Disruptive students lead to clarification in classroom p olicy Crystalize B y T im o t h y T a it S tate P ress Responding to an increase of disruptive classroom behavior, the Academic Senate and the Office of Student Life have clari­ fied guidelines for how professors should deal with problematic students. Dean o f Student Life A rt G arter said several faculty members brought the prob­ lem of disruptive students to his attention. “They are concerned about increasing numbers o f disruptive students in class and how they should respond,” he said. The guidelines, drafted by Carter and the Academic Senate Student-Faculty Policy Com m ittee, outlines how faculty should deal with problematic students — ranging from a conference between professor and student to a Student Life office referral. “This is intended to be a guide so facul­ ty can respond to increased problem s on campus,” Carter said. “If faculty have an easy reso u rce, they m ay choose not to ignore problems.” Tony Garcia, chairman of the StudentFaculty Policy Committee, said classroom behavior has becom e more o f a concern for professors. “This issue is more prevalent now than in past years,” he said. “Professors wanted to know what to do.” T he guidelines state that p ro fesso rs’ expectations for behavior need to be outlined T urn to Solutions, pace 2. F r a te r n ity o ffe rs h e lp in g h a n d in n e w h o u s e ’s b i r t h B y J eff O w e n s S tate P ress Paul Besing/State Press C ry sta l T allarico of Tem pe trie s on a pewter hologram n ecklace at a crysta l jewelry booth on C a d y Mall Thu rsd ay. The arts and crafts sa le near the MU co n siste d of vari­ o u s m erchants selling jewelry, artwork and variou s decorations. Nathan Aman said when he and his fra­ ternity brothers showed up to work on the unfinished house Of a Phoenix woman and her daughter last weekend, she looked at them quizzically . “She asked us why we were there,” stud Aman, a freshman political science major and house manager for ASU’s Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. “She asked us if we had got in trou­ ble for something. I laughed for a little bit and said, ‘No, we’re just here to help out.”’ Aman and about 10 o f his friends volun­ te e re d th e ir se rv ic e s to H a b ita t fo r Humanity, a national organization which provides hom e-building services for low income families. They will finish their work on the Phoenix house near 16th Street and Alta Vista Road on Saturday. Fraternity member Nick Vieron said the m ajor construction of the house is com ­ plete, and he and the other volunteers will work on interior construction. “W e’re making it livable, installing insu­ lation and painting,” said Vieron, a fresh­ man accounting major. “The lady was very nice and very thank­ ful for our help,” he added. A m an said the w om an “helped Tight alongside us. She was really excited that we were there.” O n e p ercen t raise w on’t m ake m u ch difference fo r em ployees B y K elly W endel S ta t e P ress Although ASU faculty and staff received a pay raise from the Legislature, you won’t find them rushing out to .put a down payment on a new Ferrari. W ith a 1 percent pay raise plus $500 granted by the Legislature, most o f the faculty and staff will have trouble affording insurance on a used Yugo. Gov. Fife Symington reluctantly signed the state budget M arch 21 after pressure from fellow R epublicans and Phoenix business leaders, but faculty and staff won’t feel the jingle in their jeans until April 1,1997. Professors whose yearly salary is $60,000 will receive a 1 percent raise o f $600 a year. Custodial workers making an averag e o f $ 1 5 ,0 0 0 w ill receiv e $150 m ore. H ead Basketball Coach Bill Frieder, who pulls in $170,000, will get a $1,700 raise. All workers, regardless o f their Salary, will receive the additional $500 stipend. IN S ID E STA TE PR ESS W eather O utlook Mostly cloudy, clearing by afternoon. Chance of morning showers. High 74°, low 57°. Taxes can take up to one-third of the pay increase. Faculty and staff are less than impressed with the raise. “ I know m o n ey is tig h t, b u t i t ’s am azin g (th e Legislature) thinks people can survive on this,” said Ezell Coates Jr., an ASU building controls specialist. “We can’t even keep up with the economy.” W hile Coates said every little bit helps, his m ilitary experience taught him the value o f competent people. “If you want to maintain a quality force, you have to treat them right,” he said. “If you take care o f the people, they will take care of you.” Although ASU President Lattie Coor said it is too early to make a judgment about the raise, he did say the low pay at ASU could be a problem when recruiting faculty and staff for the University. “O ur pay scales for faculty and sta ff are a serious problem at A SU ,” he said. “They (salaries) are a prob­ lem in o u t a b ility to a ttra c t and re ta in p eo p le. I t ’s World/Nation The Mideast peace process slows as Israelis tighten security after a wave of suicide bombings. P ag e 3 unfortunate that we have a lim ited am ount appropriated for these services.” Coor said ASU staff salaries lag behind the Maricopa County average for comparable jobs by 22 percent. “W e try to look at the m arketplace and view faculty sa la rie s on the u n iv e rsity lev el and s ta ff salary onlo c a l m a rk e ts,” he said . “ L a m fa r m o re co n c e rn e d about the low er-paying categories o f em ployees. We need to strengthen them , because it’s not right and it’s not fair.” Administrative Assistant Janina Kokins will spend her roughly $ 170 raise mostly on lunch. “McDonald’s is all I can afford,” she said. “If you break the raise down to pay periods, it works out to be a meal at McDonald’s a week.” “We wished it had been a stronger raise, but we are not going to make a judgm ent until we get a picture o f the financial circumstances a year from now,” Coor said. Sports ASU freshman swimmer Francisco Sanchez won the national championship in the 50-yard freestyle at the NCAA Championships Thursday night P ag e 15 W here To Find It Classifieds........................... 17 Comics............................„...14 Crossword........................... 12 Horoscopes ......................... 19 Opinion..................................4 Police Report .. ... ..6 Sports........................ ....;.....15 Today's A c t i v i t i e s .............2 World/Nation....'..../,...............3 P age 2 S t a t e P ress Friday, March 29, 1996 nr*.... Today Cam pus d u b s and organizations m ay subm it m itten en tries to the S tats P re ss in the basem ent o f M atthew s Center. R e q u e sts will not b e taken o ver the p h on e o r via fax. D eadline for req u ests is noon the day before publi­ cation and entries will not b e a ccep ted m ore than three w orking d a ys b efo re publication. O nly on e en try p e r organization p e r day is perm itted. E n trie s m ust contain th e full nam e o f th e d u b o r organization, a description o f the event, date, tim e and the full a d d ress o f the location. AH req u ests a re su b ject to editing for content, sp a ce and darky. Incom plete or illegible entries wHI b e discarded. T h e Today S e ctio n is a daily ca len d a r o f e v e n ts printed a s a se rv ice to the A S U community. R e q u e sts a re a ccep ted on a first-com e, first-served b a sis a n d are printed a s sp a ce perm its. • A lco h o lics A nonym ous — D aily cam p us m eeting. Newm an C enter, Aquinas H all hi the basem ent; noon to 1 :1 5 p .m . C a m p u s W o m en ’s G ro u p m e e tin g . N ew m an C e n te r, A q u in as H all in the b asem en t; 10 a.m . « Alpha Kappa Psl — C areer Night! Find out about the job world of today. MU, se e monitor for room num ber; 6 p.m . Sunday. • C am p us C rusade for C hrist — Boyce-Thom pson Arboretum hike. C a ll 968-7667 for m ore inform ation. M eet a t the C ru sad e house, 205 E . 13th S t.; 8:4 5 a.m . Saturday. • N e w m a n Center — Spring Fling *96 Luau — great food and great m usic! Newm an C enter, northwest cor­ ner of College Avenue and University D rive; 7 p.m . to 11 p.m . Saturday. S o lu tio n s C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . in writing to ensure universal understanding. The guide­ lines also instruct that behavior problems with students need to be documented. Students harassing students, “loud and boisterous” indi­ viduals and persons who “act out” in class are the primary problems, Carter said. “We are seeing a significant amount of disruptive behav­ ior in classrooms,” Carter said. “It is a national trend.” Sanctions against disruptive students can range from w arnings to com m unity serv ice to rem oval from the University, said Genna Erickson, coordinator for judicial affairs and victim assistance. “M ore frequently, I am having (disruptive students) write research papers that deal with what they have done,” she said. “We try to make this an educational process; they can learn something.” Carter said the increase of disruptive classroom behav­ ior stems from an increase o f students with a history of behavior problems. “Some students have a problem handling themselves,” he said. “Others have emotional problems or are on medications.” Erickson said a gradual increase o f classroom behavior problems over the past four years can be linked to increas­ ing problems in society. “We reflect culture,” she said. “We have a culture that is becoming more violent and less civil. There is a lack of courtesy and respect.” However, when compared to the number of students on campus, there are few behavior problems. Carter said. “It is not a real large number,” he said, “but the number is increasing.” And the numbers are even smaller for repeat offenders, Erickson said. M any problem s are dealt w ith by professors, never reaching the office of Student Life. Under provisions in the Course Catalog, instructors may administratively remove disruptive students from class. “Instructors can do just about whatever they want to do,” Erickson said. “We have found them to be extremely fair.” To assist in identifying students that may be possible behavior problems, the guidelines provide clues for professors. “Usually you can anticipate the possibility that a serious behavior problem could occur,” the guideline states. “Possible indicators are a change in the usual pattern of the behavior of a student, missing classes or deadlines, an attitude problem and/or the professor’s ‘gut’ feeling that something is wrong.” Sta te P ress • P ro g r a m fo r S o u t h e a s t A s la n S t u d ie s — C o llo q u iu m : ‘ R e n o v a tio n L ite ra tu re a n d P o litic a l D issen t in Contem porary Vietnam ,* by Peter Zinom an, history professor a t University of California at Berkeley. Language & Literature Bldg. C 1 8; 3:30 to 5 p.m. • Student Environmental Action Coalition — G en eral m eeting to d iscu ss issu e s and plans for a regional con­ ference. MU Conference Room 2; 12:40 p.m . • Writing Center — Com puter w orkshops to brush up punctuation sk ills. Language & Literature Bklg. B 302; 10.30 a.m . to 2:30 p.m . D im l ip. We're there when you can't be. OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH icy COLD SERUING THE BEST HOT WINGS IN TOWN! FOUNTAIN DRINKS 12 Wings $3.99 36 Wings $10.99 50 Wings $12.99 24 Wing Minimum for Delivery Hot - Med. - Mild - BBQ FAST, FR EE DELIVERY featuring P ete's W ic k e r ! G irls Accepted Upon Delivery 8 2 9 -0 0 6 4 LUNCH SPECIAL 12" C H E E S E P IZ Z A & 1 S O D A 1 1AM - 4PM M o n.-Thurs. (900 p e r topping) PARTY SPECIAL 20" C H E E S E P IZ Z A & 50 W IN G S DINNER FOR TWO CARDINAL'S SPECIAL SUN DEVIL SPECIAL 12“ 1-TO PPIN G PIZZA & 12 W IN GS H a p p y H o u r 1 0 p .m . ’ t i l C lo s e A F T E R H O U R S T I L 3 a .m . - 18 & A b o ve 16" 1-item pizza with 24 wings 12" P izza with 2 toppings & 2 free sodas TWO 16" PIZZAS 16" PIZZA with one topping with one topping •+ 2 free. Sodas W oiid/Nation S t a t e P ress P age 3 Friday, March 2 9 ,1 9 9 6 Armed anti-government militants face FBI HELENA, Mont. (AP) — The “freemen” live in a world writing millions o f dollars in bogus checks and money orders and threatening to kidnap and m urder a federal of their own. They formed their own shadow government, refuse to judge. They also face state charges of criminal syndicalism, pay taxes and believe they are the chosen people, indepen­ or advocating violence for political aims. The arrests came a day after a meeting at the freemen’s dent of any established authority. As their stan d o ff w ith federal agents m oved into a compound at which Schweitzer outlined a plan to kidnap fourth day at a sprawling wheat and sheep farm outside local government officials, ABC reported. “W e’ll travel in units of about 10 outfits, four men to an Jordan, those familiar with the m ilitant anti-government outfit, most o f them with automatic weapons, whatever else group Say it is rooted in racism and money woes. “It was the Jews who brought the blacks into this coun­ we got — shotguns, you name it,” he said on the videotape. Should someone try to stop the freemen, Schweitzer try to destroy it. And it has, to this point, almost destroyed it unless we wake up,” one member preached in a video­ said, “w e’re going to have a standing order: A nyone tape of a group meeting broadcast Wednesday on ABC’S obstructing justice, the order is shoot to kill.” The freemen’s badge is their refusal to recognize the “Prime Time Live.” Two freemen leaders, LeRoy Schweitzer and Daniel validity o f existing government. They call their compound Petersen Jr., were arrested Monday by the FBI, which is Justus T ow nship, insist they have their own law s and urging about a dozen others to surrender peaceably even as courts and have given themselves titles such as “justice of more than 100 rifle-toting federal agents dot the surround­ the peace” and “constable.” ‘‘White supremacy is the key,” said Robert Crawford of ing countryside. Schweitzer, Petersen and others face federal charges of the Coalition for Human Dignity in Portland, Ore. “Their Justus Township, its common-law court, is the kernel of a white Christian republic for them — a new government.” Crawford, co-author o f a new report on m ilitias and white supremacist groups, said the core of freemen philoso­ phy is that whites are the chosen race with permanent Godgiven rights. Such philosophy has led the freemen to conclude they are above any established authority — and it gave them an out when the farm crisis o f the 1970s and early 1980s brought mounting unpaid taxes, mortgages and other debts. Indeed, the farm being used by the freemen was lost in a 1994 foreclosure for failure to pay taxes: Schw eitzer’s home near Bozeman and two crop-dusting planes were seized for unpaid taxes. Kenneth Coulter, a Jordan resident who knows many of the freemen members, said the movement “was a salvation from their financial problems.” Coulter said member Rodney Skurdal was instrumental in spreading die freemen’s anti-government, anti-tax message. Skurdal is believed to be one o f those holed up at the farm. Israel w ill occupy H ebron after scheduled turnover A sso cia te d P re ss Is r a e li tro o p s d etain ed m ore than 250 P a le s tin ia n s in th e W est B a n k v illa g e of B ir Zeit Thursd ay during a security sw eep. Most of the people arrested w ere B ir Zeit University stu ­ dents from the G a za Strip who stayed in the W est B an k after Israel ordered them to return hom e following a spate of su icid e bom bings. HEBRON, W est Bank (AP) — Israeli