©Copyright. State Prass. 1994 Tempe. Arizona Friday, April 22,1994 An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 78 No. 61 Domestic abuse concern on rise locally, speakers say Mary Jane Rubio, human resources supervisor for Arizona Child Protective Services, spoke out against child abuse during a global policy symposium Thursday in the MU. B y M ika A kikuni State P ress The G reater Phoenix C hapter of the U nited Nations Association detects an increase in local concern about domes­ tic human rights compared with previous years, an ASU com­ munication professor said at a UNA-USA Global Policy Project Symposium held Thursday in the MU. Nemi Jain, also president of the Greater Phoenix Chapter of the UNA, was one of three speakers who addressed nearly 30 people at a seminar called “Domestic Human Rights: Violence to Peace”. “The United Nations selected ‘Human Rights’ as this year’s theme to be discussed in 192 countries, “ Jain said. “The idea of this symposium is that by discussing this theme at the local level — involving citizens, groups, non-govern­ mental organizations, local governments, and state govern­ ments — we can generate ideas which we can get to our national government to make suggestions to the United Nations as to what should be our contribution on that particu­ lar topic.” The other two speakers were Mary Jane Rubio and K-Lee Seckler. Rubio is the human resources supervisor of Child Protective Services at the Arizona Department of Economic Security. Seckler is a counselor at Life Point Technologies, a neuro-muscular rehabilitation therapy and counseling office in Phoenix. Both of them spoke about the dangers of domestic violence. “Children are more helpless than adults,” Rubio said dur­ ing her lecture. “A spouse can run away, teenagers can do the same, but a child is a victim to everyone in the household.” Rubio said that it is estimated that between 2,000 and 5,000 children die each year nationally due to physical abuse. “That’s one child every four hours,” she said. Eighty to 90 percent of sex offenders are known to the child, Rubio said: “They are family members and friends, neighbors and baby-sitters.” According to Rubio, Shaken Infant Syndrome is also a problem prominent in Arizona. This syndrome occurs when adults, frustrated and angry with children, shake them strenu­ ously. These injuries can occur accidentally, according to the Arizona Department of Economic Security. Physical indica­ tors are brain damage, spinal injury, blindness or other eye trauma, seizures and retardation. Some play activities that are dangerous, too, are repeated vigorous tossing of a small child into the air and jogging while carrying an infant on the back or shoulders. Rubio said she often is asked questions relating to “how we are violating parents’ rights, not on how we are violating childrens’ rights. The average (age) of children who die from abuse is 2.5 years.” One child out of five will be sexually abused by the age of 18, Rubio said. When addressing physical child abuse, Rubio said, “ethni­ cally, we are all different in our choice of abuse. The majority of the population in Arizona, Caucasians, they prefer the slap­ ping on the face, the pulling of the hair, the kicking. We also have the Hispanic community using hot chilies, jalapeftos on the mouths of the children, hot tortillas on their hands. Then, we have our black community, they like the electric cords. I am not saying that this is the case always.” Seckler, the last speaker who spoke about battered women, said the reason many women abused by their male partners do not get away from them is “ because they are afraid that these men are going to find them out and kill them.” According to Seckler, a way to spot abusive male partners is to listen to his words. “If he puts you down verbally, then there is danger. “Also, if he is too good to be true, then you might take preT urn to S y m p o s iu m , page 2. Minorities’ paychecks still lagging behind 2 ASU professors, councilman say struggle for equity perpetual B y C yndi W right S pecial t o the State P ress Figures show there is still a glass ceiling when it comes to blacks getting jobs with the best salaries, and experts from ASU and the Valley have a full arsenal of explanations why. The 1990 census reports the yearly median income differ­ ence between blacks and whites nationwide totals $11,677. In Arizona, that figure is $8,681. While some believe the plight of the African American worker in the U.S. has improved significantly since the 1960s, the wage gap has gotten worse, according to William Johnson, a p ro fe sso r in A SU ’s School o f H ealth Administration and Policy who specializes in discrimination in the workplace. ‘T he wage gap has increased, partly because of a shift in the nature of employment in the United States,” Johnson said. “People without an education are getting squeezed into entry-level service jobs that have no career ladder to climb.” In the past, an uneducated worker had a chance of getting on in a lucrative union position, such as automobile manu­ facturing in Detroit, Johnson said. Phoenix City Councilman A. Cody Williams has several theories why blacks are not in the higher-paying positions. “As the Hispanic population has become more astute and political, many of those jobs that had been earmarked for blacks (primarily government positions) have been split between blacks and Hispanics,” Williams said. This, Williams said, has led to a hardship between ethnic groups. “We have a tendency to fight over the same jobs, but we haven’t put up the same fight for those non-traditional jobs,” he said. A nother reason, according to W illiam s, is the way Phoenix evolved socially. “The city was not an active participant in the civil rights movement,” Williams said. “It was not a bastion of external violent racism. As a result, industry and business evolved without much of a struggle by the black man and woman to be part of that upper structure.” According to Johnson, a wage gap that works out to $2.23 an hour for entry-level positions can be attributed directly to discrimination. He said the black college gradu­ ate faces some discrimination, but is doing better than the uneducated African American. “The black community has not done a good job of instill­ ing the work ethic into its young people,” Johnson said, adding a cycle also exists where young black people see their elders getting paid less than their production is worth. “The inclination for education decreases,” Johnson said. However, Johnson said more blacks are going to college W ilhelm said he ch allen g ed M arci Hendrickson, his opponent in the run-off electio n , to an im prom ptu debate on Wednesday. She said he didn’t. W ilhelm said Hendrickson is afraid to debate him. She said she is not. Wilhelm said he wanted to hold a debate B y G reg Z emeida State P ress He said, she said. Accusations between the two candidates running for Associated Students of ASU pres­ ident capped off the nam e-calling, rumorslinging, and sign-stealing season on campus known as student government elections. ASASU p resid en tial ca n d id ate K urt IN S ID E * A variety of Valley events are scheduled for Earth Day. Page 9 S T A T E PR E SS W eather Outlook Mostly sunny and very warm. High 98. ► An in-depth article looks into the controversy surrounding the prescription of lethal drugs to death row inmates. Pages 12-13. Comparitive median incomes ■ whites I~1 blacks $40,000 $30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $0 The House passes a $28 billion crime bill supporting the “three strikes” rule and expansion of the death penalty. Page 3 Arizona and there are more black families in the middle class. “This gives people the incentive to do better when they see there is an opportunity to live in a better environment,” he said. A lbert M cH enry, c h a ir o f A SU ’s D epartm ent o f Electronics and Computer Technology, said the reasons for the disparity are historical. “There has never been an opportunity for blacks to catch T urn between Hendrickson and himself to give stu­ dents a chance to hear both candidates’ stand on issues like tuition. He said he m ade several attem pts Wednesday to get Hendrickson to debate him on neutral ground, but she basically ignored him because she is afraid to face him on the issues. “I have the answers to the issues and she World/ Nation U.S. Source: 1990 US Census Sports Six-Pac batting leader Jacob Cruz and the rest of the lOth-ranked ASU baseball team travel to Cal for threegame series beginning tonight. Page 15 to J o b s , page 2 . hasn’t studied the issues enough to know the answers,” Wilhelm said. “I think it reflects on her leadership style. If she do esn ’t care enough to research the issues now, is she going to research the issues (if she is elect­ ed)?” “It makes me wonder if (her campaign) is just a resume-gatherer.” T urn t o ASASU, page 2. Where To Find It Classifieds........................ 17 Comics..............................14 Crossword.......................... 6 Horoscopes ...................... 19 Opinion.............................. 4 Police Report.................... 10 Sports............................... 15 Today’s Activities.............. 2 World/Nation.............. ,...... 3 T State P ress Friday, April 22, 1994 Page 2 oday The Today section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU com m unity. R equests are p rin ted according to the space available each day. Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken over the phone. Entries must contain the full name o f the group, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f the location. AH requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Deadline fo r entries is noon the day before publication. • Alcoholics A nonym ous — Closed daily meeting, noon, basement of the old church at the Newman Center, northwest comer of College and University. • ASASU Elections Staff — Winners of the run-off election will be announced. West Lawn, 5 p.m. • W om en’s S tudent C enter — Open house, 2 to 4 p.m., everyone welcome, followed by discussion group for re­ entry women, 4 to 5 p.m., and discussion group for lesbian and bisexual women, 5 to 6 p.m.. W omen’s Student Center, MU, lower level • A IE S E C I n te r n a tio n a l B usiness Organization — Keynote speaker Scott Crazier, vice president and general con­ sul of Phelps Dodge: “Phelps Dodge in Latin America and What it Takes to S ucceed,” everyone w elcom e, MU Mohave Room 222,4 p.m. • N ative A m e ric a n B usiness Organization — Important meeting, All Conference Room, 3:30 p.m. Symposium ASASU_____ C o n t in u ed from page 1. C o n t in u ed from page 1. cautions,” Seckler said. She added that abuse on women can start from her partner leaving her suddenly at a party that they have gone to together. Elizabeth Luloff, a junior commu­ nication major, said one of the rea­ sons the symposium was useful to her was that she learned how to spot abu­ sive boyfriends through their choice of words. William Woods, a Tempe resident who lived in Botswana, Africa, for six years, said he and his wife seldom heard about parents abusing their children. “In Africa, I never saw the extent of child abuse that I see now as I have come back home. It makes me pause and think about what’s happen­ ing in our country,” Woods said. “I am wondering if our m aterialistic society has made us callous. I see these students coming in from other countries. They come here to get educated. Maybe there is better edu­ cation where they came from.” Jobs-----C on tin u ed from page 1. up," said M cH enry, who studies blacks in America. “There is too large a number of blacks stuck on the bottom with no way to get out.” McHenry said there are only two ways for an A frican Am erican to move up the career ladder. One is through education, and the other is by having family or friends in a position to lend a helping hand — eith er financially or through connections in the workplace, he said. “My family early on saw the way out was through ed u c atio n ,” McHenry said, adding that his father inspired not only he and his siblings, but countless nieces and nephews to pursue higher education. There are six degrees from ASU in McHenry’s family. “We are very strong advocates of education,” he said. McHenry said a major problem with society is that a large segment of society is unprepared to be adequate nurturers. W illiam s b elieves that blacks must get out and fight for the lucra­ tive positions. “I believe it is time to step around the comer and bust our butts to get the good roles,” he said, adding that it is important to make sure that not only are the jobs well-paying, but that benefits exist. “The expenses, like a broken car, medical or whatever ... that can kick a family into poverty,” Williams said. Johnson said pressure from the government to hire minorities and Phoenix’s job increase are making things b etter for the A frican A m erican w orker. He said he doesn’t feel educating people about the plight of the black person will work. “I think time has proven that it sounds logical, but hasn’t proven effective,” he said. McHenry said it is ultimately up to the individual to make changes. “When you are part of a group that is seen as inferior, you’re short­ com ings are am plified,” he said. “The reality is that people who want to achieve, can — without regard to color. Discrimination still exists, so in order for the minority to achieve they must be willing to go the extra mile.” Hendrickson said that she was not aware of the impromptu debate at 12:30 p.m. that Wilhelm proposed. “I was on Cady Mall, I was on Tyler Mall and Palm Walk all afternoon (Wednesday),” she said. “At no time did anyone come and tell me that there was supposed to be a formal debate, or an informal debate for that matter.” Hendrickson said she would have been willing to debate Wilhelm at a neutral site, but she said he wanted to hold it at his campaign site near Cady Mall. “I am not afraid of Kurt nor am I afraid of the issues,” Hendrickson said. “I’m articulate, I know the issues, and I am intelligent enough to create an argument.” She added that the Wilhelm’s campaign has taken a dis­ tinctively personal turn recently. “(Wilhelm) doesn’t want to debate me on issues; he wants to get personal,” Hendrickson said. “(He) has slandered me on everything from how I dress to how long it’s taking me to graduate and what my qualifications are.” Wilhelm said there was quite a bit of mudslinging during the past couple of weeks, but most of it happened behind the scenes. “I have a tape ... of someone who had a satanic voice who got on my message machine quoting every “f \ “d”, “gd” word that could exist and telling me that they were going to rip my eyes out,” he said. Hendrickson said 180 of her campaign signs were lost dur­ ing the first week of the election campaign. “I know a lot of people think thats just funny, and they will rip them down, and perhaps that is in many cases,” she said. “But its a bit frustrating to me as a candidate.” David Tung, one of the two candidates running for activi­ ties vice president, said over 20 his campaign signs were removed from Hayden West Lawn. He also was not pleased with the way the campaign season has gone. “I am very irritated and frustrated with the way the cam­ paigning has been done,” Tung said. “We should focus on qualification issues, not negative campaigns and rhetoric.” Specifically, he was upset with the State Press' coverage of his desire to hold two demanding offices at the same time, activities vice president and student regent. He said the State Press should have concentrated on the issues instead. The elections themselves were called into question by two write-in candidates. Rob Gresser and Rishi Vohra, who were running as write-in candidates for the College of business, wanted the elections to be reheld because of perceived prob­ lems with the way the write-in votes were tabulated. Results for the ASASU run off elections will be announced today at 5 p.m. on Hayden West Lawn. _________ ASIJ STUDENT HEALTH ANNOUNCES A $98 REDUCTION IN COST FOR STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE FOR 1994-95 The Student Health Insurance Program for 1994-95 offers you a choice o f two plans through Samaritan Health Insurance Company, each with a maximum benefit of $50,000 for each accident or illness. Coverage Includes: • Medical Care Visits • In-patient Services • Maternity • Out-patient Surgery • Emergency Coverage • Physical Therapy • Mental Health Main Campus: 1. Point of Service (POS). Provides 100% coverage at Main Campus Student Health for initial evaluation. There is no deductible when referred from Student Health to an in-network provider, only a $10 co-payment. The cost of this student insurance for 1994-95 is $593 versus $691 in 1993-94. OR West Campus: 2. Preferred Provider Option (PPO). Provides 100% coverage at West Campus Student Health. There is a $100 deductible and a 20% co-payment for in-network providers. The cost o f this student insurance for 1994-95 is $621 versus $691 in 1993-94. You can sign up for either of these programs during early registration or fee payment. You can also stop at Student Health for additional information. All students are eligible for services. Fees may apply. ASU Student Health At the south base of the University Bridge on Palm Walk. / ______ W o r ld / N a t io n ______ S tate P ress __________________________________ Friday, April 22,1994 P a8— round rizona Symington promises end o f income taxes if elected PHOENIX (AP) — Gov. Fife Symington vowed Thursday to phase out personal income taxes if re-elected, saying the move would fuel economic expansion that would more than make up the loss to the state treasury. The $100 million cut in personal income taxes he pushed through the Legislature that ended last week was “just a little something to break the ice,” Symington said. “Give me another four years, and we will abolish personal income taxes in this state.” Symington said personal income taxes make up about 35 percent of the state’s general fund revenue. He said elim inating that tax w ould lead to expansion of business and capital and that such taxes as those on property, sales and corporate income will make up the revenue loss. Goddard presents platform on youth crime and abuse SUN CITY (AP) — D em ocratic gubernatorial candidate Terry Goddard outlined a juvenile justice reform plat­ form Thursday he said would balance crackdowns with prevention. “We’ll cut the juvenile violent crime rate and child abuse by 2© percent by the end o f my first term in office,” G oddard said during a cam paign appearance in this retirement city where youth gang activity flared up within recent months. To get guns o u t o f the hands o f young people, Goddard said he would increase penalties for illegally providing guns to minors and would support local ordinances requiring parental authoriza­ tion for juveniles who carry guns. Negotiators agree to $2.8 