©Copyright, State Press, 1992 Tempe, Arizona Monday, April 6,1992 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 75 No. 119 Democrats seek to skip veto crisis Ketchup lover By CHRIS DRISCOLL State Press Democrats in the Arizona Legislature will attempt to avoid what they termed “a constitutional crisis” by negotiating with Gov. Fife Symington about his use of the line-item veto on bills intended to bring the state budget into balance, the president of the state Senate Said Sunday. Sen. Pete Bios, D-Dudleyville, the top Democrat in the Senate, said he hopes to meet with the governor this week. “My preference is to sit down with the governor first and try to explain to him that we do have a constitutional problem and see if we can work out a solution,” Rios Said. If he can’t come to an agreement with Symington, Rios said the Democrats would file a special court action, dropping the case into the state Supreme Court’s lap. “I think the state of Arizona doesn’t need another little crisis,” he said. “So 1 hope the governor will settle the issue out of court.” The governor, however, is ready for a court battle over his use of the line-item veto. “ (A line-item veto) is Within the governor’s power,” said Doug Cole, spokesman for Symington. “And we fully anticipated the Senate Democrats to take us on.” Responding to Cole’s statement, Rios said, “I think that’s a sad commentary on the state of politics in Arizona.” Rios said that if a court battle was anticipated “then T clearly there must have been some serious doubt in Ketoey W olf, a five-year-old student In the A S U Child Development Lab, en|oye licking ketchup straight from the packet w hile her father, Shepard W olf, director for A S tfs Survey Research Lab, oats M s McRIb sandw ich. T o rn to V eto, p a g e 8. Tem pe dum ps plans for recycling program By D.J. BURROUGH State Press Plans for a citywide recycling program in Tempe have been trashed. “I’m recommending that the city step back," said Gary Brown, Tempe’s deputy city manager. “Take a comprehensive look at its total solid waste operation from collection to disposal — including recycling '■*- and see what makes the most sense and how we can operate the system most efficiently.” Tempe has been negotiating with Waste Management since January to establish a curb-side program that would pick up recyclables from 32,000 homes in the city. The city has received a draft contract from the 20-year-old national waste management company, and could have proceeded with negotiations, Brown said. Brown said anticipated cost increases to residents for municipal services was a factor that prompted him to suggest the city not develop its recycling program. Tempe residents would have been charged $1.42 per household for the recycling program. “Costs to Tempe citizens for water, sewer and refuse services are going to increase’ dramatically over the next three to five years,’’ he said, A recently released refuse rate analysis stated that in order for the city to break even in its refuse operations, the current service rate of $8.45 per month per household should be increased to $10.40, an increase of 22 percent. The city is planning to raise the rate May 1. Stringent federal and state environmental mandates are also increasing cost to the city for sewage treatment and water treatment —a cost that will have to be passed along to city residents, Brown said. “The average household who pays a total of $35.35 today for water, sewage and trash pickup, will see the same services costing $68.80 or nearly doubling,” he said. Councilman Neil Giuliano said residents are already facing a substantial increase and should not be assessed an additional charge for a recycling program. “When you look at the big picture you have to do this,” he said. “I just hope the message gets out that we are doing this because it is the right thing.” He said the city should seek out experts to help find a way to develop the recycling project. “I think we have to also remind ourselves T u rn to R ecycle, p ag e 8. Faculty club opening prompts mixed sentiments By SHANNON LOUGHRIN State Press The opening of UniversityjClub last week prompted a flood of praise — and criticism — of the lavish faculty lounge. “I like it fine,” said d u b member Sue Schaffer, a retired comparative education professor. “It is a very nice place for the faculty to sit down with each other and talk. It’s a place of sociability.” Hie University Club opened after a number of delays and a rash of opposition posed by former Associated Students of ASU presidents and Arizona Board of Regents members. ASASU President Greg Mechem has also expressed disapproval of the club. Officials were hoping the opening would bring in more memberships to reach the 600 marie, but according to Jill DeMichele, membership committee chair of University Club, there has been no substantial increase yet. H aving a ball: Members o f ASU’s Ballroom Dancing Club dance the night away during their weekly practice on Sundays. Page 2 “It will take a few more weeks, I think,” she said. “ I know a lot of people are coming in. But so far, membership has remained pretty much the same.” DeMichele added that she expects membership to increase after April 30, when prospective members who have paid only part of their membership fee must decide whether to join or not. „ “So far, there are about 120 people who have paid some of the money and deferred the rest to see if they really wanted to join or not,” she said. “After April, we’ll expeef the numbers of members to increase.” Lex Akers, president of the club’s board of directors, said he witnessed a growth in membership when one of his guests decided to join during his visit. “I don’t have exact figures yet, but that’s an aneedote I have,” he said. “That wound up to be the most expensive meal he’s probably ever had.” So far, most of the club’s business has come from the noon lunch hour, although the club also serves breakfast and dinner. “I think that’s because of our culture,” Akers said. “People usually stay home and don’t go out for dinner.” He added that not as many members as he expected have been using the dub as a lounge. “We have a lot of people coming to eat, but not so many to sit and talk here,” he said. “Once they find out we have the Wall Street Journal, we have the ASU paper, they might be coming here more to just relax,” he said. Schaffer said she had been to the club three times already, once for lunch for her husband’s birthday, once for dinner with out-of-town guests and once for a meeting. “Most universities do have something like this,” she said. Jana Brown, systems analyst and University Club charter T o rn to C lub, p a g e 8. In su rin g tom orrow : Insuring Tomorrow, a two-day conference to be held this weekend, will focus on issues such as educatiofr^nd the economy. T he eventVas founded in 1963 by Tempe Councilman Neil Giuliano, then ASASU president. 1001 fo r Brock: The ASU baseball team beat U ofA 8 -7 in 11 innings Sunday., Page 11 Today’s weather: Sunny days and clear nights. High in the m id80s. Classifieds............................ 14 Comics...................... ...........10 Crossw ord................... ........6 H oroscope.................. 15 Sports.................................... 11 State Press ASU dance class gives edge on cutting a rug By JA CK IE RUTYNA State F r a n What couple has not dreamed of tripping the light fantastic as elegantly as Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers? Clumsy students clad in T-shirts and tennis shoes turn their dreams into realities through weekly practice with ASU’s Ballroom Dancing Club. “When you do ballroom dancing, you are holding a woman and the music is playing and it’s an expression of art,” said Kenyon Robertson, an intercultural communication major who has been ballroom dancing since his first semester at ASU three years ago. “It’s sort of like safe sex,” Robertson said, adding that he loves the music of the '30s and ’40s. Robertson said the club usually meets every Sunday to learn new steps. Twice a month members meet to go out to clubs like the Orange Tree, the Royal Palm, or the Phoenician to dance to ballroom music. “We like to go to the Latin clubs, top,” Robertson said. “We can do the cha-cha, the meranga, the somba, and the mambo.” The club was organized last semester by Lyman Goodrich, a graduate student majoring in fine arts, who also teaches ballroom dancing classes at ASU. “The major reason I am interested in offering a club and classes is because of the real shady nature of ballroom dance institutions outside,” Goodrich said. “The Fred Astaires and Arthur Murrays are incredibly high-priced and not as interested in instruction as they are in your money.” Goodrich said students do not need to have any ballroom dancing experience to join the club. “We are a social dancing ballroom du b ,” Goodrich said. “ It’s open to anyone who The calendar section is a listing of events printed on a space-available basis as a service to the ASU community. Campus clubs and organizations can submit written entries to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries are subject to editing. For publication in the This Week section, which previews special events and club meetings, entries must be submitted the week prior to publication. Publication of This Week will be on Mondays. Deadline for the Today section is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Daily entries must be turned in for each event. wants to come and take a lesson and get a taste of ballroom dancing.” Goodrich said ballroom dancing is gaining popularity and there is a drive to make it an Olympic sport. “Ballroom dancing is timeless,” Goodrich said. However, he m adeit clear that it takes practice to become a good dancer. “A lot of times people want to be involved in ballroom dancing, but they want to take the first lesson and be Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire,” Goodrich said. Doti Giacalone, a junior travd and tourism major, said she enjoys the club because it allows her to learn more steps and practice them in public. “It’s really nice when we go out to clubs, and older couples come up to us and tell us it’s really wonderful to see younger people doing ballroom dancing,” Giacalone said. •ASU Recycling: phone book recycling, April 3 through A pril 13, lots 26,11 & 13, and the southeast end of Tempe Center parking lot. •Muslim Students1 Association: free movie, “ The M essage” about the emergence of Islam ic civilization, 5:45 p.m. W ednesday, MU Union Cinem a, lower level. •Adult Children of Alcoholics: 12-step self-help group with speaker, noon W ednesday, MU Kaibab Room 208E. •Financial Management Association: BBQ, 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, Kiwanis Park on A ll Am erican Way. •M.E.Ch.A.: “ La Sem ana Cultural,” featuring five Chicano & Latin Am erican cultures of the Quincentennial, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Friday, W est Lawn. T h is W eek Today •Alcoholics Anonymous: closed meeting, daily at noon, Newman Center on University Drive and College Avenue. •ASU Student for Choice: meeting, a ll welcome, discussing next year’s committee chair positions, 4:40 p.m., “Usually, we are the only ones there under the age of SO.” The members agreed that most students start out thinking they have two left feet, but after a few lessons, they realize that it is not as difficult as it looks. “It’s a blast, even if you don’t know how to dance,” Giacalone said. “A lot of people have a hard time at first, but you just laugh