down from 64 openings in 1994. The job outlook was particularly bleak for young people. The jobless rate among workers between 15 and 24 was 6.1 percent, up from the pre­ vious year’s 5.4 percent. Unemployment stood at 3.8 percent for people between 25 and 34, and at 2.2 per­ cent for mid-career job seekers between 35 and 44. All were record levels. Economists have said that if measured by. the same standards used in Europe and America, Japan’s overall jobless rate could be as high as 8 percent. The U.S. jobless rate stood at 5.3 percent last year. Shusei Tanaka, chief of the Economic Planning Agency, said today he believed that job prospects will improve in coming months, a view supported in a recent quar­ terly survey by Japan’s central bank that found that spending on public works and housing was increasing. During Japan’s “bubble economy” in the late 1980s, the nation’s official jobless rate stood at around 2.5 percent, but the em ploym ent situation has deteriorated steadily: since the onset of a recession in 1991. Last year’s average jobless rate of 3.2 per­ cent was up 0.3 percentage points from 1994. The government began recording the jobless rate in 1953. In Japan, anyone who has worked an hour or more in the last week of a given month is considered fully employed for that month, and military personnel are counted as employed. Opinion P a g e 4 _______________________ , . ■ W ednesday, January 31, 1996 " , ' STATE PRESS P ress ditorial Vote for removal " Chris Weber’s Day of Judgment has arrived. Today and tomorrow, students will finally go to the polls to decide the student body president’s ulti­ mate political fate. After months of delay tactics and stalling, the stu­ dent body will finally make its voice heard. We urge that they vote for removal. On the surface, it may seem difficult to find reason to’expel Weber from office. After all, the Associated Students of ASU presi­ dent was cleared of assault charges stemming from a Sept. 21 brawl outside of Dash Inn. And, to heat Weber talk, he’s been die greatest AS ASU president since, well, ever. Single-handedly, much like Superman, Weber ral­ lied students, faculty and staff together for a historical protest march, brought several GOP candidates to campus for a forum and established polling sites on campus for die 1996 general election. That’s what Chris wants you to believe, anyway. While performing for the masses at the budget march, Weber spoke nary a word about die real orga­ nizer of the march — sophomore Ed Baker. Baker, not W eber, made the march a reality. Weber saw something good and took credit for it. But then, taking credit for other people’s work seems to be a hobby for Mr. Weber. Is there anyone on this campus that really believes that Weber had the individual political clout to bring a GOP presidential primary event to ASU? If you do believe that, we’ve got a bridge to sell you. The presidential forum is definitely a big event — and Weber did help make it happen. But this was a team event. Many people made it happen — but Weber monopolized all of the glory. Same goes for the polling sites. These sites were a long-term project by many people, working hard behind the scenes for years to make it easier for stu­ dents to vote. ' ,, V; This, too, was a huge accomplishment But While Weber did a fraction of the work on i t he took the lion’s share of the credit. Weber certainly is effective at taking credit for other people’s work. We’re surprised he didn’t take sole credit few Super Bowl XXX. But what about his effectiveness as ASASU presi­ dent? What has Weber really accomplished, beyond promoting himself? Part of Weber’s job is serving, as a representative of die student body. In that role, Weber is hardly a success. Weber's second arrest —- in Palo Verde Main on a charge of disorderly conduct — showed extremely poor judgment. This poor judgment has destroyed Weber’s ability to be taken seriously by those in power. W hether W eber’s actions in Palo Verde Main were criminal are not the issue today. Whether or not Weber is fit for office is. Weber’s ‘'accomplishments” in office have largely been die work of others. Indeed, his greatest accom­ plishment has been self-promotion. And as a student representative, Weber has not a shred of credibility left with the people in charge of .this stare. . . . . * ' Need any more reasons? ‘ g Vote for removal. s TAFF STATE PRESS N ew t s Iran plan ploy for self-m otivation Whether you like him or hate him, I think we can all agree on S teve one thing about House Speaker FORSBERG Newt Gingrich — he is ambitious. He is renewing American civiliza­ Columnist tion, enacting the contract with America and saving America from the Democrats. Apparently, how­ ever, saving America is not a big enough task to keep him busy. So, in an effort to share his unique tal­ ents with the world at large he has decided to save another nation as well. What nation is to be the next beneficiary of the Speaker’s plans? Iran. If you are a little confused, you have a right to be. As most Americans probably know, it has been a long time since Iran has taken any advice from us. Even our best-intentioned constructive criticism is liable to be dismissed by the Iranians as “foam-spewing from the mouth of the Great Satan.” Gingrich has apparendy decided that if we can’t do anything constructive, then we might as well do something destructive. His original plan was “designed to force the replacement of the current regime in Iran.” This leads to an obvious, yet often overlooked, question. Is the government that is to replace the current one going to be any better? Or could it be even worse? It would not be pleasant to repeat our experience in Vietnam, where we had Diem overthrown and replaced by people that made us wish that Diem were still around. All of this assumes that we really could overthrow the gov­ ernment in Iran. It is not a likely prospect. Ever since the rev­ olution back in 1979 there has been a never-ending stream of pundits and official types prognosticating the end of Islamic Iran. First it was to be displaced by military and Savak (secret police) officers staging a counter-coup. When that didn’t turn out many were heartened by the Iran-Iraq war. Surely the Iranian government couldn’t live through that, but it did. When Ayatollah Khomeini died, all the usual suspects turned up on TV, telling us how Iran would fall apart within months. It didn’t And then there was last year’s “fiscal crisis,” with predictions that Iran was nearly bankrupt and that tire people would stage a revolt because of the bad economy. Hmmmm. That never happened cither. Do I detect a pattern here? Our traditional wishful thinking about Iran seems to have infected Gingrich. How much money will this operation cost? A mere $20 million. Ah, yes, Iran is a nation making billions selling oil to the West, do you think that they will be impressed by a mere $20 million? With that much money you could probably buy a slew of U.S. politicians, but most of those in the Iranian government are true believers. Of course, with a brilliant plan behind it, $20 million might just make a difference. If it is Gingrich who thought the plan up, it is not .likely to be brilliant. Gingrich is not widely noted as being either an expert on Iran and the* Middle East, nor is he an experienced covert operations kind of guy. If his plan reads like the plot from one of his works of fiction we are in real trouble. Of course, the national security establishment probably couldn’t do any better. It would take up too much space to relate all of the foul ups they have had with relation to Iran. Why is Gingrich pushing this plan so much? It is probably more related to domestic politics than to any coherent foreign policy. If the Gingrich plan goes through, and the Iranian government falls within the next 30 years (for any reason), he will be crowing about how “he” toppled their government. Newt may also be throwing a foreign policy bone to the right of the Republican party to take their minds off of the trouble he is having pushing through their domestic agenda. In addi­ tion, dabbling in foreign policy makes Gingrich look a little more presidential, and Newt is almost certainly entertaining thoughts of someday sitting in the White House. In the end, this whole business smells of folly. The Iranian government has demonstrated great survival skills ever since its inception in 1979 and $20 million is not likely to topple or even substantially change it. Dribbling money into such a project seems contrary to the oft-stated Republican maxim that you should go in with overwhelm­ ing force or keep entirely out. The most likely outcome of this operation is a decline in U.S.-Iranian relations. They are bad enough as it is. And, at worst, it could prompt the Iranians into a more aggressive stance. After all, if we are trying to topple them isn’t it only fair that they get to try and topple, or at least terrorize, us? Gingrich’s plan has good intentions. What was that old saying about the path to hell? Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history. ■ DAVID STROW, Editor DAVID PROFFITT, Managing Editor JEREMY STEIN.............. ...... KENNES BOLIG.......... ANGELA MULL..... CHRISTINA BAILEY........... BRYN CHANCELLOR....... JIM POULIN............. ........... DAN MILLER........... ............ DUSTIN KRUGEL.................. ...............Asst. Sports Editor JOSH KRIST.......„;................ ADRIANNA GARCIA.... .....; .... ...Asst. Magazine Editor R EPO R TER S: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Garin Groff, A ndrea H ealey, M elody M cD onald, J e ff O w en s, Ray Stern, Timothy Tail, Kelly Wendel. SPO R TS REPO R TER S: Randy Jones, Seth Landau, Ed Odeven, Ron Matejko, Damian Shaw. CO PY ED ITO R S: Andrça Healey. Liz Montalbano. PH O TO G R A PH ER S: Paul Besing, Tim Hacker. Robert Hendricks', Pat Shannahan. C O LU M N ISTS: Daniel Blanco, M ichelle Carson, Bryn Chancellor, Jennifer Dodd, Steve Forsberg, Tina Holder, C. Lakshman, Liz Montalbano, Rebecca Murray. C A R T O O N IST S : Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, SteveTansley. P R O D U C T IO N : A aron R. B ra tc h er, J e ffre y C hua, JoAnne Hansen, Diana Kessinger, Jeremy Meyer, Gerry Mueller, Prashant Sampat, Corey Saunders, Eloise Young. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : N aom i C o b b , C ari Dewald, Dan EUstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, N ickelle K astein, M ike Logan, Jess Rankin, M ichelle M ade Sheetz, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: DAVID STROW Editor DAVID PROFFITT * Managing Editor . CHRISTINA BAILEY Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing die academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room IS, A rizona State U niversity, 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. H ie news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o n e N umbers Information............... 