million award settlement PHOENIX (AP) — Four men who were mistakenly arrested in the 1991 murders of nine people at a Buddhist temple would get $2.8 million in dam­ ages under an agreement announced Thursday. The award must be approved by the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, which will consider the deal Monday, said David Damron, a private attorney defending the county in a false-arrest lawsuit. Six Thai Buddhist monks and three followers, including an elderly woman, were systematically slain with blasts from a shotgun and .22-caliber rifle in the temple set amid cotton fields west of Phoenix. Associated Press Rep. Joseph Kennedy II, D-Mass, meets reporters on Capitol Hill Thursday to discusa the crime bill. Joining Kennedy, from left are: Eleanor Smeal; Rep. Jim Ramstad, R-Minn.; and Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Dei. H o u s e p a s s e s a n ti-c r im e b i l l Next step: compromise with Senate W A SHINGTON (AP) — The House passed a $28 billion get-tough-on-crime bill Thursday demanding life imprisonment of three-time violent and drug offenders and greatly expanding the federal crimes subject to the death penalty. The bill passed 285-141. Negotiators from the Senate and House will now attempt to work out a compromise with a $22 billion version approved by the S enate last November. President Clinton cheered the vote. “The House of Representatives made their inten­ tions clear: crime will not pay,” Clinton said in a statement read by Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers. “Democrats and Republicans joined together to break the gridlock and make our streets safer.” The measure would authorize spending $13.5 billion for state prison building grants, $7 billion for crime prevention, $2 billion for rehabilitation such as drug treatment in pris­ ons and $3.45 billion for 50,000 more com­ munity police. The real controversy was over the nonfinancial aspects. The bill expands from two to nearly 70 the number of crimes that could result in the death penalty, including drive-by killings and fatal carjackings and actions of big-time drug pushers, even when no one is killed. Some of the crimes carried the death penalty before the Supreme Court overturned it in 1972, but some, like the drive-by killings, are new. It would allow defendants facing the death penalty to use racial statistics on capital pun­ ishment as evidence of discrimination — a provision that Republicans asserted would eviscerate the death penalty. But with the support of the Congressional Black Caucus, the House voted 235-192 to leave it in the bill. Judiciary Com m ittee C hairm an Jack B rooks, D -T exas, renew ed his prom ise Thursday that when the bill emerges from the House-Senate conference, the racial statistics section would apply only to future cases. The bill would make it retroactive. The three-time-loser section is much like the Senate’s. It would require life in prison for those convicted in federal court of a third violent or serious drug-related felony. One difference, however, is that the House bill provides an early out for some over-70 pris­ oners who have served 30 years of their sen­ tences if the federal Bureau of Prisons suc­ cessfully petitions a court to free them. Nixon lapses into coma after stroke NEW YORK (AP) — Richard Nixon fell into a deep coma Thursday, three days after suffering a major stroke, and doctors said the former president’s condition appeared to be life-threatening. Nixon’s family was at his side as his condition deteriorated, according to a statement from New York Hospital, where he was brought after suffering the stroke Monday night. The hospital gave no other details and Nixon’s doctors and aides declined to discuss his treatment or condition in detail. But other doc­ tors said the coma sharply reduced Nixon’s chances of survival and virtually guaranteed he would never recover his formidable powers of expression. Nixon, 81, was partly paralyzed on the right side and unable to speak even before he slipped into the coma. “The fact he’s in a coma suggests his chances of dying are much greater, and his chance of surviving without a major deficit (in speech and movement) is very, very small,” said Dr. Gregory Albers, director of the Stanford Stroke Center at Stanford University Medical Center in Palo Alto, Calif. Doctors sometimes try to reduce brain swelling after a stroke by using a respirator to speed up breathing. But Nixon was not put on a respirator in deference to his explicit wishes, The New York Times and CBS reported Thursday. The newspaper quoted an unidentified health worker as saying Nixon had in the past expressed “some fairly strong intentions about the kind of treatment he wishes.” NBC reported Thursday that Nixon left instructions that he didn’t want to be resuscitated. U.S. readies Patriots in Korea, pushes for further inspection Associated Press A U.S. soldier walks past a Patriot m issile launcher at O san Air Base Thursday, as part of the first shipment of a n ti-m is s ile ba tteries fo r S ou th K o rean d e fen se are deployed. OSAN AIR BASE, Korea (AP) — U.S. Patriot missiles arriving in South Korea will be ready for firing within a week. Defense Secretary William Perry said Thursday. He also said North Korea could be ready soon to remove enough plutoni­ um from a reactor to build four or five nuclear bombs. Perry said “there is no imminent danger” of war but it is vital that North Korea permit international inspection of its nuclear activities. In a possible step forward on that front, a spokesman for the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency said North Korea had suggested it would let inspectors monitor the refu­ eling of a nuclear reactor. That monitoring “is critical,” Perry said. At a news conference before flying to Tokyo to meet with Japanese officials, Perry said that “within weeks it will be necessary” for North Korea to remove fuel rods from the reac­ tor. The spent fuel would contain enough plutonium to build four or five nuclear bombs, Perry said, though the fuel rods would have to cool down for weeks or months before they could be processed to remove the plutonium. Perry noted that North Korean leader Kim II Sung recently denied he intended to build any nuclear weapons. One of the U.S. soldiers here, Capt. David Cole, wasn’t in the Persian Gulf when the Army’s Patriot air defense system made its combat debut but says he’s sure it would perform well in Korea. Cole, of Jefferson City, Tenn., is commander of C Battery, 2nd Battalion of the 7th Air Defense Artillery, which — along with five other Patriot batteries — arrived in South Korea this week and began setting up for operations. At an earlier news conference, Perry rejected suggestions that sending Patriots to South Korea had worsened tensions with the North. “It is a purely defensive system,” Perry said. “It is a system that has no offensive capability at all and it is a part of a regu­ lar modernization program. It has been planned, actually, for several years and there’s no reason to withdraw it. It’s not here because of the (North’s) nuclear weapon program.” U.S. Army Gen. Gary Luck, commander of U.S. forces in South Korea, had requested Patriots last December and the Clinton administration was ready to send them. But South Korea balked out of concern that it might upset U.S. talks with North Korea on nuclear inspections. After an agreed-upon inspection of nuclear facilities was cut short by North Korea in March, the South agreed to go ahead with the Patriot deployment. O pinion P age 4 B ^ Sta te P ress ■ £ oos & JJravos B R A V O — to th e L e s b ia n a n d G ay C om m unity S w itchboard and the L esbian Resource Project o f Phoenix for organizing the area’s first gay prom, to be held on June 18. T h e p ro m w ill b e a tte n d e d by h ig h school students who won’t be attending their schools’ proms because they are gay, as well as college students who did n ’t attend their high school proms. By organizing this event, the tw o o rg anizations have taken an o th er step in prom oting acceptance o f gays and lesbians in the Valley, w ho’ve suffered more than enough mindless discrimination. BOO — to Daim ion Osby and his law yers for coining a new creative excuse for crime: “urban survival.” Osby, a Fort Worth, Texas teenager who was charged with two counts o f m urder, pleaded th at he su ffered from “urban survival syndrome” and had no alter­ native but to kill two men with w hom he was involved in a dispute in a parking lot. No, black, inner city youths d o n ’t have it easy. No. they are not immune to violence. No, it is not unreasonable to expect to have to engage in self-defense in some situations. B ut d isre g a rd in g p erso n al re sp o n sib ility when a young man has unnecessarily killed two others is a step in the wrong direction, o n ly serv in g to fu rth e r skew o u r already biased justice system. B O O — to ASASU presidential candidate M arci H endrickson, fo r refusing to accept o p p o n en t K urt W ilh e lm 's c h a lle n g e to a debate. During last-m inute cam paigning dur­ ing the run-off elections, Wilhelm proposed a impromptu forum, citing the fact that the two ca n d id ates had p o stp o n ed d eb atin g tw ice already. G ranted, only about 4 p ercen t o f A SU ’s population voted in this year’s elec­ tion, but those who do participate in student government deserve to be inform ed about the ca n d id ates’ view points. B ut an o th er B O O goes to W ilhelm for but trying to engage in the aforem entioned debate in a m anner that was, according to H endrickson, “ b ellig er­ ent.” BRAVO — to W ednesday’s official estab­ lishm ent o f ASU East. T he branch cam pus, to be lo cated at the vacated W illiam s A ir Force Base in southeast M esa, will provide A SU w ith th e a b ility to a c c o m o d a te th e im m inent influx o f students in com ing years. ASU East alone is expected to handle 10,000 R E S S LooKwho's in pa Hqouuuuse// To forestall ignorance, we m ust have awareness o f w orld Life is a crap shoot, I have to admit. I'm continually amazed, as .AUREEN I look around at the rest of the world, at the things that go on. M CCLARNON There are things that, whenever I think about them, my chin hits the floor. Sure, I'm a bleeding-heart liberal. I’m too empathic, I take things too seriously — but I just gotta point out, ignoring things won't make them disappear. Last week I was sitting with an acquaintance at the Village Inn, whining about Kurt Cobain vs.. Rwanda, because he asked, and he was trying to convince me that not only don’t people care about Rwanda, but why should they? After all, Rwanda has nothing to do with him, with his day-to-day life, and he can’t even imagine the reality of that situation. Then he pointed to a rather unfortunate LCD (Lowest Common Denominator, from this elitist viewpoint), and said, “Look at that guy — he puts ketchup on his eggs. Do you think a guy like that cares about world events? If you asked if he’d heard what happened to Rwanda, he’d probably say ‘I don’t know — did she get preg­ nant?' But I’ll bet he has an opinion about Kurt Cobain’s sui­ cide.” My acquaintance was probably right, but I still don’t think we should spend our lives in ketchup-sucking ignorance. Excuse me for caring. Excuse me for thinking that other peo­ ple should care. Excuse me for believing that Newsweek should be easily discernible from People. People keep up with the news, and the news as an industry exists and thrives; if no one cares about the events the news depicts, then it’s little more than entertainment, and CNN might as well save its money, and just make stuff up and shoot stories off the sound stage, instead of going on location. Perhaps people stay informed so they can impress others with their knowledge, and discuss horrors in a flat voice at cocktail parties, much like the situation depicted in Six Degrees o f Separation. We’re all so indifferent, jaded to the news of crime and civil wars, uncaring when we hear figures about homeless people, and people with AIDS, and battered women and chil­ dren. But talk about gun control or abortion or forced penis removal, and America pricks up its ears and gets righteous and emotional. If it doesn’t directly impact us or offend our pathetically hypocritical moral sensibilities, we take it with all the gravity of a new episode of Beavis and Butthead. Let’s be realistic: If gas prices hadn’t gone up, would the Average American have cared that Iraq invaded Kuwait? Hell no. (Of course, if this country had ever learned about alternative fuel sources, oil distribution problems wouldn't have fazed us.) People aren’t getting all exercised about Bosnia, because it doesn’t push the right buttons in our weak little consciousness. And Rwanda, well, who the hell even knows where that is? (Central Africa, to the east of Zaire.) I admit that it’s difficult to really spend time with these topics; they aren’t as much fun as the Menendez brothers or as silly as Whitewater, and the politics are complicated, to boot. Bosnia can’t be explained in a single sentence, South Africa has a very long history, and homelessness happens to other people. Most of us are only three paychecks away from homeless­ ness, or a nasty illness, or the loss of a job. That’s what I mean about life being a crap shoot: you and I aren’t so far from those people without jobs, without health insurance, without a place to live. I keep thinking that I’m fairly fortunate to live here, in relatively peaceful America, because I could be living in one of those many places that are subsumed by civil war and violence. I try to imagine what it would be like to live in a country where violence is all-pervasive, where food isn’t to be had, even if you can afford it, and where the fabric of every­ day life has been rent past recognition — I can empathize, but I can’t know. I can’t know what it’s like to be tortured by a government for speaking my mind, locked up just for being an artist or an intellectual. Even though I can’t know these things, I know that they’re important. It’s important to care about what goes on in other countries because the world is becoming increasingly interconnected, and the shock waves created on the other side of the earth will reach our country in one form or another. It’s important because people are dying in droves, and even if you and I don’t know any of them, it matters. It matters because no one should have to live udder such horrible conditions, starving or tortured or dead or what have you. Go ahead and castigate me for naivete, call me a victim of liberal guilt — nothing will convince me that I’d be better off keeping my eyes closed. No man’s an island, babe. Maureen McClamon is a graduate student in sociology. students. s STATE PRESS TAFF JAKE BATSELL, Editor JASON OWSLEY, Managing Editor PH O TO G RA PH ERS: W illiam L ynam , C raig CHRIS DRISCOLL............................................................. City Editor Macnaughton, Fredrick Medanich. MARY LEIGH SUMMERTON.................. Asst. City Editor COLUMNISTS: David Don, A. Marjory Kaminski, Barry KRIS FRIDRICH................................................. News Editor Kelley, Diana Lopez. Maureen McClamon, Sean O ’Neill, JAMES FRUSETTA.....................................................Opinion Editor Melanie Selcho, Shayne Whitehead. BRIAN FITZGERALD.....................................................Photo Editor CARTOONISTS: Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan, George SAMANTHA FELDMAN..........................Asst. Photo Editor O'Connor, Mateo Willis. MIKE BRANOM............................................................. SportsEditor GRAPHIC ARTIST: Yamini Prabhakara. JEREMY STEIN.........................................Asst. Sports Editor PR O D U CTIO N : Kenneth Collins, Stacey Devlin, Jodi DIANE BOUDREAU............................. World/Nation Editor Goldblatt, Amie Madden, Skip Schrader, Anna Ulinich, TROY FUSS....................................................Magazine Editor Dave Weber. BRITTON MAUCHLINE.................. Asst. Magazine Editor SA L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Sonia B enson. D an R E PO R T E R S: Mika Akikuni, Christina Bailey, Shawn Ellstrom. Kim Foster, Brigid Franzen, Heidi Harris, Jennifer Boyd, Garin Groff, Jason Hill, Paul Matthews, David Straw, Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Emil Petersen, Shane Siren. John Sullivan, Greg Zemeida. SPORTS REPORTERS: Elizabeth Appelen, Todd Kelly, Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, Julie Reuvers, Dawn Wagner. decided by a majority voted among its members. They do COPY ED ITO R S: Bob Felix, Kristine Holter-Sorensen, not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Dave Proffitt. Board members include: JAKE BATSELL JASON OWSLEY JAMES FRUSETTA KRIS FRIDRICH Managing Editor Opinion Editor NewsEditor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer 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 hone N umbers Information ..965-7572 Newsroom ....965-2292 M agazine......965-1695 Advertising...965-6555 Classifieds ....965-6731 O pinion S tate P ress ________________________________ ___________ Friday, April 22,1994 Page 5 As sum m erwear, sw im suits com e for ladies fair Let us go then, you and I, When the sun is blazing in the sky Like some power-shoppers on a quest; Let us go, to a certain fren­ zied street, The avant-garde retreat Of spendy yuppies and hap­ less youth And bars with bands with lit­ tle couth: To m ake a purchase after much consideration A painful, agonized decision That panics my unsettled brain ... Oh, do not ask, ‘What causes you such pain?’ Let us go and buy a swimsuit. ASU mall preachers force, Sports columnist off the mark with radio rights not proffer, Christianity I am writing in response to an act that frequently occurs on the ASU campus. That is, the preaching of the Bible and reli­ gious teachings by evangelical figures and Born Again Christians. 1 myself am a devout Christian. I attend church regularly and try to follow the beliefs of my particular denomination. I do not, therefore, have a problem with Christianity. I do have a problem with the way these "preachers" present it to the University. 1 resent being exposed to such loud and forceful preaching as I walk to the library to study or to the Memorial Union in search of something to eat. I do not seek out these people; they are in full view for all to see and hear, and it is indeed their right to speak freely. But I have rights as well. I do not feel 1 should have to come in contact with these people and their teaching unless 1 choose to do so. There are several religious organizations at the University just as eager to inform students and yet they are organized in such a way that students have the option to come to them if they so desire. These organizations do not force themselves upon the students. The men and women who stand in front of the prominent University buildings shouting phrases such as, “You will die and have never known Christ,” have an impact on every per­ son who walks by. Their preaching is not like a book which we can choose to put away, out of sight and mind. Once their words leave their lips, a message enters our mind and we accept it, to some degree or other. As a Christian who believes many of the teachings of these "preachers,” I am offended. 