at your mistakes.” Goodrich spends three mornings every week teaching aspiring ballroom danders the intricacies of waltzes and the quick steps of the fox trot. He mingles among the couples chanting, “Quick, quick, slow, quick, quick, slow.” Goodrich said that once students pick up on the basic steps, learning other dances is not that difficult. “ Anyone in the world can do this, it’s not that difficult,” Goodrich said. “Everything old is new again.” Women’s Student Center, MU lower level. •Le Cercle Français: meeting, all welcome, 1 to 2:30 p.m., Coffee Plantation. •Society for Human Resource Management: meeting & happy hour, 4:30 p.m., MU Apache Room 221. •M .E.Ch.A.: “ C h ican o W riters: The Not-So-Q uiet Revolution,” by Dr. Tey Diana Rebolledo of the University of New M exico, 7 p.m., LL A18. •Coalition for World Peace: Dr. M ichael Wlnkelman w ill discuss cross-cultural communication as a prerequisite to peace, noon, MU Mohave Room, C o r r e c tio n In the in-depth article about “The Disappearing Black Man” in Friday’s State Press, Leonard Gordon was incorrectly identified. He is the ASU associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. \ o u can find everything in the State Press on EVERYTHING D iam ond B a ck • Trek • J a z z • G ian t B ia n ch i • Iron H o rse « W heeler U .S .A . B a g s T ire s T u b e s P arts S h o rts J e rs e y s G lo v e s R a ck s P u m p s L o c k s Shoes Just Show Us Your A SU Stydent, Faculty or Staff Lim ited to quantity & s jze s on hand - S a le en d s 4-12-92 Y o u r C o lle g ia te B i k e Student Discounts Broadway ID W orld/N ation Monday, April 6,1998 U rttñ w » P ag é3 A b o rtio n WASHINGTON (AP) — An estimated half million abortion-rights demonstrators marched on the nation’s capital Sunday to show political muscle that they hoped would sway politicians and a conservative Supreme Court. “Hie more we learned about the law at Harvard, the more we realize how fragile these rights are,” said Julie Doyle, a Harvard Law School student. ‘‘We’re going to turn out of office people who don’t support us,” Patricia Ireland, president of the National Organization for Women, said at a morning rally. It was the first abortions rights march on the capital in three years, and Ireland called it “the largest ever of any kind in this nation’s capital.” U.S. Park Police estimated the size of the crowd at 500,000. As it does with all major demonstrations on the Mall, park police photographed the crowd from a helicopter and then superimposed a grid over the composite photo to estimate the crowd. The estimate is made under a formula derived from calculating the number of people who would normally fit into a certain number of square feet. NOW had said it expected between 300,000 and 700,000 people to take part. “We do count and there are an awful lot of us and they should watch out,” said Isabel Glass of New York. Democratic presidential candidate Jerry Brown sat quietly for about an hour, but left without speaking to the main crowd. He did stand on a folding chair on the back of the main stage to address a small crowd with a bullhorn. A NOW spokeswoman, who refused to be identified by name, said the group decided not to allow any presidential candidate to speak. Bill Clinton, who like Brown took time out from campaigning for the New York Democratic primary to attend the assembly, marched in the rally surrounded by supporters who chanted, “pro-choice, pro-Clinton.” Both sides in the abortion issue see this year as a possible turning point for legalized abortion in America. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments April 22 on a Pennsylvania case that imposes restrictions on abortions. People on both sides of the issue believe the court will use that case to undermine or even overturn Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 decision that made abortion legal. As the march began, skies were clear, temperatures were brisk and strong winds swept Washington, which also was marking the start of its annual cherry blossom festivities. Participants in Sunday*« abortion-rights rally and march Hi W ashington wear m asks and sig n s depicting thorn a s "brooding units." Tho National Organization for Woman expects several hundred thousand to m arch to show political m uscle they hop« w ill sway Congress and a conservative Suprem o C o u rt Many of the marchers were clad in white and were from out of town, having spent the night or at least the early hours of the morning crammed into buses for the trip to Washington. As they passed the White House, some demonstrators hurled onto the lawn tennis balls bearing the message “Are you ready to be a mother?” Uniformed Secret Service officers stood inside the iron fence impassively watching the bright green balls arc through the air. President Bush, who has made telephone speeches to anti­ abortion rallies, was at the presidential retreat in Camp David, Md. Anti-abortion demonstrators planned a peaceful rally at the West Front of the Capitol, just a couple of blocks from where the afternoon pro-choice event was being staged. Iranian places bomb rebel base Wal-Mart king First air attack by Iran since dies at age 74 1988 cease-fire that ended wai' NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Iranian warplanes bombed an Iranian rebel base near Baghdad on Sunday, the first air strike by Iran on Iraqi territory since a 1988 cease-fire halted their eight-year war. Iraq claimed its forces shot down one of eight Iranian fighter-bombers and captured the two-man crew. State-run Baghdad radio, monitored in Cyprus, called the raid an act of “blatant and unjustified aggression” and warned Iran of “grave consequences.” Rebel supporters in Europe responded by attacking Iranian embassies in at least six countries. The air raid marked a sharp deterioration in relations between Iran and Iraq, which have not signed a peace treaty to formally end their 1980-88 war and have been waging increasingly strident propaganda campaigns against each other. Tehran said the air strike was in retaliation for a raid by guerrillas of Mujahedeen Khalq, or People’s Holy Warriors, on two villages in western Iran on Saturday. It also blamed the Mujahedeen fen: recent attacks on Iranian diplomats in Baghdad. A ssociated P re s s photo D e m o n s tra to rs s c u ffle w ith p o lic e o u ts id e th e Iran ian em bassy, in The Hague, Sunday. The dem onstrators attacked the em bassy in revenge for Sunday’s Iranian attack on a rebel base near Baghdad, Iraq. But the raid may have been an attempt by Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani to shore up support five days before parliamentary elections, in which he is trying to crush onents of moves to improve relations with the West. ih e air attack was the most serious clash since March 1991, when units of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards crossed the border during Kurdish and Shiite Muslim rebellions and clashed with Iraqi troops and their allies. Mujahedeen Khalq, the largest exiled Iranian opposition force, said one of its fighters was killed and several others wounded when its base near Khalis, 30 miles inside Iraq and 40 miles from Baghdad, was showered with cluster bombs on Sunday morning. It denied attacking the Iranian villages. Ali Reza Jafarazadeh, a Mujahedeen spokesman in Baghdad, said: “The real reason for today’s attack was the tremendous political crisis facing the Tehran regime inside Iran over the parliamentary elections.” He spoke by telephone with The Associated Press in Nicosia. Iraq said eight U.S.-built F-4 Phantom jets “heavily pounded” the Iranian base and that Iraqi troops shot down one warplane and captured the two crewmen. The rebels said 12F-4s attacked in five waves and claimed they shot down the jet. The official Iraqi News Agency said President Saddam HUssein met with his military commanders after the attack. It did not give details of the discussions. Baghdad Radio said Iraq’s Foreign Ministry sent a letter of protest to U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali. His predecessor, Javier Per«: de Cuellar, angered the Iraqis last year by blaming Iraq for the Iran-Iraq war. Mujahedeen Khalq issued a statement in France saying its leader, Massoud Radjavi, sent a telegram to Boutros-Ghali asking that the U.N. Security Council condemn the attack and embargo oil and arms trade with Iran. In Europe, dozens of Mujahedeen supporters hurled firebombs, bricks and rocks at Iranian diplomatic offices in Germany, Sweden, Britain, France, the Netherlands and Switzerland. Two buildings at the embassy in Sweden were badly burned and a consulate in Hamburg, Germany, also suffered fire damage. The Iranians are believed to have about 20 American-made F-4s in working condition. The rest have been grounded because of a lack of spare parts, which the United States cut off after Iran’s Islamic revolution in 1979. The mujahedeen initially identified the downed Iranians as two sergeants, but the Iraqis said file pair had tried to “disguise their true ranks.” The official Iraqi News Agency identified them as Col. Qassem Mohammad Amini, the pilot, and Air 1st Lt. Arsalan Sharifi, the navigator and weapons officer, both from the Hanwvian air base in western Iran. Neither Baghdad Radio nor the mujahedeen said whether they were injured. LITTLE. ROCK, Ark. (AP) Sam Walton, the feisty business pioneer who never lost touch with his Arkansas roots as he built WalMart into the nation’s largest re­ tail chain, died Sunday. He was 74. He underwent treatment for leukemia in the early 1980s and was diagnosed with bone Cancer in 1990. He was hospitalized for treatment of the disease when he W alto n died. Walton was a shrewd businessman who used high-tech management and lots of cheerleading to sell employees on a philosophy of efficiency and service to the customer. That philosophy enabled Wal-Mart, which began with a single store in Rogers, Ark., in 1962, to ring up $43.89 billion in 1991 sales and dethrone Sears, Roebuck and Co. as the nation’s largest retailer early in 1991. It also made Samuel Moore Walton one of the richest people in the United States. In October 1991, Forbes magazine placed him and his four children as Nos, 3 to 7 on its list of the wealthiest Americans, with a net worth of $4.4 billion each. Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, a Democratic presidential candidate, called Walton a charitable man. “Hillary and I treasured Sam Walton’s friendship and we will miss him very much,” Clinton said.