965-7572 Newsroom ........... .....965-2292 M agazine.................. 965-1695 Advertising............ ..965-6555 C lassifieds........... ....965-6735 Opinion jTATEj^RESS ______ ' ' ____________ W ednesday, Jânuary i l , 1996 P age 5 E nough is enough: Iraq deserves leniency in em bargo enforcem ent Media attention was paid ear­ It’s a pleasing fiction that the economic sanctions on Iraq lie r this m onth to the fifth mean that its sadistic dictator is living on bread and water anniversary of the outbreak of and running out of aspirin. He isn't. No evidence exists that the Persian Gulf War. Some of Saddam is personally hurting, while facts continue to sur­ the reporting was time-wasting face that Iraqi citizens are being devastated by this economic jo u rn alism , as on one CNN war as they were five years ago by the bombing war. broadcast which replayed famil­ Last month, two independent social scientists, one from iar footage of tracer bombs light­ the Harvard School of Public Health, surveyed Iraq for the ing the night sky over Baghdad United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization. They and tapes of reporters describing reported that as many as 567,000 Iraqi children have died the high-tech action, since August 1990 as a result of economic sanctions. During NBC asked Norman the war and its immediate aftermath, early childhood mor­ S ch w arzk o p f to rem inisce, tality rates tripled. Now they have increased five-fold. Which he did in his usual self-congratulatory wasn’t-I- Diarrheal deaths have tripled among children. something-else manner. CBS marked the anniversary by As a consequence of the economic war waged against the dispatching Dan Rather and production crews to Iraq and Iraqi people, the U.N. authors write: “Food prices are high, Kuwait for an hour-long special report. purchasing power is low, water and sanitation systems have As in coverage of the war jn 1991, the U.S. media, if deteriorated, hospitals are functioning at 40 percent capacity CNN, NBC and CBS are typical, focused this time around and the population is largely sustained by government mostly on questions of strategy: Did George Bush end the rations which provide 1,000 calories per person a day.” war too soon? Should Saddam Hussein have been killed?' Iraqis are trapped as much by the boycotts of other gov­ Military analysts accused the Pentagon of failing to totally ernments as by the despotism of their own. Iraqi families wipe out Iraqi forces and a re n 't totally w ithout “finish the job." ' , ■ . -v • ; friends in the outside R ath er’s script m en­ world. In m id-January, a tioned "the terrible cost" of Rather’s script mentioned “the terrible group of about 50 the war —1the 147 U.S. sol­ A m ericans — many of cost” o f the war — the 147 U.S. soldiers diers killed. How many them leaders in the re li­ Iraqi troops lost their lives? killed. How many Iraqi troops lost their gious, pacifist and socialNo word. An estimate of w orker com m unities — lives ? No word. Iraqi c ivi 1ians killed by informed the Department of American bombing raids V ■' _______________________ Justice that it plans to vio­ was ignored also, as were late U.S. law, as found in the postwar deaths caused by diseases due to the effect of the Treasury Department regulations, by soliciting and trans­ bombing on water, sanitation and electric plants. porting medical supplies to the people of Iraq. As is customary in these kinds of anniversary look- • The Chicago-based organization — called Voices in the backs, the emphasis is on then, not now — as if the end of Wilderness — is in the best tradition of conscientious the war in 1991 meant also the end of enmity. The major objection to unjust laws. Its members are ready for the con­ story now is that United Nations economic sanctions sequences of fines and jail. against the Iraqi people continue. The rationale is that if The U.S. law that forbids breaking the embargo ensures Saddam Hussein is socked with enough pain, he will obey death and suffering to a people who have already had too the demands of the United Nations to dismantle his pro­ much of it. The sooner that law is broken, and broken defi- , grams in nuclear, biological and chemical weapons produc­ antly, the greater the chance that people-to-people reconcil­ tion. By an embargo of trade, the U.N. pressure is exerted iation between Americans and Iraqis can begin. mostly by the United States and its allies, including Britain and France, which in the 1980s, were among the major Colman M cCarthy is a syndicated colum nist w ith the arms sellers profiteering off Saddam. Washington Post Writérs Group. fumali |V He &JiHr 5 T P R E S S 9 A S U .E D U ‘Roe’ editorial open/shut ease o f flawed logic Your editorial on Jan. 23, entitled “Happy Birthday Roe” was a textbook example of faulty reasoning. It is a display of the kind of attitude that has led to the victim mentality so prevalent in our society. “There is no decision that requires more Soul-searching than the decision to seek an abortion,” you wrote. “No other decision is more personal than this ...” I beg to differ. It is much more personal to decide when and with whom to engage in sexual activity. As a matter of fact, that very personal decision ultimately leads to the decision of whether or not to terminate a pregnancy. The “choice” is made even before a women knows she is preg­ nant. because in choosing sexual activity, she accepts the risk of getting pregnant by default. By conveniently ignoring the responsibility and impact of the first decision, society validates the very idea that there is a second “decision.” Thus, the abortion debate is not an issue of “choice” but one of personal responsibility . It should be noted that a responsible position would allow for abortions in the cases of rape and incest or to save the life of the mother since these exceptions are not within die realm of personal responsibility. You fu rth erw o te, “And does this nation wish to see more unwanted and uncared-for children? There are too many such children already alive — and their life stories tear at the hearts of every American. How many more tragedies will this nation endure, should we overturn Roe?” Excuse me, but one of those “tragedies” was Thomas Edison, the man who brought us the light bulb and the phonograph. He was a severely neglected and unwanted child. Would we be better off if he had been aborted? Are we better off to abort 1.5 million babies, rather than our hearts be torn by those who are neglected? I shudder to think how many great leaders, inventors, doctors and educators we have lost because we didn’t want to see uncared-for children. •). Finally, one of the most ludicrous arguments in your edi­ torial was, “Adoption sounds like a clean solution, sure — but are all women prepared to give up a child for all time, never to know what became of him or her?” You’re right. Just kill them. At least you know what became of them. Sean Noble Senior Broadcasting Obtuse opinion best ignored I hope few people were influenced by Tina Holder’s opinion column on Jan. 22. Holder states that it would be wrong for a law to be passed requiring parental permission before a teenage girl is allowed an abortion. She believes that it would make every pregnant girl turn to illegal, “back-alley” abortions before turning to her parents. Thank you, Holder, for ignoring the fact that there are quite a few teenagers out there who place their parents’ opinions above their own. Please remember there is a rea­ son why children are required to be under adult guidance until at least 18 years of age — to learn from their par­ ents. It’s not arrogant to expect children to seek a moth­ er’s or father's approval. It’s something that I wouldn’t want to be without. I don’t mean to attack Holder, but I don’t understand why she dismisses the validity of values by calling them “morality, Christianity and all the rest of that junk.” Doesn’t that statement take away from the greatest rights we possess in America — the freedoms of religion and speech? ■•' . , If Holder believes that I’m “trying to push those beliefs down other people’s throats,” then she’s ignoring the fact that the separation of church and state was originally meant to protect religious rights from the power of the govern­ ment. In this day and age, it’s sad to see religious rights placed on a back burner or never even considered. Do me a favor, Ms. Holder: Find out when prayer was taken out of schools and then look at the rise of teen pregnancy. John Genova Freshman Nursing NFL, ASU prove apathy again After a long, hard day of classes on campus from 8:40 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., 1 hopped on the Rio Salado/Hardy shuttle for the exiled Lot 59 students, and upon reaching my desti­ nation what do you think I found? There were no lights and no security guards watching over our cars! As I stumbled over rocks and potholes trying to find my car in the total darkness, I kept thinking to myself, “What if someone had stolen my car? Or, what if a mugger was waiting for me out there in the dark?” I just want to say thank you very much to ASU officials and to the NFL for being so thoughtful and considerate of students once again. We know where your priorities are. We know how much you care about us. _ Jeff Kleinman G raduate student Education uotctBCes... 0: Each o f us has the right and the responsibility to assess the roads which lie ahead a n d ... if the future road looms ominous or unpromising... then we need to gather our resolve a n d ... step off... into another direction. — Maya Angelou S t a t e P ress Wednesday, January 31,1996 P age 6 J* (x^JliX+2) IP y y f A à ¿t V WJ -m \ \ o i d 1YoMHnv| H24‘|y,« i* r * *«« m m H o f^ F iw b le m s m Wow the 'W' 92 ^ fa cte ***$& VX 1 I m When it comes to math, it's sink or swim. equations 3 6 : expandí 4 :zeros( 5 : approx< : conOenon< 7spropFrac< èïnSolveC 9s T rig » ft?C onplex.► BsE x tra c t ► Fortunately weve found a way to help you keep your head above water: the new TI-92. It'll tear through statistics, crunch ; m h !jliW i|M | and handy U l i i A i S l puil-down menus, it’s as friendly as Flipper. To see calculus and rip algebra to shreds unlike , fo r yourself why the TI-92 calculator any other calculator. Of course, the TI-92 . is the biggest fish in any isn't just a piranha o f • / pond, try it out power. With easy-to-read 6n the Internet,. S w T e x a s I n s t r u m e n t s Sendè-mail,to:ti-carei«ii.cornofcall1-800-TI-CARES.C1995Tl S ee th e n e w TI-92 at: ÀSU Bookstore CHRIS FARLEY DAVID SPADE M ove U p To T he C om m ons BL&&SHKP J ÉHF T O n A pache! Live inaLuxuryApartment! SharedBedrooms As LowAs $290PerMonth! SignUp Today. 