soldiers who were to have pulled out of Hebron by Thursday will not leave until after the Passover holiday , radio reports said. E ven th en , a p u llb a c k d ep en d s on Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat’s determi­ n atio n to fig h t M uslim m ilita n ts, said Israeli Foreign M inister Ehud Barak. The militant groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad carried put four deadly suicide bombings in Israel in February and March. “ We expect to sec broader and more practical results in the fight against terror, and«when the security establishment feels that things are really happening... then the re d e p lo y m e n t w ill be c a rrie d o u t in Hebron,” Barak said. Hebron is the last W est Bank city under Israeli occupation. At the end of December, Israel completed its handover o f control over seven W est Bank tow ns a n d more than 400 villages to A rafat’s Palestinian Authority. Israel radio, quoting security sources, said a partial pullback from Hebron was likely before Israel’s May 29 elections. The weeklong Passover holiday begins April 3. Under the Israel-PLO autonomy agree­ ment, Israeli soldiers were to have left most o f the city o f 94,000 by Thursday, with som e tro o p s re m a in in g to p ro te c t 4 5 0 Jewish settlers who live in six enclaves in the downtown area. H ebron M ayor M ustafa N atche com ­ plained that his city was being used as a pawn in the Israeli election campaign, with Prim e M inister Shim on Peres trying to look tough to win the votes o f securityminded Israelis. Natche said Israel was using security concerns as a pretext not to pull out o f Hebron. “Hebron is now the hostage of the Israèli election campaign,” he said. However, it appeared that Israel has soft­ ened its position on Hebron in recent days. E a r lie r th is m o n th , P e re s sa id he would only withdraw troops from Hebron once A rafat’s security forces have Caught tw o le a d in g H am as fu g itiv e s and the Palestine N ational Council has revoked sections o f thé PLO charter calling for Israel’s destruction. H ow ever, B arak suggested Thursday that Israel was. less set in its conditions, saying only th at the tro o p w ithdraw al would take place once there was a recom­ mendation from the security forces. Also Thursday, Israeli troops rounded up 250 Palestinians in a raid o f the W est Bank villages of Bir Zeit, Abu Qash and Abu Shkhaidem . Israel army radio said troop's ordered the men in the villages out o f their homes and questioned them one by one. Many o f those detained were students from thè Gaza Strip who had remained in the W est Bank after Israel ordered them to return home as part of its enforcement of a blockade of Palestinian areas. Bir Zeit is the former school of Yehiya Ayyash, the chief Hamas bomb maker who was assassinated Jan. 5 in an operation widely attributed to Israel. In response to Ayyash’s death, Hamas and the sm aller Islam ic Jihad group set off four suicide bombings that killed 58 people plus the bombers between Feb. 25 and March 4. American doctor describes mass grave near Vukovar THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — A U.S. pathologist described Thursday finding 11 skeletons and scores of spent bullet cartridges at a suspected mass grave site near where 261 Croat men were last seen alive in 1991. Dr. Clyde Snow told the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal that the site almost certainly held the remains of Croat men believed m urdered by Serb troops after they were herded out of a Vukovar hospital on Nov. 20. S now , Who o n ce w as ask ed to id en tify a skeleton believed to be that o f Nazi doctor Joseph Mengele, has car­ ried out numerous mass grave exhumations for internation­ al humanitarian organizations. In late 1992, he made two visits to the site of the alleged mass grave near Vukovar, in tfie Croatian village of Ovcara. Snow was the last of 11 witnesses to testify in a public presentation of evidence against three Yugoslav Army offi­ cers charged in the alleged massacre. The three, M ile Mrksic, M iroslav Radic and Veselin Sljivancanin, all members o f the Belgrade-based Guards Brigade, were indicted in November for allegedly order­ ing the killings. Because Serbia has refused to surrender them for trial, prosecutors are presenting their evidence in hopes of pres­ suring Belgrade to give them up. Tribunal prosecutor C lint W illiam son, of the United States, said the three clearly played key roles in the mur­ ders, and he asked the court to report Serbia’s non-coopera­ tion to the U.N. Security Council. T h a t c o u ld re s u lt in sa n c tio n s a g a in st P re sid e n t Slobodan Milosevic’s government in Belgrade. Milosevic recently has pledged more support to the tri­ bunal, but has yet to hand over indicted suspects for trial. The Vast majority of the 57 people indicted so far are Serbs. Also Thursday, a Muslim being held by the Bosnian Serbs said that he personally killed 200 unarmed Serbs, among thousands he claimed were liquidated by a com ­ mando unit ran by a Sarajevo gangster. But the Circumstances of Jasmin Sljivo’s comments and questions about his age raised serious doubts about the veracity of his story. The Serbs said he was 25, but his parents said he just turned 20 and showed documents to back their assertions. That would have made him only 16 or 17 at the time he was supposed to have committed the crimes. Sljivo, who suffers from epilepsy according to his par­ ents, appeared under duress during his comments, made to a Serb police questioner and filmed by Associated Press T elev isio n . H e w as shaking, fid g etin g and appeared extremely uncomfortable. There was no im m ediate reaction from the Bosnian army or the government to Sljivo’s claims. The Sarajevo gangster, Musen Topalovic, also known as Caco, was arrested by Bosnian special police in 1993 and killed later in the year during an alleged escape attempt. There have been previous, unconfirmed reports of Serbs being summarily executed by Caco or his people in the ragged countryside south of Sarajevo. Local Serb authorities have blocked tribunal attempts to exhume the grave, which Snow said could contain up to 350 bodies. Opinion P age 4 S t a t e P r ess Friday, March 29, 1996 S tate P ress ■ # Boos & Oravos BRAVO — To the impending approval o f the lineitem veto. It w as easy to be wary o f this m easure before. After all, as opponents have pointed out, it does trans­ fer a lot o f power from the Congress to the president. But after watching this year’s budget wrangling, we have to admit that this is an idea whose time has come. Rather than holding up an entire budget for one spending item, the president can simply strike out that item, and the Congress has the option o f overriding that specific veto. W e don’t want to see thp budget mess repeated ever again. Let’s get a line-item veto. B O O — T o G o v . S y m in g to n ’s e te rn a l cru sad e against Indian gambling. On the surface, Fife’s actions look quite noble. His argument that gambling addicts throw away money they can “ill afford to lose” at the casinos is a valid one. B ut w h at a b o u t th e sta te lo tte ry ? C u rre n tly , Arizona has a menagerie o f “scratch-and-win” games. For those that prefer the big bucks, Arizonans can choose from two weekly Lotto drawings, four Fantasy 5 drawings or a Powcrball drawing. Add up all o f the money that Arizonans throw into that gambling, and you have to admit that they’re los­ ing money they can ill afford to lose. But apparently, that kind of gambling is OK, because all of the profits are going to die state of Arizona. And Symington certainly doesn’t have a problem w ith dog-track racing — another place gam bling addicts can go for a fix. Is that because his friends (and campaign contributors) own these tracks? Leave Indian gaming alone, governor. These casi­ nos have made a huge difference in the lives o f many reservation residents. Poverty has been replaced by communities flush with cash -—- cash that can be used ‘to improve the lives o f every reservation resident. D on't destroy such a valuable asset. BRAVO -— To the easing of the concealed weapons bill currently going through the state legislature. Senate Bill 1099 would have allowed concealedweapons holders to bring their weapons into virtually any public place, including businesses and universities. But legislators will apparently let store owners have the final say, much as ASU has been allowed to do. If stores want to keep weapons out, they will have the right to do so. This was a common-sense approach to the prob­ lem. Unfortunately, common sense isn’t something we see a lot of down at the Capitol, BOO — To the House’s approval o f a bill that would ban dilation and evacuation abortions in all cases except protecting the life o f the mother. The procedure certainly sounds gruesome. But the fact remains that the procedure is probably performed no more than 500 times a year. But, more im portantly, this type o f abortion is never performed as a so-called “elective” abortion. The vast majority o f these abortions are performed only to protect the life and health o f the mother, or in cases o f extreme fetal deformity. The law is merely mandating what is already com­ mon practice. Why go about the trouble o f making a law about it, then? We would advise House Republicans to stop trying to make a political issue erf abortion with a meaningless ML STATE PRESS TAFF G reeks fin d flaw ed co lu m n disrespectful Being a member of the Greek system, as well as the editor of the Greek Review, I realize I am more likely to be picked apart not only for my actions and views expressed in the Greek Review newspaper, but also those of other Greeks. Along with the expectations of criticism, I also expect to be treated as a human being and receive that criticism respectfully. The ASU Greek system and the Greek Review deserve the respect any other A$5U organization receives. Not only do we not get any respect, we get disrespected. M ichelle Carson claim ed the Greek system is “very” selective. I don’t know how she can make that claim. We are selective in that you actually have to register to rush and then commit yourself to pledging a house; this process is neither discriminating nor difficult. Carson also said it’s not hard to see us as we really are. How can one infer that when it is only based on the T-shirts we wear. I could respect an editorial against m yself that took some time and had a point with facts to back it up. That editorial was a compilation of all the ignorant stereo­ types people have of sorority and fraternity members. The Greek Review is not a tribute to bars and drunkfests in which the Greek system participates; in fact, quite the oppo­ site. Carson counted four stories dealing with “various aspects of alcohol.” We also had stories on what to do when you are under 21, the Gamma Sigma honorary society (members have to be G reek and have above a 3.5 GPA), the upcom ing ASASU election, upcoming Greek leadership events, how a person is coping living HIV-positive, a talented local band, two movie reviews and the various fraternity mascots. I’m sure it was just coincidence those articles weren’t mentioned in Carson’s fair editorial. As far as Carson’s statement that the magnitude of the ads are for various Tempe bars who host “Greek nights” and happy hours is concerned. I’m a little confused in that I counted nine ads including any type of reference to alcohol and 27 ads for various other Tempe businesses. Carson also mentioned the Greek Review staff had some obsession with crack cocaine, due to various “crack” ads. It was a joke.. Does the State Press actually recommend we eat the paper for our 12 essential vitamins each day? No. It was a joke, you do it to have fun, so do we. Lighten up. As for Carson’s comment that talented writers need not apply — that was funny and it was a joke. We take little offense considering several of our columnists have been published in mediums other than the Greek Review. In fact, many alumni have written for the New Times and the Arizona Republic. Instead of degrading a newspaper after one issue, I sug­ gest taking.a look at the paper for which Carson writes. You’ll find the exact same Hooters ad. Carson stated, “With the exception of a few coin or food drives held each year, Greeks on campus haven’t been putting down the longneck to help their fellow man.” Being a journalism student, one of the first things I learned was to back up my statement with verification — a quick phone call to any G reek Life staff m em ber would have been enough to prove that assertion wrong. Carson also said, “It is the job of any media to report the news ...” The State Press constantly recognizes the posit by every other ASU organization and constantly ignores the phi­ lanthropies in which the Greek system regularly participates. As ju st one example, my sorority has a major philan­ thropic event every year. It is an all-day soccer tournament that benefits Alzheim er’s disease (nationally, we are the third largest donator to Alzheimer’s disease) and involves about 250 ASU students. Guess what? Every single sorority and fraternity has at least one event to help the community, not counting the events we do together as a Greek system. That adds up to at least 32 ASU events that are never covered. Each o f the philanthropies raise at least $1,000; that’s at least $32,000 raised every year •— I call that news. C arson to ld the G reek system to grow up. W e are extremely mature; we are preparing for our future. The peo­ ple who need to grow up are those who boost their egos by kicking their peers to the ground timé and time again. E rinB luem Sophom ore Journalism Greek Review editor DAVID STROW, Editor DAVID PROFFITT, Managing Editor JEREMY STEIN.......... .......... . KENNES BOLIG....... ANGELA MULL...... ...... . . CHRISTINA BAILEY...... ............. BRYN CHANCELLOR................ JIM POULIN........................... . DUSTIN KRUGEL...... RANDY JONES ................. .......... JOSHKRIST..... ..... ....... ...... ADR1ANNA GARCIA................... .Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Garin Groff,. Andrea Healey, Melody McDonald, Jeff Owens, Ray Stem, Timothy Tait, Kelly Wendel. SPO R T S R E P O R T E R S : Brian A. Anderson, Seth Landau, Éd Odeven, Ron Matejko, Damian Shaw. COPY EDITORS: Christa Cementano, Liz Montalbano. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Paul Besing. Tim Hacker. Pat Shannahan. COLUMNISTS: Daniel Blanco, Michelle Carson, Bryn Chancellor, Jennifer Dodd, Steve Forsberg, Tina Holder, Jonathan Inge, Liz Montalbano, Rebecca Murray. CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Charles Lundsberg, Steve Tansley. PRODU CTION: Aaron R. Brutcher, Jeffrey Chiia, JoAnne Hansen, Diana Kessinger, Jeremy Meyer, Gerry Mueller, Prashant Sampat, Corey Saunders, Eloise Young. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Cari Dewald, Dan Ellstrom, Con 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 Editen' Managing Editor Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing die academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facultyr staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information............. 