©Copyright. State Press, 1994 Tempe, Arizona Thursday, February 24,1994 An Independent Morning Daily Vol. 78 No. 28 R esidential Life asks A B O R to raise rent S h e d d in g l ig h t U PO N A SCANDAL Proposed hike receives mixed student reaction H illiard tells ASU students how Oregonian broke news o f H arding-K errigan affair By M axw ell H S t a t e P ress B y G a r in G r o f f St a t e P r ess ig g i n s As Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan vied for the highest prize in figure skating on Wednesday, the editor of The Oregonian told ASU students and Valley journalists how his newspaper uncovered Harding’s connection to -the brutal January attack on Kerrigan. The Oregonian, which boasts the largest circulation- of any newspaper in the Pacific Northwest, gained international recognition when it published the first stories linking Portland residents Harding, her ex-husband Jeff Gillooly and her bodyguard Shawn Eckert to the clubbing attack on Nancy Kerrigan at the U.S. figure skating champi­ onships in Detroit.. W illiam H illiard , editor o f The Oregoniah. Spoke to ASU journalism classes and a meeting of the Valley of the Sun Society of Professional Journalists at the Holiday Inn near campus on Rural Road and Apache Boulevard. He will speak to more Figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, left, keeps an eye on teammate Tonya Harding during a ASU classes today before leaving town. practice session Wednesday morning before the start of the women’s technical pro­ Hilliard said his paper never became sen­ gram at the winter Olympics in Lillehamer, Norway. See related story, p. 3. sational. but television reports often went too far. He said he didn't expect the story to The O regonian broke the H ardingget as much coverage as it has. Kerrigan story after a private detective in "It d id n 't dawn on me that the story deserved all the attention it got.” Hilliard Portland told reporter John Long about a said. "It’s hard to say whether the story got taped conversation between Eckert and a minister. Eckert — who Hilliard said likes to more attention than it deserved. It depends on what else is going on in the world ... be view ed as an im portant person — divulged to the minister that he, Gillooly and People get tired of war stories.” He said most news is driven by public H arding had hired tw o men to attack interest, which doesn't always coincide with Kerrigan in Detroit. Overwhelmed by the newsworthiness. As proof of the story’s pop­ news, the minister told the private detective, who informed the FBI and the Oregonian. ularity, street sales of the O regonian At the SPJ meeting Wednesday night, increased by 6.000 copies daily since the Hilliard said the FBI was investigating the story broke. same leads before the story came out in the Hilliard. 66. was one of the only black journalists employed in the United States new spaper. The FBI asked th at the when he started as a copyboy at The Oregonian not print the story, fearing that it Oregonian in 1952. Thirty four years and might not be true and because it could tip off several promotions later, he became editor suspects to the FBI in v estig atio n . of the paper. Today he is a highly respected Nevertheless, the Oregonian decided to go figure in journalism , having served as a ahead with the story because she had faith in William Hilliard, editor of The Oregonian, Pulitzer juror, editor-in-residetice at several the reporter’s accuracy, Hilliard said. In an ironic twist, the O regonian was explains how h is paper uncovered the universities and. currently, as President of Tonya Harding scandal. T urn to Attack, page 2. the American Society of Newspaper Editors. Residential Life officials have asked the Arizona Board of Regents to raise rent at resi­ dential halls an average of 2.26 percent, a move that has received mixed responses from students living on campus. Rent will rise for the 1994-95 academic year only if the ABOR approves it today or Friday at its monthly meeting. Under the pro­ posal, rent will increase as much as $324 a year. Brian Etheridge, president of the Center Complex, a group o f four residential halls on campus, said he supports the increase. The complex is the least expensive of the halls, costing from $1,926 to $2,044 per year. “I’m a business major and I realize that prices rise —- it’s just part of the economy.” he said. “I p ersonally feel that C enter Complex is underpriced for what we get.” However, he argues that the $1.926 rent at Best H all should not be raised as much because many students living there are selfsupporting and can’t afford other housing. “This is really going to hit them hard,” Etheridge said Best Hall resident Stefanie Fiery opposes the increase because she said she already pays enough tuition. “Since I’m from out of state, there’s really nowhere for me to live unless 1 went to apart­ ments or something, but those are ju st as much as m ore,” she said. “I t’s so stupid because people who are living in the dorms are mostly from far away and we’re already paying more than everybody else anyway.” She also complained of loose ceiling tiles in the rooms, leaky roofs and that officials don’t respond to maintenance requests for weeks. ‘T here’s so much that they need to have done that I don’t think it’s going to be able to just come from our pockets to fix all of the stuff that needs to be fixed,” she said. Barbie Lima-Gierbolini, a hall council rep­ resentative who has lived at Best Hall since the fall, agrees. She said she lives in the hall because she doesn’t own a car. “The condition of the building is pathetic, and on top of that, there’s no space,” she said. Because of this, Lima-Gierbolini said she is moving to Sahuaro Hall next semester. W endell Brierly, business manager of T urn t o H alls, p a g e 2. N ew ly graduated stu d en t debt increased 20% in ‘93 ABOR to study reports during meeting today B y Shaw n Boyd S t a t e P ress A financial aid study to be presented to the Arizona Board of Regents Thursday reports that between 1992 and 1993, state student indebtedness has increased more than 20 per­ cent. “I was a little concerned about the number of graduating students in debt,” new Regent Hank Amos III said about his impressions after reading the report. According to the study, the debt for gradu­ ating students rose from $37.8 million to $47 IN SID E million between 1992-1993, an increase of 24.4 percent. The debt Toe those students not graduating increased 22.6 percent in the same period, from $ 198.6 million to $243.4 million. The report also states that for the one year period scholarships increased by more than 14 percent, grants by about 9 percent and waivers by less than 5 percent. Amos said the figures are of concern, but the study does not provide all of the informa­ tion to look at the complete state of financial aid. C yX A T E W orld/ Nation The United States . continues to push for democracy in Haiti, but is unwill­ ing to tighten sanc­ tions on the island. ST A T E PR ESS Weather Outlook Mostly sunny and notice­ ably warmer. High 73. ; “This is the first run, so they are gathering all of the information,” the regent said. Regent John Munger said the rise in stu­ dents taking loans and the resulting indebted­ ness is not the biggest problem raised by the ABOR study. “It’s a self-help system,” he said, adding that students should have to financially assist in their education. Munger said the way that the universities distribute financial aid is a greater problem. “My deepest concern is that the system out there is random,” he said. “I’m concerned about the control o f our direct transfers.” Center section Page 3 Sports The ninth-ranked Sun Devil base­ ball team cruised past the Utah Utes ; 17-3 W ednesday night at Packard Stadium. P age 11 He said the distribution of direct transfers, scholarships and tuition waivers, are deter­ mined by mid-level bureaucrats. There is no framework for deciding who the money goes to, he added. “There don't appear to be any policy of controls over decision-making,” the regent said. Student Regent Spencer Insolia said the data confirm s the general understanding about the loan situation. “I think it proves everything about the grant-loan imbalance,” he said. T urn t o D ebt, page 2. P a »;e 2 T h S K d f f l f e ì b a r y H f 1994 na T oday The Today section is a daily calendar o f events print­ ed as a service to the ASU community. R equests are printed according to the space available each day. Campus d u b s and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f M atthews Center, Room IS . Requests w ill not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the fu ll name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, tim e and the fu ll address o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing fa r con­ tent, space and clarity. Deadline fa r entries is noon the day before publica­ tion. • Alcoholics Anonymous — Daily meeting, noon, base­ ment of the old church at die Newman Center, northwest comer of College and University. • Counselor Training Center — Counseling for ASU students, friends and family provided by counseling grad­ uate students, directly supervised by faculty, free to stu­ dents, Payne Hall Room 402. Information and appoint­ ments available by calling fan at 965-5067, • University Blood Services — ASU blood drive, 9:30 a.m;-3:30 p.m. through Friday, Feb. 25, on Tyler Mall and Danforth Chapel on Cady Mall. • University Libraries — Free compact disc class: meet­ ing to discuss a compilation- of bibliographic citations and abstracts covering technological literature, 3:30 p.m.. Noble Science Reference Library Classroom 229. • B aptist S tu d en t Union — Meeting, noon. Baptist Student Union. 1322 S. Mill Ave. • Women’s Student C enter — Open meeting: “Selfcare for Women in the Helping Professions.” with Paulette Martin, 3:30 p.m., W omen's Student Center, MU lower level. • American Marketing Association — Guest speaker Stacey Cardinal, District manager of Frito-Lay, 4:30 p.m., MU Cochise Room. • Campus Crusade for Christ — Thursday Night Live, open meeting, 7:30 p.m., Physical Science H-wing, Room 150. • MUAB Special Events Committee — Meeting: 3 p.m., MU Conference Room 1AB, third floor. • University Toastmasters — Weekly meeting, 6:30 p.m,, MU second flow. • U n d erg rad u ate Law C lub — Speech about Environmental law by Julie Lemmon, practicing lawyer, 4:30p.m., Armstrong Hall Room 111. • Sigm a T au D elta - E nglish H onor Society — M eeting. 5:30 p.m., Java Road Coffeehouse, H E . Seventh St. • Students Taking Action to Reach Success — Open meeting: “An Eveping With the Stars,” Fashion show, poetry readings, songs to celebrate Black History Month. 7:30 p.m., MU Programming Lounge. S tate P ress Attack C ontinued from page 1. beat to the punch by the local ABC-TV affiliate station, which is run by Hilliard’s son-in-law. Just after the next morning’s paper came off the presses at about 11 p.m., a TV reporter showed up at the presses, displayed a copy of the paper to the camera and announced the story. Even in the midst of the subsequent media circus, Hilliard and his staff never felt that out-of-town reporters were trying to muscle in on the story. On the contrary, the Oregonian received much publicity around the country, he said. “They would usually come to us for information,” Hilliard said. “They usually credited us in their stories.” As more evidence and accusations amassed daily against Harding, many wondered if she would be allowed to skate in the Olympics after all. She was, but then gave a flawed per­ formance at Wednesday’s first round of the much-anticipated figure skating competition, placing so low that she is unlikely to win a medal. Kerrigan, on the other hand, placed first in the day’s competition. The final stage of the competition takes place Friday. From an editorial point of view, the Oregonian has been sympathetic to Harding, stating in editorials that she should be considered innocent until proven guilty. Halls C ontinued from page 1. Residential Life, defends the raise as a way to help pay for nearly $2 million worth of routine maintenance and major improvements planned in the halls by this fall: a renovation and re-opening of Irish and Hayden halls, roof repairs, replac­ ing carpet and renovating kitchens in Cholla Apartments. "The students are making an investment into future years for the students who are going to follow them.” he said. Some of these discretionary upgrades would be delayed if the increase isn’t approved, Brierly said. He said the blow of the increase will be softened by incen­ tives to students who renew their contracts by March 18. Perks include S35 gift certificates and other discounts at the ASU Bookstore, he said. “I do not believe this increase is going to drive any stu­ dents away,” he said. You’re talking about $56, $57, per year increase on the average,” he said. The Residential Hall Association, in a letter to the ABOR, supports the plan as a way for students in less expensive halls to pay more in an effort to standardize room rates. Now; rates vary from $1,926 to $3,227. Under the proposal, rent would vary from $2,000 to $3,250. Regent Judy Gignac said she has not decided whether she will approve or reject the proposal. “I try not to make my mind up before I hear all the pros and cons,” she said. Debt C ontinued from page 1. “If students are getting less and less grant money and if they have to rely on loans and work 20 to 30 hours a week, that will affect their academic performance.” Insolia said not enough of the sources of aid. where the universities have the most control, waivers and tuition, are going to resident students displaying need. . “A lot of the money goes to non-resident graduate stu­ dents,” he said. “If that is the group (residents with need) w e’re going to prioritize, then there’s something not in synch.” Sound Off: 965-4287 The State Pres* would like to hear from you on its Sound OCT Line; Each week, the opinion page will print a question of • C a n te rb u ry Episcopal C am pus M in istry — Eucharist, dinner, Bible study. 6:15 p.m., St. Augustine’s Parrish, 1235 S. College Ave. • A rt H istory C lub — Open monthly meeting. 