ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ^•Copyright. State Press, 1996 /tem p e, Arizona Wednesday, March 27,1996 An Independent Morning Daily Vol. 80 No. 111 A SU ta rg e ts n e x t tie r o f h ig h s c h o o l g ra d s Top 6 to 10 percent o f class seen as bolstering o f ‘talent poof Bv T im othy T ah State P ress Seeking ways to decrease the number of transfer stu­ dents while bolstering the “talent pool,” ASU has launched a program to recruit die top 6 to 10 percent of graduating high school seniors from Arizona and across the Country. The plan is designed to shape the freshman class and reduce transfer students. Although it will incorporate tuition waivers and scholarships, Provost Milton Click said the problem is finding money to support increased freshman recruitment. “Each dollar is a dollar that can be used for another effort,” he said. “We are working on finding funds.” Click said ASU has twice as many high school gradu­ ates from the top 5 percent of their classes than from the top 6 to 10 percent. “We know that the next 5 percent would be good for ASU,” he said. “These students would be a benefit for the education of all students. Students learn from each other.” ASU President Lattie Coor said the purpose of increas­ ing recruitment of the graduates in the top 6 to 10 percent is to increase the number of high-achieving students at ASU. “ We hope to expand the talent pool,” he said. “We gained enough experience recruiting students in the top 5 percent that we felt we should expand to include those in the top 6 to 10 percent” Coor said ASU has an opportunity to gain many Valley students who should consider attending the University. “We have an opportunity to gain some talented students,” he said. “We need to make sure that ASU is being considered.” T urn to Recruitment, page 2. ASU strikes deal with SAD, OKs groups proposals T r a d itio n a l w e d d in g B y B rian A nderson State P ress ASU administrators and a recently-formed student group dedicated to improving cultural awareness on cam­ pus have reached a consensus on a number of proposals the group submitted earlier this month. . S tudents A gainst D iscrim ination provided ASU President Lattie Coor and Provost Milton Glick with 10 requests intended to enhance multicultural awareness, said SAD spokesman Dondrell Swanson. The thrust of the proposals was a request for and subse­ quent approval of an Intergroup Relations Center which will act as a resource library for instructors to obtain approved material to adequately address cultural issues in the classroom. The IRC is slated to open in 1997 with one full-time director and; five full-time trainers on staff. It is expected to provide instructors with added, more comprehensive multi­ cultural training than is currently available. “We want (the IRC) to be a facilitator of communica­ tion between the entities on campus that already deal with cultural diversity and the senior administration,” said Swanson, a senior journalism major. “We’re asking the center to be a lot,” Coor agreed. Tim Hacker/State Press Soph om ore b u sin e ss m ajor and “b rid e” N orim i Y u su ff, together w ith ju n io r b u sin e ss m ajor and “g roo m ” Suhaim i A riffin, p articip ates in a m ock M alaysian w edding on H ayden Law n T u esd a y afternoon. Th e w edding began With a p ro ce ssio n dow n O ran ge Street, b eg in n in g at the boo kstore. T urn to P roposals, page 2. Legislators uncertain if bill will let students pack heat B y R ay Stern State P ress As a bill expanding the rights of concealed weapons per­ mit-holders races through the Legislature, hard questions remain about how it will affect Arizona universities. “I’m confused,” said Rep. Mike Gardner, R-Tempe. The bill that was Unanimously approved by the Senate last month and is awaiting House passage clarifiés various aspects of the permit law. It also widens the range in which permit-holders can carry guns to include most places of business and possibly Universities. Before the bill cleared a key com m ittee Monday, Gardner added an amendment that disallows the legal car­ rying of concealed weapons in buildings where the “gov­ erning bodies” of universities meet in or regularly occupy. The bill also states that the chief executive officer of the governing body “shall not authorize the carrying of a dead­ ly weapon on school grounds.” However, Gardner said the bill may still allow the carry­ ing of guns by legally-permitted owners on campus, provid­ ed there is no federal law against it. “We have two question marks,” Gardner said. “What defines ‘governing body’ and what does federal law say about this?” Currently, ASU’s gun policy is straightforward. “It’s declared a weapons-free zone,” said Chief of ASU Police Lanny Standridge. A person carrying a concealed weapon, whether permit­ ted or not, would likely face arrest, he said. G ardner said, should the b ill becom e law , ASU President Lattie Coor could Still enforce ASU’s weaponsfree policy as long as he provides a place for gun-carrying students to store their weapons. The site would possibly be off-campus where students could check in guns before class and pick them up at the end of the day , Gardner said. World/Nation STATE PRESS W eather Outlook Mostly sunny with some high clouds. Wanner. High 83°, low 55°. Flooding at the Grand Canyon begins in efforts to rebuild the river’s ecology. Page 3 Standridge said he cannot imagine such a system. “It’s impractical and cost-ineffective,” he said. “We have how many different points of entry on this campus?” An off-campus site would not only require the school to rent space for the gun lockers, but could make school offi­ cials liable if something happened to the guns, like a bur­ glary or fire, Standridge Said. Coor and ASU Provost Milton Glick said they believe gqns on campus would be a bad idea. “I think the University ought to be a place of ideas, not a place of weapons,” Glick said. Gardner, who voted for the bill as a member of the States’ Rights and Mandates committee, said he thinks stu­ dents should not be able to bring guns on campus. He said the bill may face some revision to ensure that. “(People) have been meeting all day long to figure out what this bill actually does,” he said. “We are going to re­ caucus this bill.” Sports Making the adjustment from college to the NBA has been a learning experience for ex-Sun Devil Mario Bennett. P age 15 Where To Find It Classifieds........................... 16 Comics,...............................14 Crossword.................... 8 Horoscopes ......................... 19 Opinion....,,...........;.......... .....4 Police Report........;............... 8 Sports.................... ..............15 Today's Activities ,.,„..,......,.2 World/Nation........................ 3 • * v; vr w .. T m w S tate P ress Wednesday, March 27, 19j96 Page 2 T T R e c r u it m oday C ontinued Cam pus d u b s and organizations m ay subm it written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f Matthews Center. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone o r via fax. Deadline fo r requests is noon the day before publication and entries wifi not be accepted more than three working days before publication. O nly one entry per organization p er day is permitted. Entries m ust contain the fun nam e o f the d u b o r organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. A ll req u ests are su b ject to ed itin g fo r content, sp a ce an d d a rlty . Incomplete or illegible entries w ill be discarded. The Today Se d io n is a d aily calendar o f events printed a s a service to d ie A S U community. R equests are accepted on a first-com e, firstserved b asis an d are printed a s space permits. • 4X Native American Architecture A Design Students — Meeting to d iscuss Las V egas trip. Am erican Indian Institute Conference Boom; 5:30 p.m. • Alcoholics Anonymous — D aily cam pus meeting. Newman Center, Aquinas H all in the basem ent; noon to 1:15 p.m. Cam pus W om en's C ro up m eeting. Newm an Center, Aquinas H alt in the basem ent; 10 am • Anthropology Club — Meeting to d iscuss upcoming events, guests and trips over food and drinks. Sub Stop, north side of University Drive across from ASU ; 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. • ASU Pow Wow Committee — G eneral meeting. P lease bring volun­ te e r sig n -u p s h e e ts . F o o d p ro v id e d . S tu d e n t S e rv ic e s B ld g . M ulticultural Lounge;6 p.m. » Communication Student Association — G eneral meeting open to a ll com m unications students. M U ChrysocoHa Boom 206; 3:30 p.m. • Eckankar — Discussion: “The W aking Dream.” M U Graham Room; noon. • F.A.C.E.S. in Medicine —- G uest speaker: Irma Bustam ante, crosscu ltu ra l curriculu m co ord in ator fo r the Fam ily P ra ctice R esid en cy Program at M arioopa M edical Center. M U Apache Boom 221; 6 p.m, • Kundalini Yoga Club — C la sse s and discussion. MU P in ai Room 215; 7 p.m. • M U M — G allery Com m ittee m eeting. M U C onference Room 1A; 4:30 p.m. Serendipity A rts & Crafts Pair. W est Lawn; 8 a.m. to 4:30 p,m: Special Events Com m ittee meeting. M U Com m ence Room 2; 3:30 p.m. S p e cia l Events Com m ittee meeting. MU Conference Room 2A; 3:30 p.m. Recreation Committee meeting. M U Conference Room; 3:30 p.m. . • Program fo r Southeast A sian Studies — Lecture: “M alaysia: Toward foe New Millennium,* by Rehm an Rashid, M alaysian jou rnalist Language & Literature Bldg. C50; 12:40 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. • P a l C M — G uest sp eaker Lana W ilder ta lk s about “A lt You E ver W anted to Know about the G R E and G raduate S ch o o l A pplication P rocess " Psychology Bldg, 205; 5:30 p.m . • Rainbow Alliance «*• W eekly meeting with guest speaker from the Hum an Rights Cam paign Fund, M U Room 219; 7:30 p.m. • Religious Studies Club — D iscuss Hinduism , watch a Gm and pos­ sibly hear a faculty lecture. Refreshm ents are provided, bring a friend. Engineering Com plex A334; 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. • Student Econom ic Association — Question/answer session about next sem ester's econom ics courses. B u sin e ss Adm inistration Bldg. 130; 3 p.m. • Volunteer Income Tax Assistance — Free tax advice for A S U stu­ dents and faculty. Bring your tax information and we'l! help you prepare your return. Arm strong H all 114; 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. from page e n t ___ 1. According to Click, the University will expand a peer counseling program — used to recruit high school seniors in the top 5 percent — to incorporate students in the top 6 to 10 percent. In the peer counseling program, students call prospective freshmen to answer questions and encourage attendance at ASU. In addition to increased scholarships, Glick said the University would encourage high school guidance coun- selors to promote ASU. Glick said the increased recruitment of high school grad­ uates, especially those from Arizona, in the top 6 to 10 per­ cent of their class will aid the education of all ASU students. I 'm impressed with the increased attractiveness of ASU for high-achieving students,” he said. “We are keeping and attracting high achievers to the state. This is significant because students help students.” P r o p o s a ls CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1, for new students or transfer students. Administrators also announced they will cover the cost of an intergroup dialogue program that began operating on a Campus Environment Team grant earlier this month. Coor said the decision to fund the program was based on the merits of the program. “It is such a promising way to bring people together from different backgrounds ... and truly understand the issues and understand one another,” he said. Glick said the new IRC and other soon-to-be-initiated programs will not solve all of the University’s problems, but are a step in the right direction. “There are no quick and easy solutions,” he said. “These problems have always been with us. It’s our responsibility to try to make ASU reflect the best of society, and each step is important.” “We want to constitute the group and explore the ways in which it can relate to other activities that we have on the cam­ pus,” he said. “It is a very promising instrument to expand the understanding of multicultural issues on this campus.” The results of SAD’s meeting were announced last Wednesday at the group’s rally, including: > The creation of a University admissions position dedi­ cated to minority student recruitment, especially from the Phoenix Union High School District; • The establishment of an African-American studies program; • The preparation of an annual status report regarding ASU’s under-represented population by Coor. SAD had requested that the vice president of student affairs complete the report; • The reconstruction of multicultural programs designed Correction: The headline and photo caption on the State Press profile (^ Associated Students of ASU presidential candidate Gaylord-Eric Crovetto Tuesday misspelled his name as “Corvette,": The correct spelling is Crovetto. J ùm E ¿ T ÁTE T h u r s d a y v e r y — EV ER Y W EDNESDAY FEATURING " E in stein s - No Co uer - $2 Budlicht 6 KfWiiKflZE’s All Night Long! HUE m U S I O W - 2 PANCE F L O O P S P Ü O L T ftB LESPftTIO EUERyTH ING ! F I N A L L Y A W E D N E S D A Y N IG H T A L 1 D J o n ’t etz IJ lis s M £ a r c h 2 7 t h Stixx - _______________________ , * K Z O N 7077 L iv e E. ( & G iv in g aítielback A w a A d. RICHT ACROSS THE STREET FROtTl FASHION SQUARE mftLL i State P ress Page 3 Wednesday, March 27> 1996 O k i n a w a g o v e r n o r d e n i e s U .S . b a s e l e a s e s TOKYO (AP) — Prim e M inister Rvutaro Hashimoto will renew controver­ sial U.S- military base leases on Okinawa because the island’s governor has defied a court order to do so. ruling party officials said Tuesday. Okinawa Gov. Masahide Ota said he would not Sign papers renewing the base leases because residents want the U.S. mili­ tary off the southern Japanese island. Ota declared his stand Tuesday when Masuo Morodomi. chief of the central gov­ ernment’s Defense Facilities Administration Agency, personally urged him to comply with laws requiring him to sign the leases when the private landowners refuse. "1 understand the government’s position. but there could be a case in which I can’t meet the government's.request,” Ota told Morodomi in a conversation aired on the public broadcasting network NHK. Ota is disobeying a court ruling that he must, renew the leases by Thursday. However, the prime minister has the option of signing them under the order delivered Monday by the Fukuoka High Court branch in Naha, the Okinawan capital. O fficials, of H ashim oto’s Liberal Democratic Party said he would do so. H ashim oto’s coalition governm ent, under criticism for a bailout plan for failed housing lenders, had hoped to avoid taking on the unpopular move of renewing the leases from Tokyo. Ota’s defiance, and the trial of U.S. sol­ diers convicted earlier this month of raping a 12-year-old girl, have helped focus attention on demands that the nearly 30,000 American troops be withdrawn from Okinawa, about 1.