965-7572 Newsroom..............965-2292 Magazine................965-1695 Advertising........... ...965-6555 Classifieds.....,....... ...965-6735 Opinion____ ■- ■ STATE PRESS Friday, March 29, 1996 ________ _____ , , Pa?e — U niform s not solution to violence school and college is the development of a student’s personal­ School uniform s: “G et ‘em ity. Forcing a student to conform to a uniform mandated from on,” I've heard myself thinking, high above would stunt this part o f a student’s growth.” especially those mornings when Few in the class were persuaded that more uniforms equal many in m y public high school less violence. Nearly every student saw the president’s call as class of 42 seniors are garbed in either a hoked solution or an example of political naivete “Studied Grunge” — baggy pants, about the true depths o f violence in American culture. T-shirts and baseball hats back­ “How can uniform s put an end to the violence that ward. Those are the well-dressed. plagues our schools?” asked one. “Simply put, they cannot. Then the fantasy behind the Until drugs stop being dealt in schools, the violence will not idea that kids in uniforms would end. Until students have constructive outlets to spend their be more teachable, more disci­ free time, the violence will not end. U ntil students are plined and less violent fades. taught from a young age alternate solutions to violence, the W hy? Because my students’ violence will not end.” arguments against uniforms are Insufficient evidence has been gathered to document the more reasoned,and persuasive than are President Clinton’s in favor. He believes that gunplay among kids will decline case for uniforms. The two-year Long Beach experiment — if uniform s are required. “D iscipline and learning” will one school district out of 16,000 — is not enough. Killings oyer jackets and sneakers have occurred. But the numbers come back to schools. Clinton was impressed by the uniformed boys and girls are anecdotal, when at the same time those closest to the in a Long Beach, C alif., school he visited recently. He gore offer other explanations than clothing envy. O fficials at New Y ork U niversity School o f Social beheld look-alike kids and was told by think-alike adminis­ W ork’s Institute Against Violence wrote recently in The trators that since a dress code was imposed two years ago suspensions, fights, robberies and the rest are down. The New York Times: “Our research on New York City teen­ agers, and th e research o f D epartm ent o f Education many other social scientists, has bought in by sending re v e a ls th a t th e p rim ary m a n u a ls to th e n a tio n ’s cause of adolescent violence My students ’ arguments against uni­ 16,000 school districts on is a history of victimization. how to suit up the kids. form s are more reasoned and persuasive Youths who are victims of I haven’t noticed a rush violence eventually com e than are President Clinton fs in favor. He to ask stu d e n ts-fo r th e ir around the cycle o f violence v ie w s . U n le ss k id s are believes that gunplay among kids will as victim izes.” seen as robots or inmates W hat the NYU social sci­ decline if uniforms are required. u n w o rth y o f co n su ltin g , entists know, so also do my th e ir th in k in g m ig h t be ‘Discipline and learning wilt come back stu d e n ts. “I f a p e rso n is revealing. It was for me. going to be violent,” wrote Some in my class spoke to schools. one, “a uniform can’t stop ex p erien tially . They had that. That’s the kind o f per­ been to p riv a te or son th ey are and ju s t p aro ch ial schools w here because you make them dress like everyone else, the vio­ uniforms were required, “Everyone hated it,” said a 17year-old senior girl. “It completely killed any sense of indi­ lent streak in their personality won’t disappear.” Proven solutions are known: early childhood interven­ viduality any one of us had had. Everyone looked the same. tion, mentoring, literacy programs, teaching conflict resolu­ It was sad to watch.” Another: “I have been in a private school with a uniform tion beginning in first grade, counseling for parents in abu­ and a public school without. I didn’t learn any better in a sive marriages, funding for drug treatment, discipline-mind­ ed teachers and principals. uniform than I do now.” These are comprehensive efforts based on moral codes, One of the class’ civil libertarians saw school uniforms as , • a First Amendment free speech issue, a view likely to be not dress codes. advanced eventually in the courts. “1 am not saying,” he wrote, “that every student’s wardrobe contains some message, C olman M cCarthy is a syndicated colum nist fo r the • but some do, A very important, and underrated, part of high Washington Post Writers Group. STPRE55 @A5 U.EDU S tate P ress etters to the editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our read­ ers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages to be eligible for publication. Please include your full ’name, class standing, major (or any other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be considered for publica­ tion. Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate rea­ son. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for. factual errors and print space availability. Letters containing obvious.factual errors will be rejected. All letters must either be brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basiement of the Matthews Center, or addressed to State Press, Box 871502, Arizona State University, Tempe Ariz., 85287-1502; No faxes, please. A S U finding priorities wrong $185,000 for a football coach? Do you have to have a Ph.D. to apply for that sort of position? Maybe I’m in the wrong field. It’s odd I never thought I’d agree with Fife Symington, but maybe ASU is bloated and inefficient. I’m almost done with my coursework and next year LM be writing my dis­ sertation. The Graduate College has informed me that there is no financial support for candidates who are Writing their dissertations. Apparently, though, there’s enough to sup­ port a football coach —- royally. As Marlowe says in The Heart o f Darkness .... Jeffrey Timmons Departm ent o f English Student hopes W hite s Tulane woes w ill not continue at ASU As a recent Tulane University alumnus, it is with mixed emotions that I receive the news that Dr. Kevin White has been chosen as ASU’s new athletic director. On one hand, I welcome the addition of yet another Tulane veteran to the ASU community. On the other, however, I worry how much of Tulane will follow Dr. White. Under his direction, Tulane’s athletics did improve: gender equity in intercollegiate sports was increased, Conference USA was co-created, an off-campus basketball arena was made reality and athletic funding was increased. Dr. White has certainly been a popular personality on and off Tulane’s campus. What media reports to date have hot mentioned, howev­ er, is that his position and department have not been so pop­ ular in many Tulane circles. His athletic program improve­ ments have been accompanied by a continuous over-expen­ diture of funds (depleting a dedicated budget reserve years early), and an ongoing debate within Tulane about the future of an expensive and largely unsuccessful varsity foot­ ball program (in particular) when the rest of the University faces large financial deficits. (For corroboration and details, Visit back issues of the Tulane Hullabaloo under “Student Organizations” at .) I certainly do not want to deny Dr. White his successes, nor blame these problems on him alone; 1 simply am con­ cerned that these difficulties not follow him here. Welcome to Arizona State. Dr. White. Please prove my concerns wrong. Thom as W alker (Tulane ’95) M aster’s student Communications Article demeaning to women I just wanted to write and voice my feelings about the full-page article about Tess Hennessy. 1 agree with Jerry Smith’s opinion that the article was completely irrelevant and demeaning to women. Get out of the ice age, Josh Knst. I was disgusted with the State Press Magazine. What read­ ers are you trying to appeal to with this .., adolescent boys? Sexism is a real problem that is not discussed enough and I am glad that Smith brought it up. Juliet Johnson Graduate student C ivil add environm ental engineering Page 6 S t a t e P ress Friday, March 29, 1996 P olice R eport A S V police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Thursday: • A keyboard and mouse were stolen from Architecture Room 330, • An e m p lo y e e who b ecam e ill at Gammage Auditorium was transported to Tempe St. Luke’ s Hospital for treatment. • A musical instrum ent worth $499 was stolen from Gammage Auditorium. • A m an not a ffilia te d w ith A SU w as arrested on two outstanding warrants from thé Phoenix PoliceDepartment. He was not able to post bond of $290 and was turned over to Phoenix police. • A fem ale stu d e n t re p o rte d she Was harassed by a male student on campus. • A student’s 1982 Toyota Corolla valued at $ 1,000 was stolen from Lot 59. PASSOVER. IS COMING.*. A N D • A student’s skateboard valued at $120 was stolen from Hayden Library. HILLEL IS HERE FOR YOU! Tempe police reported the following inci­ dents Thursday: F IR S T S E D E R ir ie s d a y , A p ril 3 r d 6 :4 5 a t H ille l re s e rv a tio n s • Two men were arrested and charged with d iso rd erly conduct a fter engaging in a physical confrontation with each other. • A man was arrested after he allegedly threw his girlfriend ori a bed and threatened to bash in her head and kill her. He ran out­ side the apartment and screamed, causing neighbors to call police. He was charged with assault and disorderly conduct « A m an bran d ish in g a k n ife robbed à C hevron, 1926 N. Scottsdale Road, The man fled on foot and was not found. Compiled by S tate P ress reporter Garin S tu d e n ts:' l u n c h e s F ó r $ 1 0 o r $ 3 .5 0 e a c h N O n -s tu d e lits : f o r $ 1 5 o r $ 4 .5 0 e a c h P re -p a id re s e rv a tio n s o n ly / . 1 2 : 0 .0 n o o n - l : 0 0 p . m . S u n d a y * M o n d a y , 'W e d n e s d a y a r i d T h u r s d a y T U esd ay , A p ril 9 th R e g u la r T U E S D A Y L U N C H a t H ille l (1 1 :3 0 -1 :0 0 p .r n .) fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n c a ll 9 6 7 -7 5 6 3 Groff Our B agels .Jam ASIAN C ULT U R £ The Scones 9pm W E E K March 2 5 - 3 0 1 9 9 6 TONIGHT Arizona Slate University $430 remium Pitchers S a tu rd a y , M a r c h 3 0 F rid a y , M a r c h 2 9 ASIAN 9 :00 am -l :00 pm • Cady Mall 9:00 am - 4 :00 pm • AED .60 ’ c o a litio n -Asian Cultural Booth, Music & Exhibits 3 :00-5 :00 pm • Lang. & L it Bldg. C 18 -Colloquium talk Or. Peter Zinoman, Dept, of History . ' j. University of Berkeley Beyond” Conference. A il programs subject to change. ■ Co-sponsored by the ASU Asian American Faculty and Staff Association. For registration or • Asian American Faculty and Staff Association 7 :30 pm • Nursing Bldg. 101 ; -“Rikyu” Japanese Film ;, . withEnglish'Subtitles. Free admission. “Asian Americans: Year 2000 and , Call 965-9754fo r info. more info, call 727-6135. Admission is free and open • Vice President of Student Affairs to the public. • Office of Senior Vice Presidenti Provost • Cultural Diversity Committee .. 'ASIAN BÂNKSONE UNIVERSITY 8c FOREST IT S 'IN.EWS FA N S G ET MILL AVE . I , * SKYBOX CRO W ’S 4 ® ^ R E A D Y ... TEMPE, AZ "To Do A Little Dance" IF rid ay: $ & SHOT SPECIALS DOMESTIC DRAFTS (8-1 Opm) AND LADIES! S1.75 W ell W in e & D raft til C lo se SATURDAY: LET S DANCE! FINAL FOUR: K EN TU CK Y V S . M ASSACH USETTS & M ISSISSIPPI STATE V S . SYRACUSE P R O M O TIO N W ITH C O O R S LIG H T NCAA CH AM PIO N SH IP GA M E! PROMOTION WITH BUDW EISER& SOUTHERN COMFO FO RM ERLY SK Y B O X • 4 1 4 S. M ILL, # 2 0 5 • T EM P E • 9 6 8 -9 2 8 7 Immi P age 7 Friday, March 2 9 ,1 9 9 6 S t a t e P r ess PUMPS • BOTTLES/CAGES • CAR RACKS • LOCKS • SHOES • SADDLES • PACKS • JER SEY S 16th Annual m a m We have what you want ON S A L E ! Shop early—save BIG! Save with us this week! you'll find deep ' .. discounts on first quality brand-name cloth­ ing, accessories and bicydes^m fie iifjand take advantage of SPRING S A L E 'S m u K F j store biiying'ii^ert''- •.?>*:•>, 3 DAYS ONLY G igantic Clothing C learance Save on: •SH O R T S* H ELM ETS • G LO VES • SH O ES • SO CK S •TIG H TS » JA C K ET S • T-SHIRTS • KN ICKERS • SHOE CO VER S • RAINWEAR A cce sso rie s Cycling's more fun when you haws the latest gadget. You'll save a bundle on racks, p a d » , ear carriers, bicycle lights, lubricants and elec­ tronic items. Friday, March 29, 9:00am-9:00pm Saturday, March 30, 9:00am-6:00pm S u n d a y March 3 1 ,1 1 :00am-5:00pm Com ponents/ Parts/Tools A li ‘95 B ic y c le s Priced to S e ll 10%-50% O ff Come see and save on all: • SCO TT • KONA • KLEIN • RO SS • SERO TTA «TER R Y • BALANCE • HARO * G T • TO R ELLI • MASI • COLNAGO • IRON HORSE Mate It better than new. Whether It's handlebar tape, new rim s, or items from Shimano, Mavic and Cam py-you'll find them all reduced. Tires/Tubes Super ravings cm your B IC Y C L E S ON S A L E favorites, including the latest ‘95's hottest bikes PLU S floor mountain and race designs models, dem os, pro bikes, from famous brands including one-of-a-kind special Ritchey, Specialized, Onza, deals-'Shop e aiiy and Panaracer and Continental. SA VE BIG! Spare tubes, regular Prests or Schrader-4 for $9.99. SAV£UPTO$9J 1. F rid a y , M arch 29 , 9 : 00 am - 9 : 00 pm S a tu rd a y , M a rch 30 * 9 : 00 a m - 6 : 00 pm S u n d a y , M arch 31 , 11 : 00 a m - 5 : 00 pm Save on All B icycles, Parts, Clothing & A cce sso rie s! 3 DAYS TO SA V E! Storew ide sa v in g s on h u n d red s of item s! Full list of sale items available at store during sale. No pre-sale, layaway, phone or mail orders. Sale prices apply only to stock on hand. T E M P E B IC Y C L E 330 W. University • (University & Farmer, 4 blocks west of Mill) • 966-6896 EYEW EAR • HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPONENTS • HELMETS • TIRES & TUBES • SHORTS • COMPUTERS 1 P age 8 S t a t e P r ess Friday, March 2 9 ,1 9 9 6 Career night offers ‘real world’ contacts to students B y A n d r e a M . H ealey S ta te P ress Students wanting to know what the “real world” is like and make contacts in their careers should attend Alpha Kappa Psi’s career night, said a business fraternity official. The career night runs from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday. Eric Townsend, the business fraternity’s vice president of public relations, said speakers will have time to interact with the students and answer questions. “Speakers will explain what should be paid attention to in order to be functional and how to get prepared for the world." he said. Townsend also said it would be a good opportunity for students to make contacts and increase the chances that potential employers will remember them. Students interested in the fields of accounting, market­ ing, managem ent, finance and purchasing logistics are urged to attend the career night. R e p re se n ta tiv e s fro m JC P en n y C o. In c ., In sig h t Enterprises, Coopers and Lybrand accounting firm and National Bank of Arizona will speak to students in three different rooms on the second floor of the Memorial Union. Posted signs will direct students to the appropriate rooms. ASU graduate Eric Crown, CEO and chairman o f the b o ard o f b illio n -d o lla r c o m p u te r co m p an y In sig h t Enterprises, will speak to students. Insight Enterprises deals with computers, software and peripheral equipment sales, according to Jennifer Molinaro, Crown’s assistant. ToiVnsend said students planning to attend do not need to bring their resume. “ This is more informational,” he said. “It’s just for (stu­ dents) to get some information about what’s going on in the real world, what’s going on in the industry. You can read it in a book, but if you can hear it first-hand it gives you more insight.” Tow nsend added that students interested in joining Alpha Kappa Psi will have the opportunity to speak to fra­ ternity members that evening. HD d o w n . There is more to life th an news, weather and sports. C heck o u t th e COMICS. 