-“H ew as. . one of the greatest citizens in the history of the state of Arkansas.” Walton died about 8 a.m. at the University of Arkansas Medical Sciences Hospital, where he had been more than a week, Wal-Mart officials said. Born March 29,1918, in Kingfisher, Okla., he attended the University of Missouri, receiving a bachelor’s degree in econotoics to 1940. He went to work as a management trainee at J.C. Penney Co., then served in the Army from 1942 to 1945. Walton opened the first Wal-Mart Discount City store in 1962. By 1969, there were 18 stores, but the company began growing explosively in file 1980s, sometimes adding hundreds of new stores a year, most of them in small towns iq the South and Midwest. As of March 31, 1992, there were 1,735 Wal-Marts and 212 Sam’s Wholesale Qub warehouse stores. Opinion _____ _________________Monday, April 6 , 1999 Page 4 state press ÎJU. ditorial------------- Recycling trashed! A s n e g o t i a t i o n s b e t w e e n t h e c ity o f T e m p e a n d W a s te M a n a g e m e n t b r e a k d o w n , i t lo o k s a s t h o u g h t h e T e m p e o f f ic ia ls ’ e n v i r o n m e n t a l r h e to r ic c a n b e s h o v e le d in to th e la n d f ill o f w o r t h l e s s p o litic a l p r o m is e s . L o c a l o ffic ia ls h a v e b e e n w o r k in g o n a c ity w id e re c y c lin g p ro g ra m w ith W a s te M a n a g e m e n t to c o lle c t re c y c la b le m a te r ia ls fro m T e m p e r e s i d e n t s w ith t h e i r r e g u l a r t r a s h c o lle c tio n . W ith a d r a f t o f a c o n tr a c t in h a n d , c ity o ffic ia ls h a v e ju n k e d th e p ro g ra m a f te r d is c o v e rin g i t s c o st: $ 1 .4 2 p e r m o n th . O v e r t h e p a s t fe w m o n th s , T e m p e r e s i d e n t s h a v e b e e n h e a r in g h o w b e n e fic ia l s u c h a re c y c lin g p ro g ra m w o u ld b e fo r th e e n v ir o n m e n t. R e s id e n ts h a v e b e e n w a r n e d o f o v e rc ro w d in g a t t h e la n d f ills a n d t h e n e e d le s s w a s t e o f p o te n tia lly re c y c la b le r e s o u r c e s . I s $ 1 .4 2 p e r m o n t h t o o g r e a t a c o s t f o r T e m p e c itiz e n s to b e a r in o r d e r to a v o id e n v ir o n m e n ta l d e c a y ? T h e e le c te d a n d b u r e a u c r a tic le a d e r s ______________ _____ __________________ a p p a r e n t l y t h i n k so. W h e t h e r t h e e n v ir o n m e n t is t r u l y i n d e c a y o r w h e t h e r i t i s t h e c i t y ’s d u t y t o f ix s u c h d e c a y a r e d e b a ta b le q u e s tio n s . B u t th e s e q u e s tio n s a r e n o t th e fa c to rs h o ld in g T em p e le a d e r s h ip b a c k . T h e o n ly t h i n g s t a n d i n g i n t h e w a y o f t h e c ity -w id e re c y c lin g p ro g ra m is th e u n w illin g n e s s o f e le c te d o ffic ia ls to t a c k $ 1 .4 2 o n to c itiz e n ’s u t i l i t y b ills . A s T e m p e M a y o r H a r r y M itc h e ll e a s e s i n t o h i s e i g h t h te r m , c itiz e n s n e e d to a s k w h e t h e r t h e y s h o u ld s u p p o r t l e a d e r s w h o a r e u n w illin g to p u t t h e c ity ’s m o n e y w h e r e t h e i r m o u t h s are . ‘ Clinton struggles with publics right to know “Governor, I have another question about your adm itted [IKE use of m arijuana in the past,” “I thought we had put th at ROYKO behind us. As I explained, I Tribune tried it once m any years ago. Took two puffs, didn’t inhale, Media didn’t like it and haven’t tried Services it since.” “Yes, Governor, b u t th ere a re s till Sòme p o in ts t h a t should be cleared up to satisfy the public’s right to know what th e New York m edia believe they have a right to know.” “Such as?” “Do you know if the m arijuana was Maui Wowee?” “I have no idea where it came from.” “So you cannot deny it was Maui Wowie?” “No, but I can't confirm it, either.” “In other words, it could have been Maui Wowie.” “I suppose so. It could also have been oregano, for all I know.” “Are you now changing your position and claiming th at you did not smoke marijuana, but only oregano?” “No, I don’t know if it was oregano.” “Could it have been Acapulco Gold?” “As I said, I don’t know.” “Then you aren’t ruling th at out?” “I am not ruling it out or in.” “Governor, were there any seeds in the reefer you claim to have taken only two puffs from?” “I have no idea.” “Well, when you took the two puffs, did you hear any snap, crackle or popping noise th at would indicate the presence of seeds?” “I have not heard any snap, crackle or popping noises since I consumed Rice Krispies.” “You say you consumed Rice Krispies? Was this as a result of having the munchies at the gathering where you smoked marijuana?” “No, I had Rice Krispies as a child.” “How old were you when you had Rice Krispies?”: “About 7 or 8. Maybe 9.” “Gan you be more specific than that?” “No, I can’t.” “Then, Governor, don’t you think it is inconsistent t h a t you can rem em b er ta k in g only tw o puffs of m arijuana, but you can’t remember how old you were when you ate Rice Krispies?” “Well, I . ...” “ Governor, has your wife’s law firm ever represented the Rice Krispies company?” “To the best of my knowledge, no.” “But if the law firm had represented them, Governor, 9 Ut a l ir would not your having eaten Rice Krispies be considered a conflict of interest?” “ No, b ecau se I a te th e Rice K rispies before I m et my wife.” “Governor, to get back to your claim t h a t you took only two puffs of marijuana on t h a t one occasion in England. After taking these two puffs, do you re c a ll using the phrase, ‘Oh, wow, groovy , m an T “No, I don’t rem em ber saying, ‘Oh, wow, groovy, man.’” “ You say you don’t remember. Does th a t mean you could h av e said, ‘Oh, wow, groovy, m an?” “No, I definitely did not “Then is it possible th at after taking those two puffs, say that. It is not the kind of phrase I would use.” which you now claim were the only puffs you ever took, “Then you deny it?” you m ight have grinned foolishly? While a t the same “Absolutely.” >' _ time saying ‘wow’?” “What about the word “wow?” “If I grinned, somebody might have thought it to be a “What about it?” foolish grin, but th at foolishness would be in the eyes of “Could you have used the word ‘wow,’ w ithout the thè beholder.” ‘groovy, man1?” “So you don’t deny the possibility th a t you grinned “Youmean, ju st p lain ‘wow’?” foolishly while saying ‘wow?” “That’s right, Governor.” “ I c a n ’t deny i t b ecau se, as I to ld you, I don’t “Well, I suppose there have been times when I have remember.” used the w ord‘Wow.’” “Then Governor, explain this. If you took only two “Then can you say for certain th at you did not use the puffs from th at reefer, and did not inhale them, how is it word ‘wow’ the evening you say you took only two puffs possible th at those two puffs could have made you grin from a m arijuana cigarette and did not inhale them?” “I don’t remember using the word ‘wow,’ but, no, I foolishly and say ‘wow,’ which you do not deny it is possible th at you said?” can’t flatly say I did not use it.” “Wow, th at is some question.” “So it is possible th at you did say ‘wow’ th at evening.” “Governor, you ju st said “wow.’ “ “I suppose it is possible. I might have also said ‘golly.’ “Yes, I guess I did.” I use ‘golly’ more than I use ‘wow.”1 “Yet, Governor, a few m om ents ago, you said you “But if you did say ‘wow,’ Governor, could it have been seldom said ‘wow,’ th a t you were more likely to say, while you were staring blankly at a flickering candle in a ‘golly.’ Have you changed your position on that?” darkened room, marveling at the strange and wondrous . “Golly, no.” color formations?” “Now you have said, ‘golly,’ Governor. Isn’t th a t an “No, I did not stare blankly a t any flickering candles.” indication th at you are opportunistic?” “How about light bulbs?” “Gosh, I don’t think so.” “No, I did not stare a t any light bulbs, either.” “You’ve changed positions, again, Governor. W hat “Governor, do you recall giggling th at evening?” does th at say about your electability?” “I am not inclined to giggle.” “I don’t think it says anything.” “Are you saying you never giggle? Is th at what you are “Then explain this, Governor: Why did you prefer Rice telling the New York press, Governor, th a t you never Krispies to Wheaties?” giggle?” _ . “I liked them both.” “I didn’t say I never giggle. But l am more likely to “Sorry, we’re out of tape.” : grin.” MICHELLE ROBERTS, Editor PATRICIA MAH, Managing Editor K RISM A Y ES........................................ . .............City Editor KEN BROW N...... ......................................... Asst. City Editor . KAY OLSON...... ..................................—...News Editor LARRY SALZMAN.................................. Opinion Editor ANDREW FAUCHT .... ..........••••■••.......„Copy Chief IRWIN DAUGHERTY...................... Photo Editor SEAN OPENSHAW........................... .......Asst. Photo Editor DAN ZEIGER.....................:.................................Sports Editor DARREN U R BA N .....................................Asst. Sports Editor VICKI CULVER.,.......... Magazine Editor LAURIE NOTARO..................... Magazine Managing Editor REPO RTERS: D.J. Burrough, Christopher Driscoll, Margo G illm an, Carol Ann Hansen, Blake Herzog, Lisa Kranz, Corey Lewis, Shannon Loughrin, C ecilia Marquis, Chad Redwing, Jackie Rutyna, Sondra Roberto, Irma Rosales, Richard Ruelas. SPO R T S R E PO R T E R S: Brian Charles, Michael Flores, Gieg Sexton. , MAGAZINE STAFF: Dawn DeVries, Richard Ruelas. CARTOONIST: Ken Collins, PHOTOGRAPHERS: Henri Cohen, Michelle Conway, T-JSokol. Darryl Webb, Carl York, CORY EDITORS: Joanna Glickler, Kate Wagstaffe. COLU M N ISTS; Nicholas Gerbis, Lois Griffitts, Lorenzo Sierra Jr., Ashahed Tiiche. PRODUCTION: Christine M. Armstrong, Kai Barrett, Celia Hamman C ueto, Jeff H ams, Kevin H eller, Barry Kelly, A ngela L a P o fte , J efrc y L ucas, Dan R ick erb y , Ehren Schwiebert. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Kelly A dcock, Jesus Barron, Sonia Benson, Tom Curtis, Heather DeShong, Lori Guthart, Brittin Karbowsky, ShaWn Loos, Lance Newman, Jennifer Rishel, Neil Schnelwar. Dennis Talbot'. The Slate Press is published M onday through Friday during 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 general nature. T he State Press is the o nly new sp ap er ex clu siv e ly published for and circulated on the ASÜ campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not ffeeMttfrily those of the ÀSU administration, faculty, -staff or a id e n t body. Editorial Board Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board write editorials and the board decides their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: MICHELLE ROBERTS........................... ,.......a...,......... Editor PATRICIA MAH Editor LARRY SALZMAN.......„..si..,.«....,.......f>.;.....bpinion Editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your hill name, class standing and major (or any other a f f i a t a with the universiD^and phone number. Only sighed4j|tti$s will, be consideraci for publication. R equests fo r anohyniity w ill be granted only w ith an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor All letters must be either brought in person with a photo LD . to the State Pr ess front desk in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter or else addressed to State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. State Press Phone Numbers Front Desk............ ........ .........,.................................... 965-7572 Newsroom................. .................. ............. ,..... ..........965-2292 Magazine..... .......................... ............ 965-1695 Display Advertising................... .................965-6555 Classified Advertising.................. 