1 wonder therefore about other students who are not Christian, who are atheist, or who are undecided. I wonder how they feel. Quite possibly they would like to explore religion themselves and not have it forced upon them in such a manner. Since State Press sports columnist Dawn Wagner took the time to ask questions regarding Arizona State University’s recent radio rights “windfall,” I would like to take the time to answer them. First, ASU will not receive approximately $270,000 more per year from its radio contact than it did in previous years as Wagner has suggested. Because much of the new package features dollars earmarked by KTAR for newsprint, radio, television, outdoor and sports guide advertising, ASU will not actually realize those dollars in the budget. The actual figure is less than $200,000. Second, Wagner suggests taking this extra revenue and turning it into additional scholarships for ASU’s Olympic sports, including women’s gymnastics, men’s and women’s tennis or swimming and diving to name a few. Unlike many schools in the Pacific-10 Conference and most across the country, ASU’s Olympic sports are fully funded in scholar­ ships as per the NCAA limit. Each Olympic sport has access to the maximum number of scholarships allowed by the NCAA. To add more would be in violation of NCAA rules. Third, Wagner suggests using the money to promote some of the Olympic sports. The beauty of the new radio agreement is that KTAR will provide ASU with many more opportunities to promote its Olympic sports programs. KTAR and ASU have agreed to produce a 30-minute Olympic sport Coaches Show, featuring coaches and student-athletes, every other week each year of the agreement. This alone will allow us to promote our Olympic sports better than ever. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to answer your questions. Kristin L. Buckler Freshman Undeclared Mark Brand Director of Media Relations- ICA Arizona State University WonderBra article weakened by yet more male bashing Almost. 1 almost made it through Maureen McClamon’s April 6 editorial on the WonderBra hubbub, in agreement with her common sense argumentation. Almost made it all the way through the article without wincing from some erroneous adhom attack (look it up). Almost completed the half-dozen paragraphs without feeling alienated and insulted by her bar­ baric classification of men. 1 will address Ms. McClamon’s personal integrity and abuse of power as a journalist in a moment. First, let’s talk about breasts. It gives me hope for the future of this world when a few souls point out just how ludicrous things like the WonderBra really are. It is ridiculous to think that women are spending hilarious amounts of money in droves to look like Anna Nicole Smith (ignoring the fact that she looks like she could bench-press most of the men who fantasize about her). The American obsession with breasts keeps most foreign cultures laughing at us, all the while fueling the economy with the Product + Breasts = Profits formula. It reminds me of the fun I had in Tucson last year. Some may recall the protest down at the UofA dubbed the ‘Tit-In.” Some women felt that they had the right to feel sun­ shine on their chests, so they checked up on the city ordinance only to discover that Tucson outlaws public display of nipples. Pretty gender-neutral term, that “nipples” is. So a gaggle of feminine funsters went out to the main campus frisbee mall in shorts, sneakers, and a little black square of black tape, legal­ ly As you would expect, crowds gathered, and pictures were snapped while the men stared. There they were: bare breasts in die Arizona sun. The women urged the men to obey the laws that apply to all, and soon topless men tossed frisbees with their nipples covered, too. Then an-amazing thing hap­ pened. When it was all brought out in the open, it quit being a big deal. Men went back to eye contact after getting a look at the objects so hidden by society. Is it any wonder that men ogle the chests of women with the way breasts are treated in America? The French think it’s hilarious. If you treat something like it’s a big deal then it will be a big deal. And I promise that if you ignore the WonderBra, and the philosophy that God only likes D-cups, they will go away, too. Women devote so much time and money to their appear­ ance because that’s how they’ve been taught to compete. Women compete with each other in physical appearance, men compete with money. That might answer some questions con­ cerning wage differences. This crippling system only works if you believe in it; if you let your chest define your existence, it will. And as a point o f information, when the reproductive organs hang inanimately outside of the body, it is sometimes necessary to make a manual adjustment for the sake of com­ fort. I offer a blanket apology if some do this less discretely than others. Trail Potter Sophomore E n g lis h By the pool the people come and go To look, to speak, to tan in sunlight’s rosy glow. . And indeed there will be time For the Arizona sun to pass along its heat In fierce display of unrelenting splendor; There will be time, there will be time To prepare to roast like so much meat;. There will be time to lift and run, And time to smooth the delts and lats To drop the poundage from my waist; Time for yoU and time for me, And time yet for a hundred indecisions, And a hundred visions and revisions, Before the purchase of a suit. By the pool the people come and go To look, to speak, to tan in sunlight’s rosy glow. And indeed there will be time To wonder how it looks and ‘Do I dare?’ Time to turn my back, ascend the stair, With my poly-poly little turn — (They will say; ‘She’s gained a few, and then some.’) Do I dare Show off my suit? In a minute there is time For decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse. For I have known the diets all already, known them all — Have known and mourned my favorite treats I have measured out my life by what I eat I know the muted taste sensation — Pritikin’s extortion Beneath the bland and moderate portions So how shall I presume to find the suit for me? I should have been a Cindy Crawford type Slinking around on MTV. And the wretched swimsuit still waits for my decision! Smooth and silky to the touch, But, oh my gosh, it costs so much. Should I, after coffee and discussion, Have the strength to force the moment to its crisis? But though I have wept and fasted, wept and prayed, Though I have seen my turn grow slightly smaller, I am no Kate Moss.. And in short, I am afraid. Will it be worth it, after all, After the loss of the seventy-dollar fee, Among the sunscreen, the novels, the chlorine and the Cokes, Will it be worth while, To extend my Visa with a sm ile... Couldn’t seventy dollars buy so much more? It is impossible to say just what I mean! I grow old-fashioned... I fear the c u t... I shall wear my swimsuit like a mutt. Shall I part my hair anew? Do I dare to eat a peach? I shall wear my favorite cutoff trousers, and walk upon the beach. I have heard the dizzy coeds chatter, each to each. I do not think that they will tan with me. Diana Lopez a is a second-year law student. State P ress Friday, April 22,1994 P ag e 6 Atlanta prepares for Freaknik ATLANTA (AP) — The complaints fol­ low the students to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., South Padre Island, Texas, Palm Springs, Calif. And to Atlanta. Up to 150,000 college students will pack central Atlanta this weekend for spring break festivities that some residents have come to dread. In the past, city government has tried to discourage “Freaknik," billed as a spring break festival for black college students. But this year, officials are reluctantly w orking w ith organizers on events that include concerts and a parade, but mostly just cruising. This year’s headliners include rap­ pers Snoop Doggy Dogg, Digable Planets and Queen Latifah. “You maybe see a pretty young lady and you want to stop and talk to her. so you just leave the car running.” explained Joseph Greene, 21, of Philadelphia, who drove into town Wednesday evening with three buddies to attend his third Freaknik. The traffic jams made it impossible for some residents to use their cars last year, and some reported vandalism and harassment. Linda Rodrigues said she found a man urinating on her front door last year. She sprayed him with her garden hose. “I remember what it was like to be in col­ lege and want to have fun. but there needs to be more control,” said Ms. Rodrigues, who lives a block from Piedmont Park near down­ town, where the students blocked traffic for three days. She’ll be staying with a friend in another neighborhood this weekend. O rd e r your copy Organizers say the festival pumps $20 million into the area’s economy. After years of trying to discourage it, the City Council agreed this year to pay $175,000 in police overtime and for sanita­ tion and parks services. Mayor Bill Campbell is listed as grand marshal in the kickoff parade, though his office said he wouldn’t actually be there. Former Mayor Maynard Jackson, who like Campbell is black, did not participate in the events. Police Chief Eldrin Bell has ordered spe­ cial court sessions this weekend to handle potential jail overcrowding, drawing criticism from Carolyn Long Banks, a black councilwoman who said it was racially motivated. “It says that we are expecting trouble,” Ms. Banks said. “Last year, we had virtually no trouble.” She would get an argument from Will Jordan, who is also black. “Don’t talk to me about Freaknik. I'm dreading it," said Jordan, who lives near the park near downtown. Last year, he was hours late for work because of gridlock from Freaknik. “I’m get­ ting as far away from here as possible this weekend." The gathering began in 1982 as a picnic held by the D.C. Metro Club, a group of Washington natives attending predominantly black Morehouse and Spelman colleges in A tlanta. It has m ushroom ed since then, though no one seems sure where the name “Freaknik” came from. LISTEN TO The 1993-94 Sun D evil Spark Yearbook of F R O M THE K B A Q D I G I T A L P R O D U C T I O N C E N T E R P A RT OF K A E T / A R I Z O N A S TATE U N I V E R S I T Y to d a y ! KBAQ-FM B iF BOCKS FOR YOOR BOOKS HIGHEST PRICES PAID C L A S S IC A L 89.5 Sunday at 7 PM The Fabulous Fritts with Robert Clark M usic of J, S. Bach: The Clavierubung, Part Three Performed on the Fritts & Com pany organ at the ASU School of Music BOTHER'S BOOKSTORE S t a t e P r ess Crosswords For the cruciverbalist in you. 967-5445 625 EAST APACHE CROSSW ORD by T H O M A S JO S E P H House’ 1 Dunder­ 40 Bridge coup heads (si.) 5 Blubbers 41 Beatty film 9 Fury DOWN 11 Make 1 Trades happy 2 Criminal 13 Concur slangs 14 Moved 3 Com­ carefully pletely 15 Cooking 4 Sault — vessel Marie 16 Seems 5 Oozes 18 Horse 6 Adjective homes for a 20 Born shoppe 21 Villain's 7 Com­ expres­ pletely sion 8 Sound 22 Matinee invest­ star ment 23 June 10 Made honoree 3 1 2 24 Unruly crowd 9 25 Enthralled 27 Ruin com­ 13 pletely 15 29 Actress ■ Lupino 18 30 Colorful bird 32 Removed, ■ 2Ì as coupons H25 26i 34 “Golly!” 29 35 Disney ■ World part 33 32 36 Presides over a 35 case 38 3 8 Comic Martin 39 Bob of ■ t “Full ACROSS K1 M »1■ HI U I iT u *b I TTTTTTì ■ jH 1j i [ jJ ItaiTJTlrm m J [t j I i y i ^I Yesterday’s Answer 27 Greek cross 28 Acted the lecher 30 Tribal symbol 31 Takes a breather 33 PBS science show 37 Corn unit sound 12 Ill-fated auto 17 Apiece 19 Thrash 22 Tiny bit 24 Calendar pages 25 Baptisms and weddings 26 Takes on 5 V ■ 12 11 .« ■ 16 6 14 1 17 20 ■ 22 ■ 24 _ ■ ■ 30 27 m 28 31 ■ 37 ■ m " ’ 39 1 1 ■ 4-22 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR «LONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used :or the three L’s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ipostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ill hints. Each day the code letters are different. 4-22 öo.A Turn upthe decibels. . . crank upthe adventure! FIRST QUEST“, the newInteractive Audio CD adventure game R FIRST OUEST- tolto CO Same: ■ K jfe w Feature« met 60 minutes o! digitally recorded audio CD ^ sound tracks. DUNGEON MASTER*' Screen. M books, player carts, miniatures, © and “ desistiate trademarks ownedbyTSR, Inc.' T O W 1 NFDVY BDF WN DI NCDOBL m ZCRVTAI , FCWXTN GA S WF C SCWZC GBREAL DX R U M & t Jggj BRVY. — N D O V Z A DGNZOVA B ©1994 TSR. Inc. AS R M b Resolved FC A R _ Hw M toOucMm lo Roto-Pityisi GamM CRYPTOQUOTE W m U W d | A U D IO C D G A M E Yesterday's C ry p to q u o te: A FANATIC IS A MAN THAT DOES WHAT HE THINKS THE LORD WOULD DO IF HE KNEW THE FACTS OF THE CASE.—FINLEY PETER DUNNE © 1994 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. Friday, April 22, 1994 S tate P ress P age 7 Write-in counting criticized again ASASU candidate says his votes weren’t tabulated Harkins Luxury Theatres r* • 4efore s"°w Surround A s * 4B 6P> M FS Gourmet Snack B a r • Stereo A denotesSpecw ilEngagementSound i • "B est o f Phoenix - Snack B a rs • Lo w est A dm ission P rices ] • L • ra te Refill on Large Popcorn & Large Drink • Advance m e t Sales 1 ^AD 110. 3:20. 5:30. 7:40.9:SO. 1215«m• a dSl& e*** CHASERS las?o S ch i earn ANNMsnsARr E tckielve! 12:30.2:45. 5:00. 7:tS. 9:30. Mmniqhl .a____ HOUSEOF' tHE SPIRITS 12OS. 3:00. 530. 8:15 » BRAINSCAN *<*«***»*a*,«,can,-. SNAPPER 12.15. 3:05. 6:05. 8 10• A 1245. 3:00.5:15. 7:30. 9:45. Midnight -a ABOVE THElRIM ' ~12:25. 320. 8:10. 8:30 >W FOURWEDDINGS* A FUNERAL TTTJ7 THEPIANO ecUk OOOOLt 115.605. ■ 12:00.2:25, 4:55.7:25, 10:05. 12:30ama PHILADELPHIA fEATURE' 3:35.8:20ecu. ■ THREESOME nvnn Boyw a ewo~n 1u|V SCHINDLER’S LIST 12:00.400.800» ***** •»««»»w JM 1 1.00. 3.15. 530. 8:00. 10IS. 1225am■ 11 THE PAPER *•<»«» n m a a * ™ ciom nrc J 12:05,2:30, 5:05. 7:35. 10:05. 12:25am■ "V* ' r j r r r r L - w m m is WHITEFANG2: MYTHOFTHEWHITEWOLF oN» swnneTomaemn»» a <*« eenw — T CHASERS J 12:15. 2:30. 445. 7:00.9IS Midnightit 12IS.2:30. 4:50, 7.10. 9:40, Midniohl »a H COPS AROBBERSONS BRAINSCAN 12:25, 2:40. 4:55. 710. 915, Midnightj..a__ 12:10, 2 40. 5 10. 730. 9:50. Midnight »a__ SURVIVINGTHEGAME " r*<*4* MAJORLEAGUE2 si» ~ v cm ™ a iw 100. 315. 5:30. 755. 10:00, 12:05am■» _____ 12:20. 2:50. 520. 740, 10:00. 12:15amm.... H D2-THEMIGHTYDUCKS Sw—vtm + o em w *** 12:25.250.5IS. 7:45. 10:1£L12:35am 12:00. 2:30. 5:00. 7:20,9:50. 12:10am»o____ H NAKEDGUN331/3 NAKEDGUN331/3 |.120 320. 5:20. 7:20. 9:20. Midnight ... ^ 1240 3:00.530. 7:50. 1000 12:10am». B y G reg Z emeida State P ress Another hopeful Associated Students of ASU write-in can­ didate has questioned the way write-in votes were tabulated during last week’s elections. Rishi Vohra, who said he was a write-in candidate for the College of Business, said that the write-in votes he and a friend cast for himself were not among the votes listed in the official election results. “This whole election procedure was not very organized,” he said. “I strongly believe that (the election committee) didn’t count the votes right, or (my votes) may have been overlooked.” “If that happened to me, that's what happened to many other students.” Vohra has filed an official complaint with the ASASU Elections Commission. He said he wants them to order a reelection so that he, and all candidates, will have another chance to be officially counted. Last week, another write-in candidate for the College of H c fc ON DEADLY GROUND AIR UR THERE MRS DOUBTFIRE TOMBSTONE 115.3255351 «5.955.« 12453:00515.7309:50*o 1 004 007009 SO«0 U. 13 04 15715 1000» .j III III 1 M1215.2l25.4soIT .710.930«0.. 'REALITY BITES ONDEADLY GROUND MRS DOUBTFIRE GRUMPY OLDMEN . BEETHOVEN'S 2NO MINI-STORAGE 12252.45455.720940■ 12002105007301000m 1245 3005207409 55«om 12352404 40.700.9 10a - j m RESERVE YOUR SPACE A rizona Storage Inns NOW 2235 W. 1st Street 967- 0210 1020 W. 1st Street 968- 3133 112 N. A lm a Sch o o l 964-7317 c j Gain valuable work experience while earning yonr MBA Chapman University, a leading center for economic research, offers a unique MBA program. As an Experience MBA student, you are placed in a meaningful internship position throughout your full-time MBA studies. For more inform ation on the Experience M BA program contact Debra Gonda, 1-800-723-7330. C h a p m a n U n iv e rs ity S ch o o l o f B usiness a n d E co n o m ics Orange, California 609 S. Mill 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e ( C o lle g e & U niversity) 9 67 -4 0 4 9 2 LOCATIONS (AcrossfromCoffee Plantation) 858-0567 KEYSTONE 24 pk cans | No Limit thru Sunday 4/24 Business, Rob Gresser, filed a complaint with the ASASU election commission claiming that the temporary use of sub­ stitute write-in ballot forms caused confusion among voters. He said this lead to many students not voting for the write-in candidates of their choice. The complaint, which was filed against ASASU election coordinator Jonell Lucca, was denied by the election commis­ sion. In a statement released by the commission, they said Lucca “was, at all times, operating under the ASASU elec­ tions code” and they dismissed the charges against her. Lucca reaffirmed what she said last week; that all votes for write-in candidates were counted. She also stated that substi­ tute write-in ballots were used for only a short period of time during the election because the official write-in ballot sleeves were not delivered until after the elections had begun. She said even though two types of ballot forms were used, in no way did that cause any candidates to lose votes. Adena Bernstein, chairperson of the ASASU election com­ mission, said the commission will meet today to discuss Vohra’s complaint. S tate P ress Friday, April 22, 1994 P a g;e 8 William Lynam/State Press Everything Earthly employee David Young, 24, of Tempe, displays a bookbag handmade from hemp fiber. Business at the environmental store has been lackluster in its three years of operation. The Color of M oney Environmental concern butts heads with financial lust B y D avid Strow State P ress Green is representative of forests, trees, plants and life. It is the definitive color of the environmental movement and of Earth Day. the day everybody claims to be an environmental­ ist. It is also the color of money and profits. Often, the two collide — a concern for the environment is often tempered by the lure of big profits. Some businesses have no problem between the two. Eco­ logical Marketing, a public relations firm for environmental businesses, is booming — over 200 businesses employ its ser­ vices. And Natural Lighting, a five-year-old business that promises to save incredible amounts of electricity, is in demand ■ — it