10 YEAR/100,000 MILE LIMITED POWERTRAIN WARRANTY O f course, when you get a Volkswagen the odometer won't stay there long. It comes with a German engineered 115 horsepower fuel injected engine, power assisted rack and pinion steering, A/C, dual airbags* ana 2 year/24,000 mile no charge scheduled maintenance. So get down here quick, because this deal will go almost as fast as our cars do. Drivers wanted.™ *0 down.$199ftnonfh. K) dawa^97hionth. 48 month lease.*450acquisttion fee. 48 month lease.*450acquisition fee. 1 M 1 7 M m o n M p aym en t SO dow n pa y ra n l ffO O rafund afab w a r t y àapoét an d S 4 3 (L in 4 d fc o J M d u r a l Im m inm ption. Monthly payments total $9,54576. M anufacturers Suggested Retail fVtce of $1492 0 for a 1996 G o lf G L with 5-speed manual transm ission, o ir conditioning and AM /FM Stereo cassette. Requires d ealer discount o f $650 which could affect final negotiated transaction. Purchase option a t lease end fo r $3012.40. $21479 A ral m ontfifc p aym ent $0 daw n p aym en t $225 lefundcdife secu rity ctopaeR an d S4SD^RBUhitaDLfce4kM o f leaee inception. Monthly payments total $10,501.92. M anufacturer's Suggested Retoil ftic e of $14020 fo r a 1996 Jetta G L with 5-speed m anual transm ission, a ir conditioning and AM /FM Stereo cassette. Requires dealer discount of $700 which could affect fo d negotiated transaction. F\*chase option a t lease end for $ 3 6 8 9 4 a 4 ia llw 4 8 - m ^ d o s e d ^ lease offered to qualified customers by VW O ed it, Inc. through participating dealers. Supplies lim ited, must take retail delivery by 3/31/96. R ica includes 61 costs to be paid by a consumer, except tor other options^ dealer d iarg es, licensing, registration and taxes, le sse e tesponsfele fo r insurance. At lease end, lessee responsible fo r $0.lQ frtfe over 4 8,000 m iles, for damoge arid excessive w ear D ealers set actual prices. See dealer fo r details. ’Airbags are a Supplemental Restraint System. ° 1996 \fal® "agen. Berge Volkswagen 1515 W. Broadway M esa, AZ (502) 833-0001 Biddulph Volkswagen 4611 W. Glendale Ave. Glendale, AZ (502) 934-5211 Chapm an Volkswagen ÓÓ01 E. McDowell Rd. Scottsdale, AZ (502) 949-7600 Cam elback Volkswagen 1499 E. Cam elback Rd. Phoenix, AZ (502) 265-6600 S t a t e P r e ss Pag'e 9 Friday, March 2 9 ,1 9 9 6 L o c a l J e w ish le a d e rs b a c k s e n te n c in g o f R a b in s assassin B y B r ia n A n d e r s o n S t a t e P r ess In the wake o f the sentencing o f the man convicted o f assassinating Isra e l’s Prim e M inister, local Jew ish leaders are calling the life in prison term an appropriate punishm ent. Rabbi Barton Lee o f the Hillel Jew ish Students orga­ n izatio n said the sentencing o f Y igal A m ir Was ju st. H ow ever, he said it will require more time and energy to h eal th e d eep w ounds Jew s suffered a fter Y itzak R abin’s death late last year. “I thin k th at the difficult reality o f w hat happened will still be with people,” he said. “The loss of Rabin is already being felt in the current political situation in Israel. We will be living with this sad reality for a long grinding halt after the 25-year-old Jew ish law student was convicted earlier this time. Jo sh C o le, ch airm an o f month after standing trial / think that the difficult reality o f what for killing Rabin on Nov. U n ite d Je w is h A p p e a l o f H illel, agreed, adding th at happened w ill still be with people. The 4 . L ee added th at A m ir full recovery will occur only loss o f Rabin is already being fe lt in the w h en R a b in ’ s v is io n o f current political situation in Israel. We was undeniably responsi­ peace comes to fruition. for the shooting. w ill be living with this sad reality fo r a ble “I ‘T h e sentencing is a step fo llo w ed the trial in the rig h t d ire c tio n ,” he longtim e. and the man seems to be -Rabbi Barton Lee o f the H ille l Jewish cle a rly g u ilty ,” he said. s a id . “ T h e o n ly w ay fo r Students organisation “He was punished in the there to be closure, per se, is for there to be true peace.” a p p ro p ria te m e a su re o f The struggle for peace in the Middle E ast came to a the law." S tate P ress © M M ® We're there w hen you can't be. Campus Corner 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e (C o lle g e & U n iv e rs ity ) 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 EH O U SE K EG S •Beer & Soda •Photo Developing •Health & Beauty Aids 6 0 9 S . M ill ( A c r o s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ) 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 B e e r o n ly at C o lle g e A v e . MILLER GENUINE DRAFT, LITE, MOD LIGHT KEYSTONE 6 PACK BO TTLES 12 PA CK CAN S REG. $ 4 5 .9 9 S A L E E N D S 3 -3 1 - 9 6 A M E R IC A ’S #1 C A S IN O EN TER TAIN M EN T T E A M T SHOW US YOUR CURRENT ASU I.D.* or FEE RECEIPT, YOU’LL GET A OWNER At Harrah’s Funis A Fringe Benefit If it’s fun you’re looking for, look no further. Only Harrah's offers people the most exciting opportunities in the most exciting industry in Am erica. You can have it all. But only at the company that has it all. Harrah’s. ULOS) ¥ W e are recruiting casino, hotel and food and beverage service employees for the summer. WE ARE INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS! M onday and Tuesday April 8 and 9 8:30 a.m . to 4:30 p.m . P le ase sign up for an interview at the student employment office. - T h is year w e're doing it again! Every Sunday (b ut O N LY o n Su n d ay), Mike Pulos of Th e Spaghetti Com pany will give you one F R E E dinner* for each dinner you order! It’s our 2-for-1 SU N D A Y A SU S P E ­ C IA L . And it's good for the w hole year at our Old to w n Tem pe location only. * * Any day of the w eek, for lunch or dinner, Th e Spaghetti Com pany is known for a great m eal at an affordable price. But the SU N D A Y A S U S P E C IA L m akes our already terrific prices e ven b etter! O ur dinners include a full-course m eal with all the trim­ m ings - from sala d to d essert. S o , dollar for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you c a n t beat Th e Spaghetti Com penyl E S P E C IA L L Y O N SU N D A YS! With 2 dinners for the price of 11 •But yen MUST h m your currant, n H M student LD . card, fee rocelpt o r echedufe with you to take advantage o f tN e offer. 15% gratuity added to all dtecounted checks (sxospt senior cftfasn discounts). Chicken Cordon B lu e, SfeokD I Jo n , 8tuffed Filet o f Sofe,Tenderiokv Chicken Mereata, Veal M arsala, ThradPaetaO pera,Chlokon Parmeoan, Chicken C aesar Salad , Chicken Fettucinl AMkadd and orders to go A R E NOT included in the 2-for-1 special. OPEN A T 11:00 A M TO 11:00 P M . SUNDAYS! O P EN A T 10 A.M . ON G A M E D A Y S! H arrah's promotes a drug-free workplace. An equal opportunity employer. M/F/Disabled. Employment is subject to drug testing. Harrahs* C A S I N O L A K E H O T E L T A H O E I E n jo y ô u ï n ig h t ly d r in k s p e c i a l s . filili-. ^ p a g l i e t t i ( p u t p a i f y RESTA U R A N T IN O L D T O W N T E M P E 4 t h S t . & Mill A v e . • 9 6 6 - 3 8 4 8 P a g e llo S t a t e P r e ss Friday, March 29, 1996 Local businesses can up educational value, Suiter says B y T im B a x ter S tate P ress ' One in a series profiling the candi­ dates fo r Associated Students o f ASU president. If ASU is going to provide more edu­ cation value for the dollar, student gov­ ernment has to do more titan lobby the Legislature, said Associated Students o f ASU presidential candidate Chris Suiter. S uiter w ants to w ork w ith local businesses to provide educational and work opportunities for students. “I’ve worked on the Mill Avenue Block Party, and I’ve worked with the Tempe merchants associations discussing how they can build a better relationships with students,” he said., “Just for an example, a lot o f those businesses need marketing, and maybe that’s something we can provide. There hasn’t been an outreach from ASU into those areas that I’ve seen.” Other plans Suiter has for increasing educational value at ASU are building recruitment on campus by large, local employers such as Motorola and bringing more entertain­ ment to campus. “It may come as a surprise, but some of the businesses around here are not big recruiters,” said Suiter, a 22-yearold junior industrial engineering major. “I want closer ties with area businesses.” Suiter proposed bringing edheerts to ASU with d is­ counted tickets for students. A portion o f the proceeds would go back into student funds. He said he was particu­ larly interested in providing entertainment opportunities to dorm residents under 21 years of age, because there is not much for them to do. “I’ve worked on campus and off campus with different businesses,” he said. “I saw so m uch (involvem ent) in tuition, yet I saw nothing for making the value better. “I’m interested not just in cost containment, but increas­ ing the value.” Suiter also pledged to take no more than six hours a sem ester to have tim e to dedicate to the office and to donate his salary to community programs involving youth State P ress P olice R e p o r t s Too bizarre to be anything but real. T hey s h e lle d it o u t fo r y o u r o r th o d o n tis t b ills . C oughed A nd fo r k e d it o v e r f o r th a t Y et th e y T ouched s till b y th e ir u n d y in g Y ou it u p it t s is t fo r y o u r c a r in s u ra n c e . f is h tC IT ik a c c id e n t. you c o lle c t . lo v e , y o u c a ll sp a re th e m fu rth e r e x p e n se . dial 1 8 0 0 CALL ATT. 1 8 0 0 CALL ATT alw ays c o s t s le ss th a n i -soo -collect A n d a l w a y s g e t s y o u t h e r e l i a b l e AI&T N e t w o r k . Use it w h en ev er y o u ’re q ff catnpits. K n o w t h e C o d e. I 8 0 0 C A LL A T T. T h a t ’s Y o u r T r u e C h o i c e r For interstate > aO (K X )liJB C T is a registered tradem ark o f © 1996 AM T Page 11 Friday, March 29, 1996 S t a t e P r ess Art festival takes over Tempe streets B y K elly W S tate P ress ECONOMICS! ^ Like You've Never Seen It. CURRENT ISSUES IN ECONOMICS AND POLITICS ~ ECN 304-SLN 75077 Economics applied to the ‘War on Drugs," the health care crisis, pollution, the environment, etc. | SURVEY OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS The streets o f downtown Tempe will be filled with artists, food, entertainment and people this weekend when the 19th Annual Tempe Spring Festival of the Arts kicks off at 10 a.m. today. More than 500 artists and crafts people will turn the streets into an art-lover’s paradise, with paintings and hand-crafted items ranging from bronze sculptures to hand-woven bags. Some 250,000 people are expected to attend the three-day event sponsored by the Mill Avenue Merchants Association. “This is one of the largest art festivals in die country, and it attracts over 500 vendors, so there is a lot of variety and a lot of unique things to see, do and eat,” said Susan M ulligan-P ishko, m arketing m anager fo r D ow ntow n Tempe Community Inc. The Spring Festival attracts nearly 1,000 applications a year from artists and crafts people wishing to display their wares. A jury of professional artists, designers and other artistic profes­ sionals decide who receives the 500 festival vending spaces. The festival w ill feature local entertainm ent daily, beginning at 10 a m. and lasting until 6 p.m. Patrons will have the choice of pop, blues, reggae and country music on the main stage in the Hayden Square Concert Stage. Musicians will also perform in various places through­ out downtown Tempe, and festival-goers have the opportu­ nity to tune into everything from South American music to New Age and steel dram bands. If y o u ’re hungry after taking in all the sights and so u n d s, m ore th an 30 v en d o rs fe a tu rin g fo o d fro m Thailand to Greece are sure to satisfy those with adventur­ ous appetites, but the old standby’s o f hot dogs, hamburg­ ers and com dogs will also be available. A s in p a st y e a rs, p a rk in g w ill be at a p rem iu m . Mulligan-Pishko recommended arriving early if festival goers want to avoid the long walk. The festival will last until 6 p.m. Sunday and is free to the public. FRIDAY Not For Econom ics Majors | e n d e i. | IBS 306 or ECN 306- SLN 35436 Understanding current trade issues such as the North American Free Trade Agreement, etc. | MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS IN T H E | 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 ^ BOTH IVIEN & WOMEN Harkins Luxury Theatres i» 3 * p Shows before 6PM • Advance ticket Sales • Stereo Surround Sound 1 1/irEE ttoflU on large Popcorn ft large Drink * Best of Phoenix Gourmet Snack Bar I Showtimes good for Friday; Mar 29 • Tuesday. Apr 2 • f C E N T E R R O B N T 7F odytR Qy*f°*T l0,A SGT. BILK0 ... o (Patty) 12:20, 3:00, 5 OS 7:05, 9:30 (Midnight F ri.S a t); ONTWOSCREENS! (Daily) 12 OO, 2:30, 5:00, 7:20,9:40 ■ (12:10 am Fri, Sat ) I E g m u m . (Daily) 12:40. 3:10, 5:40, B.OO, 10:20 ' (t2:40 am Fri, Sari) f l i r t i ^ W itt i i W i a w Q (D aH y)U ,4 0 , 2:20.- 5; 10, 7:45, Ì 0:05 ( I S S a m F r i ! s a ! ) DIABOLIQUE (r ON TWOSCREENS! (Fri. Sun-Tuos)A i;30, 2:10> 4:40, 7:30,10:10 . (12:45 arri F r i (Sai; 11:30.2:10. 4:40.10:10.4245 am. TB&l (Patty) 12:10. 2:50, 5.-20. 8:10 (10:50 pm Frit $aty. EXECUTIVE DECISION*« O (Daily) 12:50. 3:50, 7:1,0.10:00 (12:55 am Fri, Sat). \ (Daily) 1:30, 4:30, 7:50 (10:40pm Fri, S a l). THE BIRDCAGE?» © on twoscmeensi (Daily) 1 :20, 4:10, 7:00. 0:50 (12:30 am Fri. Sat). (Daily) 11.20. 2:00, 4:50, 7 40,10:30 (1 00 am Fri. Sat) . . . . BOLBV UP CLOSE A PERSONAL *«■> Q (Daily) 11:50, 2:40. 5:30, 8:20 (12:05 ám F ri,Sat) _ a© SATURDAY LADIESNIGHT W & P$4 iSs LADIE brade tne mali Scottsdale &.Came«iack 423-1400 SGT.BILKO.a© (Fri. Sat) 11:40.2:00.4:40;7:30,iOOO (Son/11:40,2 P 0 .440.7:30,9:90 (Mon. Tuas)4 2 S 0 .220.4:40.7:30t ON TWO SCREENS! (Fri. Sat) 11.10,11 50.1:50,2:30.4:50. &20.7:10.7:50,0:35.1020 (Sun) 11:10,11 50.1:50,2:30, 4:50. 5:20,7:10, ftÖ 0.030.10:15 (M o n,Tu as)it 40.1:30,2:40.4:50.520,7:10,500.020.10:15 (Fri, 11202:10,455.7:40,1035 EXECUTIVE DECISION,«, /11:20,2:10.4.55.740. lOIOCMonju«) 1130.2:10.4:56.7:40.10:10 ON TWO SCREENS! (Fri, Sat) 11:30.220,5:10.8:00,10:45 (Sun) 11:30,220,5:10,7:50.1020 (Mon, Tuas) 11.50.230.5:10,7:50.1020 ■ (Fri. Sat) 11CO. 1 40.4:30,720.10:10 (Sun) 11CO, 1:40,4:30,720, TOCO(Mon, Tuai) 1120.1:50,420.720,KMQ UP CLOSE A PERSONAL*« .« (Fri,Sat) 10:50,1:30,4:15,7C0.9:45 (Sun) 1050,120.4:15.7C0,0:40 (Mon, Tues) 11:10,1:40,420.700,040 THE BIRDCAGE,«, • ra.AjyuEM.viEw S W rim Exclusive! ^G otdw ater Btvd n ofCametaack 423-9900 S iScottsdah't Largati AuéKortum -(00 Boati IFri,; Mon, Tuas) 2:30. SCO. 7:45.10.10 (Sat. S i m i l i :452:30. SCO. 8.00 10:30 T O (Fri, Mon. Tuas) 1:45.420,700.0:45 (Sat. Sunm CO . 1:45 420. 7:00.0:45 tF ri Mon, Tues) 1 15.3:35, 5:40. 