965-6731 Page 5 Monday, Apri) 6 ,199g State Press P o lic e R e p o r t ASU police reported the following incidents over the weekend: • Several items of drug .paraphernalia, marijuana and a stolen sign were seized from a room on the ninth floor of Manzanita Hall. No arrests were made. • A man not affiliated with the University was contacted for urinating on the south side of the east practice fields. A man who was with him, also not affiliated with ASU, was arrested after a check showed an outstanding warrant with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office for failure to appear. • A hub cap, valued at $26, was stolen from a student’s car parked in Lot 59. • A Pioneer receiver, valued at $430, was stolen from the Psychology Building. • The fire alarm on the eighth floor of Cholla Hall was set off because of burnt ' fO O d. ■; • Two men not affiliated with the University were told to leave Sun Devil Stadium after they were seen rappelling off , the north stairs of the skyboxes. Tempe police reported the following incidents over the weekend: • An officer, responding to a burglary-in­ progress call, noticed a blue Chevrolet S-10 pickup with a camper shell travelling southbound on College Avenue. A pursuit ensued, which ended when the two men fled the truck on foot, leaving it in drive. The truck rolled into the canal east of Guadalupe. The driver was arrested after a short foot pursuit. A check showed the vehicle was stolen from Casa Grande on April 1. • Two Tempe residents, a 17-year-old boy and a 16-year-old boy, were arrested in connection with an attempted motor vehicle theft. The driver’s side window of a 1988 C hevrolet pickup, p a rk ed a t 5100 S. McClintock Drive, was shattered and the steering column was cracked open. Witnesses saw three additional suspects, around the same age of those arrested, in the area of the truck. • A jar containing 100 $1 bills was stolen from After the Gold Rush, 1216 E. Apache Blvd. The jar contained tips for a 25-yearold bartender, who said that prior to the theft, four men were talking to her and trying to distract her. They could not be located after the theft. • Two men in a 1982 Toyota Tercel were struck by a “club” thrown through the rear passenger window of the car while in the area of Baseline Road and Lakeshore Drive. One man was hit in the chest and mouth and another passenger was struck ip the right arm by the auto theft prevention device. The object was thrown from a car that fled southbound on Lakeshore Drive. Both the suspects and the victims were leaving a party held in a nearby neighborhood. • Three men entered the Hi-Health at 3222 S. Mill Ave., and as one of them distracted the clerk by asking about products, the other two stole items and ran out. Stolen were two bottles of X-Rated Body Building Diet Supplement, valued a t $49.90 each, and a bottle of Phase One Weight Gaining Supplement and Anabolic ¿lend, valued at $79.95. Two suspects are Hispanic men, about 5-foot-10. The other suspect is a black man, about 6 feet tall. All are about 17 or 18 years old, wearing jeans and T-shirts and described as thin. Compiled by State Press reporter Richard Rijelas. Parole board turns down last-m inute reprieve FLORENCE (AP) — The state parole board on Sunday night unanimously rejected an appeal for clemency for triple murderer Donald Eugene Harding, clearing the way for his execution in the gas chamber early Monday. The execution — Arizona’s first in 29 years, was scheduled for 12:05 a.m. MST Monday. The board’s options were to grant a reprive to allow further argument in court or to recommend that Gov. Fife Symington commute Harding’s sentences to life in prison. Symington can’t act to block the execution without a recommendation from the board. Defense attorney James Belanger declined to comment immediately after the ruling. “We will have something to say later this evening,” Belanger said. The prosecutor, Jack Roberts, said he expected a new appeal. “I’m sure they’ll be filing a further challenge. I don’t know what it will be,” said Roberts, a deputy state attorney general. Harding, 43, was sentenced to die for 1980 murders of two businessmen. His third murder conviction is on appeal. Nationally, 167 have been executed since the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. Arizona’s last execution was in 1963 when Manuel Silvas died in the gas information” but that he didn’t think the board wouldt make chamber for fatally shooting his estranged pregnant a recommendation to him. “Harding fits the description of the type of person that girlfriend. Defense attorneys argued in an all-day hearing before the should be given the death penalty,” Attorney General Grant state Board of Pardons and Paroles that brain damage he ^ Woods said Saturday after the Supreme Court acted. Woods, suffered at birth prevents Harding from being able to as attorney general, was to witness the execution. With videtaped recorded testimony and brain diagrams, restrain violent impulses. Similar arguments were made in an appeal that was defense attorney Hal Sheets told the board Sunday that rejected Saturday by the U.S. Supreme Court. But defense Harding suffered irreparable brain damage when he was attorneys argued that information presented to.'the board bom in rural Arkansas with his umbilical cord wrapped Sunday, including testimony by neurological and psychiatric around his neck. experts, hadn’t been heard previously by a court. Lack of oxygen suffered by Harding’s brain left him The defense said Harding was put in reform school and partially devoid of “those higher things that make us other environments whose “sterility and hostility” rivaled human” and victim to uncontrollable impulses, Sheets said. his incarceration in the Arizona State Prison here. Defense attorney Belanger read aloud letters from The pardons board originally scheduled the clemency schoolchildren in New York state and Harding’s replies that hearing for Friday, but postponed it until Sunday at the request of Harding’s lawyers because a three-judge panel of he typically signed “hugs and kisses, with love from Don.” the 9th U S; Circuit Court of Appeals issued an indefinite stay Many of the letters by Harding and the children were adorned by drawings of animals. Thursday night. Testimony began with a plea from Harding’s older brother, The board went ahead with Sunday’s hearing after the Darryl, that the board “have mercy in your hearts.” He Supreme Court on Saturday lifted the stay. H ie governor has said he supports capital punishment. On urged the board to recommend that fijs brother’s death Saturday, he said he was “open to any last-minute sentences be commuted. j Our Summer Rates Sizzle! The Commons on Apache offers f c j W K Your own room for the Summer ▼ * May 30 - August 8 *$60 per person utility allowance Single session rate $475 • D eposit $150 • $100 refundable Shared Room for the Summer May 30 - August 8 $550 IN C LU D ED * *$40 per person utility allowance Single session rate $375 • D eposit $125 • $75 refundable RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY! 829-0933 COLLEGE STUDENTS MAJORING IN UTILITIES COMMONS ^ Allied Health Professions D iscover a challenging, ^ rew arding future th a t p u ts y o u in to u c h w ith y o u r skills. T oday’s Air Force offers ongoing o p p o rtu n ities for professional d evelopm ent w ith great p a y an d benefits, norm al working ho u rs, com plete m edical an d den tal care, and 30 d ay s v acation w ith p ay p e r year. Learn how to qualify a s an Air Force h ealth professional. Call USAF HEALTH PROFESSIONS TOLL FREE 602-968-8721 ■fO H c r r Page 6 Stale Press Monday, April 6 ,1998 ASU leadership conference seeks to ‘insure tomorrow’ By CAR O L ANN HANSEN State Press ABC Senior News Correspondent Bettina Gregory will be the keynote speaker at the fourth annual Insuring Tomorrow National Leadership Con­ ference to be held at Tempe Mission Palms Saturday. The two-day event, organized by the Associated Students of ASU, will focus on education, the economy, the envi­ ronment, multicultural issues and GiulisUIO current world and national events. Beatrice Navarette, the director of Insuring Tomorrow, said the purpose of the Conference is to provide an “issues and ideas” forum for students from universities from across the country, Along with Gregory, experts from ASU will address about 100 students on issues affecting the future. “Insuring Tomorrow is not just another student leadership program,” Navarette said, adding that the conference is based on the challenges that will face the future leaders of the country. Insuring Tomorrow was founded in 1983 by Tempe City Councilman Neil Giuliano during his term as president of ASASU. We Accept McctcrCcrd & Vice on Delivery! Open Daily for Lunch! Open 11am The conference originally served ASU students but expanded in 1989 to include 24 other universities. Giuliano said Insuring Tomorrow provides a valuable experience that is “outside the norm” for college students. “It’s not a traditional leadership conference,” he said. “It’s an opportunity for students to sit down with other students and talk about some serious issues which they are going to have to face when they graduate.” Giuliano said the conference is also a leadership enrichment program, “because anytime you are interacting With people, learning from other people and have the opportunity to meet experts in the field, your own knowledge base is going to expand.” I 2am Daily! FAST, FREI, »EUVERY »AIIV! 229-0064 CARDINAL'S PIZZA Robert Balling, director of the ASU Office of Climatology, is scheduled to speak to students about global warming. Balling said he plans to present his skeptical view on the global warming scare in an “effervescent speech that will light up eyes.” DIUMEB FOR f 12" Pitie with 2 Toppings 1 2 Free Sedas $ 6 . 2 5 1 Navarette said the conference is open to all students interested in attending. “It’s targeted towards student leaders because they are an easier target for us, but any student who is interested can attend,” she said. The cost for Students to attend the conference is $25. Monday-Tuesday 1 LUNCH SPECIAL I Wednesday Special; 12" CHEESE PIZZA | 16” 1-Item Pizza ■ j ÇÇ | _ l Cruise with the State PressÜËf New! The Dragon’s Den Adventure Pack a iliff W ortley s h o w s a m a p to y o u a n d explains, “ H ere's th e lair o f the w retched green d rag o n *’ H e h a n d s you tw o m ore ' m ap s a n d says, “A nd here’s th e lair o f three black d rag o n s — fortunately tw o are only hatchlings. The third m a p show s w here w e think a te d d rag o n is hiding.’’ You ask , “W h a t’s in it for us?” ' . H e says. “ 3,0 0 0 gold p ieces for each dragon yoii kill. But w hatever treasu re you find is yours ” Then h e le a n s on th e tab le to w ard you. “And d rag o n s h ave lots o f tre a s u r e . . . ” B T h e D r a g o n 's D e n A d v en tu re P ack is filled w ith three entry-leve! a d v en tu res for the new D U N G EO N S & DRAGONS® gam e, each to u g h er th a n the last. The p ack c o n tain s three poster-size m a p s a n d a d v en tu re booklets, six d o zen s tan d -u p m onsters a n d characters, a n d lo ad s o f c a rd b o a rd tiles for y o u r dungeon. As a n a d d e d b onus, th e re ’? also a mini b oardg am e to p lay w hen you d o n ’t h ave tim e for an entire adventure. Find th is new D ragon's D en A dventure Pack a n d the new DUN G EO N S & DRAGONS gam e o n sale a t gam e, hobby, a n d book stores every. where. $ 5 . 5 0 _ ' 11 i . n . - 4 y.m . 