ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ©Copyright, State press, 1995 Tempe, Arizona . Vol. 79 No. 95 An Independent Morning Daily Thursday, March 2,1995 In crease in escort ca lls 4p h en om en al’ ASASU suspends GPA requirement B y T o d d Kelly S tate P ress T he S afety E sc o rt S erv ice has been swamped with escort requests from students and employees in the wake of the Feb. 21 rape in Parking Structure 1, receiving two to three times the number of calls per night than usual. SES d irecto r Eddie G enna called the increase “phenomenal,” adding that the 16 volunteer escorts the service currently has is simply not enough keep up with demand. “W e’ve been telling people 20 minutes (for an escort),” he said. “And we don’t like to do that. O ur ideal time is seven to ten minutes.” R adaw na M ichelle, crim e prevention c o o r d in a to r fo r A S U ’s D ep a rtm e n t o f Public Safety, said campus police urge peo­ ple to find an escort if they are on campus at night. She encourages people to use the “buddy system" or call SES, which operates seven days a week from 6:30 p.m. to 12:15 a.m. If SES is busy or it is past SES hours, DPS will escort people. “W e’ve always had that (offer to escort people on campus) and we always tell peo­ ple that in our personal safety classes,” Michelle said. “There’s no reason to walk alone on this campus.” Students and employees can request an escort by calling SES at 965-1515. ASU DPS director Bill Bess said those on campus at night should use escorts, such as those provided by SES. “I think it’s an excellent service and peo­ ple should take advantage of it,” he said. Before the rape occurred, SES averaged 25 to 30 calls a night, said SES dispatcher Becky Jones. The rape was reported on Thursday and Jones said, “I did almost 60” calls that night. On Monday, SES received 96 calls. To make it easier for SES to recruit vol­ unteers, an ex ecutive com m ittee o f the T urn to SES, page 2. In tern et art expo grants in sig h tfu l p eek through eyes o f w om en artists a new way,” said Muriel Magenta, a professor of art in the College of Fine Arts and a resident The paintbrush, easel and canvas are archa­ artist in the Institute for Studies in the Arts. ic tools of the past, compared to the innovative Magenta initiated and led the project through technological display on campus this month her creative research at the Institute for Studies using cyberspace on the Internet to showcase in the Arts. female artists from around the world. The Institute is one of six departments in The project is called “The World Women the College o f Fine Arts. It is a research On-Line.” The electronic network of women branch to fund art projects by faculty, students artists on the Internet will be on display from 8 and artists all over the world. a.m. to 5 p.m. until March 30, on the first floor “This is important because the Internet is a o f the Computing Commons. The opening wonderful new mode of communication and a reception for the exhibit will be from 4 pjn. to place where artists can show their work, in .addition to (using) traditional m ethods,” 6 p.m. today. “We are creating an exhibition space on the T urn to A rt, page 2. Internet; a place where people communicate in B y Kim W atson State P ress From the home office in Tempo, Ariz., a life-size cardboard cutout of David Letterman holds the State Press Wednesday afternoon on Orange Street in front of P.E. West. City of Tempe to dismiss more than 150 parking tickets Citations improperly issued after contract expired By K elly W endel S pecial t o the State P ress The city of Tempe continued to ticket cars near Sixth Street and Mill Avenue even though the contract granting them authority to do so expired Jan. 1, INSIDE ST A T E PR ESS W eather Outlook Variable clouds. High 70, low 48. World/ Nation U.S. Marines can only stand by and watch as a Somali w ariord's forces take over M ogadishu's airport. Page 3 Î The City of Tempe will dismiss more than 150 parking citations erroneously issued near Sixth Street and M ill Avenue after officials learned the city no longer had the authority to enforce public parking there. The city bought into an easement contract w ith C en terp o in t P laza in M arch, 1990. The easement granted Tempe authori­ ty to enforce “public parking and parking s ig n a g e ” on S ix th S tre e t, a d ja c e n t to Centerpoint. H ow ever, when the easem ent expired Jan. 1, the land reverted to the developers Sports The California Angels walloped junior Travis Flowers and the ASU baseball team 13-5 in an exhibition game W ednesday night at Diablo Stadium. Page 11 and became private property. The easement covered -Sixth Street from Mill Avenue to M aple Avenue, and Maple Avenue from Sixth Street to Fifth Street. “Normally, the city cannot enforce park­ ing restrictions, other than handicap and fire-lane violations, on private property,” said Jill Kennedy, a Tempe city attorney. “Tickets for 2-hour and 30-minute viola­ tions would be null and void.” Police issued 152 tickets after the ease­ ment expired. Ninety-nine o f the tickets issued were invalid and an additional 63 tickets also might be invalid because they T urn to P arking, page 2. Where To Find It C lassifieds............................ 