720. ft 15 (Sat, San) 11:15,1:15,3:35.5:40,7:30, ft30 990LONG- NOCOVER FORLADIES UNTIL 10:00PM NECKS UNTIL 10:30 PM (Daily) 120,400.7:20,1020 UTTLE INDIAN, BIG CITY " RACE THE SUN («o»a AflPO0»» LL « i fO*fcJ1:».S:15,Äl5 3:15,7:10 (Fri,Mon, Tuaa) 3.00,5:00 (Seri, Sun) 12:30,3:00.5:00 (D a M lX JO Exciualvet (FtiM onTum s) 230,5:15, 7 .4 S(Sa LS un ) 12:00.220.5:15.8:00 (Patty) 2:00.7:30 SENSE AND SENSIBILITY (Fri, Mon, Tues) 4 A 0 ($ a t,$ u n ) 1 1 2 0 ,44Q DEAD MAN WALKMGn Showtimes subject to change. Please call theatre to verity. A DENOTES SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT f r e n c h tw is t * 411S. MILL AVE. c L U b 966-2020 Page 12 S t a t e P ress Friday, March 29, 1996 Trickel: Raise level o f school spirit B y T im B a x ter S ta te P ress One in a series profiling the candi­ dates fo r Associated Students o f ASU president. S chool sp irit m eans a lo t to Associated Students of ASU presiden­ tial candidate Todd Trickel, and if elect­ ed, he hopes to encourage more of it. “Our spirit level is really low,” he T r ic k e l said. “We need to raise the level o f pride. We need to raise the level o f com m itm ent and involvement, and wheiyWe do that the ASU community will come together.” Trickel, a 21-year-old junior communications major, was bom and raised in the Valley. He has been an ASU booster since he was 2 or 3 years old, he said. Besides raising spirit and pride, Trickel also hopes to improve lighting on campus to improve safety and develop S tate some kind o f forum, possibly in the State Press, in which all students could voice their views bn important matters. “I want to get the students involved,” he said. “I want to figure out a way to get them to vote on issues. I also want to acknowledge some of the smaller clubs that help repre­ sent ASU.” Trickel said although he has not held an office, he had thought about running for president since coming to ASU three years ago. “I really wanted to do something for the school to give back what I’ve gotten from the school,” he said. “I’m not a ' politician, but I’m very open to any ideas, or any perspectives. “The main idea is to get the students involved,” he added. “I want to get the help of the students behind me, rather than have just one person making the decisions.” Trickel said at the very least, he hopes his candidacy will spur students into taking part in the political process. “I basically want to get people involved and get a high voter turnout,” he said. P CONDOM RESEARCH s i m Planned Parenthood is seeking monogamous couples interested in participating in a research study comparing the effectiveness of latex and investigational polyurethane condoms in pregnancy prevention. Women must be between 18 and 40-, men between 18 and 50. Qualifying couples will receive free condoms for seven months and up to $90 compensation for two clinic visits and three telephone interviews. Volunteers may also receive free Pap smears, STD screening and physicals. For more information, call Planned Parenthood at 265-2043 r ess Planned Parenthood* o f C e n tral and N orthern A rizo n a S o m w e t h in g it h o u t u s in g t o a r e a d h ig h lig h t e r . o S C À R o R O NO CRO SSW O RD by THOMAS JOSEPH FUT S 0U 1H W E S T . A N Y D IR E C T IO N . Your career c a n really go p laces w ith S o u th w est Airlines. Sign u p n o w in y o u r C areer S erv ice s C enter for FLIGHT ATTENDANT ACROSS 1 Crisp cracker 6 Peeved states 11 Without help 12 Like Holmes’s gam e 13 Small herring 14 Hero with a sword 15 Milliner's offering 16 Top tortes 18 Sawbuck Seattle# ^spoKane Portland # Chicago D«® * . (M idway) ■ Baltimore/ • Cleveland Washington •B o ise Ftenorrahoe . . . Sacramento • # Salt Lake City in te rv ie w s in m id-A pril. Ka" ” f ■ Q *• • » C d lum uL ■ Indianapolis TUba S t Louis •Lo u isville • Nashville ä Oklahoma • • Los Angeles ontano Albuquerque • City Little Rock O ran g e«" ujhhock • Ph& w • ’ ’ Binuingham San Diego ri,u J ,R Midiand/Odessa Dallas ■W •O akland Jose San Francisco LasVfcgas Burbank • • • San T IK 3 W K ; • ' SOUTHWEST . '• • ■ Austin 0P a? « * •N ew orleans San Antonio# • •O rlan d o Corpus Christi Tam p a# H i .; ■ . Bay • South Padre island F t Lauderdale (Harlingen) Southwest Airlines is ah Equ al Opportunity Em p loyer. eg- ©1996 Southwest A irlines G O FO R T H E G O L D . JOIN A W I N N E R . As a leader In the financial services industry, John Hancock takes pride in H E L P IN G individuals realize their C O A L S , John H ancock, the O fficial Life Insurance Sponsor of the 1994/1996 O lym pic G am es, is looking for hardw orking, self-m otivated individuals. In addition to receiving outstanding support and products, you'll receive com petitive C O M P E N S A T IO N and the. opportunity to train w ith som e of the best in the industry. . Jo in u s T u e s d a y A p ril 2 n d a t 7 p m in M U R o o m 2 1 5 fo r a c a re e r p re s e n ta tio n STATUS 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. (ohn Hancock Mutual Lite Insurance Com pany and affiliated companies, Boston, MA 02117, An equal opportunity employer. M/F/D/V. 42 Cager Shaquille 43 Words after “Do” 4 4 Bookish geeks 45 Rushing units DOWN 1 Scrubbed 2 Vicuna’s cousin 3 BaH gazer 4 Bambi's aunt 5 Watch recipient, perhaps 6 Harassed, as initiation s 1 N 1 C E O 1 L L A R| O G] E Tl Y esterday’s A nsw er 7 T h e XFiles" sight 8 Gold digger 9 Green shade 10 Lapidary concerns 17 Pirate 23 PreEaster buy 24 Rainbow 26 Vitamin prescription 27 Whodunit element, often 28 Francis of TV 30 Spoke 31 Difficulties. 33 Tolls 39 Insane 41 Actress 1234 . 7891 0 5 6 113 « 1 J. 17“ 1 5 1 1292 12320 ■2, ■ 2 5 2 6 8 ■29 3031 2 72 3362 j 33 . 11” «4■ 137 3 6 4424 «6 4 11 3-28 Would yon like to nominate someone for recognition? To do so, complete this form, attach a statement describ­ ing this person’s service to students, and return die nomi­ nation to die Vice President for Student Affairs Office by Friday, March 29, 1996. Nominee’s n i i i 3-29 _____ _______ __________________ CBYFTOQtlOTES Title. O K LD UH Department LYKK Your nam e. Q 8$> 27 Fancy spread 29 N ew s bigwig 32 Mine output 33 Bakery buy 34 Sw iss canton 35 Evil 36 Pitching stat 37 Carp 40Thesame S A M E S P R A H E S T Y D C A L N O T A O u R T T R 1 E T A X C E O S E S E A V E N N E X DAILYCRYFTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW O ne letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for th e three L's, X for th e tw o O ’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation o f th e words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different. .Phone. u s * OFFICIAL UFE INSURANCE SPONSOR 1994/1996 U.S. OLYMPIC TEAMS 19 Old French coin 20 Singer Stewart 21 Take advan­ tage of 22 Anger 24 T h em ’ creatures 25 Ugly building, p O u T R E M I T O 0 E A T E N N H U E Y S P Y N D E Ï U A W A K B E R E 3 8 Alabama city D 0 z E N D BT TP GRYH VYZRG. ZVDGYNU DHGPBYHR HPOI QIPQKI, GRJ VIHG.— Address— Return to: Student Affairs, ASU, Box 872103, Tempe, AZ 85287-2103. Formare info, c a ll965-7293. OD VA GLDYB Y esterday's C ryptoquote: A CHILD EDUCATED ONLY AT SCHOOL IS AN UNEDUCATED CHILD.— GEORGE SANTAYANA 0 1996 by King Featu res Syndicate, Inc. Friday, March 29, 1996 S t a t e P r ess r — — — — — P age 13 — — — — — — — — — — — — ------------------------------ Real w o rld experience m akes d iffe re n c e , W a stc h a k says Value-Star Computer Systems Starting os Low as $ 1595 B y T im B a x ter S tate P ress b Mesquite MumMedh ^ Close to ASU O t o r in o • 13 3M H z P e n tiu m * Prooeooor • 1 8 M B R A M , expandable to 128M B • 100M H z P en tiu m * P ro c e sso r • S T B 2 M B ED O D RA M • 16M B R A M , expandable to 128M B 6 4 R R P C I Lo ca W u o V ldoo • S T B 2 M B ED O D R A M 6 4 R R G ra p h ics A c c e le ra to r P C I G ra p h ics A c c e le ra to r • 1 .6 G B E IO E H a rt D rive • 1 .2 G B E ID E H ard D rive w/m ode 4 support • 6 X Sp eed M itsu m i C D R O M D rive • 6 X Sp ae d M itsu m i C D R O M D rive • 1 » B H So und C a rd R • 1 7 " OpUQ ueot SV G A O W tal C o lo r M onitor M U S te re o S p e a k e rs • 2 8 .8 FA X /M o d em total Servite &Sales 13351Hz $ 2 3 9 5 150MHz $ 2 4 9 5 166MHz $ 2 7 5 5 • I S " S V G A D is t a l C o lo r M onito r 75MHz $ 1 9 9 3 $ 2 0 7 5 io o m h x One in a series pro­ filing the candidates for Associated Students o f ASU president. 2424 W. 14A Street in Tempe B rin g in th is a d a n d re te iv e $50 o ff a n y to m p u te r p rU e d ab o v e $ 1595 T R ^ S T A Order By Phone or Fax R 731-9190 (® 5> (800) 800-2865 OTflttTO!* _ L Fax 731-9331 Open W eekdays 10-6 Saturdays 10-4 Pnces wid product descnpoons sutioct to change Offer good throutfi March 30. 1996 Student ID Required Three year warranty corers Tri-Star. TnCAD, and Star Station systems Keyboards, M AJINPeU! W e a th e r w o r r ie s ? See the forecast on the bottom o f Page /. ■C-\ ir PLEASE TELL US T e ll t h e w o r ld 25 THINGS THAT (or at least A SU ) y o u r fa v o r ite DRIVE YOU CRAZY! W eb s ite s ! 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! idjxe (Officevision) or E-mail your favs to: idjxe @ asuvm.inre.asu.edu Snail-mail your favs to: State Press Web Favs Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 or drop your favs o ff in the State Press offices located in the basement o f Matthews Center. BE SURE TO INCLUDE YOUR NAME, STATUS (student, faculty, staff) AN D PHONE NUMBER. DEADLINE IS MONDAY, APRIL U . Put 'em on a disk! I V iiimi irtTt iiihhit? State Press Tell us w hat drives you crazy! Is it the people who live above you and insist upon tap dancing after Letterman every night? O r maybe it's the way they bag your groceries? W hatever makes you crazy, get it off your chest by sharing it with the State Press readers! Please su b m it y o u r e n try on a flo p p y d isk (preferably M AC) by April 1, 1996, to Gwen in room 47 in the basement of Matthews Center. In clu d e yo u r nam e and phone num ber. A ll entries on a disk w ill be published. Questions, call Jackie Eldridge at 965-6555. Sports P a ge 15 Friday, March 29, 1996 S tate P ress A S U sw im m e r c r o w n e d n a tio n a l c h a m p io n Michigan did.” Sanchez, a 19-year-old native of ASU freshman Francisco Sanchez Venezuela, is the third ASU swimmer in became the first Sun Devil male swim­ the school’s history to win a national mer in 13 years to win a national cham­ championship. Andy Astbury won the pionship, taking the 50-yard freestyle 500 freestyle in 1982 and Mike Om won title Thursday night at the 19% NCAA the 200 freestyle in 1983. Sanchez set a world record in the 50M en’s Sw im m ing and D iving m eter freestyle (21.80) at the W orld Championships. Sanchez swam a 19.35 in the finals Championships in Rio de Janeiro last after qualifying with a 19.32 earlier in December. His previous season-best the day at the Jamail Texas Swim Center time in the 50 freestyle was 19.86. “This is a pretty big landm ark in in Austin. The 19,32 is a school record in the event. Sanchez has yet to lose a 50 ASU swimming,” said assistant coach Brian Jones. “The bottom line is very freestyle NCAA race this season. "It means a lot to me.” he said. "It impressive. On top of winning the world was my first. NCAA championship. M y; cham pionship, the NCAA ch am p i­ goal is to win it for four years in a row onship. to complete the cycle would be like B razilian G ustavo Borges o f the Olympic championship.” B y E d O deven State P ress * Two-time All-America and ASU cocaptain Felipe Delgado, finished third in the 50 freestyle with a time of J9.75. Sanchez and Delgado also swam the first two legs of the ASU 200 freestyle team, which took fifth. “Obviously it is a real terrific effort by both guys,” Jones said. “They did much better than we expected.” ASU currently stands in fifth place after four events. ASU finished 14th last year at the NCAAs. ■ “It is pretty good for the school,”, Sanchez said. “We are looking forward to being in the top 10 o f the country. That would be pretty cool.” Coach Ernie Maglischo added, “We had a great day. Finishing first and third in the 50 free was a great thing.” Jim P o u lin /State P re ss Freshm an swim m er F ra n cisco San chez, a native of Venezuela, b e ca m e o n ly th e th ird m e n ’s sw im m e r in A S U h is to ry to becom e an N CA A cham pion last night at the N CAA Swimming and Diving Cham pionships. S u n D e v ils read y to ro ck W ild c a ts in T u cso n By Ra n d y J ones S tate P ress Sophom ore G ina Holleran flies through the air on a vault attempt earlier this sea so n . The Su n Devils travel to Tu cso n tonight for their last regular se a so n meet. . B ruin/Sun D evil show dow n pivotal A S U softball hopes to clim b rankings B y R o n M atejko S tate P ress ASU baseball coach Pat Murphy said he is expecting a dogfight in the Sun Devils’ upcoming series. The 14th-ranked Sun Devils (21-11, 5-7) meet 11thranked UCLA (17-10, 8:4) in a three-game series starting at 7 tonight at Packard Stadium. “ It’s a big series,” Murphy said. ‘‘They’re arguably the best team in the nation.” j The Sun Devils are coming o ff a two-game sweep of Portland State and have won five of their last six overall. T UCLA took two o f three from Pac-10 leader USC last weekend. 1 The Sun Devils split their series 3-3 with the Bruins last year. ASU is tied for third in the conference trailing secondplace UCLA by two-and-a-half games. Junior left-hander Jason Bond (4-2) will get the start for .ASU today, while Olympic hopeful Jim Parque (5-0) will 'get the nod for UCLA. F rom the Bullpen • ASU pitchers own a collective 21-inning scoreless streak. • ASU outscored Portland St. 22-0. and outhit them 23-5 in its recent two-game series. Junior outfielder Jeff Cermak is 8 for 14 (.571) with one double, one home run, six runs scored and eight RBI in his last four games. ' ^ Fresh off its second-place finish at the Pac-10 Championships last week, the ASU women's gymnastics team travels to Tucson tonight to take on in­ state rival UofA at the McKalc Center. A scheduling twist caused the final dual meet of the season to follow Pac-lO’s. Leading the Sun Devil charge is Pac-10 Gymnast of the Year Katie Freeland. The senior scored a season-high 39.2 last week, en routeMo finish­ ing fourth in the all-around at the Pac-lOs. “We’re excited,” Freeland said. “Especially because it’s our last dual meet. It’s kind of strange (having a dual meet now) because you kind of build up toward the end of the season, for Pac-lO’s and regionals. But in the same sense it’s a good thing to let us work on things we needed to change.” The series has been dominated by the Stln Devils since 1976, ASU owns a 24-2 advantage fiver UofA in dual meets and regular season invitationals. Last year the Sun Devils defeated the Wildcats 193.675-192.2. Thq team is currently riding a four dual meet winning steak. Also, including the Pac-10 Championships, ASU has defeated 13 of the last 15 teams it has faced. The two losses came at the hands of Washington on Feb. 9 and to Oregon State last week. During the streak, the team is averaging a 194.965 score, a marked improvement over the team’s 191.6 average during its firs) three meets. “I’ve said all year that this team would be peaking toward the end,” Coach John Spini said. “They have really matured with the number of com­ petitions.” The ASU-UofA rivalry is especially intense for the team, as many of the athletes from both teams competed with each other for clubs at home. Sophomore Gina Holleran, a native of Whitehall, Pa,, and freshman Lisa Vincijanovic of Scottsdale, both are anticipating an encounter against old friends. “I think we’re ready to beat UofA,” Holleran said. “The rivalry’s pretty big. A couple of my friends go there from my old club, Christa McDermott and Maureen Kealey.” Vincijanovic added, “There’s definitely a rivalry between me and Heidi (Hombeek, Pac-10 all-around champion). W e’re gonna rock. We beat them once, Why can’t *we do it again?” B y D a m ia n