4:45 p.m., MU Gallery. • Asian Students Association — Open meeting- Time management workshop, 4:30 p.m., MU pima Room 218. âSl University or community interest, taking answers all week, 24 hours a day at 965*4287. When leaving a message, please leave your name, major, class standing (or any other affiliation with the University) and a number where you can be reached. Calls will be ver­ ified, mid responses will be published every Monday. Responses may be edited for length and to eliminate profanity. Sorry, the State Press will not grant requests fear anonymity on the Sound O ff Line. This W eek’s Question: uDo you have any concerns about personal safety on cam pus?” M A R I N E R 'S P O IN T A T M IS S IO N RAY, S A N 1)112(10 FOR MORE I NFORMATI ON CALL THE The Sun Devil Spark Yea O rder yburs today for $36.93 Matthews Center basement, rm 50 MTV SPRING BREAK HOTLINE# RLE AS 12; BRINO ÇA NN El) F 001) FOR THE SAN DI ERO FOOD BAN K. ja p in g a ll-d a y , e v e ry day T u esd a y, March 8 through Monday, March 14 . no (¿L a s s c o n t a i n e r s o n t h e REACH. NO ÀLÇOÏiOLw P r ess NO P A R k lN C ON S IT E . C IIECIi Y O U R L O C A L V A RISK F O R S H U T T L E I N FO K M A T IO N v BUOI CIIT TO VOI BY MTV AND YOI B MIAN DIEiH) CABLE COMPANIES* IF YOt . DON’T iia m : CABLE, CAM. YOI K LOCAL CAREE company AND PM (i IN. Ocnevfeaon S o m eth in g to read w ith o u t using a highlighter. World/Nation Thursday, February 24,1994 S tate P ress round' nzona Gays protest Rush Lhnbaugh, boycott Florida Orange Juice PHOENIX (AP) — A gay-rights group is calling for a one-week boycott o f Florida orange juice to protest tip hiring o f conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh as a pitchman for the product. G ays are frequent targets o f Limbaugh’s rhetoric, along with envi­ ronmentalists. animal-tights activists and Hillary Clinton. Sixty gay bars have already agreed to stop serving orange juice to protest Limbaugh’s $1 million, six-month deal with the Florida Citrus Commission, according to the new national group, Gay and Lesbian Americans. “While the commission may find it easy to swallow Limbaugh, we as con­ sumers find Florida mange ju k e leaves a bitter, homophobic, un-American taste in our mouths,” Jonathan Bauer, who heads the group's Arizona chapter and w ho cam e up w ith the idea, said Wednesday. Senate Panel rejects proposal allowing “ pollution credits” PHOENIX (AP) — A Senate com­ mittee rejected a proposal Wednesday to allow industries to buy mid sell “pol­ lution credits” after one member per­ suaded his colleagues the hall was both unneeded and unworkable. The proposed “market-based incen­ tive pilot program” was modeled after a Southern California program known as “RECLAIM'’ that allows industries that manage to reduce air-polluting emis­ sions to earn "pollution credits” thru can be sold or traded to businesses that are unable to reduce theirs. The bill, which already had passed the House, was turned down 5-3 by die Senate Natural Resources, Agriculture and Environment Committee after Sen. Chuck Blanchard, D-Phoenix, said the program wouldn't work in Arizona. C d f e n ^ m a R < l w ( |e d i i M i rare rattlesnake smuggling PHOENIX (A P) A C alifornia man has been charged with allegedly Crying to sell some m e rattlesnakes to undercover officers with the -Ariadna Game andFish Department. Stephen Earl Cook, 4S, o f Qarden G rove, C a lif., w as in d icted i y a Maricopa County grand jury last week G am e and F ish spokesman Rory A ik en ssaid C ook altegedlybrobgh* four red diamond rattlesnakes across the California border and met with depart­ ment officers who had set up a i operation. P ag e 3 U.S. calls for Haitian democracy But will not add further sanctions W ASHINGTON (AP) — The U nited S tates is still w orking to return ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power in Haiti, but is not ready to tighten sanctions against the co u n try ’s m ilitary rulers. Secretary of State Warren Christopher told Congress on Wednesday. “We believe that sanctions can add a good deal of pressure." Christopher said. "We think that they are most effective, though, when they are moving toward some political result.” Christopher, testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, dismissed a New York Times report W ednesday of a change in the Clinton administration's strate­ gy on Haiti, saying the story was “overwrit­ ten.” ; The Times said the administration has decided not to tighten sanctions unless Aristide broadens his government and grants immediate amnesty to military officers. Christopher was asked about the report by Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who said, “It seems to me we’re putting pressure on the wrong parties h ere... if the story is correct.” The secretary replied: “The main target of our policy is to restore democracy and ulti­ mately to return President Aristide to Haiti.” . U.S. officials also believe that maximum pressure should be put on the military author­ ities “to leave the country and to enable democratic rule to return,” Christopher said. He said a third élément of U.S. policy is support for the appointment of a civilian gov­ ernment under Aristide. Since Aristide-appointed Prime Minister Robert Maival resigned, complaining that the military would not allow him to function, there has been “no plan that we can be pro­ m oting effectiv ely w ith the san ctio n s,” Christopher said. “I think that there’s a great deal of suffer­ A sso cia te d P re ss People fill containers with black market gasoline in Port-au-Prince Wednesday, despite a four-month old fuel embargo called for by the Organization of American States. ing imposed by those sanctions, and we’d tike to see them working toward a concrete end,” he said. International sanctions, including a trade embargo, called for by the Organization of American States were lifted briefly last year when the m ilitary agreed to a plan for Aristide’s return. When coup leaders reneged, the sanctions were reimposed. Christopher said, “We are at a point in policy where there seems to be developing a centrist group in Haiti who are committed to constitutional government and who believe in the ultimate return of President Aristide.” He referred to Haitian parliamentarians who spent several days in Washington push­ ing a new plan for Haiti which would include selection of a new prime minister by Aristide, resignation of military coup leaders and a lift- ing of an international embargo against trade with Haiti. The State Department issued several state­ ments urging Aristide to consider the plan. The exiled leader met with the group but said he refused to discuss it with them, rejecting their call for him to appoint a new prime min­ ister as “irresponsible." There has been no indication from Portau-Prince that the military rulers of Haiti would go along with the parliamentarians’ • scenario either. A ristide, w ho has been living in Venezuela and more recently Washington since his ouster in September 1991, said he would honor only the earlier agreem ent which would have had him back in power by now. Reno to get replacement deputy W ASHINGTON (A P) — A ttorney G eneral Janet Reno, whose first deputy resigned over management differences, is getting a replacement with whom she is com­ patible: Jam ie S. G orelick, now the Pentagon’s top lawyer. “One year ago I met Jamie Gorelick. I was impressed, and I asked her to lead my confir­ mation effort,” Reno said at a news confer­ ence Wednesday. “As 1 worked with her day by day, I came to respect her judgm ent, admired her ability to marshal people and resources, and came to value her counsel.” Over the past year, Reno came to see her management differences with her first deputy attorney general, Philip B. Heymann, as irrec­ oncilable. When Heymann resigned in late January, he and Reno said they never devel­ oped the “chemistry” to work well together. R eno used h er conference room to announce President Clinton’s intention to nominate the 43-year-old Pentagon general counsel for the No. 2 post at the-Justice Department. Gorelick said she had seen Reno “at func­ tions where people come up to her with ideas, and she m akes notes o f them .” Reno is known for assembling lists of these ideas for her deputy. “People I ’ve worked with ... know that I make lists and I check them off, and that’s what w e’ll be doing,” Gorelick said. I f the S enate confirm s G orelick, as expected, none of the three top Justice offi­ cials would have experience in the federal law enforcement agencies the deputy super­ vises. Reno was a local prosecutor, and W ebster Hubbell, the No. 3 official, was briefly chief justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court. Gorelick and Reno went out of their way to em phasize G orelick’s fam iliarity with criminal investigations. Reno said of Gorelick, ‘Today, she over­ sees the second largest team of prosecutors in the country — second only to the Department of Justice staff — as the men and women of the Judge Advocate General’s corps seek punishment for wrongdoers in our nation’s military criminal justice system.” “The experience I ’ve had over the last year as general counsel o f the D efense Department has put me in the role of a prose- . cutor,” Gorelick said. “We prosecute many, many, many, many hundreds of cases in our military justice system on any given day.” Nancy dazzles, T o n ya stum bles Tonya Harding holds bar hands in a prayar before bar perform ance in the w om an’s technical program on W ednesday. At far laft la Harding’s coach, Diana Rawlinaon. HAMAR, Norway (AP) — The show­ down over, there was Nancy Kerrigan, show­ ered with flowers after a nearly perfect per­ formance. And there was Tonya Harding, staring from a VIP booth, applauding with everyone else. Maybe winning is the best revenge. Seven weeks after a knee clubbing that Harding’s ex-husband admits he planned, Kerrigan skated an elegant technical program Wednesday that entranced a sellout crowd and put her in position for a gold medal on Friday. \ Harding bungled two jumps and skated tentatively throughout, landing in 10th place with no chance of a medal. “ It’s hard to explain the feeling you get. I’m just really proud of myself,” Kerrigan said. Kerrigan, looking regal and confident, seemed to brush aside the Jan. 6 attack and skated the performance of her life. The night couldn’t have been more magi­ cal for Kerrigan. The next-to-last skater, she was introduced to the loudest ovation in the 6,000-seat Olympic Amphitheatre. Dressed in white chiffon accented by black Velvet, she smiled widely at a banner pleading, “ Marry Me Nancy” hung at the top of the arena. Even before she finished, the crowd was clapping and cheering. W hen the music stopped, hundreds of American flags waved. A huge roar greeted the marks, which included six 5.9s of a possible 6.0. Seven judges had her first; Kerrigan had made their job easy, erasing any suspicions she might get a sympathy vote by outskating the field. If anyone in the crowd regarded Harding as a villain, it was not apparent by the cheers and applause she received. Banners in the crowd read “ Frank Loves You Tonya” and “ USA Go For the Gold Tonya.” She folded her hands in prayer and gazed heavenward before starting her routine, but skated an uninspiring program to music from “ Much Ado About Nothing.” Harding, 23, sat sneezing as marks rang­ ing from 4.8 for technical merit to 5.6 for artistry were flashed on the scoreboard. Associated P re ss Nancy Karrigan leans back during a apin in th e w om e n ’ s te c h n ic a l, p rog ra m Wednesday. Kerrigan la in drat placa at the end of the program. S tate P ress Thursday, February 24, 1994 P ag e 4 ~T7 S Press S tate ta JCiditorial No low for landlords H ere’s another bright idea from die wonderful people who brought you your dorm rooms. R esidence L ife o fficials have proposed that rent for résidence halls be raised some 2.26% for next year. The m oney gained, it seem s, will be used to m ake im provem ents in Irish, H ayden and Cholla a p a r tm e n ts , a s w e ll as s u n d ry o th e r m in o r upgrades and repairs. T hat’s one o f the nice things about state-run business like the Postal Service, P ravda and ASU housing. They d o n 't have to com pete. L e t's th in k a b o u t th e h o u sin g situ a tio n at ASU. First, le t’s note that only about 84% o f the h o u sin g is o c c u p ie d — n o t c o u n tin g v ac an t dorms and facilities converted for other purposes. Counting Hayden and Irish, the rate is 74% . Can a private apartment com plex survive if one-quar­ ter o f its 5.400 room s and apartm ents w eren creating revenue? T hen th e re ’s the arg u m e n t th a t h o u sin g is cheaper at ASU — le t's go along with this at the moment. Sure, on the whole it may well be. But w hat do you g et fo r y o u r m o n ey ? D oes R esidential Life count in the exciting hall p ro ­ gram s you d o n ’t happen to particip ate in as a p erk ?’ D oes it count in such conveniences as cable (uh, no m ovie channels available, sorry), o r the oh so m odem kitchen/dining facilities avail­ able? A two-person studio apartment in C holla costs roughly $350 a month — for each student. N ot a bad price, it would seem. T hat is, until you real­ ize that ju st dow n the street you can find tw obedroom apartm ents for $650. including utilities. D on’t like having a room m ate? Furnished stu­ dios larger than those at Cholla are available for som e $320-$360 ju s t a sto n e ’s throw aw ay. If you ju st want a single room, you can attem pt to throw in for $150 or so a month to rent a house w ith friends. T o be fair, resid e n tia l life d oes o ffe r som e boons — you d o n ’t have to w orry about being stuck by a room m ate on rent, and the room s are close to cam pus. B ut is th at really w orth h u n ­ dreds o f dollars m ore a year? Particularly when it is painfully obvious ASU can’t retain residents: o f all re sid e n ts, o n ly 13.4% a re so p h o m o res, 11.9% ju n io rs and 7.3% seniors. S tudents ju s t don’t w ant to stay in the dorm s/apaitm ents after their first taste, it seems. Yaa-hoo! Now you can pay yet m ore m oney / and fin d that your dorm room m ay be slightly improved. Can you ask for a better deal? A S A N u m b e r o f tim es in the Spring 1994 semester when th e A rizona Stu b e n t s Association has closed its m e e tin g * to th e p u b lic a n d the press in violation o f th e A riz o n a O p e n M eetings Law: Ex e c u t i y e S e s s i o n W a f c tv O n W ed nesd ay. A SA v o te d to e x c lu d e th e p re s s fro m in t e r v ie w p r o c e e d in a s f o r s tu ­ d e n t re g e n t. A S A d id n o t n o tify th e press in w r it in g 2 4 h o u r s in a d v a n ce , as m a n d a te d b y th e A r iz o n a O p e n M e e tin g s Law . m STATE PRESS s TAFF -4 FTwis m e i tho ught t ju s t O F F E R S G iv e US A H A N D .' w h o l e s it u a t io n i s g e t t i n g t o h ea rd a R u s s ia n Efforts to censor violence miss those responsible W ith a q u arter in hand, he walks up to the Mortal Combat »HAYNE gam e. But it's occupied. WHITEHEAD ''D am n.'' h e exclaims! He waits as long he can before he grabs the player's hand and rips it from the joystick. The two fighters' stand fist to fist. The newcomer lunges for­ ward, doing a back flip over his opponent. They lift their biology textbooks into the air, crashing them together like clumsy swords. H undreds o f students gather around the ensuing fight. Now doesn’t this just happen too often in the MU? In January, the video game industry bowed to pressure from Congress. A trade association representing 1,100 groups prepared a thirty page rating-system proposal to create a rating system for violent video games. Meanwhile. Janet Reno warned television networks to start censoring their programs, or the government will. First off, TV is violent because society is violent. And society is violent because criminals get away with too much. That's because we’re holding everything except criminals responsible for the criminal’s behavior. First we blamed guns. Then we blamed poverty. Now we're going lock up our televi­ sions sets and our Nintendos? How far are we going to take this? In high school RQTCI learned to say, “Sir. no excuse sir,” when I messed up. Loosely, it translates, “ T know 1 did wrong, but 1 take full responsibility for my actions.’“ : Is rating video games and censoring television the best solution we can find to calm the violence in today’s society? Or should somebody else take responsibility? There is a chain of circumstances that come together to cause crimes. The chain begins with the criminal, moves through several links of poverty and firearms, and finally it ends with violent TV pro­ grams and bean burritos (which get blamed for everything). Regardless of the result of the lawsuits against Damian Williams, I have no doubt that throwing a brick at someone's head is assault with a deadly weapon. Yet Williams wasn’t convicted o f that charge. Did his attorney prove the mob con­ science had control of his actions? I don’t think so. More importantly, do people with so little self control belong on the street? No. More recently, James Carlson testified in a light-brown S wig. a pink sweater, and high heels that his alter ego. a 17vear-old lesbian prostitute couldn’t stop his other alter ego "Jim." from raping an ASU student, and that he was abused. Fortunately, the jury didn't buy it. But today, that jury's ver­ dict was an exception to a frightening rule. That rule is rooted in two other verdicts which force me to ask. “’When does abuse justify violence?’’ In the future, courts should establish a test to answer that question. The test should include these questions: 1) Was the relationship dangerously violent? 2) Did either member have cause to fear for his or her safe. ^ ty? .. . ■ 3) Was there any realistic alternative to violence’’ 4) And if so, did anyone take advantage of that alternative'1 Had Lorena Bobbit first tried any alternative to violence 1 would be much moré sympathetic. That's because I believe Bobbit was abused. It shows in her eyes when she talks about her husband. Yet. in Bobbit's case, the prosecution said that she never took advantage of a separation that could have ended her marriage to this man who terrorized her and raped her. And the defense acknowledged it. She had the chance to leave, and she didn’t use it. By not taking advantage of the opportunity she left other women with the impression that, abused women have no alternative to violence. And if they do have an alternative, they don’t have to pursue it. Volunteers for local shelters have dedicated their lives to giving abused women alternatives. Ignoring their efforts is not noble, it’s insulting. Any sympathy I have to abuse victims ends with the Menendez case. Here are two men. 26 and 23 years old. They each had a driver’s license. Yet they felt too trapped by the powerful grip of two senior citizens to leave? How much of a threat were their parents after they bought the gun. anyway? Next time I would suggest they get a job and find a new home. No car? No problem, they could just steal the old man’s. It’s not like they had any problem with breaking the law anyway. What's next? Soon, in Florida, the attorney for Michael F. Griffen will try to convince a jury that abortion opponents drove a man to murder a doctor who performed abortions by indoctrinating him with anti-abortion videos and literature. Indoctrination is just another scapegoat. And while Congress blames video games, we blame soci­ ety, and criminals blame their parents, everyone is ignoring the real problem, criminals simply don't get what they deserve — 25 years to life. In Florida, 1 hope the jury will agree. shayne Whitehead is a senior journalism student. JAKE BATSELL, Editor SHAUN RACHÁU, Managing Editor MARY LÉIGH SUMMERTON...... ............ Asst. City Editor JASON OWSLEY......................... .................... News Editor JAMES FRUSETTA........................ BRIAN FITZGERALD.................... .................... Photo Editor SAMANTHA FELDMAN............... MIKE BRANOM.............................. ................ ..Sports Editor JEREMY STEIN............................... HI AISIF BOI IDRF.A11 TROY FUSS..................................... BRITTON MAUCHLINE. Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Mika Akikuoi. Shawn Boyd, Garin Groff, Maxwell Higgins, Jason Hill. Paul M atthews, Joni Tait, Vicky Young Schauer, Greg Zemeida. SP O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Todd Kelly, Julie Reuvers. Evelyn Sheinkopf, Dawn Wagner. C O PY E D IT O R S: Bob Felix, K ris Fridricb, K ristine Holter-Sorensen, Dave Proffitt. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : W illiam L ynam , C raig Macnaughton, Fredrick Medanich. COLUMNISTS: David Don, A. Marjory Kaminski, Barry Kelley, Diana Lopez, Maureen McClamon, Sean O ’Neil, Melanie Selcho, Shayne Whitehead. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, George O ’Connor, Mateo Willis. GRAPHIC A RTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. PR O D U C T IO N : Kenneth Collins, Stacey Devlin, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Britton Mauchline, Skip Schrader, Anna Ulinich, Dave Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Sonia B enson, Dan EUstrom, ¿rigid Franzen, Heidi Harris, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Emil Peterson, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JAKE BATSELL SHAUN RACHAU JAMES FRUSETTA ANGELA BENOCHE Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The Stoic PressLis published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 15, A rizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answefc<]uestipns of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the A$U administration,faculty, st*ff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information ..965-7572 Newsroom ....965-2292 M agazine......965-1695 Advertising ...965-6555 Classifieds ....965-6731 Page 4 State P ress Thursday, February 24, 1994 I j State Press -Editorial No love for landlords H ere’s another bright idea from the w onderful people who brought you your dorm room s. R esidence L ife o fficials have proposed th at rent for residence hails be raised some 2.26% for next year. T he m oney gained, it seem s, w ill be used to m ake im provem ents in Irish, H ayden and C holla a p a r tm e n ts , as w e ll as s u n d ry o th e r m in o r upgrades mid repairs. , T h a t's one o f the nice things about state-run business like the Postal Service. Pravda and ASU housing. They don’t have to com pete. L e t’s th in k a b o u t the h o u sin g situ a tio n at ASU. F irst, le t's note that only about 84% o f the h o u s in g is o c c u p ie d -— n o t c o u n tin g v a c a n t dorms and facilities converted for other purposes: Counting Hayden and Irish, the rate is 74%, Can a private apartment com plex survive if one-quar­ ter o f its 5.400 room s and apartm ents w e re n 't creating revenue? T h en th e r e 's th e arg u m en t th a t h o u sin g is cheaper at ASU — le t’s go along with this at the moment. Sure, on the whole it may well be. B ut w hat d o you get fo r y o u r m o n ey ? D o es R esidential L ife count in the exciting hall p ro ­ gram s you d o n ’t h appen to p articip a te in as a p erk ?’ D oes it count in such conveniences as cable (uh, no m ovie channels available, sorry), or the oh so m odem kitehen/dining facilities avail­ able? A two-person studio apartment in C holla costs roughly $350 a m onth — for each student. N ot a b^d price, it would seem. T hat is, until you real­ ize that ju st dow n the street you can find tw obedroom apartm ents for $650, including utilities. D on’t like having a room m ate? Furnished stu­ dios larger than those at C holla are available for som e $ 3 2 0-$360 ju s t a sto n e’s throw aw ay. If you ju st want a single room , you can attem pt to throw in fo r $150 o r so a month to rent a house w ith friends. T o b e fair, resid en tial life d o es o ffe r som e boons — you d o n ’t have to w orry about being stuck by a room m ate on rent, and the room s are close to cam pus. B u t i s th a t really w orth h u n ­ dreds o f dollars more a year? Particularly w hen it is painfully obvious ASU can’t retain residents: o f all re sid e n ts, o n ly 13.4% are so p h o m o res, 11.9% ju n io rs and 7.3% seniors. S tudents ju s t don’t want to stay in the dorm s/apaitm ents after their first taste, it seems. Yaa-hoo! N ow you can pay yet m ore m oney and find that your dorm room m ay be slightly improved. C an you ask for a better deal? A a a A 5 A E X e N u m b e r o f tim es in t h e .................. ¡jprmg i W 4 semester wnen th e A rizona S tu d e n ts Association has closed its m e e tin g s to th e p u b lic a n d the press in violation O f th e A r iz o n a O p e n M eetings Lpw; I c u t i V e s' 5s+1° ® W a t c h " O n W ed nesd ay, ASA v o te d t o e x c lu d e th e p re s s fro m in t e r v ie w p r o c e e d in g s f o r s tu ­ d e n t re g e n t. A S A d id n o t n o tify th e press in w r it in g 2 4 h o u r s in a d v a n ce , as m a n d a te d b y th e A riz o n a O p e n M e e tin g s Law . Efforts to censor violence miss those responsible wig, a pink sweater, and high heels that his alter ego. a 17W ith a q u arter in hand, he year-old lesbian prostitute couldn't stop his other alter ego walks up to the Mortal Combat "Jim." from raping an ASU student, and that he was abused. gam e. But i t ’s occupied. Fortunately, the jury didn't buy it. But today, that jury's ver­ ‘"Damn." he exclaims! He waits dict was an exception to a frightening rule. as long he can before he grabs the That rule is rooted in two other verdicts which force me to player's hand and rips it from the ask. "'When does abuse justify violence?” In the future, courts joystick. should establish a test to answer that question. The test should The two fighters stand fist to include these questions: fist. The newcomer lunges for­ 1) Was the relationship dangerously violent? ward, doing a back flip over his 2) Did either member have cause to fear for his or her safeopponent. They lift their biologytextbooks into the air. crashing . ■ ty? 3) Was there any realistic alternative to violence? \ them together like clumsy swords. 4) And if so, did anyone take advantage of that alternative’’ H undreds o f stu d en ts gather Had Lorena Bobbit first tried any alternative to violence I around the ensuing fight. Now doesn’t this just happen too often in the MU? would be much more sympathetic. That's because I believe In January, the video game industry bowed to pressure Bobbit was abused. It shows in her eyes when she talks about from Congress. A trade association representing 1.100 groups her husband. Yet. in Bobbit's case, the prosecution said that prepared a thirty page rating-system proposal to create a rating she never took advantage of a separation that could have system for violent video games. Meanwhile. Janet Reno ended her marriage to this man who terrorized her and raped warned television networks to start censoring their programs, her. And the defense acknowledged it. or the government will. She had the chance to leave, and she didn't use it. By not First off. TV is violent because society is violent. And taking advantage of the opportunity she left other women with society is violent because criminals get away with too much. the impression that abused women have no alternative to vio­ That’s because w e’re holding everything except criminals lence. And if they do have an alternative, they don't have to responsible for the criminal’s behavior. First we blamed guns. pursue it. Volunteers for local shelters have dedicated their Then we blamed poverty. Now we’re going lock up our televi­ lives to giving abused women alternatives. Ignoring their sions sets and our Nintendos? How far are we going to take efforts is not noble, it’s insulting. this? Any sympathy 1 have to abuse victims ends with the • In high school ROTC I learned to say, “Sir. no excuse sir,” Menendez case. Here are two men. 26 and 23 years old. They when I messed up. Loosely, it translates, “T know I did each had a driver’s license. Yet they felt too trapped by the wrong, but I take full responsibility for my actions.'*' powerful grip of two senior citizens to leave? How much of a Is rating video games and censoring television the best threat were their parents after they bought the gun, anyway? solution we can find to calm the violence in today’s society ? Next time 1 would suggest they get a job and find a new home. Or should somebody else take responsibility? There is a chain No car? No problem, they could just steal the old man’s. It's of circumstances that come together to cause crimes. The not like they had any problem with breaking the law anyway. chain begins with the criminal, moves through several links of What’s next? poverty and firearms, and finally it ends with violent TV pro­ Soon, in Florida, the attorney for Michael F. Griffen will grams and bean burritos (which get blamed for everything). try to convince a jury that abortion opponents drove a man to Regardless of the result of the lawsuits against Damian murder a doctor who performed abortions by indoctrinating Williams, I have no doubt that throwing a brick at someone’s him with anti-abortion videos and literature. Indoctrination is head is assault with a deadly weapon. Yet Williams wasn’t just another scapegoat. convicted of that charge. Did his attorney prove the mob con­ And while Congress blames video games, we blame soci­ science had control of his actions? ety, and criminals blame their parents, everyone is ignoring I don’t think so. the real problem, criminals simply don’t get what they deserve More importantly, do people with so little self control — 25 years to life. belong on the street? In Florida, I hope the jury will agree. No. More recently, James Carlson testified in a light-brown Shayne Whitehead is a senior journalism student. JAKE BATSELL, Editor SHAUN RACHAU. Managing Editor CHRIS DRISCOLL ........................................... City Editor MARY LEICiH SUMMERTON.................. Asst. City Editor JASON OWSLEY......................................... News Editor JAMES FRUSETTA.........................................Opinion Editor BRIAN FITZGERALD......... ...............................Photo Editor SAMANTHA FELDMAN..........................Asst. Photo Editor MIKE BRANOM....... ............................... Sports Editor JEREMY STEIN....................... ........Asst. Sports Editor DIANE BOUDREAU.............................World/Nation Editor TROY FUSS.... .............................................. Magazine Editor BRITTON MAUCHL1NE.................. Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Mika Akikuni. Shawn Boyd. Garin Groff. Maxwell Higgins, Jason Hill, Paul Matthews, Jooi Tail, Vicky Young Schauer. Greg Zetneida. SP O R T S R E P O R T E R S : Todd Kelly. Julie Reuvers. Evelyn Sheinkopt Dawn Wagner. C O PY E D IT O R ^ : Bob Felix, j^ris Fridrich, K ristine Holter-Sorensen, Dave Proffitt. ' PH O TO G RA PH ERS: W illiam L ynam , C raig Macnaughton, Fredrick Medanich. COLUM NISTS:’David Don, A. Marjory Kaminski, Barry Kelley, Diana Lopez, Maureen McClamon, Sean O'Neil, Melanie Selcho, Shayne Whitehead. CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. George O ’Connor, Mateo Willis. GRAPH IC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhalcara. PR O D U CTIO N : Kenneth C dllins, Stacey Devlin, Jodi Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Britton Mauchline, Skip Schrader, Anna Ulinich, Dave Weber. SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Sonia B enson, Dan ElUtrom, Brigid Franzen, Heidi Harris, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jeltum, Emil Peterson, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the'views of die editorial board, decided by A majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: JAKE BATSELL SHAUN RACHAU JAMES FRUSETTA ANGELA BENOCHE Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor . The Slate Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room IS, A rizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answea questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P h o n e N um bers Information ..965-7572 Newsroom ...965-2292 M agazine.. ....965-1695 A dvertising.. .965-6555 Classifieds ....965-6731 S tate P ress Page 5 Thursday, February 24,1994 L oad in g an oth er ro u n d in th e g u n co n tro l d ebate “A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.” Few statements can cause so much controversy as the Second Amendment of the Constitution. Including those words in an opinion column is tantamount to placing a big ad in the opinion pages reading, “Hey! We really could use some letters, so please write in and tell us what idiots you think we are.” Even within the offices of the State Press —- and we all know newspapers are dens of leftist. Marxist-revering stooges, right? No conservatives or moderates or anything, just ask any Republican — there are deep staff divisions about gun advo­ cacy and gun Control. All the talk about gun control is a little bewildering for me, since having lived in Alaska for 16 years. I've experienced the most gun-happy culture in the world ■ — and I was a heavy-cal­ iber toting member. Yes, I've experienced the thrill and joy of vaporizing targets with my choice of metal death. I like shooting. It’s fun to watch paper targets turn into confetti. And, just; in case