13 C om ics.............................. ,...10 Crossword................ 6 Horoscopes .......................... 15 Opinion................................. „4 Police R eport..........................6 Sports..................................... 11 Today’s A ctivities.................2 W orld/Nation..........................3 P age 2 Thursday, Match 2, 1995 SES T oday C ontinued from page 1. Associated Students of ASU suspended a rule this week that required student volunteers to have attended ASU for one semester and have a 2.0 grade point average. When the rule was still in. effect, SES turned away students who did not have a high enough GPA. Beginning this week, anyone in good standing academi­ cally can volunteer at SES. “ A nd w e d e sp e ra te ly n eed p e o p le ,” Jo n es said. Interested students and employees can call 965-1515. The Today Section is a deity calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-cam, first-serve basis and are printed on a space-avail­ able basis. Campus clubs and organizations may subm it written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Requests will not be taken over die phone. Faxed entries will also not be accepted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organiza­ tion, a description of toe event, date, time and the full address of toe location. A t requests ate subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries vriti be dis­ carded. Deadline for requests in noon the day before publication and entries win not be accepted more titan toreo working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Genna said that while it’s important for people to use the service, “it’s unfortunate it takes an incident like that to increase people’s personal awareness.” The rape has increased awareness o f personal safety, Michelle said. “W henever there is a highly publicized crime, people tend to be more aware of their vulnerability,” she said. Campus police ask anyone with information regarding the rape to call 965-3456. Art. C ontinued from page 1. Magenta said. There will be 375 artists in die directory from all over the world. Users can click on an icon that will bring up afilli screen image of a work of art, as well as information on the artist. “This allows people to gain insight into women’s culture because they are seeing society reflected through the eyes òf women,” Magenta said. Jim Hathaway, manager of publicity and marketing for the College of Fine Arts, said it is an interesting project that utilizes new technology in art. “The project was advertised internationally, and the purpose is to encourage women from all parts of the world to submit images via thè Internet,” he said. Hathaway said the project js essentially a computer bulletin board. Anyone can open up the program via computer and thumb through the images. He said regular flat art and computer-generated art is being used for the show. A video wall located in the Computing Commons, which consists of nine television monitors, will show images from the various artists at different intervals. “The show is about the em pow erm ent o f w om en,” Hathaway said. “The Internet is the tool of the future, and 97 • Graduate Women’s Network — Pete presentation: “How I published my first manuscript." Dialogue with other graduate women students. 11 a.m.-noon, Women’s Student Center. • Campus Crusade to r Christ — Thursday Night Live. Open meeting, music, Bible study and fun. Tonight’s topic: “Do we know right from wrong?” 7:30 p.m., Physical Science H-wing, Room 151. • C hristian Students Fellow ship — ‘Understanding the Bible,” a Thursday night Bible study. Come for a time of singing, fellowship and Bible teaching. 7 p.m., Tempe Women’s Club; 13th St. and Mill. • University Toastmasters — Improve your speaking skMs at our weekly m eetings. G uests welcome. 6:30 p.m., MU Coconino. • Canterbury-Episcopal Campus M inistry — Worship ser­ vice, dinner, discussion and book study. 6:30 p.m., St. Augustine's Church; northeast corner of Broadway and Coliege. • MEChA — “Semana Cultural" meeting. Everyone that has participated in the past and all new interested people are wel­ come. 5:30 p.m., MEChA Room, MU Room 210. • • MUAB Film Com m ittee — Showing: “Taxi Driver.” 