0 1 C E R ■ w Ai G H o N EM T 1 E E N 0 S 0 s 0 U N T □ 0 R L 1 S l|R G CROSSWORD] A S H E S by THOM AS JO SEPH ACROSS 1 Bull or stag 5 Russia’s Yeltsin 10 Tennis star Lendl 11 Conjee? tured 13 Cry from the crow’snest 14 Move duck-style 15 Crypto­ grapher’s device 17 S ick 18 “Harvey” star 19 State head: Abbr. 20 Bridge expert Culbert­ son 21 Rake 22 Tote 25 Nui­ sances 26 W allet bills 27 Mythical bird 28 Addition­ ally 29 Southern African nation 33 Decim al base 34 W inter ' breakfast 35 Strangely different 37 Hotel employée 38 The Sahara, e.g. 39 Key 40 Sides in alongrunning battle 41 Highschooler DOWN 1 Actress Vera 2 — garde 3 Javelin 4 Grant givers 5 Manhat­ tan area 6 Eye­ popping pictures 7 Dispose (of) S A L 1 V A E S NE V E 1M E L P O NM H E D Y 1 N GILI E>0 L ili N T E L 0 E' V E sum u □B V 1 N A s □ S E NT T s■g A NC E A y■ t S Sn N T E S A T B E 1V D E E N S S Yesterday’s Answer 24 Rudolph 8 Blue feature shades 9 Succeed 25 Put into the mail at the box 27 Responds office to stimuli «Re­ searches 29 French river 16 Actress 30 Pester Tyne 31 Emperor 21 Make a Selassie new 32 O f yore pledge 36 Singer 22 Covered Ritter 23 W ings S— 7— g— 1r ~ r - r~ r “ r ” 1 iô ■ iô „■S?. 15 16 :- i» I 22 23^24^ _ 26 i 2■9 1 34 1 1 36 ¿6 33 38 ,f t ■ * ■ W 30 31 32 i? 1 ■ 39 40 ■ 1 ;; « Ài DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work i t AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W O ne letter stands for another. In th is sample A is used for th e three L’s, X for th e tw o O 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e length and form ation of the words are all hints. Each day th e code letters are different. 4-6 ^L-rq'oub' CRYPTOQUOTES F L U Q U P B O W W V F W P C O K E J K Q fi Ipfc expensive.” LU Z o State Press > a Classifieds 3 H 2 That’s the ticket! o O z < . ... •■ft> m S p on sored by A S A S U ASU Summer School Program in the Caribbean OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS (Applications still considered.) T H E PRO G RAM : W ill be offered during the second summer session from July 6 to August 7,1992. Three weeks of classes at ASU will be followed by 1P days of field experience in 6 Caribbean countries. FO CU S: Tourism and socio-econom ic Development in the Caribbean. Topics to be covered include: history and cultures of the Caribbean; role of tourism in the transformation of Caribbean economies; cultural and environmental impact of tourism; role of the cruise industry in Caribbean economies, and recent political developments in the Caribbean. < ITINERARY: 6 countries with diverse historical and cultural influences have been selected include: Puerto Rico (Spanish and American); Virgin Islands (Danish and American); St. Maarten (Dutch and French); Dom inica (French and English); Barbados (English) and Martinique (French). The itinerary reflects the physical, ecological, econom ic and cultural diversity of the Caribbean. CREDITS: 1-6 credit hours. Participants can obtain 3 credit hours toward A S U general studies global awareness requirement. This program is open to all students. CO ST: Approximately $1630 double occupancy or $1330 quad. This includes return airfare from Phoenix, inter-island sea travel in the Caribbean, accommodations and meals. A SU tuition fee is not included. BURGER MONDAYTHRUTHURSDAY Please send C A R IB B EA N S T U D Y PR O G R A M information to: 1/4 lb. Burger 3-5 p.m. only 990 NAM E:. Good thru 4-30-92 No coupon necessary - just show your college ID (ASU, MCC, SCC) Not valid with to-go orders LO C A L A D D R ESS: PH O N E:. M AJO R ; Complete and leave In Room 204, Dixie Gammage Hall or mall to Dr. Deni« Lederc, Assistant Program Director, Dept of Leisure Studies, Arizona State University, Tampa, AZ 85287-2302 or laave message at 965-4630*965-7291. ^ Cornerstone » Rural & University »967-3192 C o m ic s Page 10 Slate Press Monday, April 6,1998 D o o n e sb u ry BY G A R R Y TRUD EAU T H E F A R S ID E By G A R Y LARSON Calvin and Hobbes do 'fau by B ill W atterson Btu&fls wt "WE DEVIL.? VOO KNOW, A SUPREME. EVIL BEING DEDICATED TO THE TEMPTATION, CORRUPTION.| AND DESTRUCTION OF MAN? A s N yles left the safari clu b , h is stom ach su dden ly knotted up. F o o lish ly, he had ignored the w arnings not to park h is Land R over in th is part of Tanzania. i c h o u t o r y o u ’i t th e n e x t is s u e o f • OSLO, Norway (AP) — Sm art crooks stayed home this weekend. ■ » Thousands of frustrated police and sheriff’s officers spent their off-duty hours busting criminals for free, hoping their nationwide volunteer effort will shame lawmakers into spending more on law enforcement. Police complain that state funding has not kept pace with the Norwegian crime rate, especially in cities. Since they are not allowed to strike, they protested by working for free. The 3,000 off-duty officers more than doubled the number of police on duty this weekend, he said. Norway has around 6,700 law enforcement officers. “We want increased resources for the police and we are tired of broken promises by politicians,” said Terje Odegard, chairman of the national police association. “We want to show what extra police work can do to the crime rate.” “We agree with people who say that we don’t do a good enough job,” he said. Last year, police had to tell 170,000 people that their cases were closed as unsolved, he said. About 86 percent of those cases were thefts. “Thieves just laugh at the idea of being caught,” he said. This weekend, the cops wanted the last laugh. The women and men in blue were everywhere, and Odegard said it seemed to deter violent crime, vandalism and theft. In Oslo, the capital city of 480,000 people, 400 extra officers turned out, including the entire mounted police corps of 13 horses and riders. They paraded down the main street Friday before splitting into patrols. “It’s okay that there are so many police around, just so they do their job and prevent trouble,” said Snorre Kleppan, a teenager out with friends in downtown Oslo. Volunteers from Kripos — a national police team that usually has time only to respond to major crimes — spent the weekend investigating less-serious incidents in Oslo. They solved several break-ins which might otherwise have been ignored, new reports said. Odegard said the police and sheriff’s officers want stiffer sentences, a 20 percent increase in the nation’s $570 million law-enforcement budget, 500 additional police jobs, new equipment and more training. The government’s 1992 law-enforcement budget is 7.3 percent higher than for 1991. But Odegard says the increase is not enough. “ But the crime rate is higher than necessary in such a small, open society,” Odegard said. le n ta P e r r y R e v ie w * Ç U Y I T • S E L L I T - F I N D IT • T E L L IT •» State Press i Classifieds & - ST CO ■■ • a E tá cn 965 6731 i « •x i n a x «xi o n ih •x i tths «x i xna The GMAT Is In 10 weeks. A C T CO M PU TE F O R Q U O T A T IO N , C O N S U L T A T IO N , O R A N Y S P E C I F IC A T I O N Enroll now! 829-1350 f STANLEY H . K A PLA N Hour«:t *jn.-S;30pjn. 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PER SO N A L INJURY LA W YER S mnmm •Intel 486-33 Processor •Desktop Case •64K Cache Expandable to 256K •4 MB Memory •1.2 & 1.44 TEAC FD •105 MB Hard Drive •16-Bit 1 MB Super VGA Card •Super VGA Monitor (1024x768) •2 Serial/1 Parallel/1 Game Port •101 Keyboard •1-Year Parts & 2-Year Labor Warranty 1000 E. Apache • Suite 211 (1 block east of Rural) • Tempe Cellophane: Highlight: " $22" . $40" - InlaAn, “31* T A H 8 IH 6 $111 $1~eaeh visit Eyelashes & Eyebrows Tinted $12" BAKER & M ARCUS FR EE CONSULTATION ASK ABOUT REDUCED PERCENTAGE FEES. •John R . B aker is certified by the S tate B ar o f A rizo na as a sp ecia list in injury and w rongful death litigation. 438-1212 Corporate Fountains W andler Dr. Suite 1 11 • Tempo « State Pres* Page 11 Monday, April 6,1999 Sun Angel doesn't disappoint By BRIAN CH AR LES State Press An incredible field of track and field talent descended on Tempe this past weekend to compete in the 13th annual Sun Angel Track Classic, and the 4,200 spectators weren’t dissapointed, as they saw one of the best Track Classics in recent years. Despite the incredible amount of collegiate talent and Olympians on hand, the ASU team performed very well, getting a confidence builder for the NCAAs and, for some, the U. S. Olympic Trials. Highlighting the meet once again was senior Tracy Mattes, whose domination in the 400m hurdles is becoming old h a t Not only did Mattes break her own record she set just last week in that event, she ran the fastest time in the nation this year, 56.54. “I’m really happy that l am running this well this early in the season,’’ Mattes said. “I’m very pleased with my performance.’’ Also showing a dominating performance was senior Shane Collins, who outthrew his competitors by three feet in- the shotput, winning that event with a throw of 65-9. Despite a recent injury, it looks as if Collins’ 1990 NCAA championship form has returned. Also taking top honors on the day was sophomore pole vaulter Nick Hysong, who beat a very impressive field of collegiate athletes and club athletes with an effort of 17-8. Although that wasn’t Hysohg’s best vault of the year, he too looks ready for the NCAAs. Teammates Mark Knight and Jeff Girard tied for fourth. ASU was well represented in the long jump, as seniors Tesra Bester, LaShawn Simmons, and Lisa Hale all competed for ASU. Despite a very impressive field, the ASU athletes went third, fourth, and 12th respectively, with Bester going 21-1y* to break her personal best. “I’m very excited that I PR’d (personal record) this early,” the ecstatic senior said. “I have been injured lately T u rn to T ra ck , p a g e 13. Henri Cohon/State Press LeShawn Sim m ons is airborne in the long jump during Satur­ day’s Sun Angel Track Classic. Devils rally late to pull off split against Bears Softball nails Granger in 10th By MICHAEL FLO R ES State Press Things looked grim for the ASU softball team heading into the bottom of the tenth inning of its game against the University of California at Sun Devil Club Stadium Sunday. 1116 third-ranked Golden Bears (28-8) had scored in the top of the tenth to go up 1-0, and were only three outs away from a doubleheader sweep of the Sun Devils (21-17), who were still in search of their first conference victory of the season after five losses. To make things worse, Cal pitching ace Michelle Granger, who had started and won the the first game 4-0, was called in to preserve the lead for the Bears. Granger, one of the top pitchers in the nation, had made quick work of the Sun Devils in the opener, allowing two hits and striking out eight batters to up her season record to 17-5. In extra-inning softball games, a runner is placed on second to begin the inning. At second for ASU was freshman left fielder Shanen Kreipl. ASU’s first batter, Cheri Keller, reached first on a bunt, the throw going to third, but too late to beat Kreipl. That brought up first basetoan Wendy Johnson with runners at the corners and nobody out. It was Johnson’s error in the top of the tenth which had allowed the go-ahead run to score for Cal. Johnson made amends by promptly rapping a single into left field to score Kreipl with the tying run. Two outs later, second baseman Dottie Conroy reached first on a throwing error by Cal first baseman Janeen LaGrace to bring home Keller with the game-winning run. “That was a good win for us," ASU coach Linda Wells afterward. “I feel like this whole weekend the team responded real well.” UofA pitcher Klrt Klshlta and the ASU dugout look on In anticipation of a play at first baao on a groundor by Sun Devil Todd Usvsrson. A SU m akes a K u rt-a in call Ehm ann's extra-inning triple gives Sun Devils Six-Pac lead By DAN ZEIGER State Press The entire series had the kind of atmosphere coaches describe when conveying to their players what big-time college baseball is all about, so it was only fitting that the last play of the weekend was also the most exciting one. And when Kurt Ehmann tripled to right Held to score Germaine Mayberry with the winning run in ASU’s ll-inning, 8-7 victory against UofA on Sunday at Packard Stadium, the Sun Devils went back into a big-time position — first plac^in the Six-Pac. By taking two of the three contests in the series, ASU (24-12, 9-6 Six-Pac) moves into the league