(XX) miles southwest of Tokyo. O f the 32,000 landowners with plots used by the U.S. m ilitary on Okinawa, 2.937 are refusing to renew their leases, affecting about 10 percent of the total land used by the American bases in Okinawa. Ota says the bases, which take up about one-fifth of Okinawa, hamper its economic development and are one of the main rea­ sons it remains Japan’s poorest region. Ota and other Okinawan officials have demanded that all U.S, military bases be removed, while Tokyo and Washington have suggested only that some troops and facili­ ties might be shifted to other parts of Japan. The subject is expected to be discussed when President Clinton visits Japan next month. On T uesday, Kyodo News said the Okinawa government has asked thefU.S. military to investigate an incident Jast week involving O ta’s car at Naha airport. Officials say a car driven by two men who appeared to be U.S. servicemen rear-ended the governor’s vehicle, then drove away. Quoting unidentified Okinawa officials, Kyodo said no one was hurt, but the bumper of Ota’s car was damaged. Okinawa officials could not be contacted for comment after office hours Tuesday. Flooding begins in effort to rebuild river ecology PAGE (A P) — Four m o n stro u s arcs o f foamy white Colorado River water shot out of a dam with a ro ar T uesday as the fed eral g o v ernm ent began a weeklong flood designed to turn back the clock on the Grand Canyon. , As the Colorado River below the dam crept higher up the salm on-colored, sandstone canyon walls, several dozen scientists in hardhats looked on at their effort to bring the canyon closer to its natural state. "The roar of the water is like what Mother Nature Would’ve been doing naturally this time of year." said David W egner, program m anager for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, the agency that manages the nation’s dams. Because sediment settles out of the water as it sits behind the Glen C anyon Dam. the once warm and m uddy riv er dow nstream now runs cold and clear green. The flood should stir up sedim ent and redis­ tribute it through the canyon, creating hundreds of new sandy shores -where vegetation can take root to feed birds and fish. interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt called it "a new beginning" as he pushed a button, cranked a lever and turned a wheel to open the first of four huge valves, releasing millions of gallons of the Colorado River from behind the dam. : It is “a new era for ecosystems, a new era for dam management, not only for the Colorado but for every river system and every watershed in the United States,” Babbitt said. Water systems in the Pacific Northwest and in Florida’s Everglades also will adopt operating policies giving a higher priority to the environment. Water shot hundreds of feet out of the four, 8-foot steel tubes, filling the normally quiet quarter-mile Glen Canyon with the thundering sound of a waterfall. “Woo-hoo! Check that out!” exclaimed a grinning Clay Bravo, assistant director for natural resources for the Hualapai Indians, one of several tribes living along the river. "But this is nothing compared to the days before the dam.” The scientists behind the $2.7 million experiment, the government's first scientifically documented artifi­ cial .flood, said it was intended to mimic seasonal flows restricted by the 33-year-old dam. The scientists have warned that the flood may wash away fragile fish eggs and some plant life, but they expect flora and fauna to return in greater abundance. Associated Press O fficia ls at G le n C a n yo n Dam began eight d a ys o f flo o d in g T u esd a y in an effort to red e p o sit sedim en t alon g the banks o f the C o lo ra d o R iver. S cie n tists hope the stead y flow w ill rebuild a p ortion o f the riv e r's pre-dam eco system . Before the dam was built, floods three to four times the strength of the current release came through with each spring's snow melt. After the dam was built, the cold water made the river a premier fishing spot for rainbow trout — a breed exotic to the area. Leafy tamarisk and cottonwood trees — also foreigners — now thrive in the canyon. In addition, the cold water wiped out some native, warm-water fish. O f the seven endangered species of fish that lived in the canyon before the dam was built in 1963, only three survive. Scientists hope the flood will leave warmer, safer water in backwater canyons for endangered fish like the humpback chub and razorback sucker. Spectators atop the 710-foot-high dam watched the g ates open and re le a se w a te r fa st enough to fill Chicago’s 110-story Sears Tower in 17 minutes. The fiver is expected to rise 10 to 15 feet inside the Grand Canyon, which starts about 15 miles downstream from the dam. More than 117 billion gallons of water will be sent into the canyon over the week. The water level behind the dam was especially high”“ because it was a wet winter and because water releases were reduced in the days leading up to the flood. T hree m illio n people in A rizona, New M exico, Nevada, Utah, Colorado and Wyoming rely on the dam for power. The dam also stores water that eventually supplies about 15 million people in those states, along with California and Mexico. The newly churning river forced officials to ban motorless boats for 15 miles below the dam. Only expe­ rienced river runners were expected to notice the flow’s effects inside the canyon, and several tourist trips were on the water Tuesday. Russian army continues assault in western Chechnya GROZNY. R ussia (AP) — Russian troops pounded rebel positions in three villages in western Chechnya Tuesday in an offensive aim ed to drive separatist rebels into the mountains. Chechen rebels, however, put up stiff resistance in the southern and eastern areas of the breakaway republic. Gen. Nikolai Tkachev told the Interfax news agency that the western villages of Bamut,‘Orekhovo and Stary Achkoi came under attack. Russian troops also were moving street by street through the vil­ lage o f Sam ashky to clear out dug-in rebel fighters. R esidents in v illa g e s in w estern C hechnya have been g iven a ch o ice between ousting the guerrillas themselves or facing a b ru tal R ussian a ssa u lt. Officials of the Moscow-backed Chechen government say a third o f C hecbyna’s 365 tow ns an d v illa g e s hav e s ig n ed accords so far promising to keep sepa­ ratist fighters out. In the C hechen ca p ita l o f G rozny, Russian troops fearing a rebel assault tightened security around the city Monday and brought in reinforcements to guard key b u ild in g s. But the cap ital has remained relatively quiet. Two Russian servicemen were killed and an o th er 17 w ounded in fig h tin g Monday, the Interfax news agency quoted federal forces as saying. There was no word on rebel losses. President Boris Yeltsin said Monday he would unveil his plan to end the nearly 16-month war in a nationwide television address Sunday. Yeltsin is running for a second term and is anxious to appear to be making a serious attempt to end the unpopular war before the June 16 election. More than 30.000 people, most of them civilians, have been killed since Yeltsin sent in troops in December 1994 to end Chechnya's self-declared independence. Defense Minister Pavel Grachev, in a visit today to Grozny, declared the opera­ tion to wipe out the rebel resistance was succeeding, a statement the Russian mili­ tary has repeated many times. Grachev also told Interfax that rebels in eastern and so u th ern C hechnya were resisting the offensive and refusing to put down their weapons. Opinion Page 4 S tate P ress Wednesday, March 27, 1996 je P ress E s itorial Opportunity A relatively new ASU student group is quickly gaining influence within the University community. Students Against Discrimination, foim ed after the now-infam ous ENG 101 hate-speech hand­ out incident, presented a list o f proposals to A SU President Latrie Coor follow ing its Match 21 “Unity R ally.” M ost o f the proposals were accepted by Coor. , Am ong the new p o licies made p ossib le by SAD are: • The creation o f an Intergroup R elation s Center, which w ill serve as a resource o f materi­ als that can be used in classroom settings dealing with cultural issues; • Increased m inority recruitment, especially from the Phoenix Union High School District; • E stab lish m en t o f an A frican -A m erican Studies program; • An annual report on the status o f A S U ’s under-represented population from Coor; • The introduction o f a fieshm an-level, required course cm the aspects o f multiculturalism. Certainly, these are big developm ents — ones that w ou ld not have been p o ssib le without SA D ’s high-profile campaign. But an im portant q uestion is bound to be raised, one that deserves answering. W hy do w e need these new p olicies? M ost importantly, why do w e need a class addressing multiculturalism? Sim ply using the wOrd “m ulticulturalism ” is akin to profanity in som e circles. Undoubtedly, these new developments will be seen as yet another concession to the ideal o f “Political Correctness.” Yet these new developments should not be seen as a caving in to the forces o f PC: Rather, they are a way to fill in a hole in our overall education. A ll forms o f racism and discrim ination have their roots in one common cause — ignorance. If one does not understand a group, one is much more likely to believe negative stereotypes about that group. A class on multiculturalism is a way to avoid this problem. In this class, new collège students w ill learn for them selves the accomplishments and aspects o f cultures other than their own. They w ill learn view points that they do hot see on television , m ovies or within their own culture. They will learn the beauty and d ifferen ces behind each and every culture represented at ASU. Increased m inority recruitment is an impor­ tant step in that direction as w ell. M a e minority students at ASU affords students the chance to make contact with people o f differ­ ent cultures, races, creeds and sexual orientations. A s friendships form , students w ill learn the im portance o f individuality. They will realize that each person deserves to be treated as an individual — not as a member o f a group. They willTeam that no stereotype is ever accurate, for diversity lies not only cross-culturally, but within cultures as w ell. • t T h is is what th e s e n ew p r o p o s a ls w ill accom plish. Look at them as a positive developm ent — a facet o f education that w ill last fora lifetim e. s TAFF STATE PRESS D ay in the life o f a ‘live studio audience’ supposed to keep you “entertained” and keep the audience Sitcoms make up a hefty per­ chipper between takes and shot set-ups. centage of the prime-time pro­ ONATHAN (To protect his innocence, I shall call the man “Bob.”) gramming on television and only “You all need to learn how to laugh out loud,” Bob said. a small number could be consid­ INGE “Let’s see what you got.” ' ered funny. Columnist If we didn’t laugh, I wondered, would they rewrite the But how many of the jokes in scene or hold us hostage till we find it funny? the shows do we actually laugh After several test laughs, we played trivia. at? Maybe three or four. If we asked Bob a question about the show that he didn’t But when we watch these shows we hear an audience laughing, cheering, hooting all the way through. Even at the know the answer to, we win a Married With Children lamest joke in the world. It must be a laugh-track. No way bumper sticker. But he spent most of the time insulting and assaulting the audience. it could be areal audience. Finally, after the regular actors were introduced to the . But it is. audience, the taping began. So why do they laugh? “Watch the monitors!” called Bob. “Watch the monitors!” 1 had the opportunity to attend a filming of Married With I had prepared myself for any bloopers or gags, but the Children. 1 had never been a member of a live audience so I show was on the straight and narrow all the way through. was curious of what.happened behind the scenes. None of the actors made a mistake; in fact, the audience And it was a trip. ^ Everyone had to line up and follow the guides to the made one by not laughing hard enough. Aside from the forced laughter, the experience was basi­ sound stage where the show was filmed. “If you have any questions, my name is Frank!” said one of the escorts. “If cally the same as watching the TV show in one’s home. We laughed at all the jokes even some that, perhaps, you have any problems, my name is Mohammed!”; Mohammed told us to empty our pockets, of anything weren’t laugh-out-loud funny. It was easy for the audience to do this. Whenever an actor entered a scene, we cheered metallic so it wouldn’t set off the metal detector. I cursed myself for keeping a wad of change in my pock­ .and when an actor paused that was our cue to laugh. Since there are planned commercial breaks in the show, et and walked through the machine. we had to ch eer at the end o f every scene. The . BEEP! I checked my pockets for any coins that I had missed “APPLAUD” sign flashed every five minutes for an aver­ and found my pocket knife. The thing wasn’t a machete, age of one-half minute each time.. The show should have a live audience disclaimer: more of a letter opener, but that didn’t stop people from looking at me as though I was one of A m erica’s Most WARNING: EXCESSIVE CLAPPING AND HOOT­ ING WILL FORCE ALL THE BLOOD OUT OF YOUR Wanted criminals. A security guard the size of a linebacker probed me with LIM BS AND DAM AGE TO THROAT M USCLES, RESPECTIVELY. , a wand. “Put your arms out to the sides.” I did what he said as long as he didn’t ask me to bend Twenty years ago, the concept of filming a show in front over, turn my head to the side and cough. of a live audience was a revolutionary step in television (For the record, my steel-toed boots tripped the alarm, entertainment, but now it is insipid and contrived. The audi­ ence is nothing more than a living laugh-track. not my pocket knife.) Being a part of a live audience brings about a feeling of Anyway, everyone was escorted to their seats and we obligation to laugh at the jokes. After all, you are a guest waited patiently for the taping to begin. In front o f us were TV m onitors and an electric and the tickets are free. This feeling probably harks back to more recognizable “APPLAUD” sign, and behind those, further in front, were traditional customs between guest and host. If the host the cameras and sets they were going to be using. Above us hung microphones that recorded our laugh. makes a remark that is supposed to be funny, it is the obli­ Apparently, they were so sensitive that we could not talk during gation of the guest to laugh. It would be considered disre­ filming, not even the slightest whisper. (Of course, it would be spectful if you didn’t. JT it’s not the feeling of obligation, the audience mem­ interesting to hear on television if some guy asks someone bers want to hear themselves bn TV when the episode airs. named Bubba if he took his hemorrhoid pill that day.) To get the audience worked up for raucous- laughter, a (“Listen, that’s me! That’s my chuckle right there!”) crowd-warmer “entertained” us. Many (if not all) sitcoms have a crowd-warmer who is Jonathan Inge is a freshman studying journalism. , DAVID STROWi Editor DAVID PROFFITT, Managing Editor JEREMY S T E I N . . . : i , . ...Night Editor RENNES B Ö U G ...................... ................ ............City Editor ANGELA M ULL, . ^ ....... ,.,.City Editor CHRISTINA B A I L E Y E d i t o r BRYN CHANCELLOR ..r.. . . . . ;News Editor JIM POULIN. . Editor DUSTIN kRUGEL.... ,. ^ ...» .. ...^ .. ;... Sports Editor jRANDY JQN ES^«»^fT............... ......Asst. Sports Editor .............................M aiazine Editor ^ R R fÄ N N A G A R C I A . , . . . ........ .Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Garin Groff, Andrea H ealey, M elody M cD onald, Jeff O w ens, Ray Stem, Timothy Tail, Kelly Wendel. S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : B rian A , A nderson, Seth Landau, Ed Odeven, Ron Matejko, Damian Shaw. COPY ED ITO RS: Christa Cerrentano, Liz Montalbano. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Paul B esing, Tim H acker, Pat Shannahan. C O LU M N ISTS: Daniel Blanco, Michelle Carson, Bryn Chancellor, Jennifer Dodd, Steve Forsberg, Tina Holder, Jonathan Inge, Liz Montalbano, Rebecca Murray. C A R T O O N ISTS: Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Charles Lundsberg, Steve Tansley. P R O D U C T IO N : A aron R. B rutcher, Jeffre y C hua, JoAnne Hansen, Q iana.KessingCr, Jeremy Meyer, Gerry Mueller« Prashant Sampat, Corey Saunders, Eloise Young. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Can Dewald, Dan Ellstrotri, Cbri Facione, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Nickelle Kastein, Jess Rankin, Michelle Marie Sheetz, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted^among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the. State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: DAVID STROW DAVID PROFFITT CHRISTINA BAILEY Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor ■The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 15, .Arizona State University, Tempe, Àriz. 85287r 1502. We *do not answer questions of a general nature. ^ . . The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus- The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of thé ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S tate P ress P h o ne N um bers Information...............965-7572 Newsroom................ 965-2292 Magazine..................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds................. 965-6735 Opinion S ta te P ress Wednesday, March 27,1996 Page 5 ‘Nothing will change’ mentality needs to end It took me 23 years to dig up my dreams, plant new Now 1 am 24, a beautiful, strong, powerful queen who “There is no cure for what seeds and watch my visions grow into a reality. has been able to find peace with my past and excitement in ails this society, Things like C h r is t in a It took me 23 years to learn how to love and be loved. what my future holds. racism, sexism and homophobia b a il e y So when people ask me why I did what I did arid why I I realized that nobody from the outside could love me, will never disappear.*’ Opinion help me or guide me until I lost that “nothing will ever continue to do what I do, I offer these explanations. “Nothing will ever change, we No child should have to look in the mirror and ques­ change” mentality. . just have to learn to deal with it.” Since I wrote “The time for talk is over,” I have been tion her or his self-worth because they are “different.” Those are some of the com­ called a hate-monger, a racist, a bigot and a poor excuse for No child should be without the love and support neces­ ments I have heard from peo­ sary to become a successful adult who knows how to a writer and a person, among other things. ple and read in the many let­ love and be loved. I’ve been all of that and more. te rs to the e d ito r th at have No student on a campus of higher education should have Haven't we all? flo o d ed my o ffice since the to fight to learn what each of us should already know. Nor I’m stubborn, I’m anal-retentive and I’m emotional. But ENG 101 incident arose. should students ever feel unsafe or threatened on a campus I have a wealth of love for people — all people. That love, I strongly disagree with the coupled with my past experiences, gave me the strength that teaches empowerment through education. notion that nothing will ever change. But these are the issues students and even faculty have I think it’s that defeatist attitude that keeps this.country and conviction to fight for everything that the newly been faced with. Over this past academic year, 12 discrimi­ stuck in a perpetual cycle of ignorance, intolerance and formed Students Against Discrimination stands for. natory incidents have been reported. I know what it’s like to be judged by the color of one’s skin. hate. By saying that the problems we. as a community, face But aren’t we just blowing this out of proportion? Imagine growing up in a family that tried to dismiss today won’t change, we ultimately give up control and When students are afraid to look each other in the excuse ourselves from taking action and being accountable their heritage because they allowed society to convince eye as they walk through them that their beliefs and for those actions. campus, when people are traditions were substandard Today, I speak to you. as 1 have done in the past, from apprehensive about ask­ my heart. I speak with the hopes that you may understand a and inferior. ing so m eo n e d iffe re n t Im agine being one of I think it-s that defeatist attitude that little bit better about why I put my editorial cap on the shelf from them a q u estio n , and took an active role in trying to make this campus safe, three Blacks in the fourth when people ridicule or grade and being the only, keeps this country stuck in a perpetual emotionally and physically, for everyone. exclude others because Growing up. I had grown accustomed to my feelings of ones singled out by your cycte o f ignorance, intolerance and hate. they are different, are we hom eroom teacher every devastation and depression. By saying that the problems we, as a really blow ing this out My father was an alcoholic and mom decided if she time something was broken, community, face today won*t change, we of proportion? missing or stolen. couldn’t charige him she’d join him: When my father bent SAD w as form ed Im agine pulling that on my mom. she'd take it out on me. When my father ultimately give up control and excuse because some of us don’t didn't think my mom was fulfilling her “wifely” duties, 1 teacher aside, asking why ourselves from taking actiort and being think this to be the case. became her replacement. I vividly recall feeling like those she singles you out and hav­ A fter T hu rsd ay ’s ra lly , memories would haunt me forever and the wounds I had ing her respond, “Because I accountable fo r those actions* m ore than 200 people know how you people are.” accumulated over the years would never quit oozing. signed up to be members Im agine at the sam e ; So at 15, 1 took a razor and watched the pain dribble o f SAD becau se they down my arms into my lap because I thought my life didn’t time, if you will, sitting in a agreed something needed to be done. social studies class, reading about the “history” of the matter and nothing could ever change that. God has given each of us a gift, a talent or a skill. It is When that didn’t work, 1 swallowed pill after pill after pill United States. The history that depicted Blacks as slaves, in the confines of my bedroom because no matter what posi­ Indians as savages and Whites as saviors, the ones who our responsibility as students on this campus, and as people tive affirmations 1 received from the outside world through controlled the uncontrollable. The ones with the power, the within this society, to use those gifts to move this campus therapy, friends and some family, my soul was still shattered money and prestige. The ones to whom the people of color and this country forward. L et’s move beyond identifying our differences as should be thankful. into a million pieces. 1 thought that would never change. problematic. As an impressionable fourth-grader, imagine the seeds At 19, 1 stood in G od’s house, next to family on Let’s move beyond believing there is nothing we can do Christmas Eve. and cursed him because things still had not of shame and doubt planted within me. to cure the sickness that is spiritually, emotionally and Imagine how many times I saw people look into my changed. I had even started searching for a cheap gun in the physically killing our society. child eyes with pity, contempt, hate and ignorance because newspaper because 1 was tired of screwing around. Because until we lose that “nothing will ever change” At that point in my life. I had successfully buried all of of the color of my skin and the texture of my hair. It took me 23 years to be able to gaze into my now-adult mentality — nothing ever will. my dreams and childhood fantasies under the guise that things would never change enough for me to accomplish eyes without that same contempt and shame for my obvious differences and without questioning the beauty of my heritages. Christina Bailey is a senior studying journalism. any of them. N o anthropological basis for race differentiation Sexism still problem advocated by I have a question for the editor of the State Press Magazine, Josh Krist. What was the thought process behind the decision to run the full-page article on the Playboy model Tess Hennessy? What purpose did it serve, besides the opportunity to display a slightly blurred picture of a naked lady? Many people have graduated from ASU and have gone on to bigger and better things. The fact that one of them is willing to show us her ass in the pages of Playboy should not be considered newsworthy. Krist can defend his decision by claiming “freedom of speech,” which is truly part of your protected liberties. However, having the right to do something does not make it the right thing to do. Objectifying women in a paper that has the name of an institution of higher education in its title is simply wrong. It is as if you are telling the women on campus that their education and contributions to the world mean nothing, and that they are valued only for their looks, especially if they will pose naked. If someone wants that type of material, let them buy the magazine. To run the “article” on the same day in which a rally was being held to address discrimination is to admit that the decision-makers at the State Press are ignorant to the fact that sexism is a major problem. This may explain why it was never mentioned in our campus paper that the “jokes” handed out by the English teaching assistant included an entire sheet of sexist material. I only learned of this by reading the Arizona Republic. As a University we all need to rise above this type of behavior and thought process. There are better and clearly more important stories to be told regarding ASU, without having to resort to masturbation fodder for juveniles. If any readers agree with my views, please let the editors of the State Press, such as Krist, know. If a person, institu­ tion or editorial staff needs to be told that sexism does not belong on our campus, or anywhere else for that matter, then let’s tell them. Jerry N. Smith Junior Art history In light of the popular obsession with race, and the local manifestations of racism at ASU and at some of the local high schools, it might interest readers to know that there is no factual basis for race in science. Race, or subspecific variation, has been studied for decades by genetics, molecular biology endocrinology, anthropology, psychology and animal ethology. All this research establishes beyond the shadow of a doubt that the 19th century notion of races as discrete, bio­ logical types is completely without foundation. Race can only be defined statistically, as polythetic sets of characters that vary with the extent, nature and intensity of interbreeding. Consequently, there is only clinal genetic divergence among the human breeding population. All observable dif­ ferences reflect this and, over evolutionary time, cascades of strictly local adaptations. In a recent article in the Wall Street Journal, anthropolo­ gist Lionel Tiger (Rutgers) likened the popular concept of race in public discourse to being a flat-earther in NASA. The world looks flat, but itisn’t Race seems real, but it’s not. Racial and ethnic politics are characterized by a colossal ignorance of human biology, exacerbated by the simpleminded tribal mentality currently sweeping the globe. The idea that race is, or should be, important in public policy is a dangerous delusion. We need to become abso­ lutely indifferent to race and ethnicity — not celebrate what are, from a biological standpoint, utterly trivial differences. As the world becomes choked with countless millions of humans, we can ill afford to indulge these pernicious vanities. The orderly conduct of public life in the United States depends on eliminating race and ethnicity as categories in the discussion of public policy. G.A. Clark Professor of anthropology S ta te P ress . Wednesday, March 27,1996 Page 6 DES projects solid job growth through 1997 PHOENIX CAP) — Arizona’s booming economy will slow down slightly over the next two years but will contin­ ue to produce jobs at about twice the national rate, a state economist predicted Tuesday. . As a result, the state’s unemployment rate will remain at 5 percent or lower through 1997, said Department of Economic Security senior economist Don Wehbey. DES said in its annual economic forecast that Arizona will add more than 161,000 jobs over die next two years, for a growth rate of 4.4 percent the remainder of this year and 4.5 percent next year. In comparison, the state's economy expanded by 90.900 jobs, or 5.4 percent, in 1995, which was down slightly from 1994, which was the state's best year in a decade. S t a t e W IN G S M ild «M ed. « H o t* F ire 6 W in g s..................