2:40 p.m., Union Cinema, MU lower level. • Intervarsity Christian Fellowship — Weekly meeting, Bible study of the Book of Romans. Praise and worship, everyone welcome. 7:30 p.m., MU Apache, Room 221. • American Marketing Association — Marketing trivia con­ test: watch or join in. 4:40 p m., BAC 216. • KASR 1260 AM — Soloman and the Supermodel. Featuring Monte’s story of the week. Tune in and share your experi­ ences at 965-4162. 9 p.m.-mfctoght, KASR. • “Da Hui”-Hawaii Chib — Video of last Saturday's festivities will be shown today at the Filipino dub meeting. 6 p.m., MU, look for ”PASA”s for room number. • PRSSA — Bi-monthly meeting. 4:30 p.m.,, Stauffer Hail Reading Room. S tate P ress percent of Internet users arc men. We want to introduce women to the capabilities of the Internet.” Hathaway said one of the most important missions of the institute is to utilize art that incorporates new technology. “In five years the methods taught today may not be used because technology is changing so quickly. The research is essential to help us determine where art is going out and what the future of it is.” Sheilah Britton, arts research administrator for the Institute for Studies in the Arts, said the Institute has a great interest in new technology. “The Internet is a great opportunity for artists to transmit images through cyberspace.” “This is an exciting project to involve women in technology and bring their vision into the computer world through personal expression.” * The show will be on exhibit in Beijing, China, Aug. 30 to Sept. 15 at the United Nations fourth World Conference on Women. It will then go to the National Museum for Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C. The address to access W orld W om en O n-L ine is: http://www.asu.edu/wwol. Parking C ontinued from page 1. don’t list the specific address where a vehicle was ticketed, according to Tempe Courts administrator John Greco. Greco said the city will give those 63 people the benefit of the doubt and, along with the other 99 tickets, dismiss all the citations. So far, 91 of these tickets have been paid. The city plans to notify these people that they may apply for a refund, ■-'C " Greco said. The average price of a parking ticket in Tempe is $15. Tempe may buy back the easement. “The City of Tempe is in the process of negotiations w ith C e n te rp o in t,” K ennedy said. “C e n te rp o in t has expressed a desire to renew the easement, but it hasn’t been finalized.” A T T E N T IO N s f a i N c r H G R A D U A TE S . The deadline to apply for Spring 1995 graduation is Friday, March 31, 1995. 1. Here's how to complete your application process: Pay your graduation fee at the FEE SCHEDULE: Cashiering Services Offices in Student Services, second floor. 2. Complete the "Graduating Senior Report Card" that is given to you by the Cashiering Staff. (Undergraduates only). Take your graduation fee receipt and completed survey to the Graduation Section (Student Services, first floor) Graduates $17 Undergraduates $12 Late Fee $5 (after deadline) Apply on time to ensure that your name appears in the Commencement Program. Graduate students should contact the Graduate college at 965-3521 to make sure all deadlines are being met. W orld/Nation Thursday, March 2,1995 State P ress P ag e3 ^ U.N. pulling out, Somali warlord moving in Looters move in quickly as Pakistani peacekeepers retreat from Mogadishu’s airport MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — W arlord M ohamed Farrah Aidid’s militiamen swept into the Mogadishu air­ port Wednesday, chasing away packs of looters and filling the void left by a retreating U.N. mission. American and Italian troops watched from the nearby dunes while the militiamen loyal to Aidid, who once car­ ried a $25,000 U.N. price on his head, roared through the airport gates in stripped-down trucks and jeeps mounted with heavy weapons. A Marine sniper shot and killed a Somali gunman who fired a rocket-propelled grenade at Marines during a firefight betw een tw o Som ali factions, said U.S. m ilitary spokesman Lt. Col. Jerry Broeckert. The grenade exploded over the Indian Ocean behind the Marines. U.S. and Italian forces also fired numerous warning shots to keep Somalis from trying to breach the razor wire between them. V. After the last U.N. peacekeepers left the airstrip in the morning, hundreds o f looters swarm ed over walls and barbed-wire fences to pick over wooden pallets and what little else remained. American and Italians troops protecting the withdrawal of Pakistani peacekeepers nervously watched the looting. Rifle shots rang out, m ost fired by