lead, a half­ game in front of the Wildcats. UCLA is in third place, two games back of the Sun Devils. “To beat UofA in a series like this is a good accomplishment for us,” Ehmann said. “They’re the best of anybody I ’ve seen, so far this season. I wouldn’t be surprised if the league pennant goes down to the wire between the two of us.” UofA (21-13-1, 7-5) brought in Danny Baker, a reliever with a 9.00 ERA, to pitch in the bottom of the 11th inning. He retired outfielder Scott Samuels on a short fly ball, but then walked pinch hitter Brett Weinberger. Mayberry then came in to pinch rim, and Ehmann took the second offering and laced it beyond the reach of Wildcat right fielder John Tejcek. Mayberry crossed the plate standing up, and Ehmann was then dogpiled by his happy teammates. Turn to ASU-UofA, page 12. Turn to Softball, page ( 3. Women's tennis falls short late against Wildcats Geiger-Cioffi tandem lose in final tiebreaker 4-4 Pac-10) saw mediocre singles play and outstanding doubles play. It looked like this would be the case as the Wildcats took an early 4-2 led in singles. By BRIAN CH AR LES State Press Coincidentally, this was the same score as in the previous meeting, and it seemed like ASU was experiencing a case of deja vu. When the sixth-ranked ASU women’s tennis team stole a 5-4 win from archrival UofA in late February, the ninth-ranked Wildcats were anything but pleased. And with recent victories over both of the Los Angeles schools, the UofA team made it clear that when it rolled into Tempe, it was not going to let this one slip by. It was a heated battle from the start, with h a r d fo u g h t p o in ts a n d c o n s t a n t intimidation by both sides throughout the match. But the UofA prevailed in the last game of the final set to steal a 5-4 win from the Sun Devils. In their last meeting, the Sun Devils (13-5, The key for UofA in singles were victories from its top three players, who all are ranked nationally. Senior captain and 35th-ranked Krista Amend, still battling an injury, fell to 10thranked Danielle Scott 6-1, 6-1, while 47thranked freshman Kori Davidson lost a tough three set match to 41st-ranked Banni Redhair 86, 7-6, 6-2. In addition, sophomore Meredith Geiger fell to 44th-ranked Alix Creek 7-6, 6-2, and senior left-hander Luann Klimchock, suffering from tendinitis in her arm, fell to Erica O’Neill 6-3,64. . Turn to T ennis, page 13( \ 1 1 1 \ W & m\ m m m Y> ■ j p * F i M A S U ’s r _____ : ^ \¡fc. < ► f Cari Yovfc/Statn Prana Pàm Cloffl rifles a return during Sunday's 5-4 lo ss to UofA at Whiteman Tennis Cantor. Page 12 State Pie«« Monday, April 6,1998 A S U -U o fA C o n tin u ed fro m p ag e 11. Just how he had planned it. Really. “It was a fastball, and I wanted to hit.it to the right side,” Ehmann said. “ (UofA) had been pinching the (outfield) gaps the whole series, so I wanted to put it near the line. I hit it off the end of the bat, and it was just enough to get by the right fielder . It was just a matter of Germaine scoring.” All of the extra dramatics could have been easily avoided, but llth-ranked ASU could not hold mi to a 7-4 lead over the final three innings. Sun Devil pitcher Jeff Matranga, who had thrown in relief in a 7-6 ASU win on Friday, started on Sunday and was never in serious trouble until the seventh inning. With two out and a man on first in the seventh, Wildcat center fielder Don Parker took a 1-0 pitch from Matranga and deposited it behind the left-field fence for a two-run homer to slice the Sun Devil margin to 7-6. Matranga was replaced by Mike Fenton shortly afterward, leaving the game after pitching 6% innings and giving up six runs and nine hits while striking out six. “ I was very proud of the effort that Jeff gave us,” ASU coach Jim Brock said. “1 don’t think there’s any doubt that he would have been stronger had he not had to go for us the other night, so what he did do was encouraging.” Fenton got out of the seventh inning and also threw the eighth without incident, but then Moen led off the ninth by hitting a solo home run off of him to tie the game. But ASU then received a big boost when pitcher Doug Newstrom came in to relieve. Newstrom, who started and threw 8% innings to earn the win on Friday, came in after the homer and shu| the Wildcats down over the next three frames, allowing only one hit while fanning four to get his second victory of the weekend. “I’ve pitched cm Friday and Sunday before, so this wasn’t that unusual for me,” Newstrom said. “I only threw 97 pitches Friday night, and that isn’t a lot for eight innings. So my arm feels fine — I was just physically tired (after the game),” In fact, Newstrom — who was impressive in closing appearances late last season — was so effective during the weekend that Brock and pitching coach Dub Kilgo are re­ examining his role on the Sun Devil staff. Brock said that if he had to choose his starting rotation for the series at Stanford this weekend right now, he would throw Matranga on Friday and Sean Lowe on Saturday. If Newstrom isn’t needed in relief during the first two games, he would start oh Sunday. “Coach Kilgo and I talked about that — the fact that even if we have a pretty big lead in the eighth inning, it’s still a crap shoot,” Brock said. “We thought we needed to take a lode at finding who could pitch under the circumstances we had this weekend. Right now, the only one is Newstrom.” ASU scored four runs in the first inning on an RBI single by designated hitter Jim Henderson and another single from first baseman Todd Cady that brought in two more runs. UofA starting pitcher John Kishita also walked in a run. The 16th-ranked Wildcats came back in the third inning with three runs, all of which were scored on a home run by second baseman Chris Gump. UofA added another run in the fourth on a RBI single by shortstop Jason Bates. The Sun Devils scored two in the fifth inning, the first on a triple by Ehmann that scored outfielder Jacob Cruz from first base. Henderson then brought Ehmann home with a single to right field. ASU scored again in the fifth when left fielder Scott Samuels doubled to left field to score second baseman Bill Dunn all the way from first, “Of all of the series between the two teams that I’ve been involved in, this just might be the best one of them all.’’ said Brock, who achieved the 1,000th victory of his career in ASU’s win on Friday. The Sun Devils return to action with an exhibition against the Phoenix Firebirds on Wednesday night at Scottsdale Stadium. Y ou can sta y o n top o f th e n ew s b eca u se w e do. STATE PR E SS ... you r morning d a ily a t ASU. Ship Your Dorm Hom e With Us! Pickup Call 9 6 6 - 4 2 9 4 to Schedule M A IL B 0 X SUPERSTO RE 717 S. M ill Ave. • Downtown Tempe F R E E W IN G S E V E R Y SUN DAY S M ONDAY H A LF YO U R WING O R D ER IS FR EE! We show all Iowa Hawkeye games W OODSHED I W OODSHED II Food & D rink S W C o m e r o f B a se lin e & M ill C a su a l D ining & Lib atio ns N W C o m e r of D obson & U n iversity 831-W OOD 844-SHED professionally managed by B E R JK A R D /FIN N E Y MANAGEMENTSEKVICES.IMC. Collegiate Community for the Serious Arizona State University Student S u m m e r also a v ailab le CallUs 602/ 894-2320 525 S. Forest Avenue Page 13 Monday, April 6,1999 Tracks______ T e n n is C o n tin u e d f r o m p a g e 1 1 . C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 11. The lone singles winners for ASU Were freshman Joelle falling for the Wildcats. ASU managed to hold its composure, however, and Schad, who used key aces to defeat Jane Yates in straight sets 6-0, 6-2, and junior Dawn Martin, who moved past forced a 6-5 tiebreak. But the Wildcats proved to be too strong, taking the game and the match 7-5,4-6, 7-5. Lesley Barbour 6-4,6-3. “We played really hard,” Geiger said. “The desire and With the duos of Amend-Schad and Klimchock-Davidson defeating their opponents rather quickly, that deja vu intensity was there, but luck just wasn’t in our favor. When thing seemed to creep up on the Sun Devils again, as ASU we came back from 5-3, it made us want it really bad, but it just wasn’t our lucky day.” again found itself in a similar situation. “We can’t expect to spot them a 4-2 lead and be able to Only this time, it was the 29th-ranked combination of Geiger and junior Pam Cioffi going up against the eighth- win,” Sun Devil coach Shelia Mclnerney said. “I knew we ranked tandem of Scott and Redhair in a three-hour match still had a chance, but it just didn’t go our way.” The Sun Devils met up with unranked UNLV on Friday, that proved to be one of the most exciting this season for the Sun Devils. It was the second time ASU had a match- defeating them easily 9-0, giving up only two sets all afternoon. deciding, three-hour game this season. Tennis woes still continue for the now-unranked men’s Cioffi and Geiger started out strong against their highersquad, as it dropped its third in a row to UofA on Saturday ranked foes, with Cioffi putting down some tough winners and Geiger using a lethal backhand, but dropped the first 6-3 in Tucson. Freshman Eric Brunner continues to shine for the Sun set 7-5. ASU’s tandem stormed back to take the second set 6-4, and that is where things really began to heat up. Hie Devils amidst an enormous amount of injuries, as he players began to let one another know who they thought defeated Matt Holt in the No. I singles slot 6-4, 6-7,6-2. Senior Bryan Geiger, coming off a foot injury, was the was better, and the fans in the stands also had a few things only other Sun Devil to win in singles, as 68th-ranked to say to each other. With the score tied l-l in the third, ASU broke, and senior captain Ross Matheson fell, along with junior Chris seemed to be riding on a wave of emotion that started with Gambino, senior Marc Rothchild, and freshman Peter Jeschke. the second set win. Despite a doubles win from Matheson and Jeshcke, ASU However, UofA showed no interest in letting down, taking the fourth game from ASU in a game that saw 11 was unable to mount a comeback, as the other two deuces. After that, the Wildcat duo broke Cioffi when she tandems fell to tough UofA competition. The women’s team will return to action at 1:30 p.m. double-faulted, and suddenly the momentum ASU had was Tuesday, at Whiteman Tennis Center where it hosts 15thnowhere to be found. ASU was also getting some very unlucky breaks, as the ranked San Diego State, while the men’s squad travels to ball just didn’t want to land between the lines and kept the Bay area schools this weekend. and have had the flu as well, but the light training seems to have worked.” The men were also represented in the long jump, with freshman Brian Ellis and sophomore Danny Simpson taking fifth and sixth respectively. Ellis has been suffering from a hamstring injury, but was still able to snatch fifth place. ASU also saw double duty from freshman Dennis Black, who competed in both the shotput and the discus. Black started off with an impressive fourth-place finish in the shotput amidst some sizeable competition, then stole ninth place in the discus. Also turning in a good performance was underdog Jimmy Kegler, who had to face a sprinting field that was intimidating to say the least. Kegler took ninth in the 100m with a time of 10.6 seconds, and eighth in the 200m with a 21.4, edging out Olympian Larry Myricks. ASU’s high jumpers, junior Gabe Beechum and sophomore Shelly Choppa, were only two of the three collegians that competed in that event, and despite their competition experience, were able to post a good performance. Beechum took third with a 7-2% foot launch. Choppa had it tougher than Beechum, with defending Sun Angel Classic winner Jan Wohlschlag, former NCAA heptathlete champion and ASU star Gea Johnson and gold medal winner Jackie Joyner-Kersee all competing in her event. Choppa looked a little nervous at first, but was able to put that past her and take seventh with a jump of 5-10, just missing the cut at six feet. “I was definitely a Utile shaky when I was warming up,” the sophomore said. “But mice I was ready to compete, I wasn’t as intimidated. Everyone seemed to be equal and that was able to relax me.” The distance crew also had a strong showing. Leading the way were sophomore Kim Toney and junior Sharnette Garcia, who took second and third, respectively, in the 800m dash. In addition, senior Todd Lewis took fifth in the 3,000m steeplechase, freshman Jim McCreery took 11th in the 1,500m, and junior Kelly Cordell took fourth in the 3,000m behind world class distance runners PoUy Plummer and Patti Sue Plummer. Other Sun Devil action saw Charlie Cohen take ninth in the javelin, and Erin Scroggins take 11th in the 5,000m. S o ftb a ll_______ C o n tin u e d f r o m p a g e 11.. WHY YOU SHOULD S R R T PLANNING FOR RETIREMENT WITH YOUR EYES CLOSED. can ad d up quickly. W h at elsé makes SRAs so special? A broad range o f allocation choices, from th è safety o f TIAA to the investm ent accounts o f CR EF s variable annuity; no sales charges; a variety o f w ays to receive income, including annuities, paym ents over a fixed period, o r cash. 