OCR Text |
Show {ournal CIOS$1 1c<d, mu t be submitted to our ofllccs on the basement lcvd of the Teclmology Building or 10 the ec,rctuy in the Student Activities Oflice. The co,t is $1 for mtin ben ol the campus communit y; S2 for oll•campus indlvldual • All ads mu,1 be paid for in odvance. Deadline I• noon Frlwiy for Monwiy wue; _ , n Tue5'lay for Wedne day ls,ue; noon Thursc:by for Friday ls ue. Those who ,ubmit ad. ate reminded 1h01 no ad may be pbced on behal! I another md1V1dual w ithout that individual's consent. If the Owvcr<1ry foumal dl,coven such an auempt, borh the advertisement and the payment will be forfeited. The Univers117 /oumal prohibna di.s<:rlm1nation m ra<e, color, crud, age, reli,i;ioo, sex or handicap. H LPWANT ED Po 1tions are available for male and fem le tulOr/ coun sclors for the SUU Upwa rd u nd 1995 ummer program which runs from )une I to July 29. Students with two years college completion are encouraged to ap ply . Specia l teaching abilitie are req uired in at least ~ of the follow in are as : Math, Science, Engli h, Foreign La nguage .. al ary starts at Sl ,800 plus room and b ard for the six -week period. Upward Bou nd is an equal opportunity emp loyer, a nd as part of its nondiscriminatory emplo yment practices, encourages upplicants from traditionally 1tnder-reprc. ;;med group . Pica e pick up ou r applications at the Upward Bound office in the ,eneul Classroom Building room 114. Applications need to be typed and submitted by April J 4, 1995. ... 33 ELP WANTED ... Men/Women cam up 10 S480 weekly as embling circuit boards and electronic components at borne. Experience unnecessary, will train . Immediate openings your local are.i. Call 1·602-6 0.7444 Ext. 102C LIVE AT PISHLAJ<E while working tbjs summer!! Fishlakc Resorts will be in Cedar City on April 18th to interview lor summer employment. Contact )ob Service lor interview, appointm,nts and listing of positions available. For more information call 1-801-638-1000 NATIONAL PARKS HilUNG - Sea anal & full-time employment available al National Park , Forests & Wildlife Preserves. Benefits + bonuses! CaU: 1-206545-4804 ext. N59133 CRUisE KIPS NOW HlRlNG - Earn up 10 S2,000+ / month working on Cruise Ships or Land -Tour compani,s. World travel !Hawaii, Mexico, tlie Caribbean, etc J. easonal and full -time emplo yment avail blc. No experience necc nry. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C591 4 ALA KA SU lMER EMl'LOYMENT Fis hing Indus try . Earn up 10 SJ, 000$6,000+ per month . Room & Boardl Tran portatlon! Male/ female . No experience necess ary! 1206)545-41 55 ext A591 33 TRAVEL ABROAD AN O WOR K. Make up IO $2,000· 4,000+ / mo. teaching ba ic wnver ational Engli h in Japan, T aiwan, or • Korea . o teach ing backgro und or A ian languages required. For information call: (206) 632- 1146 ext. )5913 1 FUNDRAISING FA T FUNDRAI ER - Rai e S 00 in 'i days - Greek , group , cluhs, m otivnted l J,~lt!i' rl~. l ~-·.1J~~-f ~H!E I :.. ' • · ' 1 ~ j , • 1 , 586-SHOW • FOR COMPLETE IHfORMATIOH ..,, NOW PLAYING AT FIDDLERS THEATRE OUTBREAK (R) 9 p.m. Dustin Hotrman rnk~ !~k~~J.Pflo Matinee (Sat individuals . Fa 1, Easy · There is no financial obligation 1800) 775-3851 Ext. & ' "" l Patrick Swayze TOMMY BOY CPG -13) 7:30 & 9;40 P.M. ~:30 Matinee t>a< • '"" l Chris Farley David Spade BORN TO BE WILD (GJ 7:15 & 9;30 P.M. 4:30 Matinee ,,,. • son.) DOWNTOWN • CAMPUS [VlRY SAT. l'TAMATIHUS 11 a.m. lo 1 p .n,. $1 AT DOOR CAM,u s THEA.TIU ONLY. FORREST GUMP (PG-13) 1 & 9 :30 p.m. C:30 Matinee ,s., • ,.n.) RESEARCH INFORMATION Tom Hank, MAJOR PAYNE (PG-13) Largest Library or information in U.S.All Subjects 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. Damon Wayans 800-351-0222 o,Q,Qt ff7.fint 5"'TURD°'Y AMO SUMD°'Y MATIMU ADMISSION O N LY $3.00 ,>,U. REGUI.Nl $£ATS n .oo O , tlMltiCIOIO Mlf.MCHWWORllllATIOtf lt:122~ AVE •.20IJ A l.m ~ G A tomS SCHOLARSHIPS Need money for college! funds go unused every year. Computer Resources of Utah can help you. 1-800-887-0716 FORSAl.E FOR SALE: 2. Kenwood auto power amps. 921 & 821. Good as new. Cost SSS0.00 a piece, new. $275.00 a piece. Call Randy at 801-677-2244 FOR SALE: Misc . Textbooks, Giant gumball machine, MACLC Computer , TI82 Graphic Cale. Call 586-1153 College Way Apts. has penings for spring & fall qtr. Each apt. has washer/dryer, dishwasher, fully furnished. S465/Qu. or $155/mo. Call Eric 586-6107 PER ONALS AUTO DETAILING: Have no time to wash your car! I will pick it up, wash, vacuum, Armor-all, d the window and deliver it to you for ON!,,Y SIS.00 (Wax, an adclitional SI 0.00. Call ~ercmy 586-3906. Congratulntinns to t e sisters on your installation. Love, the Sisters of Zeta Tau Alpha To the Si ters of Zeta lau Alpha: Thank you lor alJ your liard work through rush week and~ood luck with instaUation. To: All Yose We3rin Blue Todiiyl Have a great one! - The Happy Camper ziggy Bronco King} - Wfuit's up!ll How's football o ing!ll How 'bout dinne r and dessen ag;iin someti me! You know where Ii. r go, d n't oul