Inside Sports W orld/N ation C lib sifitth ........ J— C om ics. . . . . . . . ..1 2 Crossunjrd.............\. . . . . . to Morosi upes mmmmi Opinu-n .. . Police R eport........ m rnm m Sports...... ............ ..............D W o m e n ' s g o lf team captures SECOND AT PING/ASU I n v it a t io n a l Page 13 Space Shuttle m is s io n TO BE CUT SHORT P age 3 ©CópyrigW, State Press, 1997 . Témpe, Arizona . Monday, April 7,1997 An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 81 No. 118 Ortiz, M addin to com p ete in ASASU ru n -off By L idia E. Kelly State P ress Associated Students o f ASU presidential hopefuls Andy Ortiz and Brent Maddin will face each other in a runoff after surviving the initial election last week. The results w ere announced Friday am idst a flurry o f claims o f election code violations. Ortiz finished first with 1,234 out o f a total of 3,518 Votes cast Maddin followed with 968 votes. To win thè election, a candidate needs 50 percent of the votes plus one. Joshua Carr beat out Adrian Fontes for executive vice president. Audrey Church defeated Richard Bosco in her success­ ful hid for campus affairs vice president. Autumn Ness and Erik Noland will compete head to head in a runoff for activities vice president. Elections are scheduled for April 15 and 16. “I am very, very excited." Ortiz said. “1 am happy stu­ dents trust experience.” He attributed the high number of votes cast in his favor to his focus on groups that historically have low turnout — such as Native Americans and engineering and internation­ al students. "They were the sleeping giants,” Ortiz said. Maddin said he fell good about the results. "1 think that students appreciated the signs 1 have had,” Maddin said. "I put my platform on them and that reached many more people than 1 could have talked to personally.” Both candidates said that since the race is not over, their main focus will be on a strong and effective campaign. Both candidates also face charges brought to the atten­ tion o f the elections commission. Ortiz, will confront accusations brought by Elections Coordinator Chip Ahlswede that he neglected to include T urn to E lection , pag e 2. ^ : Erik Guzowski/State Press ASASU Presidential candidate Brent Maddin gets a hug from newly elected campus affairs vice president Audrey Church on Hayden lawn Friday. Maddin will face Andy Ortiz in a runoff for the presidential spot. Student input sought for ABOR tuition meeting B y V ivi Stenberg State P ress The Arizona Board of Regents is getting ready to set tuition for next year and ASU students have a chance to influence the out­ come at an on-campus meeting Thursday. ABOR will host a multi-site tuition hear­ ing, where representatives from the three state u niversities can testify on tuition, financial aid and other financial m atters through interactive television. “i t ’s a great chance for students to par­ ticipate in the tuition-setting process,” said Christine Thompson, executive director of the Arizona Students Association. Thompson said ASA is recommending a tuition increase between zero and 2 percent. The group has also taken a stand against suggested tuition increases at the ASU and UofA law schools. Students can comment on any proposed tuition increases at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Room 328 of the College of Business C-wing. ASA has also suggested regents move away from the traditional comparison of other state’s tuition levels. Instead, the regents should consider quality issues, Thompson said. “We’re a unique state that has a constitu­ tional provision to provide students with as nearly free education as possible,” she said. An ABOR study group that reviewed the tuition setting process developed a policy requiring universities tp reveal their list of pri­ orities a tuition increase would pay for. In previous years, students have had to respond to tuition hikes without having the insight as to how the increase would benefit or malign them. ASU Provost Milton Glick said President Lattie Coor will present the list of priorities prior to the Thursday meeting. Glick said that although he had not reviewed the bud­ get appropriations concerning tuition, he did not anticipate a large increase. Thompson said the relatively large appro­ priation from the state Legislature was the rea­ son ASA recommended the low tuition hike. “Boy, would we be happy if we could avoid a new tuition increase,” Thompson said. The regents are expected to set final tuition during their meeting at ASU East April 24 and 25. Wave p o o l aids Navy, en v iro n m en t studies B y B en L eatherman State P ress Leonard Montenegro stands in the wave tank that has been drained so that better observational lighting can be installed. Montenegro helped design and build the wave research tank for the Technology Center. . In one o f ASU’s many laboratories, a chunk of military money allows some sci­ entists to hang around a pool all day. They recently discovered that more cash is on the way. R esearchers w ith the E nvironm ental F luid D ynam ics Lab used a three year, $3 5 0 ,0 0 0 g ran t from th e U S. N avy in March 1995 to construct a 140-foot water tank to study the physics o f waves’ for the Office of Naval Research. The group was aw arded an additional $100,000 last week, which was requested to augment the projects and bring more stu­ dents on board. Currently, three graduate students are involved with the project. Construction of the tank, which takes up two rooms at the Technology Center, began in April 1995. Researchers began doing the wave last October. L e o n a rd M o n te n e g ro , p r o fe s s o r o f mechanical engineering, said the military w ants to know how tid es in teract w ith objects, such as m ines, th a f could w ash ashore. However, there will also be some civilian uses. “W e’ll test some military applications, b u t th e re w ill be som e e n v iro n m e n ta l research, such as beach erosion,” he said. T urn to W av es , pa g e 2. S tate P ress Monday, April 7,1997 P age 2 Election__ _ T oday C o n t in u e d Cam pus clubs and organizations m ay sub m it w ritte n e n trie s to th e S tate Press in th e basem ent of the M atthew s C enter, R equests will not be taken over d ie phone or via t o Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries vwB not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entiles must contain tire full name of the club or organization, a descrip­ tion of the event, date, tim e and the fu ll a d d re s s o f th e lo c a tio n . A il req uests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calen­ dar of events printed as a service to th e A Sl|»com m unity. R equests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • C areer S ervices — Marketing your L ib e ra l A rts D e g re e W o rksho p a t 1 2:40 p.m . in M U 2 1 2 . Com pleting the Puzzle Workshop at 4 p.m. in the C areer Development Center. • C o lle g e o f L ib e r a l A rts a n d S cien ces — Council meeting at 4:30 p .m . in the M U G ila room , second floor. • G o ld e n K e y N a tio n a l H o n o r S o c ie ty — G eneral m eeting at 5:30 p .m . in to e M cC lin to ck H all Study Lounge. • M UAB G a lle ry C o m m itte e — Meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the MU con­ ference room 1 A, third floor. • C h ristian S cience O rg an izatio n — M eeting at 4:30 p.m. in the Danforth Chapel. • C o alitio n o f Ju stice and Peace — Meeting at noon in M M ohave. • O R A L in te rp re te r's T h e a te r — “B reathing Life into L iterature” «A 1 4 p.m. fn>Stauffer Hail 318. • Malaysian Students’ Association — ■Expo M alaysia '9 7 from 1 0 a ^ ^ to 3 p .m . in th e S o u th ea st c o rn e r o f Hayden Lawn. • SCA College of B r y m s t o n n e | Medieval and renaissance dance prac­ tice at 6:30 p.m. hi MU Yavapai 209. H a b ita t fo r H u m a n ity C a m p u s C h ap ter — G eneral m eeting at 5119 p.m. in the MU meeting room, second floor. • Collegiate National Association of the Deaf — T ic ke ts fo r th e form al b a n q u e t “G o o d V ib ra tio n s ” a t to e Buttes Hotel on April 26 at 6 p.m . a te $ 4 5 . For m ore info and tickets call 921-1561. • AFL-CiD Union Summer —• If you interested in working for a union dur- :• ing th e su m m er o r a s a p o s s ib le career opportunity see Lisa Fareila a t . th e M U M u ltic u ltu ra l c o n fe re n c e room. • Students Towards Educational Progress Honor Society — G eneral m eeting w ill have D r. Louise B aca speaking on racial ethnic d evelo p ­ ment at 4:30 p.m. in MU Pinal 215. • Muslim Student Association — Movie showing: Book o f Science will be a documentary exploring the rela­ tionship between science and religion with discussion of Islam at 4 p.m . in the MU Theater (Basem ent). • Kundalini Yoga Club — Meeting at 7 p.m . in M U Gold 203, will discuss the weekend retreat planned fo r the last weekend of April (26th & 27th). • C ounselor T ra in in g C en ter — Free counseling available for full-tim e s tu d en ts an d s ta ff a t P a y n e H a ll, room 402. For more information o r an appointment, call 965-5067. OVAL OFFICE D REAM S? MUAB SELECTION Process Sch Committee Chairperson Applications Due Interviews for Committee Chairpersons from pag e 1. item s on his fin a n c ia l sta te m e n t. A dditionally, M addin and his staff filed three other complaints accusing Ortiz repre­ sentatives of campaigning illegally . Maddin, however, said he plans to with­ draw the complaints today. “I think the elections should be decided by voters — not by disqualification of a candidate,” he said. “The other reason is that the complaints are against Andy’s staff and I don't think Andy himself was aware of the illegal actions.” Richard Golden, a staff member of for­ mer presidential candidate Damon Pace, also filed charges against O rtiz ’s staff, alleging they campaigned within 75 feet of polling booths. “It is not against Andy,” said Golden, a junior political science and sociology major. “But if he is in the run-offs, he needs to be aware that his campaign manager is a jerk.” College o f Education Sen. Craig Reid filed a complaint against run-off contender Maddin accusing him of campaigning over the Internet and using an honors college email list. “Chip told all o f us this was w rong,” Reid said in the complaint. Reid is asking the election commission to assess Maddin 120 penalty points. Other complaints also have been filed against activities vice presidential candi­ d a te s A utum n N ess and E rik N oland. Several other former candidates for execu­ tive and senatorial positions also face com­ plaints. O pen h earings for com plaints begin today. Waves C o n t in u e d from pa g e 1. “It’s the study o f the motion o f the solid o b je c ts and th e ir in te ra c tio n w ith the waves.” ' Small model mines used in the 10,000 gallon tank are batted about by w aves generated by a com puter-controlled pad­ dle, which can generate any type of wave. The w hitecaps, which can reach am pli­ tudes o f 3 feet, are then analyzed for how they break as well as how the objects mix with the makeshift sand beach at one end o f the pool. Approximately 6,000 gallons of filtered water arew used during a session. Researchers Don Boyer and Bill Huston have analyzed enough data to come up with a mathematical model that indicates how. a particular wave type moves. Montelnegro said their results are com­ pared with field studies conducted by the N av y ’s C o astal D ynam ics P rogram in Mississippi. “ W e’ll start the erosion portion this summer, which will help to see what kind of forces the wave has on the beach mate­ ria ls , su ch as ro c k s and s a n d ,” Montelnegro said. The project lasts until December, but researchers plan to apply for an additional three years of funding. Even if their attempt fails, Montelnegro said they will continue to use the pool for environmental studies. O p in io m l F o r u m ASASU E S IB E N T I DEBATE M U PR O G R A M M IN G LOUNGE Spring Banquet/ Inaguration A real debate, moderated by a real talk show host m rnnsm LOCATED ON TOP OF THE UNION! MU • 3RD FLOOR 965*6822 RECREATION CULTURE t* ART SPECIALEVENTS GAUERV COMEDY ______ W orld/N ation_______ Monday, April 7,1997 S tate P ress D eterioratin g fiielUfeell cu ts _________________________________ _ _ _ P a g e _ 3 s h o r t m is s io n Holloway said a M ondaylanding Was Control first had the astronauts reduce the ruled out in rader to allow fo r an orderty power load on the degraded fuel cell, But C A PE CANAVERAL, Fla. ~~ Space retorn, and because Columbia’s two other th e v o lta g e c o n tin u e d ' to d w in d le . shuttle Columbia and its seven astronauts electricity-producing fuel cells Were work­ E ngineers debated a-few hours before deciding to shut down the unit’ once will return to Earth on Tuesday, 12 days ing fine. The fear was that hydrogen Atei and turned off, It cannot be restarted in the earlier titan planned, because o f a deterio­ rating and potentially" explosive pow er oxygen in the degraded generator could event another fuel cell fails. W hile a shuttle can land safely with mix, overheat and blow up if voltage in generator. It is only the thhd tin » in space shuttle the unit dropped far enough. Flight con- two fuel cells, it’s uncertain what would history that a mission has been cut short hollers had the astronauts turn off the unit happen if only one fuel cell was available Sunday to reduce, i f not elim inate, th at because of all the vital systems that would by equipment failure. W hile NASA co n sid ers com m ander risk. The crew also shut down all non-crit- have to be shut down for lack o f power. Each $5 million fuel cell uses hydrogen Jam es Hal sell Jr. and his crew to be in tip ical equipment to conserve powef. “O ur plans would Ite to manage this and oxygen to generate electricity for the immediate danger, shuttle managers did not Want to take any chances w ithtbe gen­ Atei udii in a way that’s not a threat to numerous shuttle systems, and produces erator and, on Sunday, cut short the J6H , crew safety and, indeed, we m e extremely W ater . a s a b y p ro d u c t, N a tio n a l confident in t i » two rcm ahtisg.toet cells A eronautics and Space A dm inistration day science mission. "The conservative thing to do is land and their ability to support an orderly and flight rules stipulate that aH three fuel cells on Tuesday,” shuttle program m anager methodical preparation for landing, and be working properly in mbit, otherwise a mission m ust be cut short. j | Tommy Holloway announced at a hastily landing,” Holloway stud. '¡JfSs M ission Control had been monitoring To slow the decline in voltage. Mission arranged new s conference. B y M arcia D unn Associated P ress toe mysterious decline in voltage In tito fuel cell since Friday’s liftoff. A s i t bans out, brief jumps in voltage- were detected ia toe unit several hours before launch, but m a n a g e rs d eterm in ed it w as w orking properly and cleared Columbia to r flight. H olloway adm itted that “wit&*20-2fl hindsight,”, toe Countdown should have been halted and the fueL céll replaced. Launch controllers made toe best decision at the time with the data available, he said. Engineers have no idea why the fuel cell slowly was losing voltage. The unit; has fioWU before in space without problems. . A failed fuel cell forced an early land­ ing during NASA’s sécond shuttle flight in 1 9 8 1 in that case, the unit was flooded with water. The only other time a shuttle mission w as cut short for equipment fail­ ure was in 1991, because, o f a failed navi- Blizzard halts movement on northern Plains B y J eremiah G ardner A ssociated P ress BISMARCK, N.D. — A blizzard shut down much of the northern Plains on Sunday with blinding wind-blown snow and drifts up to 20 feet high, stranding travelers and making life miserable fra- volunteers sandbagging flood-threatened towns. H u n d red s o f m iles o f h ig h w ay s w ere c lo se d in Wyoming, the Dakotas, Nebraska and the eastern edge of Montana. Thousands were without electricity. The blowing snow rebuilt drifts that had begun melting after a winter of record snowfall. “My mailbox is