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Wells saw more good things than usual to say about her team’s effort over the weekend — most having to do with the players’ faUure to crack under pressure situations. “It would have been easy to faU apart on a number of occasions,” Wells said, “particularly the bases-loaded mess they got themselves into in the tenth.” Wells applauded-the efforts of sophomore pitcher Mona Nard (7-4), who scattered five hits and yielded one unearned run over ten innings, and Johnson, who provided the heroics from the plate when it reaUy counted. “What a job she did,” Wells said of Nard. “She threw a great game. Whenever she did get into trouble, she would just step back and icfocus. “And Johnson, for her to step up and spank out a single after she had made that error. That was just great.” The hard-hitting Bears certainly got their cuts against Nard, who admitted to being more than a little scared to face the nation’s third-best team. Cal had jumped on ASU ace Terri Carnicelii for three quick runs in the first inning of the first game. Camieelli and Nard both pitched complete games against NMSU on Saturday and may have felt the effects. Nard credited her teammates’ defense with improving her performance. “They saved my butt quite a few times,” Nard said. r START PLANNING FOR TOE TIME OF YOUR LIFE, TODAY. For your free TIAA-CREF Supplemental Retirement Annuity Kit, send this coupon tor TIAA-CREF, Dept. QC, 730 Third Avenue, New York. NY 10017. O r call 1 8 0 0 842-2733. E x t. 80fi Name (P le a se p rin t) Aièress C ity SEES Ensuring the future for those w ho shape it!" Z ip Cotie Institution (F u ll n am e) T it# TtAA -CHEF Participant b . Sta te Daytime Phone ( ; ) I f yes,¡Social Security # Ù Ÿ e sQ N o •D epending upon your institutions plan end the state you live in. GREF annuities are distributed by TIAA-CREF Individual & Institutional Services. 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CALL NOW Usa C 254-3750 A C RO B A TIC IN STRUCTOR, parttime at dance center. $8-10 hourly. 40th Street/ Indian School. Ask for Carrie 957-0046, 946-7666. ALASKA SUMMER employment- fish­ eries. Earn $5,000+/month. Free trans­ portation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or female. For employment pro-: gram call Student Employment Services at 1(206)545-4155 ext. 1603. •$5-50 per hour guaranteed •25 hours per week •Evenings and Saturdays only •N o experience necessary •Flexible scheduling •Paid weekly Mr. Griffin 968-4457 HIRING FULL or part-time telem ar­ keting positions, salary + commissions; Ca|l 481-9200. I NEED determined people not afriad of hard work for big commissions who can work unsupervised. Setting ^appoint­ m ents w ith b u sin ess ow ners for Visa/Master Card representative. Call Christa at MTN 244-0183. INFANT SERVICES Technician, work­ ing with developmentally disabled inf­ ants. 18 hours per week, $6 per hour. Flexible hours day* Do home visits. Ap­ ply: TCH, 2720 South Hardy #2, Tem­ pe. EOE. C PEOUS SECURITY Securityofficersneeded Full-time, Part-time, On call Pay $5.25-$5.4e. ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY Looking for a job or summer internship? Seize a powerful advantage by receiving an invaluable, list o f contact names, addresses, and phone #'s at over 100 o f N.Y. and Hollywood's top production co.'s, talen t agencies, and studios. Send $12.95 check to: INFO-SEARCH PO Box 15664 Bevedy Hillls, CA 90209-1664 D o n 't Delay! Summer hiring is soon oved State Press HELP WANTED -GENERAL PART TIME auto inspector, $5.50 an hour to start. Will train. Afternoons and weekends. 254-8117. PART TIME daycare in my home for sweet 10 month old. Flexible days, 15 minutes from ASU. 437-9727. PART TIME- immediate opening. Loan Service Specialist Trainee. Must possess good custom er service and Communi­ cation skills. Experience with collec­ tions, computer and typing helpful. Part time evening hours, 20 hours a week. For appointment call today ! 381-3830. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CORK ’N CLEAVER RED ROBIN o f Tempe has immediate openings for wait staff with day/side availablity. Apply in person Red Robin 1375 West Elliot. THE SUN Devil Spark Yearbook is now accepting applications for Photo Editor. M ust have extensive photography ex­ perience, able to supervise staffs Appli­ cations due April 1, Please apply in Room 50 of the Matthews Center or call 965-6881 for more information. EARN $300 a day, during the summer, starting your own specialized residential cleaning business. For complete manu­ al, send $9.95 to W Ml, P.O Box 1026, St. Louis, MO 63031. "UNIQUE BOOKSTORE Sales". Amer­ ica's first and only audiobook super­ store with over 10,000 audiobooks for sale and rental. Work in a pleasant, com­ fortable superstore atm osphere with positive, energetic customers and em­ ployees, Assist our Customers in the se­ lection o f recorded books and other gen­ eral duties. Reliable, steady and flexible hours. Convenient to campus. Starting pay o f $5 an hour phis commission and Contribution to school tuition after a 2-4 week training period’ is completed. We require a positive, dedicated, individual With a professional appearance and dress, a willingness to provide a high de­ gree o f custom er s e t t e e is esseiiti^i. Previous retaii/restaurant/library- or customer service, experience preferred but will consider someone with a "win­ ning attitu d e " .Y o u r know ledge o f books and/or personal growth and mot iNational tapes a plus. Ideal position for English o r business majors. Career op­ portunities and advancement available. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, -9-12 at Reddings Audiohook Superstores, 2302 North Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale. INVESTMENT investment bunking firm in Scottsdale willing to train bright enthusiastic peo­ ple to become leading stock brokers. Will trade stocks in the NYSE and GTC markets.,Prefer college degree but per­ sonal interview deciding factor. Thirty positions available. Must apply now if May graduate. Cajl David Kramer at Frankl in-Lord, 1nc, 947-6262. LIFESTYLES. SUMMER income like you've probably not seen before. Mod­ e ra te e ffo rt re tu rn s b ig d o llars. 924^2930. PR O G R A M M ER ’S W AREH OU SE. Looking, for part-time computer soft­ ware sales person. Computer Science Engineers preferred. Call 4 4 3 -0 5 8 0 and ask for personnel to schedule an in­ terview. SUMMER WORK Ideal opportunity to earn a lucrative, sum m er incom e. W e o ffe r flex ib le hours, tetrifk; experience. This is .a peo­ ple oriented part- time position that re­ quires energetic team players. Please call 921 -7755 Monday- Friday 1-4pm. - HELP WANTEDCLERICAL _______ A D M IN IST R A T IV E A SSISTA N T: G ood com m unication sk ills, typing sk ills , w orks w ell w ith p eople. 437-1048. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BANQUET SERVERS BUSINESS o p ro R T y N m n _ _ TUTORS CONCERNED BIRTHMOTHER: Ari­ zona-certified couple is prepared to lov­ ingly welcome your Caucasian, Caucasian/Hispanic or Caucasian/Asian new­ born into our home. We are a finan­ cially secure, well-educated, caring cou­ ple who realize your choices and respect your courage. We offer a future’filled with love, laughter, education, travel* four-legged friends and doting grand­ parents. We artistic,, outdoorsy, affec­ tionate and fun-loving. Med/Iegal ex­ penses paid. Confidential. Call Robin or Lenny evenings 730-8846. EXPERIENCED ACCOUNTING tutor 211,212,321,322. Call Bev 839-8543. SERVICES EL EC TR O LY SIS— PE R M A N EN T hair removal. Remove unwanted hair forever. S tudent discounts. C all for more information: 969-6954. BULIMIA/ H ie T im e M w iiin r Compulsive overeating Fun M oney Maker CaifcfenM, pmoral I «fteclrw couiMtng &treatment. Insurance welcome. Work your-way through school by idling a computerized printout of events such as sports, headline of the day, most popular song, Academy Awards, cost of cars, house, food, then and now, etc. from 1899. Comes complete with display cabinet and lights. IBM compatible 20M B 640K. Great for history research and seconds. Set it up in any event. Originally cost $12,500 MAKE OFFER (need cash!) Ginnie Grant, CEDC, CISW 887-0444 I-HAUL M oving and transit. Your stuff, my truck. B ed, couch, m iscellan eo u s. 967-3774. T h o r b e c k e ’s G ym 966-6621 $12 per month plus $50 one­ time membershipfee. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING 982-1576 $ 1 PAGE, all typing, experienced, reli­ able, accurate, free editing, rush jobs accepted. 897-7670, Gail, FREE LOST/FOUND FOUND: R IN G / Bank o f A m erica/ Mill. May have been there for awhile. If •you think it's yours, call M ari Beth 894-8171. 1-DAY TURNAROUND- for most pa­ pers- Typing. Reasonable. Close/ASU. L aser. FpcuU y/Students. Dfane 966-5693. " REWARD... WOMAN'S Wedding ring, missing from Farmer Ed. Building rest­ room 3/25. Please call Kelly is-found-.' 965-6563 or 838-1478. 24 HOUR turnaround- for most papers. Processing/resumes. Laser. Near ASU Quality assurance. Caroline 892-7022. RESTAURANTS/ BARS PERSONALS A BETTER resume, typing, wordpro­ c essing service a v ailab le fo r your school heeds. Call Daleen at 985-3134. PHOTOGRAPHY G RAD U A TIN G ?? DO N 'T settle for Olan Mills. Cool, dramatic B & W por­ traits. 