recently supplied seven schools in the Kyrene District with natural lighting systems. O thers are suffering econom ically for th e ir cause. Everything Earthly, a “green store” that sells only recycled and recyclable products, is struggling to break even after three years of operation. And Earth Day Arizona, a non-profit organization, will only take funding from those who meet their strict criteria. But with state government, it’s business as usual — money comes first, and environmental agencies such as the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality are crippled by lack of funding. Ellen Bilbry, owner of Eco-logical Marketing, said it is possible to take care of the environment and the pocketbook simultaneously. “They (environmental business owners) do have problems with the competition,” she said. “But my clients are very com m itted to helping the environment.” She seeks out only those businesses which she consid­ ers “environmentally respon­ sible.” “The com petition is fierce,” Bilbry said. “The big corporations will try to buy them out in order to get rid of the competition.” An environmental busi­ owner of ness often finds itself at a handicap. Often, environ­ mental products cost more at the reg ister than regular products. But since clean-up and disposal costs are eliminated, 'green' products are actually a much better bargain, Bilbry said. “At the front end, they do cost more, but there are no dis­ posal costs,” he said. “People just don’t track the costs all of the way through.” three to four years in saved electricity.” Among the buildings to use B ilbury’s system is the Student Recreation Complex. "It’s an older model, though. I'd like to put in a newer model, but ASU probably isn’t going to put up the money to pay for it.” Bilbury wasn’t thinking environmental when he founded his business in 1989. “I was just thinking in terms of the cost of electricity,” he said. “If I can turn the lights out, I can save electricity.” But Bilbury said saving the environment is one of his con­ cerns. “We’ve got to stop consuming electricity and fossil fuels the way we do because of what it does to the environment,” he said. “We also have to remember that there is a finite resource of fossil fuels.” Population growth is accelerating the depletion of fossil fuels, Bilbury added. While it is not a problem in Arizona, which has an energy “surplus,” states such as California will soon feel the pinch. That state will soon be using 80 percent of its electrical production capacity. “They have a choice,” Bilbury said. “They can build more nuclear power plants, they can build more coal plants, or they can reduce consumption by using more things like daylight­ ing. The utility companies there are offering substantial rebates to customers that use things like daylighting.” It’s Not Easy Being Green For Greg Beltz, environmental issues take center stage. Everything Earthly, his three-year old “green store” which sells only recycled or recyclable goods, has yet to turn a prof­ it. But Beltz is not conceding defeat. “My primary motiva­ tion is to make environmen­ tally safe products available to the public and to help pre­ serve the environment,” he . said. “The response to our products is increasing every day, and we are getting some good support from the envi­ ronmental community.” H ow ever, he — Ellen Bilbry, acknow ledged that p ro fit Eco-Logical Marketing does play some role in his business venture. “For a business to be sustainable, it has to be prof­ itable,” he said. “But I’m not in this business to make a mil­ lion dollars. I started it because I had a firm belief in doing business the right way, in a responsible and a sustainable way.” Opinion polls would seem to suggest that stores like Beltz’s would have much more support. “The statistics say that 85 to 90 percent of Americans are willing to pay up to 10 percent more to preserve the environ­ ment,” Beltz said. “That’s probably not true. We’re not see­ ing that survey translated into action enough. “But there are a substantial number of consumers that are willing to pay more for the environment. Those are the con­ sumers that have taken the time and the effort to educate themselves.” However, Beltz has not lost hope in the market. “There are clear trends that environmental products are taking hold in the marketplace,” he said. “I think that there is a huge amount of promise for environmentally responsible businesses. “There is a tremendous amount of potential out there, especially for college students who want to create solutions to the problems that past generations have created.” ‘“‘The competition is fierce The big corporations will try to buy (environmental businesses) out in order to get rid of the competition.” Riches from the Sun For Connie Bilbury, the Valley is literally a gold mine for his environmental product. “There are literally millions of flat-topped, one-story buildings that can take advantage of the sun for their light­ ing,” he said. Bilbury’s product is quite different from a traditional sky­ light. His system employs a system of mirrors which tracks the sun. It then diffuses the sunlight to create even lighting. This solves the problem with skylights, which let tremendous amounts of heat and light into a building, and often add more in air conditioning costs than they save in lighting. “Lighting costs are a large percentage of electrical costs,” he said. “Something like 40 to 60 percent of electricity used goes toward daylight lighting. "In a town like Phoenix, where we get sun 290 days a year, this is ridiculous. Natural lighting can pay for itself in Rejecting the Greenwashers Want to use Earth Day as a P.R. opportunity? Don’t go to Earth Day Arizona, a non-profit organization William Lynam/State Press These beeswax candles, on display at Everything Earthly, were handmade by local artists. The owners of the shop purchase crafts from merchants and artists from all over the state. committed to the environment — so much so that the organi­ zation will not take money from anyone it considers to be environmentally irresponsible. “We recently returned a check from APS (Arizona Public Service),” said John Sanford, chairman of Earth Day Arizona. “It was $500, relatively minor, but we felt we could not accept it. “We are very selective about our sponsors.” The hang-up was Palo Verde, the nuclear power plant on the edge of town that APS operates. ‘T hat is a major problem,” Sanford said. “Some of our sponsors, such as Greenpeace, are opposed to nuclear power. Some other organizations, such as Veterans for Peace, are not opposed to the nuclear plant itself, but are concerned because APS sells its plutonium to the government to make bombs.” T hat alleg atio n was flatly denied by Palo V erde spokesman Mark Fallon. “Uranium is our main fuel, not plutonium,” he said. “We do have some plutonium left over from the fissioning process. It is not weapons-grade plutonium, however. The govern­ ment would have to buy a huge amount of spent corhmercial fuel to gather enough plutonium to make even one bomb.” The two fissionable isotopes, used both in nuclear power plants and in nuclear weapons, are uranium-235 (U-235) and plutonium-239 (Pu-239). Reactor-grade uranium has very low concentrations of U-235 — around 3 percent, according to Fallon. “Weapons-grade uranium is nearly 100 percent (U-235),” he said. Palo Verde employs 241 uranium fuel assemblies. These fuel assemblies have a three-year life expectancy, according to Fallon. Approximately 80 assemblies are replaced annual­ lyThese spent assemblies are then stored on-site. Fallon did not disclose the size of the assemblies. “Currently, there is no nuclear disposal site in the United States,” Fallon said. “All commercial nuclear facilities are responsible for storing their own spent fuel.” The federal government is trying to establish a nuclear disposal site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. However, this site is “years behind schedule.” Spent assemblies contain a number of fission by-products, T urn to Earth, pa ge 9. Friday, April 22,1994 S ta te P ress P l a n e t ’s w e l l - b e i n g a t f o c u s o f E a r t h D a y f e s t i v i t i e s ASU celebration to feature variety of environmental events B y J ake B atsell S tate P ress Today’s ASU Earth Day Celebration will kick off a weekend of environmental events aimed to rejuvenate stu­ dents’ attitudes toward the planet. “In the busy world that we’re all in, students, staff and faculty alike tend to lose sight of the vision of Earth Day,” said Mary C harette, program coordinator for Campus Communities, one of ASU Earth Day’s co-sponsors. “It’s important to have specific time set aside so that people can concentrate and recharge their batteries about the issues of Earth Day.” The celebration — a collaborative effort betw een Campus Communities, the Residence Hall Association and the Associated Students of ASU environmental issues com­ mittee — will take place from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on the Student Services Lawn and Cady Mall. Other weekend environmental activities include tonight’s All Species Dance at Margaret Hance Park in downtown Phoenix from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m., and various events during Phoenix’ “Sunday on Central.” Charette said 28 information booths will accompany bands, entertainment, food and speakers at today’s ASU cel­ ebration. Robert Bullard, an author who writes about envi­ ronmental justice, is scheduled to speak between band per­ formances at about 1:30 p.m. Among the groups represented at the booths will be Greenpeace, the Sierra Club and the Green Party, ASASU environmental issues committee volunteer Maggie Ovson said. “The good thing about Earth Day is that it encompasses all aspects of the environmental movement,” Ovson said. “If we all take care of our environment, we will all benefit. We will all be healthier and happier.” Richard Scott, co-owner of Everything Earthly, a Tempe environmental store, said Earth Day has gained prominence in recent years. ‘There might be more legitimacy to celebrating the plan­ et than there might be, say, for celebrating a person’s birth­ day,” Scott said. “I think (Earth Day) is more and more pop­ ular, because more and more people are coming to under­ stand how important the planet and its life-giving abilities are.” The key to Earth Day is carrying on its message through­ out the year, said Joe Aponte, chair of the ASU Earth Day organizing committee. “I don’t think Earth Day itself is important, because it’s every day that’s important — being consistent on how you recycle and what you recycle,” Aponte said. “We all agree that it’s about time ASU does something to give back to mother nature and stop wasting so much products that can be reused.” Changes in store for campus recycling efforts, official says By S haw n B oyd State P ress An Associated Students of ASU official said on the eve of Earth Day that University recycling programs have room for improvement, but changes are already in the works. “We’re trying to get an educational program dealing with recycling here." said Chris Stone, director of recycling pro­ grams for ASASU. Stone said he is working to establish a University course in the fall to raise environmental awareness among students. Those students could then teach others the following semester. Stone said. He said the recycling program in residence halls is not running at full force “because of a lack of information.” In addition to the class he is working on establishing, Stone said improving accessibility to recycling bins in resi­ dence halls is a top priority. “Not only are we trying to get big bins on each floor of the residence halls, but we’re trying to advise people to get their recyclables outside of their rooms,” Stone said. He said most residents currently have to walk downstairs to the recycling bins. If additional bins, which cost about $60 to $70, are placed in dormitory buildings, Stone said volunteers would most likely gather the material because of a thin University budget. Stone said the University is mandated to recycle 50 per­ cent of paper products, but is exceeding that goal with a 60 percent figure. In other areas that are not mandated, such as plastic and aluminum cans, the University is lagging behind, Stone said. “A pretty scarce amount of individuals are recycling these other things,” he said. He said there are further plans to eliminated sorted recy­ cling, allowing residents to throw all material in the same bin for later sorting. M ary C harette, program co o rd in ato r for Cam pus Communities, said there is a general sense of agreement with recycling efforts on campus. “It’s a complicated issue, but there is a lot of support Ea rth D ay A c tiv itie s ASU Earth Day Celebration 10 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Student Services Lawn and Cady Mall • Will feature bands, food, entertainment, information booths, speakers and arts and crafts. Phoenix All Species Dance 6 p.m .-11 p.m. Margaret Hance Park ( above I-10 tunnel) • The dance has an animal costume theme. from ASU students for recycling,” she said. “The enthusiasm is high and students have made some strong steps toward recycling more aluminum cans (and other materials).” Kolby Granville, vice president of public affairs for the Residence Hall Association, said plans for the fall include separate trash cans for garbage and recyclable items. He said the one problem area has been the lack of recycled aluminum cans. “The paper part has been successful, but the aluminum part has been less than successful,” Granville said. He said the difficulty lies in placing locks on the alu­ minum recycling bins to prevent thefts. Earth C o n t in u e d fro m pa g e 8. and are extremely radioactive. Half-lives of the radioactive isotopes vary from “seven seconds to thousands of years,” Fallon said. “If not stored properly, then they certainly present a haz­ ard,” he said. "But they are safely handled and stored here on-site. They are stored in reinforced structures under several feet of concrete and steel. “They pose no threat to the community or the environment if handled properly.” Falling Victim to Politicians Arizona is unwilling to spend the bucks to clean up the state, and the DEQ is suffering for it. The DEQ, the state’s environmental enforcement agency, receives a mere trickle of the funds it was promised with its inception in 1986. Originally, the agency was to receive a budget of $5 mil­ lion a year to launch a statewide groundwater clean-up cam­ paign. “We have never received anywhere near that,” said Matt Ortega, DEQ Legislative Liaison. “They cut that figure down to $2.9 million, but they never met that. "In fiscal 1993 we only received $1.5 million. That shows you a trend.” The lack of funding and resources also hurts the agency’s ability to prosecute environmental violators, Ortega added. “A lot of environmental laws are new,” he said. “It takes a while to get violators to comply, because we have to construct a database on them, then we have to actually track their behavior. This takes time and money.” But DEQ is making headway in its fight against polluters. “We have collected over $2 million in fines in the past two years,” Ortega said. “Once you start getting some of these violators, it causes others to stay in compliance.” Arizona legislators have given solar power a boost, but not willingly. Recently, the state legislature passed a solar tax credit — a 25 percent refund on solar purchases, up to $1000. The first attempt to pass the bill by itself failed. The tax credit passed only after Rep. Andy N ichols o f Tucson attached it to an unrelated bill as a rider. Nichols was unavailable for comment. Another pitfall that solar power faces is simple aesthetics. Bilbry said that many homeowners’ groups have banned solar systems because “they don’t like the looks of the photovoltaic panels on the roofs of homes.” “This is a real problem,” Bilbry said. “Arizona is not a solar state. It should be. We have to start using all of the sun that we are receiving.” A local radio station recently used solar power in a differ­ ent way. KPSN, or “Sunny 97,” recently conducted a remote broadcast using four solar panels. The remote van was covering a children’s Earth Day festi­ val held at Encanto Park on April 16. Doug Brannan, promotions director for KPSN and its sis­ ter station, KIDR (a children’s station) said that the solar broadcast was an “interesting experience.” In the end, however, money won out over environmental concerns. “The station engineers and I thought that it was a great idea, much easier than starting up a gas generator,” Brannan said. “It’s feasible that we could do this regularly, but the only drawback is that it’s not cost-efficient yet. A gas genera­ tor is a lot cheaper. “Hopefully, when solar power becomes cheaper, we can use the sun to power our broadcasts all of the time.” Engineers take cerem onial oaths; pledge to act ethically B y J o h n S ullivan State P ress There were no pocket protectors, no slide rules, not an engineering cliché in sight at the installation of the Order of the Engineer earlier this week. The meeting was the first of its kind at ASU and included the induction of 56 members into “Link 19,” which covers the Phoenix metropolitan area. The inductees, mostly engineering seniors, were charged by Link Chairman Ron Ewing “to uphold devotion to the standards and dignity of the engineering profession.” The organization is unique in that it has no regular meet­ ings (except for the induction), or dues for its members. A ccording to Susan Leckband, representative of the order’s national board, the concept of “Link” is derived from the original ceremony where the newly inducted members would pick up links in a chain that was spread across the room during the pledge. This symbolized the members of the profession acting in unified goals, she said. The organization had its genesis in Canada in 1926, when a railroad under construction failed and resulted in a number of deaths. A group of engineers reacted to the tragic event by beginning a ritual which included a pledge similar to the Hippocratic Oath given to doctors. The order didn’t appear in the U.S. until 1972 in Akron, Ohio. Engineers received into the order also are presented a stainless steel ring. The ring, wom on the little finger, is remi­ niscent of the original ones, made from the failed railroad structure. According to Ewing, president of the Arizona Society of Professional Engineers, the ring is more than just a piece of jewelry — it’s a statement. “It will say to all who see it: ‘Here is an engineer possess­ ing a dedication to his or her profession and the public they serve,”’ said Ewing. Beta Pi, an engineering fraternity, in conjunction with the ASU Engineering Department sponsored the induction of the members into the order. The link was tfie second one estab­ lished Arizona. The other one covers the Tucson metropolitan Area. Frederick Medanich/State Press Over 50 students and faculty participated earlier this week in taking the “Order of the Engineer.” Johnnie L. Smith, right, Is presented with a ring by Ron Ewing, President of the Arizona Society of Professional Engineers. St a t e P r e s s Friday, April 22, 1994 P age 10 P o l ic e R e p o r t The Sun D evil Spark Yearbook Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Thursday: • A 16-year-old youth fired three rounds into the hood of a man’s car while the man was stopped at a red light at Curry and Scottsdale Roads early Thursday morning. Police said the man was sitting in his car waiting for the light to change when the youth walked across the street and stood in front of the man’s car. When the man yelled at him to move, the kid pulled a 9mm pistol and started shooting. Police apprehended the youth when an anonymous call reported the shooting and an officer noticed the youth leaving the Texaco Food Mart, 1380 N. Scottsdale Road. The victim called the police later from University Drive and Mill Avenue. Reports compiled by State Press reporter Paul Matthews ASU police reported the following incidents Thursday: • A male ASU student and a man unaffiliated with ASU were arrested for possession of marijuana at Palo Verde West. • A male ASU employee reported someone stole a $250 graphics card from a computer disc drive at the Computing Commons. • ASU police recovered a $200 stolen scooter from Area 24. The owner was contacted to recover his vehicle. • A woman unaffiliated with ASU reported that her car was hit with a softball while she was driving northbound on Rural Road by the practice fields. She estimated the damage at $100. • A male ASU student was contacted at Manzanita Hall after he rappelled down the building. He was warned of criminal trespass and left the area. An investment in your lifetime O rd e r yours today for $36.93, Matthew s Center basement, rm 50, 965-6881 « B P Hardware * If we d o n 't h a v e it, we'll g e t it for yo u . •Hardware •Housewares «Phone & TV Cable »Lumber »Paint »Plumbing Supplies •Tools »Balsa Wood »Model-making Supplies »Plus Special Orders 9 6 8 -4 5 4 4 Apache _ Broadway Rural W BO e E M ; _ . 