2 bedroom, 2 bath suites fully furnished great swimming pool jacuzzi, computer lab February, 1996 Controlled access gated community washer & dryer in each suite microwave, dishwasher weight room & sauna sand volleyball racquetball roommate matching U THE L COMMONS 1111E. Apache Tempe, AZ T o n apacheT 2 Blocks from ASU 303-7000 in k ■■•■-■■-ST..... t r ^ e v e r y t t w fa m ^ ily . ; ; .. J \ Iff : .................. ,-! . N a m e tw o m o tio n p ic tu r e s c r e d ite d © sæ t o D a v i d S p a« « d e® a n d y o u 'll w in o n e o f t h e fo llo w in g : •An admit two complimentary pass to the advance screening of Black Sheep on Thursday, Feb. 1, at 7:30pm at Harkins Centerpoint in Tempe •A Black Sheep Mini Poster •A Black Sheep Folder A ll you have to do is com e in to th e S ta te P ress Advertising offices in Matthews Center Basement and give your answer to Gwen. Offer good while supplies last! No purchase necessary. No State Press employees are eligible. BLACK SHEEP OPENS EVERYWHERE ON FEBURARY 2 Page_7 W ednesday, January 3 1 ,1996 S t a t e P ress H O W D O YO U TURN 4 0 ,0 0 0 STRANGERS INTO 4 0 FRIENDS? Escort service slow during Super Bow l B y T im B axter S ta te P ress CIRCLE K INTERNATIONAL SERVICE • LEADERSHIP « FELLO W SHIP C O M E F IN D O U T ! Tuesday at 12:40PM and Thursday at 7:00PM M.U. 2ND FLOOR The Super Bowl meant less work for at least one ASU organization — the Safety Escort Service. As of last Friday, the escort service had only 300 calls since school started Jan. 16. This is roughly half the normal 560 to 600 calls during that period, said SES director Kevin Kolb. “Basically it’s miserable,” he said. Kolb said he had a few ideas why the service received so few calls. “People weren’t showing up for night classes or their night classes Were can­ celed,” he said. Escorts were available Thursday and Friday during the ASU Experience, but Kolb said they were not needed. The service was closed Saturday and Sunday. Kolb said he anticipated calls to jump back to normal this week. “I expect it to go back up to 50 to 70 calls a night,” he said. KAPLAN PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT BUCHANAN ’9 6 N o w is t h e T im e ! Now is the time to help form a group of ASU students dedicated to promoting the candidacy of the most informed, articulate, principled, oldschool conservative to run for president since Barry Goldwater. The Republican primary is February 27, so there is still time to help make a difference. Help put America First! Support Pat Buchanan! Call John Lyon at 937-9703 for more information. Paid for by John Lyon Buchanan for President P r e p w ill g iv e y o u th e e d g e • STRATEGIES FOR SU CCESS • CONVENIENT HOME STUDY • UNLIMITED PRACTICE • VIDEO R EV IEW S • SIM U LATED TESTING K A P L A N is co m p le te p re p a ra tio n fo r D A T an d O A T gat a Higherscore 1 - 8 0 0 -KAP-TEST KAPLAN E-mail: lnfoQkapian.com America OnHne: koywmd "Kaplan" World Wide Web: http/Arww kaplan com CROSSROADS E piscopal C hristians February O n C ampus ALPHA DELTA PI "THE FIRST AND THE FINEST" FOUNDED 1851 1, 1996 A n O p e n I n v it a t i o n to th e ASU C o m m u n i t y S t u d e n t s , Fa c u l t y & S t a ff FOR A N EVENING OF G A M E S " M A N C A L A " [a n A f r ic a n R o c k gam e] C h e ss ♦ C ribbage ♦ C a r d s ♦ D o n ' t m iss t h is g r e a t o p p o r t u n it y f o r FRIENDSHIP & FELLOWSHIP . ♦ R e f r e s h m e n t s & B ev er a g es ♦ 7:00 PM at S t . A u g u s t in e ' s P a r is h H a l l NE comer of College & Broadway Come w o r s h ip w it h u s a t St. A ♦ Only three blocksfrom campus u g u s t in e ' s E p is c o p a l C h u r c h 1735 S. C o lle g e S t., T em pe Sundays at 8 and 10 am For more information about our programs, please call 967-0990 145YEARS OF TRADITION PATA mPATA*" PATA PATA Sta te P ress Wednesday, January 31, 1996 Page 8 C o n stru ctio n sch o o l nabs top h on ors Bv B ria n A n d erso n S ta te P ress A crew from ASU Del E. W ebb School of Construction nailed down top honors for developing a mock housing community plan at the N ational A ssociation o f Home B uilders convention in Houston. The team of six under­ graduate construction stu­ dents —- five active mem­ bers and one alternate — “blew the com petition away,” said Pete Gasca, a senior construction major Robert Hendricks/State Press and team member. G asca attributed the S tu d en ts and faculty from th e ASU Del E. W ebb School of C onstruction disp lay th e trophy th ey won at th é National A ssociation of Home Builders convention in H ouston. team’s success last Friday to the hundreds o f hours of some of the supposed people that seemed to have been teamwork the students devoted to the six-week project. w inning each year gives ASU a real boost where it “We gave up our Christmas break and our social life for counts,” he said. “Our guys and ladies are all getting many this project," he said. “I thought other schools were going job offers.” to do the same, but l was pretty surprised that (they).didn’t Gasca agreed. . put in as much time as we did.” . “I got one offer, but I had to turn it down because it was Gasca also credited the team’s achievement to going back East,” he said. “We were able to get a lot of contacts “far and beyond the scope of the competition” by working in our resume books. I’m really excited for myself and on optional portions of the project that other schools did more importantly the school.” not. ASU competed against 18 other schools including BYU and Purdue University, which placed second and third, respectively, and have dominated the competition in past years, said Don Mulligan, an ASU construction professor. M ulligan added that com petition from big name schools with similar construction programs was as stiff as a board. “We have the best team of students in terms of being able to put together a total comprehensive package like this out of any other school in the country,” he said. “The real significance was that this was only the second time that we have participated.” For its struggle to the top of the competition’s ladder, the ASU team received $1,000 in cash that was.given to the National Association of Home Builders local chapter. The team also received a rotating trophy that it will keep until next year’s competition. In addition,.each individual team member received a computer software package worth more than $ 1,000. Bill Badger, director of the construction school, said the honor will help the school’s reputation grow, which will ultimately make construction students more marketable. “I think winning something like that and knocking out» Want $24,500 ter college? rCAMPUS-| LC o r n e r ' 712 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C o lle ge S tre e t D e li 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 a c ro ss fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ASU T-SHIRTS The Army Reserve can help you take a big bite out of college expenses. How? If you qualify, th e M ontgom ery GI Bill could provide you with up to $6,920for college or approved yo/tech training. We'll also pay you over $105 a weekend' to start. Training is usually one weekend a m o n th plus two weeks'Annual Training. By adding the pay for Basic Training and skill training, ; you'll earn over $ 17,585 during a standard enlistment. So, if you could use a little financial help getting through school-the kind th a t w o n 't interfere with school-stop by or call: $7.99 967-1611 EVERY DAY ■tau. vosean«;. ARMY RESERVE Go ahead. Tell that special someone ju’st how much you care with a State Press Valentine’s Day Love Line, 3 lines for $2. Each additional line is $1. Hurry! Ad deadline is Monday, Feb. 12, at 3 p.m. Ads must be placed in person at the State Press classified offices in the Matthews Center basement between 8 a.m. & 5 p.m. daily. Ads will be published Feb. 14. ASMALL PRICE TOPAYFOR LOVE I Gift certificates to Sunny's Pizza will be given to the authors of the • most romantic ad • silliest ad • most cryptic ad A ' ■ ▼asgan waw M irúitn ' R o u n d trip fro m P hoenix ....5 6 9 C O STA R IC A M EX IC O C IT Y . . .. . . . ....1 9 8 P U ER TO V A L L A R T A ... ...1 2 0 V A N C O U V E R . ............ ...2 0 8 538 LO N D O N ~ ■: ’ B R A Z IL ...... ........ .....................7 6 7 ED M O N TO N ............ .....2 9 9 P A R K .......... 601 AM STERDAM .................. .....6 3 8 B A R C E L O N A ................... ...6 6 0 .128 D E N V E R .............. ......... M A D R ID ...... ............ . S H A N N O N ........... ........ .....6 3 8 ,....6 3 8 NEW Y O R K ................. .....281 O ther C ities Available MILL AVENUE TRAVEL 966-6300 Discounts Also A vaila ble To Faculty & Staff Restrictions Apply. Subject tô Ava iIabi Ii|y . P A S T HÖ A N WE C R O S S W O R D by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 1 Edna Ferber novel 6 Farm youngster 10 Barton of nursing 11 Up to now 12 Stands 13 Loosen a lace 14 Currier’s partner 15 Allergy symptom 16 Convened 17 Under­ world group 10 Blushing 19 Building and its grounds 22 Hosiery hazard 23 Related 26 Gives one’s word 29 Upper limit 32 Madison Avenue output 33 Wheel track 34Recently 36 Abhor 37 Agenda 36 Plow pioneer John 39 Cantina snacks 4 0 Lowest deck 41 Flight part 42 Makes headway DOWN 1 Be frugal 2 Stone and Reed 3 W e count in it 4 Angers 5 Stove fuel 6 Solitary 7 Following 8 Cbm 9 AKC concern 11 Some rays 15 Call for help 17 Goes south, eg. f 2 C R E O L E S e s S HO O T L T L Y ■ L R u S A S h] S H A 0 I R U fi E L A T E Ms p E NNA G I L 0 A R A T R A C E 20 Glove compart­ ment item 21 Take to the slopes 24 Peres or Shamir 25 Alpha particle part 27 Keats creation 5 10 R T A N S S T Y N E Yesterday’s Answ er 28 Brews, as tea 29 Expenses 30 One of the black keys 31 Finish second 35 On the roof of 36 Zeus’s wife 38 Follow r ~ 8“ — 4 3 u N T E T A C R E s F 1 N O 0 T 1 R 3 E R T O A C H O L L E L L E Ifl, E E S f l 1 • 1 ii 1 14 - ■ is J 19 ■ /: ■ ^■ 22 24 25 I W~ ■ 27 26 » 18 ” 37 39 _ 41 33 _ ■ 35 34 28 32 31 ■ ■ 36 L m 38 ■ f l 40 ■ i 1-31 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work itf AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for foe three L's, X for the two 0 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, foe length and formation of foe words are all hints. Each day foe code letters are different. 1-31 CRYPTOQUOTES N EP F VP YJ L V P S X P F K E P A NJXDJL FE ZERJZF IEDJD RJ X F E R J X P X S F J Z B J MZELVAH. — ~ Sítate P ress Classifieds G U A T E M A L A .. . ..... ...5 3 8 C A B O SAN L U C A S .... ...... 120 F R A N K F U R T .......... .......... ...6 0 8 ...6 3 8 D U B L IN ............ BJ ENTER T O D A Y ?| W in n ers will b e p u b lish ed in th e F eb. 14 issue. ... . SPECIAL STUDENT FARES http://aspin.asu.edu./pmyidey/State Press/ a Yesterday's Cryptoquote: CRITICISM OFTEN ‘ TAKES FROM THE TREE CATERPILLARS AND BLOSSOMS TOGETHER.