$1.88 12 W ing.... ......... ,.„.$3.49 24 W ings..................$5.99 P r e s s P About three-fourths percent of the new jobs will be added in the Phoenix-M esa metropolitan area, which includes Maricopa and Pinal counties, Wehbey said. The Tucson metropolitan area, which includes all of Pima County, will add 15,000 jobs, while the remaining counties will pick up 24,300 jobs, he said. All segments of the economy are expected to share in the growth the next two years, with construction, manufac­ turing and service businesses leading the way. Another 17,700 construction jobs will be added over the two-year period, a growth rate of about 7 percent. “It may seem like a far cry from the 1994 growth rate of almost 22 percent, but much of that earlier growth reflected demand pressures placed on an industry that had experience o l ic e R T o o b iz a r r e t o b e a n y t h i n g h u t r e a l. e p o r t s BARRO'S COMES TO ASU year-over-year losses from the mid 1980s through 1991,” Wehbey said. Since 1991, the construction industry has grown by 40,000 jobs to reach an all-time high of 117,400 jobs last year, he said. • Manufacturing employment, which began to rebound in 1994, is expected to add 9,000 more jobs during the fore­ cast period. Wehbey “lean” inventories and improved con­ ditions in some export markets both are good signs for Arizona’s manufacturers. The service industries, which have grown by 110,000 jobs since 1991, will add another 63,200 jobs, for a growth rate of 6 percent for each of the next two years, according to the DES forecast. THELOCALSTOREFORALLYOUR LASER,COPIER DESKTOPPUBLISHINGNEEDS. & D is c o v e r o u r l o w p r ic e s , q u a l i t y p r o d u c t s & e x c e p t i o n a l c u s t o m e r s e r v ic e . e a n n o ii P in a 50 Wings...-......... $10.99 LUN CH S P E C IA L S 11: a.m. - 3:00 p.m. 1 Slice of Pizza & 16 oz. Drink $1.40 2 Slices of Pizza & 16 oz. Drink $2.58 3 5 0 -9 1 2 2 1 Slice, Salad & 16 oz. Drink $2.82 P IZ Z A & W IN G S COMBOS University ($1 Delivery Charge) D IN N E R S A L A D S Med. Cheese * 25 Wings Reg $1.88 « Lg. $3.72 $10.99 C H E E S E S T IX Lg. Cheese & 25 Wings LOCATED AT LEMON & TERRACE $11.49 Lg. 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ELEMENTARY DANISH ELEMENTARY NORWEGIAN ELEMENTARY SWEDISH MON. - TlIt.'RS., 6:00-8:40 p.m MON. - THURS., 6:00 - 8:40 p.rnMON. - FALL CLASSES WOMEN'S STUDIES (UNDER SLA) : (IN ENGLISH) 1. WOMEN IN MODERN SCANDINAVIA, M/W/F 9:40 - 10:30 _ TAUGHT IN ENGLISH BY FULBRIGH? PROFESSOR FROM'SWEQEN 2. WOMEN IN VIKING AND EARLY MODERN SCANDINAVIA, Ni/W/F>^:4l TAUGHT IN ENGLISH BY FULBRIGH'iV rOFESSORJE SCANDINAVIAN LANGUAGES: INTERMEDIATE DANISH: M/W, 6:40- 8:55 p.m? ELEMENTARY NORWEGIAN: SECTION 1, Dafly, lp:40r=TT3S' ^ -------SECTION 3. M/W/ frAO.yjk55 p m ______ ELEMENTARY SWEDISH SECTION 1. Daily, 10:40-11:30 SECTION 2. T/Th, 6:40 -8:55 INTERMEDIATE NORWEGIAN: M/W, 6:40 INTERMEDIATE SWEDISH: M/W, 6:40-B555 ALL LANGUAGE COURSES SATISFY THE FOREIGN LANGUAGE REQUIREMENTS OF THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES STUDIES COURSES r to E n glish a n d E asier to Learn -REGISTRATION S MARCH 28 FOR MORE INFORMATION: 965-6281,965-7551 o r 965-5900 S tate P ress Pagi:e 7 Wednesday, March 27, 1996 G M AT • over 50 hours of course time » practice on over 30 tests • small classes • excellent teachers • convenient times • 70 points average improvement • free extra help • come take a free parctice test » cla ss starts April 20 • get an edge ' 967-1480 * www¿re view.com em ail at paula.phofenix@review.com THE PRINCETON REVIEW ThePrinceibnRevie»' is noiaffiliatedwithLSAS'or Prince O ur KnowingChrist Garvin Jones 9pm TONIGHT a Thursday N oon 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: $4.50 remium Pitchers Knowing Christ os Victory Over Condemnation Thursday, Mar 28,12:40 -1:30 pm Cold Rm/203 Christian Students Fellowship All are welcome (bring a brown bag lunch) beverages and desserts provided For more information call 921-7270 ^ V? i ' Ji o u r ears. S É I É É éS 8» (That’s just the price. Wait until you experience the multimedia.) For wore informationvisit us on theinternetat http://bed.mfo.aliple.com/ When you buy a Macintosh' computer, you're buying some of the most advanced multimedia capabilities you can get In a computer. With built-in stereo sound, video graphics and animation, Macintosh is an easy way to bringyour work to life. And there!; no better time to start creating that work than right now. Because we're offering special campus savings on selected Macintosh computers and Apple* printers. With the sight, sound and motion of a Mac' it won’t just beyour eyes and ears that are blown away. Your professors will be blown away too. So visit us today, and look into the power of Macintosh. The power to be your best! - B u y a M a c b e fo re y o u p a c k . FormoreinformationvisitASUComputerStore Mon-Fri 940-5:00or caU965-4488 Power Mac"7500/100 LaserWriter"4/600PS PowerBook'5300c a/100 I6MB/ICB, CD, 15"monitor 11532 fnc. Mac andPmver Mac aretrademark ofApple Computer, Jnc All Macintosh computers are designedto be accessible to indhiduals with disability. TbJeam more (US only)r call 800-600-7808 or JH.8QOJ55-060L 8/500MB $2,099 600dpi 1759 Sta te P ress Wednesday, March 27, 1996 Page 8 P olice R eport H i g h f ib e r , l o w f a t . ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • Burnt food set off a fire alarm at Hayden Hall. The officer reset the alarm. • A student was sent to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital after becoming ill at McClintOek Hall, • A student reported a man followed her while she was rid­ ing her bicycle on campus, • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested for having an outstanding warrant from Phoenix. • A student reported someone stole clothing from a wash­ ing machine at Manzanita Hall. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: • A woman was arrested after an investigation revealed she struck her husband during an argument. She punched him repeatedly in the upper torso and broke a mirror over his head. When the man tried to restrain his wife, she bit his right wrist. She faces misdemeanor assault charges. • A man was arrested on misdemeanor assault charges after allegedly head butting a person at Walgreen’s, 1719 E. Southern Ave. Compiled by Slate Press reporter Garin Groff There's more to life than the flPmil©! and the cernie» ... try reading th e N E W S ! S P E C IA L A D V A N C E S C R E E N IN G s L O P E C R O S S W O R D by THOMAS JO SEPH ACROSS 1 ME C R A MP E N R A T 1O R H E H 1 L L ■ R AW S K 1 s E C S E R S P u R E S E T G U E S S A1F T S P ER R R £ M 1 H E t. 3, E S S Eil E S S■ A T E N D E R T H E G UN 1A NO A ME N D A|N D S s O R T S H O V E R A R E N A 42 Ladies’ men 1 MossDOWN covered Tl 1 Least E 6 Scenery bright A chewers 2 Rivals C 10 Tennis U 3 Byrd, for star P one Agassi S 4 Easy gait 11 Custom 5 Hankering Yesterday’s Answer 12 Iced tea 6 Mist additive layers contests 7 Superior 13 Protec­ 20 Margarine 30 Band­ tive-layer to leader holder 8 Short gas Shaw 21 Historic skirts 14 Give off 31 Sunday time 15 Wonder of 9 Soak in reading 24 Gut liquid music 35 Chow 25 Far from 11 Dorm 16 Polite 36 Yup's subtle cooker address opposite 15 Grinder’s 27 Pretend 17 Young 38 Floor 28 Corrects kin cover 29 Paint 18 Sixth 6 7 8 9 sense 1 2 3 4 6 » 19 Serving 11 10 site 22 Fake coin 12 13 23 Mecca 1 J 15 14 native 26 Not 18 17 16 invincible 29 Truck part 19 20 32 Top card 24 25 1 23 22 33 Hoover, "‘‘j for one 28 26 27 34 The East 33 32 29 3ÖP31 36 Do, for J one 36 34 35 37 Facing the pitcher 37 38 38 Director ■ 40 39 Polanski 39 Inclines 41 40 Capsize . 41 Oates 3-27 1 11a ■ ■ ■ ■ some women ■ ■ DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3-37 CRYPTOQUOTES KL S ZF D O : D PZ ZX P TX R C X I FREE M O V IE POSTERS Y O YZ Thursday March 28 8:00 PM Neeb Hall Pick Up Free Passes at 3rd Floor Memorial Union Tuesday March 26 MUAB/ASASL: SNEAK PREVIEW rOMMÎTIEE • IZXD H Z OLEQ UQ ZDZ X SC X I TATQZ LV T QD LV RPTQK XL D D L C D . - L H C BZQ PZQVLQS Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te: MONEY IS LIKE A SIXTH SENSE WITHOUT WHICH YOU CANNOT MAKE COMPLETE USE OF THE OTHER FIVE.—W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM C 1996 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Page 9 Wednesday, March 27, 1996 State P ress State Press N O COVER CHARGE. 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Washer/Dryer in each suite - N o m ore "laundry room socials" 7. Computer/Printer Station - 6. Bring Your Own Roommates - 5. "H elp...I sa w a m ouse!" Or borrow som e o f ou rs (w e d o free room m ate m atching!) Fully-Equipped Kitchen - It d o es ev ery th in g b ut the cook ing! 4. Indoor Racquetball/Health Club AVAILABLE FO R FA SH IO N SH O W S FU LL S E R V IC E SALON R eliev es stress... ok, it’s ju st fun! 3. 2. Furnished Apartments - N o m o v in g h assles! Pool/Spa/Sauna - W hy liv e an yw h ere else? A nd th e #1 reason to choose The C om m ons on A pache - 1. If David Letterman went to ASU, he would have lived at THE COMMONS ON APACHE! m a j o r e re a cc e p t m 'li/e d d ù u p * D a y “ S r c d a íi. ‘We are exclusive, not expensive. 277-888(> i. C a m e lb a e k P h o e n ix 1111E. A pache Tem pe, AZ 85281 CO M M O NS T o n APACHE 2 Blocks from ASU ph 303-7000 fax 303-7005 S tate P ress Wednesday, March 27,1996 Page 10 Lace counts on experience to land presidential spot B y T im B a x t e r St a t e P ress One in a series p rofiling the ca n d i­ dates fo r president of th e A sso cia ted Students o f ASU. A ss o c i a te d Students of ASU pres- , idential hopeful Graham Lace is count­ L a c e ing on his AS ASU experience to land the president’s chair. “I’ve seen the people at ASASU that work for the students, and I’ve seen the people who are just up there to pad their resumes or for their egos,” Lace said, “I think we need to weed out those people. I think I have the experience to do that. I won’t have to get acclimated to the office — I’ve already seen it, I can go in there and work from day one.” Lace, a Valley native, came to ASU three years ago after graduating from Scottsdale’s Chaparral High School. He has filled three vice-president term s in the Business College Council and, as a junior finance major, serves as president of the council. Lace also served nine months as ASASU government relations director. Lace said ASASU needs experience such as his. “Within my position as government rela­ tions director, I helped plan the University budget march, bring the Republican presi­ dential candidates debate, lobbied for stu­ dents on various issues such as tuition and financial aid -— all the things a president works with on a daily basis,” he said. “Signs are nice, catchy slogans are nice, but what do they say? If students look at what the candidates have really done, 1 think the choice is clear.” Lace said he plans to continue working on tuition rates and financial aid, and hopes to bring President Clinton to campus. “I think if we can bring the candidates (to campus) we should be able to get the president,” he said. “I think that would be another way to get students m ore involved.” S tate P ress I f y o u ' re r e a d in g th is in CLASS, YOU'RE IN BIG TROUBLE! L o o k in g f o r a c h a lle n g e and a paycheck? The Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the editorship of the 1996-97 Sun D evil Spark yearbook. Applicants for the position of editor: ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ M ust b e a student at A S U in good acad em ic standing. M ust h ave a m inim um o f tw o years yearbook or m agazin e exp erien ce. M ust p o ssess strong lead ersh ip , m anagem ent, organ ization al, com m u n ication , graphic d esig n , production and w ritin g sk ills! M ust b e p ro ficien t in M acin tosh M S W ord— Q uarkX Press p ro ficien cy a lso preferred. M ust n ot graduate prior to the com p letion o f the term o f appointm ent. T he appointm ent is from June 1, 1996 to M ay 1, 1997. A p p lic a tio n s and information on the subm ission and selection process are available at the front reception desk o f S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s, M a tth e w s C e n te r , n o r th b a se m e n t. Please direct questions to Julie Knapp, Associate D irector o f Student Publications, 965-7572. ~Tkefyunt^vil D eadline for applications: N oon, M onday, A pril 8 H o r o sc o p e ' s g u a r a n t e e d a Ije&tlool OR YOUR MONEY BACK! z aHOIR v CUTTERS" ie n e Happy m Hour! 2'8pm Mex. Beer $1.29 Ë “ 34b. wonder that staggers your imagination” T h e r ig h t w/FREE 32-oz. DRINK Expires 4/12/96. 216 E. University (just ea st of Forest) * Tempe ♦ 829-6026 Tell the w orld c u t f o r E V E R Y s ty le ! (o r a t le a s t A S U ) your favorite Web sites! In the Final Spring Semester Edition o f the State Press, we will be publishing the favorite Web sites o f ASU students, staff and faculty. If you want to share yours, then get busy! E-mail your favs to: idjxe (Officevision) or ■ ; y * idjxe @ asuvm.inre.asu.edu Snail-mail your favs to: State Press W eb Fays Box 871502 Tem pe.A Z 85287-1502 or drop your favs o ff in the State Press offices located in the basem ent o f Matthews Center. BE SURE T O IN C LU D E YOUR NAME, STATUS (student, faculty, staff) A N D P H O N E NUMBER. DEADLINE IS MONDAY, APRIL 22. ! Bring The H H P P h University & Rural Cornerstone Center NOW O P E N Rural & Guadalupe Albertson's Center 968-8008 839-4282 CO U PO N CO U PO N FREE SHAJMPOO | DESIGNER PERM I WAREHOUSE PRICES | WITH CUT a I I « ¡s2 9 9S|! 11 00 « ! ■ Ai irandNameSalonExclusiveProducts i ■ ¿ I Notgoodwith oliarforlaac a servie* thany anvotheroffer .■ (LonghairA.specialtywrapsextra) No«««al «*HaqrodM,dh, ImuihmIVIu. ED ■ RE DKEN I QM mg, sUoO4 i■ HOMI VT i |9R3jh _ _ mm.i Ou r i ^ _ saga u ||* Sebastian* Page 11 * Wednesday, March 27,1996 S tate P ress &** S tate PSI CHI PRESENTS THE #1 LEADER IN TEST PREPARATION KAPLAN Home of the Killer ’ Calzone % Members and non-members are invited to attend a seminar about the GRE/GRE psych exams and the graduate school application process. 1 b lo ck E ast o f M ill A ve. ori U niversity 894-MAMA M A M A K N O W S Wednesday, March 27th, at 5:30pm Psychology Building, Room 205 ASU Main Campus B E S T POP QUIZ 1. How many tim es have you missed [Qfll9lfli this semester? a) None. b) Fewer than five times. c) 1 800 CALL ATT. d) Where’s Dylan? 