m ilitiam en as they shooed away looters. The sprawling seaside airfield looked like a hurricane hit it after the looters, a motley collection that was mostly young and female Somalis, many in long red skirts, fin­ ished carting off the remains. No looters were hit by gunfire. The Americans, Italians and Pakistanis, who were evacuating three miles away to the seaport for their return home, suffered no casualties. A idid's action pre-empted an attempt by Somali busi­ nessmen and elders to form a multi-factional committee to operate the airport and seaport after the United Nations’ departure. Som e m ilitia m e n w ho m o v ed in to th e a irp o rt Wednesday almost were“ taken out” after coming too close to the American and Italian perimeter on high dunes over­ looking the airfield, said M arine Lt. Gen. A nthony C. Zinni, head of the force covering the evacuation. “The decision to shoot or not to shoot was close,” he said. “But it became obvious they were there to shoo the looters away and gain control. They got a little too close so we fired a couple of warning shots, but they waved at us and backed away.” T op : U ,S M arin es keep w atch as S o m alis lo o t an area o f M ogadishu A irport ev ac u a ted by U .N . fo rc e s W e d n e s d a y / T h e lo o te rs w ere quickly chased o ff as forces loyal to Som ali w ar­ lord Mohamed Farrah Aidid took over the airport. R ig ht: A P ak istan i so ld ier naps after withdrawing from the airport through American lines. Pakistan’s contingent o f 1,5 00 p eac ek ee p e rs is scheduled to leave Som alia today. Facing defeat, Dole sets up Senate vote on balanced budget W ASHINGTON (AP) — Facing likely defeat/Senate Republicans set a showdown Vote for Thursday on the balanced-budget am endm ent w hile vow ing to revive the issue at the height of the 1996 election sea­ son if it fails. M a jo rity L e a d e r B ob D ole sh a rp ly attack ed sev eral D em o crats o p ponents Wednesday for what he called a “stunning flipflop” on the measure similar to one they supported a year ago. Other GOP senators criticized President Clinton’s opposition. Dole’s decision to proceed with a vote Thursday — tw o days after he abruptly p o stp o n e d it — cam e a fte r ap p aren tly unsuccessful attempts to reach a com pro­ mise with wavering Democrats who could e n su re the am e n d m e n t’s p assag e. The D em ocrats said they w ould support the measure only if it specifically spared Social Security trust funds from budget cutters. He conceded that no senator’s vote had been changed, indicating that barring a lastminute developm ent, the m easure would fall one vote short o f the two-thirds needed for passage. While saying he remained open to overtures from Democrats, Dole added, “W e’ve done all we can.” That was not enough for the Democrats, who said Republicans were proposing only separate legislation that would gradually protect Social Security from budget cuts over the next several years to a decade. “Republicans are indeed counting on the use of Social Security trust fund dollars to buy down the debt over the next 10 years,” said D em ocratic leader Tom D aschle o f South Dakota. “It is just fundamentally wrong to take Social Security trust fund monies to balance the budget,” said Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D. Dole said during a brief floor session W ednesday that if the measure fell short when the vote is called, he would use his parliam entary right to keep it alive for a second vote at any time, most likely next year. Public opinion polls show support for the measure at 70 percent or more, a fact that has m ade som e D em ocrats skittish about opposing it. “L et’s see what happens when w e get near the election and die American people are a little agitated at C ongress, as they should be,” Dole said. Republicans say the amendment would impose the discipline necessary to stop the run-up in die federal debt, now approaching $5 trillion. Some Democrats say it will lead to d ev astatin g cu ts in social program s, while others, more sympathetic to the pro­ posal, want a change that would keep the Social Security dust funds from being Used to reduce the deficit. Judge Ito boots 4th juror from O J . Simpso® murder trial There had been reports that Knox was oh the brink o f on the outcome of trial before it started. LOS ANGELES (AP) A juror who stared at a pho­ Knox acknow ledged he looked at photographs in tograph o f O J . Simpson during a visit to bis mansion dismissal for allegedly failing to disclose past domestic was dismissed Wednesday and said later die prosecution abuse — an important issue in the case since Simpson Was Simpson’s house when the jury was brought there and to the crim e sceoe. saymg, “You cannot miss the pictures alleged to have abused his ex-wife before si« was slain. has presented a “strong case.” In a live interview w ith television reporters a t his i because they are eveiywhere in th# house.'