—RICFfTER A k u i f i n n C a a ti iro c Q u n rlin a ta In n • Page 9 W ednesday, January 31,1996 S t a t e P ress Alittle free advice onthe P olice R eport A little known fact about the GRE: guessing is good. There is no guessing penalty on the GRE, so you can pick up points by guessing when you're not sure of the answer. Of course, the Computer Adaptive Test is another story ... Need more help? At The Princeton Review, our small classes utilize over 50 hours of personalized training, the most up-to-date materials, and prac­ tice on real GREs under actual testing conditions. The bottom line is a higher score. 967-1480 + ww w .review .com em ail at paula.phoenix@ review .com J l THE PRINCETON REVIEW nncetopReviewisnotaffiliated' . INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS EXPERIENCE Travel to the w orld's g reatest cities Interact with to p executives of well-known organizations Earn academ ic credit ASU Police reported ther-following in ci­ dents Monday: • Two m inors not affiliated with the U niversity were contacted at 200 E. University Drive while jumping onto mov­ ing vehicles. They were warned of disor­ derly conduct and left the area. • Three people reported th eir cellu lar phones stolen from Sun Devil Stadium dur­ ing the Super Bowl. • A cellular phone was stolen from Alpha Drive and Sixth Street. • A golf bag containing clubs and golf shoes was stolen from the Karsten Golf Course. • A computer hard drive was stolen from Physical Education West. • A CD player, 18 compact discs and a pair of sunglasses were stolen from Parking Structure 6. • A CD player and one compact disc were stolen from Parking Structure 5. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents over the weekend: • A woman Was arrested for allegedly pick pocketing a m an 's w allet containing $1,300. • A woman was arrested for alleged disor­ derly conduct and resisting arrest at Fat Tuesday, 680 S. Mill Ave. She caused a disturbance and was asked to leave, but refused. When a security officer removed her, she fought and yelled racial remarks at the security guard. Officers had to mace her to detain her. • A man was arrested for alleged misde­ meanor theft and disorderly conduct. He was seen carrying an orange traffic cone at Mill Avenue and Sixth Street when an offi­ cer told him to put the cone down. The man refused to put the cone down and shouted obscenities. A crowd gathered until the officer removed the man. • A.man was charged with false reporting when he called police and claimed he was a victim o f a hit and run. An investigation revealed he hit a cement marker in a park­ ing garage while backing his car out. Compiled by State Press reporter Garin Groff INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS W ednesday, January 31,1996 and Thursday, February 1,1996 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Room: BAC 631 If you cannot attend, contact: Dan Brenenstuhl in Management 965-5031 Greg Moorhead in Management 965-4566 Jim Spiers in Marketing 965-3621 or International Business Seminars 874-0100 Knowing Christ VALLEV BUSINESS MACHINES 675 East 2100 South, Sugarhouse, UT 84106 801-467-1537 • FAX 801-486-0813 TOLL FREE 1-800-462-2019 a Thursday Noon Bible Study Christian Students Fellowship is sponsoring a noon Bible study every Thursday during the Spring Semester on the various aspects of Knowing Christ in our personal experience. This week we will talk about: Knowing Christ in a New Birth Thursday, Feb 1,12:40 -1:30 pm Off Campus 1212 S. Mill Ave. C h ristian S tudents Fellow ship All are welcome 0>ring a brown bag lunch) beverages and desserts provided For more information call 921-7270 $5 McDonald's Gift Certificate and FREE Breakfast Given To NUTRITION STUDY VOLUNTEERS V Texas Instruments TI-92 THE POWER OP A COMPUTER LAB WITH THE INDEPENDENCE OF A CALCULATOR BA n PLUS P i BUSINESS i WÊBÊBBSm CALCULATOR l(S 0 (D G D D W SBGuß]© BS > Mathematical expressions appear as written Connectivity unit-to-unlt link cable included Split screen display 8-dlrectloncursor Extensive programming capability 3>dimehslonal graphing Symbolic manipulation Trigonometric functions, natural logrlthms. powers etc. • Tlme-value-of-money calulatlons • Cash-flow analysis Including NPV&IRR TI-82 TI-85 GRAPHICS CALCULATOR GRAPHICS CALCULATOR Programmable 28.2-KB Memory Easy pull-down menus IBM & Apple compatible Split screen setting shows graph and data In same window Handy I/O port allows . datasharlng • Programmable . • 32-KB Memory • Handy I/O port allows data sharing • Equation-solving capabilities • Large display screen displays 8 Unes X 21 characters • IBM & Apple compatible M ondays, W ednesdays and Fridays from 1 /2 9 through 2 /1 6 . 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Total Time = 30 Minutes • • • • graphing tool Programmable Easy pull-down menus Superior data analysis V ANYLITE solar power allows operations even in low light • Scientific functions • 3-memories • Premutations & combinations • Converts between fractions and decimals • 10-dlglt display with 2-diglt exponent FREE SH IPPIN G TOLL FREE NUMBER: 1-800-462-2019 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- — Comics St a t e P r e s s Wednesday, January 3 1,1996 P ag e 10 a[ n ( r A t i § N H e X b y Stccoy H oLrhsiteAt sI KNOW YOUR PROFESSORS! T yp e t r m b a b y s it t e r TUST TRY TO Keep THE NOISE LEVEL DOWN ANO YOU'LL ALL GET " Ai . I'M A ssi& m G YOU ALU t o V fs a is s /o M GROUPS. W H ILE You'Re ROSY MORAfWWft I'L L WORK OH M NEW ROOK■ Good tor, 7 HATS EQUITUR Cla s s . BY y \m y VERY— CLASS? / I U CULTURAL P lffC R tN O ti» MHPG, P ocT o R , Y ltV KLL fcf??PCAKT& \T IF YbU'D éTO P RGFCRR\NÉr T o TWfc ofc&fcNG U* CJpLCTé» Dilbert By Scott A dams SO YOU USED CODE FROM THE PAYROLL HERE'S A T IP system ? D O N T FLY 5 O N PAY DAY. SUDDENLY THE GIFTED PROGRAMMER EMPLOYS A RARELY SEEN STRATEGY OF "CODE REUSE." / ----THE CROWD) GOES W ILD . COALLY W RITES THE. C R IT IC A L CODE FOR OUR N A TIO N 'S NEW A IR TR A FFIC CONTROL SYSTEM. v) 2 _ D o o n e s b u ry vie/ a BY G A R R Y T R U D E A U M t WaNaÿrn Pa* WHMRGroup O WHENIT COMES SEX.TTHINKTHE PEOPLEOPNEW HAMPSHIREAPE LOCKINGFOR r -S ~ \ CHAN6E ' o p s ALAN l& B S T ' URN TO WOO FORMBARENANOFOSE THE PROBLEM & SEX, you SEE! TOO ¿UHY7 m u o io RE. BOTTM NOT90SURE THE BECAUSE rÜBLACK7 AO ITS OH*. LAMP REALLYY BECAUSE ts v m xxxz n r /s NU75- HOWNUTS7 Zm MUCHOFm MHÜ: SoQuPooflOool.cQfn PRETTYOUT THBRE.POYOU HAVEA FAMILY? SOMEONEWE COÜLOCALLT temei •wmm W w iN W W W f W F f ARUO*» STATE UMITtASfTT On the I f Y O y o l/lE u ^r R E A D IN G e i n T H IS IN World Wide Web G LASS h ttp ://a s p in .a s u .e d u /p r o v id e r /S ta te P r e s s / BIG T1QHBL11 LUNCH SPECIALS one SLICE of P IZZA 16-oz. D R IN K p in a l l y SBSSrSE c# delicious • fast • low everyday prices MAKE YOUR CHOICE AND GIVE US A CALL LARGE PIZZA SINGLE ITEM add'l. items 1.10 each Medium Single Item^ W FOR DEL1VERY1J add'l. items 95$ each THESE ARE EVERYDAY aP R IC E S p I FORASU LARGEBARRO'S SPECIAL Includes: cheese, pepperoni, ham, onions, mushrooms & green peppers. Veggie special can be substituted. 4 LARGE add'l. items each 1.10 per pizza 19.99 LA R G E C H EES E P I Z Z A • SO WINGS 0 9 add'l.items 1.10each M E D IU M P H F F R P p iz z a 9 9 1 .4 0 r x k tw ec o rn e r • 25 WINGS I witli ASU I.D. 2 SLICES of P IZZA 16-oz. D R IN K 2 .5 8 with ASU I.D. one SLICE of P IZZA SALAD 16-oz. D R IN K adcl'|' i,ems1-10each C A L L F O R D E L IV E R Y 3 5 0 - 9 1 2 2 DINE IN OR CARRY OUT ONLY Sports STATE P ress ~ zWednesday, January 3 1 , 1996 _______________________ __________________________________ ________P a ^ e ^ l . Frieder excited about maturing Sun Devils Jim Poulin/State Press Ju n io r point guard Quincy Brewer had his h an d s full with UCLA and B ruins' g u a rd Toby Bailey tw o w eeks ago, but the Sun Devil basketball team is currently riding a tw o-gam e win streak. By Damian Shaw State Press ASU men's basketball coach Bill Frieder has spent Half the season looking for matu­ rity from his bench players, and he thinks with last weekend’s sweep of the Oregon Schools, he got just that. “That was one of the biggest things of all our meetings and discussions,” Frieder said at his weekly press conference Tuesday. “We had to get more out of every­ body and there were things they could do to help this team. The whole thing is we had to pick these kids up and have them become a part of this team again.” F rieder singled out ju n io r R odger Farrington, who recently stepped up his play with a winning basket over against Oregon in Eugene last week. “Rodger got 15 rebounds in two games, so that was a big jump on what he’s been doing,” Frieder said. “Him making that winning basket, and also a basket right before that to keep us in the game, has got to help him a great deal.” -v Farrington and the rest of the Sun Devils have turned things around as of late, scor­ ing their first Pac-10 wins of the season on the road. ASU will have a chance to contin­ ue the streak this week when it faces both Washington schools at home, starting with Washington State Thursday night. Magical Comeback Frieder had an opinion, as always, on the return of Magic Johnson to the NBA’s Los Angeles Lakers Tuesday night. “Magic’s a good friend of mine,” Frieder“• Said. “I feel like everyone else, if that’s what he feels he’d like to do, then that’s fine. I think that even though he’s played a lot of basketball since leaving the game...I think that all that time off will effect how he plays.” Frieder got to know Johnson quite well while coaching at Michigan. There were no NCAA rules on how much time a coach could spend with a prep recruit when Johnson was in high school, so Frieder said he spent almost every day with Johnson and saw every one of his high school games. In the end however, Frieder lost Johnson to Michigan State, which was in his home­ town of East Lansing. “Right now we can only go out 20 days from October 15 to March 15,” Frieder sdid. “Then there was no restrictions, so I was with him almost every day. So we became very close. I was always there.” . ASU gymnastics ’ club handles early-season adversity B y Randy J on es S ta t e P ress Injuries and illness have kept the ASU men’s gymnastics club from getting on track so far this season. Paralleling the injury women’s gymnast Carie Courtney incurred in an auto accident, freshman Rob Davis was unconscious for over 10 hours after he was hit by a car in the snow in Chicago over winter break- Davis suffered a severe concussion, and has lost some control of the right side of his body. He has not been able to start exercising yet, as his condi­ tion doesn’t allow him to raisè his blood pressure. “ It’s a shame,” said coach Scott Barclay. “He trained extremely hard for this season, and then this happened.” Senior co-captain Marty Larson, the team’s top allaround performer, fell sick on Jan. 19, the day before the team competed