9 2 9 E. B ro a d w a y Whprahoum Record* t ._ _ „ Tem pe (S.E. Corner of Rural 3 Broadway) M-F 7:30a.m. - 8p.it sat. 8a.m. - 7p.m. &<«. 9a.m. - 5p.m. One of these high-speed, high-performance machines can be yours for low monthly payments. The other one is just here for looks. Lamborghini Diablo VTwitb leather interior, cool wheels anda natty, natty, nattyfast engine. PowerMacintosh 6100/60 8/160with an tp fa t Color Plus 14"Display, an AppleExtendedKeyboardIIand mouse. Right now, when you qualify for the Apple Computer Loan, you could pay as little analysis, simulations, video editing and much more. Without wasting time. If you’d irer Macintosh, mauiiiusu, visit visu like further information on Power as $33* a month for a Power Macintosh-! Itis one of the P o w e r M a c in t o s h fo r $ 3 3 a m o n th . your Apple Campus Reseller. You’re fastest, most powerful personal computers ever. Which means you’ll have the ability to run high-performance programs like statistical sure to find a dream machine that’s well within your budget. :Appled. For more information visit ASU Bookstore Mon-Fri 9:00-5:00, Sat 10-2 or call 965-8963 Month!)'payment ts an estimate basedon an AppleComputerLoan of$2,122for thePowerMacintosh 6100/608/160shown above. Priceand loan amounts are basedon Apple'sestimate ofhigher educationprices as ofFebruary 1994. Computersystemprices, monthlypaymentsand loan amounts may vary. See yourAppleCampus Resellerfor currentprices. A55% loan originationfee will be addedto the requestedloan amount, the interest rateis variable, basedon the commercialpaper rateplus535%- Forthe month ofFebruary, 1994, the interest ratewas 834%, withan APRof10.14%. 8-year loan term with no prepaymentpenalty. Themonth!)'payment shown assumes no deferment ofprincipal or interest (deferment will changeyour monthlypayments). TheAppleComputerLoan issubject to credit approval. <5)1994AppleComputer, Inc. All rights reserved AppleandtheApplelogoare registeredtrademarks ofApple Computer, Inc. PowerMacintosh is a trademark ofAppleComputer, he. P a g e 11 Friday,April 22, 1994 S tate P ress Com e in fo r a COLD, FROSTY, GOLDEN PITCHER OF BEEEER Sneaky Pete's S p o r t s B a r 8c L o u n g e Happy Hour Seven Days a Week! 1 1 :3 0 - 7 p .m . $4.00 pitchers $1.50 wells & domestic longnecks 2155 E. University (at Price) 350-9328* Hrs. 1 1:3 0 - l:30 am M-Sun. Bring in this ad and get $ 1 .00 off any purchase. Moosehead specials ■ 'and FREEBIES! 1 “U ... p r o a r io u s K IL L IN G L Y F U N N Y ... K athleen T u r n e r I s D y n a m it e In A P e r f o r m a n c e T h a t K e e p s S p r in g in g S u r p r i s e s !” - P e te r T ra v e rs . R O L L IN G STO N E KATHLEEN TURNER “A warmly funny movie that even a mother could love.” - Carvn James. THE NEW YORK TIMES W hy drive? P a r t ttf The tpne qg|§| 3 ride ourbtts tothe showt'-j^p Æ Ë S - I S I S W k H ÉL w b B L . MS _____ '¿ S ì A New Comedy By John Waters. E L ® * S t a t e P ress P o lic e R epo rt s - T oo bizarre to be a n y th in g but real 1 7 7 7 5 nriTEE Audio Reinforcement Aift'iiitMiW B O O G IE M U S IC •**■***' M« * T H E s l ? O ï « • * it 1 M a swot nat tp riLUSL ma j » 1 STAR TS TO DAY AMC SPORTSPLEX SCOTTSDALE 7 ISJO P A S S E S O R D I S C O U N T C O U P O N S A C C E P T E D STATE P r e s s Crossw ords - G o a h e a d ...d o th e m in ink. e»wermiCT- SSSM U M O ‘AKTi MewMuac Source' Proudly Present: O P U S . 2 w m m m WÈËÊSSËNÈ 8 11 WÊÊMfâmMmêm Special comedy performance from The Farce Side Karaoke contest, great prizes and MORE!! Don't miss it! Friday, A pril 22 SAT. APRIL 23 11:00 am - 7:00 pm Palo Verde Beach A.S.U. The Second Annual Opus 2 Amateur Band Competition fea­ tures selected amateur (unsigned) bands competing for cash prizes, gift certificates from M ilano Music, air time on 106.3 FM "The Edge", time in AAZTEC Recording Studio, and the honor of being named ASU's favortie new band of 1994. BAND FINALISTS ALTERNATIVE n ig h t 2 for 1 A n y Drink 8-10pm N o C o v e r b efore 10pm $1 Drafts 10-Close Ed g e cutting Alternative D a n ce Music S o ty rc í< 3 y :A p !Í2 3 CLASSIC ALTERNATIVE NÏG ÏÎT W à sé c Alternative M usic Of th e 1 2 f o r | i i f c p r l n k 89l 3Q p rn 4M *?** * * * 0 *** I I E x c lu s iv e ly a t... Scottsdale Rd.& 5fh Ave. I ■ ____________________ 956-4AMC _________________________ intrato g 6820 E. Fifth Avenue, Scottsdale 994-4168 Page^2 Friday, April 22, 1994 S tate P ress P rescriptio n fo r D eath P h y s ic ia n s ' r o le s in d e a th p e n a lt y s c r u t in iz e d B y M ary L eigh Summerton State P ress Randy Greenawalt sat down heavily into the brown metal folding chair. He said he was ready to die. He shifted in his seat, and his handcuffs jingled, causing the two guards at either side of him to reach for their weapons. “I’m not going anywhere, man,” he said, looking at the thick plastic that extended to the ceiling. “Isn’t that obvious? I ’m never going anywhere again.” Greenawalt is an inmate of Arizona State Prison in Florence, one of the 2,588 people currently on death row in the United States. His case is currently under appeal. If Greenawalt is executed, it will be under the pre­ scription orders of prison physician, Dr. David Wilbert. Under Arizona and Federal laws no drugs may be administered to a person without a doctor’s written pre­ scription. A nationwide ethical dilemma has developed over lethal injection because a physician must order the execution. “What a f---------joke,” said Greenawalt, who was convicted and sentenced to death for murdering a Yuma family of four after escaping from Arizona State Prison on July 30, 1978. “The doc is going to prescribe my death.” He tilted his head back and laughed. “The worst part of it is that people are going to be there watching. I hate that idea. I don’t want people laughing at me when I die.” AMA OBJECTS TO physician’s role The American Medical Association in conjunction with the World Medical Association, the American College of Physicians and the American Public Health Association have written a resolution that would exclude physicians from any type of involvement in capital punishment. The resolution states that the Hippocratic Oath has been interpreted as prohibiting physician participation in executions. It also requests that the U.S. government allow lethal injection drugs to be used without written prescription. Dr. Oscar Clarke, chairman of the Council on Ethical and Judicial A ffairs of the A m erican M edical Association, said that death by lethal injection presents a problem for physicians because prescribing drugs that will cause death is not compatible with the life-saving oath a physician must take. “The Hippocratic Oath states in part that ‘I will use treatment to help the sick according to my ability and judgment, but never with a view to injury and wrong­ doing. Neither will I administer a poison to anyone when asked to do so nor will I suggest such a course,’” Clarke said. The AMA is submitting its resolution to the United Nations in January. It plans to lobby before the United Nations to ask for support in denouncing physician par­ ticipation in capital punishment worldwide. “Using medical devices and methods for execution distorts the lifesaving purposes of medical technology and medical tools,” Clarke said. “Physician participation in a process that has medi­ cal overtones, but ultimately causes involuntary death, in Washington D.C., 77 percent of the people in the United States favor the death penalty and 36 states have adopted laws making capital punishment legal. In 1992, Arizona citizens voted 611,790 to 183,099 to change the state’s method of execution from the gas chamber to lethal injection. The state has executed three prisoners since 1992, two by lethal injection. Wilbert said participation in an execution is part of his duty as a citizen because the execution takes place under the authorization of the government. L ethal prescriptions kept on file “Physicians have a moral duty to ensure that the exe­ The drugs that will be used to execute Greenawalt and other prisoners are the same that are used as anes­ cution is carried out in the most humane and painless way possible,” Wilbert said. thesia for surgical procedures. “Physician participation would not signal approval According to Hal Wand, deputy director of the Arizona State Board of Pharmacy, written prescriptions of the taking of a life, but compassion for the person to be executed.” for the execution drugs are on file at the prison pharmacy. Clarke said the duty as a physician and healer should Physicians, however, may try to get around the come before any other obligations. requirement of writing a prescription. “The specific procedure can be performed by non­ “The physician has a DEA (Drug Enforcem ent Agency) number which allows him to order drugs physicians with no more pain or discomfort for the pris­ through a drug wholesaler,” Wand said. “He can then oner,” Clarke said. “While physician participation may potentially add some degree of humanness to the execu­ administer them without writing a prescription. “But there must be a record of the drugs, either a tion of the individual, it does not outweigh the greater harm of causing death to the individual. prescription or a purchase invoice.” “Government approval or authorization of an act Whit Weeks, the pharmacist for the Arizona State Prison said he could not comment on the pharmacy does not constitute a requirement on the part of any citi­ zen to take action. An example of this is voting. An records. Percy Howard, prison health administrator said, “I’m election is authorized by the government but it is not mandatory to vote.” not sure where the records are kept.” In 1993, M ichael A rra, A rizona C orrections Department spokesman, said physicians are not directly A rizona changed death penalty According to the Death Penalty Information Center involved in the executions. “We do employ most of the AMA recommenda­ tions,” Arra said. “Our physicians do not prescribe or administer pre-execution tranquilizers. They do not •The electric chair select the fatal injection site, and they do not supervise The prisoner is strapped to the chair with belts the execution personnel.” that cross the chest, groin, legs and arms. Two cop­ One citizen claim s that W ilbert is unethically per electrodes are then attached, one to the leg on a involved in the state’s executions. patch shaved bare to reduce resistance and another Adele Clark, the widow of executed prisoner James to the prisoner’s shaved head. The electrodes are Dean Clark, submitted a complaint to the state Medical soaked in brine or treated with gel (Electro Creme) Board of Examiners last week complaining that Wilbert to increase conductivity and reduce burning. The selected her husband’s injection site. prisoner will be wearing a diaper. The board dismissed the claim, and issued a state­ An executioner gives a first jolt of between 500 ment that said Wilbert did not violate any guidelines. and 2,000 volts, which lasts for 30 seconds. The prisoner’s eyeballs sometimes pop out and Since Clark filed her complaint, Arra has declined to rest on the cheekbones. The prisoner often defe­ comment on the issue. cates, urinates and vomits blood and saliva. The Doug Cerf, the board’s executive director, said there body turns bright red as its temperature rises, and is a difference between what is ethical and what is legal. the prisoner’s flesh swells and his skin stretches to “Ethics, until they are part of the statutes, cannot be the point o f breaking. Sometimes the prisoner enforced,” said Cerf, who is retiring from the board on catches on fire. Witnesses hear a loud and sustained May 1. sound like bacon frying and the sickly sweet smell “This is unclear to many people. of burning flesh permeates the chamber. “The specific complaint alleged that the doctor A physician then examines the prisoner. If he is checked the patient’s veins for the injection site. The not (¿ad, another jolt is applied. board’s conclusion, after much debate, was that this is •The gas chamber not prohibited.” The prisoner is strapped to a chair. Beneath the Cerf said that a specific protocol is set up in the chair in the gas chamber is a bowl filled with sulfu­ department of corrections to order execution drugs. ric acid mixed with distilled water, with a pound of “The board is mostly concerned if the physician is sodium cyanide pellets suspended in a gauze bag competent to fulfill his medical duties,” he said. just above. After the door of the chamber is sealed, the executioner in a separate room flicks a lever Arra said that the prison does not break any laws, that releases the cyanide into the liquid. This causes and the three drugs required to execute a prisoner are a chemical reaction that releases hydrogen cyanide purchased in a premixed package. gas which rises through the holes in the chair. “Prison employees give the initial needle stick into At first, there is evidence of extreme horror, pain the prisoners arm,” he said. “They are the ones who and strangling. The prisoner’s eyes pop, the skin start the IV running. It is completely voluntary on their turns purple and he starts to drool, prisoners who part to participate in an execution.” die in the gas chamber die of hypoxia, or the cut-off of oxygen to the brain. The initial result of hypoxia L ethal injection procedures outlined is a seizure. Because of the straps, however, invol­ untary body movements are restrained. Greenawalt’s attorney, Denise Young of the Capital further distorts the purpose and role of medicine and the medical professional in the preservation of life. The image of physician as executioner under circumstances mimicking medical care risks the general trust of the public. “Lethal injection requires that mechanisms that are ordinarily used to preserve life in a medical setting be used to cause death and that a person with at least some medical knowledge perform the procedure.” Other death penalty techniques Friday, April 22, 1994 S ta te P ress P ag e^L 3 Associated Press Arizona Department of Corrections spokesman Mike Arra (above) ponders reporters' questions about the bed, which is used for executions by lethal injection at the Arizona State Prison in Florence. Randy Greenawalt is currently on death row for murdering a family of four near Yuma in July, 1978. Jack Kevorkian, (left) retired Michigan pathologist, has proposed a method of execution that would allow physicians to harvest the organs of executed inmates prior to their legal deaths. “They can pay their debt by saving someone s life, Kevorkian said. Representation Project in Tempe, a non-profit organiza­ tion dedicated to raising the level of representation in capital cases, said the execution process is a “horren­ dous experience.” “We approved lethal injection, not to ease the pain of the prisoner, but so we are not repulsed when we wit­ ness it,” Young said. Young has not witnessed an execution, but a col­ league of hers, attorney Jim Belanger, witnessed the execution of Don Harding, who was executed in the gas chamber. Harding was the state’s first execution in more than 25 years. “The H arding execution was a grisly a ffa ir,” Belanger said. He said lethal injection is more “palatable” to the public than the gas chamber. “Many people are familiar with injections,” said Belanger. "People think the executed person is just going to sleep. “But nobody really knows.” Young said inmates are kept in a “cage” near the execution room during the last 24 to 48 hours of their lives. During the last six hours, the inmates are no longer allowed to have family visits. During their last two hours, the inmates cannot see anyone, including their attorneys. “I can’t think of any reason this is done,” she said. When the state executes prisoners, they are taken to a very small, white room deep within the prison. A hospital gurney covered with a sheet will be wait­ ing for them. A telephone hangs on the wall just outside the door. If it rings in the hour before the execution, it will mean a stay of execution has been granted. If the telephone remains silent, the execution will continue as planned. The gurney is equipped with an extension panel for the inmates’ left arms, where the catheter needle will be stuck. Long tubes connect the needle to several intra­ venous drips. The first dispenses a harmless saline solu­ tion, where the fatal drugs will be injected. Then the black curtains go up. Spectators will witness the execution through large glass windows. Directly opposite the gurney, with the best view of the inm ates, will be the family and friends of the inmates’ victims. The inmates’ family, attorney and public witnesses, who witness the execution to make certain the state completes the punishment, watch the execution from another window. At the