S h a w S tate P ress Freshm an shortstop M ichael C o llin s and the No. 14 A S U baseball team will tackle No 11 U C L A in a Six-Pac show dow n at 7 tonight at Packard Stadium . The ASU softball team’s run for the playoffs starts Saturday. JX |' Although the Sun Devils have played two Pac-10 contests earlier this season, full-scale divi­ sional play doesn’t begin until 1 p.m. Saturday against Washington at Sun Devil Q ub Stadium. The Sun Devils, who are currently ranked No. 20 in filenation, need to pull out at least one win in the doubleheader against the No. 3 Huskies to move up in the Top 2S rankings, according to Coach Linda Wells. “There’s two WRysto get there,” Wells said of tiie f ’ayoffs. “You can either win the conference or you can get a wild card and the Way you get a wild card is to be up in the rankings.” With 15 of the regional playoff berths being. awarded automatically to divisional champions, the Sun Devils are faced with the task of either winning the Pac-10 outright or earning the wild card entry. Four teams are ranked ahead of ASU in the Pac-10 and wild card entries gener­ ally are given to teams from the top 15 which have not won their division. ASU would need to move up five slots in the rankings to fit that requirement. A win over Washington could help do that. T urn t o S o it b a u , pag e 16. P age 16 S t a t e P ress Friday, March 29, 1996 P IN G n ex t u p for golfers “Fortunately for us the match K ellee B ooth, the Sun is not decided on paper or by Devils’ sophomore leader and R O U N D - U P foe rankings.” lOfo-ranked player in the coun­ California is an up and com­ try, will be absent when the No. ing program and boasts the 3 ASU women's golf team hosts the annual PING Invitational at the Karsten No 17 ranked singles player in the nation Golf Course today through Sunday. She will be Michael Hill. “PaC-Six weekends are always great because competing at the LPGA Nabisco Dinah Shore they provide the best competition in foe coun­ toumamentt in Palm Springs, Calif. Coach Linda Vollstcdt said her five-mem­ try. It's going to be great tennis.' ’ added Belken. — Brian A. Anderson ber team will be ready after enjoying a brief hiatus from competition. The Sun Devils' last Undefeated lacrosse hosts two The ASU lacrosse club (5-0), fresh off a win tournament Was one month ago when they captured third-place at the Arizona Invitational over New Mexico last weekend, will host two games. The Sun Devils face UC-Riverside on in Tucson. : / “We’d like to win our home tournament and Saturday and Chico State (Calif.) on Sunday, they’re all playing really well right now,” both are scheduled for 1 p.m. -—Staff Report Vollstedt said. Water Ski begins ’96 campaign — Seth Landau The ASU Wafer Ski team will compete for Highly-ranked foes await men’s tennis The ASU men’s tennis team faces a tough the first time this year, Saturday and Sunday at challenge this weekend when it faces No. 2 foe 19-team Cal Classic hosted by UC-Berkley. ranked Stanford at 1:30 p.m. today and No. 15 The squad returns its top players from last California on Saturday at noon at foe Whiteman year’s squad, which finished seventh nationally and first in foe Western Conference. Tennis Center. All-American team captain Jennifer Dawes The Cardinal comes into foe match with five of its singles players ranked in the top 50. This and Renee M iller, the reigning W estern is not unusual according to Sun Devil Coach Conference slalom champion, form a potent combination on foe women’s end. Lou Belken. -Staff Report “It doesn’t Concern us,” he said. Softball— Continued from page 15. Junior Lisa Dacquisto. who earned foe Pac- very least we need to get at least one win out of 10 play«' of foe week honor last week for bat­ this weekend.” ting .625 in the Diamond Devil Classic, said that Last weekend ASU took out its frustrations ASU wants to improve its status in the Pac-10. on four different teams at home in the Classic, “We need to win this weekend because we outscoring them collectively 54-5. Despite that want to keep our spot or move up in the rank­ show o f offensive and defensive prowess, ings,” Dacquisto said. “We also want to show Breedlove believes that the Sun Devils don’t get the people in the Pac-10 that we’re not screwing the credit they deserve, sighting a split with No. around. We can win and we know it. We just 2 UCLA earlier this season as justification. need to go out there and prove it.” “People say that when we beat UCLA it “We need to beat tins team so we can move was a fluke, but it wasn’t,” she said. “If we higher up in the rankings and get a spot in the win, it’ll show that we’re a good team that postseason,” said sophomore pitcher Carrie shouldn’t be underestimated and we're going Breedlove. “We can beat tins team, and at foe ' to go far this year.” S ta te P ress P o l ic e R e p o r t s Too bizarre to be anything but real. Looking for a challenge and a paycheck? The Student Publications Advisory B oard is now soliciting applications for the editorship o f the 1996-97 Sun D evil Spark yearbook. A p p lic a n ts fo r th e p o sitio n o f ed ito r: * / M u st b e a stu d en t at A S U in g o o d a ca d em ic sta n d in g , t / M u st h a v e a m in im u m o f tw o y ea rs y ea rb o o k or m a g a zin e e x p e r ie n c e . %/ M u st p o s s e s s stro n g lea d ersh ip , m a n a g em en t, o rg a n iza tio n a l, c o m m u n ica tio n , g ra p h ic d e sig n , p ro d u c tio n and w ritin g sk ills. i / M u st b e p r o fic ie n t in M a cin to sh M S W ord— Q u ark X P ress p r o fic ie n c y a lso p referred . %/ M u st n o t grad u ate p rio r to th e c o m p le tio n o f th e term o f a p p o in tm en t. T h e a p p o in tm en t is from Ju n e 1, 1 9 9 6 to M a y 1, 1 9 9 7 . A pplications and inform ation on the subm ission and selection process are available a t the fro n t reception desk o f Student P u blication s, M atthew s C enter, north basem ent. P lease d irect questions to Julie K napp, A ssociate D irector o f S tudent P ublications, 965-7572, Deadline for applications: Noon, Monday, April 8 O p™B u TUea.toook K 1995 N ISSAN ASU Career Night A forum fo r highler learning . Ur C (>iulili(iiiii/(‘ •F ttu v rU ic h s •P o ttv r W indows •A M l 1/ CcissvT/U • Till Wheel • Cnh'se C m ilro l » D u a l A ir Jicios <~- Much More! 159 G u e st S p eak ers B ill M cG ra th o f JC P enn y E ric C r o w n , CEO o f In sig h t E n terp rises R o b C a n tr e ll o f C oop ers & L ybrand P eter H ill, V P o f N a tio n a l B ank o f A rizon a A n n a F ly n n , P u rch asin g & L o g istics G uru Per Month fo r 39 months with $999 Down, or trade-in value A sk About College Grad Program ! I •NO CREDIT REQUIRED •AUTOMATIC APPROVAL1 BrownNISSANBrown r Û V 1* 'm L t t a w Fraei I t e Pries CH> M ESA *« 1 4 3 0 0 U O & EK ot ta lte le ^ a M e p ta s i fe S iÉ É te S , » ■ i .t w p r v f f i n w , 3 j hM 1 * L S u » h . T E M P E • 5 9 8 -6 0 0 0 b Lim ited tim e M e of $1 5 9 .0 0 for a 39 month dosedend lease. Actual capitalized cost $ 1 3 ,6 7 5 .0 0 Includes a $3 50.00 nonrefundable acquisition fee. T ares, registration, title, and Insurance, not included In lease rate and m aybe payable on consum ­ m ation. Total monthly payments *8 .2 0 1 .0 0 . Purchase option m ay be available at the end o f the lease for a purchase price of *8 .3 3 2 .2 4 , plus applicable sale s ta r. Mileage charge of 15« per m ile for mileage over 12 .0 0 0 per year. Sunday, March 31 from 6~8 pm MU Second Level S tate P ress "s. Friday, March 29, 1996 P age 17 S u m m e r O ly m p ic s c o u ld b e n e x t s to p fo r A S U ’s Je ffre y By Ed O deven S ta te P ress Chris Jeffrey's ultimate challenge is here. After four seasons of All-America glory, the ASU senior yearns for one more accomplishment — a trip to the Olympics. S he w ill a tte n d th e C a n a d ia n O ly m p ic S w im m in g T ria ls in M o n tre a l, Q u e b e c on M arch 30 JEFFREY through April 4. “It’s not going to be easy. I’m going to have to have the race o f my life,” said Jeffrey, a 23-year-old from Guelph, Ontario. “I’m not the favorite to make it, but I’m definitely right up there.” Jeffrey’s competitive nature should be an asset. “Put her in any situation and she likes to race,” ASU C oach T im H ill said. “I think if she could m ake the Olympic team, which is going to be real tough, that would be great for her.” Currently, Jeffrey is ranked third among Canadians in the 400-m eter individual medley. Jeffrey is also highly touted in the 400 freestyle (she was the runner-up in the 1992 Canadian Olympic Trials). “That’s kind of her goal, to go out on a winning note and make the Olympic games,” Hill said. “I think that if she could do that she could be in the top 16. And if things hit right she could maybe be in the top eight.” Jeffrey differs with Hill on what events she should competein. “I don’t really want to swim the individual medley (400 individual medley), just because it is so strong in Canada,” she said. “I’d like the 400 free. I think that’s my best shot.’' Jeffrey must place in the top two in one of the events she competes in to earn a trip to Atlanta this summer. “I don’t think she’s a medalist, but if she could get there she Could be in the top 16 in the world,” Hill said. “That's a pretty high level of achievement.” Final Four coaches enjoy stay at M arch M adness NEW YORK (AP) — A November loss to Massachusetts forced Kentucky to decide w hat kind of team it wanted to have this season. T he d ecisio n the W ildcats m ade got them started on a 27-game winning streak, a 32-2 record and, ultim ately, a place in th e F in a l F o u r a g a in s t U M ass in Saturday ’s semifinals. “We had a meeting after the UMass loss and I told the players there were tw o ways, we could go,” Kentucky coach Rick Pitino said W ednesday during a conference call for Final Four coaches. “With 11 talented players o f this caliber, it could either be very d ifficu lt for all o f us, or-w e could look at the Larry Bird and Magic Johnson philosophy to care only about the team. If we take the other road, we can reach our goals. And they chose the latter.” Before losing to Mississippi State in the S o u th e a s te rn C o n fe re n c e to u rn a m e n t, Kentucky won every game by double-digit m argins, m ost o f them by considerably more than 10. In the NCAA tournament, the W ildcats have won all four games by at least 20. B ut P itin o h a s n ’t fo rg o tte n U M ass’ impressive November victory. “I ’m enjoying the Final Four experience very much, except that w atching UMass on tape is not e n jo y a b le ,” he said. “It makes me sick. So 10 percent of the time, I ’m sick. The other 90 percent I’m having a heck of a time.” , Jo h n C a lip a ri, w h o w as h ire d at M assachusetts by a selection com m ittee that included Pitino, a UM ass alum nus, said he has tried to incorporate Pitino’s p h ilo so p h y o f m esh in g m any ta le n te d players. “We have a sign that says, ‘It’s amazing what can get done when no 6ne cares who g ets the credit,’’’ C alipari said. “O nly a great coach can get great players to sacri­ fice for the team. It’s difficult for people to understand how hard it is to get players to do that.” Mississippi State, which faces Syracuse in S aturday’s other sem ifinal, follow ed through with impressive victories over the S o u th e a s t R e g io n a l’s top: se e d s,: C onnecticut and Cincinnati, to reach the Final Four for the first time. All of that convinced Mississippi State and co a c h R ic h a rd W illia m s th a t th e S tark v ille, M iss., sc h o o l belongs rig h t where it is despite being the first fifthseeded team to reach the Final Four since 1982. “I knew we had talented players, and I th o u g h t if they learn ed th e ir roles and accepted their roles, that we could be a good team,” Williams said. “It didn’t hap', pen all at once. It was a gradual process,” Williams said he distinguishes between the kind of confidence his team has now and the confidence some teams put on for appearance sake. “W ith kids this age, co nfidence can sometimes be false,” he said. “They see it as a sign o f weakness if you don’t show confidence, even if it isn’t real. But as you win games, confidence increases. As you win games against quality team s, confi­ dence becomes more real.” The run of upsets by Mississippi State (26-7) has made the Bulldogs the favorite in Saturday’s semifinal against Syracuse (28-8), which is making its first Final Four a p p e a ra n c e sin c e 1987, w hen the Orangemen lost the final game to Indiana on a last-second basket by Keith Smart. “You can’t really say Mississippi State is a su rp rise th e w ay th e y h a n d le d Kentucky and Georgia in the SEC tourna­ ment,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. The Orangemen needed last-second shots in re g u la tio n an d o v e rtim e to d e fe a t Georgia in the NCAA. Syracuse’s 1991 loss as a No. 2 seed to 1 5 th-seeded R ichm ond w as one o f the biggest upsets in recent NCAA tournament history. But this year the Orangemen were given just a marginal chance to even make the field, “At the beginning of the season, I was w o rried ,” B oeheim said. “I thought we c o u ld w in 18 g am es, b u t I ra ise d my expectations because we played w ell. I knew it w ould be a long, long shot (to make the Final Four). But the tournament usually goes that way. There always seems to be a surprise team that sneaks in.” Classifieds Notice to our readers: Before . ANNOUNCE responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, M ENTS___________ you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press FREE MEDICAL School Ad­ cannot assume responsibility for the missions Seminar. View deans validity of die offers advertised in o f adm issions from Baylor, our classified section. For more Morehouse, Ohio State, SUNY. information and assistance regarding Improve your chances of ad­ the investigation of an advertisement, mission* get adyice from die ex­ please contact the Better Business perts; explore your financial aid Bureau at 264-1721. options, choose the right med­ ical school. FREE ADMIS­ SION. Thursday, April 4, 6pm MU Cinema. The top country for sheep in the world is Australia. c Source, Th e Top 10 o f Everyth in g Russell Ash AN N O U N CE FREE FINANCIAL aid! Over $6 billion in public and private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, in­ come or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F59184. Mesa Community College Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! Put it in the C lassifieds! APARTMENTS ANNOUNCE MENTS____________ OPEN: MIC Competition spon­ sored by MUAB's C ulture & Arts Com. is looking for en­ trants. Any talent is welcome. Grand prize is a trip for 2 to Las Vegas, Competition date is April 17 from 11:30-1:00. Pick up applications @ MUAB, 3rd fir. MU or call 965-6822. APARTMENTS 2BD APARTMENT Near Base­ line & Rural, small, quiet com­ plex. $475/mo. Call Je ff or Mike 967 3037. APARTMENTS LARGE QUIET 2bd apt., walk to ASU pool, laundry, 1 blk south Of University on 8th St. Cape Cod Apartments 9685238 ; HOMES FOR RENT 3BD, 1 112 BA. tile floors. 740 W. 9th St. $825/mo. Tim 8940288. • WALK TO ASU. 3 bd.. 2 ba. With pool. $900 month. 8940288. C la s s ifie d s W O R K ! EL DIABLO APTS. NE corner of Apache and McCliiitock quiet luxury living lbd $480, 2bd $550-600,921-0699. APARTMENTS daily State Press on MCC 2BD/2BA W/D, dishwasher, microwave, unfurn. $650/mo Avail, now 858-8771 Or (602) 91043810. ^ 3 MLS TO ASU* 2br/lba loft, frnshd, w/d, frplce, patio. $750 month to month. 