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Show CLASSIFIED muit be 11.lbm.Jtr~ to ow oUicn on the baxmcnt kv~I ol the Ttthnology Butldlng or to the teettury 1ft the S11.1deru Atdvlt1a: Oflice. Th~ cxn:1 It S 1 for member, of the UIIIIJIIUOIIJ1 ll fm off-c,mpu, indl.idu:,1,. All om muit be pud lo< ID a<mncc. o..dllnt I> noon frld..y lo, Mond..y ls.W <j Tuodoy Ir.- W«loud,y UC, 000ft Thw,day fo< F.t 'f bsuc. TboH who submit ,cb. .ire re-m inJed du.t no ad mAY be- plaud on heh.Alf of anotht1 l.odividU.11 without Wt lndMdu.11, ton5ent U the Unurusl1y JOUl'ltd dl:tc:oYcn iuc.h ,an ,m cmp both the -dvcnbcmcnl and the payment wlU be fodcltc.d The Umversuy /oumal probtbttt d1,crimln.nJon In r.tcc:, color, crud. age-, rc.l~ion, tel or hlindicap. Jncunol Cbnd1 ""°" umr,u, HELP WANT ED MP STAFF NEEDED.•.The Utah Girl cout Council is accepting applications to r um m«r camping programs. nunselor , h egu:mls, EMT/medical and nding inst tors needed. Information and application s are available at tbc UU Placement enter or contact Ann Mullins at the Southern Utah Girl Scout Service enter at S86·7299. Po itions arc available for male and e male tut r/ coun elors for the UU pward Bound 1995 Summer program , hich run , Crom June 16 to July 29. tudents with 1wo years college c mp l etio n re encouraged to apply. pecial teaching abilities are required in at least lUlJ: of the following areas: Math, ~,IA (ft. ~O~!. , . · .. , l I l' S86·SHOW j ' j , . ~ r o R COMPLETE INr ORMATION STARTING FRIDAY AT FIDDLERS THEATRE THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE 7:00 & 9; 15 P.M. 4:30 Mat inee (Sal . & Sun.) TOMMY BOY (PG -13) 7:30 & 9; 40 P.M . 4:30 Matinee (Sat . & Sun.) Chris Farley D•vid Spade BAD BOYS (R) 7: 15 & 9;30 P.M. 4:30 Mat inee (Sat . & Sun.) DOWNTOWN • CAMPUS EYlllY SAT PTA MATINEES 11 • . m. & 1 p.m. $1 AT 00011 CAMPUS THU.TU O NLY. FORREST GUMP (PG-13) 9 p .m. Tom Hanks MAJOR l tYNE (PG·13) _9:30 p.m.,~ on Wayans ·~BORN TO BE WILD (PG) :JO p.m •• RESEARCH INFORMATION experience necessary! 1206)545-4 155 ext AS9133 TRAVEL ABROAD ANO WORK. Make up 10 $2.,000·$4,000+/mo. teaching basic conversational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For information call: j2.06) 632-1146 ext. )59131 FUNDRAISING FAST PU NDRAJSER - Raise $500 in 5 days - Greeks, groups, clubs, motivated individuals. Fast, Easy · There is no financial obligation (800) 775·3851 Ext. 33 CHOLAJlSHlPS Need money for coHege! Funds go unused every year. Computer Resou.rces of Utah can help you. 1.8()().887-0716 FOR SALE POR SA.LE: 2 Kenwood auto power amps. 921 &. 821. Good as new. Cost $550.00 a piece, new: $275.00 a piece. Call Randy al 80 l •6 77 ·2244 PERSONALS Students at Work Art and Letters Candidates: Heather Green, C i rce Chamberlain and Jenn Hemme. We' ll do ii right. Vote!!! AUTO DETAILING : Have no time 10 wuh your earl I will pick It up, wash, vacuum, Armor-all, do the windows and deliver it to you for ONLY Sl5.00 (W:u:, a n addition a l S 10.00.) Ca ll Jeremy 586-3906. Bus/Comm/Tech Candidates: Amanda Traeger, Matt Davi s, Jodi Hart. Vote Students :It Work on Tuesday. They know how to add it upl !I ave the earth - Recycle this newspaper! Sieve - Oh! Excu e u ! That's - Mr. Professor: U ruin y our life? We thin k not - unles 5, of course, it's the result fa bro ken h art due 10 love lost, in whi h c o c, w e're o vc.ry so rr y, bu t there' nothing we can do! - The Queen TT ENT IO EDUCAT IO N AN D P. E. MAJOR : Mi nd i Sitterud, Je remy lc.hol:11 ond Becky Parker wl h to b a v ,cc for you as Educat ion enatu~. otc Students ot Work ·ruesd.1y! Largest Library of information In U.S.