signal of the prison director, a “death worker” will start the intravenous drip. The first drug released will be sodium thiopental, a common barbiturate used as an anesthetic. A normal dose for a long operation is 1,000 milligrams. Death row inmates are given twice that dose. When they lose consciousness, the executioner administers 100 milligrams of pavulon, a muscle relaxant. This should stop the inmates from breathing. Then to speed up the death, a dose of potassium chloride is given to stop the heart from pumping. The whole procedure takes about 10 minutes. On average, one person in the United States will join Greenawalt on death row every day of the year. Deutsch was approached by Oklahoma Sen. Bill Dawson in 1977 to invent a method of execution that would be a cheaper alternative to repairing the state’s electric chair. “It was not that difficult,” Deutsch said. “It is easier to kill a person with the drugs that an anesthesiologist uses during surgery than it is to keep them alive. That’s why it takes 12 years to become an anesthesiologist. Those drugs are deadly.” Although the AMA has always forbade physicians from the production, inspecting, testing or maintaining of lethal injection devises, many methods of execution have been developed by physicians as a means of mak­ ing capital punishment more humane. Dr. Joseph Guillotine’s method to quickly decapitate a person was considered to be less painless than the methods of death-by-torture executions that were com­ mon throughout the world until the 18th century. The state of New York introduced the electric chair, developed by a group of physicians to cause cardiac arrest in 1890. K evorkian suggests organ donations Even Jack Kevorkian, the retired Michigan patholo­ gist who has helped 20 people with chronic, painful dis­ eases to commit suicide, has proposed a method of exe­ cution. Kevorkian, who is currently on trial for violating Michigan’s ban on assisted suicide, proposed that a prison physician anesthetize the inmate to the point of brain death, then remove the heart, lungs, pancreas, kid­ neys, liver, intestines and eyes. “The people on death row owe society a debt,” Kevorkian said sorting through letters from inmates that he has corresponded with during the last five years. “They can pay their debt by saving someone’s life.” During the 1950s, Kevorkian wrote letters to men on Inventor says it is ‘peaceful death ’ death row asking that they donate their bodies to him Dr. Stanley Deutsch, chairman of the Anesthesiology after their death. Department at Oklahoma University Medical School, “All the methods of execution we currently have inventor of the method for lethal injection, compared it destroy the prisoner’s body. to the way a devoted owner treats a faithful dog he’s “We need to do this. It’s cheap, efficient, and it gives loved and cherished. back to the community.” “Someone’s moment of death, no matter how terrible Each day, Arizona inmates are given a vitamin sup­ the crime, should be accorded some measure of respect. plement with their meals. Greenawalt said, “I’ve gotta be good and healthy Lethal injection gives the condemned a peaceful death,” before I die.” said Deutsch. C o m ic s St a t e P F rid ay, A p r il 22 , 1994 Page 14 Calvin and Hobbes by B ill W a tte rso n YOUR PARENTS TOLDYOU TO BEHAVE TONIGHT, REMEMBER?/ THEY’RE HOT GOING TO BE HAPPY WEN THEY HEAR ABOUT THIS/ VMR STUPENDOUS SPEED, STUPENDOUS MAN IS OUT S E E , IF NE HAD BOUGHT A DOG INSTEAD, LIRE I WANTED, WE GOULD GO OUT LIKE THIS ALL ^ THE TIM E. I T||( F A R M D E ress By G A RY LARSON HONEY, WE CAME HERE TO RELAX. LETS TALK ABCWT SOMETHING * BY GARRY TRUDEAU D o o n e sb u ry “So, Professor Sadowsky, you’re saying that your fellow researcher, Professor Lazzell, knowing full well that baboons consider eye contact to be threatening, handed you this hat on that fateful day you emerged from your Serengeti campsite.” NEW YORK (AP) — Ellen DeGeneres is following the formula for comics who want to write books. She got a TV sitcom first. Her book lacks a title and is due out in fall 1995, said Irwyn Applebaum, president and publisher of Bantam Books. It’s Bantam's third signing of a comedian-tumed-sitcom star, counting Jerry Seinfeld and Paul Reiser. DeGeneres appears on ABC’s “These Friends of Mine.” "I hope to follow in the tradition of Mark Twain, Ernest Hemingway and Jackie Collins,” DeGeneres said through a publicist. “I’ve never really read a book but I read a lot of magazines.” CLEVELAND (AP) — Billy. Elton. Only you could can a concert in the future home of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. Fans stood in line for hours to buy tickets for the Joel and John show July 14 in Cleveland. A Belkin Productions offi­ cial said Wednesday it was canceled “due to the lack of ticket sales in the Cleveland area and logistical concerns.” Barry Gabel, a company senior vice president, wouldn’t say how many tickets were sold for the show at Cleveland Stadium. S t a t e P r ess Sports - W e w rite from the field, the floor and the locker room . BE$T B U Y $ 2 4 LONDON........... ... 660 FRANKFURT .... ....785 PARIS/MUNICH........785 MADRID.................805 SHANNON/DUBUN.....745 ATHFNS 875 ROME/MItAN..... ....785 BUDAPEST/PRAGUE......795 4 - 2 4 4 TOKYO............... ...579 TAIPEI/HONG KONG.....729 SEOUL/MANIIA..... ...755 KUAIA LUMPUR...... ...899 JOHANNESBURG... .1595 DUBAI/MUSCAT... ..1150 KARACHI............. ...999 BOMBAY/DELHI..... ...999 6 MADRAS.......... ... 1108 MINNEAPOUS.... .....279 ATLANTA.......... .....308 NEWARK.......... .....263 NEW YORK....... ..... 273 DALLAS............ .....250 HOUSTON........ .....188 HONOLULU....... .....359 MEXICO CITY..... .....238 Restrictions A pply • O ther Lo w Fares A vailable FALCON WINGS FOR TRAVEL_____ A S U Earth D a y 5 Friday, April22 Startsat 10:30am R ita D ove Former ASU Creative Writing Professor Rita Dove talks about her life and work on Bill M oyers' Journal. ge P ° Residence Hall Association Cady Mall & Student Services Lawn WATCH TONIGHT AT 9 A n in te rv ie w w ith P u litz e r P rize -w in n e r, U .S . P o e t L a u re a te , a n d te rm e r A SU P ro fe sso r Be Active Them e: H an ds on E arth R e sp e c t & P ro te c t P r o g r a m s ta u n t u n y o u ta u n t o n - y u u ! for life. . . • love, hale, and death " Rita Dove KAET P a rt of A r iz o n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity Sports State P ress Friday, April 22,1994 ___________________________________ Sun D evils approaching stretch run ports Briefs S G olf heads to Stanford for ILS. Intercollegiates The No. 5 ASU men's golf team com­ petes in the annual U.S. Intercollegiates at the S tanford G olf C ourse on the Stanford campus Saturday and Sunday. ASU coach Randy Lein will field a lineup consisting of Todd Demsey, Chris Stutts, Larry Barber. Chris Hanell and Scott Johnson. The tournament features 18 teams, in c lu d in g ASU, Fresno S tate, USC, UCLA, California, UC-Irvine, UC-Santa Barbara, Nevada, New Mexico State, Oregon, Oregon State, Pacific, USF, San Jo se S tate, U TEP, W ashington and Washington State. T he team s w ill play 36 holes on S atu rd ay and 18 on Sunday. The Stanford Golf Course features a 6,786yard, par-71 layout. The Sun Devils will be looking for a strong finish, after placing first to defeat No. 1 Oklahoma State at the Thunderbird Invitational last weekend. It will be the team’s last tournament before the Pac-10 Championships begin on May 1. N o . 1 0 A S U w a n ts w in s again st G o ld e n Bears Stanley Cup Playoffs CONFERENCE QU ARTERFIN ALS {Best-of-7) EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Rangers 5, N.Y. Islanders 1 Rangers lead series 3-0 Washington 2, Pittsburgh 0 Capitols lead series 2-1 New Jersey 2, Buffalo 1 Devils lead series 2-1 Boston 6, Montreal 3 Bruins lead series 2-1 NBA Roundup Charlotte 95, Boston 89 New York 130, Philadelphia 82 Miami 94, Atlanta 89 Houston 126, Dallas 100 Utah 122, Portland 111 Golden State 121, Sacramento 96 Baseball Roundup AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 4 , Seattle 2 Boston 6, Oakland 5 Cleveland 10, Minnesota 6 Milwaukee 6, Chicago 4 California 11, Baltimore 8 Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 6, San Francisco 1 Montreal 5, San Diego 4 Los Angeles 13, New York 3 Only games scheduled Compiled from staff and AP reports. Page 15 Brian Fitzgerald/State Press ASU center fielder Jacob Cruz’s sweet swing propelled him to five hits, including three doubles, in five at-bats Tuesday against Grand Canyon. Cruz now leads the Six-Pac in hit­ ting with a .408 average. Cruz and the rest of the Sun Devils open a three-game series against California tonight. B y M ike B ranom State P ress A lthough m ost ASU baseball fans haven’t noticed, there is a parallel which can be drawn between the lOth-ranked Sun Devils and a certain local NBA basketball team. ASU (32-14 overall, 13-8 Six-Pac) will see if the analogy holds up over the week­ end when it begins a three-game series at California tonight. First pitch is scheduled for 7 p.m tonight at Evans Diamond with Saturday and Sunday’s games beginning at 1 p.m. ASU’s scheduled starters are Billy Neal (4-4, 4.46 ERA) tonight, Kaipo Spenser (70, 4.23) Saturday with Sunday’s hurler yet to be determined. Both the Suns and Sun Devils enjoyed magical seasons last year, with each team accomplishing feats they had never done before. Phoenix won 62 games, its bestever showing in a season. ASU swept USC at Dedeaux Field, something none of Coach Jim Brock’s squads (or Bobby Winkle’s, for that matter) had ever done. Each team reached the finals, but both fell short w ith the Suns falling to the Chicago Bulls and ASU being eliminated after two gam es at the C ollege W orld T urn t o B aseball , page 17. Track tu n in g up for Penn Relays S u n D e v ils to fa c e in - s ta te B y E lizabeth A. A ppelen State P ress The ASU track and field team may be completing against in-state rivals UofA and NAU Saturday in Tucson, but for the Sun Devils it’s ju st more preparation for the upcoming-Penn Relays. “I think that for UofA there seems to be that sense of rivalry more,” ASU sprinter Michaelene Tetteh said. “Last year, for us it was just a meet, but for them, they wanted blood.” ASU head coach Leonard Braxton said the ASU team is going to take advantage of the lighter competition this weekend and let his better athletes rest up for the Penn Relays, which is held next weekend. “The meet probably means a lot more to UofA and NAU than it does to me at this fo e s U o fA , N A U point in tim e,” Braxton said. “W e’ll go in and experiment a little and train through this.” T hirteen Sun D evil athletes have set qualifying marks for either the Pac-10 Championships or the N C A A Championships. 10 of T oney those athletes have recorded NCAA Automatic Qualifiers. Field athlete Nick Hysong pole vaulted a 18-5 3/4-foot (5.67m) mark to qualify him and set the outdoor school record at the Sun Angel Classic earlier this month. Hysong said he is looking forward to competing at UofA because of their good facilities. “Pole vaulting is a weird event,” Hysong said. “ICs not like anyone is out there to beat someone else. It’s basically you and the bar.” Other NCAA Automatic Qualifiers are sprinters Kim Toney and Janice Nichols, who both qualified in the 800 meters with times of 2:03.41 and 2:04.11, respectively. “This past weekend, I ran an automatic qualifying time so this weekend I am looking to do more conditioning,” Nichols said. Two women’s relays, 4x400 meter and the 4x100 meter, also have set NCAA auto­ matic qualifying tim es. M embers of the 4x400 meter relay are Sun Devils Jacqui Gayle, Tayo Akinremi, Lade Akinremi and Shanequa Campbell. These sprinters have set a school record of 3:29.77 at the Sun Angel Classic and are predicted by Track & Field T urn t o T rack , page 17. D e v ils h it road; ro a d to h it b ack Killer schedule may keep ASU from ending 12-game slide B y T o d d K elly S tate P ress ASU’s murderous softball schedule continues this week­ end as the Sun Devils (16-33 overall, 1-11 Pac-10) travel to Washington, Oregon and Oregon State for three days of con­ ference double-headers. Coming off a doubleheader blowout last Wednesday night from No. 1 UofA, ASU looks to end its 12-game losing streak in the possibly unfriendly confines of the Northwest. First up is No. 11 Washington at 1:30 p.m. Friday. The Huskies are 6-8 in the Pac-10 but 29-17 overall. They have not played since dropping two games to UCLA on April 16. ASU leads the all-time series with Washington four games to three, but all the losses have all come this season. Washington is in its second year of softball. “Can we beat Washington? Yes,” ASU coach Linda Wells said after the UofA game. “How are we going to have to do that? We’ll see.” Individually, the Huskies are led by Jennifer Cline, who has seven home runs this season, and Michelle Church, who T urn t o S oftball , page 16. Craig Macnaughton/State Press A S U ’s Jeanne Redondo slides into second base Wednesday for her seventh stolen base, good for eighth in the Pac-10. Redondo and the rest of the Sun Devil softball team begins a six-game road trip today at Washington. State Press Friday, April 22, 1994 Page 16 Ryan looking for diamonds late in draft Rejoicing Red Sox TEMPE (AP) — A seven-round draft holds no mysteries, for Buddy Ryan. The Arizona Cardinals general manager-coach, who coached in Philadelphia for five years, has found Pro Bowlers in rounds which no longer exist. In 1986. Ryan landed linebacker Seth Joyner in the eighth round and defensive end Clyde Simmons in the ninth. This year, he changed tactics by signing Joyner and Simmons as free agents. But Ryan believes a replay is possi­ ble in a draft rated strong in wide receivers, which the Cardinals don't need, and thin in tight ends, which they do. "I think there is somebody like Seth, but the proof is in the pudding," Ryan said. “ They guy I'm thinking about tak­ ing late, and maybe also an early free agent, could step up and be that type of guy. 1 mean, they have that type of quality. Now. whether they have the same inner fire as Joyner or Clyde Simmons is something else." The Cardinals have the No. 10 pick and two in the second round after receiving compensation for the loss of strong safety Tim McDonald to San Francisco before the 1993 sea­ son. Ryan said he would take any player with superstar poten­ tial. "We have a lot of priorities, but if there’s certain people there, we’re going to take them, whether they’re offense, defense or who they are," he said. But the Cardinals need more help on defense. "O ur offense was second, ninth, eighth — all in single digits in the league last year," Ryan said. “ Our defense was 27th, 28th, 22nd, so that tells you right there where you need work." Last year, college-scouting director Bob Ackles master­ minded a strong draft. Six of the eight choices made the team, and Ryan said offensive linemen Ernest Dye and Ben Coleman and running back Ron Moore will start. Garrison Hearst. the No. 3 choice overall and the first run­ ning back taken in the draft, was a bust, however. He held out, missed the preseason and was injured in the sixth game. Ryan has tried to trade the 10th pick and H earst to Cincinnati for the Bengals’ No. 1 pick and a shot at Ohio State defensive lineman Dan Wilkinson, who has “ the atti­ tude of Alan Page and the size of Reggie White.” The Bengals rejected the offer. If not Wilkinson, Ryan might try for Nebraska linebacker Trev Alberts or a pass-rushing defensive end to pair with Simmons. Among free agents he did not invite back this season are tight ends Walter Reeves, Butch Rolle and Pat Beach. Associated Press Boston Red Sox center fielder Otis Nixon, center, is congratulated by pitcher Roger Clemens, right, as the rest of the team pours onto the field to join in after Nixon connected with a double during the bottom of the ninth inning to push the Red Sox ahead of the Oakland Athletics into a 6-5. The win gave the Red Sox a three game sweep of the Athletics at Fenway Park. Softball____ C o n t in u e d fr o m pa g e 15. has knocked in 45 RBIs, which ranks her fourth in the Pac-10 and 14th nationally. Teresa Wilson started the Huskie program after stints at Oregon, where she was named Division I Coach of the Year in 1989, and Minnesota, where she was Big Ten Coach of the Year in 1991. ASU’s freshman Tina Ruff feels confident heading into the road trip. “W e’re going to do it,” she said, referring to ending the losing streak this season. “We should win a majority of the games this weekend.” Ruff claimed her team would pull off a sweep of Washington on Friday. Oregon’s bats do not measure up to Washington’s. In fact, the Sun Devils have a higher team batting average than the Ducks, .269 to .263. Oregon, whose starting lineup is identical to last year’s 18- $599 16 squad, is coached by Tami Brown, a 1985 graduate of ASU and former shortstop who was an all-conference per­ former from 1982 to 1984. Laura Schmidt, named Pac-10 player of the week Monday, is tenth in the Pac-10 in RBIs with 28 in only 36 games. Kathy Stahl, an all-Pac 10 team selection as a freshman in 1993, has 30 runs this season, ninth in the Pac-10, and has three home runs and two triples. The other Oregon team, Oregon State, finds itself near the bottom of the Pac-10 pile along with ASU. The Beavers are 16-29, with an 0-12 conference record, one game behind the Sun Devils. Two freshm an p itch ers, Amy W arner and H eather Reynolds, have been the pitching threats for OSU this season. Warner has been the more successful, with a 12-16 record and a 2.61 ERA. Warner was 24-0 in high school. Spend Your $ I N Europe, Not Getting There Complete Macintosh System! The Macintosh LCII is an ideal computer for your college work. Why wait in the Commons for a Mac when you can get the job done right in the comfort of your own home. The Mac LC II is great for writing essays or finishing term papers. This complete package includes 4 Megs of RAM, 40 Meg Hard Drive. Key­ board. Mouse, and I'T Grayscale Monitor. Hurry, quantities are limited! (Add $249 for HP DeskWriter printer.) We also have a special price for a PowerBook 160 4/80. For just $1199, you get a PowerBook 160 4/80, with 25MegHz microprocessor, and built-in video for an external color monitor. ^ Com puters P lus C om pan y (U V k e He w l e t t * Pa ck ard Authorized Dealer 2303 N. 44th St #2; Phx. A Z 85008 2nd traffic light North of M cb o w e ll R d on 44th Street PH* 955 1404 Authorized Dealer Right nowfora lim ited time, Blown &Brown Cheviolei • Geo isoffeiingcollegegraduates $400OFF! lfyou'rearecentor soonto becollegegraduate, sim­ plystepbyfora testdrive&)ou'll receive a $400 ForDetails or More htformation Contact CraigDarlingor JohnFaro ©W B7-8B3 You should be spending your vacation dollars on the good stuff ! AIRHITCH® has helped thousands of students ‘experience* the wonders of Europe over the last 10 years. AIRHITCH® is the source for student