probably 30 yards away. At tim es I can’t see it,” said Chad Klinske, who lives about a mile outside Grafton, N.D. "My drifts that were down to 4 or 5 feet are now 12 feet.” With the electricity off, Klinske had to borrow a genera­ tor to run a small space heater and run the sump pump keeping water out of his basement. “ Right now. I'm walling off the living room with cush­ ions from the couch, to try to reduce the area I’ve got to heat,” he said Sunday afternoon' Snowbound day-shift employees couldn't get to work Sunday at the Elim Nursing Home in Fargo. The overnight crew put out a call for help from people in the neighbor­ hood, and 15 to 20 volunteers showed up, administrative assistant Louise Swanson said. "They’re making beds. They’re helping feed the residents and just doing whatever they can to help,” Swanson said. North Dakota Gov. Ed Schafer asked President Clinton to declare the state a disaster area. “We’ve got the whole state virtually paralyzed,” he said. Across the state line in west-central Minnesota, dikes failed throughout much of Breckenridge during the night, letting the Red River pour as much as 3 feet deep into streets. Most o f the downtown was knee-deep in water and snow-crusted ice, and parked cars were frozen in place. Hundreds o f people had been evacuated in Breckenridge because o f the flood caused by melting snow from previous Jo h n D avis/A ssociated P ress People help each other free cars stuck in the snow Sunday, In Aberdeen, S.D., as snow and winds in excess of 40 miles per hour create blizzard conditions in the area. Most of eastern South Dakota, including Aberdeen, spent the last week dealing with flood­ ing from snow melt when the spring snow storm hit early Sunday. storms, and others were stranded by the blizzard, police Chief Dennis Milbrandt said Sunday. Temperatures were in the 20s and the wind-chill was below zero. “W e’ve had officers going door-to-door with chest w aders,” M ilbrandt said. “We thought about boats, but there’s so much ice and wind, we’re concerned about that. We don’t want to put anybody else in danger.” In M o n te v id e o , M in n ., 100 m iles so u th e a st o f B reckenridge, w aves driven by 40 mph w ind Crashed against dikes along the bloated Minnesota River, splashing volunteers as they piled sandbags and coating their clothing and men’s beards with ice. It doesn’t get any worse than this. We had flooding last week, but that was in warm weather. This is bad,” said Ronald O lson, a volunteer firefighter from Clara City, Minn., who was piling sandbags in Montevideo. A t W aterto w n , S .D ., L ake K am peska, fed by the swollen Big Sioux River, had reached a record 42 1/2 inches above the full mark and residents of a 30-block area were urged to evacuate. s M ost highways w ere closed in North Dakota, includ­ ing all 600 m iles o f Interstates 94 and 29. A m trak’s E m pire Building passenger train was stranded in Fargo by signal failures. Army drops charge that Aberdeen female private lied B y D avid P ishneau A ssociated P ress A B E R D E E N PR O V IN G G R O U N D , Md. — The Army on Sunday dropped its allegation that a female trainee lied about having sex with an instructor. The Army said the charge against Pvt, Toni M oreland w asn ’t a p rio rity and it didn’t want to bring in an out-of-town wit­ ness The so ld ie r’s attorney accused the Army o f ducking a confrontation over its investigation of the Aberdeen sex scandal. M s. M oreland, 21, p lead ed g u ilty to other minor charges Sunday at a summary court-martial, the lowest level o f military court. She was sentenced to 16 days in a military prison and fined $300. M s. M o relan d w as th e firs t o f five Army privates who accused Army inves­ tigators o f trying to bully them into false­ ly claim ing they were raped by instruc­ tors a t the weapons training school at the A rm y ’s A b e rd e e n P ro v in g G ro u n d in northern Maryland. M s. M oreland was charged w ith two counts o f making a false statement after she recanted a sworn statem ent that she had co n sen su al sex w ith S ta ff Sgt. M arvin Kelley. She repeated Sunday that she never had sex with Kelley and signed the state­ m ent only to appease investigators. She said investigators were pressuring her to claim he raped her. Consensual sex between superiors and subordinates is prohibited in the military . No ch arges w ere filed b ased on Ms. Moreland’s original statement. Army officials have denied that investigators tried to force false accusations from interview subjects. K elley has been ch arged w ith o th er offenses, including adultery and obstruction of justice. M s. M o re la n d ’s a tto rn e y , S tu a rt Robinson, suggested the Army was ducking a confrontation over the tactics used by investigators. “It gives absolute credence to the char­ acterization o f how the investigation was handled,” by the Army’s criminal investiga­ tions division, he told reporters outside the courtroom. M s. M oreland said she reg retted not being able to face the investigators. “I believe they’re trying to make some kind of example o f things that happened here. I think they got carried away,” she told reporters. One false-statement count was dropped because the government didn’t want to fly in at least one out-of-town witness, accord­ ing to Maj. Susan Gibson, the second-high­ est legal adviser at Aberdeen. The court-martial’s presiding officer dis­ missed the other count because' it was too vague and because Ms. Moreland piay not have been properly advised of her rights. M s. G ibson said proving the charges wasn’t a high Army priority. “This is just a summary court. We don’t ordinarily bring witnesses back for summa­ ry courts,” she said. M s. M oreland was co n v icted o f one count each o f being absent without leave, failing to report for extra duty, disobeying an order and breaking restriction to certain areas of the post. __________ O pin io n _________ _ Eaftorial Page 4 ___________________________ Monday, April 7, 1997 ; _____ t______‘_________________ StaTE_PreSS , Ballots were cast b u t voting season is not over F in ally, electio n s are over! We can fo r g e t a b o u t m a k in g to u g h d e c is io n s affecting the entire A S U population and concen­ trate on our ow n liv es, right? Sorry, it*s not over hew ! ■ yetT he stu d en ts o f A SU w ill fa c e tw o m ore episodes which could change things around here for die next year — the A ssociated Students o f A SU runoff elections and the upcoming tuition increase. The circus that is the 1997 A ssociated Students o f A SU elections w ill stay in town a bit longer. Not only are many o f the candidates facing com plaints filed against them , but there w ill a lso be runoff elections for die positions o f president mid activi­ ties vice president. Students can again vote April 15 and 16. For those students who would like to represent themselves to an organization determining the fate of "tuition money next year, there win be a meeting on Thursday. The Arizona Board of Regents plans to hear testimony via a multi-site interactive TV meeting, in which students can participate. The Arizona Students’ A ssociation is suggesting an increase som ewhere between K ao to 2 percent. N ow , when w e hear die words ‘tuition increase,’ w e sim ultaneously sigh in disgust. But in doing the math, the increase is really very slig h t Here’s som e help ft» those without a calculator. Rounding the increase to 2 percent and basing it on 1997 spring fees for students taking 12 or m ore credit hours, w e find the increase w ould mean an additional $19.40 paid by residents o f A rizona and another $83.08 paid by out-of-state students. Thar would mean a resident w ould pay $ 9 8 9.40 and a non-resident would pay $4,237.08. Som e students m ay feel A SU is already sticking it to us, but w e feel that a 2 percent increase or less is really quite fair. N ow if anyone suggests a larger increase, then w e doth protest. “Yeah, that does sound fa r, h it then w hy should I g o to th is m eetin g on T hursday? W hat’s th e point?” a student m ay ask. There are plenty o f reasons. F ast o f all, attend­ ing th is m eeting sh ow s in terest and concern in tuition matters. Secondly, students need to support a lo w to n il tuition increase or tire pow ers that deckle the increase m ay believe it doesn’t matter to us and instate a higher tuition increase. K eep in m ind that w hat A SA suggests is not necessarily what ABOR initiates. Students pay a good deal o f m oney to attend this U n iversity; therefore, th ey h a v e ev ery right to express their opinions and concerns about tuition increases. Som e have n o problem expressing those opinions w ith friends during lunch, but opinions need to be voiced to d ie right people. W e urge the students o f A SU to attend the m eet­ ing cm Thursday and let ABOR know the concern about tuition increases. I f A SA SU is important to you, then g o vote again in the runoff elections. The pessim ist in us says m aybe these steps w on’t mat­ ter, but you w on’t know if you don’t tty. S STATE PRESS [f| A C E Positive actions result from attitude Have you ever wondered what makes people successful? Have A yflCHELLEi you ever thought o f a person’s j V / i HARDT language as a prime factor — the Columnist way a person uses language in their every day life and especial­ ly in the work force? A c c o rd in g to 'S te v e C h a n d le r, it d o e s. C h a n d le r gives self-im provem ent sem i­ nars across the country. He is also the author o f 100 Ways to M o tiva te Y d u r s e lf. M y fath er re c e n tly a tte n d e d one o f his se m in a rs, a fte r w h ich he and I d is c u s s e d w h at he learned froth this hum orous speaker. Chandler’s concept is that language is a key factor in whether or not a person succeeds. One o f his examples was the difference in people who over-use the word “should.” These people tend to say things like, “W ell, I should fin is h th is b e fo re th e w e e k e n d , b u t I can do it on M onday.” Or one that is spoken quite often is, “ I should lose weight.” The opposite, o f course, are people who say, “I’m going to finish this before the weekend because then 1 won’t have to worry about it on Monday.” 1 suppose the idea he is trying to get across is that people speak what they believe of themselves. The “should” in the first example signifies a realization o f the necessity to do something, but a lack of desire and motivation to do so. Have you ever noticed that people who over-use the word “should” usually say these kinds o f things their whole lives, but never really get around to doing them? Essentially, motivation is brought on only through a pos­ itive attitude. If you know that things need to get done and you never get around to doing them (procrastination), then you are bound to have somewhat o f a negative attitude about things and the effort it takes to accomplish them. The only way to make a difference and to take action is to change. You can’t just say that you will change — you have to change. This not only means your outlook on life, but the way you speak, your attitude and possibly even your atmosphere. Have you ever realized how hard it is to break a bad habit when you are constantly surrounded by things that remind you of this habit? This usually tends to wear down a person, and causes the person to give in and fall into the opportunity to change, causing them to come up short in their desire to better themselves. Technically, Chandler is a professional speaker and writ­ er who teaches workers and employees through seminars sponsored by well-noted companies about how to succeed. He presents ways and steps in which they can accomplish this. He tries to motivate them to better themselves and make a difference in their lives and in the company they work for. Another factor besides language that he men­ tioned was creativity. ■ M ost people don’t think o f them selves as creative. His definition o f a creative person is any individual who has an im agination. This should classify every living individual. You w ould be surprised, though, to know that the few people who do think that they are creative usually- work harder, enjoy their work and are therefore happy and successful. If you can imagine several middle-aged people in one lecture room, listening to this speaker and taking notes on how to better their lives and make themselves more successful, you will realize how effective this speaker and topic are. Sure, it takes time and effort, but these people are ordi­ nary people like you and-me, too. Everyone wants to be happy and work in a happy atmosphere. His suggestion was to sing “Zippidee Doo Dah,” instead of the song his son lis­ tens to, which has lyrics having something to do with rage and being a “rat in a cage.” We may not be able to change our atmosphere or our job. but we can certainly be more positive wherever we are. Everyone has a given birthright to be happy. So find your song. Sing it as loud as you can and get your family, room­ mates and co-workers to sing along with you. Don’t hesi­ tate because you want to be macho and not look like an idiot. Believe me, if you are worried about what other peo­ ple think, you will never truly be happy. Michelle Hardt is a freshman studying journalism and can be reached at zeekl@ asu.edu. BRIAN ANDERSON, Editor DUSTIN KRUGEL. Managing Editor CARYL MIGALIZ1Ö...... Night Editor TIMOTHY TAIT...... ......................... City Editor RAY STERN..... ......................................Asst City Editor THERESA YALLES ’. , ; . . . . . . .Opinion Editor CHRISTA CERRENTANO............................ News Editor LORI G A I N ..... ........Photo Editor JIM P O U L I N ....... .............Photo Editor RANDY J O N E S ....... ............Sports Editor ED ......... „...Asst. Sports Editor TIM BAXTER............. ....... .Magazine Editor LEYLA SALMASSIAN.... .... ..„... .Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Sara Bush. Kevin Culwell, Deanna Darr, Rowe Edgell, Lidia Kelly, Bert Leatherman, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Vivi Stenberg. SPORTS REPORTERS: Josh DeFamio. Percy Ednalino Jr., Lori Haro, Matt Paulson, John Sheehy. COPY EDITORS: Jodi Bafundo, Lone Roberts. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Erik Guzowski, Pat Shannahan. COLUMNISTS: Kevin j. Berlat. Michelle Carson, Olga Puentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Gordon, Michelle Hardt, Diane Q. Jacobs, George D. Rose, Sr., David Ruffiilo, Adam i Schiffer, Steven Stein, Karin Wadsack. CARTOO NISTS: Brian Fairringtön, David Gould, Jonathan T. Inge, Maurice Mitchell, Steve Tansley, Michael S. Whiteman. PRODUCTION: Jeff Chua, Adrianna Garcia, Kai HaischRisley, Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Wendy Luney, Erik Noland. Sara Pike, Shellie Scott. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Cari Dewald, Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Brandon Mudif, Nick Pezzorello, Jess Rankin, Mark Santiago, Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland. CLASSIFIEDS: Heidi; H ester, Wayne Hpoyer, Sarah Kimmel, Stacey Thayer, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of thè 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: BRIAN ANDERSON Editor DUSTIN KRUGEL Managing Editor THERESA VALLES Opinion Editor CHRISTA CERRENTANO News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the 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 genera] nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub- r lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. S ta te P r ess P h o ne N um bers Information............... 965-7572 Newsroom........ ........965-2292 Magazine.................. 965-1695 Advertising........... ..965-6555 Classifieds................. 