in the Rocky Mountain Open, hosted by Air Force. . Barclay admitted it is tough for the team. However, he did see some positives in its eighth- place finish. “As an open meet it was an opportunity to see every­ body’s hand, to see where they were this early,” he said. . Top returnees for the squad include the three remaining gymnasts on scholarship left from when the team was demoted to club status three years ago: Larson, Rob Kjar and Kirk Johnson. Kjar, an All-American as a freshman, is the two-time reigning national champion in the pommel horse. Barclay also expects sophomore Jon Protillo to make B aseball new com ers expected to see early action for Sun Devils B y D u s t in K r u g e l S t a t e P ress Jim Poulin/Srate Press Senior first baseman Robbie Kent will be one of the few fam sliar facies on the ASU baseball team this season. The ASU baseball team’s game program from last year is alj but useless now because the 1996 squad has 24 new facts. Friday's home opener against Loyola Marymount will be the debuts of several Sun Devils. Robbie Kent. Jason Bond, Cody M cKay, Kaipo Spenser, Ryan B radley, R ichy Leon, M ikel Moreno and Dan McKinley all had significant playing time last year, but the rest of the roster is made of new com ers and returnees who didn't see much action. ASU baseball coach Pat Murphy said he’s never had a team with so many new faces but he’s not con­ cerned. “Our youth is incredible,” he said. “I look at that as a positive.” The biggest change in ASU’s lineup occurs in the infield where last year’s third baseman, McKay, will move to catcher, and Kent will become the full-time starter at first base after splitting time between first and second last year. M urphy is very pleased to have University of Miami junior transfer Mike Torti at third base and the veteran senior Kent at first. • “Kent and Torti are real solid,” Murphy said. “Kent’s a winner in every sense of the word. Torti has really made some great adjust­ ments. He’s ready to have a tremen­ dous season. There's just no doubt about that.” Kent said he doesn’t care where he plays. “I would definitely be willing to go anywhere,” he said. “This is my last year and I’ve never been to a (College) World Series. I would do anything in my power to help us get there.” McKay, who returned for anoth­ er year at ASU despite being selectTURN TO ASU BASEBALL, PAGE 12. significant contributions. , Up next for the team is the UCLA Inyites on Feb. 10. “This is a big meet for us,” he said. “With the California schools, Illinois and some mid-western schools, this is an opportunity for us to compete with these schools that have funding.” When mentioning money, Barclay sighed. It’s hard to compete at a team level with teams that have funding, he said, adding that a Dade County school in Miami recently added four Cubans to the squad. “This instantly gives them four title contenders,” he said. Barclay insists, however, that ASU can compete for individual titles. “We’ve got the talent (individually) to hang with the UCLA’s and the Washington’s,” he said. Roadrunners tp host ‘ASU Night’ to help disabled B y“ IU»i_Jsfa ttir o S ta te P ress ' The Phoenix Roadrunners hope to-start something new when they join forces with ASU to help raise money for the Disabled Student Resource Center on campus. The Roadrunners’ game at 7 p.m. Saturday against the Indianapolis Ice has been tabbed “ASU Night.” Portions of ticket proceeds will go to the ASU center. ■ Tedde Scharf, Associate Director, said some of the money will be used to repair transportation carts which were damaged just prior to the beginning of the semester. Damage on just one cart totalled almost $1,500, she said. Jeff Orenstein, Account Executive for Roadrunner Ticket Programs, said this is something the team would like to do every season. He added that up to 30 members of ASU’s band will be on hand and attempts to land ASU mascot. Sparky, are being made. Also, die Roadrunners plan to have a former ASU athletic standout in attendance fqr the game, possibly to drop the puck for the opening faceoff. P age 12 S t a t e P ress W ednesday, January 3 Î, 1996 A S U b a se b a ll C ontinued from pagi 11. ed in the fifth round of amateur draft, has already played third base and shortstop dur­ ing his career, but he has quickly taken to his new position. “I’m going to do what I can as far as catching,” he said. “1 want to kind of pace the game by myself. I want to know my pitchers really well. I want them to really trust me if they throw the ball in the dirt that I’ll block it. 1 want them to feel that they can throw whatever pitch they want.” ■ M cK ay’s backup probably won’t see extensive playing time at catcher, but if an injury were to occur, the Sun Devils: won't be left empty-handed, Murphy said. “(Greg) Halvorson has worked very hard." Murphy said of his freshman back­ stop. “His work ethic has not gone unno­ ticed.’’ The Sun Devils’ middle infield will also have two new faces. Freshm an M ichael C ollins from Mountain Pointe High School in Phoenix Alittle free advice onthe will start at second base and either junior Jav ier F uentes or freshm an Andrew Beinbrink from Scripps Ranch High School in San Diego are slated to see early action at shortstop. Leon Was projected to start the opener at shortstop until he broke his ankle earlier this month. Murphy said he is not worried about the possibility of starting two freshmen this early in the Season. • “You never like to go into the season starting two freshmen I guess on paper,” he said. “But again these are quality kids that are very capable.” ' ;: The Sun Devil outfield will have two familiar faces in Moreno and McKinley, who are expected to make significant improvements during their sophomore sea­ sons. Murphy reaped praises on Moreno, who is expected to see most of his action in center field this year. “Moreno is the catalyst,” he said. “He’s a home grown Arizona native. Local prod- Many medical schools now recommend that appli­ cantstake the Spring MCAT and turn in their applica­ tions as early in the Fall as possible, fakin g the Spring MCAT also gives you time to re-take it jf you need to, and allows you to use the personal score release option. The bottom line is a higher score. G et S tarted Studying a s Early a s February 3rd S or Princctoa l niimili email at paula.phoenix@review.com week. Pat Kelleher, a fall baseball recruit for the 1997 season, is attempting to play this spring. Kelleher graduated from Chaparral High during the winter break and has enrolled in classes this spring, but Murphy said ASU is still waiting for word from the NCAA Clearinghouse about his eligibility. By enrolling in classes, Kelleher has committed himself to ASU baseball for the next three years. Kelleher* who was listed as the 33rd-m ost-coveted high school recruit in the nation by Baseball America recently, is not eligible for the amateur baseball draft th is June because he is already enrolled in college classes. “I really respect his decision.,” Murphy said. “I think it shows that the young man had more than the accolades and the money in his mind. He was really committed to a college education.” Murphy added he has not'had a case like this while he Was coaching, but he said Kelleher, if eligible, would see playing time this year, “He would be a contributor but he has to pay his dues and start from the bottom,” Murphy said. “He’s a Brett Butler type with a little more pop.” GREAT HAIR'S NO HASSLE WITH THE RIGHT STYLING TOOLS. Need more help? At The Princeton Review, our small classes utilize over 90 hours of personalized training, the most up-to date materials, and practice on 10 fulllength MCATs. 967-1480 uct. Just trem endous character. H e’s a tremendous leader on the team. He made an impact on Arizona State baseball last year. (He) really made a positive impact on the team when there wasn’t always a tremen­ dous attitude on the team.” Mesa Community College transfer Jeff Cermak is ticketed to start in right field along with McKinley in left. “Both are terrific baseball players, very capable,” Murphy said. Murphy has not named his Starting rota­ tion against LMU this weekend but he said several pitchers who haven’t received much publicity are fighting for playing time, “There’s a lot of battles going on,” he said. “Jason Bond, Gabe Molina, Ben Byrd, Widd Workman (and) Jon Wente have not read the press clippings of the other players. They have just decided that they are going to give this thing a whirl. Those guys are all going to contribute.” ASU’s three highly-touted freshm en pitchers, Phill Lowery, Ryan Mills and Ron M arietta, and Olympic hopeful pitcher Kaipo Spenser; have all received significant media coverage this year. Notes: ASU received good and bad news this HAIRCUT M e n & W o m e n (n e w c lie n ts ) You choose the right tools to build something great. le right tools to give your hair more style. Like styling products from MATRIX' ESSENTIALS, and Conditioning to give hair a fuller, healthier look. And quick­ drying, non-sticky Splitting Spray to hold your style. Come in soon for a hair care and styling consultation. *" T"F PRINCETON REVIEW yiMrfx HAIR-SKIN-COSMETICS NAILS 519" Full se t a c ry lic (n e w c lie n ts ) W jzza r d s h a ir S T U D IO 9 0 3 S . R u ra l R d . i h v 967-2360 * WE DO "MAGIC" WITH HAIR Classifieds N otice to o u r readers: B efore responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you. may .wish to investigate the company arid offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f die offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an adveitiseirierit, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. The state w ith the m ost prisoners on death row is California. r■ ANNOUNCE MENTS FREE FINANCIAL Aid! O ver $6 B illion in public & private sector grants & scholarships is now ayailablé. All students are eligible regardless of grades, in­ come, o r parent’s income. .Let us help. C all Student F in an cial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext, F59183, : : FREE STUFF from Uncle Sam: g ra n t/lo a u s/sc h p la rsh ip s/g o v t surplus. Claim yoùr share! Free facts. Arrow Publications P.Q. Box 813 tA Z U ) Blue Bell, Pa 19422 C o lle g e Pick up your copy of hie doily S ta te Press qn MCC cam pus a t the entrance of th e qdmirUstrqtion building. M A TU RE NS fem ale. Own rm /ba in a 2 bd/2ba apt. nr AS.U. P ref. Jap a n e se but w ill consider Others; $ 2 7 3/m o+ l/2 util + $150 dep. A nnètte 9668615 / 'J , Ì2& PAP AGO PARK I 2bd/2ba, d/w,- w/d, covered prkrig, pool $775/m o. Jo h n 894-8440 or 945-1258 , HOMES FOR RENT 3 BDR 2 BA w /pool, w.alk to ASU- $900/mo. Call Tim 8940288. TO W N H O M E S / C O N D O S FOR RENT HAYDEN SQUARE, 1 Bdrm 1 B ath, p o o l-sid e , asking $70Q/mö. R e/M ax E x c a lib u r Realty, ask for Gary G reenacre 483-3333. COMIC BOOKS Community LARGE 2BD apt., walk to A$U pool, laundry- room , 1 blk south o f U niversity on 8th St. C ape Cod: A p artm en ts 968- REMODELED 3 BEDROOM. 