- GOOFY ~VIE (PG) ' 7 p .m. Science, English, Foreign Langu.age. Salary startll at S 1,800 plus room and board for the sjx-week period. Upward Bound ls an equal opportunity employer, and as part of Its nondiscriminatory employment practices, encourages applicants from traditionally under-represented groups. Please pick up your applications at the Upward Bound oHicc in the General Classroom Building room 1 14. Applications need to be typed and submitted by April 14, 1995. CRUISE SI--IlP JOBS! Attention: Students. Earn $2000 + monthly. Summer/full-Lime. World travel. Caribbean, Hawaii. Tour Guides, Gift Shop Sales, Deck Hands, Casino Workers. No experience. CALL: !6021453-4651 H ELP WANTBD ... Men/Women earn up to $480 weekly assembling circuit boards and electronic components at home. Experience unneces ary, will train . Immediate openings your local area. Call 1-602-680-7444 Ext. 102C LIVE AT Fl HLAKE while working this su m mer!! Fishlake Resorts will be in Cedar City on April 18th to imerview for summer employment. Contact Job Service for interview, appointments and listing of positions available. For more information call 1·801 -638-1000 N ATIONAL PARKS HfRJNG - Seasonal &. fu ll -time employmen t available a t National Parks, Forests &. Wildlife Preserves. Benefits + bonuses! CaJI: J .2Q6. 545-4804 ext. N59133 CRUI E SHIP NOW HlRlNG - Earn up to $2, 000+/ m o nth worklni on Crui c Ships or Land·Tour companies. World travel [Hawaii, Mexico, the aribbea n, etc.). co onal and Cull-t ime cmpl ymcnt availahle. No experience necc Sa ry. Fo r more Information call 1·206-634·0468 ext. 9 134 A.LA, KA MME R EMP.LOYME T Fishing Indu s try . Earn up t o S ,000 · 6,000+ pe r month . Roo m & Board ! ran po rt allon ! M nle/ Fem ole. N o ,f' SATI.l~OAY ANO SUNDAY MATIHU ADMISSIO N OHlY S3.00 AU REGULAR SEATS SS.00 All SubjeclS 800-351-0222 •P•Qt m -taa Send a Pe onal Todnyl 0.. Nlft 12.00 ID AUU.IIICH IW04'MATIOfl t1:JZ2 1Do\H1)/l.'tl[ . ~ Lo. A.nglltN. CAIOm5 THE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL IS SEEKING EAGER, ENTHUSIASTIC, MOTIVATED INDIVIDUALS FOR ADVERTISING SALES AND AN ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER TRAINEE SALESPEOPLE WILL BE REQUIRED TO CALL UPON BUSINESSES IN CEDAR CITY (AND IN ST GEORGE IF POSSIBLE), SELL ADVERTISING SPACE AND COORDINATE DESIGN WITH AD PRODUCTION STAFF. IN ADDITION, ACCESS TO AN AUTOMOBILE IS MOST HELPFUL. REMUNERATION: COMMISSION ON SALES. AN ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER TRAINEE Will BE CHOSEN FROM THE POOL OF ADVERTISING SALESPEOPLE TO ASSUME DUTIES FALL QUARTER. IN ADDITION TO PREVIOUSLY MENTIONED DUTIES, THE MANAGER WILL ALSO BE REQUIRED TO COORDINATE BILLING WITH THE BUSINESS MANAGER, SEND TEARSHEETS TO AGENCIES AND COORDINATE SALES STAFF. REMUNERATION: ROUGHLY $400-$500 A MONTH IN SALES COMMISSION AND IN-STATE TUITION PAID. NN IONAL SPORTS DIGEST CRENSHAW WEARS GREEN JACKET FOR SECOND TIME: Ben Crenshaw, who last Sunday took one last lesson from his teacher Harvey Penick, won the Masters championship exactly a week after Penick died. Taming the treacherous Augusta National greens with a confident putting stroke bolstered by Penick's reassuring words, Crenshaw shot a finalround 68 to finish at 14-under-par 274, one stroke ahead of Davis Love and three ahead L---..L..- - -..-..