9961125. CONDO FOR rent, 2bed lbath ns lg. patio w/d, pool prvt., nice Broadway & Dobson avail 4/1 $500/mo: 839-6115. HERMOSA PLACE, 2bd/2ba, walk/bike to ASU, w/d, pool, yard, clng fans $635, 9660987. APARTMENTS IT’S YOUR MOVE... • t s e t t le ^ h e b e s t ' Terrace Apartments LUXURY APARTM ENT FEATURES: ♦ M ini blinds ♦ Free h o t water ♦ Vertical blinds w ith valances ♦ Free cable TV-37 stations! ♦ Brass ceiling fans ♦ 3 pools, 2 spas ♦ European cabinetry ♦ 7 barbecue areas ♦ Walk-in closets available ♦ Covered parking ♦ Private batcony/patio ; ♦ Laundry facilities ♦ Security alarm systems available ♦ Large exercise room QUADDANGLE6 VILLAGE A PA R TM EN TS 1255 E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-8118 S.E. Comer, of University & Rural II you e a rn less th a n $24,000* p e r year, y o u m a y q u a lify to get a m o n th ly re n ta l d isc o u n t! C all Now! 1 block from ASU lb d room , l bath & 2 bdroom , 2 bath Apartm ents Now Taking A pplications for August □ns Apply IDA PROGRAM TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT call 968-6383 RENTAL SHARING RMTE NEEDED m/f, ns to , share beautiful 3bd/2ba home w/pool & w/d. Avail, now PAPAGO I, Roommate to share $350 + 1/3 util. Call Seth or 2bd/2ba condo. $360 + de­ Cort 838-8295 posit + 1/2 utils. M/F, no pets. Call Paul at 303-9545. Lve ROOMMATE M/F Wanted to message. share 3bd/2ba condo in Papa­ go Park during summer. RENTAL $300/mo + 1/3 util. Call Sarah or Kristen at 784-0791. Leave SHARING message. 26+ YR N/S Fern to share SCOTTSDALE $350, 1/2 util. 2br/2ba. gated cmplx on golf Own condo fully furn. w/pool, crs. Near Hayden & Osborn. w/d, ns 2bd/2ba 994-8229. $350 + 1/2 ut. Good ref. No pets. Lve msg at 994-4531. FEMALE NEEDED to share apt. 1 blk from ASU. Own rm/ba. $316+ 1/3 utl. Call 967-5899. LARGE CHANDLER home $350/mo incl. util. David 9021000 ext 8031/pgr 310-8060. M/F, 2BD, 1.5 ba, 2 lv I f urn, 1/2 mi ASU $275 + 1/2 util. Eric 894-0069. dont Pick u p your cop y o f the cam pus a t the entrance a t the adm inistration building. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT N/S, N/DRINK1NG single fe­ male looking for same to share 2 b d r/lb a apt in Mesa area. $225/mo. + 172 util. Call Cynthia 962-4906 leave mes­ sage. RMTE NEEDED asap! 2bd/2ba 15 miles to ASU $100 dep/ $275 + 1/2 util m /f 926-9387 lv msg. HOMES FOR SALE B uy o f t h e Week Papago Park - 3 Bed., N ew Carpet, Just steps from park - Hurry! $96,500 ROOM S FOR R|NT_ _ _ _ _ BEAUTIFUL LG 2bd apt. Very safe, near ASU. Free cable, laun­ dry, pool. Call 966-4797. 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 cons., natural stained woodwork, large LR and DR, large eat-in kitchen, marble window sills, 2 ovens, built-in stove and many more builtins/extras. This home is elegant and beautiful. $210,000, 1223 E. Sunburst Lane, Teittpe. Call 838-7890 for appointment. HUD HOMES, Free list, 3% dn. ASU area TJ Carty, Realty Ex­ ecutives 831-0322, 24hrs/7days Find it FAST in the C la ssifie d s Page 18 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE PAPAGO PARK Village I, I bd/lba, vaulted ceilings, nice. TJ Carty, Realty Exec. 8310322. M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE COPIER PANASONIC FP2520 excl cond, photo mode ADF cabinet enlarge $400 obo 3039307 FURNITURE MUST SELL Im mediately!!!! Blue/gray sleeper sofa grt. cond. $100 obo, white student desk $75 obo, cull Dwight or Vicki 921-3157. Lv. Msg. M OTO RCYCLES '94 MAGNA Sportscruiser. Bags, fairing, cust. paint. Show bike. $6000 OBO. 814-1309. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places worldwide. I also buy transfer­ able coupons/awards. 968-7283 BAGEL SHOP/DELI 10 minutes from ASU in Scottsdale seeks friendly, responsible peo­ ple to work counted & sand­ wich prep. Parttime mornings & afternoons Call 970-6165. EUROPE $249 BEAT THE Summer heat: wil­ derness trip leaders needed for boys camp in Northern Wis­ consin. Prior experience a must and climbing background pre­ ferable. Counselors also need­ ed. Skills in: archery, riflery, or tennis. Good pay, free room and board. Call 1-800-4801188. Be a little flexible and save $$$. W ell help you beat the airline prices. Destinations Worldwide. AIRHITCH ™ 800..397-1098, airhitch@netcom.com HELP WANTEDGENERAL 75MH PENTIUM 8megs of Rum, 1.2gig hd, 4x cd-rom, svga 14” mon, ink je t printer, 14.4 fax/mod, Sony 3piece sat­ ellite w/sub> Paid $3,100 w/warr. 777-9623. $-ALASKA JOBS-EARN to $3,000-$6,000/mo. Fishing In­ dustry. Transportation, room/ hoard. No experience neces­ sary. Male/female Age 18+ (310)285-0085 Ext. A-70401. LASER PRINTER- Epson Ac­ tion Laser $1600, 600 DPI, one yr. old, $480. Call 9687020 $-CRUISE SHIPS and Vacation resorts hiring. Earn to $3,000/mo. working for cruise ships, theme parks, tropical re­ sorts, etc. World Travel, trans­ portation, room/board. No exp. necessary. f 310)285-0085 extM-70401, TICKETS PHOENIX SUN$ & Milwaukee Fri night $25 & up San Anto­ nio Tnes. $35 & up Steve 678-: 0316. V ; RED HOT Chili Peppers. Great seats at great prices. Steve at 921-715Ò.. RED HOT Chili Peppers April 3 America West Arena; General adm ission floor or excellent lower level reserved seats near stage $40/ea. free delivery, cred­ it cards accepted. Call 2543300. / TRANSPORTATION LIMOUSINE Driver included, 6 passengers. $45/hr, min. 3 hours. 925'2497.. .• '■- AUTOMOBILES '92 BUlCK Riviera -red w/whiie landau roof, white leather 6way seats. Loaded price to sell fast at 14,900 oho - Call today won’t last 894-1237. ; ; ; 1988 SUZUKI Samurai for sale . -90k, custom wheels,: teal, gray . interior, am/fm cassette pull out deck. 4wd. just tuned up, new tags, call Carrie 994-5214. 88 IMPULSE 5spd. Runs great, AC, loaded Lotus Pkg, mbón-\ roof, $2700 obo 829-6654 $10 PER HOUR Weekends. Need a part time job with a full time paycheck? Give telemarketing a try. Now hiring for Saturday & Sunday shift. $10/hr guaranteed. 350-9110. $j 750 WEEKLY Possible mail­ ing pur circulars. For: info call 202-393-7723; V AIRPORT GIFTSHOP, Cashier/sales. Now hirifig f/t, p/t for our new store in international concourse. Good salary/benefits/id parking. Must have reg­ ister exp-. EQE. Call Patty 2.731803: M-F 8 5 p:m! ALASKA SU MMER Employ­ ment. - Fishing industry: Earn up to $3,000-$6,0Q0+ per ; month. Room and board! Trans­ portation! Male/female. No experi ertce necessary! (206) 971 3510: ext A59186. ASST COOK wanted for: sum­ mer camp, in N. Wisconsin commercial quantiy cooking exp. required good pay free room & board Call 1-800480-1188. AUTOMOBILES $T0P DOLLARS For Your Auto Today Call Brian Now BERGE HELP WANTEDGENERAL DO YOU Need a summer job? Look no further. Room, board, and salary provided. YMCA's Sky-Y Camp and Chauncey Ranch are looking fbr caring, motivated men and women to'~ work with children ages 7-17 in a resident camp setting. Counselbrs/program staff are needed for the following areas: mountain biking, archery, arts and crafts; riflery; low ropes course; pool horses. Call for more information and applica­ tion. 1-800-660-1385. DO YOU? Need s great part time job? 8:301:30/4-15-9:00. Must have ex­ cellent communication skills & some customer relations. Res­ ervation work, no selling. $8hriy. Sara 303-0939. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH Tech needed to work in alternative school/treatmeht program. Pàrt or full: time available. No wee­ kends or eves. Must be 21 w/yalid AZ drivers license. Re­ lated exp. or education useful. Send resume to: SWEC, 4260 E; Baseline Rd, Phoenix 85040. EARN $6-$l2/H R , flex hrs.; days only, Scotts. cleaning co. Car & phone a must: We’re fun. Start today. 451-1039. CHIROPRACTIC ASST, need­ ed for high energy office f/t bi­ lingual a + 955-2858. F/T, P/T, Temp, sub positions available at an agency for adults with mental and physical challenges. Call 994-5704. CLEANING, APARTMENT or house, part or whole residence. V ery - reasonable rate> 777-, 1177. y ~; ' CNA/ORDÉRLY-CARÈ FOR male quad. Eve & Weekend hrs. avail. $8/hr. Call 273-7695. F/T, P/T positions available providing assistance to adult individuals with mental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ efits & training, no exp. nee. Call 438-8617. 246-3499 I BUY ALL Used Cars/T rucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. 4 8 1 -9 0 5 3 HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL GRADUATE STUDENT Who can spend from April 1st '96 May '97 (Acceptable to start in June ’96) tutoring high school Spanish 1 & 2, high school Al­ gebra 1 and 2, and high school Chemistry. Must be able to teach all three of these subjects, not just one of them, pay from $8.00 to $12.00 an hour. Must be able to work at least two o f these days, possibly three days a week on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday from 1:30-8:30pm. Call - *953-3070 as soon as possible. Income possibility from lowest to highest estimate is $654-$ 1632 a month. Must have reliable transp. as location is in Scotts: Wonderful, steady position for' Master's or Doctor­ al student. GREAT SUMMER job working in luxury resorts. Many pos. avail, 1-800-750-6608 for info. GREAT SUMMER Job. Coun­ selor in M ain e,' outdoors. Coed staff. All sports, all ac­ tivities, -Land sports, waterfront áctivities, creative arts, Outdoor skills. Modern facilities, great pay. In-door gym, rock climb­ ing wall, water-skiing, 2 roller hockey rinks, and more. Call now 617*277-8080 Camp Ce­ dar. You can VIEW and SEARCH the State Press Classifieds on the Internet! GET TOMORROW’S PC skills now! Scottsdale internet, Amer­ ica Online, and Microsoft Net­ work provider seeks p/t and f/t online menu programmers/assistan ts. W e'll train. Need some htm i exp., & good DELI VERY DRIVERS & coun­ English skills^ Pay $6/hr ter help wanted $5/hr tb start + d.o.e. Internships, w/eburse $ 1 for riins & tips. Tempe. 945credits available. Fax resumes 8850, ■: to 602-970-1208. CRUISE SHIPS hiring! Students needed! $$$ + free travel (Car­ ibbean, Europe, Hawaii!, Gde. 919-929-4398 ext,C105R DESK: HELP, Part-time or fulltime for a motel. 273^712 L . DISTRIBUTE FLYERS to stud­ ent apartments around'ASU. P/T .$6.50/fir + bonus. Call Nick 838-2722., COMPUTERS ROCK GARPEN BPS Not fo r the normal! 50+ lines, chat, games, files! 222-3000 HELP WANTEDGENERAL tdg CASH TODAY!!! HELP WANTEDGENERAL FLEXIBLE HOURS. Leading NYSE firm has oppty. for pt. computer operator. 10-30 hrs./wki 2 $10 hr. Call 2651066 to sched; interview. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Fisheries, Parks, Resorts . now hiring! Earn to $3,000-$6>000+/mo! Airfare! Room/Board! FREE VIDEO w/program! State Licensed Service. Call (919) 932-1489, ext.Al H A V E F U N W ITH M U S IC O N T H E PH O N E. NO S A LES! $ 7 .< X )/H O U R TO ST A R T lO M IN U T E S . FRO M A S U . C A L L NOW 9 6 4 -4 0 0 0 . W O M EN A N D M IN O R IT IE S EN CO U RAG ED TO A PPLY. EO E HAS DONE IT AGAIN! Jittp://news. RESTAURANTS/ BARS 'Communication Assistants $6 DOWN $199.84 Per Mo. Must type 50 wpm Paid Benefits -: FT/PT NO SELLING! Paid Training $6.30 per hour - 929-4848 GOTTA GET A JETTA 1996 JETTA GL $0 DOWN $219.91 Per Mo. 48 month closed, end lease + tax. 104 per m ile over 40,000, Golf Stk# 6087. Residual $7246. total drive off $1314. Je tta Stk# 6148, Residual $10.556. total drive off $1386. BERGE VW 1515 W. Broadway • Mesa 833-0001 M e tro O n e Telecom m unications ...is seeking people with strong customer service skills to provide enhanced directory information service to US West Cellular customers. Ideal Candidates will demonstrate strong typing and spelling skills, good geographical knowledge of the Phoenix Metro area and the state of Arizona and have flexibility in scheduling. We offer a competitive compensation package and excellent benefits for qualified employees. To learn more about joining the rapidly growing team at Metro One Telecommunications, and to Schedule an interview please call our Phoenix Operation Center at. 225-9661 Mon. - Fri. from 8am - 6pm. NEEDED BARISTA for cdffee house in Old Town Scottsdale. Days & nights 994-1331. NURSING ASSISTANT beauti­ ful garden setting, all farmer's unit. If you have outstanding caring skills and are looking for a permanent future call Mar­ yland Gardens 265-7484 31 W. Maryland Phoenix AZ 85013. New wage scale. FRONT OFFICE Work in Tempe Dr.'S office, M-F parttime, Call 838-2277, RED EYE Jr. appral. is hiring assist, mgrs. and sales, in all Phx & Mesa locations. We offer excellent training. N/S env. Call Debbie 833-9207. SERVERS/ FOOD prep pt/ft days/evenings Mr. Anthony's Pizza, Mesa.. 464-1600 9am8pm The State P ress has a new World W ide W eb address: http://news. vpsa.asu.edu/ RESTAURANTS/ BARS Largest US firm seeking moti­ vated interns. 954-5064. MOTION PICTURE and tele­ vision shows hiring. .World travel: Transportation, room/board! No exp. necessary! (310)285-0085 ext M-70401. S W M 'S l'1/./.A WOODSHED II • New Times 1995 Best Neighborhood Bar • Over 100 Menu Kerns Se ■ 1 I PAS IA $2°o Where ASU Goes for Pizza I I I OFF ANY PIZZA I I I I ;;::;Ì2" or 16" 1 Coupon Per Pizza I Dine-ln or Pick-Up or $1 Off Delivery I 968-6666 I 1301 E. University r i . J U l TO N IG H T SA TELLITE^ Saturday Night Resort on South Mountain WAITSTAFF Nurse Rick A S S IS T A N T L Sunday Night b e a W a ite r o r W a itre ss. P " the 1 I CHADWICKS I BaUroa Cafe 404 S . Mill A ve. 966-1300 C a ll o u r J o b H o tlin e fo r m o re o p p o rtu n itie s: It's Finally Friday 2*for«1 D rin ks $3 Jumbo Pitchers CLUCKU Oil the patio... (5pm - 11:30pm ) 8 5 5 S . R u ra l • 8 9 4 -2 1 1 2 2 Med. P izzas with Cheese 99 $9 . 438-4)303 P le a s e a p p ly in p a rso n : 7 7 7 6 S . Pointe P arkw ay , Su ite 138 C lo ckto w er C o rpo rate C e n te r MERRILL LYNCH HELP WANTEDGENERAL ■ T f )The Ptrinte Monday. 8am-4pm Tues. & W eds.. 8am-12noon Human Resources Dept. LOOKING FOR high energy, positive pers. trainers, nutrition & sales people. Call Graceful Fitness 893-8041. U n iv e rs ity & D o b so n v a rie ty of d ifferen t sh ifts. 1996 GOLF GL KENNEL WORKER needed p/t. Must be neat, dependable. 7311 E. Thomas," Scottsdale 945-7692. Sun. & Mon. 8 4 4 -S H E D <206) 971-3550 ext.C 5 9 1 8 4 P re v io u s Fo o d & B e v e ra g e e x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d . M ust h a v e a v e ry fle x ib le s c h e d u le a n d b e a b le to w o rk a JOIN THE fastest growing tele­ communications company in America. Make good money saving your friends and family 30-50% on their long distance. It's simple and profitable. For an interview call Greg or James at 872-7639. • Upscale Atmosphere • All Appetizers on Happy Hour • 4 Satellites - 20 Screens • Home of the $1.25 Shot • 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE Students Needed! BANQUET SERVERS F/T HIGH-TECH TELECOM­ MUNICATIONS company in northwest Phoenix seeks pub­ lic relations, journalism or com­ m unications, major to assist with internal and external com­ munication, special events, community relations and con­ tributions, research and public relations planning. Position re­ quires 3.0 GPA in major, cours­ es in editing and publication design, PRSSA membership and photography skills are highly desirable. Send resume and writing samples by Wed­ nesday, April 17 to; Danielle Sittu, Manager, Communica­ tions Programs, AG Commu­ nication Systems Corp., Cor­ porate Communications Dept., 2500 W. Utopia Road, Phoe­ nix, Arizona 85027, RESTAURANTS/ BARS E a rn u p to $2,000-*-/m o . w o rk in g fo r C ru ise S hips or L and-T our com panies- S easonal a n d F ull-T im e e m p lo y m e n t available. N o e x p e rie n c e n e c e s ­ s a ry , a n d th e p o ten tial fo r g re a t in co m e a s w e ll a s th e tra in in g g ro u n d to HELP WANTEDGENERAL vp sa.asu. C R U IS E J O B S * CASH PAID for Car;» * Trucks * Vans run­ ning or not Call 499-7223. ; - HELP WANTEDGENERAL ASÜ STUDENTS Wtd, Short surveys. $6.00 basé, average $7-11/hr. Start now. 7842270. COMPUTERS MAC D ci 8MB ram, system 7.1 Daystar accelerator card 3Nubus slots extras! 