7 years experience. Studio F 990-7803. JOYCE'S WEDDINGS Traditional organ music for prelude and wedding ceremony. CD's $14.95, cas­ settes or LP’s $9.95 + $3.50 Shipping and handling. Visa/* mastercardv,Week­ days call 1-800-52-JOYCE. W e B u y U s e d C D 's H ig h e s t P r i c e s P a id NEED A back issue of the State Press? Come to the basement of Matthews Center to the Front Information Desk MondayFriday, 8am-5pm. If We have the isisue you need, it's yours! Campus Corner 712 S. C o lle g e 967-4049 RATES RATES State Press u m m i* C la s s ifie d s U N E R A D R ATES: _ 15 words or less ®n $3.50 per issue (1-4 issues) $3.25 per issue (5-9 issues) $3.00 per issue (10+ issues) 15c each additional word. No abbreviations. The first 2 w ords are Capitalized. N o bold face or centering, no type size changes. Personals (15 words o r less) ere only $2.00. You can also add Greek symbols to your personal for only 500 par set (3 symbols max. per set). S E M -D IS P L A Y R ATES: 15 words or less $4.50 per issue (1-4 issues) $4.25 per issue (5-9 issues) $4.00 per issue (10+ issues) 15C each additional word. The first word(s) are 10point bolded, centered type (15 characters max.). Rest of ad is regular justified liner ad type. C LA S S IF IE D D ISPLA Y R A T E S : (per colum n inch, per insertion);, 1 time: $8.50 p.c.i. 2-5 times: $7.75 p.c.i. 6+ times: $7.35 p.c.i. A ll classified display ads have borders. Type can be bold face, centered, etc. An average of 15-20 words can fit in one column inch. Your Individual Horoscope : Frances Drake A BEAUTIFUL rose bouquet, one do­ zen, delivered on April 22 (Secretaries Day)- $ 12- Call 968-2391 - Sun Devil Lion's. A DOZEN beautiful red roses delivered rtnly $20.00 + tax. We also have baloons: 894-3419. ATTN. GREEKS!! Did you know you can put Greek sym­ bols in your State Press personal ad for an extra fifty cents? Ask us for details. Call iis at 965-6731 or stop by our Mat­ thews Center basement location today! Do you think your boyfriend or girlfriend could be a model? If so, call Georgette collect at Fox TV (212)730-7937 EXPERIENCE ATA The Brothers of AJA will be having prerush d in n er bn Thursday, A pril9 at 5:00pm. Come and get to know die men who make things happen. Everyone is welcome. ATA location: 406 Adelphi Dr. Questions: Call Scott 921-2826. PICTURE THIS You cun have a bold centered headline on your State Press liner ad for an addi­ tional $ 1! What a great way to get atten­ tion! Ask us for details! Call 9656751 or stop by today ! RUSH ATA A \ W O RD PRO CESSIN G Services. E verything from résum es to theses typed q u ic k ly and p ro fessio n ally . Graphics and delivery available. B est job in town. Sue 831-6148. A P A/M LA EX PER IEN C ED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. ' ASU AREA typing, word processing, editing; and transcription. Call anytime for fast service 966-2186. ASU GRADUATE will professionally type y o u r reports, term papers, etc. R ush jo b s no problem . T h eresa, 924-1976. C R E A TIV E TY PIN G , term papers, resum es, essay s, la se r p rin ter, rea­ sonable rates, fast turnaround. Pat, 897-1741. . E X C EL LE N T W ORD pro cessin g A PA /M LA p a p ers. C lose to ASU. Southern and Mill. Catherine 921-7242. FREE PICKUP and delivery. Fast ac­ curate professional word processing, $2 per page. Barb 396-4632. LETTER QUALITY word processing. APA/M LA thesis, resum es, fast tur­ naround.' $ 1.50/up. Roxanne 437-8830. If you're an experienced waiter or wai­ tress, have Tux black & whites, trans­ portation and a phone, we have jobs year round a f all Valley locations. H ospjTem ps Personnel, 1462 North Scottsdale Road, Tempe. 990-9312, Come and meet thé brothers of ATA ori Thursday, April9 at 5:00pm. We will be having a steak and sea-food Dinner with volleyball afterw ards. ATA location: 406 Adelphi Dr. All are welcome. Ques­ tions? Call Stott 921-2826. WORD PROCESSING, secretarial serv­ ices. 23 years experience. Student dis­ counts. Southwest corner, M iller and Chaparral, 994-8145. BUSTER'S RESTAURANT Scottsdale is now hiring experienced food servers and bus person. Please apply in person: 8 3 2 0 N o rth H ay d en (M e rc ad o Del Lago). 951-5850. ,1 YOUR AD HERE! AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS certifica­ tion W orkshop by National Aerobics Training Association, weekend April 3. Mesa. Call 963-9415. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Call 965673! for rates and information! MISCELLANEOUS A D O F JIO J^ _ _ _ PLEASE CONSIDER us as adoptive parents for your unborn child. We are a happily married professional couple liv­ ing in New England. We wish to adopt a new bom into our loving home. We can provide relocation during your preg­ nancy. Please call Patricia and Tom at (401) 621-8931 confidential. ROCK 'N ROLL! We are busy, need immediately: Deliv­ ery dri vers, cooks, counter help. Day shifts. Sandwich Rock, Hardy/University , 921-3040, ask for Don. No bologna. HELP WANTEDSALES RESTAURANTS/ BARS accepting applications for lunch wai­ tress. W ill train . C oncern w ith a p ­ pearance, reliability ana personality are im portant. Apply in person MondayFriday 2-5pm or by appointment. 5101 North 44th Street (44th/Cam elback) 952-0585. \ ' ■■ V.- ' ' : SOUTHWESTERN COMPANY inter­ viewing students for full time summer work. Gain sales and business manage­ ment experience, leave Arizona, make $5,300. Call (602) 968-4167 or write: The Southwestern Program, P.O. Box 1 185, T em pe 8 5 2 8 0 -1 1 8 5 ; include phone number. THE SUN Devil Spark. Yearbook is now accepting applications for Copy Editor. Must have writing and editing experi­ ence, know AP style. Applications due April 7. Please apply in Room 50 o f the Matthews Center or call 965-6881 for more information. Page 15 Monday, April 6,1999 Spice Up your liner or personal ad by topping it with a bold, centered headline! It's only $1 extra - what a deal to make ypur ad really stand out from the rest! Call 9656731 today for information! State Press Classifieds work! INSTRUCTION YOU SAY it, we display it —only in the State Press Classifieds! Cal| 965-6731! ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Morning hours find you somewhat impatient, It’s best not to force issues in business. Some appointments will be changed now. Guard against domestic extravagance. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Be sure o f your facts before speaking out. There’s a tendency to gloss over details today. An irritation could arise with an. adviser. Low key activities are best GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You’re inclined to go overboard in spending now. You could be spreading your energies thin. Be discriminating about which social invitations you ac­ cept. CANCER (June 2 1 to July 22) K eep aim s realistic in business. You're enthusiastic now but judgment could be off. D o your best to cooperate with a partner. Be willing to compro­ mise on key issuer LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Doing a job in a rush is not the best way to get things done today. Take the time necessary for success and accom­ plishment, Some plans for tonight may be changed. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) No need to overspend in your efforts to make a good impression. Be more patient with a child. Avoid quarrels about intimate matters. Afternoon and evening social plans are subject to change. LJBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You may be touchy now and easily provoked. Try to avoid an argument with a family member. Business plans may. be overly expansive. Restlessness may be a p.m. concern. SCORPIO , (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You start the day out with the best o f intentions, but you may not accomplish as much as you’d like. Still, take the time necessary t o do a project well. SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 22 to Dec. 2 1) You’re in a pleasure-seeking mood today, but are inclined to overspend or to quarrel about money , Unexpected de­ velopments this afternoon could cause a change in plans or an outlay o f cash. CAPRICORN (Pec. 22 to Jan. 19) Being too insistent on your own way could cause problems in getting along with other fam ily members. Guard against extravagance in shopping for the home. AQUARIUS (Jan, 20 to Feb. 18) Pay extra attention to the rules o f the road, if driving today. A chance remark you overhear could irritate you in some way. Mix-up.3 in communications are possible. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Try not to argue with a friend today. Extreme care is needed in the way you handle money right now. Extra ex­ penses are likely and extravagance is also a danger. YOU BORN TODAY work well with groups and often achieve a leadership position in that capacity. You have a keen sense o f responsibility and are willing to help others withtheir burdens. Fields such as writing, law, journalism and acting often appeal to you. You’re at your best when you find, and then do, your own thing. You should never allow yourself to get into a rut or to take the easiest way. Always, strive to better yourself. Birthdate of: Lowell Thomas, broadcast commentator, Gerry Mulli­ gan, jazz musician; and Harry Houdini, magician. Copyright 1992 by King features Syndicate. Inc, Page 16 State F irm Monday, April 6,1992 THERE A R E TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE M THE ARMT. -- -----A nd they’re both repre­ sented by th e insignia you wear as a member of the Army N urse j Corps. T he caduceus on the left 1 means you’re part o f a health care / J / / ' A \ JXK/ A system in which educational and f career advancem ent are the rule, 1 not the exception. T he gold bar on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you’re earn­ ing a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, RO. Box 3219, Warminster, PA 18974-9845. O r call toll free: 1-800-USA-ARMY, ext. 438. ARM T NURSE CORPS. BE A LL YOU CAN BE: 1. W hat are the lin t steps in planning a nuniiig career? 2. W hat should I expect at my first job interview? 3. How do I choose the right hospital? 4. W hat is the best way to prepare for the new NCLEX-RN? 5. W hy has the failure rate on the NCLEX-RN increased? ' WE AT O’NEAL CHIROPRACTIC ARE CONCERNED ABOUT YOUR HEALTH NEEDS. G e t T h e A n sw ers T h is W eek A t A Free S ta n le y H . K a p la n N u rsin g C a reer S em in ar N ear lio n T his week Stanley H . Kaplan and St. Joseph's H ospital are conducting a Nursing Career Seminar. Learn h ow to find the perfect RN job for you. Discover strategies that will help you ace the NCLEX. Review sample NCLEX questions. Special guest speakers - Judy Burkhardt and Beverly Kaplan, National Directors o f Nursing Programs for Stanley H . Kaplan. For more inform ation please call 7 th f t T h u r s d a y , A p r il 9 t h from2:30 p .m . to 6:45 p.m. 967-2967 RSVP required by April 13th. Take Kaplan O r Take Ybur Chances Summer Housing in New City This offer is good for patients we have not seen in the last 90 days, or a friend; co-worker or family member who has never been a chiropractic patient. ' Will you be working, doing an internship, or enjoying a summer in New York? You can live in the heart of Greenwich Village as an NYUAssociate drrake a course in our exciting summer sessions if yMhrçsh. Bring your pain Bring your stress Bring your fatigue • Minutes from New York's busiïfëss^nd cultural centers • Apartment-style and traditional residences; single and double occupancy • Outstanding sports-recreation facility • Includes the New York Experience, an enjoyable noncredit program exploring careers and culture in New York City • Over 1,000 undergraduate, graduate, and professional courses offered a 4day and evening ( t l Housing available May24-August 15 For more information and an application, call toll free l-800*282-4NYU Ext. 784 New York University it an sffinMtive action/equal opportunity institution. New Ywfc University O’NEAL CHIROPRACTIC Dr. Richard L. O'Neal, Palmer Graduate 491-1242 t a k e c o u n t r y v il l a g e ? Shopping Center NYU Summer Housing 5 Washington Place New York, N.Y. 10003 NYU ¥ TO m u VESA* 8 H W --M .------- 11i (masrOfwvira CELEBRATING 12 YRS. OF PRACTICE Baseline Road 1 0 7 0 E. Baseline Rd., Tem pe