Oh, well, the core is ,tiU tied! - Shon Sheet and Cookie Dough Mey UPO girls! Viva Lis Vega51 - HB hnr, and N t: Tfuink lor talking - I feel better; I ho e y u do too. Have fun this weeke nd . Thanks for e ve r thing ! -OMRAH Hey " K" - Are we crazy or what!!! oh, well, I lo ve our little regression back 10 t h e High School cars! Ha! H ! Thi weekend should be fun - I've never been 1 Milford! How does it cornrare to 0 .C.! I I love you! Than lor everything! - MEI s,ooo people in Utah have the AIDS virus. Your date tonight could be one of them! AIDS IOI Please Protect YourseU! Presented by the Utah AIDS Foundation TIME: 9-10 a.m. DATE: Thursday, April 6 PLACE: SUU Technology Building, Room 113 (Just Notth of the Centrum) For more information, call: Sponsored by: Steve Susoeff, 586-251 5, 586-9051 Ruth Ann Adams, R.N., 673-3528 Southwest Utah Mental Health/Alcohol & Drug Center Southwest Utah Publlc Heatth Department Unsafe Sex and J.V. Drug Use Can Kill You JIM LITKE SPORTS COMMENTARY The old man was in the building It didn't hurt that the old man was in the building. He didn't speak to the team before the game, didn't score a basket, didn't send over a play, didn't even stay in his eat all the way to the end. It didn't matter. Somehow, it was enough to lo k acros the floor and see John Wooden in the house. "l hammered him all along and told him, 'If we ever go, I want you there," UCLA coach Jim Barrick said. "It really meant a lot to me personally, " he added, the words spilling o u t faster and faster now, '"beca use we're very close friends." A torch was passed Monday night from a dozen of the ~reat teams of the past to one with a present and an interesting future. Another was passed from mentor to pupil, though in keeping with the leaner spirit of the times, it was actually nothing more ornamental than a rolled-up scorecard. That was what Wood n, the winner of 10 NCAA champion hip in the stretch of a dozen years, u ed to carry when he prowled the UCLA sid line two decade ago. lt wa a habit Barrick pick d up after moving to Lo An ele to take a j b as a high sch ol coach in 1964, the year Wooden won his £ir t title. And until the 89-78 victory over Arkan a wa ea led and Harri k had a title f hi own, me p pie figured that rolled-up program wa all they had in comm n. Not even clo e. How about steadfastness? And leadershi p? And con id nee? And cool! Harrick learned n the eve of the bigge t game f hi life that he m ight I e Tyu Edney, hi senior point guard, to a wri. t injury. Three minutes into that ame, he found out for ertain . He didn 't c hange a thing. He simpl y turned th r m o te con tr I o er t ameron ollar. "At the b ginnin I wa a little ncrvou ," Dollar said, " and I got stripped the fir t time l touched th bal l." But when he looked ba k at th bench for th quick hook, it never came. " And as the gam got on," h aid, " my confidenc began to grow." He was not the only one. Barrick' defensive sch me was the fir t to effectively hut down Corliss Williams o , harrassing Arkan a ' tud into 3 -for- 16 shooting and just 12 points, only seven in the second half. On the other end of the floor, Barrick ordered Dollar to counter the Razorbacks' wilting pressure by pushing the ball into the teeth of their press. ''J don't think it was ju t that they attacked the press, it was how they finished it," Arkansas' Scotty Thurman said. " Mo t teams will get by a couple of times, but not every team capitalized on it when they break it." These Bruins did, time after time, in way that Wooden might not have approved when be was running thing , but in ways that certainly must have thrilled him watching from the tands. The most thrilling came when freshman Toby Bailey £ini hed a fa t break by dunkin.g backward to finish an 11-2 UCLA run five minutes into the econd half - a time when the outcome was still very much in doubt and more than one coach would bave blown a gasket. But Harrick merely looked at it as a reward for all the hard work Bailey and his teammates put in over that same tretch, pounding the offensive board in a way no c ach could help but love. Going to the glass two and three times for putbacks and short jumpers, it proved to be most important sequence en route to the Bruins' 50-31 rebounding edge. "I'm very proud," Wooden said afterward. "To b honest, I didn't think they could win it without Edney. He makes that team run." He did. But be was not the only one that could. At various times, Dollar made it run, or Bailey made it run, or Ed O'Bannon simply put it on his back and ran all the way to the championship with it. UCLA wa not supposed to be deep enough to mn that long. " Ain't no way nobody was going to come out in this game," said O 'Bannon, who finished with 30 points, 17 rebounds and the title of most outstanding player. "Everybody sucked it up, we went out and wupped them, simple as that." Harrick knows that it's never as simple as that, knows it better than anyone, perhaps, except for the old man in the building sitting across the way. |