some random grizzly with a toothache wandered by while I was out hiking, it was nice to know that my Casul .454 was the perfect bear repellent. But that was Alaska, and the “guns” sit­ uation on the tundra is a lot different than the one here in the desert. Let’s face it —you could go on a shooting rampage up there and the only things to notice would be the trees, the snow and the walruses. It’s not exactly an urban area. H aying now gone to school .in C alifornia and A rizona, som etim es it seems like the sub-Arctic zone's gun advo­ cates' bewildering motto is “Bigger guns! We need bigger goddamn guns!” You see. I can perfectly understand the need for urbanites to own pistols (self-pro­ tection). shotguns and rifles (the occasional hunting trip) but even after moving Down South, I’ve never understood why in the world do people need assault rifles? The best rejoinder I've heard is — from a State Press staffer, in fact — well, what is the need to restrict them? After all, despite the media image of machine gun toting gang members terroriz­ ing America’s cities, the number of people Umoj a Hall article brews unnecessary controversy The State Press must need controversy. This is the only reason I can think of to explain the article about Umoja Hall on Feb. 14. First of all, I am the resident assistant o f the hall. Neither I nor the president of the hall nor the public relations person was asked to be interviewed. I was contacted along with the president only to take a picture. Well, it's my turn to speak. Umoja, once again, is.a history: and culture hall used as a teaching tool to deal with AfricanAmerican issues. Before the hall there was not a black history class being taught on campus. Many students had to wait to learn about black history in a classroom setting until they came to college. You see, black history is not part of the U.S. history, even though black people helped build this country. Many of us never had a black neighbor or classmate. Tire hall is our way of learning more about our culture- Maybe the hall is mostly black because mostly black students are interested in the topic (what a concept). Maybe white students could learn more about being a minority if most of their neighbors were black. The best way to team about a culture is total immersion, Umoja is open to any student who is interested and the information goes out to any student applying to stay in the res­ idence halls. Umoja does not house even the majority o f stu­ dents in the residence ball system, so who are separating themselves? Are Alpha and Adelphi Roads segregated? Is ASU segregated because the majority of students are white? Some say by having Umoja we are separated from others and Hving in a community that will not prepare us for the real world. I have always attended majority schools and now they say living on a majority black floor for two years is supposed to make me forget how to function? College is a time for learning and exploring and broaden­ ing your experiences. Isn’t that what the culturally based housing is attempting to do? The African American students asked for an institute of teaming and research, seeing as how there are Native American, Asian and Hispanic institutes. But Umoja was what we were given, so we are making the best of it. Can we move on to more important issues now? Umoja, whether you like it or not, is here to stay. LaurenR . Guyton Senior Social Work killed with assault rifles is extremely small — for example, I am not aware of any of Phoenix’s 176 murders last year hav­ ing been committed with an ‘assault gun.’ And, for that matter, our “founding fathers” insured our rig h ts to keep arsenals in our closets w ith thè Second Amendment. What’s the harm? There wouldn’t seem to be much... at first After all, the average owner of a an assault rifle — much like the average civilian owner of, say, licensed machine guns — are responsi-: ble owners and shooters. But assault rifles are essentially military weapons — although the most fanatic of gun controllers and legislators tend to use the category to lump together anything with a bar­ rel. a trigger, and a large magazine. The ‘classic’ assault rifle originated in the M aschinen Karbiner MKb42(H) and MP43 Sturmgewehr 44 of Germany in World War II; in both cases, the weapons were designed for one purpose, to kill people in large numbers, to produce a high volume of suppressive fire while still retaining a rifle’s accuracy, to the tune of 600 rounds a minute. The technology o f the M-16 may be superior, but the mission is still the same. Well, the gun fans say, didn't our foundin’ fathers want us to be able to overthrow tyranny and defend ourselves? Hmmm ... true, but it is important to remember that tech­ nology has changed. In 1789, the flintlock muzzle-loading rifle was a multi-purpose tool useful for hunting as well as being a militia weapon for defense against Indian and bandit attacks. In 1994. the Russian AK-74, Israeli Galil or Belgian FN-FAL are weapons designed essentially for one purpose: to kill, v , You can’t hunt with such weapons — trust me, as an Alaskan I still chuckle about the poacher that went after a bear with an Uzi. (The bear ate him.) They aren’t particularly use­ ful to defend against, say, criminals, unless you happen to be willing to lay down an indiscriminate blanket of fire which will likely end up hitting everything in the neighborhood. And, although I personally enjoy putting a couple of hundred rounds into a paper target on the target range, the fun of doing such in the space of 30 seconds palls after a while. Quite simply, the “dual-use” guns which were once of equal value for hunting or shooting have evolved into very specific types of weapons. The guns of the Constitution are nor the guns of today. Military armaments have a long tradition of being banned and/or regulated — not that many people are killed each year by, say, machine guns because the government very closely restricts civilian Ownership of such weapons through licens­ ingLet’s face it, even the NRA doesn’t insist that grenade launchers be available in gun stores without restriction. To be fair, there is an obvious rationale for thè ownership of assault rifles— as part of the militia system. But since the revolution, combat has become increasingly complex, and his­ torians have noted the rise of the “professional” army and the concurrent decline of the “militia” system the latter having essentially died out in the Civil War. It seems odd to declare that guns are needed for militias when the militias no longer exist. Of course, for those who take the Constitution to be some sort of permanent gospel of government, it is also instructive to remember that it has been changed as cir­ cum stances demanded; without being a law student, I can recall that there are at least a half-dozen sections (slaves equaling ‘threefifths’ of a free man, changes in the election of the president, elec­ tion processes for senators, session times, return of escaped slaves, prohibition) where changes have been made. The “gun control” debate has many facets and even more fac­ tions. But it is curious to see how vehement Americans can become over an issue that rests on defini­ tions and interpretations. James Frusetta is a graduate stu­ dent in history. State Press Eetters to the editor American presidents go unacknowledged at ASU It seems strange to me that Arizona would not cele­ brate Presidents’ Day with a holiday., We celebrate Martin Luther King Day with a holiday but spurn the likes of Gedrge Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln, upon w hose foundation Martin Luther King's future contributions would rest. Without a Washington and Jefferson and others, Lincoln would not have had any union to save, no office of president to fill, no pow er to free the black man. W ithout Lincoln, there would probably be no United States, but a land divided, the curse o f slavery of the black man still with us. And finally, without all these men we might all be slaves of one form or another, either to a plantation owner or to an autocratic King of England. Let’s have a holiday in honor of the great ones. Douglas T. Lee Sophomore Architecture Monolingual arguments insensitive, ignore reality I feel I must comment on the recent letter by Maureen Chara, junior in nursing, where, in the name of monolingualism, the author sanctions a car injury — probably including death — on any person who does not read or speak English. 1 take issue with her on three points; 1) the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which guarantees in the Southwest —under U.S. law — the language rights of people of Mexican descent; 2) our post-modem reality of a global village where we Americans need to acculturize to other peoples o f the world, especially those from Mexico -— the number one trad­ ing partner of our state o f Arizona, and 3) the human value in medicine which calls for aiding the injured and the weak. In that the author plans to become a nurse, I find her cal­ lous on this last point. I am sure in the future some of her patients will be Spanish-speakers of the Southwest. Any child, mother or elderly citizen will be in danger in her care. Chara should definitely think about changing major. If she were not to do so, Chara should understand her inhu­ manity and rise above it by approaching the Phoenix City Council and requesting that international traffic symbols like those used in Europe — replace the monolingual signs that are programmed to continue injuring or killing innocent people. In light of the NAFTA treaty and the benefits Arizona shares, a callous disregard for the Mexican or Spanish-speak­ ing pedestrian is passe, chauvinist, salvaje. Manuel de Jesús Hernández Faculty Foreign Languages and Hispanic Research Center Sound Off: 965-4287 The State Press would like to hear tram you on its Sonad O ff Une. Each week, «be opinion page ,wUt print a question o£ University or emnmunity interest, taking answers aflw eek, 24 hours a day at 965-4287. When, leaving a message, ¡dease leave your name, major, class standing ; casb e reached, c m wit» be verified, and responses wilt be published This Week’s Question “ D o you h aw any concerns about p e ts p a lsa fe ty P a $£ 6 S tate P ress Thübday, February 24,1994 B lu e Jean s D a y c a lle d a su cc e ss NOW SERVING WINGS Wt Accept MettarCird & Vita a* Delivery! Open Daily far Laaalil Open 11am-2am Students show support for gay, lesbian rights By D avid Strow State Press Wearing blue jeans to class is typi­ cally a fashion statement. On Wednesday, it was a political statement. ASASU proclaimed, Wednesday as “Blue J^ans Day,” a day when students could show their support for gay and lesbian rights by Wearing blue jeans. Mark Wendell, Associated Students o f ASU senator from the School o f Social Work and a sponsor of the reso­ lution, said the day was “a resounding success,” *■ “A lot of people are wearing blue jeans,” Wendell said. “Most of them know why they are wearing them.” However, to many students the day was no different than any other. "I grabbed the first pair o f pants I saw,” said Brian Fitzgerald, a sopho­ more com puter systems engineering major. ”1 didn't pick them consciously in support.” Chris Gustafson, a junior architec­ ture major, sported khaki shorts, but said that he wasn’t making a statement by not wearing blue jeans. “I just got up and it was sunny, so I wore khaki,” he stud Gustafson thought that the choice of symbols was a poor one. “I don’t think that it [Blue Jeans Day] is very effective,” he said. “People wear blue jean s every day. It’s not something that’s going to stand out, like pink T-shirts.” ' DeAnna Adkins, a senior history major, said that blue jeans were a useful Symbol because they showed the uni­ versal nature of homosexuality. “Homophobics feel that you can dis­ tinguish homosexuals by the way they look; talk, or act,” she said. “This shows that it is universal.” Others, like Rick Wattier, a junior zoology m ajor, said that blue jeans allow students to .show their support •quietly. “Blue jeans are OK because they allow people to support gay rights covertly,” he said. “For some people, supporting it [gay rights] is hard. This allows, people to support it by doing something they do naturally.” N ot all students agreed with ASASU’s action. Some, like Joseph Martinez, a junior chemistry major, said that he shied away from blue jeans because he did not want to support gay rights. . “I can understand his [Wendell’s] objective, but he’s not going to accom­ plish his goals,” he said. “I don’t think that being discriminated against this one day is going to teach anyone a lesson. Martinez said that he poked fun at several of his jeans-clad classmates. “I was teasing a couple o f them about wearing blue jean s,” he said. “M ost o f them were w earing them because they didn't know about it.” bicycle from the Aquatic Center where he failed to lock it. Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Wednesday: • A 34-year-old Tempe woman was arrested at her trailer in the 1800 block of E. Apache Boulevard Tuesday and charged with neglecting her three children, ages 4. 7, and 8. Police said the ceiling to her trailer was caving in over the living room and the children’s bedroom. In addition, the sink was overflowing with dirty dishes, the heater and ice box did not work, the trailer was filled with dirty clothes, and there was little food to eat. There were also wires protruding from the wall. • A 20-year-old ASU student was arrested for leaving the scene of a hit-and-run accident in which injuries occurred. The man reportedly drove into a bicyclist in the 1100 block of E. Apache Boulevard, saw the bicyclist get up, and continued home. Police arrested him at his residence. • A 41 -year-old Phoenix man was arrested after he reportedly stole three boxes of aspirin from Fry’s grocery store, 3115 S. McClintock Drive. Store security said they saw the man hide the aspirin in his pants. • A 20-year-old Mesa woman was arrested and charged with fraudulent use of a credit card stemming from a series of inci­ dents at Sizzler’s, 3231 S. Mill Ave. where she was a cashier. The woman used customers’ credit cards to obtain food and sometimes cash for friends. • A 38-year-old Tempe woman was arrested for aggravated assault after she allegedly hit her boyfriend in the ankle with a hammer during an altercation at their residence, 314 E. Ellis Drive. Reports compiled by State Press reporter Paul M atthews DO YOU HAVE W H A T IT TAKES TO "GO FOR TH E GOLD" IN TO D A Y'S JO B M A R K E T ? OR Will you march straight into parking cars and waiting tables? HPL Corp. PRESENTS A 1-DAY SEMINAR "TU R N THE JOB IN T E R V IE W IN T O A JOB OFFER!" This information-packed seminar will present secrets you won't find anywhere else! DO YOU KNOW : • According to the Dept, of Labor, 30% of college grads will be jobless or under-employed? • You can intimidate the interviewer and lose job opportunity? • Your own unique talents and how to present them in the best way? 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Apache Blvd. Tempe (at A pache Blvd. & C ollege Ave.) ■ FAST, FR EE D ELIV ER Y DAILY! 