2 bath, tiled flriors $800/mo. 8940288. ANNOUNCE MENTS M esa RENTAL SHARING OLD TOWN Tempe 3 bedroom 2 bath w ith pool and poolhou se. $ 1000/morith. Tim 8940288; Source: The Top 10 o f Everything Russell Ash Huge comic book sale Sat. Feb. 10 & Sun. Feb. 11 from 8am 5pm . O ver 10,000 com ic b ooks, $ .2 5 /each o r 100 for $20. M arv el/p C /Im ag e/V aliam /D ark Horse and many oth­ e rs. All m ajo r lin e s ,& a ll in M in t co n d itio n : 1 m ile from ASU, 1040 W. 19th Sir., cross'' s tre e ts B roadw ay/B eck $6 .0 0 b ase, average $7- I I/hr. Start now. Data pro­ cessing pos. also avail. 7842270. M A T O R JAKE 957-7770 Centeon Bio-Services, Inc. (formerly Associated Bioscience, Inc.). Why donate plasma? R E C E IV E +Help save lives • Earn up to $185 each month • Supervised care area for your children to play •W atch your favorite movie while you donate •W e have many ASU donors! • Extra bonuses possible if you've had your . Hepatitis "A" shot New E x te n d e d H o u rs 7:30am-8pm 8am - 4:30pm 10am - 4pm 1334 E, Broadway Rd. Suite 102 (across from the Native New Yorker) MrF . -.' Sat Sun Western Health Services C A M P T A K A JO F or boys. Outstanding Maine camp noted for magnificent lakefront setting and exceptional facilities. Oyer 100 positions for heads and as­ sistants in tennis, baseball, bas­ ketball, soccer, lacrosse, golf, s tre et hockey, ro lle r hockey, sw im m ing, sailing, canoeing, waterskiing. Scuba, archery, ri.fiery, w eight training, journal­ ism^ p hotography, videography, woodworking, ceramics, crafts,- drawing & painting, na­ ture study, radio & electronics, dram atics, piano accom panist, music instrum entalist, band di­ rector, backpacking, rockclimbirig, whitewater canoeing, ropes course, g eneral (w /youngest campers), secretarial. June 17AugUst 18, Top salaries, room & board, travel provided. Call 800-4 0 9 -C AM P. O r w r i t e : C am p T akajo, 525 E a st 72nd Street, :25th floor,. New York; NY 1002.1. O r fax resum e to 212-988-0212. We will be on cam pus W ednesday, February 14th, I0am-4pn>, Room s 208Hopey and 208D-Havasupai in Memorial Union. Walk-ins wel- Find th e C lassified on th e Internet: http://aspin .asu.edu/ StatePress/ C A N ’T STA ND litte r bugs? H elp keep o u r cam pus tidy. Now hiring students to pick up after those who let inserts with­ in the S tate P ress fall to the ground. Must be avail, anytime betw een 8am -3pm , W ork is sporadic. Exclut compensation. Apply at State Press Info Desk, Matthews Center/Basement. CHIROPRACTIC ASSISTANT, f/t bilingual, teamplayer & high engery 955*2858 CRUISE SHIPS hiring! Students needed! $$$ + free travel (Car­ ibbean,: Europe, Hawaii!, Gde, 919-929-4398 ext, C105Q, DOMINO'S PIZZA Come join the excitement with the #1 food delivery team for the ASU area. W ith the a d d i­ tion o f subs & hot wings, this Domino’s is one ùf the top cam­ pus stores in the country. We need more f/t & p/t drivers to help us safely deliver all these orders., Our drivers can make $7$ 14 per hour including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bo­ nuses can also be earned. We are very flexible & can work ar­ ound y o u r school schedule.: W e su p p o rt a drug free w ork environm ent. Apply in person after 1lam at 903 S, Rural, Tem­ pe, or call 968-5555. EOE. $25 YOU COULD BE THE NEXT MISS ARIZONA USA. " W om en 18-27 w ho would like to com pete for the title of MISS USA with a prize package of o v e r W ith this coupon new donors will receive $ 2 5 for th eir first donation!! $200,000... call 602.945.6778 for free brochure., ■,Swimwear, Evening Gown &. Interview Competitions. HELP WANTEDGENERAL F/T, P/T po sitio n s a v ailab le providing a ssistan c e to adult in d iv id u a ls w ith m ental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ e fits & trainings no exp. nec. Call 438-8617. G A IN EX PERIEN CE working as an in te rn at PaineW ebber. M arketing and finance m ajors will find this to be an excellent opportunity. Call Kenneth Lundin 957-5143. GRADUATING A n d ready to start youir career? W ould you like to w oik w ith a leading w orldw ide c o nsulting orgariiz a t i o i ^ A ndersen C onsu ltin g w o6ld lijce to talk w ith you. Fii\d oijj all about us at the In­ form ation Presentation on Fe­ bruary 7 from, 5:30 to 7:30 pm in the Pima Room in the Memo­ rial Union. Submit your resume to Career Services by February 8; Contact C areer Services for more information. G R EA T O PPO R TU N ITY To earn w h ile you learn , youth care Workers, p t to provide sup­ port, su p ervision, & c o u n se l­ ing in residential programs for adolescents. M ust be 21, have d riv e rs lic e n se , and able to w ork vatid tis d ays & shifts. Education and/or exp. in coun­ seling, juv. ju stice, spe. work, or related hum. services pref. A pply a t Tum blew eed 902 N. 5th Str, 271-9904. EOE HIGH-END ITALIAN fast food restaurant looking for cashier/sales person. 4hrs/day, 5days/w eek, $7/hr.: Please call to apply in person 252-0007.: HELP WANTEDGENERAL IMAX THEATRE In S co ttsd ale is now hiring friendly, hard w orking people to fill staff postions. All avails needed $5.00/hr. Apply at the IM AX box o ffice , 4343 N. S co ttsd ale Rd. suite 2501 (11 am -9pm ) Ju st 10 m inutes from ASU! Come join our team! INTERN WANTED NEW TALENT/Modeli ng agen­ cy needs intern - get great ex^ ' perience. Call 829-4982. LEGAL MESSENGER Needed. P/t or f/t mom. and afternoon. Call 2 53-1155, pays hourly+ m ileage. LIFEGUARD NEEDED ASAP S c o ttsd a le P aradise V alley YMCA p/t hrs w/YMCA bene­ fits contact Adam at 922-5474. LOCAL COMPUTER store has p erm anent/pt p o sitio n . A ssist ini sales, sto ck in g , etc., about 20hrs./wk?966-1388 LOCAL SUB shop hiring p/t MF days. C ounter helpr. san d ­ wich makers & delivery, drivers, 921-7827. -V ‘ LOOKING FOR a challenging and w ell paid sum m er intern­ ship? W ould you like to intern with a leading worldwide con­ sulting organization? Andersen C onsulting w ould like to talk with you. Find out all about us at the Information Presentation on February 7. from 5:30 to 7:30 pm in the Pim a Room in the M em orial U nion. Subm it your resume to Career Services by February 15, Contact Career Services for more information, (C ali fo r N ew D onor H ours) . *\ For a limited tim e only, New Donors receive $30 for their first donation!! (Sundays Orly) 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 PART TH E N E W JERSEY YM-YW HA C A M PS ARE L O O K IN G FO R PEOPLE W H O W A NT T O M A K E A DIFFERENCE!! , HELP WÂNTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL • COUNSELORS • SPECIALISTS NAH-JEE-WAH - GRADES 1-6 CEDAR LAKE - GRADES 7-9 TEENAGE CAMP - GRADES 10-11 KISLAK ADULT CENTER ROUND LAKE CAMP FOR ADD/LD E x tr a In c o m e O p p o r t u n it ie s A D ULT NEW SPA PER A GENT Hours vary according to route and mornings or afternoon delivery. Earn in the range of $500 to more than $1,000 monthly. Must have dependable transportation (some routes require pickup trucks); valid Arizona drivers license and auto insurance. Two to four hours daily. $ $ $ $ Now Hiring Telesales Consultants A ttention Students: Excellent part and full tim e jo b s near ASU. Aftermarket Company is now hiring for afternoon, evening and weekend positions. Join our team and make qualified inquiries for nationally televised products. N O COLLECTIONS Applications are being accepted at: Area 22/12: 6390 E. Thomas Rd., #3 - 423-7973 The Arizona Republic The Phoenix Gazette OUR 5 CAMPUSES INCLUDE: 6 separate lakes, 3 swimming pools, superior athletic facilities, m odem craft shops, quality Jewish programming Guaranteed minimum for the first 30 days ■ _ ☆ Commissions and Bonuses -¿Sr Avg pay: $9-12/hr ☆ Benefits and Vacation Pay ☆ Weekly Paychecks ' Equal Opportunity Employer M/F SALARY RANGE $1100-2000 On campus interview at Arizona State University on Monday, February 19th from 9-5 PM in the Student Services Building, 3rd Floor. For more information or to set appointment: New' Jersey YM-YWHA Camps (201) 575-4268 ext. 24. ☆ Referral Bonuses ☆ P aid Training ☆ No Experience Necessary ☆ Flexible Schedules ☆ No Cold Calling DIALAM ER IC A M ARKETING . INC. V Call (602) 4 70-2500 n Jm | C V ' Y AFTERMARKET COMPANY Aftermarket is located at 40th St. & .1-10 - D edicated ano R esponsive Telesales NCM If you are looking for a full-time or part-time job, here are FIFTEEN good reasons, just in from our hom e office in Tempe, AZ w h y you should call NCM, Inc. Top FIFTEEN List #15 Beer Tasting Job Was Already Taken! #14 Casual Dress! #13 Brand New Office Just Opened! #12 Your Parents New Number is 1-800-KID LOAN #11 Paid Training - No Experience Necessary #10 Getting a Tan Just Doesn't Pay #9 We Pay $7/Hour Guaranteed + Bonuses #8 Physical Labor Gives You "The Willies" #7 Receive Paid Days Off #6 "Would You Like Fries With That" Enough Said! #5 Leant A Skill You Can Use In The Future #4 You May Not Have Already Won $10 Million #3 Create Your Own Work Schedule & Days To Work! #2 Within Biking or Walking Distance to ASU #1 It's a Free Call 894-9816 CREATE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE W E F L E X B P A R T-TIM E • C re a te a shift betw een the hours of 6:00am and 9:30pm (W e 're totally flexib le) S 8 .0 0 G U A R A N T E E D PAID T R AIN IN G • Weekly paychecks • No experience necessary • Helpful, friendly trainers • Non-stressful, fun, friendly environment P h o e n ix Airport MOVIE PASSES FOR CAR POOL 50% BUS PASSES EASY ACCESS TO ALL FREEWAYS Near University & Hohokam Expressway For all positions, prev. experience preferred, but willing to train die best matched applicant. AM FO O D SERVERS N IG H T SECURIT Y COOKS Experienced for all levels, A.M. and P.M. shifts, good starting wage and a great opportunity to work for award winning chefs in a very busy kitchen. Please call today to schedule a confidential interview. 345-9509 1310 E. Broadway, Suite #103 Tempe, A Z 85282 I X Reservation Agent Full time days. PHOENIX AIRPORT HILTON 2435 S. 47th Street Phoenix, AZ 85034 EOE N o Phone Calls Please - • M ention this ad and receive giftU l HELP WANTED* GENERAL MARKET RESEARCH super­ visor and phone interview ers. No sales. E v es., W eekends. Tempe. Flexible schedule. 