481-3021 ex­ pandable to power pc $750. State P ress Friday, M ardi 29, 1996 EVERYDAY! Additional items $1.10 each L IV E J A Z Z T O N IG H T ! 8-10:30pm featuring... B eth L ed erm a n Q u a rtet B a n n o ii p iz z a Open Daily 11 am W e support a drug free w ork environm ent through pre-em ploy­ m ent drug testing. 22 oz. Imports $3.50 350-9122 EOE M/F/V/H 2 2 2 E . U n iv e r s it y D r. T e m p e • 9 6 7 -7 7 4 4 Corner of Lemon & Terrace - ASU Call for Delivery HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL SOCCER OFFICIAL. $25 per game, Mon. & W ed. nights from 6pm -11pm. Responsible for officiating and applying rules, of soccer for adult league. Experience officiating in adult leagues preferred. Immediate openings. Apply in person at City o f Tempe, Recreation Di­ vision, 3500 S. Rural Road (top floor of Tempe Public Li­ brary) Tempe, AZ (602) 3505200/ TDD (602) 350-5050. Subject to closing without no­ tice when needs o f City met. Equal Opportunity/ Reasonable Accommodation employer. VALET PARKING attendants for special events:2-3 nights/wk. Must be available weekend nights. At least 20 years old, good driving record, clean cut, w illing to drive to Scotts, Phoenix,^etc. Apply at 34 W. Dunlap m-f between 1:30-4:30. Directions to apply from Tempe: Squaw Peak Free­ way north to Glendale, go left to central, go right to Dunlap, go left. American Valet Co. is 1 1/2 blocks Up on the right. 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 Cim arron, Tucson, AZ 85750 520-577-7925. BEAUTICONTROL COSMETICS seeking motivated cosmetic reps. Share skin care, cosmet­ ics, color analysis, & image. Fiex. hours, ongoing training & support. For interview 8303535. TEMPE SPRING Festival of the Arts is currently seeking festi­ val workers for March 29th, 30th & 31 st. Parking, security & crew positions $6/hr. Karen 967-4877 ARIZONA BASED marketing & design firm seeks summer intern for salés and marketing dept. Must have good interpersonal skills. $8/hr. Fax cover letter and resume to C. Walker (602) 275-9556 Ä Visit the Knower at the Internet onlv com ic strip ? im 8 ? o e ro P age 19 Friday, March 2 9 ,1 9 9 6 State P ress http://news.vpsa. asu.edu/ HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICA L 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) OT-9556 HELP WANTEDFOO D SERVICE CLUCK U Hiring: patio bar staff, cocktail servers, bartenders & barback. Call 966-8460. Also hiring cooks, line persons & chicken mascots. App. @ 855 S. Rural Rd. '• \ CORKNCLEAVER by M a r c o n is 9 pm - 12:30 am • NO C O V ER • BANDERSNATCH 5th966& 44F3T st FREE LOST/FOUND HOUSTON’S RESTAURANT in Scottsdale hiring food servers & kitchen employees. Applica­ tions accepted 3-4 MondayThursday 922-7775. ' CRUISE SHIP Jobs. Apply now for summer, m/f. No exp. req. High pay/benefits. 1-800638-6845 ext. C0301 BICYCLE SEAT found on cam­ pus, Cull 274-3058, Describe the seat and where you may have lost it then its yours. NATIONAL PARKS Hiring Positions are now available at National Parks, Forests & Wil­ dlife Preserves. Excellent bene­ fits + bonuses! Call: 1-206-9713620 ext. N59182. LOST: LIGHT Gray cat. Male tabby stripes, green eyes, friendly, lost since 2-8-96. Re­ ward. Please call 675-5006. JAPANESE RESTAURANT looking for wait staff and cash­ iers for lunch Shift. 598-0506. MADISON’S IN Scottsdale now hiring waitstaff, barback. Apply in person 7108 E. Stetson. FULL & PART Time servers needed. Steve's Greenhouse Grill 139 E Adams 252-2742. RED ROBIN in Tempe has irned. opening for exp. waitstaff. Apply today i 375 W. El­ liot. HIRING FOOD servers, bus per­ sons, cooks. Apply within Na­ tive New Yorker 1301 E. Broadway Tempe. SERVICES ADOPTION T h in k a b o u t it! C h o o sin g th e rig h t fam ily to a d o p t y o u r b ab y in v o lv e s m o re than re ad in g a d s , c a llin g LIV E M U S IC ! JO B OPPORTUNITIES Accepting 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 appt. 5101 N. 44th S t 952-0585. HELP WANTED Deli person 20-30 hrs./wk flex. hrs. Ex­ perience preferred but not nec­ essary. Apply in person Capistranos Italian Deli 655 W. Warner Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene & Warner) 496-9044. 8 0 0 n u m b ers, and liste n in g to p ro m ise s from stra n g e rs w h o w an t y o u r b ab y. I'm an M AJERLE'S Hiring all positions, exp. nec, Apply in person between 9-11 & 2-4,24 N 2nd St, Phx. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE CHILDCARE PROFESSIONALare you fifed o f being unap­ preciated? Do you love the the kids you care for, yet have little support? Check us but- bene­ fits, good pay, family at­ mosphere. F/t, p/t. Call 451 0710. 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; JO B OPPORTUNITIES $35,000/YR. INCOME poten­ tial. Reading books. Toll Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext. R -1676 for details. a d o p tio n co n su ltan t w h o can h e lp y o u ch o o se th e rig h t a d o p tio n fo r y o u ft. SERVICES read ab o u t co u p le s ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by Syd n ey O m a n th e m , C a li u s to And o u t m o te, o p e n o r clo se d a d o p tio n s. Y o u C H O O S E ! Tam m y Friday, March 29,1996 ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr., 19): You could break record ! Scenario highlights drama, variety, intense rom a n t fe re 1at i on sh i p . L.un a r position em phasizes color, excitem ent, show m anship. Competitive Scorpio is on your side, .. \ TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20); Communicate with family mem­ ber who is. on record as saying, “No one pays attention to me!” Written material more important than originally anticipated. Legal guidance may be required. GEMINI (May 21 - June 20) C óüld be night o f love and laughter! Stay close to home, feature music, gourmet dining. Spotlight on lifestyle, residence, decision regarding marital status. Libra offers wise counsel. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Those who thought you were fooled are in for rude awakening. You’11 not only get the money but will expose charlatan. Virgo native offers analysis o f what’s going on. Victory ! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Steer clear of individual who promotes “sharp p ractice” in business. Focus chi organization, priorities, responsibilities, intense relation­ ship. Capricorn, Cancer persons play roles. VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22): Stress universal appeal, over­ come distance, language prob­ lems. Bring forth psychic capa­ b ilitie s— see tom orro w ! Romance relates to travel, atten­ dance at educational- health con­ ference. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Imprint style, be open-minded without being gullible. Wait only so long for laggards, slow peo­ ple. Take cold plunge into future! You’ll win friends and influence people, could hit jack­ pot. • SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21): Intuition serves as reliable guide. Adhere to unorthodox methods, procedures. Aquarian woman talks of emergency but is fakingLunar position; emphasizes pro­ motion, added recognition. SAGITTARIUS (Nov: 22-Dec. : 21’):' Start o f winning streak! Social activities accelerate, peo­ ple dem and your presetted, declaring in unison, “You’re fun • to be with!” Journey relates to ;romantic liaison-—protect self in clinches! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) : You’ll be asked to make financial decisions relating to partnership, business venture, marriage. Cancer, Leo persons figure in unusual scenario. Money and love play leading roles. AQUARiUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Mystery angle! You’ll discover secret hiding places, mystery unravels in surprising fashion, d o n ’t be cau g h t. off-guard ! Someone wants something for nothing—you’re prime target ! PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Attention revolves around; color coordination, d esign, m usic, necessity for beautifying sur­ roundings. Focus on residence, collecting money owed, marital status. Aries is in picture. IF MARCH 29 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: You are intuitive, unorthodox, relationship with mother was at times unusual. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius per­ sons play significant roles i n , your life. Current cycle relates to travel, art, fashion, political activity. You’ll be more popular, demands made on your time. D uring A pril vigor returns, you’ll be independent, dynamic, will exude sex appeal- Power struggle in May, you’ll emerge richer in experience and money. © 1996. Lpi> Angeles Times Syndicale 1 -8 0 0 -6 7 5 -3 4 0 7 WANTED MATH Analysis tutor for MDN H.S. student. Cull 831-8726. Hrs & $ flexi­ ble. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES HUGE INCOME. If I could show you a way to get free long distance serv. & earn huge home-based income, would you be interested?! For more info send SASEto: Pam Stedman 7722 S. Kachina Dr. Tem­ pe, AZ. 85284. Include your ph. # so I cun cull you w/date of upcoming meeting. To hear more details 1-800-942-9304 X 20500 & Ext. 20338. INCOME RAISING pian...result driven individuals...one time out of pocket. $100; Invest­ ment $ 100. to $500. daily-pay­ out. For appt. call Betty 9343607. VISA MLM Pays you $50 to join, no sign-up fee. Income p ot $T0,000/mo. 926-8874 ext.2. ' "■ ’/ / WORK FOR yourself! Process government refunds in your area. No exp. necessary. Above average incom e. 340-4070 24hrs. ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!« GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED BY PRIVATE SECTOR. BILLIONS O F DOLLARS IN GRANTS. T O QUALIFY CALL: 800-400-0209 M USIC LOST: TAN & Black female Tabby cat, green eyes, thin, friendly. Lost since 2-8-96. Reward, Please call 675-5006. LOST: DISNEY watch, possi­ bly at MU. Reward, please call 784-8023. P gR S O N A g^^ DELTA GAMMA will kick the duck out of you in Duckball. Love your coaches, Todd, Troy, Nick and MJ. FREE MEDICAL School Ad­ missions Seminar. View deans of adm issions from Baylor, Morehouse, Ohio State, SUNY. Improve your chances of ad­ mission, get advice from the ex­ perts, explore your financial aid options, choose the right med­ ical school. FREE ADMIS­ SION. Thursday, April 4, 6pm MU Cinema. “ “ GUITAR 12 STRING Yamaha w/ hard case; Rarely played, like new. $250 obo. 894-2639 PROFESSIONAL RESUMES at student prices. CareerPRO Re­ sume Center 21,11 E; Broadway #7 967-7760. SCOTT YOSHIMURA-SPRITUAL therapist. Thurs, Fri, Sat at Liquid Carma. Ang ?'s 8580888 TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G AAA TYPING/ word processing. $1.50/page. 15 years experience. Fast turnaround. Call 962-8075. AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports, theses, resumes. Fast turnaround. Townsend W/P, Maureen, 955-0969. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. PRO. WORD Processing, term papers. Fair fates, accurate APA/MLA S&LWP 831-1384. TUTORS DON’T PANIC! You can still save your grade in MAT 106210 by calling Miracle Tutor­ ing at 967-1236. E-mail: tutor­ ing® indirect.com WANTED HAPPY 20TH Birthday Jaime!!!! Let's party hard til we drop! Love, Jenny, Reana, Car­ olyn THE LADIES of Z Z t will take first place at Delta Upsilott's flagfootball tournament. SERVICES RESTAURANTS/ BARS COUNTRY GLAZED Ham now hiring ft/pt sales clerks. Apply 2-5, M-F at 2501 E. Camelback Rd. Flex, scheduling. y o u r b a b y . W ith u s y o u b efo re y o u sp e a k to SERVICES HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE INFANT CARE Devoted mom of a 6mo. girl will care for your baby, too with lots of love & attention. Jennifer 56th St & Thomas $ 125/wk 840-8204. LADIES: ARE you lonely? How to improve your lovelife in 30 days, or less. W rite to: Box 85280-1040 Tempe, AZ 85280 .. : " r * - NEED CASH? We will buy your used musical instrument. Top $$ Paid. 548-1114. MSat, 10-6 ' INTERNET URLS ASU FINANCIAL AID Interac­ tive Service may be reached at: http://www.asu.edu/fastt/ ENTRANCE TO the Shake­ speare Web http:/www.Shakespeare.com/ INTERNETRELATED SERVICES THE INTERNET Is a business opportunity. 905-0294: Mon­ day-Friday. ASU Box 87150 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-8484 State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form N am e Hom e Phone B u sin e ss Phone A d d ress C ity, State Zip P le a se print one letter per box, le av e a blank box betw een w ords. P lease be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly a s you wish it to appear in the State Press, Including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds will be given, but 1f you need to cancel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. r-» ìÀ W e*** Include Private Party 1-4 days, $1.35 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1,30 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day R A T E S Commercial 1 day, $2.20 per line 2-4 days, $1.65 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.40 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.25 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Oates vou w ish vour ad to run: □ OB Price per Day Bank Card Number * # of Days X . ' ■' Total i* Classification Nama/Number: MUAB & ZIA RECORD S PRESENT: BARENAKED LADIES LIVE IN THE M.U.! MON. 4/1 @ 12:40pm - NO APRIL FOOL'S! Name on Card Expiration Data Sorry, we cannot accept personal ads through the mall. P age 2 0 Friday, March 29, 1996 S t a t e P r e ss No sugary purees Come to Juice Stop and pick up a FREE sample of our No sweetened fruits specially formulated juices No smoothie mixes 725 S. Rural Rd. • 968-2855 We have gone to great lengths to satisfy you in ways that cannot be matched by other juice establishments. Juice Stop manufactures its own specially form ulated yogurts and vitam in-fortified sherbets. This enables us to cut the calorie count o f our frozen yogurt in HALF by using proprietary ingredients produced by our own culinary experts. Juice Stop has re-developed its juice formulations and constantly meets with growers to pick the most succulent fruits so that you w ill continue to get the quality o f all-natural products that you deserve as a health-minded consumer. W e challenge you, as an experienced smoothie consumer, to take our "Cham pion's Challenge." W e invite you to try every smoothie on our menu, and if you are not com­ pletely satisfied w ith a selection, we w ill replace it w ith your favorite smoothie at no cost to you. N O QUESTIONS ASKED! Sam ples of O ur Lineup Grand Slam: O range, strawberry, banana and yogurt blend Slap Shop: A sweet cranberry, strawberry, blueberry, raspberry and orange combination Touchdown: A smooth raspberry and yogurt mix Each smoothie includes 2 FREE extra points: Brewers Yeast • Ginseng • Rice Bran • O at Bran • Bee Pollen • Lecithin • Calcium • W heat Germ • Egg • Protein Powder • Power Pack (2 points) • Spirulina (2 points) • Vitam in C Juice Stop Juices Apple Juice PineappleJuice W atermelon Juice M ango Juice C ranberry Juice O range Juice Raspberry Juice C arrot Juice Papaya Juice Guava Juice G rapefruitJuice 8 Vegetable Blend W HEAT GRASS SHOTS