829-0064 CARDINAL'S PIZZA LUNCH SPECIAL 12" Cheese Pizza & 1 Soda $ A 99 lieta - 4pm • 90‘ per teppiey * n im m m m m m m m m -m m m m am m m m-mamy rnm m m m um m m m m m fm .m m m iii m m m -j DINNER FOR TWO j M M iè L U iÈ m P o l ic e R epo r t ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Wednesday: *: A female ASU employee told the police that someone caused $20 in damage to a door at ASU stores. • A male unaffiliated with .ASU reported that someone stole his $10 black organizer from his vehicle while it was parked in Area 57. south of Alpha Drive. • A male employee reported that someone caused $200 dam­ age to his vehicle-while it- was parked in Parking Structure Two on the northeast side of campus. • A male ASU student reported that someone damaged a cement bench at Dixie Gammage Hall on Forest Mall. Police estimated damage of the bench at $400. • Dust from a trash chute set off a fire alarm at Manzanita Hall. The responding officer found nothing wrong and reset the,alarm. • A female ASU employee notified police that a suspicious man was hanging around the outside fence of the playground. A police officer told her to immediately call the police if she saw the man near the playground again. • A male ASU employee notified police that someone caused approxim ately $200 in damage to a door at Sun Devil Stadium. • A female ASU student reported that someone burglarized her Geo Tracker while it was parked in Parking Structure One. The burglary Caused $200 in damage. • A male ASU employee was arrested, cited, and released for driving his vehicle with a mandatory insurance suspension and suspended registration at 2200 8. College Ave. • A male ASU student reported that someone took his $1,000 Cannondale bicycle from 701 Alpha Drive where he had locked it with a U-lock. • A male ASU student reported that someone took his $500 Daily! 12* Pim w/2 Toppings 1 &2 Free Sodas ; $ 6 calltodayfororfreebrochure (800 ) 375-4092 if you register before Feb 28, or $149 at the door. Includes Interview Process Workbook and Audio Tape ! 75 1 ACRO SS Ó ié ■ ^ Ö $ 7 1 by T H O M A S J O S E P H 45 Perfume 1 Study late 45 Magnet 5 Carried end 10 Quite DOWN popular , 1 Trolley 12 Texas sound 2 Scalawag landmark 13 Marble 3 — garde 4 Convened type 5 Statu­ 14 Czars' successor esque 15 Sister 6 Bread 16 German spread 7 Snarls cathedral 8 Re­ city nowned 16 Blow one's top 9 Gift 20 Actress recipients 11 History Grant 21 Brain­ divisions 17 Keats storm 23 Print creation units 1 2 3 4 24 Cotton bundle 1 26 Vipers' 13 home 28 Rose-to15 be 19 29 Sweeping story 31 Top card 32 Dangers 24 2 36 Mustard, 2 for one 39 Last mo. 31 40 Baseball's Tony 37 36 41 Mirror 4 sight 43 Dressed 43 to the — 4 44 "Over There!" writer *" TL■PP R ER A JAA O R Y R EA uT M RENO ALDK ÉN E PU p AU D B JAPAPE As sEA E M T E MR B Ü N AA R A O SPR EYSUSE TS N PE SO S uIN sN A PIAi L E P C ■ A S S T ES TY E■|SPA IT EE RC £ EA EN CROSSWORD 5 Y esterday's A nswer 19 Wire measure 22 Heavenly 24 Countri­ fied 25 Barber­ shop girl 27 Corn serving 28 Breakfast strips 30 Mimic 33 Spud state 34 Permitted 35 Play part 37 Pizzeria fixture 38 Cartoonist Thomas 42 Swabbing need i■ ; è 6 h 0 7 'S U ■“ ■ f ■* J V ■ ¡a m H■“ :M * ^ -■Ô ■ 4À fi ■ 1 1 1 23 29 30 1 34 35 3 41 42 46 1 2-24 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. . / 2-24 CRYPTOQUOTE IFXT TU R REGISTER NOW ! 12* 1-lte» Pirn with 12 Win« O T P O R O TY RXELR YQXMR WBS X. RFX PM Q O XRK /, ZU E L MT K, LM SM RX BW AK GU M B T F X M S R F- G M O T R O XJ / — ZM R F X QO T X AXXZFXQ Y esterday'sC ryptoquote: ONEÖFTHEBESTWAYS TO PERSUADE OTHERS IS WITH YOUR EARS—BY LISTENING TO THEM.—ANONYMOUS 61904 byK ingFeaturesSyndicate,Inc. P age? S t a t i P ress Pepsi C EO speaks to A SU stu d en ts B y J ake B atsell State P ress Developing leadership is crucial for students to become successful in the work force, the president and chief execu­ tive officer of Pepsi Co. said Wednesday in a presentation on campus. Craig Weatherup, Pepsi’s CEO for the past six years, addressed a crowd of about 250 students during a guest speaking appearance in Professor Stephen Happel’s morning macroeconomics class at Murdock Hall. “I think you're on the cusp for a major change in leader­ ship,” he said. “To be an effective leader, you need to pos­ sess a multiple dimension of strengths in personality and character.” Weatherup, who graduated from ASU in 1967 with a degree in accounting, emphasized breadth, risk-taking, and living a balanced life as key elements to becoming a good leader. He also fielded questions from students regarding the marketing of products on college campuses and Pepsi’s product spokespersons. Pepsi had been the sponsor of singer Michael Jackson’s world tour, but the tour was canceled once allegations broke out linking Jackson with child molestation' charges. Weatherup, 48, said it isn’t likely that Pepsi will Seek any further endorsement packages from Jackson. “ Right now, we are doing nothing with him, and the odds are we wouldjiot do anything with him,” he said. As head of the company, Weatherup said he’s had to use crisis management leadership on several occasions. W eatherup pointed to one instance in 1988, when Madonna released what was then her latest video, “Like a Prayer.” A relatively mild form of the video debuted during a Pepsi commercial, while another version — featuring burning crosses' and scenes depicting gang rape —- was released shortly thereafter. Religious groups from across the nation called for a boycott of Pepsi products, and the com­ pany ultimately decided to discontinue use of the commer­ cial. Pepsi faced another public relations nightmare in June when several citizens claimed they found syringes inside sealed cans of Diet Pepsi. The claims were later {»oven to be a hoax. “Where Madonna was our own creation to some degree, this (the syringe allegations) was a circumstance that came out of thin air that affected every one of our 50,000 people,” Weatherup said. One student asked about the Dream Team II status of Orlando Magic center Shaquille O’Neal. O ’Neal, who is contracted with Pepsi, is currently not a member of the team because of a contractual disagreement with the NBA. The NBA has agreed to market all Dream Team ,11 members in conjunction with McDonald’s and Coca-Cola. “We aren’t enamored with the idea of Shag selling Coke for McDonald’s,” Weatherup said. G o o d Times! Great Food! ★ Some Menu Favorites ★ Served after 3 p.m. Orange Roughy Dinner $770 with G arden Rice M edley T-Bone Steak Dinner Leonard M onti a n d a friend pre p are to g o a fte r a d e a d b e a t cu stom er a fe w years ag o. Fortunately, m ost o f th e tens o f thou­ san ds o f cu stom ers th a t visit M o n ti's La C a s a V ie jo e a c h y e a r a re very sa tisfie d w ith M on ti's' e x c e lle n t fo o d , q u a lity ser­ vice. a n d reasonable prices. ASU students, faculty, a n d staff h a ve enjoyed M onti's for d e ca d e s. A lthough tim es have ch an g ed , th e g o o d tim es a n d g re a t fo o d a re still be in g served a t M onti's. $13S0 18-ounce Baked Chicken Dinner $620 BBQ, Seasoned, or Plain Served with Our Special Hot Rom an Bread an d Tossed Salad • G arlic, 1000 island. Ranch or French Dressing • Extra C h arge tor, Roquefort • Baked Potato. French Fries, Spaghetti or R ice • Extra C h arge for Sour Cream an d Chives Exceptional COFFEE! Monti’s Specialty Coffees ★ Introductory Offer ★ J g jS E s p r e s s o ...... J w C a p p u c c i n o ..........................$ 1 50 B K M o c h a ___ ____ t b ....... $ 1 00 . . $ 1 50 H o t C h o c o l a t e .................$ 1 50 H ot C h o c o la te with Pep p erm in t S c h n a p p s .. M onti's N ew La P av o n i Espresso M a c h in e Dollar value put on cost per AIDS patient in nationwide survey B y M ary Leigh S ummerton State P ress Each person with AIDS costs taxpayers $119,000, accord­ ing to a report released last week. The AIDS Cost and Service Utilization Survey studied 1,164 patients in 10 U.S. cities between 1985 and 1993. “The costs have increased to reflect enhanced survival time,” said Dr. Fred Hellinger, a Harvard University medical professor and direct«»' of the study. Hellinger said survival time for people with AIDS climbed from one year to just over two years between 1985 and 1990. “This is double the previous survival rate, so although it doesn’t seem like much, it is significant,” said Hellinger. According to the study, more than 95 percent of the cost for treating AIDS patients is paid by taxpayers because peo­ ple with AIDS are unable to work or pay for their health care. Hellinger said people often get confiised between HIV and AIDS. “Someone could live with the HIV virus for 10 or more yeans,” Hellinger said. “But once the virus develops into AIDS, people generally live about two years. “Care from HIV infection Until the development of AIDS costs $50,000. The majority of the cost occurs during the last two years of an AIDS patient’s life.” The average cost per hospital day for a person with AIDS is $1,085, said Hellinger. The cost is somewhat higher in Phoenix. “Thé average for treating AIDS patients in Phoenix is about $1,750 per day,” said Jana Fulbright, a spokesperson for the Maricopa Hospital Association. “AH Arizona hospitals are required to treat AIDS patients, but none of them have a specific ward for AIDS patients,” said Fulbright. Dr. Larry Sanders is the infectious disease control officer for Maricopa County. He said the number of people in the United States with AIDS is growing every year. “AIDS is becoming a large drain on the county health care system,” Sanders said. “The county is overwhelmed with AIDS patients.” N ew health center offers ASU W est students basic care B y J odi G oldblatt State P ress A Student Health Center opened Wednesday at ASU West providing free care to full-time students by two staff physicians and part-time residents from Good Samaritan Medical Center. Harry Muir, director of student affairs at the west campus said the facility is small because of budget constraints. “Services are basic outpatient medical care, immunization, very basic women’s care, and basic laboratory testing,” said Rosalea McLemore, nurse practitioner and assistant director of student health services. “We will refer to outside services when necessary.” Women’s care will provide pelvic exams, but not birth control. The center does not have a program for AIDS testing. “There will be some health education and counseling, wellness fairs and lectures,” said McLemore. “We’ll have health education on some women's health care issues, and sexually transmitted diseases-. We’ll also have cholesterol screening, and a blood drive.” Dr. Dale Bowen, ASU director of student health, said that students needed and wanted the health center. “The center will be primarily providing care for those who wouldn’t have had it otherwise. Also, it will provide things that we here at student health are concerned about such as lifestyle changes, smoking prevention, nutrition, sexually transmitted disease education and good w omen's health care,” Bowen said. S T U D Y IN IRELAND Fall 1994 St. P a tric k 's C o lle g e ; U n iv e rsity o f L im e rick Lim erick. Ireland Maynooth, Ireland • Liberal Arts Program • 30 Student Maximum • 2 9 G .P A Required • Business Program Option • International Student Village • 2.9 G .P A. Required S P O N S O R IN G C O L L E G E S St. B o n a v e n tu ra U n iv e rs ity -T h re e R iv e rs C o lle g e F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n , co n ta ct; M s. R e n e e G rig g s Serving Today's Finest Foods in the Rom antic Atm osphere o f the O ld West 3 W est First S tre e t T e m p e (a t First & Mill) 967-7594 O p e n S u n d a y th ro u g h Thursday 11 a .m . to 11 p .m . • Friday a n d S a tu rd a y 11 a .m . to M idnight University of Arizona RL Nugent Building-Room 205A Tucson, Arizona 85721 (602) 621-4819 Other C C IS Programs: Italy, England, Scotland, Sweden. Germany, Portugal, Greece, Israel, Spain, France, Mexjco, Ecuador, Colom bia, China, Switzerland. Japan. The College Consortium for International Studies T y i A P T h i ir c H a v C o h n i a r v 7 4 1 QQ4 S tate P ress This is an offer that can't be beat. M iller Genuine Draft, MGD Light and M iller Lite are bringing you free apparel, merchandise and more. Just collect UPC proof-of-purchase symbols from any of (be above been and redeem them at your participating local M iller distributor. So you collect the points, and don't w o n r we've got you covered. Offergood« if toammo oflegal drinkingage. SeelewparficipalingIdler destrihutarhr detailsmicalaleg. RedeeiplMmtimesaeeFridays9in - 11«nend1pm- 3pai, startingFekmmi 4,1994. OffergoodunHJune10,1994. St a t e P ress T h u rs d a y , F e b ru a ry 2 4 ,1 9 9 4 m ifim Sam antha FM dm an/State P resa Tempo mayoral candidates, Don Cassano, Barbara Sherman and N eil Giuliano focused on local crime, term limitations for council members and county islands in Thursday night’s debate. Grime, term lim its top list o f topics at mayoral debate B y J a s o n H il l St a t e P ress The hip, political and social buzzwords of the ‘90s — ‘crime’ and ‘term limits’ — were the primary concern of several Tempe mayoral candidates at a debate Thursday night. The debate, sponsored by the North Tempe Neighborhood Association, was held at the Arizona Historical Society Museum in front of a crowd of approximately 100 peo­ ple. “We must pull all of our resources togeth­ er to prevent our youth from pursuing crime,” said Barbara Sherman, one o f three candi­ dates for Tempe mayor. Mayoral candidate Don Cassano stressed the importance of neighborhood block watch programs and increased police and resident participation in hindering crime within the city. All three mayoral candidates favored some form of term limitations. Giuliano and Sherman said they believe that council mem­ bers should be limited to two four-year terms (eight years overall) as opposed to Cassano, who believes that three terms (12 years) would be an appropriate term limit. Mayoral term limits varied between the candidates. Sherman supports a limit of two four-year terms, while Cassano and Giuliano are pushing for four two-year terms in office. Giuliano, who is currently the only mayoral candidate still involved with council decisions, was asked if his role as ASU com­ munity relations vice president has ever caused a conflict between the city and the University. “1 am proud of my experiences with the University and there has never been a conflict of interest between the two,” Giuliano said.' Giuliano also expressed concerns over county islands — sections of land squeezed between Tempe and other cities — which he believes the state Legislature should legally cede to the city of Tempe. Businesses and residents in city islands are not required to comply with city laws. “We need to go to the landowners and business owners and explain the benefits of becoming a part of Tempe,” Giuliano said. “We would not expect them to immediately comply with the regulations of Tempe, but within a certain period of time.” i 1STTAN FREE! ! f New customers only) !■----! 6 SESSIONS $ \t*- Upstairs at the Cornerstone Mall next to Flake? Jakes Comics St Thursday, February 24,1994 :e 1 0 Calvin and Hobbes P ress by Bill Watterson By GARY LARSON THE FAR SIDE D o o n esb u ry MR. SLOCUM. COOP yOU PLEASE TOLU in e JURY HOW THE LOW 6RAPE you RECEIVED HAS AFFECTED YOURUFE '• a te BY G A R R Y TRU D EAU r r s eetn a total sm rM ARe, MAN. EVERYWHERE160, ra m e point an d sn icker w om en turn aw ay from m e . DOES NIPA T MYHEELS THEY :■ SEEM TOKNOW1 NOION6ER HAYE \ A FUTURE. ' ANDY0URRR5T WASN'TEXACTLY A BAYIN THE HARK, EITHER, WAS IT, SON? WELL,NO. NOWTHAT YOUMEN­ TIONTT,.. IN FACT, YOU WERE ABUSED, R/6HT? BYA PRIEST,PERHAPS? 1 A PRIEST? SURE,WHY NOT* " W h a t a f in d , M s . D in k in s ! . .. I t 's M a ilm a n , a ll r i g h t b u t re m a r k a b ly , t h is s p e c im e n is fu lly in t a c t , w ith h is C a n u s n ip p o n ic u s s t ill a t t a c h e d !" LOS ANGELES (AP)— Jack Nicholson is being sued and faces possible criminal charges for using a golf club to batter a Mercedes-Benz that supposedly cut him off in traffic. A motorist accused the legendary star of such films as “The Shining." “One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest” and “Five Easy Pieces” of flailing away at his car. breaking the windshield and denting the roof, police said. The city attorney’s office may determ ine this week w hether to file a m isdem eanor vandalism charge, said spokesman Rick Schmidt. In a Superior Court lawsuit filed last week, Robert Blank, 38, said he feared for his life during his Feb. 8 confrontation with Nicholson. The lawsuit alleges assault and battery and claims Blank was “severely injured” but does not say in what maimer.* WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Comedian John Henton gets to swap his microphone for a baseball bat and a stint in the Montreal Expos’ spring training camp on Friday. “It’s just something I’ve always wanted to do since I was a kid,” said Henton, whose real shot at fame is ás a co-star in the Fox network sitcom, “Living Single.” In return for Henton’s batting practice. Expos’; third baseman Sean Berry gets to perform with comics David Brenner, Richard Belzer and Henton on Saturday at the Just for Laughs ... on Vacation comedy festival. Berry jumped at the chance to do a comedy routine, “so it’s only fair that I get a chance to get in some batting prac­ tice,” Henton said. “Besides, I might get more laughs at bat­ ting practice than he’ll get on stage.” . , HOUSTON (AP) — When Wynonna Judd beckoned, two fans responded eagerly. But instead of getting to dance on stage with the Country singer, they got tackled. Wynonna’s trademark — aside from going by her first name — is to invite a cowboy from the audience to join her on stage at the end of her concerts. She did just that Monday night at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo in the Astrodome. Jeff McDonald, 23, started sprinting toward the stage but was intercepted by a security guard. Across the Dome, anoth­ er security officer was wrestling with 25-year-old Michael Ackerman, who also heeded Wynonna’s call. “Mr. Security Guard, you can let than man go,” Wynonna trilled in a hurried but stili-musical voice. The guards, who apparently had not heard Wynonna’s invitation, held the two men down as the crowd booed, but released them shortly afterward. Rodeo officials apologized and offered to buy the two men a trip tb another Wynonna concert. 'RALEIGH, N .C .(A P) — Retired Gen. Colin Powell, a surprise guest at a high school’s career day, was grilled on his own career plans. : ., In a wide-ranging, 45-minute exchange Tuesday with Broughton High School students, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff side-stepped questions about whether he might run for president. “I’m enjoying my retirement and being a good husband and a full-time grandfather,” he said. But a few minutes later, he added, “I want to do something in service to the nation, and politics is an area I'm looking at.” Powell, who retired Sept. 30, 1993, said he still feels “like a soldier in civilian clothes.” Powell, former Vice President Dan Quayle and former Housing Secretary Jack Kemp were brought to Raleigh this week by the Shavano Institute for National Leadership. The Michigan-based institute sponsors lecture series. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jane Alexander, chairwom­ an of the National Endowment for the Arts, admits not every­ one will be happy about art projects the government helps fund. “We’ll not be able to please all of the people all of the time, but I don’t think the arts ever have,” Alexander said Tuesday. But she also said grants are awarded through a “highly democratic process.” More than 200 people turned out for Alexander’s appear­ ance Tuesday night at a town hall-style meeting on the arts. S t a t e P r e s s Sports - W e w rite fro m th e field, the flo o r and th e locker ro o m . checkout the latest involleygear ^ r e d s a n d , s id e o u f, v .b . ra g s, c lu b , )■ - p e r n ia c i, p r im it iv e p rin ts , v. s a n d m a n & m a n y m etre ... Douglas A . C lark, M.D. Orthopedic Surgeon Also Treatment o f Buch, M uscle. Bone. LUBE, OIL & FILTER SPECIAL 12 - tanning as low^ as $ 3 3 * *some perr«»rKTtons month (w o lff beds) apply 8 3 9 -0 0 0 8 2055 East Southern A w ., Sude G , Tempe 3839 N. 3rd S t, «200, Phoenix (3rd and Indian School) N W C orner E. Rav Rd. & 1-10 (at Foothills Park Place) • H4 0 -4 S U N ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE We*re more than a bookstore,, • Study A id s • G re ek Items • Lab B ooks • Sw eatshirts • Backpacks • T-Sh irts • S ch ool Supplies • Caps • Jackets * • S h orts C hildren's W ear Open 7 day* a w eek ■ 6 2 5 E. Apache 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 1 FAMILY PLANNING ASSOCIATES MEDICAL GROUP B oard C ertified M .D . G yn eco lo gist. Ö v l* ^ w v Expires 3-31-94 iro n Chevron • C o v e rs nearly A ll D o m estic/lm p o rt C a rs . C o m p le te C h a s s is Lu be • O ffer in c lu d e s 5 qts. C h e v ro n M o to r O il an d A tla s » Filte r CAM PUS C H EV R O N 9 6 6 -3 3 3 0 S.W. CORNER APACHE Sc RURAL Simplv S m a rter B e A c t iv e 25 Years Experience in Pregnancy T erm in ation Procedure while asleep (a t your option) • Pregnancy testing (im m ediate results) • Gynecological ultrasound and infection exam s • Birth control. M om ing-atter pH. • 10% DISCO UNT 5 5 3 -0 4 4 0 Major Credit Cards Accepted D f tlA F f tll V 3143 N. 32nd St ______luraIRd. #4C i» just North of Loop202_ Between Broadway & Southern peP ° Residence Hall Association Page 11 T h u rs d a y , F e b ru a ry 2 4, 1994 S tate P ress p o rts B r ie fs G olf strong after first round The ASU men’s golf team finished die first-round of die 18th annual John A. Bums Intercollegiate Tournament in sev­ enth place with a score of 287. The Sun D evils were led by Chris Stutts, who finished the day tied for sev­ enth place with a score of 69, and Chris Hanell, who returned to the clubhouse in a tie for 17th place with 71. The tournament, held in Hawaii, will continue on through Friday. Barkley goes to court C h arles B arkley w a s in court Wednesday to defend him self against ch arg es th a t he hit a fan at the Meadowlands Arena after a December 1992 game. Dennis McKeever, 30, of Yonkers, N.Y., testified in Municipal Court that the Phoenix star struck him in the face with the back of his hand after die- Suns defeated the New Jersey Nets 105-100 on Dec. 8. 1992. McKeever, a New York City firefight­ er, said he extended his hand to tell Barkley “Nice game." but that the 6-foot6 forward hit him as he left the court fol­ lowing a post-game interview. Barkley scored 34 points and had 13 rebounds in the game. He said Barkley told him “Fans like you ruin it for the other fans” before striking him. NBA Roundup New Jersey 106, Philadelphia 102 . Cleveland 106, Washington 96 Orlando 103, Indiana 99 Atlanta 99, Seattle 92 Chicago 123, Golden State 100 Denver 102. Boston 94 Utah 106, San Antonio 102,20T Portland 121, L.A. Clippers 112 NHL Roundup Buffalo 4, Anaheim 2 Montreal 3, San Jose 1 Boston 6. N.Y. Rangers 3 New Jersey 7, Detroit 2 Edmonton 6, Toronto 3 Dallas 0, Los Angeles 0, tie Compiledfrom staff and AP reports Big 8 bid wont pressure Pac-10 Baylor accepts bid, others decide soon By D awn W agner St a t e P ress The Pac-10 Conference’s assistant com­ missioner said Wednesday that a proposed merger adding four new members to the Big Eight is not putting pressure on the Pac-10 to expand anytime soon. “1 don’t think, per se, that another confer­ ence expanding would cause us to expand,” said Jim Muldoon, Pac-10 assistant commis­ sioner. “It doesn’t change our condition. We didn’t feel any pressure when the Southeast Conference or Big-10 Conference changed.” Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor were all approached by the Big Eight on Monday, and each was invited to merge with the conference beginning with the 1996 season. On W ednesday, the B aylor Board of Regents voted unanimously to accept the Big Eight’s invitation, while Texas, Texas A&M and Texas Tech have all scheduled regents’ meetings for this week. Such a move would spoil alm ost any chance for P ac-10 expansion in the near future. The P ac-10 has reportedly shown interest in adding Texas and Texas A&M as conference members. An article published in The A rizona Republic on Wednesday reported that a Pac10 athletic director, who wished to remain anonymous, said that thé Pac-10 would be unanimously in favor of offering an immedi­ ate conferende spot to Texas. M uldoon declined com m ent on that report, though he did say there have been dis­ cussions in the past about the possibility of Texas and Texas A&M joining the Pac-10. He added, however, that “no formal offers have been made” to either school. Texas, whose baseball team is considered to be a perennial powerhouse in the NCAA. T urn t o M erger, page 12. Sun Devils romp over Utah 17-3 Williamson’s slam, 5 RBIs lead attack B y M ik e B r a n o m S t a t e P ress With a lineup that gets seemingly more patchwork by the m om ent, the ninth-ranked ASU baseball team (10-5) destroyed Utah 17-3 with a 16-hit, nine-w alk barrage Wednesday night at Packard Stadium. Third baseman Antone Williamson led the Sun Devils’ attack, going 3 for 4 with two walks, a double and a grandslam home run, his second bases-loadcd homer of the season: The All-America drove in five runs and scored two during the evening. Williamson has now hit three homers and driven in 10 runs in ASU’s last four games, causing him to remark that his power-stroke is now coming around. “My power feels really good this year,” he said. “It's pret­ ty much effortless swings. Even when I fought them (inside pitches) off. it felt like pretty good swings.” C oach Jim B rock has noticed the im provem ent in W illiamson’s swing, saying, “He’s slowly rounding into shape.” Williamson will need to kick up his hitting another gear, because Todd Cady will be absent for perhaps a month. Brock said the junior catcher will undergo arthroscopic surgery today at Phoenix's St. Joseph’s Hospital to repair a knee liga­ ment damaged in the Sun Devils’ series at Florida State. Cady, who was hitting .413 with a homer and 13 RBIs before being sidelined, is expected to miss three to four weeks, “unless there’s a lot more problems when they get in there (the knee),” Brock said. “I might have to pick it up more now with three guys gone from the lineup,” Williamson said. ASU now travels to Stanford to take on the 12th-ranked Cardinal (10-6) at Sunken Diamond over the weekend. C ra ig M acnaughton/State P re ss A S U ’s Antone W illiamson (right) receives hand slap s from teammate Sean Tyler after W illiam son's grand slam in the bottom of the fourth inning of Wednesday night's game at Packard Stadium. The Sun Devils went on to crush Utah 17-3. Basketball faces D ucks’ rising tid e B y J u l ie R e u v e r s St a t e P ress Meeting up with the Oregon men's basketball team has usually meant adding another “W” to the win column for ASU. At least that’s the way it’s been since 1989 — the last time the D ucks w ere able to beat the Sun Devils. .. But, combine Oregon’s two road wins last week — its first road sweep since 1990 — with ASU’s two losses ^ at home, and the stage is set for the vrREEN Ducks to continue on their upswing when ASU plays in Eugene, Ore. tonight at 8 p.m. “There is no worse time to play them,” ASU coach Bill Frieder said. “They manhandled Washington State. ... The worse way to go on the road is after a loss, and they ’re return­ ing home after winning two.” Oregon did away with both Washington and WSU last week, defeating the Huskies 87-71 and the Cougars 98-87. Oregon coach Jerry Green said his team has changed tremen­ dously of late, and is no longer the team that lost 84-78 to ASU last month in Tempe. “W e’re a better team now than we were earlier in the year,” Green said. “Our Achilles’ heel has been our shooting. When we're around 33 percent, we play people well but we can’t win on a consistent basis. And we have played better lately.” The Ducks (8-13 overall, 4-8 Pac-10) put their shooting troubles to rest last week, shooting 65 percent from the floor against WSU (32-49), the school’s best mark in eight years. That news spells trouble for ASU (12-10; 7-6), which has shot 35.7 percent for the past three games. Against USC on Saturday, ASU made 22 of 62 shots and connected on 19 per­ cent (6-31) o f its three-point shots. ‘They have to pick it back up,” Frieder said of the Sun Devils’ shooting. “We’ve had a lot of ups and downs and adversity, and strong people emerge during adversity. We stress that all the time.” If the Sun Devils are unable to revive their outside shoot­ ing, they will need to depend heavily on 6-foot-9 center Mario Bennett to lead the inside game. Bennett had just eight points and six rebounds in 35 minutes on Saturday. ASU’s defensive responsibilities will be to focus on Oregon guard Orlando Williams, the Pac-10 Player of the Week. Williams scored 65 points in two games last week. Thursday at Washington, he hit for 25 points, collected eight rebounds and dished out three assists. Saturday at WSU, Williams poured in 40 points — including seven three-point­ ers *— and added eight rebounds and three assists.'He is now third in Pac-10 scoring with 18.7 points per game. “His numbers are good,” Green saifl of Williams. “A lot of things are coining out of our offensive set, not just one-on-one situations. But he really has shown the ability to be more patient and more in control.” Bennett qualified for Pac-10 statistics this week after com­ peting in the required number of games. He ranks second in the conference in rebounding (8.3), right behind teammate Dwayne Fontana (8.5). Bennett is now third in Pac-10 field goal percentage, with 56.6 percent. Eight is the number •Stevin “Hedake” Smith needs eight points to pass Byron Scott (1979-1983) to become ASU’s career-scoring leader. Smith has 1,565 points to Scott’s 1,572. Smith also needs just two steals to set the career mark in that category and pass Fat Lever (1979-1982), who recorded 236 steals at ASU. •Fontana is eight boards away from hitting the 600-mark iii his career, which would make him No. 11 on ASU’s career rebounding chart. W om en’s g o lf kills com p etition SunDevils sweep top 3 spots; Bowie takes, home lst-place F r o m St a f f R e p o r t s The Suh Devil women’s golf team dominated its oppo­ nents in all three rounds of the 1994 Conquistadores/Chris Johnson Arizona Invitational and captured a first-place finish Wednesday night in Tucson. ASU finished Wednesday’s final round with a threeday total of 869 and a 26-stroke lead over second-place UCLA. “It was fantastic, awesome,” said Sun Devil coach Linda Vollstedt about ASU’s amazing show of power. Besides capturing the team title, ASU also had the top three individual performances. Freshman Heather Bowie led the pack with a final score of 214, while senior Tracy Cone (216) and sophomore Emilee Klein (218) rounded out the top three places. Bow ie's solid performance for all three rounds, in which she never fell beyond second place, has Vollstedt feeling good. “She (Bowie) is playing really, really, really well. She’s playing good, steady golf, especially for a fresh­ man,” she said. The Sun Devils took a seven stroke first-round lead on Monday, and they took off from there. ASU’s crushing performance has some people arbund golf talking about a dynasty, which is fine by Vollstedt. “Right now, that’s true. I’ve never seen a better team.” P a g e l2 T h u rs d a y , F e b ru a ry 2 4 ,1 9 9 4 S tate P ress Sw im m ing heads to L.A. B y J e r e m y S t e in S t a t e P ress After an impres­ sive regular season showing, the 1lthranked ASU women’s swimming and diving team travels to Los A ngeles for the eighth annual Pac-10 Sw im m ing and H il l D i v i n g Championships. The Sun Devils (7-3 overall, 2-3 Paekick-off the championships today with the preliminary heats at noon in the Bellmont Plaza Olympic Pool. The: team is coming off a big victory over UofA and enters the championships with high expectations. “(I expect) everybody to swim their best ... and we want at least fourth or fifth (place) this year,” said junior Heidi Toft. According to Coach Tim Hill though, the team has had to adjust some of its goals for the Pac-10 championships. “We kind of had to readjust our goals a little bit," said Hill. “Originally, our