2. Someone calls you collect, using 1 800 CALL ATT. What happens? a) You accept because you and the person calling are automatically entered to win an internship on Beverly Hills, 00210? b) You accept because It always costs le ss than 1800 COLLECT* c) You accept because he/she might be Dylan. d) A ll the above. 3. What’s the best thing to do while watching Beverly H ills, 90210*? a) Study. b) Listen to David’s rap song. Want c) Hope for a guest appearance by Dylan. $24,500 d) Call a friend co llect using 1 800 CA LL ATT (you might win the Beverly Hills, 90210* internship and listen to David’s rap song in person). 4. You have to call your parents for money. Select the most appropriate scenario: a) You use 1 800 CALL ATT because you know you’ll get more money out of them. b) You use 1 800 CALL ATT because that way you’ll get another chance to win the Beverly H ills, 90210* internship. c) You’re doing it to get a bigger TV set. d) A ll the above. •M9BI8K0 gueflew id ♦spgotISJtm J8j. 'UMmr-wwi—»OMSREjiapsa»MS *ss|SangiMiaiwmi pmajisiirmrmhpin—|i»ie ig m ■amfra—g m W 8*8 »W«»M•JapweMseeasguifagtmIWHttP»Mae f sssewumup ■su Sg«elam ss« pas u p i U P W mg T l d a n y fr— m m ó I— 1 H W d H llliP H H 8 p o i i f g 9 1 ÜHM BO 8 1, 8 8 * B 9 8 l8 ë I P PU B — * 9 — 0 1 8 1 B TWO 1 Il w M U p gw P B U « ss p h a i M H 8 H H I H B U d >wga .........W P 8 9 A U S M— «H»8 U ¥ TTW 8 0 0 » I eg * 0 H 0 f «W H f W 8188M 90 8 8 88 M c i m i m i for college? The Army Reserve can help you take a big bite out of college expenses. How? If you qualify, the Montgomery GI Bill could provide you with up to $6,920 for college or approved vo/tech training. Well also pay you over $105 a weekend to start Training is usually one weekend a month 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—die kind that won’t interfere with school—stop by or call: 967-1611 01996 AT&T *1 800 COLLECT is a registered trademark of MCI. N AUTO*CAMIT ARMY RESERVE Page 12 S tate P ress Wednesday, March 27,1996 Kloeung: Community service key in education B y T im B a x t er S t a t e P ress One in a series profiling the candi­ dates fo r Associated Students o f ASU president. You can’t have a sense of commu­ nity without community service th a t's the m essage o f A ssociated Students of ASU presidential candi­ date Hung Sa Rath Kloeung. “I want to develop a program of service and leadership,” he said. ‘‘You K l o e u n g come to ASU expecting an education. When you leave here, they want to know more than your GPA they want to know if you were involved in the community. If people want to come together to volunteer, ASASU can provide the funding.” Kloeung. a Cambodian who came to Arizona 11 years ago, is not just promoting volunteerism for others — a large portion of his time is spent in community service. “I like to do volunteer service,” said thé president of Alpha Phi Omega, a co-ed service fraternity. The 21-year-olxl junior history major has outlined a number o f goals he hopes to meet if he were elected. Creating a safer campus environment and promoting racial unity top his list. “We need to turn (racial) conflict into a conversation,” he said. “We need more than demonstrations; we need to bring people together — we need interaction.” Kloeung also hopes to create a computer database to match students with their interests, build a community watch program and develop a “Meet Your Neighbor” night in the residence halls, “Once we get to know each other, we become aware and watch out for each other,” he said. “We can create a safer and more inviting environment.” Kloeung said he felt it was important for students to he involved in student government because it directly affects their wallets. “In a sense we are all share-owners in ASASU because it’s our tuition money that goes into it,” he said. E C O N O M IC S ! Like You've Never Seen It. In v ita tio n to ap p ly fo r S t a t e P E d i t o r r e s s s h i p The ASU S tu d en t P u b lica tio n s A dvisory B oard is n o w so lic itin g a p p lica tio n s fo r th e S t a t e P r e s s ed ito rsh ip fo r th e Fall Sem ester 1996. Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not on academic or disciplinary probation); :must have a cumulative grade index of 2,50 pr better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the S t i l l think a website is where SpiderMan liv e s? CURRENT ISSUES IN ECONOMICS AND POLITICS ECN 3Ü4-SLN 75077 St a t e P ress; must have completed a minimum of 15 hours of journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and journalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. Applicants must also: submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses; submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the S t a t e P r e s s or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions arid responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the S t a t e P r e s s or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the S t a t e P r e s s office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. . The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Monday, Monday, April 8. Director, Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 IT T UNIVERSITY OF OREGON w 199 6 m SESSION June 24-A ugust 16 Classes and workshops begin throughout the summer. No formal admission requirements. For a free sum m er session bulletin write Or call: 1996 Summer Session 333W Oregon Hall 1279 University of Oregon Eugene OR 97403-1279 (541)346-3475 E Q /A A /A D A in stitu tio n com m itted to cultural diversity. Accessible form ats available upon request.' Name A Think Again. Economics applied to the “War on Drugs," the health care crisis, pollution, the environment, etc. SURVEY OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS ' Instead of trudging to the library, you can use IBS 306 or ECN 306-SLN 35436 the Internet to do all your research at home. Understanding current trade issues such as the North American Free Trade Agreement, etc. Instead of mailing letters, you can e-mail anyone, anytime, anywhere. And instead of letting a travel agent pick out your Spring Break hot spot you can scout it yourself, there are no limits to the information you can access. Think it might be nice MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS ECN 394 -SLN 12824 Business and administrative decision-making using economic tools. PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS/ 2nd SUMMER SESSION IBS 300-SLN 78023 Survey of International Economics & business topics. ^Prerequisites: ECN 111 or ECN 112, Junior standing, 2.0 GPA to have the world at your fingertips? Think Phoenix Community Internet „S M provided by campusMCI YOU’RE EITHER NET OR YOU’RE NOT. *$12MO/NMB •HIECRUISIN'1JUM-8AM •DIRECTCAMPUSCONNHmON • *N0BUSYSIGNALS Withgreatpagers fromNEC. Coverage whereyouwant it Locations whereyou needthem. Andbills you’ll understand. From thefirst name inpaging-AiiTouch. Sogive us acall and let usget yourbeep goingtoday! Upte n bars el hen acetes. Oea-thh tin * he el fllMM, embed rb rm « y ippli reelirt renew emiri hr cándete dable. canariMI Merest service presidid parease! te cettsMO propri C MOUh»— Itiflin C a n u ti, IM . *Onece el recahhp a buey tip i it approximately 1%. A IRT O U C H Address Cüyg___ State Not Fo r E co n o m ic s M ajors I ZIP_ A g r e a t p la c e to g e t a h e a d WhatAreYouWaitingFoi? CALL 1-800-446-3309 Paging 1-800-6-AIRTOUCH y P ag e 13 Wednesday, March 27, 1996 S t a t e P ress Levine: Student-faculty communication No. 1 concern said he hopes to increase communication between students and faculty, create a safer campus and stabilize tuition. “My number one point is I want better communication between students and faculty;” he said, adding that he plans open forums with students and faculty to discuss issues of concern, Levine said it was not realistic to expect the president’s office to lower tuition. “I don’t have the control to lower tuition, but I want to get in there and try to stabilize it,” he said. Increasing the number of phones around campus linked By T im B axter State P ress One in a series profiling the candi­ dates fo r Associated Students o f ASU president: Steven Levine hopes to ope day be U.S. president, but first he hopes to be Associated Students of ASU president. Before heading to Washington, the 21-year old junior broadcasting major L ev in e to the Department of Public Safety tops Levine’s ideas for improving safety. “If there are phones everywhere, you can ran to a phone and DPS knows where you are at.” Levine also hopes to have higher-profile educational sem­ inars and speakers on campus than ASU has had in the past. “We deserve the best when speakers tour campuses,” he said. Levine said he thought he could meet his goals simply by working with the right people within ASASU and by getting students more involved in the governmental process. Sizzle O u r S u m m e r R a te s $ 975 Reserve Your Space Today! THE 968-6427 Your Own Room — The Whole Summer One Price — May 28 — August 10 U tilitiess Included* D ^ V U V J M lN O u tilitie in clu d ed -* *up to $120 p e r condo p e r m o n th 1215 E ast L em on O n ly 2 b lock s from cam pu s o n L em on r - SPECIAL STUD EN T FARES FR EE TAX H ELP Round trip from Phoenix F R O M V IT A V o lu n te e r In co m e T a x A s s is t a n c e R E S I D E N C LO N D O N ............ .........478 .......710 PARIS..... .......... AMSTERDAM....... ....... 686 FRANKFURT... .............641 MADRID. .. ........ ....„734 MUNICH........................726 BARCELONA....... ......„734 BRAZIL . .. .... ...........780 CARACAS............ ,...,....522 Wednesdays and Thursdays 6-9pm Feb. 21 st to April 13th and Saturdays 9am-noon March 23rd to April 13th Foreign Students welcome-Thurs. only Disabled Students contact DSR for tim es Y Every Wed. & Thürs. 2-3 p.m. Student Services Amphitheater C O L L E G E O F LAW TOKYO ... . . . ....... SEOUL,....,.................. H O N G K O N G .............. SINGAPORE......... BANGKOK................ GUATEMALA................ COSTA RICA................ 550 BELIZE........... PANAMA....... ........ ...... O t h e r C i ï i ë s A v a ila b le A r m s tr o n g H a l l R o o m 1 1 4 F R E E T a x A d v ic e and M ILL AVEN U E TR A V E L 966-6300 Discounts Also Available To faculty & Staff- F o r m P r e p a r a tio n A s s is t a n c e IRS Sponsored . Restrictions Apply. Subject,to AvallabiIjty.. Ad funded by ASASU IL, F ir st I n t e r s t a t e B a n k o f A r iz o n a ‘F ie s ta . ‘B o w l C ^ iie e ii C o r n p e t i t i o r i Enter Today! Entries must be postmarked by April 1. Questions? Call 350-0900 or 800/635-5748. The First Interstate Bank of Arizona Fiesta Bowl Queen Competition is your chance to enjoy the most exciting time of your life! From ten semi-finalists, the Queen and four court members w ill be selected to take part in Fiesta'Bowl events and receive scholarships, a wardrobe, jewelry and other valuable gifts. It could happen to you-so enter today! _ * The competition is open to all females who have not been married or had any children and who must have attained the age of 19 years but w ill not attain the age of 23 years during 1996. Candidates may not graduate prior to M ay 1997. Each candidate roust be a full-time student In an Arizona college or university. She must be taking a minimum of 12 academic hours, be in good standing and not on scholastic or Social probation. Previous Fiesta Bowl Queen and Court are ineligible. April 13:1st Interview ■ : wp- h i ' m m DATES TO REMEMBER April 20: 2nd Interview April 27: 3rd Interview April 30: Fiesta Bowl Committee Meeting All interviews will be held in Phoenix. 'mm .mm mm wm um mm. e m : mm-.imm '-mm mm mm mm h i ■■ ■■ mm ■ ■ ■ ■ . ■ ■ mm ■ ■ mm p p ■■ * • '■ ■ ■ • • ■ OFFICIAL ENTRY APPLICATION Name 7- . .. A 7-, / / T T ’V : :-'7 7: ' ■"• 7;- Age- 7 -''7-..-7 7 •■' / : ■Street 7"; ■' - -7 ■ City ; " ■■■■; ■ Zip ■: 7. . ; , . , ; ; Phone (Home! (Work) .■ ''7 '■: .' ■- ' - -. ■U niversity/Col lege/Major .7 ^ 7 ■;-7--- 7.-,7 ,/;7---7 ; -■ / 'T' ’ Class □ Freshman □ Sophomore □ Junior □ Senior Credits taken this semester ‘School-: Activities " 7 ;r ■■- ■ : V" ' 7 --7 :: - ■ _- ■ Other Activities;:"-... ' : 77y. 7 '7 - r •7 ■■ , , ■ 7 ..Parent's'- Street - ' :7- ' 7-:-7 ■.■■■ ' ■; _'-7, 7; ' ;i City : 7' ■- ' ■ .7: 7 ''' State 7 7'".7 ^ Z ip 7 / . 7 7 phone- - ; '7- 777 ,7 I certify that a ll above inform ation is true and correct and agree to allow the Fiesta Bow l use o f m y photograph and application. I have read, and fu lly understand and agree to the rules and regulations regarding e lig ib ility for the 1996 First Interstate Bank Fiesta Bow l Queen and Court. Signature _. - ■" ■'' All applications must be submitted to the Fiesta Bowl Queen Competition, Apirl 1, 1996,,One photograph, no larger than 5 x7 inches, 120 S. Ash Ave., Tempe, A Z . 85281 , postmarked on or before (nonreturnable) must be included with the application. Comics f a i S ta c y H cLthdteJZ E n C m ti# N H e X e d / v ie r u e s t /s t a r m e ù o u m T H E SCULPTURE, O T /A J& S A F E T Y F A C T : A S U k /e S T H AS A SC U LPT U R E C A LL6 P F W M & N T / N m o v e p iw t ' t t j s & Ho o p s , f t □ a S tate P ress Wednesday, March 27, 1996 P ag e 14 co st F A C T -A S TUB SFEA R . 