travelers. coupon lotcardsthepurchaseof anew vehiclePLUSa FREEgift. a t Brown &Brown Chevrolet* Geo 145 E M ain St. in Mesa can 800-397-1098 for your FREE program description Recommended by Let's Go, Consumer Reports, The Washington Post, Rolling Stone... S t a t e P ress Friday, April 22, 1994 Page 16 Ryan looking for diamonds late in draft Rejoicing Red Sox TEMPE (AP) — A seven-round draft holds no mysteries, for Buddy Ryan. The Arizona Cardinals general manager-coach, who coached in Philadelphia for five years, has found Pro Bowlers in rounds which no longer exist. In 1986. Ryan landed linebacker Seth Joyner in the eighth round and defensive end Clyde Simmons in the ninth. This year, he changed tactics by signing Joyner and Simmons as free agents. But Ryan believes a replay is possi­ ble in a draft rated strong in wide receivers, which the Cardinals don’t need, and thin in tight ends, which they do. I think there is somebody like Seth, but the proof is in the pudding," Ryan said. “ They guy I'm thinking about tak­ ing late, and maybe also an early free agent, could step up and be that type of guy. I mean, they have that type of quality. Now. whether they have the same inner fire as Joyner or Clyde Simmons is something else." The Cardinals have the No. 10 pick and two in the second round after receiving compensation for the loss of strong safety Tim McDonald to San Francisco before the 1993 sea­ son. Ryan said he would take any player with superstar poten­ tial. "W e have a lot of priorities, but if there’s certain people there, we’re going to take them, whether they’re offense, defense or who they are," he said. But the Cardinals need more help on defense. "O ur offense was second, ninth, eighth — all in single digits in the league last year,” Ryan said. "O ur defense was 27th, 28th, 22nd, so that tells you right there where you need work.” Last year, college-scouting director Bob Ackles master­ minded a strong draft. Six of the eight choices made the team, and Ryan said offensive linem en Ernest Dye and Ben Coleman and running back Ron Moore will start. Garrison Hearst, the No. 3 choice overall and the first run­ ning back taken in the draft, was a bust, however. He held out, missed the preseason and was injured in the sixth game. Ryan has tried to trade the 10th pick and H earst to Cincinnati for the Bengals’ No. 1 pick and a shot at Ohio State defensive lineman Dan Wilkinson, who has “ the atti­ tude of Alan Page and the size of Reggie White.” The Bengals rejected the offer. If not Wilkinson, Ryan might try for Nebraska linebacker Trev Alberts or a pass-rushing defensive end to pair with Simmons. Among free agents he did not invite back this season are tight ends Walter Reeves, Butch Rolle and Pat Beach. $599 Complete Macintosh System! Associated Press Boston Red Sox center fielder Otis Nixon, center, is congratulated by pitcher Roger Clemens, right, as the rest of the team pours onto the field to join in after Nixon connected with a double during the bottom of the ninth inning to push the Red Sox ahead of the Oakland Athletics into a 6-5. The win gave the Red Sox a three game sweep of the Athletics at Fenway Park. Softball C o n t in u ed from page 15. has knocked in 45 RBIs, which ranks her fourth in the Pac-10 and 14th nationally. Teresa Wilson started the Huskie program after stints at Oregon, where she was named Division I Coach of the Year in 1989, and Minnesota, where she was Big Ten Coach of the Year in 1991. ASU’s freshman Tina Ruff feels confident heading into the road trip. “We’re going to do it,” she said, referring to ending the losing streak this season. “We should win a majority of the games this weekend.” Ruff claimed her team would pull off a sweep of Washington on Friday. Oregon’s bats do not measure up to Washington’s. In fact, the Sun Devils have a higher team batting average than the Ducks, .269 to .263. Oregon, whose starting lineup is identical to last year’s 18- 16 squad, is coached by Tami Brown, a 1985 graduate of ASU and former shortstop who was an all-conference per­ former from 1982 to 1984. Laura Schmidt, named Pac-10 player of the week Monday, is tenth in the Pac-10 in RBIs with 28 in only 36 games. Kathy Stahl, an all-Pac 10 team selection as a freshman in 1993, has 30 runs this season, ninth in the Pac-10, and has three home runs and two triples. The other Oregon team, Oregon State, finds itself near the bottom of the Pac-10 pile along with ASU. The Beavers are 16-29, with an 0-12 conference record, one game behind the Sun Devils. Two freshm an p itch ers, Amy W arner and H eather Reynolds, have been the pitching threats for OSU this season. Warner has been the more successful, with a 12-16 record and a 2.61 ERA. Warner was 24-0 in high school. Spend Your $ I N Europe, Not Getting There i* /.'7 y/j/ The Macintosh LCII is an ideal computer for your college work. Why wait in the Commons for a Mac when you can get the job done right in the comfort of your own home. The Mac LC II is great for writing essays or finishing term papers. This complete package includes 4 Megs o f RAM, 40 Meg Hard Drive. Key­ ____ t Mouse, _____ ____ ( Ad d „ board, and__ I'T Grayscale Monitor. Hurry, quantities guantities are limited! lA S249 for HP DeskWriter printer.) We also have a special price for a PowerBook 160 4/80. For just $1199, you get a PowerBook 160 4/80, with 25MegHz microprocessor, and built-in video for an external color monitor. I U I HEWLETT wZrM PACKARD Authorized Dealer Com puters P lu s Com pany 2303 N. 44th St #2; Phx. AZ 85008 2nd traffic light North of M cDow ell R d on 44th Street PH: 955-1404 Authorized Dealer Right noivfora lim ited time, Blown &Brown Chevivlet • Geo and & SSSP is offeiingcollegegraduates $400 OFF! lfwu'rearecentor soon to becollegegraduate, sim­ plyslop byfora testdrive &you'll receive a $400 For Details or More Information ContactCraii DartingorJohnfire 0>M SZ7-3ZS3 You should be spending your vacation dollars on the good stuff ! AIRHITCH® has helped thousands of students "experience' the wonders of Europe over the last 10 years. AIRHITCH® is the source for student travelers. coupon towardsthepurclxise of aneiv vehiclePLUSa FREEsift a t Bwwn& Brown Chevrolet • Geo 145 E M ain S t in M esa can800-397-1098 for your FREE program description Recommended by Let's Go, Consumer Reports, The Washington Post, Rolling Stone.. State P ress PageUp Friday, April 22, 1994 Baseball C o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e Track_____ 15. Series. However, this season is different. It would seem the magic is gone from this season's edition of the Sun Devils, just like the Suns. Even though its overall and Six-Pac records are the same as last year at this tim e, there seems to be something missing. “It doesn't seem like we have the same record as last year." stopper Noah Peery said. Center fielder Jacob Cruz offered the explanation of the Sun Devils are saving th e ir energy for R egionals and the College World Series. “It is kind of like the Suns — float through the regular season,” he said, “but when we get closer to Regionals, our play will get better.” Brock is having none of this talk. He said he d o e sn 't see any d ifferen ce between this year and last year. "I do not agree with that statement or give any credence to it.” Whatever the mood, designated hit­ ter Seasn Tyler said this is no time to be coasting and waiting for the post-season to begin. “There’s no more room for error. We’ve got to kick it in the butt.” Cal (21-28, 9-12) is reeling after cooling off a hot streak last month. The Golden Bears have won just five of the last 17 decisions after their seven-game winning streak ended March 22. Still, the Sun Devils know Cal can still play the role of spoiler. “Cal isn’t a team to count out,” Cruz said. “They can still ruin someone's season. They’re battling for dignity and a chance to bump someone down.” C o n t in u e d fro m pa g e 15. News and College Sports to finish first at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. The other record setting relay, the 4x100 meter, is run by Tayo, Christy Akinremi, Lesa Parker and Tika Walton. They have set a time of 44.33 and are picked by T&F News to finish fourth at the NCAAs. The Sun Devils will send a full team to the annual dou­ ble-dual meet, which is held at the University of Arizona’s Roy P. Drachman Track and Field Stadium. Sun Devil Notes Kim Toney and Michaelene Tetteh received awards Monday night at the Wings of Gold Awards Banquet. Toney received the Co-player of the Year award, tying golfer Wendy Ward, and Tetteh received the sophomore academic award for having the highest GPA. SENIORS & ALUM ... DON'T MISS THIS CAREER EVENT! Are you graduating? Need a job? BRING YOUR RESUME! On Saturday, April 23, ASU will host Arizona Collegiate Job Fair '94, the first job fair to pool the resources of six major universities in one central loca­ tion! This is your excellent opportunity to meet with over 100 recruiters to increase your chances of graduating with a secured position. Don't miss it\ Please - graduating students and alum of ASU, NAU, UofA, DeVry, EmbryRiddle and Grand Canyon College only! Read ARIZONA COLLEGIATE JOB FAIR '94 Please, no undergraduates... just graduating seniors and alumni. SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 9AM-4PM MEMORIAL UNION - VENTANA & AZ BALLROOMS C lassifieds APARTMENTS ) YOUR DAILY POSE Moments are the crutch on which the hour leans as it limps into eternity. -Elbert Hubbard APARTMENTS APARTMENTS ASU AREA, studios, 1 & 2 bed­ room apts. from $280-$360/mo not including utilities. 966-8187 966-8838. BIG 2BD, 2BA APARTMENTS CAMPUS CLOSE! Rent now or hold for Fall. 2bd lba, all new carpet, tile, cabinets, appliances. From $475. Great Lo­ cations Rental Services 968-8886. APARTMENTS EARLY BIRD Special on 2 bd Call for summer prices, short leases accept. Walk to ASU. On 8th St. btwn Rural & McClintock. Cape Cod Apartments 968-5238. Share a beautiful apartment and keep your privacy. Everything new. $675 furnished. Closest to ASU. 910 E. Lemon (office 919 E. Lemon) 966-9000. Some Things You Shouldn't Have To Share W ith Your Roommate. $100.00 O F F M O V E -IN * Like Common ■Walls & Bathrooms. C eilin g F ans ■ L aundry R oom ■ ■ ■ ■ G a s B arbecues S R P U tility H o o k -u p B uilt-in M icro w av es V au lted C eilin g s ■ Pool/S pas ■ C lu b h o u se ■ B ay W in d o w s ■ E x ercise S tudio ■ L ighted, A ssigned C o v ered P arking Apache 1 Br from $400 R an ch o L a s P a lm a s 1249 East Spence • Tempe ur"''""< ;" u 829-9607 ifllfil « A in ; lb (3 j; Spence l X -a 3 Broadway M-F 9-6; Sat 10-3 1855 E . Don Carlos ■ PHONE TODAY' 968-6926 2 Bedroom $430 3 Bedroom $575 I block to ASU Sparkling Pool Laundry Facility Covered Parking A+ Management & Investment «Cali for details APARTMENTS APARTMENTS M OTORCYCLES HOMES FOR RENT M ISC. FOR SALE LARGE 5 bd, 3 ba hse, pool, w/d, dishw'r, etc. $ 1200; 2nd 5 bd hse, $1000. Apache/Rural. 437-1048. 85 KAW 550 JS w/trail, prop, paint, plate, pad, bars, grate 2100, Todd 451 -7370, w350-3573 TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT M ISTRAL COM P TCS sail­ board. Great beg/int. $240. Pgr; 902-9634; 956-4331 lv. msg. FURNISHED 2BD 2ba, 1 mi from ASU (Worthington Place), pool, volleyball, clubhouse, sum­ mer & or fall occupancy. Enrico 966-0789.__________________ HAYDEN SQUARE, 3 bed­ room s. A vailable June 1st. Please call John 829-8160. FURNITURE ~ 2 TWIN beds for sale, $50 ea obo. Must sell by 4/27. Call Tammy 966-8112. FURNITURE FOR cheap! Grad­ uating. Beds.desks,chairs, futon, bikes.TV,dresser,bar stools. Free table,more. Mark 858-9558. LUXURY 3BR 2ba condo. All appl., ASU area. $825/mo. Bill 966-7790, mb. 602-309-9312. COMPUTERS PAP AGO PARK II, 2bd, 2ba. w/d, unfum , pool, $585/mo, avail June 1. Plan for the fall se­ mester now. 494-9105. IBM Thinkpads, Toshiba porteges & satellites, NEC Versas. Call Laptops + at 602-322-5258. RENTAL SHARING F/M RMTE, wanted to share lg. house in Scottsdale. Approx. 3 mi. from ASU. $225/mo. + 1/4 util. 946-0001.______________ NEAR ASU, nonsmk, 1700 sf hse,ac/evap,w/d,fp,clngfns $200 mo+l/4util Bob 990-2284 av5/10 ROOMATE WANTED for 3 bd. condo in quiet area, 2 mi. from ASU. $200/mo 496-8930 aft. 5pm ROOMMATE WANTED 3bd house, close to campus. $220/mo + util. 966-7301. ROOM S FOR RENT CHEAP SUMMER housing! Coed. $500. Utils included. Call 450-4757 for information M/F QUESTA Vida 2 rooms for rent in big 3bd/3ba wash/dryer $295mo+1/3 utilities avail. 5/16. Kris 967-1871.______________ QUESTA VIDA room, washer/dryer, f/p, pool, spa, indoor raquetball. 968-7132. Avail 5/13. SUMMER SUB LET: Master bd/ba, beaut 4bd hse, pets ok, price nego. Stephanie, 964-6623. HOMES FOR SALE QUESTA VIDA never rented, 2 master suites, assumable loan. West USA, Betty A. 820-3333. TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR SALE $200 DN. + take over payment, lmi from ASU. 2bd 2 ba. 714582-9148. 2BD 2-1/2BA townhome close to ASU. upgraded linoleum, fire­ place, organizers in cists, fnsd patio, 2 comm pools, 63,000 ask. Call John 649-9404 appts. 3BED RO OM C O -O P TH , $21,450, pool-near ASU, shop­ ping, bus on comer-pets ok. 9459013. LAPTOPS 92 UNISYS PC. 14" SVGA clr. mon., 50mb. SCSI HD, 4mb ram.,31/2" disk drive, kybd and mse. Installed 5.0 W indows, Louis 967-7786, M-F, 8-5pm. $725. JEWELRY ALWAYS BUYING jewelry. Inclu.: gold, ster., pearls, gems, an­ tiques. etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. Mill Ave.. Tempe Center 968-6074. f T he W B ob B ullock R ealty E xecutives 998-2992 G A R A G E SALES MOVING OUT o f the dorm? Huge garage sale. Clothes, tons of furniture-will store. 827 N. 86th Way, Scottsdale, comer of Roosevelt/86th Way, Saturday, 9-5; Sunday, 9-3. CATCH A JET! Europe - $269: New York - $ 129 Call for program description! Airhitch (R) 1-800-397-1098. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. FLY CHEAP, $150-100 or less anywhere in US, depending on destination. Val 966-6601. So u th w est T ravel S ystem s Discount airline tickets to most destinations, domestic and international. Open 7 Days FLOYD TICKETS VIP 4 in a row, sect.31 $200ea. 4 for $750. Call David 956-3025 pg 5900434______________________ ♦EARN $7.00/hr* JACKS TICKETS Depeche Mode, Eagles, Pink Floyd, Traffic, Meat Loaf, Jerry Garcia, Salt n Pepa. Yanni, Nine Inch Nails($27.50). 968-3939. NINE INCH Nails tickets May 1, $30/ea. Also available- Depeche Mode, Salt N Pepa, Meatloaf, Ea­ gles, and more!! 254-3300. PINK FLOYD 2 VIP Sec. B2, row 8, 3 main floor. Sec. A2, row 2. Make an offer. Call 897-2066._________ PINK FLOYD: 3 excellent tickets available. Golden Circle Sec B 1, row s 3 & 4. W ill sell very reasonable. Call Eric, 714-4973346, leave message. PINK FLOYD tickets!! Sec-10, row-5, $200 obo. Call Bob or leave message, 967-9269. PINK FLOYD, 2 loge seats, call 820-6348 after 6pm. PINK FLOYD, Eagles, Depeche Mode, all great seats, all great prices. Steve, 921-7150. PINK FLOYD, good lower deck & field, $60 & up. Center stage row 25, $100. Steve, 678-0932. PINK FLOYD, sec. A3, row 9. 890-1248. SUNS VS LA Clippers tonight, Sacramento Sat night, good seats $45 & up. Steve, 678-0932. $ CASH TODAY! $ 1976 TOYOTA Corolla, runs good, automatic, cheap transp. $600 obo. Call 947-1628. 1981 VW JETTA, Automatic, a/c, am/fm, runs well! $1250 obo. Call 964-3480. eek You deserve it! Papago Park I Village, 3 bd, tile floors. $98,500. ASU BERMUDA and Caribbean Summer Programs for up to 6 credits. Limited space available. Call 965-4630.______________ HELP WANTEDGENERAL I Buy all used cars, trucks, misc. items. Call A1944-4369. O TRAVEL FLOYD ON the floor. Great seats! $200/pr obo. Call Doug after 6pm, 808-9420. POOLSIDE TOWNHOUSE 2bd, 1.5 bath, neutral colors, park area, close to ASU $46,900. Century21 AM (602) 831-1114. uy YAMAHA VIRAGO 920,1986, mint cond., has been garaged, was selling for $1600, now $1200, must sell. 732-9392. TICKETS a u t o m o b il e T " WHY RENT when you can own? 2bd, 2ba, sunny, airy, safe, f/p, com. pool. Low 40s. 833-4317. 87 HONDA Elite 150, looks and runs like new, $999, 784-8136. 602- 255-0234 CONDO 2BD, 2ba. f/p, all major appi incl, $700/mo. Questa Vida, 714-582-9148. B State P ress Friday, April 22, 1994 P a g e l8 79 DATSUN B210, $500, good local transp., 5 spd, call 784-9805. 88 RED Beretta 44000 mi. auto, a/c, am/fm $3500 obo 784-0430. 91 CAMERO RS 5-spd, loaded low miles, $8900. Call after 6:30, 838-4038. TRAVEL Guar, hourly, setting free appts for established chiropractors, close to ASU. 470-1828 anytime. ♦MARKET RESEARCH phone interviewers, no sales, Tempe. Eves/wknds. Susan 967-4441. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale seeks fulltime permanent front & back office help. Must type and have computer knowledge. Will train.. Apply in person. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd, Suite 108. ACCOUNTING CLERK, p/t, 20 hrs/wk, respon. incl: data input, bank acct reconciliation, general ledger analysis and filing. Exp req.- spreadsheet software (Excel or L otus), W ordPerfect, ac­ counting software preferred by not required. $5.50/hr. Contact Cathy Lang at Arizona Hospital Association, (602) 968-1083. ARE YOU looking for a great opportunity that will last through summer? Set your own sched., great resume exp., relaxed work environment. Call The Pacific Group. 965-6775.____________ ARE YOU looking for a great opportunity that will last through summer? Set your own schedule & work in a fun work environment. Call 965-6754._________ ATTN - &7/HR Tem pe busin ess now hiring warehouse/manufacturers rep /sales help, 3-7pm, no exp nec. Call Jim, 820-8408.__________ CRUISE LINE, entry level on board positions avail, great bene­ fits. (714) 549-1569. LEADERSHIP Will train motivated, quality peo­ ple. 3 m grs & various reps. 3K/mo. possible. Serious in­ quires . For appt, 829-8105. EXECUTIVE ANSW ERING Service needs p/t operator, Mon. 3:30-10:30pm, Tues 4-10pm, Fri & Sat 1 lpm-7am. Must type 45 wpm, have computer and 10 key exp. Call 264-4000 for appt. FRIENDLY PEOPLE person w/ office skills to work 10+ hrs weekly on long-term project. 9686754. FIND IT in the Classifieds! TRAVEL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES____________ JO B OPPORTUNITIES HELP W ANTED w ait staff, cooks, outside help, summer or full time. Salary, housing, bene­ fits. Apply at Apache Lake Resort, 467-2511.______________ TAKING APPS now for summer help. Tele-sales & cust service reps (existing & new accts). Earn $6-$6.75/hr. Call Jon Evans, 9672678 ext. 129, Mon-Fri. ART GALLERY/ frame shop, p/t sales, wknds, eves, 15-18 hrs/ wk. Apply: Art M arket, 9518907. Art background pref. $750/WK. ALASKA fisheries this summer. Maritime Services 1-208-860-0219. LO O K IN G FOR c e rtifie d lifeguards, babysitters, and a tennis court w asher for f/t sum m er employ. Ahwatukee Community Center 4700 E. Warner Rd. 8931942.