goal was to be top three, but given that a couple of our people aren’t going to be rested and we have one or two people o u t... that origi­ nally were going to be at the meet.” Returning AH-Americas Beata Kaszuba, Chris Jeffrey and Joanne Currah, who have all qualified for the NCAA Championships, will be competing for ASU, but none of them will be “shaved or tapered” said Hill. The Sun Devil diving team also begins championship competition today with the men’s 1-meter dive and the women’s 3meter dive starting at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., respectively. T he w om en’s diving team is led by divers Amy Gamer, Amy Palmer and Jen Conta. All three placed in die top-six in at least one of three events last year. Senior Joe Lyons stands out as the one to watch on the men’s side. Lyons finished fifth last year in the 1-meter dive and sixth on the platform. Merger C ontinued from page 11. is of special interest to ASU baseball coach Jim Brock. But with this new development,: he thinks there's little chance of any of the four schools coming to the Pac-10. “If this does happen, the only chance the Pac-10 would have would perhaps be with Texas,” said Brock. “In term s o f Texas, Texas Tech and Texas A&M, I think that right now it is kind of far-fetched. "But with those teams possibly joining the Big Eight there is less of a chance for the Pac 10 to expand. If the Texas team does join the Big Eight, then it’ll be a while for the Pac10.” ASU athletic directo r C harles H arris believes that this possible merger is just one part of an ongoing three-year process of schools trying to find an environment that is most beneficial to them. He doesn’t believe though, that this is putting any pressure on the Pac-10 to expand. “I don’t know that one move necessarily requires that somebody else move,” Harris said. ‘T think that if the conference (Pac-10) has an opportunity to explore possibilities with attractive potential members, they cer­ tainly will. But, I don’t See that because somebody else did it, that means we’ll go off and draft somebody.” The possible conference switch would boost the number of schools in the Big Eight from eight to 12. This would lead to a possi­ ble split of the 12 teams into two divisions, northern and southern. Something to read without using a highlighter. LSAT GMAT GRE MCAT +7.5 pts. +72 pts. +214 pts. +6 pts. It's official! A Big Six accounting firm confirms the average score improvements of Princeton Review students! For more information on thejm ly course with documented results for LSAT, GRE, GM43!jind MCAT programs, give us a call: THE PRINCETON REVIEW 967-1480 We Score More! Princeton Review is affiliated with neither Princeton University nor Educational Testing Service. Available campus-wide and in downtown Tempe Questions? Comments? Call Jackie Eldridge at 965-6555 wi '»gß‘1 ,t*S yjü ü id s-i .y c b ito ii I ''5¥a ¥ e P r e s s A S U len d s h e lp in g h an d Basketball runs clinic for Special Olympics B y T o d d K elly S t a t e P ress The Special Olympics of Arizona met the ASU women's basketball team in a clinic Wednesday, the first time the two have coor­ dinated an event like this. "It's fantastic,’’, said Kim Behrens, the director of sports and training for Special Olympics. “We’ve done something similar with the men's team, but this is the first year with the w om en’s team and Coach (Jacqueline) Hullah,” she said. The clinic was preparation for a 60-team state-wide Special Olympics basketball tour­ nament in Mesa. "That tournament actually is funded by Phoenix Suns Charities." said John Norgord. project specialist director for Arizona Special Olympics. "We met Hullah at a luncheon. ... gave her our card, and it went from there." : Joe Schmidt, one of the basketball coach­ es. recognized immediately the importance of Wednesday's clinic. “(It is important) seeing these guys haye fun.” he said. “To have a little success at something. When you have some success at something, it carries over to the rest of your life." Ten-year-old John Cota thought the clinic was important for one reason. “We got to play basketball.” said Cota, who was last year's state champion in the Special Olympics Summer Games diving competition. ASU forward Nikki Thompson was as ful­ filled by her involvement as Cota was happy in his. ‘T ve helped before and it’s fun, and it lets you know how lucky you are ... to have the ability to help ... because they really appreci­ ate it.” she said. Softball ends slump B y T o d d K elly S t a t e P r e ss ASU hoopstet Melani Francis instructs nine-year-old Eric Hesketh on free throw shooting Wednesday night at the University Activity Center. The Women's basketball team hosted a clinic for Arizona Special Olympics athletes. Nothing builds confidence like a twogame sweep, and A.SU has renewed confi­ dence heading into this weekend's Arizona State Classic. The softball team's doubleheader defeat of Michigan on Tuesday ended a four-game slide and also ended its bad habit of allowing the opponent to mount a lead that ASU could not surmount. In Tuesday's second game, the Sun Devils gave up five runs in the seventh inning, which tied the score and pushed the game into extra innings. The Sun Devils held on to win in the tenth on Tammy Lohmann's sacri­ fice fly, which scored Alyssa Johnson. ASU coach Linda Wells thinks she knows what happened. "I was trying to get everyone involved, and I substituted too much." she said "1 wanted to give people some at-bats." ASU looks to further its momentum in games this weekend against Ohio State. No. 3 O klahom a State. No. 8 Iowa and Sam Houston Stale. The tournament will also include No. 15 Washington. San Diego State and Michigan. All games will be played at the Sun Devil Club Stadium. The Sun Devils will be one player short today when they take the field. Sophomore pitcher Susanne Reynolds has left the team, according to Assistant Sports Information Director Paul Kirk. S t a t e P ress Classifieds - we're always in the back. A S U n ew s. Theater ads. P o lic e R e p o rt . Comic strips. L e t t e r s to th e e d ito r. Daily horoscopes. C it y & c o u n ty n ew s. Special advertising inserts. D a ily e v e n ts s c h e d u le . Apartment rental ads. C u lt u r a l a c t iv it ie s . It's free. It's fr e e . It's free. It's f r e e . S t a t e P ress fee PO. Box 217 Classifieds St a t e P r e s s Thursday, February 24,1994 P a g:e 14 Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or in v ested , you may w ish to investigate die company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the o ffers ad v ertised in ouir classified section. For more in fo rm atio n and assistan ce regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264172i: 2 BD, 2 BA, walking dist. to ASU $725/mo, dep. $400,155 W 3rd St. #157,Tempe. Century 21 AM Realty 831-1114. AN N O U NCE­ MENTS RENTAL SHARING INTERESTED IN Buddhism? Jodo Shu Dharma Center. Call 545-7684. TO MIN/ASU, own room in 2bd/ 1ba quiet-apt. Female nonsmoker only $ 190 +f/3 util. 966-0701 PH O N E BILLS FEMALE GRAD needs house­ mate in east Mesa. International also Welcome. 834-4124. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2 BD. 2 BA, C lose to ASU, Comm, pool. $475/mo., dep. $475.604 E. Weber #20, Tempe. Century 21 AM. 831 -1114. Too high? Call for Up to 1 hr any­ time, any state-just $2.60/call. Rec msg: 800-382-0183 ext. 566. FEMALE NONSMOKER, share apt. in Tempe area, a.s.a.p.. Must be neat/reiiàble. 834-7602. GRATEFUL DEAD, Sat/Sun. March 5/6, reasonable prices. Evan, 966-3844. / GRATEFUL DEAD tickets, gen­ eral admission, Sun. Mar. 6, have 2 tickets, $45 each, 371-114?. AUTOMOBILES 87CAMAR03LK, 5 spd, v6,ps, p r.ac .cc , new clutch, tires and tags, immac.,dep.,in great shape, $4,000 obo, 829-6764. F $ 2 2 5 ow n room in house w /pooL^m i to campus. Avail. now. Call Jen 730-8306. NEED A new car? H ave no credit? No down payment, no co­ signer. Info, 285-1025 (lv msg). GRAD STUDENT needed for minimal, supervision o f teenage son in exchange for room/board in Nrflcottsdale. Pool, spa, ga­ rage, executive home, close to buses. 483-9179, Mr. Wright. M OTORCYCLES 1985 HONDA Eiite-$150, under 1,000 miles. Excellent condition. Call 941-8895, leave message. g j Ç Ÿ Ç L ||^ ~ Papago Parte II, 2 bd poolside, tiled patio, newer carpet, $62,500. 996-2992 FURNITURE MUST SELL immediately! Glass coffee table, queen-size bed and couch. No resonable offer re­ fused! Todd 438-7091. HOM ES FOR COMPUTERS IBM COMPATIBLE: monitor, keyboard, 9-pin printer, $250, contact Julie or Jim 598-1882. LAPTOPS 10!-N: 7TH St., Phx, dwnto. Re­ naissance Park, 2 bd, 2 ba, sec gate, prof, loc., pool/spa, quiet, Feb. free, tease $775:386-7655. Guaranteed lowest prices. IBM Thinkpads & Toshiba Porteges & Satellites. Call The Educational Solutions Co. At 1-800-469-0060 or Pat Becker at 205-8202. APARTMENTS APARTMENTS DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick dqnrtures. Most (daces world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283, MTV S NEW Spring Break Hot Spot: San Diego, Cal Packages start as low as $99. 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Receive discount book for Durango toy sending $25 (your savings in beer) to; 10 Town Plaza, Suite 136 Durango C O 81301 YOUR I JULY ROSE C a ll to order 1- 8 0 0 -S A V E -S W -C O Honor: O n its objective side, other people's opinion of what we are worth; on its subjective side, it is the respect we pay to this opinion. -Arthur Schopenhauer PUBLIC RELATIONS GROWING CO. seeks positive people oriented iiidiv. w/ leader­ ship qualities to expand our of­ fice. Will train. 967-7344. ATHLETIC OUTGOING Peopie, Health Co. seeks indiv. to fill rep/mngmnt pos., Positive attitude & people skills a must. No exp, nee , FT/PT 968-2076. CLUCK-U- CHICKEN Rest, Now hiring Delivery Drivers. PT/FT. Apply in person, 855 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, 894-2112. SELF STA RTER S needed immed. to demonstrate & sell Italian food at outdoor markets. JWix, & Scotts. Fri. afternoons & S a t. moms. Good people skills? Like to sell? $5/hr 840-3202. Come join the excitement with the #1 food delivery team for ; ASU area. With the addition of subs & hot wings this Domino's is the #1 campus store in the company. W e need f/t & p/t driv­ ers & inside help. We heed more drivers to help us safely deliver all these orders. Drivers make $7-$10 per hour including mileage & tips. Safe driving cash bonuses can also be earned, inside help & pizza m akers startin g up to $5.50/hr DOE. We are very ftexi- ble & can work around your school schedule. Apply in person after 1.1am at:; 903 S. Rural, Tempe or call 968-5555. EOE. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs fulltime permanent front & back office person. Typing & computer knowledge a must. Will train. Great advancement poten­ tial. Apply in person 9-5 M-F* 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd, Suite 108. a p p o in t m e n t s e t t e r s needed, flex schedule, $5/hr & commi., Part-Time481-9200. ARE YOU looking for an oppor­ tunity to learn about marketing, communications & fundraising? The ÀSU Telefund has the ex­ perience you need. Base pay of $5/hr & bonus to start. Flexible p/t hours. 965-6754.; CASH DANCERS now hiring females for bachelor , parties; Call Randy at "Only the Classiest". 997-6698. CLUB TRIBECA, doormen & floor walker positions. Apply in person this week between 123pm. SW comer Scottsdale & McDowell. COLORADO SUMMER jobs: In die Rockies near Vail, Anderson Camps seeks caring, enthusiastic, dedicated, patient individuals who enjoy working with children in an outdoor setting. Counselors, cooks, wranglers, riding instruc­ tors, and nurses. Interview s March 10th. Sign up, get appli­ cation at Student Financial Assis­ tance from Hridi. Questions? Call us at (303) 524-7766 ; EARNS6/HR guaranteed+ com­ mission. Diversified Telemar­ keting located in Tempe is hiring p/t evening positions. Relaxed environment, casual dress. Set your own schedule & get paid every Week. Joe, 921-2342. 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M A CIN TO SH SE 2.5/20mouse & keyboard in exlnt.. shape, $450, obo. 948-1881. 80 SUBARU 4spd, $1695 obo. 84 R enault Encore 4spd, $ 1695 obo. 893-6884, 838-9778 eves, ask for Bob, NONSMOKING FEMALE to share furnished twnhse, w/d;, A j£ R T M |N T |_ COMPUTERS State Priii CjitiifiMlt Mittkiw Cuter B inant 965-673$ ENJOY BASEBALL & fresh air spring training is in full swing. 100 people needed every day. You could work 40+ hrs per week at the baseball stadiums ar­ ound the valley . You must be clean cut, have a big smile & anx­ ious to work outdoors. Apply in person M-Th, 9-3. Ready Temps, Inc. 15100 N. 78th Way, Suite 200, Scottsdale. 951-9266. ★ EARN $7.50/HR!A Set free appointments for estab­ lished chiropractors. 4?0-1828 . anytime: INTELLIGENT AND in good shape? W ant to help make a change in the environm ental mess, we’ve created, enjoy your jot>, & make money ? Impossible? Not by a long shot. Environ­ m ental co. needs to fill ft/pt mgmnt & supvsry positions. No exp nee. 497-5798, Dona. INTERESTED IN $6-12 per hr? Avail. Weds., Thtira. or Fridays 8-5. Must, have car. Call CCC Inc. 4? 1-1039 ; LOCKER ROOM attendants. Ex­ citing opportunity for honest, respon. indiv, to work in a prestig­ ious sports club. Various shifts avail. Apply in person M-F 9-5, Western Reserve Club, 2140 E. Broadway, Tempe. EOE MARC CENTER Serving people with disabilities since 1957. Call our job hotline: 962-4838. NANNIES WANTED: Positions nationw ide, sum m er or yr.round. Exp. not req. Great pay. Free travel. (612) 643-4399; NEW ENGLAND brother/sister camps-Massachusetts. Mah-KeeNac for boys/Danbee for girls. Counselor positions for Program Specialists: All team sports, espe-. dally baseball, basketball, field hockey, roller hockey, soccer, volleyball; 25 tennis openings; also archery, riftery, weights/fitness and biking;other openings include preforming arts, fine arts, newspaper, photography, radio station* cooking, sewing, rollerskating, rocketry, ropes & climbing and camp craft; all waterfront activities (swimming, skiing, sailing, windsurfing, canoeing/kayaking). Inquire: Mah-KeeNac (boys) 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, N J. 07028. Call: 1800-753-9118. Danbee (girls) 17 Westminster Drive, Montville, N J. 07045. Call 1-800-392-3752. OFFICE ASST, p/t, dependable, good phone/comm., filing skills, etc. Near ASU. 437-1048. PT SHIPPING & Rec. clerk, I t warehouse duties, M-F, pm's. Call Bernard 268-4800. THERAPEUTIC WORK, excel­ lent pay, flexible hours, will train. Call 844-9060 or 377-7283. L uxury G uest Ranch W it ' s En d at Va l u o to Lane (near Durango, Colorado) Now hiring for summer season! Job descriptions: Servers, office, counselors, wranglers, bar ten­ ders, culinary students, fine din­ ing Waitin’, wine stewart, outside maintenance, horticulturist and others. Room, board utilities & use o f facilities. Bonus for com­ pletion o f contract, plus pay o f $600. Exp. wranglers $750. Send resume, G.P A . , picture to: Jim Custer Realty, Inc. 4207 N. 19th Ave. Phoenix, AZ 85015 All Green Corporation Now hiring p/t between S6-S7, hr + bonus & incentives. 4:30 9 p.m . M-F. Near campus. Call Gregg Brown at 431-9300 HELP WANTEDF O O D H R V IC !_ ALWAYS HIRING fun and en­ ergetic people. Taco John's, 7841515. Come in and apply. JOHNNY ROCKETS taking apps. for fountain, cashiers, food serv­ ers. Fashion Square M all, 911:30am. Apply in person. 423- BARTENDER- FOR fun neigh­ borhood bar, $7-12/hr. 24-32 hrs/wk. Sports knowledge a must Apply The Woodshed I. 19 W. Baseline, after 5pm., exp. only. 1 5 0 5 . ' ; • OUTBACK STEAKHOUSE NOW HIRING A ll Positions Com e work for a casual, A ussie them e restaurant, efinners only, serving the finest steaks, seafood and pasta. Applications being taken NOW . A pply in person M on. thru Fri. 10:00-6:00 Sat. 10:00-3:00 1734 E. Southern Ave. Tem pe (602)491-6064 EQ£ R ED RO BINcooksreceive top wages, paid vacations and bo­ nuses. Apply today, 1375 W. El­ liot, Tempe. RED ROBIN Tempe, has imme­ diate openings for wait staff with daytime availability. 