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For 46 years, AirTouch Paging has provided Arizona students with top quality pag­ ing products and services. From the widest coverage area to the largest customer sales and support network, AirTouch provides the paging support to keep you in touch. Today and every day. « E 9:00 am-4:00 pm • AED 60 -“Asian Americans: Year 2000 and : Beyond" Conference. Co-Sponsored by tfie ASU Asian American Faculty and Staff Association. For registration or more info, call 727-6135. Admission is free and open to the public. ASIAN c o a litio n Thursday, March 2H 4:30-7:30 pm • Physical Science Bldg. F123 -Japanese Sword Dance -Documentary: “Japanese American Concentration Camp" . Refreshments Provided. * 1:40 pm • Lang. & Lit. Bldg. A-18 -“Rule of Law in China: Past & Present” by Prof, Su Gu of Nanjing University People’s Republic of China . • Asian American Faculty and Staff Association • Vice President of Student Affairs • Office o f Senior Vice President & Provost • Cultural Diversity Committee A ll program s subject to change. C a ll 965-9754fo r info. •O ffice L ocation s: Phoenix, M esa, Tucson, F lag sta ff, C asa G rande, Nogales, S ie rra On cam pus se llin g pagers W ednesdays 10MOam-2:OOpm - ■ in fro n t o f the Com puting Com m ons - Look fo r us! Vista Centerfor AsianStudies 9:00 am-l:00 pm • Cady Mall -Asian Cultural Booth, . Music & Exhibits 3:00-5:00 pm • Lang. & Lit. Bldg. C18 •Colloquium Talk Dr. Peter Zinoman, Dept, of History University 6f Bericeley 7:30 pm • Nursing Bldg. 101 -“Rikyu”- Japanese Film with English Subtitles. Free admission.; ASIAN rs B A N KZO N E SUN*EWS A Sports State P ress Wednesday, March 27, 1996 Pa»;e IS Ex-Sun Devil Bennett enjoying real world By S eth L andau State P ress The all-too familiar names instantly ting a bell in the heads o f a partisan Phoenix Suns’ crowd: Charles Barkley, Kevin Johnson, John "Hot Rod” Williams and Michael Finley. But for the past 12 games, there bias been a new edition to Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons’ start­ ing lineup. “Aaattt forward ... Marrriiiooo Bennett!!!,” bellowed the Suns’ public address announcer as all 19,023 purple and orange fanatics cheered their hometown hero last week at the America West Arena Thursday night. Whilë A.C, Green recovers from a thuggish cheap-shot to the mouth by the New York Knicks’ J.R. Reid and Danny Manning being eased back into gam es after knee surgery, Bennett, a rookie out of ASU. is earning valuable experience at his power-for­ ward position. Bennett, the 27th overall pick in the 1995 NBA Draft, sat out three-fourths of the ‘95’96 regular season rehabilitating a tom ACL in his left knee, which he suffered the summer before his sophomore year. The injury ham­ pered the former Sun Devil throughout his college career. Bennett missed a year and a half of playing time during his four-year stay at ASU, The m ove to ac tiv a te B ennett o ff the injured-reserve list this late in the season might have been premature, since he still is feverishly working on rehabbing his knee but with an injury-depleted roster, Fitzsimmons and the Suns had no choice. "My knee is doing good. It’s-doing better than what it was in the (NBA) preseason so I can't complain," said Bennett, who earned the nickname of Super Mario at ASU. “But 1 still have some work to do on it.” In- his lim ited appearances this season, Bennett is averaging six points and three rebounds in about 15 minutes per game. “It’s been hard, 1 missed out on a lot of stu ff,” said B ennett, who added that th< adjustm ent from college ball to the NB.A ranks is taking its toll. “College is totally dif­ ferent. You the man, so you’re usually ir control of what you’re doing. You don’t have to worry about getting taken out o f the game and mistakes.” While Bennett works on his game, the cri­ tiques of his performances appear consistent the potential is there. Fitzsimmons,, who was hired mid-season to replace Paul Wesphal, is somewhat of a Super Mario advocate. “So far I gotta say M ario’s done a nice job,” Fitzsimmons said. “Most rookies are not consistent day in and day out. Mario is learn­ ing that he has to come out and put forth a good effort every night in order to be good.” Suns' floor-leader Kevin Johnson agreed that potential can go a long way “He needs to continue to become a smarter player and work hard very consistently,” he said. “It’s all upstairs. If he can do that, he'll have a great career.” An aspect of Bennett's game that is notice­ ably improved is the one thing that haunted him at ASU :— the dreaded free throw. In three college seasons, Bennett averaged 53 percent from the line. As a Sun, he is hover­ ing around 80 percent. “I stopped listening to everybody trying to teach me how to shoot a free throw because I know how to shoot,” he said. “I went back to the way I used to shoot them when I was a freshman at ASU and it worked. My shot has always been good, (the technique) is ju st more or less mental.” Bennett is bracing him self for a bumpy ride the rest of the way, another, rookie trying to unlock their potential in the do-or-die world of professional basketball. “I’m not the best player on the team any­ more, not even one of the best, 1 just have to adjust,” he said. “As far as m entally, I’m there, I can handle that. I just gotta settle down and relax, play my game.” Former Sun Devil star Mario Bennett has given the Phoenix Suns a lift with his strong inside play. The rookie forward has started all 12 games since his return from knee surgery. W restlers grapple w ith d isap p o in tm en t B y D an M iller Special t o the State P ress The final numbers are indicative of a bittersweet ending to a postseason that was flooded with promise. But if you asked anyone on the ASU wrestling team to describe their feelings now that it’s over, chances are they would only say bitter. Seven Sun Devils made the pilgrim age to Minneapolis last weekend for the NCAA j Championships. Three came back All-Am ericans, one returned with a new identity and another left distraught after not wrestling a match. The team finished a' disap­ pointing 10th. “We’re not satisfied with Tim Hacker/State Press a lop-10 finish.” said Coach Senior three-time All-Am erica Steve St. John (right) lost a brutal 5*2 match to Cary Kolat of Lock Haven (Pa.) in the 134-pound final at the N CA A Cham pionships in M inneapolis Saturday. Lee Roy Sm ith, whose squad entered the NCAAs Mollica, the defending champ who also took first as a ranked sixth in the country. “We came hoping we would be 158-pound freshman, was trying to become the first wrestler in the top five somewhere. We’ve got to assess what we in ASU history to win three NCAA crowns. In the wake of can do to change that.” the adversity, Smith said he handled himself like a veteran. Two Sun Devils won’t be back to assist in the resur­ “After that semifinal loss, he wrestled like a champion gence movement. All-Americans Markus Mollica (167 even though his heart wasn’t in it,” he said of Mollica. pounds) and Steve St. John (134) took fourth and second, After the defeat sent Minneapolis reeling and Mollica to respectively, marking the end of their ASU careers. the consolation bracket, he beat Iowa State’s Barry Weldon For Mollica, a two-time national champion and the No. 1 in the consolation semis before losing to Boise St.’s thirdseed, gamering his fourth All-America honor was reduced seeded Charles Burton in the third-place match. to a mere afterthought. His mind-bending 6-4 loss to Iowa’s Earlier this month, Mollica became the first man in Pacfifth-seeded Daryl Weber in the semifinals was not. 10 history to win four conference titles. He finished his “It’s tough when you have your goal set on one thing and yoq, lose,” Mollies said.. _ T urn to W restling, page 16. W m im- D evils fall sh o rt in comeback, 5-3 By B rian A. A nderson ' State P ress The No.' 2j3 ASU women’s tennis team suffered a heartbreaking defeat to archrival. No. 3 ranked UofA Tuesday at the Whiteman Tennis Center 5-3. Reka Cseresnyes lost to the No. 1 player in the nation, Vicky Maes, 6-3, 7-5. The loss was especially frustrating because Cseresnyes held a 5-0 lead in the second set. Anna Moll (No. 5) and Torey Pratt (No. 6) were the only winners for ASU (8-7, 0-7) in singles action and were the last to finish. Added pressure was put on their matches because the Sun Devils had to win both in order to stay alive in the match. “It doesn’t really matter (the score) because I try to concentrate on my match,” said Moll a 2-6,6-4, 64 winner. Pratt also a winner in three sets did not feel any ill effects from the long singles match going into doubles action. v “You have to be real mentally tough in the doubles to be able to win,” said Pratt, referring to the rigors of playing a doubles match 10 minutes after' finishing sin­ gles play. By winning the first four singles matches UofA (14-2, 6-1) forced ASU to sweep the three doubles matches if the Sun Devils hoped to win. The No. 1 tandem of Stephanie Lansdrop and Katy Propstra used blistering serves and volleys to over­ power their opponents, 6-3,6-2. The No. 2 team of Cseresnyes and Moll lost the first set and then took their opponents to a tiebreaker in the second set. They came up just short and lost the match 6-4, 7-6 (9-7). “You never like to lose, especially to UofA, but we are getting better,” Coach Sheila Mclnemey said. S t a t e P ress Wednesday, March 27, 1996 Page 16 W re stlin g .__ _ 15% phenomenal career 113-15 after going 34-4 this year. “I think in any sport you want to end your career with a bang,” said Mollica, who will now pursue the 163-pound spot on the Olympic freestyle team. “But I can still look back and say I won two national titles and was the Pac-10 champion four times. That’s the positive.” St. John, the fourth seed, lost an emotional final, 5-2, to second-seeded Cary Kolat of Lock Haven (Pa.). Now a three-time All-American, St. John beat Iowa’s top-seeded Mark Ironside for the second time this year in the semifinals. “I wanted to win it all,” he said after die championship bout. St. John, who finished third at the NCAAs last year, lost to Kolat in the consolation final as a sophomore when Kolat was at Penn State. “I was pretty nervous.” admitted St. John, who was 19-4 this season an¿ finished his career 82-25. “I’m glad it’s over.” ASU sophomore Aaron Simpson clinched his first AllAmerican honor Friday when he pinned Rod Franklin of Clarion (Pa.) in 5:56 of his wrestleback. Simpson, the 12th A seed, lost to Lock Haven’s fifth-seeded Mike Geurifi in the seventh-place match. Coincidentally, he pinned Geurin in the second round. “I’m not satisfied,” Simpson said. “I’m going to be a national champion next year.” Three Sun Devils fell one match short of All-American honors (top-eight finish). Two of them, sophomore Matt Suter (158) and redshirt-freshman Casey Strand (190), lost in the last 30 seconds of the “All-American” round. Suter (31-10), the ninth seed, Was beaten by Michigan State’s third-seeded Jeff Catrabone, 2-1, in an overtime tiebreaker. Strand, meanwhile, lost a 2-2 tiebreaker to Northern Iowa’s Tony Wieland after Wieland rode him out. Sophomore 126-pounder Shawn Ford, who upset Iowa’s defending champ Jeff McGiriness in the second round, was eliminated by Brown’s Willie Carpenter in the wrestlebacks. ASU junior All-America Danny Felix (27-8), the fifth seed, spectated after failing to make the 118-pound weight limit. . w/ASU I.D. LUNCH or DINNER C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1$- ---------------— O R ------------------ Lg. Cheese Pizza & 50 W in g s ... $15.95 ( ^ • (Take-O ut Only) Not valid with any other coupon or promotion ' H A P P Y H O U R ! 3:30-6:30pm S u n D e v il p itc h e rs o u td u e l P o r tla n d S t., 1 0 -0 Fr o m S taff R eports Behind the arms of Kaipo Spenser and Ryan Bradley, the No. 14 ASU baseball team plastered Portland St., 100. Tuesday night at Packard Stadium in front 1,496 fans. Spenser (3-4). a junior, earned the victory after pitch­ ing 6.1 innings, walking two and striking out eight bat, .ters. Bradley, a sophomore, finished off PSU by pitching the final 2.2 innings. The two combined gave up only four hits. . The Sun Devils last shutout was 39 games ago against. UofA on April 21, 1995. Junior third baseman Mike Torti went 2-for-3 with 3 RBI including his seventh home run of the season in the second inning. The Sun Devils will tangle with Portland St. again at 7 tonight at Packard Stadium. ----------- STATUS--------- -- Weather worries? Seethe forecast on the bottom of Page 1 . BLUE ASU Jewish Undergraduate Students Student Affairs announces the fifth annual STATUS awards program. STATUS honors administrative and classified staff and service professionals across campus who provide continuous, outstanding service to students. Be a trained religious school teacher earning Would you like to nominate som eone for recognition? To do so, com plete this form, attach a statement describ­ ing this person’s service to students, and return the nomi­ nation to the V ice President for Student Affairs O ffice by Friday, March 2 9 ,1 9 9 6 . $4500 fo r the 1996-97 academic year. Nominee’s n a m e T it le . Department - ' /- . ■ ' ■ Send R esum e and C over Letter b y A pril 15th to: : ,, ■' • ■ Your name _______ A d d re s s ■' ■ HILLEL TEACHING SCHOLARS Ph o n e ■; / ■. 1012 S. MILL Tem pe, A Z 85281 M ore Info: 967-7563 ■" Return to: Student Af&irs, ASU, Box 872103, Tempe, AZ 85287-2103. For more info, call 965-7293. 9 4 7 -8 2 4 5 1 8 1 0 N . S cottsd ale (betw ed Classifieds Notice to our readers; Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be senior invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-J 721. The top name for boys in the U.S. is Michael. L Source: The Top 10 of Everything AN N O U N CE MENTS Mesa Com m unity College Pick u p your co p y o f the daily S tate Press on M C C cam pus a t the en trance o f the adm inistration building. A N N O U N CE MENTS CASTING CALL 2 feature short films, 2 alternative rock videos, 2 new country videos. Wed­ nesday March 27. Graham Rm 21 <5 2nd floor MU 3:30, 5:30, 7p.m. CHINESE STUDENT Associa­ tion general meeting. '3:00pm Sat. 3/30/96. To vote, please update/apply your membership by 3/28/96, For more info., call 303 0618 (A nnie). 9682263 (Wu). Leave message or fax. • FREE FINANCIAL aid! Over $6 billion in public and private sectorgrants & scholarships4s now available. All students are eligible rçgardlëss of grades, in­ come or parent's income. Let us help. Cell Student FinancialServices: 1-800-263-6495 ext, F59184, ' OPEN MIC Competition spon­ sored by M UAB’s Culture & Arts Com. i s . looking for en­ trants. Any talent is welcome. : Grand prize is a trip for 2 to Las V egas. Com petition date is April 17 from 11:30-1:0Q- Pick up applications @ MUAB. 3rd fir. MU or call 965-6822. APARTMENTS 2BD APARTMENT Near Base­ line & Rural, small, quiet com­ plex. $475/m o. Call Jeff or Mike 967-3037. APARTMENTS EL DIABLO APTS. NE corner o f Apache and M cClintock quiet luxury livin g Ibd $480, 2bd $550-600,921-0699. LARGE QUIET 2bd apt., walk to ASU pool, laundry, 1 blk south o f University on 8th Sh Cape Cod Apartments 9685238 NICE 1 br. apt. wash/dry, pool, spa. Close to Mill/Uriiversity. Ref. req. $425. 834-1444 ext.2. Apache Terrace Apartments 1 b lo c k fro m , ASU 1 bdroom, 1 bath & 2 bdroom, 2 bath Apartments Now Taking Applications for August c a ll 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 HOMES FOR RENT 1 BLK TO A Stl: 3bd, w/d, frige & stove, evap & A/C, fenced yard, 3 people max, $1100/m o. lyrs, lease. Credit check & ref’s, no pets.* 8333851. r ■' 3BD, 1 1/2 BA, tile floors. 740 W, 9th St, $825/mo, Tim 8940288. CLEAN & NICE 3 bedroom 2 full bath single fam ily home. Ceramic tile in entrance, kitchen & bath, block wall yard, close to ASU, Scottsdale Rd,/McKellips area. Please call 641-1901. WALK TO ASU, 3 bd , 2 ba. With pool. $900 month. 8940288. WALK TO ASU. 3bd. 1 ba. brick house with wood floors, $800/m 6. Others avail. Tim 894-0288. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2B D /2BA W /D, dishwasher, m icrowave, unfurn. $650/m o Avail, now 858-8771 or (602) 910-0810. CONDO FOR rent, 2bed Lbath ns lg. patio w /d, pool prvt.V nice Broadway & Dobson avail 4/1 $500/mo. 839-6115, TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd/2ba, walk/bike to ASU, w/d, pool, yard, clng fans $635, 9660987. RENTAL SHARING FEMALE NEEDED to share apt; 1 blk from ASU. Own rm/ba. $316 + 1/3 utl. Call 967-5899. LARGE CHANDLER home S350/mo incl. util. David 9021000 ext 8031/pgr 310-8060. M/F, 2BD, 1.'5 ba. 2 Ivl furn. 1/2 mi ASU $275 + 1/2 util. Eric 894-0069. N /S, N/DRINK1NG single fe­ male looking for same to share 2bd r/lba apt in M esa area. $225/m o. + 1/2 util. Call Cynthia 962-4906 leave m es­ sage.. . , . RMTE NEEDED asap! 2bd/2ba 15 m iles to ASU- $100 dep/ $275 + 1/2 util m /f 926-9387 lvmsg. RMTE NEEDED m /f. ns to share beautiful 3bd/2ba home w/poo) & w/d. A vail, now. $350 + 1/3 util. Call Seth or Con 838-8295 C la ssifie d s WORKI RENTAL SHARING ROOMMATE M/F Wanted to share 3bd/2ba condo in Papago Park during summer. $300/mo + 1/3 util. Call Sarah or Kristen at 784-0791. Leave message. SCOTTSDALE $350, 1/2 util. Own condo fully furn. w/pool, w/d, ns 2bd/2ba 994-8229. HOMES FOR SALE " CUSTOM TEMPE HOME This 3K sq. ft. luxury home is absolutely incredible. Custom EVERYTHING...from the par­ quet kitchen floor to the tiled granite entry way! 3BR, 3BA, super insulation, tile roof, brick block con s., natural stained woodwork, large LR and DR, large eat-in kitchen, marble window sills, 2”ovens, built-in stove and many more builtins/extras. liu s home is elegant and beautiful. $210,000, 1223 E. Sunburst Lane, Tempe. Call 838-7890 for appointment. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE COMMERCIAL ICEMAKER 220V Been sitting 2yrs- was working $50 998-1866 lv msg. _ COMPUTERS 75MH PENTIUM 8m egs o f Ram, 1.2gig hd, 4x fcd-romi svga l4" mon, ink jet printer, 14.4 fax/môd, Sony 3piece sat­ ellite w/sub. Paid $3,100 w/warr. 777-9623. LAPTOP TOSHIBA T-l 200XE* Dos only, 286m g, $350. E x ­ cellen t condition. Call 451 1194. MAC II ci 8MB ram, system 7,T Daystar accelerator card. 3Nubusi slots extras! 481-3021 ex^ pandable to power pc $750. 1 ROCK GARDEN BPS Not for the normal! 50+ lines, chat, games, files! 222-3000 TICKETS PHOENIX SÜNS & Milwaukee Fri night $25 & up San Anto­ nio Tues. $35 & ùp Steve 6780316. S tate P ress TICKETS TRANSPORTATION RED HOT Chili Peppers April 3 America West Arena. General admi ssion floor1 or ex cel lent lower level reserved seats near stage $40/ea. Tree delivery, cred­ it cards accepted. Call 2543300. S H IP Y O U R C A R in the US. Affordable rates door to door. 800-886-7135. AUTOMOBILES '92 BUICK Riviera -red w/white landau roof, w hite leather 6way seats. Loaded price to sell fast at 14,900 obo - Call today won't last 894-1237. TRANSPORTATION LIM O U S IN E 1985 TOYOTA p/u 4x2 white, new tires, clutch, brakes, good transportation. 190k 1000 less than bl bk $2200 obo. Call Mike @ 929-0549. • 2491. AUTOMOBILES STOP DOLLARS CASH TODAY!!! For Your Auto Today Call Brian Now I BUY ALL Used Cars/T rucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. 246-3499 AUTOMOBILES 1988 SUZUKI Samurai for sale 90k, custom w heels, teal, gray interior, am/fm cassette pull out deck, 4wd, just tuned up, new tags, call Carrie 994-5214. MOTORCYCLES'94 M AGNA Sportscruiser. Bags, fairing, cust. paint. Show bike. $6000 OBO. 814-1309. BICYCLES Driver included, 6 passengers. $45/hr, min. 3 hours. 925- 481-9053 tdg ’95 GIANT ATX 890, silver, shimano LX components, marzocchi shocks, barely used, $1000 obo Call Nathan 9672087 TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures, M ost places worldwide. T also buy transfer­ able coupons/awards, 968-7283 HELP WANTEDGENERAL n HELP WANTEDGENERAL m C AFTERMARKET COMPANY- Be a little flexib le and save $$$. We'll help you beat the airline prices. D estinations Worldwide. AIRHITCH ™ BOO3 9 7 -1098, airhitch @ netcorn.com , D edicated and Responsive T fj.es ales Find it FAST in the Classifieds . Sales Consultants M ake q u a lifie d call-b ack in q u iries fo r nationally televised Infom ercial products. Flexible Schedules Sun-Fri 1pm -9pm & Sat 7am -7pm Call (602) 470-2500 Aftermarket- (formerly Associated Bioscience, Inc.) W hy d o n a te p la sm a ? • Help save lives ' • Earn up to $185 each month • Supervised care area foriyour children to play • Watch your favorite movie while you donate • W e have many A S U do n o rs!1 n • Extra bonuses possible if you've had your Hepatitis aA* shot N ew E x te n d e d f lo u r s 7:30am - 8:30pm 8 a m -6 p m 10am - 4prh 1334 E. Broadway Rd. Suite 102 (across from the Native New Yorker) $1750 WEEKLY Possible mail­ ing our circulars. For info call 202-393-7723. . Outgoing, energetic appoint­ ment setters for Universal Por­ traits. Call Rachael, 777-1054. ACCOUNTING CLERK, B ill­ ing, a/r, clerical, filin g , e x ­ cel/word, analytical skills, also assist ip hr. PT flexib le 2Ohrs/week. $7-8 doe. Call 278-5561 ext, 221. EOE. Advertise your internet b u sin ess or Web sfte in the Classifieds. ALASKA SUMMER Employ­ ment - Fishing industry. Earn up to $3,000-$6,000+ per month. Room and board! Trans­ portation! Male/female. No ex­ perience necessary ! (206) 9713510 ext A59186. ASST COOK wanted for sum­ mer camp in N. Wisconsin com­ m ercial, quantiy cooking exp. required good pay free rooim & board Call 1-800480-1188. ASU STUDENTS Wtd. Short surveys. $6.00 base, average $7-11 /hr. Start now, 7842270, BAGEL SHOP/DELI 10 minutes from ASU in Scottsdale seeks friendly, responsible peo­ ple to work counter & sand­ wich prep. Parttime mornings & afternoons Call 970-6165. BEAT THÉ Sulnmer heat: wil­ derness trip leaders needed for boys camp, in Northern Wisr consin. Prior experience a mustand climbing background pre­ ferable. Counselors also need­ ed. Skills in: archery, riflery, or tennis. Good pay, free room and board. Call 1-800-4801188. GREAT EXPERIENCE-FLEX HOURS Dash Designs now has openings for: • Weekend retail mgr. Great for bus. majors-utilize mgmt, actng, & adinin. Skills. $7/hr> 16-20/hrs • Customer Serv Rep-requires good communication & data entry skills, PT/FT, $ 6/h r » Inventory Clerk-material mgmt, purchasing, spread sheet skills. $6-6.50/hr, 15 h rs/w k • Handyman-Light carpentry, painting, iriisc. duties $6-7/hi:, 15 h r s/w k * For a limited tim e only, New D onors receive $30 for their first donation!! (SurtoysOrly) ^ P r o I V la r k t& P ro M a rk O n e M a rk e tin g S e rv ic e s , Inc. SUMMER SPQRTSJOBSJI PREMIER BROTHER/SISTER CAMPS! Located, m western Massachusetts - over 100 positions open! I Come to work for the best and most professional camps anywhere!! Top Salary, RM/ED/Laundry, Travel Allowance. Activities include: Baseball, Basketball, Gymnastics, Ice Hockey, Lacrosse, Ufeguardittg, Piano, Rocketry, Rollerblading, Sidling, Secretary, Soccer, Swimming, Tennis, WaterSki, Windsurfing, Weights, Wood and More ! For more info, contact: (Men) Camp Winadu 800-494-6238 (Women) Camp Danbee 800-392-3752 NOW HIRING ProMark One is now accepting applications for our dynamic,new Tempe Center. |(* C ity o f Tem pe POSITIONS Working with children (K-5th) before and after school. Hours vary. Position descriptions available with application. Full-time an d Part-time Health & Dental Benefits • Paid Vacations • Paid Holidays # • Flexible Schedules • Professional W ork Environment • Prom otion From Within • No Experience Necessary • Paid Training • Advancem ent Opportunities • $ 6 .0 0 An Hour Plus Com m ission (Top R eps Can Earn $12.00+ Hourly) • Relocation Opportunities_____________________ • C a ll Today To Set Up A n Interview • 777-0877 Or Stop B y At 3136 S. M cClintock, Suite 7, Tempe ProM ark One is the 166th Fastest Growing Company In Am erica' - INC 500 M agazine Program Manager $7.84/hr, 10-33 hrs wk DISTRIBUTE FLYERS to stud­ ent apartments around ASU. P/T $6 50/hr + bonus. Call Nick 838-2722. DO YOU Need a summer job? Look no further. Room, board, and salary provided. YMCA's Sky-Y Camp and Chauncey •Ranch are looking for caring, motivated men and women to work with children ages 7-17 in a resident camp setting. C ounselors/program sta ff are needed for the following areas: mountain biking, ¡archery; arts and crafts; r iflery; low ropes course; pool horses. Call for more information and applica­ tion. 1-800-660-1385. CRUISE SHIPS hiring! Students • needed! $$$ + free travel (Car- . ibbean, Europe, Hawaii!, Gde. 919-929-4398 ext, C1050, Need a great part time job? 8:301:30/4:15-9:00. Must have ex­ cellent communication skills & some customer relations. Res­ ervation work, no sellin g. $8hrly. Sara 303-0939. ; EARN $6-$ 12/H R , flex hrs.; days only, Sçotts. cleaning co. Car & phone a must, We're fun, Start today. 451-1039. DANCERS NEEDED: no ex ­ perience necessary, 18yrs & up. We w ill train, $700-1500 per week potential. Flexible hours, comfortable/ discreet work en­ vironment. Make $ for’school, travel etc. Please call 921 -8870 12-8pm. F/T, P/T positions available providing assistance to adult individuals with mental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ efits & training, no exp. nec. Call 438-8617. DELIVERY DRIVERS & coun­ ter help wanted $5/hr to start + $1 for runs & tips. Tempe. 9458850. - F/T, P/T, Tem p, Sub positions available at an agency for adults with mental and physical challenges: Call 994-5704. 9 6 4 -4 0 0 0 . W OM EN A N D M IN O R ITIES ENCOURAGED TO APPLY. EOE Exciting surroundings... com petitive benefits., great training. Looking for fun, custom er oriented sales associates to work at airport specialty re ta il gift shops. C a ll Sylvia at 956-9600 CRUISE J O B S ' S tu d e n ts K e e d e d ! E arn u p to $2,000-*-/ m o . w o r k in g fen* C r u ise S h ip s or L and-T ou r c o m p a n ie s . S e a so n a l a n d F u ll-T im e e m p lo y m e n ta v a ila b le . (206) 9 7 1 -3 5 5 0 ext.C 39184 A7/7///W 47AVÌSSÌSÌ& & T IN D E R ARIZONA BIUMORI C o m e join the fun an d work for the Valley's most prestigious resort! We have immediate openings in many areas! VALET PARKERS SERVERS HOST/HOSTESS BUSSERS PM BQT CLERK PM RM S V C ORDER TKR COCKTAIL SERVERS PHONE OPERATOR RECREATION ATTNDS We have-full and part-time positions available. Call our job hotline for more information. 954- 2547 or 9556600 EOE M/F . What could he better? A great cigar shop, private clubroom, unique gift and gourmet cafe opening soon. Looking for P/T enthusiastic individuals who take pride in their customer service and enjoy a great working environment. Flexible scheduling available, g F o r questions c a ll Steve or Jaim e @ 507-9320. Find it FAST in the Classifieds MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR SUMMER AT CAMP TACONIC Prestigious coed camp in beautiful Massachusetts seeks motivated sophomores, juniors, seniors and grads who love working with kids to be general counselors an. SUMMER CAMP Jobs-North Star Camp for boys, Hayward, W isconsin has openings for counselors, activity instructors, overnight trip leaders, and wa­ terfront director. Mid-June to M id-August. Good pay. Call collect to' arrange on campus in­ terview. Robert Lebby 6101 E. Paseo Cimarron, Tucson, AZ 85750 520-577-7925. TEMPE SPRING Festival o f the Arts ;is currently seeking festi­ val workers for March 29th. 30th & 31 st. Parking, security & crew positions $6/hr. Karen 967-4877. . RED EYE Jr. appral. is hiring assist, mgrs. and sales, in ’all Phx & Mesa locations. We offer e x cellen t training, N/S env. Call Debbie 833-9207. SERVERS/ FOOD prep pt/ft days/even ings Mr. Anthony's Pizza, Mesa. 464- Í600 9rim8pm S P O R T S M IN D E D Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate émp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flexib le hrs/wk. Flex, holiday hrs. avail. Call Mike for inL, 9218282. C la ss ified s W O R K ! RESTAURANTS/ BARS SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. . Park rangers, gam e wardens, park police, $6-$2Q per hour. Hiring men/women. Call today (504) 429-9223 ext. 5057P12. f BARRO'S PIZZA 4Lq' pizzas w/cheese $ 1 9 .9 9 350-9122 Corner Lemon'& Terrace We Fit Your Schedule Part-Time • • • • $8.00 G UARANTEED PAID TRAINING!! Earn $7.00 An Hour Guaranteed Average Earning S9-S11 18 -, 35 Hours A Week Great Opportunity' • No Experience Necessary • FUN ENVIRONMENT DIALAMERICA MARKETING INC SERVICES SERVICES UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY W cutting edge environmental company: System Administrator needed. Experience w / Wind­ ow s environment & hardware troubleshooting skills. Grad Student or Under-grad welcome to apply. We are located in Central Phoenix, (27th Street1& Osborn) accessible by Phoenix Transit System , if necessary. Please fax resum e/ qualifica­ tions to Julie Ingalls at (602) 553-8782. provider/StatePress AZ SHORTS Seeking energetic & friendly sales associates; c/s sk ills preferred. PT & FT. Must be here fpr summer, 2 lo­ cations. 5th & Mill 966-9199 or Az Center, Phx 252-7525. SERVICES CROSSROADS •New Times 1995 Best Neighborhood Bar •Over 100 Menu Hems • U pscale Atm osphere • A il Appetizers bn Happy Hour • 4 Satellites - 20 Screens • Hom e of the $1,25 Shot • 1/2 Your W ing Order FREE Sun. & Mon. 8 4 4 -S H E D U n ive rsity & D obson E 0 MmÆ p i s c o pa l C hri ST I ANS O N C am pu s S aturday , M a r c h 30 H e l p C r o s s r o a d s b u il d a h o u s e f o r : H a b it a t f o r H u m a n it y ! N C H > C K r PIZZA RESTAU RAVI Learn how to become involved in this worthwhile project: Join us at the groundbreaking ceremony this coming Saturday at Where ASU Goes for Pizza W A C K Y W E D N E S D A Y 11:15 A M 7 1432 East St. C atherine S t., P hoenix 0 D R A FTS $2.81 (2 blocks south of Southern Avenue) 14 Z 0 N. Scottsdale Rd. Tempe • 945-8850 PITCHERS Bud Light * Coors Light 3pm ■Close 968-6666 1 3 0 1 E . U n iv e rs ity HELP WANTEDGENERAL ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Fisheries. Parks. R esorts now hiring! Earn to $3,000-$6,000+/rho! Airfare! Room/Board! FREE VIDEO w /program ! S^ato Licensed Service. Call (919) 932-1489, ext. A t 2 921-3278 Please call number below with additional questions LUNCH SPECIAL YOU NEED NOT BE A PROFESSIONAL1 12" M E D I U M 2 TO PPIN G P IZ Z A Come S t. A ugustine’s Episcopal Church 1735 S. College S t., Tempe Sundays at 8 and 10 am For more information about our programs, please call 967-0990 $ 4.99 MARCH worship with us at "you g e t m o re f o r y o u r m on e y a t G um b y's" RESTAURANTS/ BARS > 2 % ’Wb* RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS $1.00 64 oz. Pitchers TONIGHT UVEI Donnie Dean HAPPY HOUR! • C a p p u c c in o s E sp re sso s • C a fe L a tte s . • R e g u la r C o ffe e • $2 Molson Ic e d C o ffe e s N ow A vaila ble 500 Ice 404 S. Mill Ave. 966-1300 Progressive Pitcher Night (3 -6 p m M -F ) Balboa Cafe CALL TODAY 345-8313 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES http://aspin .asu.edu/ ( I lu m - i p m ) 1996 T R A D E R J O E ’S p/t clerks; stockpeople and de­ mo peop 1e Wanted, flex hrs. good pay. Scottsdale 9489886. SWIM INSTRUCTOR Needed for mobile swim program. Must be CPR, First Aide and WSI Cert, and have rel.trans, $7-9/hr DOE. Call Jeanene at 971-3993. WOODSHED II BARS Finally at ASU! Sco ttsd ale Conference R eso rt HELP WANTEDGENERAL y L I V E JA Z Z -T h u rs d a y s & F r id a y s ! 