965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu O pin io n ______ ___ State P ress Monday, April 7,1997 P age S Men’s traditional shopping succumbs to its feminine side For years, Tim A llen's standup ro u tin e w as b ased on the ACHEL assu m p tio n th a t S ears w as a GORDON m an’s store. W ith its linoleum Columnist floors, bright fluorescent lighting and sparse decorating. Sears was simple, reasonable and most significantly, masculine. Sears never went for the frilly, floral and feminine decorating so many stores moved to. 1 remember as a child going into Sears with my father, looking for household items. My father saw himself as Bob Villa reincarnate, although he remains much closer to Tim T aylor or C liff H uxtable. He could not hang a picture straight or differentiate between photo hangers and house building nails. To say he is not a handym an is an understatem ent. However, if you were to look inside any of his five tool boxes, you would think him a master carpenter. Dad loved Sears, they always had tools, and he had several different sizes and versions with updates of each. We always went to Sears, “the m an's store,” for tools. I would accompany Dad on his tool buying excursions, frustrating him with my lack o f understanding. I could not comprehend this need to buy tools. To me, they all looked the same. If these four hammers all say they do the same thing, then why do we need all four? He needed all four hammers because they were ju st slightly different. It was always an excuse to go into Sears. These shopping trips to Sears were not my favorite thing to do. Although I loved spending the time with my dad. I did not like the starkness of the store. To me, it was nothing m ore than never-ending row s o f ham m ers, nails, lawn IR mowers, snow blowers and so on. I have yet to understand why needle-nose pliers have the name that they have and what they’re used for. But never fear — there are about six in the basement of his home. As far as the eyes could see lay nothing but tools, appliances and lawn equipment. Shopping for those household items Was one of D ad’s favorite past-times. Only during the holiday season did my mother venture into Sears looking extremely out of place in a store that could almost have had “no girls allowed” signs posted up like a childhood clubhouse. She and 1 would wander aimlessly until some kind o f grandpa-type gentle­ man would come and take pity upon her, this poor woman coming into “our" store. Explaining that we needed a gift for Dad, we would be led off to yet another row looking remarkably like the previous ones, full o f Craftsman tools and the like. Once an acceptable gift was obtained, we would pay and head out into the main part o f the mall, alm ost as if returning from enem y cam p. N ot that the employees in Sears were hostile; they genuinely tried to help all customers. But the fact remained it was not a store for women. There w ere no pastel-colored w alls, floral arrange­ ments, grand pianos, overstuffed chairs or sofas scattered throughout the store. While many other department stores evolved and m ainstream shopping becam e m ore like Victoria’s Secret one store at a time, Sears continued to hold out. Tradition kept it going. M en w anted a store where they felt com fortable, truly believing that Sears remained the one-stop shopping center for all gift needs. Shall we compare the years mom received a microwave or new pots and pans for Mother’s Day? Not exactly the per­ sonal gifts she envisioned. The main difference today is that Sears is no longer billing itself as a man’s store. If you walk into one at your local mall, you will find cosmetic counters, aromatherapy products, overstuffed chairs, soft lighting and so on. Gone are the fluorescent light fixtures and linoleum floors. Sears has gone soft. I have to wonder what this is doing to the American male who grew up believing, as I did, that Sears was a place really for men only. Day by day, the stores begin to resem ble V ictoria’s Secret more and more. Sears advertises their “softer side,” an entire campaign based upon a man entering the store in search of some tool while the woman finds lingerie, cloth­ ing or something for the kids. “Come see the softer side of Sears” is sung in soft tones with light music behind it on television commercials. I can’t imagine the old Se^rs adver­ tising this way. As so many aspects of society are evolving, it is under­ standable that Sears would want to update its image for the 1990s. However, it just seems as though we’ve lost a true part of Americana. Generations of fathers and daughters to come may still venture into Sears in search o f the perfect new tool for Daddy, but the store will not seem so alien to the daughters. They will now feel c o m fo rtab le—- no fluorescent tube lights glaring down from the ceiling, carpeting on the floors ... how will they ever understand what it once was like? Little boys will not grow up idealizing shopping in Sears. 1 know my Brother does not feel the same way about shop­ ping there as Dad did. Since Sears has gone soft, what will happen n e x t...? Rachel Gordon is a sophomore studying broadcasting and can be reached at Rachel. Gordon @asu. edu. . ‘Cult’ beliefs wrong only when compared to our own • T o satisfy my own curn &ity , I picked up a dictionary yesterday There it was: “cult — n. la . A religion or reli­ giou s sect generally consid­ ered to be extrem ist or false, with its followers often living communally under an authori­ tarian, charism atic leader." I needed that dose o f reality. Y ou se e . a ll the rhetoric about the H ea v en ’s G ate “cult” seem s to gloss over the fact that these were nice p c o - | pie. By this, I mean that they didn’t bother anyone and kept their beliefs to them selves. So far, there is no evi­ dence o f hypocritical behavior on the part o f their leader or any o f the members. A lot o f conventional religions cannot say this. B ut “c n lt” h as a negative context in our so ciety . When you say “cult.” people picture bald men in orange robes selling flow ers at airports. This perception is not entirely unfounded. The funny thing is. depending on what perspective the observer has, any religion can be classified as a cult by this definition. It’s a value judgment. The only thing that can’t he considered a cult on some level is your own reli­ gion. Just a little reality check for everyone — because 39 people made an unorthodox decision last week, and the world is judging them by their own beliefs. ft’s ironic, somehow, that these people made a living by working on computers, dealing with the most modem, up-to-date pieces o f technology, yet their deaths rest on one o f the oldest traditional harbingers o f doom o r tran­ scendence: the comet. This light in the sky overrode all o f the conventional information at their fingertips on the Information Superhighway. ' What’s also funny about this is that our society, as a whole, will believe these natural things and put aside all the collected knowledge science has to offer in favor of superstition. Superstition is. after all, in our very bones. It blow s on w indy nights and covers o u r brow during eclipses. It is a pan of who we are and whispers to us as we deal with die unknown. It was definitely a part o f w hat the H eaven's G ate leader, Marshall Applewhite, wanted to preach — but instead, he found h im self in m usic. As an adult, he ta u g h t m u sic a t th e U n iv e rs ity o f S t. T h o m a s in Houston. Texas. He married and had two children. This is where his norm al life ended. According to CNN, he had an affair with a male stu­ dent. He was discharged for mental health reasons, and went to a psychiatric hospital to try and rid him self of homosexual desires. There he met Bonnie Lu Nettles, a nurse w ho convinced him to jo in a fringe religious group after he had a near-death experience. He left his w ife and lived with Nettles in a sexless union until her death in 1983. Applewhite and Nettles made headlines in 1975. when they convinced a group to leave their homes in Oregon and move to east Colorado, where they would rendezvous with a spaceship. The ship never came. The group resur­ faced in the early 90s. Applewhite preached celibacy, and the group clothed themselves in loose, unisex clothing. Several o f the mate m em bers, including A pplew hite, were castrated. They lived in New Mexico, Arizona and finally in the Rancho Santa Fe, Calif, house where they committed suicide by washing down Phenobarbital in pudding o r applesauce with vodka, then placing plastic bags over their heads ‘Stress Free D ay only reminder to hang loose In response to your April 2 slam editorial on Stress-Free Day, I do not believe that anyone was expecting the entire student body to actually have a stress-free 24-hour period as a result o f the proclamation of Tuesday as Stress-Free Day. However, the acknowledgment o f the University atmo­ sphere as stressful, combined with the compassionate inter­ est o f others who wish to help in the reduction o f stress can be a great catalyst for a positive lifestyle change. This event provides a chancé for us to re-focus on the most important things in life and learn how better planning of school and work requirements (even scheduling time for fun events) can go a long way for our personal happiness and toward lowering stress levels. Personally, a S tress-Free Day sm iley sticker, a kind word from a stranger and a free sample o f lotion this past Tuesday helped me have a much better day than I usually would have. Maybe if your staff wore a Stress-Free Day smiley stick­ er and shared the good word that we are all here to learn and have fun together, it would make this campus commu­ nity one o f the best around. Taking 10 minutes to talk to someone who cares is a whole lot better than whining about an elusive stress-free, responsibility-free day that will never come. I applaud and would like to thank the Student Health personnel who put the booth on. It made my day. Jennifer R ussell . Junior Com m unication Applewhite taught — and seemed to believe — that his group would be picked up by a spaceship. The group believed the ship to pick them up was following the HaleBopp comet. They thought it was time to “ascend.” To many of us, including myself, this sort of ascension goes against our personal moral code. But there have been polls recently showing that about h alf o f us believe in UFOs. Is it such a jum p, if vou believe in them, to believe one is coming to pick you up, ■ when you have a charismatic leader you believe to be credible telling you they are coming? I’m not sure. Once the initial disbelief passes, human beings are capable o f accepting a lot of things that seem far-fetched. Christians, as an example, believe Christ raised Lazarus from the dead, among other miracles. Logical ? Probably not. but rather a matter of faith. The Heaven’s Gate cult believed some things that most o f us can’t swallow as truth. But they were sincere about it. They didn't have a plan to rule the world, they just had their own belief in ascension. 1 can’t quite believe their “authoritarian charismatic leader” was trying to victimize his follow ers, as many o th er c u lt leaders have done. Applewhite lived with his followers, castrated him self and died with bis followers. The evidence unearthed so far does not paint him as an evil man — misguided, not entirely sane and different* yes Not evil 1 just don’t want to convict hini in absentia when the facts are not ail in Right now all we can say with surety is that the members o f this group had beliefs most o f us cannot share. I even hope, for the sake o f all of the Heaven’s Gate members, that they and their leader were right. But I don't think they were. Rick Liljegren is a graduate student o f creative Writing am i can be reai hed at Rick.Lijegreni&asu edu uotaBfes “I don’t want any yes-men around me. / want everyone to tell me the truth even if it costs them their jo b s.” — Samuel Goldwyn (1 8 8 2 -1 9 7 4 ) State P ress Monday, April 7, 1997 P age 6 Art Festival fun Three year old Katie Zellner of Mesa gets a picture o f Barney painted on her face by clown Cherry P ie, Sunday afternoon at th e Tem pe A rt F estival. The fes tiv al included gam es, rides, food, live music and booths displaying artists' w orks. The festival was held Friday through Sunday. Car insurance from GEICO. Because its never tòo eafRio begin making sound financial decisions. Whether you already have your own car insur­ ance policy or yo u 're ready to start one, our great student rates make GEICO a wise choice. W e'll answer ques­ tions and handle claims 24 hours a day. And in many cases, your claim can be settled within 48 hours o f reporting the details of an incident. Serving Lunch and Dinner ! Days a Week S tate P ress B ringing Fine Food and F riends T ogether SihceJL963 M am a R o sa 's T ra d itio n a l Sonoran M exican Food R ecipes A re S im p ly th e B e st! Featuring N ew Selections to Enhance Your H ealthy L ifestyle Fabulous Fajitas - Beef • Shrimp « Chicken ■ Camaron Ranchera and Diablo (Shrimp) I ■ Steaming Sides of Fresh Vegetables ■ Incredible Fish Tacos Crosswords They aren't harsh words. They're just across-words. FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS 1/2 PRICE DINNER P " ™ ® 9 With the purchase of one dinner of equal or greater value. ^ Not good with any other offer or discount. Offer good after 2 p.m. Expires 4-15-97. Mesa 2023 W . Guadalupe (Southwest Comer Dobson & Guadalupe) 897-9411 Campus Corner H a p p y Hour B uffet 4-7 p.m. Monday-Friday •Beer S. Sods •Photo Developing •Health & Beauty Aids 609 S. MILL 712 S. COLLEGE 967-4049 2 LOCATIONS P h o to E v e ry d a y Savory Black Beans 858-0567 variety o f co n v e n ie n t paym ent plains to meet your needs. Join over 2 m illion drivers who have already Isn‘t it timeyou graduatedto yourown insurancepolicy? Call GEICO tolearnhow. sw itched, to an auto insurance company that’s got an A++ rating. Call GEICO today, and find out just how much you could save. The sensible alternative. Tempe 960 W . University (602) 931-0766 (Northeast Comer University & Hardy) p 966-0852 MID WEEK MADNESS! And GEICO offers a COT THE MUNCHIES?H0KEYPOKEY GUMBY'S HAS THE CURE! M O IM U EO O H IY X-tra Large 16" Pizza w/ 2 toppings ONLY $ y 9 9 Large C h o se PIZZA F in is h in g L o w P r ic e ONLY S 399 DINNER FOR 2 TOPPINGS *1 “ EACH l $699 1 ONLY 11“ MIN FOR DELIVERY BONUS BUYS w w w .g t im b y s p iz z a .c o t n 24 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS color C -4 1 process B e st price in to w n . 