1375 W. El­ liot, Tempe. HELP WANTEDO J J L D C A R !_ ADORABLE 2 YR old boy needs PT babysitter. $4/hr. Refs, reqr"* Ahwatukee area. Call Cindy 7599014. HELP WANTEDGENERAL P H R O G G ’S , T E M P E N ow a ccep tin g a p p lica tio n s for: B arten d ers, C ock tail S ervers, D oor S taff, C ooks, C a sh iers, D J's, L aborers. PM, F u ll/p a r t-tim e . A pply in p erso n d aily 9 a .m .-5 p .m . 9 1 9 E . A p ach e, Tem pe NEED NEW WHEELS? WANTED COMPUTER Con­ sultant Knowledge of Excel. Call 951-1513, Become A Plasma Donor! WE NOW PAY MORE! Earn $35 for two donations per week! ATTENTION GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR, enthusiastic, experienced to teach 5-10 yr olds. Monday pm 2:305:00,7th St. in Glendale. $10/hr. 955-7805. TE IC H ER T M A R K ET IN G , AZ's largest promoter o f video stores is searching for 3 sales reps. Candidates should be clean cut w/good comm, skills. An at­ tractive sal. + comm, for right in­ div. We will work around your school schedule. Please call 921 7755 bet. 1-4 pm. for interview. DOMINO'S PIZZA (Extra bonuses availableforfrequent donors) Consteuctiòn Supply Company S e ll tools nationw ide. W ill train. N ear À S U . Part-tim e. Joe *894-1257 $5-$8/Hour That's up to $160 your first month! A nd that can help pay your car payments! New Donors bring this ad in for an additional $10 for your first donation. (Must bring in ad.) For more information call........... ..............:..8!M-2250 For an appointment c a ll.................................... 968-6139 Let State Press Classifieds work for yea! UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER 1015 S. Rural Road, Tempe (Next to Sno Oasis) CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT AY TO U C C E SS We are currently interviewing those with a professional customer service back­ ground for one of the fastest growing telemarketing companies in the United States. We offer: $6/hour guaranteed paid weekly • Commissions up to an additional $8/hour • Paid holidays • Health and dental insurance • Career Opportunities. 96 PART-TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY -P ro M a rk & Telemarketing fo r th e ¡m age Conscious ProMark One Marketing Services, Inc. 1232 E. Broadway « Tempe • 784-1599 State P ress T h u r j & f f ^ b n J f y 2 4 ,1 9 9 4 HELP WANTEDCH1LD CARE RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS MOTHER NEEDS a wife! Need a babysitter from l-5pm M-F; a lso so m e w eekends an d /o r occasional nights. Must drive to my home in Scottsdale. Job emails watching 2 children 4 & 7 yrs.and light housework. Pay is $6 an hour. More for housework. Call 948-9520 weekends and evenings after 7:00 pm. (JRATEfï I. DEAD XKiHT JAZZ! _ by !» BUD DIMOCK with the NO HOBO BAND 4 É I Je t 8:30-11 p.m. Every Thursday!" NO COVER BOSTON'S BANDERSNATCH 5th St & Forest BREWPUB McClintock & Curry • 921-7343 Get Clucked PT NANNY, need from M-F 26pm Tempe, Çhand, Scotts, Pos. avail immed. 661-8004. U p !! NEW Babysitters & Nannies $4.99 EXPAN D ED HAPPY HOUR! Set your own sched­ ule of days, evenings or weekends. $4.25$6.70 per hour. Must have reliable trans­ portation. Call Parent's Time-Out (but only if you truly love,children) at 345-2433. Gallon ( 1 2 8 - o z .) Pitchers 4-7pm • Bud Light, C o o rs Light • $3.50 Pitchers 15« W ings Cluck-U PRAN KSTER S A L A S K A SUM M ER EM PLO YM EN T 2 fori College Night • O p e n til 2 a m • Anything on Menu RESTAURANTS/ BARS CAN USE ALL OVER BODY!! Lose Inches FAST. $23.95 Delivered Free. 6 -ft B ig S c r e e n I 1024E.BraadMÏÿ Tempe »967-8875 D R IN K S P E C IA L S IfS fö È *, U) m 8708 E. McDowell * Eastof Hayden on 8?th St, j> 946-6227 N BEDSPINS 9pm-1am For aGood Time cafl 966-1300 IdboaCafo < 404 S M« Ave,, Suite 10t J KW ) Where ASU Goes for Pizza THIRSTY THURSDAY Alternative Thursdays All I CL u b No Cower All Night with college id 85< Congratulations to our very own Pat Fogler for winning the University Award of Merit. You deserve it! m ill a v e n u e m W NGS ADOPTION .■ M cm day-Fhday ,. A . 4pm-ôpm . ADOPTION: ■LET us help each other. Loving white couple offer a lifetime of happines and secur­ ity to your newborn. Medical & Legal expenses paid. Please call JoAnna & Joe anytime "1-800522-6914. :7 :Saturday. & Sunday ^ . Hair:-43m v y Calling all ASU SPORTS FANS!! NW Corner Dobson & University 844-SHED Jä g e rm e is te r È s s i HAPPY HO UR M -F 10-7 4-7pm 2 d r a fts ...........$2 Im port B tls....$2 \ f / V 1 /2 Price ' jd& M g ® A ppetizers ' • 4 S atellites • IS Screens "We show all Suns & Iowa Games!" E v e ry T h u rsd a y 9pm -12am 931-7220 1 WOODSHED II 1 3 0 1 E. University DENISE AND Susie, Did you enjoy your Golden Stoli? Maybe the old men will'get out o f the rocking chair next time. 411 Bugpicker and Double D. SKINNY DIP THIGH CREAM 4pm-close Thursdays m m o —i GREAT P/T income by educating publec how tó become financially ibdependenL 938-0514. 968-6666 COLLEGE BOWL March 9th. Get your teams of four and play College Jeopardy. Applications are in the 3rd floor, MUAB of­ fice and due back by Feb. 25 ! TH IGH CREAM It really works!! Get rid of ugly cellulite. Lose inches. Call 784-8767. 60-oz. pitchers $3.75 p BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES All 12 oz. B ottles BABYSNAKE KIM- get psyched for date party this weekend. We'll party like Rockstars! vyotirv sis Katie. Sig Kap sisters, v Kim 8 5 5 S . R u ra l R d. (1 b lo c k S. o f U niv. D r.) 8 9 4 -2 1 1 2 ^ Excellent Blues, « U Rock & Jazz » 0 every nite! ^ * NEVER A COVER .75 Fisheries - Many earn $2.Q00+/mo. in canneries or $3,000i$6,(XK)+/mo. on . fishing vessels. No exp. necessary. Male or Female/ For more mformatiori call; (206) 545-4155 ext, A5918 B u d • A m ste l S am A d a m s St. P a u li H ein e k en • B e c k s C o o r s L ig h t M o lso n B a rtle s & Ja y m e s COLLEGE FUNDING: $$now available. Free information, 5 sources guaranteed. Write BJ En­ terprises, R t2 Box 134, Hickory, KY, 42051-9623. gotten my Lil challenge! Under the table-just kidding! I v my Chicken Co^- t A R & lf iL L j AA CRUISE and travel employ­ ment ;guide. $$$ + free world­ wide travel! (Caribbean, Europe, etc!) Summer/permanent avail­ able. Guaranteed success!! (919) 929-4398 ext. C H S. $125 AK*F LIL' bro Jill, good luck at Midcourt. You'll do awesome! Love you, Suzie. IK. Katie- Don't think I've for­ A A ALASKA summer employ­ ment. Earn up to $15,000 this summer in canneries, processors, etc. M or female. No exp neces­ sary . Room/board/travel often provided! Guaranteed success! (919)929-4398 ext. A 145. ' KW SERVICES JAM IE- MY roomie and my good friend. I hope you have a wonderful 20th B-day. v Jen. PimS m o n fo w l¿c JO B OPPORTUNITIES C I PIZ Z A & PASTA PERSONALS CONGRATS DELTA Sigs on taking 1st in Sigma Kappa soccer! You gtiyS w ere the greatest! Love, your coaches. E very D ay: 4 -9 p m ^ 701 S o u th Mill Avenus 96 6-3 147 v MUSIC WE BUY CDs $l - $6 C A S H CAMPUS CORNER 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e ADOPTION: YOUR child’s fu­ ture is our 1st & most important priority. They w ill be loved, cared for, protected & nurtured . to the best o f bur ability. Gall Kathy/Steve, (602)496-6425. SHARON & NICK happily mar­ ried 10 years, young couple wish to love, adore & adopt a baby: Legal/Medical covered. 1-800752-1959. SPORTS & RECREATION ELECTROLYSIS BY Degna Perm, results, the blend method. Rural/Southem area 921-1146 TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. NOT JUST TYPING FREE- NO obligation eval. of your finances & valuable mate­ rials. No pressure. 938-0514. Grammar/spelling/syntax check. Rural/University. Jim 967-2360. RESEARCH AND writing help, all subjects.Catalog $ 2 : 1-800351-0222. WORD PROCESSING, secre­ tarial services, fax. 28yrs exper. Student discounts. S/W corner, Miller/Chaparral. 994-8145. WANTED NEED USED transcriber, stan­ dard cassette. 5-3410/9574767. MISC. PAYING CASH for used toys: Starwais, Startrek, Superheroes, GI Joe, Pez, Dis. 820-4668. State Press back issues can be picked up at the Information Desk in the Basement of Matthews Center STATISTICAL ANALYSIS & consultation, spec. ed. psych; $40/hour, 1 hour min, 8374999. Y o u r In d iv id u a l TIRED OF hair? Face/body hair removed permanently. 25% stud­ ent discount Skin Etc., 829-7500. H o ro sco pe = TRACY’S TYPING, Etc. Accu­ rate quick, prof., laser,$l,75/pg nego $ on lg doemnts. 641-5889. F rance5 D rake = For Thurs., Feb. 24,1994 ARIES (Mar» 21 to Apr. 19) The w ée sm all hours favor romancé, but later today you’re inclined to extravagant spend­ ing. A friend’s argumentative G et a m ood p u ts a dam per o n H A R D SEX Y BODY evening socializing. Lose fat! G e t to n e d & shape­ TAURUS ly - M y w o rk o u ts are fu n & (Apr. 20 to May 20) easy. G u a ra n te e d results. 12 Warm feelings are shared by years experience. C ertified. those in love or dating today. A Ca ll M r. A rizon a, 945-0712 busin ess concern may be agg rav atih g . You may fa ll behind with household duties: GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Your personable ways are an asset in business, but you may $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. have difficulty in getting your Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP. ideas across. Someone’s defen­ Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. sive mood works against com­ munication. 24 HOUR laser $i.25/pg. Rush CANCER jobs ok. Graphs/charts, resume, (June 21 to July 22). fax, IBM rental. Call 438-7091. Those who are dating will feel 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. closer to each other, today, but Professional typing, laser, fax, J a d isagreem ent co u ld arise Walicable/ ASU. Diane829^1602. about a money :matter. Others aren’t ready to make compro­ AAA- KINKO’S Copy Center - mises. makes the grade! Get reports, LÉO resumes, & flyers fast! Color cop­ (July 23 to Aug. 22) ies, Macintosh & IBM rental & G ood new s com es about a much more! Open 24 hours! dom estic concern or from a Rural & University, 966-2035. family member. However, it may be hard to get things mov­ Ac c u r a t e , e x p e r i e n c e d ing in business, ánd a partner word processor: Apa/Mla $2/pg. may simply be in a bad mood. Wordperfect. Laura 820-0305. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) '"Why Type it Yourself?] The idiosyncrasies o f a co• We specialize in typing for students | w orker may be particu larly - APA/MLA. experience bothersom e today. The HP LaserJet 4 printer for quality, demands of others leave little professional looking papers, time for yourself. Partners are resumes, graphics, and more! supportive, however. Flexible hours For students evenings, weekends, rush jobs are.. LIBRA welcome! (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Pick-up and delivery to ASU, or You may receive praise for the FAX your order to us!w ay you. handled an assign: Bring in this ad and receive | ment, but tact will be needed 10% off any paper! with either à child or a roman­ Salem independent | tic interest. Accent home life Secretarial Services I tonight. HEALTH & FITNESS TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING SCORPIO (Oct. ¿3 to Nov. 21) . Lovely social times are in store for you-today, but signals may be crossed in business o r you may underestimate a task’s dif­ fic u lty . Home m atters also need attention. SAGITTARIUS (Noy» 22 to Dec. 21) Family togetherness is high­ lighted today. Unfortunately, you may also be dealing with a person w ho’s out to trip you up. Minimize differences. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) B en e fits com e through a friendship today, and singles may meet with romantic intro­ ductions. However, you may be at odds with someone over a money concern. AQUARIUS Xian. 20 to Feb. 18) Your good will invites business gains, and new starts; are favored. However; you must be careful not to be bossy with a partner or there will be reper­ cussions. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Vlar. 20) , .. A tendency to let tilings slide at work could leave you Witii too much to do at the end o f the w orking day. Y ou m ay be making plans for a trip. YOU BORN TO D A Y are practical,! y et you are also inclined to dream. You have a good imagination and are often drawn to an artistic career, yet you can also succeed in busi­ ness. You have a love o f the sea and would enjoy work that allows you to travel. You heed definite work to keep you busy^ lest you retreat into your own private world of reminiscence, and introspection.. Home is also important to yotir happiness . Birthdate of: Winslow. Homer, artist: Honus Wagner, baseball Hall o f Fam er; and Zachary Scott, actor. 924-1976 STATE PRESS Classified Ad Order Form S n o w b o a r d - S i m s i 65 w/boots, $265, make offer, 948- 1881. FREE LOST/FOUND Name Home-Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip P le a s e p rin t o n e le tte r p e r box, le a v e a b la n k b o x b etw een w ords! LOST- BLUE notebook with! blue marble cover, Reward $25, ^84-9664,-''; ;; ; ; LOST- GOLD bracelet on 2/21 or 2/22. Extreme sentimental val­ ue!! Please call Sean @ 929-9435* nice reward!! ! LOST: IBM 31/2" Dysan DS, DD disk @ BAG Lab on 2/17 around 3pm. Very important: Reward. Call Lysandra 784-8780. FUNDRAISING Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure if reads exactly as you wish if to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appeàrs-the liability of. the State Press shall not exceed die cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling prrbrs do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can;per your ad a credit will be held pn account for future advertiaing. Commercial 1 day $2.00 per line 2-4 days, $1.50 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.30 per line, per day; 10+ days, $1.00 per line, per day W R A T Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, par day 6-9 days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, per day ^ • . 3 line .minimum. Add i bold headline for trie cost of 2 lines. MAKEUP to $2000 in one week! Motivated student organizations, (fraternities.S drorities, e tc .) needed for marketing project. Call Larry Chiangat 1-800-7566662. Well, Wine, Draft 8-11 p.m. AXO- THANKS to our wonder­ ful coaches. You did a great job! 411 S. Mill Ave. 966-2020 Ad> NEW members-Get ready to find out who your big sis is. Love, your, active sisters, iM t t . Hm Staf« PfMi whin yu AFTERHOURS FLO W ERS: Roses by the dozen & balloons. Best deal in town! Call 894-2419. P g fc O N A ^ _ _ PTD - Mat t* Ml, 4riak u U u \ t » fifi P a ge 15 MP - '■ : - "" , ." 098 065 010. 020 061 064 051 077 054 086 Adoption Airplanes ,, Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities Computers Freeiost/Found 080 052 049 101 074 072 "073 070 . 071 030 040 Fundraising 102 Furniture Garage Sales 107 .1 0 3 Health & Fitness 056 Help Wanted-Child Care ' 076 Help Wanted-Ctericai Help Wanted-Food Service 015 120 Help Wanted-General 050 Help Wanted-Sales 045 Hornee for Rent Homes for Sale Housecleaning Instruction Insurance Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes 063 082 090 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 Motorcycles Music Personals Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rent 10Ö 081 058 031 041 060 067 108 105 115 Services Sports & Recreation Tickets Townhomes/Condos for Rent Townhomes/Condos for Sale Transportation tra v e l Tutors Typing/Word Processing Wanted Page 16 T h u rs d a ^ ^ e b r u a r ^ 4 ^ 9 9 ^ State Press Alternative Thursdays Co D« Night NO COVER A U NIOMT with College I.D. WELL. WINE & DRAFT 8-11 pm DJ*s ROB WAGNER & TONY PANNELL Spin the Hottest Alternative & Techno Mix in the Valley DRINKS 6-8 pm 4115, Mill Ave*»Downtown