967444iv . ; MARKETING ASST. Cuttinged g e ed u ca tio n a l serv ice co. seeks b rig h t, m otivated in d i­ vidual to assist m arketing d i­ rector. Duties v£ry fro n t work-, ing on corporate deals to feed­ ing the fish. Sense o f humor, nerves o f steel, resourcefulness, and ab ility to ju g g le m ultiple projects required. Superior oral and w ritten com m unication skills, and computer lit. essen­ tial, Pt flex, schedule. C on­ vince us you deserve an inter­ view. Resume and cover letter to: The Prin ceto n R ev iew ,1¿32 E, Broadw ay, suite 101, te m p e . Az. 85282 Fax: 967- HELP WANTEDGENERAL SINGERS/ENTERTAINERS ALL ag es. S erio u s in q u iries only. D ream H igher S erv ices 8405990 SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start a t 15-30 fle x ib le hrs/w k. Flex, ho lid ay hrs. a v ail. C all Mike for in t., 921 8282. SUMMER JOBS- female coun­ selo rs fo r c h ild re n 's cam p, n o rfh east/to p salary, rm /h d /iau n d ry , tra v e l a llo w ­ ance. Must have skill in one of the follow ing activ ities: arch­ ery, arts & crafts (ceramics, stainglass. jew elry), athletic trainer, b a sk e tb a ll, can o ein g , k a y ak ­ ing. dance (tap, pointe, modern ■3325.y jazz), drarna, field hockey, golf, MECHANICAL TECHNICIAN ft gymnastics (instructors or quali­ or pt. good advancement, start $6fied spotters), horseback riding8 /h r, 15 min. to ASU. 956hunt seat, Îaçrossç; nature, pho­ 8200. tography, v ¡Geographer, pinno accom panist, piopeering/cam p NAIL TEC H N ICIA N Needed c ra ft. T op.es(innerquest-ropes part trifle o r full tim e for full challenge course. 25 stations), service salon. Exp. necessary. sailing, soccer, softball, tennis, Call 966-6676'or 598-9326. th e a te r te c h n icia n s, track & NEEDED ASST, to tax preparer. fie ld , volleyball. W .S.l./sw im Flexible m orning hours: C all . instructors, w indsurfing. Also« 968i7202 o p p o rtu n ities fo r kitchen Cooks, m ain ten an ce, nu-rses, ONE B ED R O pM . 4 bedroom house. 6mi from ASU 2mi. from; * sec re ta rie s. C all 1-8 0 0-838Sth Mt. $ 172/mth +util. NonVEGA or write: Gamp Vega-for smoker 820-9360. ■G irls, PO Box, 1771. Duxbury. MA 02332. We will be on cam­ O U TSID E JOBS N ational pus W ednesday. F ebruary Parks. Ranches, Resorts! Earn 14th. 10am-4pm, 208-Hopey & . to $12hr +b en efits! All 50 208D-Havasupai in the merripstates! Free V ideo w /program rial U nion, No ap p o intm ent SEI (919) 932-1489, ext. R29. necessary, P/T C p N C IE R G E position, open evenings & w eekends. TENNIS JOBS- summer child­ M tll ti-1 i ngual a pi us, $5.50/hr. ren’s Camp-northeast-good ten­ Please pick up an application at nis background, co lleg e-level the concierge desk, Scottsdale player who can teach children Fashion Squareto play ten n is. G ood sala ry , room, board & laundry, travel P/T GYM SUPERVISOR. Must allo w an ce. Call: 1-800-838enjoy w orking w ith kids. A p ­ VÉGA o r write: Gamp Vega for prox. 15hrs/wk. Call 897*6247. G irls, PO Box 1771, Duxbury, PART TIM E office help 4 hrs. . MA 02332. We will be on cam­ pus W ednesday, F ebruary in aftern o o n s, M-F. C lose to 14th, 10am-4pm, 208-Hopey & campus. Please call 437-8515. 208D-Havasupai in the Memo­ PART-TIME POSITIONS avail­ rial U nion. No ap p o intm ent able: General Warehouse & De­ necessary. livery. Local shipping com pa­ ny searching for motivated, de­ WATERFRONT JOBS- W .SXp e n d ab le, h onest stu d en ts to summer children's Camp* Northjo in o u r team . Ear 1y morni ng east-T each c h ild ren to sw im , and afternoon shifts available. coach swim team, dive, waterski W arehouse; packaging and/or (slalom , trick, barefoot, ju m p ­ co m p u ter experien.ce a plus. ing), sail. G ood salary, room , $5 .0 0 + per h r. to s tart, d e­ b o ard , lau n d ry , trav el ¡allow­ pending on .qu alificatio n s. ance. Call 1-800-838-VEGA or Please apply in person between write: Camp Vega for Girls, PO 8:00-5:00 at Total Fulfillment, Box 1771, D u x bury, MA Inc, 2850 S. R oosevelt Ste. 02332. We w ill be on cam pus 102 Tempe, AZ 85282. W ednesday, F eb ru ary 14th, PT D RIV ER /W A REH Q U 10am-4pm, 208-Hopi & 208DSEMAN heeded, flex , h o u rs, H avasupai on th e M em orial pays $ 7/hr. 30 day review . Union. No appointm ent neces­ 966-9929 sary. PHX COCA-COLA SEEKING ENERGETIC, self­ starter who is reliable and can work flex ib le h o u rs as a PT Merchandiser. Responsible for stocking and ro tatin g shelves w ith product, b u ild in g and maintaining displays, and keep­ ing shelves and back room s clean at v arious accounts. M ust have high sch o o l d ip lo ­ ma o r GED , re lia b le v e h ic le, proof of insurance« motor vehi­ cle record, and neat appearance. Hourly rate o f $6.00 + $.30 a mile. Interested candidates may co m p lete an a p p licatio n M*F 2pm to 4pm or call 345-3123. Phoenix C oca-C ola, 1850 W. Elliot Rd., Tempe, AZ 85283. eoe; V , - '.... SET UP AND M aintain books for small construction firth. Fa­ miliar w/windows, quickbooks, & g en eral accounting p rin c i­ ples. South Tempe. 756-2332, H Z I I S t a t e P ress W ednesday, January 3 1 ,1996 Page 14 XLNT PT JOB 4 hrs/nght. No exp. nec. $520/mo. salary. Gall Kelly after lpm. 894-9442. HELP WANTEDSALES MODELS/ACTORS .'All ages. S erio u s in q u iries only. D ream H ig h er Services 840-5990. SALES TRAINEE T our guide position. M ust be o u tg o in g & like people. In­ come S15-27K+ p/t f/t for per­ sonal, p riv a te interv iew , call Mr. Cyphers at 874-0031. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL NA TIO N A L PARKS H iring Positions áre now available at National Parks. Forests <& W il­ dlife Preserves. Excellent bene­ fits + bonuses! Call: 1-206-9713620 ext. N59182. HELP WANTEDFO OD SERVICE RESTAURANTS/ BARS CLUCK-U Roll call: Del. Drivers, Servers, B artenders. Bouncers, Chicken M ascots. M ake som e serious CLUCKIN’ $$$. Apply in per­ son. 855 S.-Rural. CdR K N CLEAVER Exciting breakfast & lunch restaurant is hiring! • Server Position need availability 2 weekdays & weekends Apply in Person or p art tim e custom er service reps. C om puter ex p erien ce with Windows?, typing of 35 w pm , to p co m m u n ica­ tion skills, a n d custom er service abili­ ties required. 2 w eeks 7:30-4:00 required, p a id training. Variety of shifts av ailable a t Tem pe location. Drug test required. $7.00/hr. Call Sara for a p p o in tm en t a t 1660 S. Alma School, Mesa 9 2 9 -7 5 6 4 JOB OPPORTUNITIES NOW HIRING! all positions f/t p/t m anagem ent. exp. reemnd. A pply in person: 7 15 S. M c­ Clintock. M inder B inders,' PETS DESPERATE CAT A ccepting a pps fo r evening cocktail server, lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w / appearance, re­ liability . & personality are im* portant. Apply in person M-F 25p.m . o r by appt, 5101 N, 44th St. 952-0585. NO CATS Allowed at apt. He is a 1yr old nudered Tabby w /all h is shots & in p erfect K itty .c o n d itio n . He needs a fun, safe, loving, perm anent hom e now ! H e’s com pletely free. Call Bettina & Samantha. 858 9567 evenings. D R IV ER S. C O OK S, C ounter help. D ependable, e n erg etic people needed, flexible hours, near W est Campus. A pply in person: Submarines 51 st Ave & Northern, 10:30-9 M-Sat. FUNDRAISING JAPANESE RESTAURANT is looking for cashier p/t 3 nights $ 5 .50/hr; A lso w a itsta ff p/t $3/hr. + tips. 598-0506 Mari. JOHNNY ROCK­ ETS C ashiers, supervisor incentive fo r p a rt tim e days fle x ib le schedules 423-1505. A pply in person Fashion Square Mall. MAJERLE'S H IR IN G A LL P o sitio n s, exp. nec. Apply in person b/w 9 -1 1 A-2-4,24 N 2nd St; phx. NOW H IR IN G A ll p o sitio n s. Please come in to apply at 715 S. McClintock Minder Binders. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CLU B S O R In d iv id u als can earn fast, easy $$$! Call 800860-1100, Pin #717838. FA ST FU N D R A ISE R -R A ISE $500 in 5 day s-G reek s, groups, clubs, m otivated indi­ viduals. Fast, easy-no financial o b lig a tio n . (800) 862-1982 Ext. 33. PERSONALS $19.99 FOR a full set o f nails a t W izzards H air Studio is an awesome deal. 967-2360. A LPHA G A M M A D e lta is pyched fo r rush!! J a n 3 1 -Feb 2****** Classifieds WORK! HELP WANTEDGENERAL PERSONALS T TUTORS HEALTH & FITNESS ASU COMEDIANS! W in a trip for 2 to New York to appear on "Up All N ight". V our short comedy rountine is your ticket. C all (800) 592-2121 E x t. 341 for details. NEEDED: 20 Students who are serioUsly interested in losing 5100 lbs. Call today (303) 3843917: . v - ' . : X fl Pledges:Get excited for Ini­ tiation! Luv, the Actives TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING FREE FLEM ENCO SHOW in the M.U. Programming Lounge! Today only! 11:3 0 a.m .-lp .m : B rought to you by M U A B 's Culture & Arts Committee. Eve­ rybody welcome!!!!, JOIN ASU’S Alpha Phi Omega a national co-ed service fratern­ ity! Info m eeting Feb. 1 ¿it 5:30pm MU (see m onitors for room). D inner at M acayo's to follow. Info table a ll week on Cady Mall!!! SAN FELIPE -Spring break- get fired up - USC, ASU, U of A. & rtiatiy tnore—hot beaches, non­ stop entertainm ent, including .the M80s- the New Havasu-$79179; C a ll Jordan or T iffany asap at (310) 987-2270; See U There. THE LADIES O f Sigma Kappa are holding S pring ru sh on January 3 1, and February 1. For m ore inform ation, please call 784-8835. ^ TO MY SO many frien d s,-g et . p sy ch e d ; you rock, lif e ’s a beach, hang loo.se. I love you man'« nobody know ’s that I ’m crazy, l can walk through walls-; ouch', no I can’t, I'm the world's tallest midget- you persons are great!!’Thanks for the love, Sta­ cey". die light of your life" T. SERVICES ~ ELEC TR O LY SIS BY D egna. All m ethods. Low rates. Rural/Southem area. 921-1146. MASSAGE FULL BODY pain relief for men by in-shape male therapist, Jacuzzi/steam room/sauna. M-F. 530-6889. SC H O L A R S H I PS /M O N E Y AVAILABLE for college. Recorded m essag e g ives details, (602)838-3123 HEALTH & FITNESS LOO K IN G FOR high e n erg y ; positive pers. trainers; nutrition tech. & sales people 893-8041. HELP WANTEDGENERAL CRUISE JOBS S tudents N eeded! Earn up to $2,000+/mo. working for Cruise Ships or Land-ToUr companies + World Travel. Seasonal and Full-Time employment, available. Call: •" (206)971-3550 ext. C59183 PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN MASSACHUSSETTS ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS VISA is now hiring 30 full time NANNY-LIVE in, non-smoker, in Tempe C hristian home, hrs vary, some days 11:30a, some 3 4 h r and som e w eekend. Car preferred and no tickets, drug te st req u ire d .R e sp o n sib le , g o o d values and loves children.6mo term 897-8200 4p-8p PT O FFIC E C lerk in Tem pe. Duties include copying, filing, m ail, data entry and phones, M ust be d etail oriented and a quick learner $5/hr ’1-5pm M-F Dawn 831-7774 : Working with chil­ dren (K-5th) before add, after school. Hours vary. Position descriptions available with application. . WESTERN STAFF S ER V IC ES M ESA PR ESC H O O L H iring. Pt po sitio n s w orking w ith children. 