• of Greg Norman and Jay Haas. As his final Ben Crenshaw putt dropped on the last green, Crenshaw - - - - -- ---bent over and clasped his head, overcome with emotion. It was a slam-bang finish after the day started with 12 players within four strokes of Crenshaw and third-round co-leader Brian Henninger. And it all turned, as always, on the tricky back nine at August.a. The cIW1ching blow came at No. 16 when, with Love safely in the clubhouse at 13-under, Crenshaw hit a brilliant iron shot that showed enormous knowledge of the course, hitting well right of the hole on the par-3 and curling down the slope to 3 feet. He knocked it in for the birdie that put him at 14 under and rode that emotion to a 12-footer for birdie at No. 17. He played No. 18 safely and made a bogey. It was the econd Masters title for the 43-year-old Crenshaw, who won in 1984 and also has finished econd twice. HOLME LOSES TO McCALL; RETIRES: Georg F reman had th wer to cheat Father Time. Larry Holmes didn't. Th 45year-old H Imes, trying to j in the 46-year-old Foreman atop the heavyweight divisi n, bad hi le• let him down in the late roun as liver McCall pulled off a unanimous decision and retained the heavyweight titl aturday nigh t outdoors at Caesars Palace. T he vict I)' put McCall int th rich Mike Ty n w pstakes, as it did Bruce Seldon, who earlier stopped J-: ny Tucker aft r seven rounds and won the vacant WBA title. While McCall can look f rward to Ty on, wh had been pectecl to attend the fight card but didn't how up, Holmes must look forward to retirement "Thi was a good way f r me to go out, 11 said the man wh was heavyweight champion £mm 197 to 1985 but now has failed in four attempts to become a champion again. FREE AGENT SIGNINGS SLOWING: The steady stream of free-agent signings and trades slowed ye terday, leaving t he likes of M ickey Tettleton, Benito San tiago and Tim Belcher wondering how much money is left in the m arket for them. There were only a few m oves, none involving stars, following two days in w hich there were 80 deals. Boston signed Stan Belinda and Reggie Jefferson, t he Chicago Cu bs got pitcher Jaim e Navarro, San Francisco got outfielder Glenallen Hill and Colorado signed pitcher Omar Olivares. One t rade that may not happen concerns C leveland and Baltimore. The Orioles want to be sure Cal Ripken Jr. can break Lou Gehrig's consecutive-games streak at Camden Yards. T he date, as scheduled, would be Sept. 6 in Baltimo.r e on the fina l day of a series against California. After that, the O rioles go to Cleveland . A rainout could m ess up the Oriole ' plans, so they want to trade a home series with the Indians in May for t hat series on Sept. 8-10. Bu t Cleveland general manager John Hart is against the sw ap. "Ownership asked my opinion on it," Hart said. " I don't want to make t he change. T he Orioles want a backup plan . This is abou t competition . Our fan s deserve to see the dat es on the schedule . Our fans deserve to see a possible championship race in September at home." Another free agent interested in a job is Bruce Hurst. He retired last season after trying to make a comeback from shoulder surgery with Texas, but called the Red Sox about another t ry. Hnrst, who nearly pitched Boston to t he 1986 World Series champion sh ip, t hrew in fron t of a Red Sox scout Saturday in Las Vegas. T h e t eam will decide later t his week whet her to invite the St. George left-hander to camp. UN SER WI NS LONG BEACH GRAND PRIX: Al Unser Jr. renew ed his lease on the downtown street circuit at Long Beach yesterday, turning around a disappointing season start with his sixth Toyota Grand Prix victory. |