9 2 1 -F A S T ■ 9 2 1 - 3 2 7 8 offers may expire L - \.W/6;rioÿcè- P age 7 Monday, April 7, 1997 S tate P ress K eep o n s m ilin g ... Autumn Ness, ASASU activities vice presidential candi­ date stands next to newly élected campus affairs vice president Audrey Church, Ness w ill compete against Erik Noland for the ASASU position. ASASU presidential candidate Andrew Oritz talks with newly elected executive vice president Joshua Carr after hearing the ejection results on Hayden lawn Friday. Oritz w ill be in a runoff against Brent Maddin. H o r o s c o p e 's g u a r a n t e e d O R Y O U R M O N EY BACK! O N PA G E 19 The KBAQ A P R I L P E R F O R M A N C E S PRODUCTION STUDIO Listen to 89.5 FM A Part of KAET-TV/Phoenix S o u t h w e s t S e a s o n T ic k e t T u e sd a y sa t 7 pm April 8 April 15 A pril 2 2 A pril 2 9 Scottsdale: Chopin, Schumann, Scarlatti and pianist Stephen Hough Tucson: The Lofcke Consort celebrates the bicentennial of Henry Purcell Tucson: The New York Chamber Soloists recall “Paris in the 1920s” Scottsdale: Pianist André-Michel Schub: Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition and more A s u .I n .C o f th e S u m m er is C o m in g to Q u een C re e k A Z APRIL 24-25-26-27 featuring: o ncert ^igëmàÈ>m:f x Æ jtiiiliÉ iiÉ iÉ iM il A pril 10 A pril 17 April 2 4 Guitarist Antonio Lopez features the music of Manuel Ponce Lyric Opera Theatre: Benjamin Britten’s chilling adaptation of Henry James’ The Turn o f the Screw Oboist Nancy Clauter performs Britten, Francis Poulenc, and J.C. Bach T f c e l ^ f g ^ '^ C a n e r • S anyer Brown . T he G reen A p r il 2 3 Ro o m ■ Our weekly concert-preview program of Arizona classical music events closes its third season with features on: The National Symphony Orchestra; pianist Christopher O ’Riley; Phoenix Symphony guests pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet, percussionist Evelyn Glennie, and the ASU Choral Union; Dan Laurin and Ite recorder; the New York City Opera Touring Company’s “La Boheme; ”Venezuela’s Cuarteto Rios Reyna with pianist Monique Duphil; oboist Martin Schuring; and the Amadeus Piano Trio at the Sedona Chamber Music Festival. T»MB-,l*A ttlL Q U K jpR IT T S April 13 April 2 0 SUNDAYS AT 7 PM Susan Ferré offers music from Germany and Spain Roberta Gary’s repertoire includes Schumann and Mendelssohn ^ s u b j eitocbaijgj, c t . . u; n ^ cG raw The deal o f die sum m er is coining tp you! Two for OneTicKets One-Day 2/$40 • Three-day 2/$80 With student ID Call: 602-966-9920 for tickets or free color brochure St a t e P ress Monday, April 7,1997 P age 8 Gay, lesbian and bisexual activists unite for day o f com m unity pride B y Sara B ush State P ress O rganizers o f the first ASU C om m unity Pride Day refused to take credit for thé rainbow-colored cement ‘A ’ that graced Tempe Butte on Friday. But the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendér student activists said it coincided nicely with their community-build­ ing event held Friday afternoon in the Memorial Union. “This is the first pride event at ASU so far,” said Tina Van Puymbroeck, a doctoral student in counseling psychol­ ogy who helped organize the event. “We really wanted to mobilize the various groups of students on campus.” About 150 students and faculty members gathered in the MU Programming Lounge. Those in attendance participat­ ed in group dialogues about the experience of being gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender at ASU. Campus groups involved in the pride event included Progression, the Lambda League- Ubiquity, Coming Out d isc u ssio n g ro u p , th e L e sb ia n /B ise x u a l W o m en ’s OPEN D iscussion G roup and the G raduate Lesbian/B isexual W omen’s Group. The groups came up with the idea for Community Pride Day earlier this year, prompted by some anti-gay legislation being discussed in the Legislature. “We asked all student leaders to come together to talk,” said Kris Ewing, a program coordinator for Student Life who helped organize Friday’s activities. “They started talking, and after a lot o f input from all o f them , they decided to have this event. Each student leader organized his or her own group.” Leslie Fischer, a research technician in the botany department, also helped organize the day’s events. Fischer said that in the future, the Community Pride Festival will expand to include the whole campus, but this year they decided to focus on building pride in their own community. “We wanted to get as many people as possible, includ­ ing people who don’t go to any o f the organizations,” Fischer said. “The idea is that people are out together and everyone can see that they’re not alone.” 11AM - DAILY! FAST, FREE DELIVERY! 829 0064 T U E S D A Y S P E C IA L Q uestions probe in n er p sych e o f p o te n tia l b om b in g tria l ju rors B y Steven K. P aulson A ssociated P ress DENVER — What kind of bumper stickers do you have on your car? Read any good books lately? Ever had a dis­ agreement with police? Depending on your answers, you might be a good candi­ date for the Oklahoma City bombing jury. Nearly three dozen prospective jurors were asked those questions last week by U S. District Judge Richard Matsch and lawyers trying to seat a panel to hear the case against Timothy McVeigh. The prospects already have filled out two lengthy ques­ tionnaires, detailing their knowledge of the case, potential hardships and views on the death penalty. The surveys pared die jury pool from nearly 1,000 to 350. From the remaining group, both sides hope to find 18 people who can set aside their biases, ignore peer pressure and vote their consciences after seeing the evidence against M cV eig h , a c c u se d o f th e w o rst te rro ris t a tta c k on American soil. The judge has withheld the questionnaires to help guard the candidates' identities, but details emerged during jury questioning last week as the candidates read their answers in open court. It’s not a test, say Matsch, prosecutors and attorneys for McVeigh. "There are no wrong answers,” prosecutor Patrick Ryan told one prospective ju ro r. “A ctually, the only wrong answer is an answer that’s untruthful.” “You can tell a lot what a person thinks by the bumper sticker on their car,” said Denver lawyer Andrew Cohen, who is following the case. “It’s a very quick way to find out about a person’s political and social beliefs.” C ohen said o n e m an , a re s e a rc h e r fo r th e Environmental Protection Agency* disclosed a lot about him self when he reported that heTiacT a bum per sticker reading “Mean people suck.” “It’s a social statement, not a political statement. It’s the same as bumper stickers that read ‘Random acts of kind­ ness,”’ Cohen said. But Cohei* said some soul-bearing statements can be misinterpreted, which is why the judge and lawyers are quizzing the jurors about their answers. Cohen said prosecutors might like the bumper sticker b ecause it can be read as opp o sin g c rim in als, w hile defense attorneys m ight interp ret it as som eone who favors the underdog. McVeigh faces murder, conspiracy and weapons-related charges in the bom bing o f the O klahom a C ity federal building on April 19, 1995. The explosion killed 168 and injured more than 500. No trial date has been set for co­ defendant Terry Nichols. N A IL S ^NAIL 6 7 5 -9 9 7 8 Vn Ì L Ì s k f l \np Otai*, ! • Learn practical, street-smart se lf defense. 1 KENPO S c o ttsd a le & M cK elllp s 1442 N. Scottsdale M • Union fla u MAtacmr tie "m JL s " L f;..: «»MHr........ 1 ____ Southeast Corner of Broadway & McClintock C om plete N all Care Salon fo r L adles a n d G entlem an •■»<•««*« I KICK-BOXING TA1 CHI Mention this ad for 50% off the Introductory Training Package 11 j (2 private training lessons and 1 troop d m - $35 Value) U napt tts J earnonly mo > lOUPMHWilifciÉ la H lj O nly ‘É2.99 tatto tota» i m A.C.S. KARATE 968-2068 2AM NO nN H j H CR O SSW O R D Go ahead .. do it in ink. by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 47 Bart’s dad 48 Razor sharpener 1 Arrange­ ment 6 Be of ~ advan­ tage 11 Without help 12 Senor’s squiggle 13 Breezes 14 Movie rentals DOWN 1 Beheld 2 Inventor Whitney 3 Cargo amount 4 Polling answer 5 Basilboy-king a snake based 31 Cigar 18 Factual sauce 1 5 -, waste info 6 Makes Brute?* 19 Privy to 34 Bills of harmoni­ 20 Without a 17 Used a fare date ous stool 35 Deep cut 7 By way of 21 Skin-art 18 Store36 Choir creator member employee’s 8 Yodeling perk site 37 Close 24 Llama’s 22 Opposed land 9 Brain­ loudly storm to 25 Kitchen 40 Epoch 10 For fear 23 Brewing fixture 42 Auto that aid 26 Exam 43,Concept 27 Frogs’ kin 16 Egypfs 28 Move like 44 Agt. 29 Quarter­ 2 3 4 7 5 8 > 10 f back 6 11 ,2 Young ■ 30 Lansbury 13 of “Murder, 1 , 1 16 15 17 She Wrote* 18 19 20 21 3 2 “— bien* 33 Gym­ 22 23 24 26 26 nast’s .■ 27 28 concern ■ 1 35 Balloon fill 30 31 32 38 Vincent ■ Van 34 33 Gogh’s 38 35 36 37 brother 39 Islamic 42 43 44 30 40. God HAYDEN'S FERRY„ R E V I E W " T h e W E B P r e s e n t: Literature sightings on the Internet. A presentation by Julie Knapp, Associate Director o f Student Publications T uesday, A P R IL F ile s ..." IS Borders, Books & Music 45 41 More pleasant 47 45 Play place 46 Custom Borders Books en d M usic One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 4-7 CRYPTOQUOTE C K C N H C I U A I F P T D I 7 :3 0 p m * AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW N 2 4 0 2 E. C a m e lb a c k R oad, P h o e n ix (in th e B iltm o re F a sh io n S q u a re ) i DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES— Here's how to work it: O P F N D P ro g ra m is free to th e p u b lic a n d h e ld a t: ; Z D N N Y B T I M ZEKCQI H . - P G H C T D T U E S D H A Y N I G H T R E A D I N G S E R I E S F I P D I D N P Q I YTUGIM 0 1997 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Monday, April 7,1997 S ta te P ress P olice R eport A S U p o lic e reported th e fo llo w in g in cidents over the weekend: • A male student reported that someone unlawfully entered his vehicle and removal a stereo while it was parked in Lot 59. ■* A female employee reported that someone removed a vac­ uum cleaner from Sahuaro Hall. • A female student was arrested, cited and released at 701 Alpha Drive on charges of public consumption of alcohol. Another female student was arrested on charges o f under­ age consumption of alcohol and providing false informa­ tion to a police officer at this location. • A male not affiliated with the University was arrested, cited and released at U niversity Drive and M cA llister Avenue on charges of driving with a suspended license. • A male student reported that someone criminally dam­ aged a window at 717 Alpha Drive. • A female employee was contacted at the Engineering Building G-wing, where she had become ill. She was trans­ ported to a local hospital. • A female student reported that someone removed her wal­ let and its contents from the new Music Building. • A male not affiliated with the University was arrested, cited and released on charges o f shoplifting at Tow er R ecords,,. ■. • A male student reported that someone removed a laser light box from 406 E. Adelphi Drive. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents over the weekend: • A 34-year-old female was arrested on charges o f con­ tributing to the delinquency of a minor and criminal tres­ passing after a police investigation revealed she brought her child to school to fight another student. Police said the Woman failed to check in with the office when she entered campus. She was booked into Tempe City Jail. • A 21-year-old male was arrested at Third Street and Ash Avenue on charges of criminal trespassing and theft. Police said the suspect entered a building under construction inside a fenced area, where he removed a hard hat. The sus­ pect later admitted to the theft, and was booked into Tempe City Jail. Police reports compiled by State Press reporter Melody McDonald. Lost Cessna found off Grand Canyon’s north rim, no survivors GRAND CANYON NATION PARK (AP) —* A fter more than three days of searching, the Park Service found the wreckage of a small plane Sunday off the north rim of the Grand Canyon. T1 After spotting the plane from the air. rescuers had to hike to the heavily forested site on snowshoes, and were only able to find one o f the two bodies believed to be aboard the Cessna 210. They tentatively identified James Eldredge, who offi- Paradise P izza Ue^lHvy Yöiat cials believe was with his wife, Darla, in the plane when it radioed in a trouble call Wednesday night. The couple are from Salt Lake City. , Poor w eather had grounded the search on and off, including more than three feet of snow and heavy clouds. By Sunday, more than 1(X) people from state, federal and local agencies were involved in the search, which was cen­ tered about seven miles north of the canyon’s north rim. Park Service officials say extensive damage to the plane’s the alternative copy shop DEFINITION • MASS • POWER • ENDURANCE • STRENGTH 915 South Mill Ave. • Tempe • 829-7992 ST E R O ID S Southeast Comer o f M ill & University HIGHER TESTOSTERONE MEANS FASTER • EASIER • MUSCLE GROWTH NOW—Thereis a Safe Replacementfor Steroids — p tu ^ v ! withNo Harmful Side Effects. BORON StERQ COMPLEX c a n Color Copies iic r e a s e y o u r TESTOSTERONE LEVELS DRAMATICALLY. HIGHER TESTOSTERONE MEANS * We w*ke our ìngreM étà s &esU A«ily •ule w e 1/5 less Buy pnEfizzA j a t RÏ60LAR Oil In OUr piLia o n only. Please r p er customer per vi*h. Bigger Bite & ff coupon before ordering. Void w ith other offers. O ne coupon per customer, not inducted. Customer must pay any sales tax due. Cash value t/1 00 of one cent. I S.Ë. com er Broadway & Rural M on-Sat 8am-10pm Sunday 10am-8pm WE SUPPORT THE ASU ICE DEVILS O ffer good at Broadway & Rural store only. 921-9222 SUBS 8t SALADS 1 -800-C O L L E C T P ro u d ly S p o n s o rs Intram ural S p o rts At Arizona State University In tra m u ra l C ham pions 1-800-COLLECT B asketball S o ccer M en’s A -- Beer Good M en’s B - Sigma Phi Epsilon M en’s C - Supreme Court 5 '1 0 ” - Cap Club USA Women’s - 36 Minutes of Hell Co-Rec - NDN Outlaws M en’s A - Jammers M en’s B - Free Agents Women’s - Sparkey’s Co-Rec - B-Munchers 1-800-COLLECT® congratulates these Intram ural Sports Champions Coming Up: Track & Field Sun Angel Stadium - April 23 & 24 '\ Entries due April 14 For further information, contact intram ural Sports a t 9 6 5 -5 8 3 5 (9 am - 5 pm) <&***»* ■ V st * 'f / . NIRSA Endorsed See Your Intramural Recreational Department 1-800-COLLECT It’s Fast. It’s Easy. It Saves. Il P age 11 Monday, April 7, 1997 State P ress Federal grant provides m ore cops for Tempe streets B y K evin C ulw eli. State P ress Thanks to a federal grant, 10 new police officers will hit the streets of Tempe in June, Five more are expected to be ready by September. The Universal Cops grant, implemented by Congress last October, will provide 75 percent of salary costs for the 15 new Tempe police officers. The funds will be phased in over a three-year period. A fter the initial three years, Tem pe will take full responsibility for the payroll, using additional revenues and cost Offsets to account for the salaries, Sgt. Mark Bach said. The city will weigh which revenues and cost offsets to use in a couple o f years, he said. “I’m not sure about what funds w e’re going to use,” said Jim McGeorge, City of Tempe spokesman. S alaries fo r new recruits range from $35,000 to $40,000, while salaries for officers who have been on the force th ree to four years range from $60,000 to $65,000, he said. To account for the other 25 percent of the new offi­ cers’ salaries, the Tem pe City Council in February approved use o f the Local Law Enforcem ent Block Grant, worth more than $203,000. This grant, which also was allocated in October by Congress, was given to cities based on its population. Tempe has a population of more than 155,000. The City of Phoenix, with a population of more th an -983,000, received just over $ 1 million. “The C ity o f Tem pe got a favorable am ount o f money for comparable cities,” Bach said, The block grant money will also be used to pay for equipment necessary to support the new officers. The average cost of equipment per employee is more than $18,000, Bah said. That equipment includes cars, radios, guns, laptop computers, bullet-resistant vests, office furniture, bikes and related equipment. “There’s a lot of extraneous equipment that is needed for newly-hired officers,” he said. “ The costs depend on each officers’ duties. Bike patrolmen obviously need different equipment than regular patrol officers.” The 15 additional officers will include six downtown officers, four patrol officers, three adopt-a-school offi- cers, one narcotics sergeant and an internal affairs sergeant, Bach said. Police Chief Ron Bums said the department is cur­ rently in the process of hiring the five other officers, who should be ready by September. “This is a great opportunity for us to augment with the assistance of the Feds,” he said. “It will allow us to put more officers in schools.” Bach said the six officers assigned to the dow n­ town area will give the police department the oppor­ tunity to expand the bike squad and have more patrol­ men available. He said the four patrol officers will be assigned to the new shopping mall being constructed on Priest Drive and Baseline Road, which is set to open in November. The three adopt-a-school officers will be used for juve­ nile detention at local elementary schools, and the nar­ cotics and internal affairs sergeants will provide addi­ tional help for the current sergeants. “W e’re very pleased with the grant because it gives us a lot more flexibility,” Burns said, “These extra offi­ cers are much needed.” State P ress ©IP®®TO We're there when you can't be. On Campus ! Spinning Your Financial W heels? Discover the benefits available to all A .S.U . Students, Faculty, Staff and Alumni. FR EE lifetim e membership, FREE checking, LO W cost student loans, FR EE 24-hour account access and a C O N V E N IE N T auto buying program. Stop by and see us today! Friday, April 11 Monday, April 1 10:00 am to 3:00 pm * Hayden Lawn -Malaysian Expo, 12:00 to 1:00 pm • Hayden Lawn -Lion Dance Rung Fu Tuesday, April 8 11:15pm to 12:00 * Hayden Lawn -Indian Traditional Dance 12:00 to 1:00 pm * Memorial Union Programming Lounge -Ait Exhibitionby Haru Kawamitsu 2:30 to 4:30 pm * Ventana Room 226A -Documentary: “Slayingthe Dragon” 4:00 to 6:00 pm • Memorial Union Cinema -Film: “SuperCop” by Jackie Chan A S IA N coalition Wednesday, April 9 12:00 to 1:00 pm ’ Hayden Lawn -Filipino Dance 1:00 to 2:00 pm* Hayden Lawn -Tinikling Filipino Performers 6:30 to 8:30 pm • Memorial Union Cinema -Film: “SuperCop” byJackie Chan 11:00 to 11:15 am * Hayden Lawn -Indonesian Seudari Dance 11:30 am to 12:00 pm* Hayden Lawn -Indonesian FashionShow 12:00 to 12:30 pm • Hayden Lawn -ChineseMusical Instrument 5:00 to 8:00 pm * Memorial Union Programming Lounge -CulturalFashionShow&otherspecialevents, by Haru Kawamitsu 10:00 am to 2:00 pm * Hayden Lawn -AsianAwareness Booth Saturday, April 12 Thursday, April 10 6:30 to 8:30 pm • Memorial Union Cinema -Film: “Super Cop” by Jackie Chan 6:00 to llkOO pm • Memorial Union Pima Room -“AsianTalent Night” ^ A.S.U. West Univ. Center 543-5626 State Savings & Credit Union A.S.U. Main Memorial Union 965-4426 A.S.U. East ^ Opening * Spring ’97 Offices in Phoenix, Mesa, Scottsdale and Throughout Arizona I n v ita tio n t o a p p ly f o r Sta te P ress E d it o r s h ip T h e ASU S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s A d v iso ry B o a rd is n o w S o licitin g a p p lic a tio n s f o r t h e State P ress e d ito r s h ip f o r t h e F all S em e ste r 1997 . Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not bn academic or disciplinary probation); must have a cumulative grade index of 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the State P ress; must have completed a minimum of 15 hours of journalism courses including news writing, reporting, editing and journalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. . Applicants must also: ASIAN SIINews submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those 1 courses; submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the State P ress or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State P ress or other newspapers. Applicants must pick up application forms at the State P ress office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Wednesday, April 9,1997, Director, Student Publications Matthews Center, Room 133 C omics T r ia is it T B y D avid G ould . I WHY MALE EN 6USH PRoFESSOgS M£Et>TPG»£TOUT MQgg. • ■■■and... a n d -Hie poem's else, o f . .. u n i .. -th e w o rd Y f c i " '. • um u n i :.. U u /ë s e e houi -¡-he c.baraak-f's se-xua / ( B5C e fo cK Wre« JdeiviM irffo I3aiv»es3byc£ I '¿A U k « 4 o -fo lk a lo p u T U ne. SQCUai h is to ry g f e v e r y ^ .-.. c J e a c /y re fir e s tn J s ...a » * -. 1 XU BY KlkE Hep! By J onathan I n ge r ib u l a t io n s J o cular Para ble 3 State P ress Monday, April 7,1997 P age 12 a u a L e n i r \ a ,% a Tesa I t WSSÈW S R ß P - •: e f - • • Irish w r i+ e r e v e r. • myseW- in c lu d e d . a a t i r m f i a :. rn I gfe.r' is. \ (xoa, /Vu lonely • ■■ Fj.:k ' .- PRE-REGISTRATION NED W o R R IH G I t B y M aurice OUT h it c h e l l O FF T H E KARR &0Y, Tun /VU. YEAH, IF ¡¿E (i HUCrE! HUK*rUE&M ' X MATE ¿ (M b INTO PAUk/ub Loro LOObJNb IFiK MY TUm k . x ALWAYS CEr JHE^ f* m u /. T ^ grYT/ewwr r'M r^tMls. roFtup our TUAT MOMENT OFFANIC UAEN L.KENOUÌI You TONT MATE THAT * • " //& ' AtJ*r fe e u u h !:!. j /B y H A *k Pa r is i W 1H E UHL UKETE’3 Y< m t V • UHOA. »• fcfrCfc O ff, S f é P ^ N , (jM-OK m u * -? . T kI aT S T f tA v iS C f tA T Y - tuMici' * G il b e r t B y S c o t t A dah « ® m e t , YOUR PERFOWAANCE IS GOOD, BUT YOU PVUST LEARN T O DEAL U )TTH A M B IG U IT Y . T ro u b le w ith A lg e b ra * Æ B lackJ ack P izza • ^ IBETTERPIZZABETTERPRICE' LARGE PIZZA X-LARGE PIZZA $C 99 $£99 order by item number GS2 order by item number GS1 Schaum's Guides can help. More than 50 subjects. A . i SideItems: Ben&JerrysIce(ream• FreshSalads • Wings! 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(WEST OF McCLINTOCK) W A T C H FO R OTHER M ETRO AREA O P E N IN G S A S K A B O U T O U R F R E E L IF E T IM E W A R R A N T Y O N C O M P L E T E C L U T C H & B R A K E R E P A IR S . sgasa»— W om ens g o lf team denied repeat o f PIN G /A SU title Kellee Booth (73-75-71) who was second Bv M a it I’a u .son behind Baena with a 3-over par 219. It was S tate P ress Despite shooting its lowest three-round B ooth's highest placing o f the 1996-'97 total of the season, the No. 3-ranked ASU campaign and her third top-five finish in women's golf team finished second behind seven tournaments this season. th e U ofA W ild c a ts at th is w e e k e n d 's Even with the excellent numbers put up PING/ASU Invitational held at the Karsten by the Sun Devils, Booth was .still a little; Golf Coursé in Tempe. frustrated with the results, “There is little bit of disappointment." It was the first time in four years that ASU failed to take top honors at its .annual said Booth. “1 think it’s more disappointing because it is our home course and you tournament. The Sun Devils com pleted rounds o f almost feel like you should play better than 300. 299 and a team-tournament low 293 everyone else because you do know it so well. But I still think we played well." on Sunday , for a score of 892. No. 1 UofA ended a blistering 12 strokes V ollstedt. how ever, d id n ’t share the ahead of ASU. shooting a 16-over par 880. same outlook. The W ildcats were led by sophomore m)not really (disappointed)," she sensation Marisa Buena, the current No. 1 said. "W e're still a young team. We don't collegiate player in the nation. Baena domi­ have any seniors. We accomplished a lot of nated the entire tournament and led from things we wanted to accomplish. I don't start to finish. She shot a tournament low feel badly at all. Sure it's nice to continue round of 5-under 67 on Friday. Baena fol­ the tradition, but we’ve still got a lot of golf io wed that; p e rfo rm a n c e w ith a 73 on left." Junior Jeanne-M arie Busuttil recorded S aturday and 7 I on Sunday to end the her second consecutive to p -10 finish and weekend 5-under,at 211. A fterw ard s. ASU head coach Linda tied for fifth, with rounds o f 78, 74 and 70 Vollstedt couldn t say enough about Baena. for 6-over par 222. S op h o m o re T ui S elv aratn am . w ho the only player to finish under par. >• ‘‘Great player. She's got it all." Vollstedt played her best go lf of the season, was said. "She’s got the whole game. She's got another integral part of the Sun Devils per­ the attitude, the game, the experience. She formance. Selvaratnam. who highest previ­ carries herself really, well out there. She’s ous finish this year was a tie for 23rd, shot rounds of 75. 74 and 77 to finish tied for wonderf ul for collegiate golf.” The Sun Devils were paced by junior Sophomore Keri Cornelius tees off at the third hole during weekend action of the ASU/PIng Invitational at Karsten Golf Course. Cornelius, who finished tied for 27th, helped ASU capture second place. 1 : ' .-. Men s golf heads to Southern Cal B y J o h n S heehy State P ress Junior Jeanne-Marie Busuttil digs herself out of the fourth-hole bunker Saturday during the A$U/Pihg Invitational where she finished tied for fifth. S u n D e v i The ASU m en’s golf team heads to Southern California today, to tee it up in the 20th annual USC Cleveland Southwestern Invitational. The tournament will be held at the North Ranch Country Club in Westlake Village, Calif. USC is the host school o f the event, while ASU is the defending team champion. The Sun Devils will be led by Senior AllAmerican Chris Hanell. He is currently the top-ranked college golfer in the country, according to the Rolex Rankings. He also U l ® B a seb a ll T r a c k S un Devils TAKE 2 OF 3 S un Angel v fflB C lassic coNTiuES AQffZ V J in \ T| P tN A S T ic s j VANCES TO NATIONALS. l V f) 514 D leads the nation in top-five finishes with four, and has yet to finish out of the top ten this year. In his most recent event, Hanell won the Golf Digest Invitational three weeks ago. Darren Angel had to overcome a great deal of adversity to get to this point The sophomore, who finished third at the NCAA Championships last year, has missed most of the season with a t injury. Angel rejoined the Sun Devils with a top10 finish in Hawaii. Joining Hanell and Angel on the Links for this event will be Brad Cannon, Scott Johnson, Tim Mickelson, and Greg Padilla. A T S o ft b a l l S quad SPLITS PAIE A/'VA A P a g e 15 E S ta te P ress B y R andy J ones State P ress G ym nast M eagan W rig h t did the sam e thing after Saturday’s Midwest Regional that she has done each of the past two seasons — she cried. However, this year the junior all-arounder shed tears of joy — not pain — as the Sun Devils ended a two-year drought and qualified for the NCAA Championships. “Oh my gosh, yeah. This was the biggest relief,” Wright said, of the teams’ second-place finish at Salt Lake City. “Ever,” she added after a brief pause. Head coach John Spini agreed. “We are all really excited (about qualifying)," he said. “The kids just stayed focused and worked really hard. (They) kept doing what they always do in workouts. We just wanted to be in one of the top-two positions leaving this m eet” ASU did just that, finishing . 475 points behind the Utah Utes, who claimed their 10th straight Midwest Region crown. The Sun Devils’ score of 195.225 gave them a ninth-place seeding for the championships which take place in Gainesville, Fla., on April 17-19. The 12 teams in order of seeding for the championships are: M ichigan, U C LA , A labam a, LSU , F lorida, G eorgia, Washington. Utah, ASU, Nebraska, Minnesota and Penn State, ASU’s second-place finish at regionals marks the highest the team has finished at the meet since taking second in 1988. The Sun Devils were the last team to defeat the Utes in the regional back in 1987. That meet took place in Tempe. The championship is divided into two sections, each com­ posed of six of the 12 teams which qualified. The Sun Devils will compete in the night session, which Spini said was an advantage. “1 think we are going to match up well at nationals,” he said. The second session, starting out in the evening. We’ve been real lucky. One-tenth too high, one too low and we could have been starting somewhere else. We are in the drivers seat” ASU will start out on vault, an event which has been its most consistently high-scoring all season. The Sun Devils’ vault squad ranks No. 3 in the country on the event. “It (the session) is good for us because it is just like a home meet for us,” Wright said; . After the first session, the top six teams advance to the “Super Six” and battle for the honor of being the No. 1 squad in the country. “I think we have a real good chance to get to the Super Six,” Spini said. “For some reason I think everything was meant to be this year.” Wright and junior Carie Courtney led the Sun Devils’ regional showing with all-around scores of 39.175 (third place) and 38.675 (14th), respectively. Courtney was in the running for the all-around title until two falls on vault caused her to fall out of the race. Wright praised the efforts of Courtney during the meet and for her leadership beforehand. “Carie is an awesome all-arounder,” she said. “A lot of peo­ ple don’t recognize how good of a gymnast she is. She carries the team. She is a great leader and a good motivator.” Three-event performer Elizabeth Reid had one of her best performances of the year. The freshman took home first place on the floor exercise (9.875) and balance beam (9.925). She also tied for ninth-place on the uneven bars with a 9.8. “(She was) amazing,” Spini said of Reid. “The kid was sec­ ond after three events in the all-around. If we had her on in vault, she still was in the top four in the all-around. The fresh­ man was fantastic. She is an Olympic-quality athlete.” Other ASU finishers in the top 10 included Wright (second) and sophomore Lisa Vincijanovic (ninth) on floor exercise, Courtney (third) on balance beam, Courtney, Reid and fresh­ man Amy Shelton at ninth on bars and Wright (first), Shelton (seventh) and Vincijanovic and freshman M ichelle Hess (ninth) on vault. Erik Guzowski/State Press Junior Carie Courtney and the rest of the ASU women’s gymnas­ tics team w ill be making a return to the NCAA Championships after a two-year hiatus as a result of their second-place finish at the Midwest Regionals in Salt Lake City over the weekend. PING_______ C o n t in u e d from page 13. After jum ping out to a 14-stroke lead after two days, UofA assistant coach Tom Brill started to get a little worried when the W ildcats lost som e ground on the front nine Sunday. “It's a tough place to play because they (the crowd) don’t clap for the W ildcats,” 13th at 10-over par 226. Vollstedt said Selvaratnam ’s dedicated work effort finally paid off. “T u i p la y e d g re a t.” V o lls te d t said . “She’s been practicing hard and just had a w onderful to u rn am en t. I t ’s n ice to see someone rewarded for their great play.” I Sybase has evolved itito a major player software/services industry, and is now one o f the largest independent software companies in the world. m i markets products' and services under two brand names. Sybase products are focused on scalable database and middleware solutions. Powersoft products are focused on the development tools marketplace. These product lines, combined with our award-winning consulting services, provide rhe most comprehensive ■ solutions to the IT requirements o f industry leaders and small companies alike. Brill said. “But they clap twice as loud for the Sun Devils. Once Booth got way under, and Jeanne got way under, I said ‘Here we go. We’re in for areal dog fight.’” Last season, the Sun Devils were down 14 strokes to the W ildcats going into the final round of the Pac-10 championships but came back and won. Booth said she thought her team could do the same on Sunday. “I thought we could (win),” she said. “We tried to go out there and make it up shot by shot, but we ran into the back side and had some struggles. Arizona started playing real­ ly well. And that made the difference.” C orner th e jo b m a r k e t. CS, E ngineering an d IS m ajore p lan n in g a fu tu re as ASSOCIATE CONSULTANTS sh o u ld atten d our: NFORM ATION SESSION ■ (casual dress) outlay April 2 1 ,6 - 8 p.m., Coconino Room Memorial Union Bui.ldine An ASU degree can give you a com petitive edge. Now, take classes off-campus, evenings, weekends or through our virtual campus—TV, freer CD-ROM, Internet and correspondence study. M'ward your resume to T a k e t h e f ir s t s te p ! ■ E-m ail: college@qrhase.com ■ FAX: (800)700-0076 ■ M ail: U niversity R elations Sybase, Inc. 6425 C hristie Ave., 5 th Floor Em eryville, CA 94608 Call 9 6 5 - 3 9 8 6 fo r a fre e catalo g . Sybase ivan ccjuai opportunity employ« values the vtrengtbdiversifv brings to ti A bttp:Hvni>w.sybasi com!careers!college m i r iz o n a St a t e U n iv e r s it y Extended Campus h ttp ://w w w .a s u .e d u /x e d P age 15 M ondayjj\grü^J99^ State P ress Softball team hopes to rise after sp lit w ith H uskies B y J osh D eFamio State P ress The Arizona State softball team won one, lost one, and may have vaulted into the top 10 in the latest poll. The rankings will not be released until later today, but the players and coaches feet the .split against No. 5 Washington (25-7, 1-1 Pac-10) by No. 11 ASU (28-8, 6-4) will allow the Sun Devils to jump up a few notches in die rankings. The Sun Devils wasted no time in breaking open the first game. After junior Roxanne Tsosie retired the side in top of the first, ASU loaded the bases on two walks and a hit batter with only one out. Washington starter Eve Gaw was able to strike out senior Stacey Slick, but sophomore Holly Smith whacked a shot down the third base line that brought in two runs. Sophomore Carla Fortune then knocked in