835-8004. $35,000/Y R . INCOM E poten­ tial. R eading books. Toil Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext. R -1676 for details. City of Tempe In Partnership with CHILD CARE needed in my S. Tempe home for a 9 &5 yr old. Saturday evenings with an oc­ casional w eek night, trans. & ref. a must 839-8958. CO M PU TER ESTIM A TO R Tempe m anufacturer needs de­ tail oriented, comp, literate per­ son p/t em ploym ent (20-30 hrs). Data entry + clerical du­ ties. Salary $6/hr + doe. Apply in person 1,045 W. G eneva Tempe. HELP WANTEDGENERAL M ERCHANT ASSISTANCE CENTER HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as Program Specialists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics^ Field Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; also Golf, Archery, Riflery, Pioneering/Ovemight Camping, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weights/Fitness and Cycling; other openings include Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Figure Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, Sewing, and Rocketry; All Waterfront/Pool Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing, Windsurfing, Canoeing/Kayaking). Top salaries, room, board and travel. June 18th-August 17th. Call for interview times and information: MAH-KEE-NAC (Bovs): 1-800-753-9118 DANBEE (GiHe): 1-800-392-3752 Recruiter will be on campus Monday, Febraury 19th 10am to 4pm in the Memorial Student Union Room 206A. TUTOR FOR C++ wanted. Jeff 265*6311 ext 1127 or 2791275 or email: jeff@ sunbelt.com TUTORING - Get a head start! Expert help in m ath, chem , or physics. Call Peter 829-4982. WANTED $1.99 PG. E xp’d e d ito r* F ast, accurate. APA/MLA. Rural/ Uni­ versity. JIM. 967-2360. I BUY C D 's for c a s h !!!! A ny condition, w ill com e to U . 1800-807-7168 AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports, theses, resum es. Fast turnaround. Tow nsend W /P, Maureen, 955-0969. INTERNET URLS 1996 O LY M PIC S: h ttp :// www.atlanta.61ympic.org/ INSTRUCTION ARIZQN A ST ATE Government http://www.state.aZ;Us/ WWW LEARN TO W rite HTML for fun and profit. Small group c la sses form ing now. Call 829 t9585 for details. TUTORS MIRACLE TUTORING: help in math. 967: 1236 http://www.indircct.com/www/tutoring A RIZO N A ST A TE Parks: h t f p : 7 / w1w w . w e. b com.com/borchers/azparks.htnil ASU FINANCIAL AID Interac­ tive Service may be reached at: http://www.asu.edu/fastt/ RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS C v 9 c-( SWTS I*IZ Z A & PASTA ) Where ASU Goes for Pizza W ACKY W EDNESDAY 70 10th & Ash $2 Molson Ice DRAFTS $2.81 PITCHERS Bud Light * Coors Light 3pm • Close 968-6666 1301 E. University Balboa Cafe 404 S. Mill Ave. 866-1300 ^ L A R G E P IZ Z A Single Item $6 . 95 E VER YD A Y! Additional items $1.10 each B a n n o lt Pizza Open Daily 11 am 350-9122 Call for Delivery Comer of Lemon & Terrace - ASU 829 S. Rural Rd. 966-5543 Activity Leader A BRAND NEW CONCEPT HAPPY HOUR $1.50 U-CALL-IT We are on the look-out for ener­ 4pm - 8pm everyday getic, responsible people to be a ( A n y b o t t le , s h o t , d r a f t , o r m ix e d d r in k ) $ 6 .7 5 /h r. 10-28 hrs wk Specialty Instructor $ 7 .8 4 /h r. 6 -2 0 hrs wk Various subjects. Apply at City of Tempe Social Services Dept. 3500 S. Rural Road, part o f our unique team. Come Tpfhnp join us as we unveil our new (602)350-5400 TDD (602) 350-5050 yogurt concept to Sky Harbor Equal Opportunity / Reasonable Accommodation employer. Every WEDNESDAY Airport. Fun atmosphere, Grateful Dead Night competitive pay, and a great $2 Guiness Pints S2 Jager Shots 9pm-close opportunity to advance with us. Call 948-8191 y Page 15 W ednesday, January 3 1,1996 S t a t e P ress SERVICES N ails By Sheila S p e c ia l P r ic e s F u ll s e t $ 2 5 F ills $ 1 5 L im ite d T im e Located at th e Bronze Beach SE Comer of Broadway and Rural Call F or An Appointment Today 966-3644 WANTED WANTED DONOR EBBS NEEDED H ealthy w om en (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ m ously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. M ust have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $1500-2000. SERVICES TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING SERVICES SERVICES THE CHOICE IS YOURS • COMPLETE BIRTH CONTROL CARE. Depo-Provera, Birth Control Pills, IUD, Morning After Pill For more information call • PREGNANCY TESTING 602-860-4792 TUTORS SERVICES No appointment necessary Abortion with Twilight Sleep Evening & Saturday Appt. Available • GYNECOLOGICAL EXAMS TUTORS TUTORS TUTORS Pap Smears, Infection checks, STD exams. F A M IL Y P L A N N IN G IN S T IT U T E PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE TEMPE 7806 N. 27th A ve. 2334 N. S cottsdale Rd. 9 9 7 -7 4 9 3 9 4 5 t4 9 9 9 2525 S. Rural R d .# 7 C 9 6 8 -7 4 7 1 P ic k up y o u r co p y o f DEVIL D EA LS to d ay! IRISH M U S I C rmm ■Sill 9 P M - 1 AM • NO COVER • : BANDERSNATCH State Press C lassifieds M atthews C enter, B asem ent Office: 965-6735 ASU Box 87150 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-8484 Classified Ad Order Form H dm e P h o n e B u sin e ss P h o n e A d d ress City, S ta te Zip P le a s e print o n e letter p e r box, le a v e a b lank box b e tw e e n w ords. 096 066 010 .020 061 064 051 077 054 066 Adoption A irplanes Announcem ents Apartm ents Autom obiles. Bicycles Books ; #t . Business O pportunities C om puter* Free Lost/Found' 068 ÓQ2 04© 101. 074 07,2 073 070 071 030 Fundraising *' ' , Furniture G arage Sales H ealth & Fitness H elp W anted-Child Care- ; ' Help W anted-C lerical • Help W anted-Food Service H eip W anttH f G eneral . Help W anted-Sales Homes fo r Rent 040 102 107 103 056 076 015 120 050 045 R A T Private Party 1-4 days. $ 1.3 5 per line, per day 5-9 days, $ 1.3 0 per line, per day 1 0 - days, $ 1.1 5 per line, per day Com mercial i day, $ 2.20 per line 2 -4 days, $ 1.65 per line, per day 5 -9 days, $1.4 0 per line, per day 1 0 - days, $1.25 per line, per day E S Home fo r Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Jew elry Job O pportunities Legal Notices M iscellaneous M iscellaneous fo r Sale M obile Homes 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. 063 082 090 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 966 4438 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by S ydney O m arr W e dn e sday, Ja n u a ry 3 1 ,1 9 9 6 N am e P lease b e sure to check your ad. M a ke sure it reads exactly as you w ish ft to ap p e a r in th e S ta te P re ss, including punctuation. P lease check your a d th e first d ay it appears-the liability o f th e S ta te P re ss shall not exceed th e cost o f th e ad and credit m ay b e given fo r the first in sertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify fo r m ake­ goods. N o refunds w ill b e given, but if you need to cancel your ad a cred it w ill b e held on account fo r future advertising. 5 th St. & Forest M otorcycles M usic. Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms fo r Rent 100 061 068 031 041 060 067 Services Sports A Recreation Tickets Townhom es/Condos fo r Rent Townhom es/Condos fo r Sale Transportation Travel 109 Tutors 105 Typing/W ord Processing 115 W anted making flesh start in new direction. Signs and Influences: Elements Love relationship results in jour­ o f the zodiacal signs provide, clues to their characters, poten­ ney, publishing, getting facts on paper. Philosophical discussion tials. People capable of inspiring with, Gemini provides enlighten­ others to live up to their potential are those born under fire signs. ment. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): F ire signs are A ries, L eo, Intuition serves as accurate guide. Sagittarius. Water sign people Focus on the unorthodox, utilize often exhibit 'extrasensory per­ elements of timing, surprise. You’ll ception, are psychic and some be asked to be in charge of other become Outstanding mediums'. people’s money. Aquarian plays O ne exam ple: E dgar Cayce. different role. Water signs aye Cancer, Scorpio, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. Pisces. 21): Ride with tide, be aware of ARIES (M arch 21 - April 19): legal aspects, check tax, license Emotional debris set aside— focus requirements. Deal with public, on versatility, relatives, visits, news express feelings in dynamic man­ o f joyous nature. Em phasis on ner. Spot light on partnership, mar­ rebuilding, correcting proofs, riage, victory in court. checking references. Taurus, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Scorpio persons play roles. Those who doomed you to failure TAURUS (April 20-May 20): will be embarrassed, forced to con­ New ways to earn money discov­ cede defeat. Emphasis on basic ered in surprising fashion. Cycle issues, pets, employment, repair high—-you live, learn, love. Written work, tools honed to razor-sharp­ material causes dissension, ultimate ness. Scorpio involved. pleasure. Ability to stay focused is AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): put to test. Change o f scene essential if goal is G EM IN I (M ay 21-June 20) to be achieved. Keep (dans flexible, R em aindose to home, gift due to you could be called out o f town. arrive, harmony thus restored in Written instructions require proof­ connection with family. Focus bn reading. Simple mistake in spelling music, arts, literature, romance of causes laughter. discovery. Designate where action PISCES (Feb. 19-M arch 20): istotakeplqce. Study Aquarius message. Attention CANCER (June 21-July 22): revolves around home, security, Clandestine operation underway— family, necessity for correcting be discreet, play role in subdued plumbing defects. Permit light to manner. Learn what is expected of enter work, living quarters. Libra you, what you can anticipate in figures in scenario. return. Pisces individual regales IF JANUARY 3 ! IS YOUR with tales of foreign land. BIRTHDAY : You were separated LEO ( July 2 3 - Aug. 22 ): Odds from parents, psychologically or against you mean nothing«-—you otherwise, while young. Many con­ win friends and foes alike agree, sider you a revolutionary. You cre­ “You’re the champion!” Colors are ate your ow n tra d itio n ; family yellow, gold; romance dominates, members at once revere and revile you bring order o u t o f chaos. you. You are exciting, dynamic, Capricorn is in picture. creative, controversial, attractive; VIRGO (A ug. 23-S ept. 2,2): Taurus, Leo, Aquarius persons play Lunar position highlights confer­ important roles in your life. Social ences with “ influential people.” activities accelerate, you’ll receive Promotion due, you’ll rceceive “ secret assignm ent" during; notide in w riting. Long-range February. May wjll he memorable,* prospects made crystal clear.. and romance, style, financial suc­ Assignment includes foreign land. LIBRA (Sept. 23-O ct. 22): r cess will figure prominently. © 1996, Los A ngeles T im es S yndicate Im print style, take initiative in S t a t e P ress W ednesday, January 31, 1996 Page 16 WednesdayMorning Never la ste d S o Rural £ U niversity 6:30 aw - 3:00 pM e \n s te in G reat taste, great variety, and a refreshingly dysfunctional personality. Cornerstone Plaza, 725 South Rural (Rural & U niversity) 303-6606 CM6I1C. 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