______________________ ULTIMATE LAWN Care is hir­ ing p/t employees. $5/hr to start. Exp nec; own trans req. Early mornings, flex 20-40 hrs M-F (days can vary). Call Marlene, 964-7297 M-F bet 8am-5pm. MARC CENTER Looking for dedicated caring people to work with individuals who are DD in home setting. For more info call 962-4838. MODELS/ACTORS - Calif, ad agency seeks M/F, all types/ages, for summer catalog. No exp. nec. 266-6224. NANNIES WANTED: Positions nationw ide, sum m er or yr.round. Exp not req. Great pay & ben. Free travel. (612) 643-4399. NIELSEN MEDIA Research, the leader in the TV ratings industry, has outstanding p/t opportunities available. Varied working hours incl wknd/eves. Exc starting sal­ ary. The field interviewer posi­ tion entails contacting households for gathering info on TV viewing habits. This is not a sales position. Req'd: Car for use on job, good oral comm skills (Spanish a plus), some sales exp pref. Assignments in Phx area. For immed consid­ eration please send resume to: Nielsen Media Research, PO Box 20577, Mesa, AZ 85277. OFFICE MANAGER, national collection agency. Ground floor opportunity in AZ, salary plus incentives, call 602-504-0345. PROFESSIONAL OFFICE, fun atmosphere. Resort advertising, n e ar F iesta M all p t/ft, m in. $20Q/wk. 897-1676 Cindy Brady. PROGRESSIVE MOVING com­ pany is looking for drivers, must be 25 and have clean driving record. G reat fin. oppor. for students and teachers. Call Super Movers 829-8888 or apply b e t 93 weekdays at 222 S. 52nd St. RESIDENT SUMMER camp in Prescott looking for male coun­ selors, specialists and kitchen support. Call 254-1571 for an ap­ plication. SUMMER WORK National firm has retail openings v a lle y w id e. S ta rtin g pay is $10.15. No experience required. All majors welcome. Scholar­ ships awarded. Apply now — start after finals. East Valley, 968-1840; Northwest Phoenix, 240-6792; North Valley/Scottsdale, 244-8424. SWIM INSTRUCTORS-AT cli­ ent's homes in your area. Flex sched. $12-15/hr + bonuses. WSI + strong exp. 998-9633. TELEMARKETERS Schedule appointments for Sears. Tempe office. Flexible hours. $6/hr + bonuses. Call 968-5266. WE’LL GET you thru the sum­ mer...and beyond! $8 to $12/hr, pt, long term year round empl. Imm. openings at Tempe branch. Flex p/t hrs. No cold calls. Week­ ly paychecks. Pleasant work envir. Fully-automated. No typing. Pro, paid training, $7.50/hr guar, min. Dialamerica Marketing 8940264. Adventure Employment Colorado Ski resorts, rafting companies, camps & parks hiring in beautiful Rockies. (303) 282-8780 24 hrs. WALK FROM ASU! N o Selling Telephone survey research, fle x ib le h o u rs a v ailab le mornings, afternoons, even­ in g s , w e e k e n d s. S ta r t a t $ 5 .5 0 /h o u r. W eekly pay. Frequent raise reviews. Higginbotham Associates 829-3141 COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS Are you looking for a challenging posi­ tion with a great company? Then we have the perfect position for you! PW is a specialty distributor of pro­ gramming tools. We are looking for sa le s techn icians and technical sup­ port people. Know­ ledge of C, Clipper, A SM and/or other tools helpful. Flex­ ible hours, good pay and a friendly environment. Programmer's Warehouse 8283 N. Hayden Rd. Suite 195, Scottsdale CLASSIFIEDS WORK! 443-0580 P/T SPORTS Marketing position, hourly pay, 20-30 hrs/wk. Fire­ bird International Raceway. Con­ tact John 268-0200. HELP WANTEDCLERICA L RESTAURANTS/ BARS ù&t, W A R EH O U SE T O N IT E O N L Y ! DON YOUNG o f No H o b o B a n d M inim um C over BOOKKEEPER/RECPT, FLEX hrs, $6/hr, exp req, approx 25 hrs/wk bet 9am-5pm. 968-5002. CUSTOMER SERVICE Reps. We represent a major employer in the E. Phx/Tempe area who is actively seeking a large number of prof. CSR's for a long term project. This program offers ex­ cellent weekly pay and benefits that most employers can't match. Please don't delay in contacting us for an appt. to apply. Tempo­ raries, Inc. 955-2900. EOE. P/T HELP. Phones, filing, dis­ patch. Close to ASU. T-Th, 2-7p & every other wknd 8am-4pm. 966-9571. City-Wide Plumbing." WORD PROCESSOR, exp, ad­ vanced WP 5.1 incl Excel tables. Dictaphone, 80+ wpm, Tempe location 30+ hrs/wk. 839-8039. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE Friday > with SP EC IA L G U E S TS 9pm-1am L Saturday ' IPHAirtKlIM) 9pm-1am / Saturday ( 99* \ T . Q . Hot Shots For a Good Time call 966-1300 B A M bh S. 404S. Mffi Ave., Suite 101 BARTENDER WANTED, male /female, for fun bar $7-$12/hr, 24-32 hrs /wk. Sports knowledge a must. Apply The Woodshed I 19 W. Baseline aft. 5pm Exp. only CORK N CLEAVER SUMMER WORK $10.15/Start; Scholarships avail. All majors apply; No exp req. (602)968-1840 Phoenix: S. Orange Cnty: (714) 851-4738 N. Orange Cnty: (714)449-2469 (310)799-1661 Long Beach: (909)686-5410 Riverside: San Diego: (619)455-9433 (805)382-8391 Oxnard: (909)985-5079 Upland: (818) 240-6866 Burbank: (818) 293-8665 Arcadia: (602)798-7378 Tucson: ♦Call now-start after finals. ♦Conditions exist. Accepting apps for lunch food servers. Will train, p/t. Fun at­ mosphere, fast pace. Concern w/appearance, reliability & per­ sonality important. Apply in per­ son M-F 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. (44th/Camelback) DELIVERY DRIVERS for nights & wknds. Counter help for nights & wknds. Apply in person at Blimpie, 911 E. Broadway. JOHNNY ROCKETS is now tak­ ing applications for cashiers-food servers. Fashion Square Mall, apply in person. 423-1505. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE GET THAT SUMMER JOB NOW •P/T Flexible Hours •Persons w/Special Needs •Home Environments, 1-to-l •Locations Close to You Call M-F 8-5 Only. Ask for Job H otline 494-1234 TEMPE HIGH community ga­ rage sale, April 3 0 ,8-3pm, space avail. For info or donation 9671661. ext 279 or 963-0582. 965-6735 WANTED: DRIVER, afternoons $5.25/hr + mileage. Immed open­ ings. Call Shelly now, 246-7702. LADIES BO UTIQ U E, Scot­ tsdale, p/t sales, days/evenings/wknds. Call Kim 941-8629. SUMMER JOBS W e are hiring 100 stu ­ dents & te ach ers for a variety of temporary cleri­ cal positions. If you have office skills such as typing, reception, clerical, WPO, secretary, etc., please call for appointment: Tempe 966-1100 Phoenix 264-4537 Scottsdale 948-2225 STIVERS TEM PORARY PERSONNEL IN C . HELP WANTEDSALES Th e Broadway Loa Areas We are now accepting appli­ cations for part & full time sales associate positions in: • Mens & Women’s Apparel • Accessories • Juniors/Intimate Apparel • Housewares/China • Elizabeth Arden, Clinique or Estee Lauder Cosmetics • Mens & Women's Shoes BABYSITTER NEEDED for ac­ tive 2-1/2 yr old & 8 mo old. 36 pm w/some early afternoons. Call 8-noon/after 6pm, 947-9180. BABYSITTING P/T during sum­ mer, own transportation nec, near PV Mall, $6/hr. 494-4392. PT, 44TH St./Osbom, full day needed(flexible), car/references req. $5+/hr. 840-5926. JO B OPPORTUNITIES AA 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. AA CRUISE and travel employ­ ment guide. $$$ + free world­ wide travel! (Caribbean, Europe, etc!) Summer/permanent avail­ able. Guaranteed success!! (919) 929-4398 ext. C145. CRUISE SHIPS now hiring Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour companies. World travel. Sum­ mer & full tim e employment available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C5918. ANY DRINK IN THE HOUSE 4-10p.m.. Complimentary Buffet Pizza, Wings, Subs, Veggies 6-8 p.m. N O CO VER B-4 8 p.m . 4 1 1 S . M ill A v e . 9 6 6 -2 0 2 0 SATURDAYS A ll LADIES NIGHT f k W t W e l>/ Wine & Draft • 8-10 p.m, FOR EVERYONE Well, Wine & Draft All Nisht for the Ladies M No Cover Before 10 p.m. for the Ladies Apply during store hours. 4 1 1 S . M il l A v e . Equal Opportunity Employer 9 6 6 -2 0 2 0 Page 19 Friday, April 22, 1994 S t a t e P ress RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS FindWeekendFunin theState Presi! PRANKSTERS lA R & lR IL L c1 LIVE MUSIC! by MARCONIS 9 p .m .-1 2:30 a.m . -NO COVER- BANDERSNATCH “5tl St. S Forest B R EW PU B PERSONALS New York PIZZA ! 10% OFF Kaplan! It's in your Grad Pack. Your Alumni Asso­ ciation has compiled what you need for a successful graduation in the 1994 G rad Pack. D is­ counts, benefits and the official GRDU8 T-Shirt. On Cady Mai daily! 12"-$4.50 16"-$6.50 E v e ry day! toppings extra Tempe *967-8875 II } A DOZEN Roses $20. Balloons & Delivery available. Call After Hours Flowers 894-3419. ATA AIMEE- One more day until Jungle Fever! Is the sus­ pense killing you yet? I knew it would! Love, Jason. ATA MICHELLE A. congratu­ lations! Tomorrow you'll be ac­ tive! Epsilon Pi! Luv, Mom. AK'F LIL’ Bros JS and BM: What does "assume the position" mean 2U? Good luck @ COH! JC. AXO IS going to rip the hats off IX Derby Days!!! CAP & GOWN Discount! It's in your Grad Pack! Save over $300 on the goods and services you need as a new graduate! Call your Alumni Association at 9653566 or 1-800-alumnus for fur­ ther information. XQ WILL take Derby Days! ADOPTION PERSONALS PREGNANT? LOVING family looking to adopt. 602-282-6510. HERPES 30 million Americans infected no cure, Syphilis -highest level in 40 years, Chlamydia- 4 million in­ fected. Reports, diagnosis, treat­ ment, prevention. $5 ea. JMJ Medical Services. PO Box 1267, E. Lansing, Ml 48826. KA ALEX- A 0 formal is going to be a blast-Just watch what you eat this time. vBrat. IX TO THE men of Kappa Alpha-1 love you guys tons. Have a great weekend. Love, Michelle. D o n 't miss the F rances D rake Desktop Publishing: Typing, re­ sume service, charts & graphs. Near ASU. 966-1984. W RITE STUFF. Fast, profes­ sional, reasonable word process­ ing. Term papers, resumes, etc. APA/MLA. Beth, 963-3537. FLIGHT INSTRUCTION- Get your private license the afford­ able way! Page Terry @209-3988 TYPING/WORD PRO CESSIN G TUTORS $2/PG, $15 resumes. Proofed. Laser. Fast. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. GRAD STUDENT, assist stud­ ents prepare for grad admissions test. LSAT, GMAT, GRE, etc. Call 590-7295, ask for Angel. Theresa • 924-1976 MATH PROBLEMS? Tutoring available. Call Gary at 994-0960. WANTED 3-4 BED, furnished home to rent for 1 or 2 wks beginning May 10. Call Alicia 491-3592. DONORS NEEDED for Desert C ryobank Sperm D onor Pro­ gram. All medical expenses paid. Fee paid to donors meeting strict medical criteria. Call 957-1879 for complete information. SERVICES SERVICES _______________ EMPLOYEE YO U'RE Tl o c a t o r I HIRED) G ra d u a tin g and need a fu ll-tim e job? O r m ayb e a p art-tim e or su m m e r job? -Monthly Publication Listing People ready tor work TODAY! P u t Y O U R R esu m e in th e hands of 1,0 0 0 s of V alley E m ployers for as little as $16.00! GRADUATING? W E'VE got what you need! Grad Pack 1994 offers discounts for the goods and services you need as a gaduating student and young alum! Come see what we have to offer. Cady Mall daily, or call 1-800alumnus or 965-3566 for further information. ✓ 4 weeks exposure in the publication / Assigned your own voice mail box where employers contact you directly Call 892-2506 CLASSIFIEDS WORK! Mon.-Sat. 8am-12am Sunday 9am-9pm LATE NIGHT W E DELIVER! B roadw ay & Rural INSTRUCTION Want to hear . . . GRAD PACK-YOUR ticket outta' here! Your Alumni Associa­ tion has compiled what you need to graduate- discounts, benefits and the official GRDU8 T-shirt! Stop by the Grad Pack table on Cady Mall or call 965-3566 or 1-800-alumnus for further infor­ mation. FYi I WANT IT NOW! If you'd rather spend your time doing something besides typing, let an ASU graduate help you make the best impression ! possible. APA/MLA expert, laser printer, rush jobs no problem! TEDDY BEAR, I can't wait for this w eekend-celebrating our birthdays. Je t adore mon cheri! Love always. Your sexy bunny. G A M M A PHI has no fearSigma Chi Derby Days is oursGo Gamma Phi ! $1 Y our Individual H oroscope W HY TYPE IT YOURSELF? SIG M A C H I - G am m a PhiSigma Chi - Gamma Phi - Sigma Chi - Gamma Phi! CONGRATS TO the men o f Kappa Alpha for capturing first place in Alpha Phi Open '94. Lem on Drops, Boysenberries, & Kam is FAST TURNAROUND. Term papers, theses, resumes. MLA/ APA, laser, fax. Pat, 897-1741. 24 HOUR turn around. $2/page. Professional typing, laser, fax. Walkable/ ASU. Diane 829-1602. PRE Rush dinner Fri. Apr. 22, 1-6, come hangout by the pool and meet the brothers of Sigma Chi, all welcome! SERVICES T onight CAR REPAIR WANTED: BALDING men and women, 30 day guarantee or your money back, 345-0073. RUNOFF ELECTION results will be announced today at 5pm on west lawn. Be there!! RESPO NSIBLE DRIVER to drive car to Oklahoma City at end of semester. I will pay for gas. Please call Ethan at 2340100. ASU AREA typing, w/p, editing, transcrptn, WordPerfect, laser. Charts/graphs. 966-2186 anytime WANTED 100 students to lose 10-29 lbs. No hips, thighs or butts about it. 1-800-579-1634. K I JARED: Thanks for being sweeter than apple pie. See you later Honeybaby- Tiff. ARTIST/ PROF seeks house and/or studio 6-15 to 8-15. Hof­ mann, Box 195, Ghent, NY 12075 AWARD WINNING academic writer, published poet, will edit your paper. $2/pg. 230-4132. HEALTH & F IT N |^ _ _ _ K I BILL GL- Who wears the pants in your relationship? Party your balls off at Fever! !-Your Friends! WANTED SERVICES STAT PRO - Statistical analysis, consulting, research help. Call 837-1999. KA GOLFERS- We had a blast coaching you guys. You guys are the best. Love- Mish & Tillis. WANTED APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/w ord processing. Need it fast? Call Jessie, 945-5744. Mobile- We come to you! Low rates, work guaranteed 839-5398 KA BRIAN G. - Old South was a blast. Thanks for a terrific time. 111 make it up to you at my formal tomorrow night. Love, Michelle. TYPING/ WORD PRO CESSIN G for information mailed FREE of Charge STUDY SNACKS 921 -9222 SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) A talk with a friend is inspira­ tional now, but some confusion could exist at the job. You may find a project more time con­ suming than you had anticipat­ ed. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Some career gains are likely now, but it’s not a good time to m ix busin ess and p leasure. Deceptive trends require that you be vigilant in your finan­ cial dealings. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) U ntil a dom estic concern is resolved to your satisfaction, you w on’t feel free to take advantage of a travel opportu­ nity that comes now. Enjoy cul­ tural interests. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Not everything you hear today will be the truth. Be wary of those who conceal their inten­ tions. A business opportunity is promising but requires further research. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Be careful you’re not imposed upon today. T hough social interests are favored, it’s not a good tim e to loan others money. Keep a lid on expendi­ tures. YOU BORN TODAY are more visionary than the tyical mem­ ber o f your sign. You often have ideas that are ahead of the tim es. You are at your best when your work reflects your ideals. You can succeed in both the arts and sciences, but must guard ag ain st la z in ess and being too stubborn. You have a good imagination and are usu­ ally a good m oneym aker. Birthday of: Jack Nicholson, actor; Hery Fielding, w riter; and Immanuel Kant, philoso­ pher. For Friday, April 22, 1994. ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Y our e nergies may be a bit scattered now and you may not accomplish as much on the job as you’d like. Deceptive trends require that you weigh deci­ sions carefully. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) K eeping th ings to y o u rse lf could cause you to separate in spirit from a close tie. It would be b est now to share your thoughts. Advice you receive may be misleading. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) It’s not a good day for loaning o thers m oney. H om e-based a c tiv itie s are favored, but frien d s could drop by at an inopportune time. Be tactful in speech. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) It’s a day to guard against mis­ understandings. If uncertain about w hat o th e rs m ean or expect of you, it would be best to have a heart-to-heart discus­ sion. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) T ry not to let daydream ing interfere with concentration on the job. Though a moneymak­ ing opportunity com es now, you m ay m eet w ith extra expenditures as well. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Avoid making hasty decisions involving the use o f credit. Creative types will be blessed with inspiration now. Be level­ headed in matters of the heart. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You’re likely to have new ides about home decorating today. You may be asked to help a rel­ ative out. K eep the lines of com m unication open w ith a partner. We are not an employment agency I--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHEAP DATE ! STATE P ress Classified Ad Order Form Students adm itted fre e to a ll A S U s p o r t in g e v e n ts w ith v a lid ASU ID (except Football & Men's Basketball). SUCH A DEAL! P i n k F lo y d P a rty ! Sunday M oosehead freebies! $1 Shots Why drive? Ride our bus to the show! D o n 't Bk A V ic t i m ! Protect yourself from vio­ lent crime with our top-ofthe-line personal protection d evices at th e lo w est prices. Stun G u n ......................... $42.95 (Compact. 100,000 volts, w ith safety switch & wrist strap) Keychain Pepper Sprayer .$ 14.95 Wfl® (With Holster, available in Black, Red or Blue) Personal Alarm ................ $24.95 894-2662 „ A T s 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 Private Party 1-4 days, $1.30 per line, per day 5-g days, $1.25 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.15 per line, perday 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Please include comes w ith wrist strap & belt clip) Fatoki Rural & A pa ch e r-, _ « (Loud I3 0d balarm . ORDER NO W ! Send check or money order plus $3.00 s/h to: NO»COVER Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish It to appear In the State P ress, Including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State P re ss shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given tor the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make-goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to can­ cel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. 920 South Terrace Rd. Suite 210 Tempe, AZ 85281 Absolutely no sales to minors □ S B □ M Bank Card Number Eterne cm Card Expiration Date l Q M Price P& Day $ # of Days X Titel * $ Classification Name/Number: Sorry, we cannot accept personal ads through (ha mail. • State Press Friday, April 22, 1994 ‘Bitfiards • Dancing free rrwbe0 t-shirts FOR THE FIRST 100 PEOPLE IN THE DO OR! 2 for 1 ANY DRINK in the HOUSE 1 Goldschlager Before 10 p.m. • until 10:30 p.m. “ALL NEW!” m LONG ISLAND ICETEAS ’til 10 p.m. $ 1 WELL, WINE, DRAFT AHNight SATURDAY “ LADIES NIGHT’ $1 DRINKS A LL NIGHT LONG! NO COVERtil 10 p.m. • NO COVER • • Proper Dress Required • SW Corner of Scottsdale Rd. & McDowell mm TUESDAY