another run with a single to left that scored the Sun D evil’s third run and knocked Gaw from the game. ASU added another ran in the second, ending die scoring until the top of the seventh. Two nice defensive plays by out­ fielders brought Tsosie within one out of her seventh shutout. But after a shoe-string grab by Slick in center and a against-thewall grab by senior Tina Ruff in left, Tsosie ran into trouble. She w alked the next b atter, th en gave up a single to Washington’s Shelly Brown, After another single loaded the bases, Sara P ickering brought hom e tw o runs w ith Washington’s third consecutive single. But the Sun Devils’ defense killed the rally in dramatic fash­ ion. With runners on the corners, cleanup hitter Becky Newbry blooped one that looked as if it would drop for another hit. But second bagger Raja Woods dropped back for it, got a glove on it. and held on even after the ball originally popped out “1 saw the ball com ing,” Woods said. “I ju st kind of squeezed my glove down and the ball stayed in there.” Despite the rocky seventh, Wells stuck with Tsosie, who picked up her 13th win and ninth complete game of the season. “Roxie really didn’t pitch well all night,” she said. “But she was getting the people out, so I decided to stick with her.” Game two turned out to be a pitcher’s duel. ASU’s Carrie Breedlove and UW’s Jennifer Spediacci battled for five innings, With a third-inning Husky ran the only scoring in the game. But Breedlove was chased from the game after giving up a rurt in the sixth, and Spediacci allowed no Sun Devils runners past first base in picking up the shutout • “Certainly, for the evening, we have to credit our pitching,” Wells said. “In the second game, we just didn’t have the offense.” ASU was also victimized by two controversial calls.'Senior Lisa Dacquisto and Tammy Lohmann were both called for leaving the base too early alter each had singled to lead off the first and second innings, respectively. “That was really ridiculous,” Ruff said. “They took away our runners, two of our best runners, on those calls.” ASU’s next challenge will be against No. 1 Arizona. .The Sun Devils will host their rivals in a doubleheader Wednesday night at Sun Devil Club stadium. ATTENTION GRADUATES Health Care You Can Count On. Campus HealthPartners offers you very affordable student health insurance. Great benefits, services and physicians at the rig h t price. Enrollm ent is simple. Just check "yes" on y o u r registration form . Or, call In Touch at (602) 350-1500. If you have questions about enrollm ent in Campus HealthPartners, call ASU Student Health at (602) 965-2411. 1 0 O ff with any Student I.D. < t h € Cool Jewel 414 È. Mill Ave. #121 „Tempe, AZ 85281 •* (irritim i r itt Spaghetti Co.) 602S29.1Î27 Be sm art and prepare fo r the unexpected. M aintain yo u r good health by signing up fo r Campus HealthPartners d u rin g Early Registration, Campus HealthPartners Insurance Com pany and ASU Student Health. Affordable health insurance you can c o u n t on. All the tim e Every tim e. Health/’orinm Insurance Company Only a few more chances to take the GRE ,on Paper. O & » O April 13, *996 Qotobor 12, 1096 Pooom bor 14, K April 12. 1997 0 ????????????? KAPLAN 1-800-KAP-TEST FORMERLY SAMARITAN HEALTH INSURANCE COMPANY H PIA D V .03 www.kaplan.com E-mail: GRE0kaplan.com America Online: keyword “kaplan" •GRE te the reoistefed trademark of Educational Teetinq Sendee. Proud Sponsors of Golden Key National Honor Society S tate P ress Monday, April 7,1997 P age 16 Baseball team w ins ugly over N o . 2 Bruins, 15-14 B y P ercy E d n a u n o J r . State P ress You’re guaranteed of two things during a Sunday game in the Six-Pac: One, pitching w on’t be as stellar as it is during a Friday or Saturday matchup. And two, nothing is ever guaranteed. Just ask anyone on the ASU baseball team. The No. 23-ranked Sun Devils edged past No. 2 UCLA 15-14 on Sunday in front of an announced attendance o f 3,165 at Packard Stadium. ASU won the three-game weekend series 2-1 with the Sun Devils losing 5-2 on Friday and winning 4-3 on Saturday. The wins were a welcome change from the shutout ASU received from USC last week­ end. And with a tough road trip against Stanford on deck for this weekend, the wilts helped the Sun Devils build momentum. ASU head coach Pat Murphy said the first two games of the series were well-played in comparison to Sunday’s win. “It was an ugly baseball game,” Murphy said. “We didn’t play great.” “That’s all we can do is keep winning,” reliever Ryan Bradley said. “We really don’t care any more. Ugly or not, just get it done.” Yet Murphy said the Bruins should not have turned die game into the hig-scoring affair it was. “We had a chance to bury them early,” Murphy said. After four innings, ASU led 8-2. The fifth inning saw the Bruins score five-runs on four hits off ASU starter Jeff Cermak. ASU respond­ ed with a four-run seventh to take á 14-8 lead. The Sun Devils allowed just two home runs during the series both to UCLA shortstop Troy Glaus. Murphy said a big part of winning the weekend series was in preventing the Bruins from getting the big hits. “That’s one of the things our assistant coach­ es came up with,” Murphy said. “In the scout­ ing report, they said if you keep the ball in the park, you’ve got a chance. Except for Glaus, we kept the ball in the park pretty good.” Glaus stroked his 19th home run of the season on Sunday with a ninth-inning grand slam off Bradley, who came in for Ben Byrd in the ninth. That grand slam allowed the Bruins, who were trailing 15-10, to close ASU’s lead to one. With two outs in the ninth and ASU up 159, Byrd walked UCLA’s Nick Theodorou and Chad Matoian, then loaded the bases when he hit leadoff hitter Jon Heinrichs with a pitch. Theodorou then scored after Byrd hit Eric Bymes with a pitch. That prompted Murphy to pull Byrd off the mound and put Bradley in against Glaus, who responded with a home run to right center field. Eric Valent then hit a long fly ball to center fielder Rudy Arguelles to end the game. “H e’s a good hitter,” B radley said o f Glaus. “It was a fastball and it was down, but he hit it out. At least I came back and got Eric (Valent) out.” Bradley, who picked up his sixth save of Lori Cain/State Press ASU’s Andrew Beinbrink, left, congratulates team m ate Rlchy Leon after scoring during the eighth inning o f Sunday’s win over No. 2 UCLA. Leon went 2-for-4 with three runs scored while Beinbrink ended going 2-fqr-5 with a double. the season, spent most of series playing first base. Murphy said the junior right hander has struggled lately on the mound, but playing first base has helped Bradley find a way to settle into tire game easier. “H e’s a good first basem an, th a t’s for sure,“ Murphy said. “He played first base all summer and I toyed with the idea of just putting him in there and letting hirregd, but he’s too valuable to us as a pitcher.” Bradley finished the game going 2-for-4 with one RBI and three runs scored. Texas torches tennis team Sun A ngel continues tradition By Lori Haro fM rA fs fte s ' • ‘ / ¿ y i ;;’TM n^SUiworiseii, s teaois team moved to 13-3 o v e r i l L T ^ f ^ ndai : conference play after it was unable to close its non-conference season j with a perfect record, losing to No. 5 Texas 7-2 Sunday. “We got beat by a better team today, Texas came on and played really well,” head coach Sheila Mcinemey said. “W e c&tiunly didn’t play as well as we could, but all credit to T eSis, they came out today The bright sp m o f the match was Laasdorp arid: K&y Propstra’s win against the No. 3 doubles team in the natron o f Cristina Monos and Farley Taylor 8-4. The No. 3-seeded doubles team o f Reka Cseresnyes and Kerry Giardino were able to hold o ff Anne Pastor and Michelle Faacher winning 8-6. * Texas swept all o f the singles m atches in straight sets, M oros, ranked No. 5, beat ASU’s top-player Cseresnyes 6-3, 6-2. Lansdprp and Propstra w ere also unable to pull out wins; L ansdorp lo s t to Sureephong 7-5, 6-2, and Propstra lost to Berendi 7-6, 6-4; N ash and Giardino drove their second set to seven games, b u t also cam e up short. Nash lost to Faucher 6-3, 7-6, and Pastor beat Gtardmp 6-4,7-5. At tire fifth seed Moll fell to Taylor 6 -3 ,6-2. C Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may Wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. APARTMENTS AVON - SUN care, sales, and free skincare evaluations! Call Jodi @ 964-2664 today! STUDIO APT w/1 year lease, $260/mo + util $200 sec dep, 1 occupant, 117 S. W ilson, Apt 2. Evap. cool. Call 265- APARTMENTS 1 & 2 bd avail, laundry, 2 blks from ASU, 'quiet small complex. 939 S. Farmer. 675-0928, Mara Trivia... Tony the Tiger turns 42 in 1997 % \. OTa'SJ T i r a n a ^ G v 4 S l/'s Coupon Book Made for ASU students, by ASU students to save you money all over town! 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd & studios. $50 off move-in w/ad. 966-8597. Vil l a g e / C ortez Ponds: Studio- $395, 2bd- $525, 3bd$625. ReMax 100, Rose 8200500. T* a su C la s s ifie d s W O R K 1 Featuring teams like USC, UofA, and Florida and elite athletes including an Olympic champion, the 18th annual Sun Angel Classic continued to be one of the most successful meets for the ASU track and field team. “I thought it was a great event overall,” head coach Greg Kraft said. “As an event it was one of the bright spots on the schedule.” Kraft said that the Sun Devils had a very good meet on the men’s side. -Mika Laiho took second in the hammer throw with a toss of 225-feet, 9-inches. Ari Rodriguez reached his personal-best time in the 1500-meter run, taking third in 3:48.52. Vondre Armour, redshirting the season, ran unattached and placed third in the 800 in 1:49.78. Matt Repak took fourth in the 5000 with a time of 14:47.84. “It was more competitive than I expected it to be,” Armour said. “I had a few problems early in my race, but I think it went okay.” 1413, V:.: ■.; SUMMER SUBLET. 1 bd in the Enclave Apts; fully furri. 5 min from ASU. $550/mo. 7778158. HOMES FOR RENT 4BD/2 BA Dobson Ranch . Prvt. pool, tennis, park. Price/Baseline. $950/mo. 8977892 HOMES FOR RENT WALK TO ASU 3bd 2ba $875, 5bd 2ba $1250. 4bd 2ba w/ popí $1400. Call Tim 894-0288 WALK TO ASU. 1 b d/lba $450 mo. 3 bd/2ba $925 mo., 4bd/2ba with pool' Tim 894■0288. WALK TO ASU: 2, 3, & 4bd open for summer & fall. Tim 894-0288 Find it FAST in the Classifieds Beat the Rush / Make you reservation for FALL now • Spacious Studios • / & 2 bedrooms •Beautiful parh-like setting , - Close to campus • Lim ited availability Call us or stop by today. 9 6 6 -5 8 1 9 1440 E Broadway TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2 B D Condo Papago Park $800/mo. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992. QUESTA VIDA lux condo 3bd/3ba, 2 stry, vltd ceilings, sky lights, w/d, dish, micro, 2 pools, spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU, $1195/ mp. Harris Prop­ erties 829-0902. PAPAGO PARK- 2bd/ 2ba, w/d, 2 pools, 2 Jacuzzis, 1 mi to ASU. $795/irto. Harris Prop­ erties 829-0902 Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL APARTMENTS APARTMENTS % Bedroom Apartments Immediate Move-In Apache Terrace Apartm ents 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 RENTAL SHARING TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT C la s s ifie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL © eg)p r o FEMALE STUDENT looking for responsible, laid back room­ mate to move into nice 2bd/2ba apt 2 mi. frotn ASU. Avail, end of April. Call Pam @ 844-2048 U H /VV4 P A S S I O N Attention Summer Students Meridian Corners Apartments For die women’s team, Charity Amana took second in the javelin with a toss of 154-03. Joronda White placed third in the 400 in 54.78, Fiona Daly took fourth in the high jum p with a leap o f 5-10. The women’s 4x400 team also placed fourth with a time of 3:44.45. Karen Vigilant continued to be consistent in the 400 hurdles taking fourth in 59.90. “I improved my time, but I thought 1 could do bet­ ter,’’ Vigilant said. “I was too worried about finishing strong.” The event also showcased elite athletes including former ASU assistant coach Lynda Tolbert-Goode, former NCAA Champions Anna Sorderberg and Nick Hysong, as well as O lym pic gold medalist Inger Miller. Goode was unable to defend her 100-meter hurdles title as she took second behind Miesha McKelyy of San Diego State with a time of 13.24. Sorderberg won the women’s discus with a throw of 188-11, and Hysong won the pole vault with 17-06.5. Miller took firét in the 100-meter dash in 11.21. , l a s s if ie d s ANNOUNCEMENTS NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tion vehicle. Some work OK. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. B y L ori H aro State P ress Short term rentals Available. Studio, 1 & 2 bedrooms Gorgeous community. Call now! Meridian Comers 966-5818 F RESIDENTIAL C o u nselo rs Social Service Agency has y t / Y l positions available working with adults who áre developmentally and mentally challenged in group homes & apartment settings located in Phx., Mesa & Tempe. $6.00-$6.50/hr. DOEPd. training. Call 431-9511. o r S a l e s ? Alamo Rent-A-Car, a leader in the car rental Industry, has openings for full & part time RENTAL AGENTS • Hourly pay plus bonus • Well work around your classes • Marketing students a plus! • Highest paid bonus in the business • Exciting airport location • Career options worldwide after graduation 244-0897 Alamo AUTOMOBILES TRAVEL RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING RO O M S FOR MALE/FEMALE STUDENT to share condo at the Lakes. Pool, gym, tennis. Volleyball, sat. tv. Start August $225/mo. 777-9019. NEEDED 2M mites to share apt w/ 2F at Apache Commons. 2/bd 2/ba fully furn. $350/mo incl $80 util. Call 784-0055 ROOM FOR rent Chnd Glbt area. Big house, no smk pets party. $300 + 1/2 util. M/F ok. Leave rosg. 963-4727 ROOM IN nice home; w/d, ga­ rage, sec; sys., sat. dish. 2 mi from ASU..$.450/|jio. includes everything. Laura 921-2640. f SCOTTSDALE $350 + 1/3 util. 10 min from ASU. Must have ref. 949-2452. NEED RMTE for my Tempe tnhm. Own bd/ba. $250/itio + 1/2 util + 112 phone. Lse from 2-8 mt). n/s, fern only 820-3483 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL This should be your ad Call 965-6735 HELP WÄNTEDGENERAL ...S cience and PreMed M a jo rs ... ROOMMATE WTD nice house w/ pool & spa, w/d 275 + 1/3 util close to campus 470-8467 ROOMS AVAIL, in home. Util., H2Q, gas, sec. sys., w/d, garage, pool. 8 min.; from ASU all for $395/mo. 456-0717 CLINICAL CONDUCT ASSOCIATES Harris Laboratories, a lead er in th e pharm aceutical testing industry, has o p p ortu n ities available fo r persons to m o n ito r activities o f Study Participants and collect and d o cu m en t d ata. G reat exp erien ce fo r science, nursing or p rem ed m ajors. A b ility to w o rk a flexib le schedule req uired . A p p ly at: 153 HARRIS H Page 17 Monday, April 7, 1997 S tate P ress ■ Warehouse Operator for small fast-paced company. We n eed a conscientious Indi­ vidual with a professional work ethic and good communications skills. Responsibilities include: Pulling, boxing, packing, ship­ ping and. Inventory management. Hourly rate $6 50 « ATTN: Ron \^ 4 0 - 9 M 0 X HELP WANTEDGENERAL Instructors N eed ed F/T, P/T, temp, substitute workers needed at agency for adults w/developmental disabilities. Call 994-5704 or apply 7507 E. Osborn Road, Scottsdale. EOE DONOR £GES NEEDED , J-SPR 3 6 th STREET AZ 8 5 0 4 0 AA/EOE Reso SOUTH P h o e n ix , uman 4639 PART T IM E V u r c e s Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ mously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $2000. For m ore inform ation call 602-860-4792 Your ad should be here! Call 965-6735 NEED MONEY for trip to Eu­ rope. For Sale:65V WBug $300, MAC com puter $2000, and old English oak desk $250. Call Patrick wk 965NO QUALIF. 1 1/2 mi. east of . 