2 2 2 E . U n iv e r s ity Dr. T e m p e • 9 6 7 -7 7 4 4 64 oz Pitchers $1 • 7-8pm $2 • 9-10pm $1.50 • 8-9pm $2.50 • 10-11pm $3» 11-close C L V C E -U on the patio... 8 5 5 S . F A u r a I - 8 9 4 - 2 1 1 2 S tate P ress Wednesday, March 27,1996 HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BEAUTJCONTROL COSMETICS seeking m otivated cosm etic reps. Share skin care, cosm et­ ic s, co lo r a nalysis, & image. Flex- hours, ongoin g training & support. For interview 8303535. APPOINTMENT SETTER. Fun, friendly dental office seeks peo­ ple person. Mon-THurs. 6p.m.8p.m. $7.50/hr + bonus. Up to $40/day. Scotts & Shea. 4838822. ■ ', • - F/T, for computer training co. 7:3Òam-4:30 M-F, 1 mile from campus. Send resumes to: PO Box 252856 Tempe. AZ. 85285. HOUSTON’S RESTAURANT in Scottsdale hiring food servers & kitchen employées. Applica­ tions accepted 3-4 M ondayThursday 922-7775. ARIZONA BASED marketing & design firm seeks summer intern for Sales and marketing dept. Must have good interpersonal skills. $8/hr. Fax cover letter and resume to C. Walker (602) 275-9556 v G e t your c o p y of the Sun Devil Spark Y e a rb o o k $ 4 2 .3 0 ARIZONA BASED marketing & design firm seeks summer intern ; for sales and marketing dept. SERVICES HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE M A J E R L E 'S Hiring all positions, exp. nec. Apply in person between 9 - 11 & 2-4,24 N 2nd St, Phx. CLUCK U Hiring: pàtio bar staff, cocktail servers, bartenders & barback. Call 966-8460. A lso hiring cooks, line persons & chicken mascots. App. @ 855 S. Rural • RED ROBIN in Tempe has imed. opening for- exp. waitstaff. Apply today 1375 W. El­ liot,. . '■ . COLD STONE, 5th & Mill, hir­ ing strong, reliable, & fun em­ ployees. Must be available summer & w eekends, day & evening positions. Excellent tips. 921-7456. SAM'S CAFE in the Arizona Center voted best southwestern restaurant in Phoenix is hiring host/h ostess. Looking for som eone upbeat., experienced to coordinate reservations + seating o f a busy restaurant. Stop in and apply btwn 2-4, Rd. CO RKN CLEAVER HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE A ccepting apps.,'for 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. or by. appi. 5101 N. 44th St, 952-0585. CHILDCARE PROFESSIONALare you tired o f being unap­ preciated? Do you love th,e the kids you care for, yet have little support? Check us out- bene­ fits, good pay, fam ily at­ mosphere. F/t, p/t. Call 451 0710. DÈLI VERY DRIVERS heeded Apply at Gumby’s Pizza 2107 S. Rural Rd, FOOD SERVERS Full or part time. Pier d’ Orleans, 61 É. Uni­ versity, Mesa. INSTRUCTORS Wanted. The city of Scottsdale's creative cam­ pus program is currently recruit instruct, to teach children ages 4-10. yrs. Is held June, July. If interested call Jennifer Wolfe 994-7957. HELP WANTED D èli person 20-30 hrs./wk flex, hrs. Ex­ perience preferred but not nec­ essary. Apply in person Capistranos Italian D eli 655 W. Warner Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene & Warner) 496-9044. ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by Sydney Omarr SEEKING PERSONS to work with developmentally disabled infants/toddlers & adolescents. Paid training- p/t 15-25 hrs/wk. B ilingual a plus. Call 4319511. HIRING FOOD servers, bus per­ sons, cooks; Apply within Na­ tive N ew Yorker 1301 E: Broadway Tempe. P ag e 19 JOB OPPORTUNITIES S35.000/YR. INCOME poten­ tial. Reading books. Toll Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext. R-1676 for details. NATIONAL PARKS Hiring Positions are now available at National Parks, Forests & Wil­ dlife Preserves. Excellent bene­ fits + bonuses! Call: 1-206-9713620 ext. N59J82. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ARIES (Mar. 2 1 -Apr, 19): Fam ily get-together featured, m isunderstanding concerning travel, money is straightened to everyone’s satisfaction. Cancer native plays im portant role-, invites you to dinner. Accept! TAURUS ( Apr. 20-May 20): If yoi| attempt to please everyone, you please no person, least o f all ; yourself. Be versatile without scattering efforts>r-re 1at i yes seem to* appear out o f nowhere. Gemini dominates. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): C heck handw riting, accent rebuilding program, financial w in d fa ll p o s sib le . Make inquiries, proofread, gain access to material previously forbidden. (Taurus, Scorpio persons repre­ sented. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Have your say during dinner—Virgo native will listen and act in your behalf. Focus on words, verbal and written. Keep plans flexible, trip involved- Flirtation lends spice. LEG (July 23-Aug. 22) You’ll gain added recognition, could be on precipice o f fame and fortune. Major domestic adjustment fea­ tured, marital status, residence, lifestyle. Aries, Libra natives in picture.; VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22) You’ll be offered choice in con­ nection With plum assignment. Learn what is expected o f you and what you might anticipate in return. Y ou’re not being told entire truth. Pisces involved. L IBR A (S ep t. 23-Q ct. 22): D o n ’t rest on la u rels— bring order out o f chaos, learn where you stand in love relationship. Focus cm power, authority, over­ tim e, chance to hit jackp ot. Capricorn figures prominently. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis cm distance, language, ability to promote product, talent in overseas market. On personal level, love relationship equals fireworks. Aries w ill figure in dramatic scenario. SAGITTARIUS ( NoV. 22 D ec. 21): Your kind o f day! Emphasis on creativity, style, romancé; fresh start in new direction. Y o u 1,11 learn more about financial status o f partner, maté. Let go o f preconceived notions. ( CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Spotlight on cooperative efforts; public appearances, test­ ing o f tools, recipes. Emphasis also on lifestyle, where you live; . marital status. Cancer, another Capricornplayproles. AQÜARíUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18): Diversify, discover methods o f streamlining procedures, getting rid o f superfluous m aterial. You’ll be invited to attend exclu­ sive social gathering. Sagittarian helps over rough spots. PISCES (Feb. 19- Mar. 20): Moon position coincides with style, creativity, physical attrac­ tion, decision associated with special person. Focus on chil­ dren, challenge, change. Variety of sensations. Libra involved. IF MARCH 27 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: You aré head­ strong, romantic, willing to lead the charge, reluctant to follow . others. Aries, Libra persons play significant roles in your life. You picture yourself as battling for principles, fighting when cause is right, being devastating in arena o f Eros. Current c y c le em phasizes independence, courage, w illingness to make fresh start in new direction. Flirtation during April provocátive, possibly dangerous. July also will be memorable. © 19%, Los Angeles Times Syndicate M U AB & ZIA R E C O R D S PR ESEN T: BARENAKED LADIES LIVE IN THE M.U.f MON. 4/1 ® 12:40pm - NO APRIL FOOL'S! SERVICES MUSIC — W ^ F O y N D _ _ _ BICYCLE SEAT found on cam-; pus," Call 274-3058. Describe the seat and. where you may have lost it then its yours. SERVICES • PREGNANCY TESTING No appointment necessary Abortion with Twilight Sleep Evening & Saturday Appt. Available Pap Smears, Infection checks, STD exams FAM ILY P L A N N IN G IN S T IT U T E PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE TEMPE 7806 N. 27th Ave. 2334 N. Scottsdale Rd, 2525 S. Rural Rd. #7C 997-7493 945-4999 965-7471 State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 ASU Box 87150 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-8484 C la s s ifie d A d O rd e r Fo rm Q - C h e c W ^ ^ ., an^ $M a«M Q{I::;o Bank Card Numter h qw PrivateParty rnmmttnvsi days. SI .35 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1 30 per line, per day 10+days, ST.I&per line, per day * 1 day, $2.20 per Vne 2-4 days, $1.65 per line, par day 5-9 days, $1.40 per Una. per day 10+days, $1.25 par line, per dsiy E S 3 line mMmum. A dda boicl headline for the cost of 2 lines. ■ fr ic a par Day I t o fO a y s X SERVICES " ELECTROLYSIS BY Degna A ll methods. Low rates. Rural/Southem area. ,921-1146. INFANT CARE Devoted mom o f a 6mo. girl will care for your baby, too with lots o f lové & attention. Jennifer 56th St & Thomas $125/wk 840-8204. LADIES: ARE you lonely? How to improve your lovelife in 30 days -pr less. Write to: B ox 85280-1040 Tempe, AZ 85280 PROFESSIONAL RESUMES at student prices. CareerPRO R e­ sume Center 21 11 E. Broadway #7 967-7760, ADOPTION • GYNECOLOGICAL EXAMS » • $ 19.99 FOR a full set o f nails at Wizzards Hair Studio is an awesome deal. 967-2360, HEALTH & FITNESS NEEDED 23 students who are seriously interested in losing 5100 4 pounds. New Metabo­ lism Breakthrough. Guaranteed Results. $29,95 Free Gift with order. 1-800-600-7389.24 hrs. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $1.99 PG. Exp'd editor. Fast, accurate. APA/MLA. Rural/ Uni“ versity. JIM. 967-2360. AFFORDABLE- TERM papers; reports, theses, resumes. Fast turnaround. Townsend W/P, Maureen, 9554)969.. ^ APÀ/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. N eed it fást? Call Jessie, 945-5744. PRO. WORD Processing; term papers. Fair rates, accurate APA/MLA S&L WP 831-1384. INTERNET U R LS ~ ARIZONA STA’r é Government http://www.state.az.us/ ASU FINANCIAL AID Interac­ tive Service may be reached at: http://www.asu.edu/fastt/ ENTRANCE TO the Shake­ speare Web http:/w\Vw.ShakeSpeare.com/ INTERNET“ RELATED SERVICES PRIMENET SERVICES for the Internet is "all you need for the Internet." To start service today call 395-1010 or v isit us at http://www.primenet.com THE INTERNET Is a business opportunity, 905-0294 Mon­ day - Friday. You ca n VIEW a n d SE A R C H th e S t a t e P ress Classifieds o n th e Internet! h ttp ://a sp in .a su .e d u tM tf * $ Think about It! Choosing the right family to adopt your baby involves more than reading ads, calling 800 numbers, and listening to promises from strangers who want your baby. I'm an adoption consultant who can help you choose the right adoption for you &, your baby. With us you read about couples - before you speak to them, Call us to And out m ore, open or closed adoptions. You CH O O SE! Tammy 1-800-675-3407 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING SERVICES ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED BY PRIVATE SECTOR. BILLIONS O F DOLLARS IN GRANTS. TO QUALIFY CALL: 800-400-0209 State Press on the Internet! Find all the stories, the Today section, special sections, and the Classifieds on the World Wide Web Claaaification NamaMwntMr- Is I Expiration Dat* Sorry, we carmof accapt paraanai ads through tha mail. IRISH M U S IC 9 p M -'1 AM • N O C O VE R • BANDERSNATCH 5th St. & Forest 966 4438 061 Automobiles . 064 Bicyoiaa 061 Books 077 BusinessOpportunities 054 Computers 066Fia*Lost/Found “ SCOTT YOSHIMURA-SPRITUÀL therapist. Thurs, Fri, Sat at Liquid Çarma. Ang ?'s 8580888 Depo-Provera. Birth Control Pills, IUD, Morning After Pill p " FREE • COMPLETE BIRTH CONTROL CARE. A P g jg O N A tf^ ^ AKPSI PLEDGES-GOOD job on your mid-court. Keep-up the good work-from the Actives. GUITAR 12 STRING Yamaha w / hard case. Rarely played, like new. $250 obo. 894-2639 THE CHOICE IS YOURS Please be sure to check your ad, Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the S tate P ress shad not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given tor the first insertion only- Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods: No refunds wiH be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit wffl be hekf on account for future advertising. FAST FUNDRAISER-RAISE $500 in 5 days-Greeks, groups, clubs, motivated indi­ viduals. Fast, easy-no financial obligation. (800) 862-1982 Ext. 33. HUGE INCOME. If I could XG-Will kick some duckin butt show you a way to get free at DU Duckball and cover the long distance sefv. & earn huge :17 points w e bet on them. hom e-based incom e, would Your coaches. : you be interested?!; For more info send SASE to: Pam StedGREEK PASSOVER Seder cat­ man 7722 S. Kachina Dr. Tem­ ered by Chompies hosted by pe, AZ. 85284. Include your ph. # so I can call you w/date AEFI. Thur$, Apr. 4th 6:30pm. of upcoming meeting. To hear - Call D avid @ 967-8326 for more details 1-800-942-9304 X more info by Wed. Mar. 27. 20500 & Ext. 20338, KA0: GET ready for AY DuckINCOME RAISING plan...result ball. driven ind ividu als..,one time Out o f pocket. $100. Invest­ KA0: Will dominate AŸDuckment $100. to $500. daily-pay­ bàll. ; . V y ? y ; out. For appt. call Betty 934O LORD (Any lord, even the 3607. landlord) Please guide Pat for WORK FOR yourself! Process he is an àthiest arid a Libertar­ governm ent refunds in your ian A&J and R oy. area. N o exp. necessary. Above THE LADIES o f I I I will take average incom e. 340-4070 first placé at D elta Upsilon's 24hrs. flagfootball tournament. Wednesday, March 27, 1996 SERVICES FUNDRAISING 031 TownhPmawCondotkxRsnl 041 Townhomes/ConOosforSale 060Trsnsiortaikm 067 Travel .108 Tutor* 106 Typinf^iyonfProcessing 116 Wanted h t t p : / / a s p i n .a s u . e d u / p r o v id e r / S t a t e P r e s s / » 20 S t a ix P ress March 27, 1996 ait FOR▲THOUGHT little Caesars McKellips Univ./Hardy 966-3181 s3 I P '•pR HS1 o -C o X D ELIV ER Y A R EA I sc Qo Is *o *S X -, Superstition Fwy. littleCaesars PIEASERS $099 8 9 7 -8 1 1 4 A N Y SIZE Plus Tax N o C o u p o n . N ecessary L im ite d T im e O ffe r S E Southern/McClintock A N Y PLEASER . University Dr. <>] D ELIV ER Y IS A R EA £ Superstition Fwy. ★ Choose from: S u p re m e / P e p p e ro n i, 'S f f S t g T ^ ■ BEST VALUE COUPON M ED IU M PIZZAS i 1* 8 w ith C h e e se and 1 Topp ing BIG, BIG MEAL LARGE PIZZA 1 MEDIUM PIZZA w ith 1 Topping w ith 1 Topping PLUS Little Caesars Chicken Wings and crazy Crazy Bread br< $ 10 $ y 99 $ 1 0 » Valid on O riginal Round or Pan Pan Pizza Valid on O riginal Round or Pan Pan Pizza with co u p o n at locations listed. with co u p o n at locations listed. with coupon at Locations Listed. Expires 4-15-96. Expires 4-15-96. Expires 4-15-96 LttÚeCaesais’Pízza ^litdeCaesais’Pizza ©1996 LittleCoesor Enterprises, Inc. jb ■■■E5BZ1BHEBSIb m m m Valid on Original Round or Pan Pan Pizza b » ©1996 LittleCaesar Enterprises, Inc. BEST VALUE COUPON mê mmm IW A N T E R I DELIVERY DRIVERS! littleCaesarsPizza LittleCaesar Enterprises, Inc. BEST VALUE COUPON ■ ■ m ■ ■ OR CALL: 991-3406 ©1996 l.CI. INC;