1257 1 lam -11pm or hm 968ASU. 3 bdr/2ba. fp, vault ceil, 3776. . pool, jacUzzi + appli. Exlusive comm. $76,900. Jim Wascalo AUTOMOBILES pgr. 306-0922 office 996^441 1; 1986 300 ZX 2-I-2, blue, ac, au­ tomatic, ps, am/fm cass, 110k mi Nissan car in great shape $3,500. Call 957-2662 1986 TOYOTA Carnry $500 runs. Needs some work. Call Lori.736-1946. HELP WANTEDGENERAL t Summer Swim A I Instructor ages 6 w k s - l Stop by any time Monday through Saturday between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm. Meet our managere s s employees to learn about our great benefits: •Tuition Reimbursement •401(k) and stock purchase plan : «Medical, Dental, Vision,life •Free long distance credit •Average earnings are $9 -$ ll/lio e r Take your place with MG. Come to 1801E. Cameltiack Road. Suite 201, Colonnade Mai, Phoenix, AZ or call our Job Hotline at: (602) 2486812. MCI is proud to be an equal oppor­ tunity employer, M/F/D/V. H HELP WANTEDGENERAL AUTOMOBILES 1991 TOYOTA CAMRY 5sp., full power, tilt cruise, only 50,00 miles, beautiful S c o t-. tsdale trade $7495,949-7600 FOR SALE- Bronco 2 great in shape '85, 9200 orig miles, ask­ ing $4500 call Mike or Summer 755-7575 G o o d d e p e n d a b l e used car, Chrysler Lebaron. Every­ thing new $4200 314-5728. Call after 6pm on wknds. M O TO RC YC LES" 94 K A WAS. Ninj 250EX $1950 Recently adjusted. New rear tire, leather bra. 966-8267 BICYCLES BOB'S BICYCLE. Barn 25% off tune up, repairs on all makes, bike rentals; Home of GT mtn bikes in Tempe, Cornerstone Mall. 894-6852, MOUNTAIN BIKE Mechanic & tour leader for adventure com­ pany. Part-tim e/flexible. Call David at Venture Up, 955-9100 TRAVEL ADC HAS free cars avail, for most areas. Gas allowance. ; Auto Driveway Co. 952-0339. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 12:30pm & 5pm7:30pm. W SI & CPR/First A id cert. nec. I ^ $6.75-$7.75.hr, DOE. I Call 831-7464. J Flexible Open for Summer Please call for interview 9 6 5 -6 7 5 4 SCOTTSDALE CAMELBACK R esort & Spa has the following em ploym ent opportunities: $$7 HOUR- Beat the heat. Great company , great hrs., no exp necess, to Work in bur a/c Tempe telephone renewal dept. If 3-8pm M-F works for you & if you have the determination to succeed then cal us at Orca Intemtn'1438-8095. Front Desk Clerk 2nd Shift 3pm - 11:30pm Please apply in person. Interviewing and application hours are from 10-4, M-F Scottsdale Camel back Resort 6t Spa is an equal opportunity employer. If you are interested in a fun, exciting, lively environment, then Applebee's is the place for you! Md's average teiemarketeis earn W/hour $13/hour. Join MCI at $7.&0/hour plus greal Incentives, OUTBOUND SALES REPRESENT«!« • Various full-time and part-time positions now avaiWe • We have 2 new shifts: • 6:00 am -12 noon Mondayftiday • 7:00 am • 5:45 pm Friday & Saturday • S7.S0/H0UR PLUS CONTESTS AND LUCRATIVE INCENTIVES 1991 CHEVY CAVALIER, auto, a/c, cruise, very sharp, many other clean cars in this price range, $3995.949-7600 adult. M-Th, 7:30am- $3 .50 - $7 .43/h f 8« Oct of ¿tMHCAVf&uoHte fteifktuw! FURNITURE ASU INCOME property 4bd, 1 1/4 ba, fenced, irrigated + Ibd guest Cottage. Maple/Ash area $145,000. 968-5074 10-30 h n /w c e k TAKE CENTER STAGE EARN $16.00/HOUR ORMORE PAPAGO PARK, Questa Vida, & others! 2 & 3 bdrms. Own for less than rent. Greg, Realty Executives; 966-0016. COUCHES 8 mo. old, excellent cond. Standard couch & loveseat, $275 obo 938-3879 HOMES FOR SALE Telefund Now Hiring I ON YOU TOW NHOM ES / C O N D O S FOR SALE Appiebee's needs energetic, fun-loving individuals who want to have a good time, and earn BIG BUCKS in the process. WflnTGD We offer both part-time and Tull-time positions, & an excellent benefit package! Accepting applications for the following: •> Cooks Server Assistants •3 Host/Hostesses -3 Bartenders ; •3 Server -3 Dishwashers ? L o c a tio n s • Apply in person Mon - Sat from 8am - 7pm 909 East Broadway Road Tempe, AZ For management opportunities fax a resume to: Norma Cardwell (606) 254-4558 C a e u a l u o c k p la c e I h ô& L L W - Call iteceli 1 -8 0 0 7 0 1 -3 7 6 3 8 0 6 -0 Û Ô 6 N e i g h b o r h o o d G rill & B o r . As We Grow, So Do You! Interested in getting in on a fast-track for promotion; advancement and success? Stuck in a dead­ end job that’s taking you nowhere fast? Then FAGS, the Phoenix area's hottest new employer, wants to talk to you! The FACS Group, Inc. provides financial, credit and administrative services for Federated Department Stores, Inc. including Macy's, as well as other companies. Business is excellent so we're looking for dependable, motivated, service-oriented people to join our dynamic team. In our fast-paced environment, advancement opportunities abound - in as little as 120 days, you can move up to a position of greater responsibility and reward. C U S T O M E R S E R V IC E • C O L L E C T IO N S A HOST of Job Opportunities! Host Marriott Services, Corp. is the nation’s leading operator of Food, Beverage and Retail concessions servicing the traveling public at over 170 airports, travel plazas and tourist attractions worldwide. Currently at Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport we have positions for. Food & Beverage Assistant Manager • Food & Beverage Store Manager • Food Servere/Cashier • Sales Associate • Maintenance Technicians • Utility « A U T H O R IZ A T IO N S C E N T R A L S T O R E O P E R A T O R S * E X P R E SS C R E D IT Join the dynamic team at our offices in Tempe and enjoy: • $7.50/hour to start for m ost positions • Complete benefits for full-time • Generous discounts on most Macy's purchases •Service & performance awards V alet Parking for th e V alley’s h o tte st n ig h tclu b s, h o te ls & restau ran ts. M anager pQ sition s a v a ila b le. ¿¡jet tom e com * h i you* pocket! • Variety of full-time and part-time shifts • Fully paid training on phone and CRT online applications • Recreation and social activities M l o f this plus with our. casual dress code you can even wear storts to work! A typing test is required for all positions. Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. at 1345 S. 52nd Street (northeast comer of 52nd Street and West 14th Street between Broadway Road and University Drive), For more information call: ^ O O O Q /m 2 (toll free, 24 hours) X * u O O " Z O T " J / Host offers excellent benefits including: • Medical/dental/life • 401(k) • Tuition reimbursement • Free meals • Paid parking or partial bus pass reimbursement FACS FINANCIAL an d CREDIT SERVICES Equal opportunity fo ra li Apply in person at: Host Marriott, Sky Harbor Airport, Terminal 3, west end level 3, Monday - Friday, 8am - 4pm. Apply by phone at 1-800-555-5718 ext. 4003. H H orr M arriott Sunca Drug-Free Workplace M/F/V/D An Equal Opportunity Employer. St a t e P ress Monday, April 7,1997 P age 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ARIZONA STYLISTS, We offer the best pay & benefits in the business! Stay busy, make money! No Appointment Fami­ ly Haircuttérs, Cornerstone, Call Pilav%8-8008 . GYMNASTICS TEACHER en­ thusiastic, fun coach for 5-12 yr olds. Exp. pcef. $7.50$9.00/per hr. 955-7805. M O R TG A G E BNKR SCOTTS. V IN E Learn the mortgage business. Earn $ now and prepare for ..a six figure income upon grad. Call Matt 990-1010 ext 235. Ld cooks & line sups heeded. A-pply within. 946-0696. Scottsdale Rd. & Oak. HAVE FUN this summeT & get paid for it! The Ahwatukee ÀSU STUDENTS wanted now. .Foothills YMCA is looking for energetic, self1motivating peo­ $7-$t 1/hr. I f you can say ple to be Summer Camp Lead­ "free," call me. Also baye cléri­ ers, Teen camp leaden», « swim cal position. Start now: 784lesson instructors. Starting pay 2270; Ask for Bill is $5.25-$6.69 ; for 15-35 BOYS GROUP home staff.need-, hts./w k. The YMC A .is also éd @ Tempe loç: Eve & wknd. looking for soccer referees, for Clean MVR & fingerprinting , April & May. Apply noW at the Ahwatukee Foothills YMC A, jreq, Training pròv for upward 3233 E. C handler Blvd., Ste. mobility. Call 864-1159. 6B, Phx, AZ 85044 CNA NEEDED for 10-bed adult LOOKING FOR personable, care home in Ahwatukee - all professional stud, w/ prof in shifts avail.; 893-1370.> MS Office & Win- 95 interested COUNSELOR POSÌTÌONS: po­ sition-openings in all team & individual sports 4 waterfront + art + drama' •+ RN’s.4- coaching. Com petitive salary. Located Berkshire Mts Of Massachusetts -.2 1/2 hrs from NYC/Bpston. Çàli G re ylock 1-800-8425214. Camp Romaca for girls 1-888-2-RÓMACA, in real estate & finance indus­ try. Must have filing &■phone .exp. P/t & F/t up to $8/hr. REFCO 614-2996 ask for Vin­ cent. m o d e ls /a c to r s . in tT scouts want you for music vid­ eos and local print wprk. 941 6922» P/T OPERATOR for Tempe based answering service.;7am2pm of 2-9pm, Some wkend work. $6/hr. to start 303-2222 This should be your ad Call 965-6735 SHORT ON CASH? VOLT SERVICES GROUP Tempe ACCO UNTING CLERK Part-time DBC ResMentiat Services 2406 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tem pe, A Z 8 5 2 8 2 I1S81 756-1203 H I 1 Employment Opportunities < Benefits « Medical Clerks \;M • AM Host/ Ífoítjp ák . ' • AMServer . WVWW3TTS________ CamelbûcRlnn .;v p O houR (You CAS . ÌI) .A,; .1 Bartending Academy 1 2 9 0 E. ApAcht Blvd. ft 108 I Tempe 921-9925 MED 12" m tem pizza 6.12 HOT WINGS TEMpEfS ONÍy $8.99 B arienc Üiw , s c h o o l! 405W. UNIVERSITY 3101 WEST OF MILL AVE. NEXT TO TOPS LIQUOR HELP WANTEDGENERAL P A R T T IM E A Data Entry/Cusfomer Service for small fast-paced companyWe need a conscientious individual with a professional work ethic and good commu­ nications skills to assist in pro­ viding quality service to pur customers. Responsibilities include: sales order data entry, answering phones and responding to customer requests for information. EOE M /F NE Scottsdale 391-2728 TERMINIX, Hourly rate $6.50 ATTN: Ron 940-9S80 Success Breeds Success Prior experience working with children preferred. Students majoring in education, psych, PE & child development encouraged to apply. For n o te information, call one of die above centers, or check the white pages for a center near you! • F ro n t D esk Earn For this and other opportunities call Gregg Brown © 443-0541. • FT or PT work NE Phoenix available between • 49$-1167 6:30am - 6:30pm 42nd/Chandler Blvd • Relaxed dress 759-4063 code • Help children Arrowhead Lakes KinderCarer learn through 561-7757 play! •Chandler • Alt teacher 460-2040 supplies provided! A DRUG-FREE ENVIRONMENT! B ecom e A B artencJer Openings available in: W ork a t a place w here we focus on h in t EOE has openings for: W e’re one of the country’s fastest growing Fortune 500 Service companies. W e’re looking for enthusiastic individuals with intelligence and dependable work habits. Tired Of working weekends? Do you enjoy w orking w ith Children? Looking for a job to fit w ith your school schedule? 2727 N. Central Ave. Phoenix, AZ 85004 Tempe SPRING & SUMMER JOBS Su b m it A p plications To: U -H aul In te rn atio n a l JOB OPPORTUNITIES When sc h o o l’s out, w ill you n eed a jo b ? Don yt se ll y o u rse lf sh o rt w ith fa s t food, check o u t TERMINIX for rew ardin g Incentives: Tuition R eim bursem ent, P aid Tim e Off, A dvancem ent Potential, 6 Month Raises, Paid Training, Full Benefits P ackage U-Haul International, located in central Phoenix, has a part-time opening for a person with general clerical skills to assist our Tax department. You win answer department phones, file, work on a PC using Windows applications, and process tax returns. You must have good communication skills and work well Under pressure. Flexible hours available. Drug testing may be required. Fax resumes to 351-8989 or apply to: RESTAURANTS/ BARS - Head Coach Mesa | Swim team, ages 5-17. UfeguardWSl &■ coaching exp. dec. $2300/June 1 - July 31. ca»ôai-74B 4 s 730-1808 Earn $ 6 .5 0 - $ 8 .0 0 p e r H our W orking With Adolescents (2 4 h rs T w k ) 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 W E W A N T YO U Don’t call another ad until you hear what we have to offer! Re­ sort Reservations Dept has 20 pos'. avail. 9am -lpm or 5pm; 9pm. $9-$12/hr aVg,_ no sell­ ing!! Start immed. Call Beth 491-4921, , Vott Services Group 894-2250 NTEON 6 D BC needs people to work with children, adoles­ cents, and young adults w ho are D evelopm entally, Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. 7 3 0 -1 8 0 8 C la s s if ie d s VÁLET PARKING attendants, must be c le a n c u t, good atti. tude, $7-$12/hr. 548-0599. VIN E O N C A M PU S Doorperson, barbaek needed. Apply within Vine on campus 894-2662. ASK ABOUT OUR REFERRAL BONUSES!!!! p l e a s e Ca l l Mo n d a y »!! Eain Valuable Experience BO NU SES!! TR A D E R JO E’S p/t clerks, & stockpeople want­ ed. Flex hrs. & good pay. Must be enthusiastic & energetic. Scottsdale 948-9886 Find it FAST iff the Classifieds 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102 Tempe ASK A B O U T O UR REFERRAL THE PICNIC Company Gour­ met Cafe is now hiring delivery drivers & counter help. Fit/pt. 1415 E. University, 2 blks E. of Rural 968-7740 Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guar, to ¡start at 15^30 flex, hrs/wk. Call Jon for intv. between 3-5,921-8282 -April 'C PART-TIME SERVICE Reps. United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for morning, evening & wkend /hifts. $6.87/hr plus shift dif­ ferential for evening hours. Good customer service skills and pleasant phone voice pre­ ferred. Call 431-9500. Tempe location. Employee drug test­ ing required; EOE/M/F/D/V. Needed for large bankcard center in Tempe beginning in early April!! Long term positions w ith great opportunities!!! Must have 10.000KSH. Day shifts and possibly 2nd and 3rd shifts avail. Pay is $7.50-$8.00, DOE. New Donors Earn $ 8 0 For Your First y Three Donations / • Free Supervised Child Care • Generous Bonuses •$ € 5 0 Cash Drawing in Telemarketers needed for large banking center in Tempe, Will be making outbound calls to existing customer base. Previous exp. is helpful but not required. Pay is S7.31+DOE, plus incentives. SWIM INSTRUCTORS at «ilient homes valley-wide. WSI + strong exp, $12-14/hr + bo­ nuses, flex sched. Christ! 5695504 ", ^ ■ .'. 3 0 DATA ENTRY CLERKS!!!! Plasma M akes a Lot of Cents! g HELP WANTEDGENERAL SPORTS M IN D E D PART-TIME FILE clerk - small company 6 miles from ASU is seeking help, heavy filing and; other admin, tasks. F lex .... hours, great working atmos. $7.50/hr. Call Sandi 276-1733. PHONE SALESPEOPLE NEEDED!!! HOTELS * RESORTS • SUITES OUTDOOR ADVENTURE com­ pany now hiring: Mac fluent of­ fice assistant, adventure sales staff, mechanic & bookkeeper. $5,50-8+/hr tp start. Flex hrs Must have own transportation. Gilbert & Mckellips location. Fax resume to 962-0597 or call Ed962r6620. Vy'.,.;.' ;■ ' / ; ; OUTSIDE JOBS - Now hiring! National Parks, Beach Resorts Ranches, Rafting Co.’s, Na­ tionwide openings. Benefits? Bonuses! Call (919) 918-7767, ext R 105 GYMNASTICS COACH want­ ed. M usi, enjoy wçrking w/k;ids. M-F* after .3:15 pm. + Wknds. Great pay, flex- hrs, immed. & summer positions itq'd. 941 -3496. Harriott. SMALL NON-PROFIT compa­ ny seeks M acintosh network administrator for part-time re­ tainer work $ 15-20/hr. DOE For more info: 6554948 OFFICE/DRIVER POSITION: clban MVR, pt, good hrs. lpm7pm, no wkeds, computer work. 24th StTUniv. mature, rtsponsible 244-1114 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL J [ Call for ^ Info Customer Service Reps REVERSE HAPPY HOUR Over 100 P ositions A vailable Balboa Cafe 404 S. MWAt«. #>. o R Valley - W ide Locations . Minimum Experience Required •-------- RESOOT. GOLF CLUB S SPA and V 966-1300 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES wwwo rrs - 1st and 2nd Shifts Available RESORT SUD GOLF CLUB I II Ixtok for these and many other positions to be avialable now and in the near future: Tull or Part Time * Food & Beverage 4r G olf Hr Rooms & Related ★ Spa A Pius O ther Opportunities H e Excellent Benefits Package Available M arriott proudly supports a Drug F ret Work Environment. » O EOE/Minorily/F/V/D 3 Call our job hotline for current positions • 596-7034 e ¿5 « Room Discounts • Food/Beverage Discounts a- dim •u.w*’ $6.50 - $ 8 .7 5 DOE If you have the courage to call Call Today - Work Tomorrow 1 it can make you rich!! 8 9 0 -1 1 1 2 Remedy INTELLIGENT STAFFING (602) 351-3971 (24 hr. message) r St ate P age 19 Monday, April 7,1997 P ress HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDSALES EXPANDING TEMPE company has immediate openings for 510 self-m otivators. 8hr. guar­ anteed + bonuses. 491-5136. PAY ATTENTION My rep made 7k comm/bonuses his first mo. Who's next? Career minded and part-tim ers. 9527332. Classifieds WORK! RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS PT/FT PROFESSIONAL sales consultants to help us grow in '97 in the telecommunications service industry. Commission + salary. Fax resume to 731 -9656 EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Service (A Tempe Co.) has openings for f/t day operator w/Wed. & Sun. Off. P/t operator/supervispr F/Sat. 11pm7am. Other p/t avail. Must 45+ wpm, 10 key by touch, comp, exp. Call 264-4000. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL I $2oo II OFF I > 7 95 ANY I PIZZA I I B a o n o 'i 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 Ï issa ssi PwaaQ Bladder Buster lc Drafts 81°° Drinks A M N i g h t i n j Questions? 966 5543 PIZZA & PASTA HELP WANTEDCLERICAL WINERY REP Sonoita Vine­ yards. P/T, great opp, Phx area. Maintain & develop accts. Wine + sales exp prèf - not nec. Must be over 21. Send resume to Dr. Gordon Dutt 6550 N. 1st Ave, Tucson, AZ 85718. Lem on EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Service (A Tempe Co\j has . openings for f/t 3^9:30 pm Fri & Sat 11 pm-7am. Full benefits, P/T -M.W.F 7-lOam & Sun l28pm; P/t T,Th 7rlpm and Sat 12-8pm. 45+: wpm, ten key by touch, comp. exp. Call 2644000. & . Where A S U Goes for Pizza Terrace. L iiité k b a r a 1 ite m PERSONALS ADOPTION? PREGNANT? 3*0 -9 1 2 2 Think about it! Choosing the right family to adopt your baby involves more than reading ads and calling 800 numbers. I'm an adoption consultant who can help. With us, you read about the couple and decide if they are the right family lor you and your baby before you speak to them. Open or closed adoptions. You CHOOSE! 1301 E. University E v ery M o n d a y Night S tarts at 9pm SECORNER-UNIVERSITY4 RURAi i MIKE PULOS Spaghetti Com­ pany at 4th and M ill needs hosts and bussers. All shifts available: Apply in person bet­ ween 2-4pm Mon-Thurs. PT SECRETARY: MS ExceJl/Win. req'd. Flex hrs M-F $8/hr Carole 966^6276 ext 703 NOW HIRING cooks & wai­ tresses for exciting new Famous Sam’s Restaurant & Sports Bar in Scottsdale. Apply in person at 7134 E. Thomas Rd. M 10am-4pm, T 10am-2pm HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE : Busy lunch, restaurant current-: ly hiring for f/t wait staff posi­ tion; Day hours only, no nights required, .Applicants, must love to give excellent cus­ tomer service Prior experience a plus, Apjily in person M-F, Neiman Marcus, Human. Re­ sources office. 6900 E. Camelback Rd: Scottsdale. RED ROBIN Tempe has immediate openings for. experienced w aitstaff & cooks. Have fun & make good money. Apply today 1.375 W. Elliot:, • WAIT STAFF: immediate open­ ings for lunch & dinner shifts: $3/hr. + tips. Also need, host/ess. Sushi Bar -Sakana 5061 E. Elliot 598-0506 CORK'NCLEAVER Z ie D e b i t i e r ! 12 " or 16" 1 Coupon Per Pizza Dine-In or Pick-Up or S1 Off Delivery M AJERLE’S • Currently hiring day waitstaff. Apply m person, 24 N 2nd St., Phx. NEIMAN MARCUS ' 1 -8 0 0 -6 7 5 -3 4 0 7 Accepting apps. fo r .lunch , HELP WANTEDhost(ess) &' lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ CHILD CARE pearance, reliability & person­ ality are' im portant. Apply in . BABYSITTERS & Nkniiies, flex schedules. Car req'd. $4.75person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 7/hr. 460-1200. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585.: SERVICES SERVICES G riffin , Z ipperer & G ivens * P ip a TUTORS 4th & M ill • 964-3020 5 ASimOGICALFORECAST MS .• IfeurlxyoL by F rances Drake Monday, April 7, 1997 ARIES (March 2J to April 19) You’ll be bringing à project to a successful conclusion. Extra expenses could arise or perhaps it’s you who’s overspending. Travel should prove glorious! TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You could have some inner doubts.or worries about a part­ nership. Still going out for good times is favored. Some consider an investment in an art object or other gewgaw. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Guard against an early-morning argument. Business negotiations could be time-consuming and ted io u s, but a breakthrough occurs late in the day. Persevere and Utilize your concentration. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Try to avoid a quarrel about money. Find ways to cut down on possible expenditures in con­ nection with a trip you need to take. Y o u 'll be pleased with what transpires in a m eeting with an adviser LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Be careful of what financial obliga­ tions you assume. You could be gettin g in o v e r your head. Apply yoürselÎ to the job and you’ll make valuable progress. VIRGO (Aug 23 to Sept. 22) If you have any doubt about another’s m otivation s , now ’s the time to straighten things out w ith a h eart-to -h eart talk. C ouples m ake trav el plans to g eth er. H ow ever, these needn’t be overly extravagant. LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22) You could be personally extraVagant an d you also may meet , with an unexpected expense, Good news comes from â dis­ tancé Romance and social life are favored after dark., SÇORPIO (Oct; 23 to N ov. 21) Yotir personality is an asset to you in business, but guard against plans that are overly expansive. A partner acts in some way that is out of charac­ ter. Try to get to the bottom of this. SAGITTARIUS (Nov: 22 to Dec. 21) You and a partner are on the same w avelength, but problem s could arise before day’s end in Connection with a friendship. Neither lend nor bor­ row money. Financial transac­ tions are not favored. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan 19) Morning hours are your best tim e fo r business interests. L ater, you could get bogged down by some red tape. Don’t expect im m ediate responses from others, even though a part­ nership matter concerns you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You could receive a valu­ able financial tip and you could also be considering an unusual investment. Know when to be silent. U nsolicited advice should be ignored. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) You’ll welcome the day’s social opportunities. Those eligible will meet with roniantiç intro­ ductions. Do guard against an excessive use of credit. YOU BORN TODAY are like­ ly to experiment before settling on a career. You’re not content with an ordinary 9-to-5 exis­ tence and always look for the unusual. You have an active*: intelligent m ind and need to always be stimulated to keep your interest in whatever you; re doing Government and politics appeal, as well as brokerage and the stock market. Your charm and charisma are assets to you. ©1997 King Features Syndicate Iric. O rder yours today! JOB OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA Commercial fishing job. Hard worker, drug-tested, 917-5727. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Earn to $3,000-$6,000+/itiO: in fisheries, parks* resorts: Airfare! Food/lodgingl Call (919) 9187767, ext. A105. CRUISE LINES hiring - bafnrto $2,000+/mo. plus. free w orld. travel (Europe, Caribbean; etc ):: Room/ board. Ring (919) 9.187767, ext Cl 05,'. P u t i t i n t il e C la s s ifie d s ! M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117, M A T 119 C alcu lu s/P recalcu lu s M A T 210, M A T 270, M A T 271, M A T 170 Statistics Q B A 2 2 1 , P SY 230 Physics P H Y 111, P H Y 112, P H Y 121 C h e m istry C H M 113, C H M 115, C H M 1 1 6 Business FIN 300, 0 P M 301 $44.94 TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING THE WRITE STUFF Professional Word Processing ft Dosktop Publishing Services W e still have space in some classes; currently taking names for both Summer Sessions and Fall Call 965-6881 FUNDRAISING FUNDRAISER: MOTIVATED groups needed to earn $500+ promoting AT&T, Discover, Gas & retail cards; Plan now for the next semester to get priority for the best dates. Call Gina at 1-800-592-2121 ext 110. Free cd to qualified callers! MAKE UP to $2,000 in one week! Motivated student or­ ganizations (fraternities, sorori­ ties, etc.) needed for marketing project. Call Dana @ 1-800357-9009 PERSONALS CAMPUS VIDEO contest! Student video clips wanted. Excit­ ing prizes for funniest clips. Share your funniest moments! Send 3 minute VHS clips to Campus Video Contest, Netwofk Event Theater;; 149' 5th Avenue: 11th floor, NY,NY 10010. CAMJPUS VIDEO Contest! Student Video Ciips Wanted. Exciting prizes for the funniest clips. Share your funniest mo­ ments! Send 3 minutes VHS clips to-: Campus Video Con­ test, Network Event Theater, 149 5th Aye, 11th, floor, NY,NY 10010. HOUSE MUSIC: NYC, CHI, L,A. underground parties & ev­ ents. Info. lihe.602-530-8750: SERVICES $1OOFFM ASSAGE Parrish The S tre s s / 430 N. Dobson Rd. Suite 108. Locat­ ed on the N/W corner of Dob­ son & University. 461-0513. $10 off any session w/ASU ID for the month of April. HEALTH & FITNESS AIR PURIFIERS. Breathe fresh air indoors. Removes odors* bacteria, dust,al lergens,pet dander, etc. 244-1400. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING S1.99/PG, $15/RES. Proofed. APA/MLA; Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 TUTORS W e offer tutorial for th e following classes: A lg e b ra /F in ite M a t h . "TkeisunTivil .. LIKE CHILDREN? Person to work 1 on 1 w/ autistic child in beh av io r mod prog: N6; exp nec. Patient, caring, reliable & enjoy wbrk w/ children.. Stud­ ies in. spec, ed, speech or psych helpful: Good $$.497-9515. M a k e y o u r a d v e rtis in g $ $ $ $ w o rk h a rd e r! The Name You Know... The Reputation You Trust.. OPEN FOR LUNCH DAY CAMP counselor. Great exp. for Rec/Ed m ajors. 2040hrs/wk, $5.25-$6 DOE*. - Six locations in Mesa. Apply in person @ .207 N. Mesa Drv. Attn: Jen, *Pr6v. exp. preferred FAST FUNDRAISER - Raise : $500 in 5 days - Greeks*-: Clubs, motivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obliga- . lion, (800) 862-1982 Ext. 3.3. $1 Drinks For • : ' FUNDRAISING Fax: (602) 829-7565 TUTORS CHILD CARE provider needed. Exp’d, flex. hours, p/t. TuesThur. from noon to 7pm. Re­ ferrals req’d. Must have car. Central Tempe area. Call 350-. LOST: MEN'S gold bracelet. Reward. Lost near speech and hearing bldng. Call 982-4244 928 South Mill A venue TEMPErA r852'g'i— CHILDCARE NEEDED in my home. M/T/W 6:30am-8:30am & M*E 3pm-6pm. $6/hr. Must be reliable/have exp. & car. Full time in summer. Call Deb 9662263-Leave message. FREE LOST/FOUNP A GENERAL LAW PRACTICE SERVING ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS, STAFF & FACULTY (602)829-7500 E-Mail: gzglaw @ sprynetpom LADIES N i l HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDSALES 963-3537 Successfully helping students since 1980. MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER < "SIMON Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 Tara Pipan *Tinta* * Dissertations APA/MLA/Groduato CoHapa Formats Rosumos *Graphics ASU Box 871502 Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 S tate P ress C lassified s M atthew s C enter, B asem ent O ffice: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Forrri COMPUTER TUTORING: help With software use/sehool pro‘jects/intemet & moreirr314-4375 ; NÈED HELP getting better grades in chemistry & math? Call Tutor John 483-6043 m MATH TEST Reviews for MAT 119, & 210 by Luis Ast. $20 for 2 to 4 hrs. Ph. 967-3774. Oh the web WWw.miracletutoring.com WANTED $$NEED CASH? We buy used musical instrum ents. Top $$ paid. 548-1114. M-Sat 10-6 MODELS/PRINT/VIDEO M/F 18-22 for Nat’l Boat Co. shootr ing at lake Powell-Pleasant: Send photos/çomp. cards to MDF Agency 3205 148th Ave. Ste. E Bellvue, WA 98007. $10 file/process fee req'd. MISCELLANEOUS NAT L TEACHERS Day May 6th. Honor your favorite teach­ er, name a star. 1-800-3836928 SECRETARIES DAY April 23rd. Name a star for your sec­ retary. Call 1-800-383-6928 Private Party Please be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, in cluding punctuation. Please check your ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility of the S tate Press Shall not exceed th e cost o f the ad and cre d it m ay be given fo r the firs t in sertio n only. M inor spelling erro rs do not q u a lify fo r m ake­ goods. No refunds wiM be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a cre d it w ill be held on account fo r future advertising tw l □ D riv e r's license# cbb o m Bank Card Num ber . &wm •> 1-4 days, $1.62 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.57 per line, per day 104- days, $1.42 per line, per day 3 , Comm ercial 1 day, $2.47 per line 2-4 days, $1.89 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.67 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.52 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline to r the cost o f 2 lines. $ | g g . '-t . - 'i* ■ 'lillijig I M i C la ssifica tio n N sm s/N um ber: N sm e o n C srd E xp ira tio n Date INTERNET U R L S ~ CHECK OUT your student g o v e r n m e n t . h ttp ://w w w .asu .ed u /stu d en tlife/ASASU D ates you P rice p e r 0 e y f" SPERM & egg donors needed! Earn $2,000 in your spare time! Call our 24hr private informa­ tion line: (602)280-9266. S orry, W6 ca n n o t accep t psrsoi»«l sDs ttu q u p h ttM in isM . INTERNET-RELATED SERVICES $$ FOR YOUR used books. Visit www.usedbook.com Sell/buy your used books State P ress Monday, April 7, 1997 P age 2 0 ft; T m M ta ff tyess Ts l now hiring a qualified m student to work days in the State Press production -departflpnt. 1 QuarkXpress experience is required and m ilc h e fram iliar with M M h tosÈ teftfrare. 1 Stop by the State Press offices in the basement of Matthews Center to pick up an application today or call the production department at k 965-2097 for A L . . more information. A Example of good spinal structure. Example of poor spinal structure. Twelve Danger Signals 1. Numbness in arms and hands 2. Restless nights 3. Pain between shoulders 4. Stiffness of neck 5. Nerve tension 6. Depression 7. Headaches 8. Anxiety in the chest 9. Stiffness or pain in the lower back 10. Tired hips and legs 11. Painful joints 12. Whiplash A R IZ O N A STATE iJ Do You Understand the Damaging Effects of Subluxation? ■ O nly D am aged Tissue Gives You Symptoms. ■ You Can Build Disease W ith out Knowing It. Brain Stem Control C enter C1 .C 2 (Atlas-Axis) Healthy Nerve Pinched Nerve = Subluxation = Disease = Symptoms m Turkey B IT Melt [ ^ ^ C h icken C h e e se s teak™ ÿ g Bacon Ham ’n Cheese Melt O’NEAL CHIROPRACTIC Celebrating 17 Years In Practice CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT Personal lnjury, Workman's Compensation, Insurance and Guh Acceptai Most Workman's Compensation Cases Eligible For Care - Call For Details From ASU at Loaf Monster™ Caraful - thag’rB Hoaded! Extreme Carver™ C o m b o O N LY *3” I n c lu d e s y o u r c h o ic e o f o n e E x tr e m e C a rv er™ S a n d w ic h , a n in d iv id u a l s i d e it e m a n d a r e g u la r d r in k . G o o d .at all p a rtic ip a tin g B oston M ark et (o p tio n s . P resent coupon, w h en o rdering. O n ly one: c o u p o n p e r visit p e r custom er. C o u p o n is n o t redeem able fo r cash, fo r gift certificates, o r w ith a n y Other c o u p o n o r special offer.; N o re p ro d u c tio n s allow ed. A pplicable taxes p a id by bearer. N o cash refu n d . O ffe r expires 4/27/97 South on Rural, turn left on Baseline & go 1/4 mile, turn left into Lake Country Village Center at Winchell’s and Firestone Tire. Look for O ’Neal Chiropractic neon sign on right, 4 doors from AMC Theater box office. I A K E C O U N T R Y V IL L A G E S h o p p i n g C e n te r 491-1242 For your convenience, call 8:30am - 6:00pm Mon.-Fri. fo r appointm ent. Our office is designed to keep w aiting to ah absolute mihimum! Dr. Richard L. O'Neal. Palmer Graduate Team Physician Sport and Fitness Council World Olympic ■ World” ..,. irrimitfee Chiropractic Commi ‘ 1 1 0 7 0 E. B a se lin e R d., T e m p e