* The juror, who is black, also denied there was racial ten­ Knox, «courier identified previously only as juror No.. sion on the sequestered panel. He was replaced by a 38-year- North Long Beach home, Kaox wouldn’t discuss why he 6ffi, wasn’t i» court when his dismissal w as announced. old white woman who works for the phone company and was dismissed, but he did talk about the case. v A sked if the ju ry w ill reach a verdict, Knox said: His chair at seat Nf». 22 was empty until filled by the new | «ice described herself as a “touchy, feety” kind o f petsoa Michael Knox, 46, was the fourth juror dismissed and '’‘W ithout a d o u b t Because 1 think Hum the prosecution juror, No. 353, who was picked by lottery. A fterti^iteW 'jBm r’sn am e wasdraw n, the judgesaid, the change leaves only eight alternates. Superior Court has made a pretty strong case so far and tiK ^^.geU jibe j ■ wasn’t asked whether jurors discussed the , “All right No. 353, when I said we needed you to stay Judge Lance Ito gave no reason for Knox’s dismissal, She smiled back a! the judge. Lute other alternates, other than to say it was for “good cause.” v* 5 wife, Beverly, denied reports of domess h e h a s saf^M p n l|tl th e te stim o n y a n d h a s b e e n The ethnic balance filsp) denied reports ihat h e had placed bets two whites, one Hispanic and one juror o f m m Opinion P age 4 ___________________ Thursday, March 2,1995 Balanced balderdash Well, it’s a good idea. W hile it lasts. T he Senate will be voting today regarding a balanced budget am endm ent which would forbid future federal governm ents from running u p a tab. W hich d o esn ’t seem to be that bad an idea, co n sid erin g the m assiv e tallies ru n u p in the 1980s. F or good o r for bad, past presidents have been m ore than happy to use that “m agic m oney” to pay for welfare paym ents, m ilitary upgrades o r that porii dinner. And, as anybody w ho picks up a newspaper, m agazine o r watches the occasional TV broad­ cast knows, the national debt is one o f the more forbidding problem s facing America today — a m ountain o f debt totaling $4.8 trillion that looms over the A m erican future. O f all the m easures o f the G O P ’s “Contract w ith America,” the balanced budget amendment is the m ost needed. It’s tim e to stop mortgaging o u r future away. We ju st w on’t be getting it y e t A s o f last count, the m easure w ill probably fail — by one vote. Debates over econom ic conflicts, presidential p ow ers and enfo rcem en t o f th e m easure have lead to d issid en ts w ho h av e pro m ised to vote “N o” unless changes are made. W hich m ight be correct. In the rarefied legal term inology o f W ashington, it’s difficult to tell exactly w hat any bill will do at first glance. But it won’t be popular. More than 70 percent of the voting public endorses the measure, calling for an end to feder­ al mismanagement of the budget. Maybe cuts will be necessary. Certainly, Democrats in the Senate have rallied against spending cuts in social programs. And. depending on how you feel about social programs, that might deter a vote or two. But the issue isn’t about where cuts will be made — it’s whether or not cuts will be made. And considering that the Democrats have con­ trolled both the House and the Senate for some time now, the question arises —- if they don’t want the cuts the GOP will make, why didn’t they enact a balanced budget when they were in power? . > .-«j Somewhere down the line, programs probably will have to be trimmed. Cuts will have to be made. Preferably, these will take place all around ‘ the board, to minimize hurt to any one area or region — something the GOP is not doing, and foolishly so. But the overarching idea is a good one. And it’s one that should — no, must — be enacted, by a mandate from the people. ' ■ . ITFrom now on, America can’t run a tab — cash, check, but no credit A nd for those o f us w ho somewhere down die line w ould be pay in g the d eb t accrued today, that’s not a bad thing at all. I T A FF n ir? A T T tT rii Liberty, freedom at 21 years could never smell any better As I d ro v e aw ay fro m h er house with the car window down, my hair blew into my face, still scented with the perfume she dabs on her fragile neck. She sm elled young, yet with depth and intensity found only with age and increasing liberties. I inhaled more deeply, discovering more about this brief visit 1 had with my grandmother. She had invited me over for an afternoon of happy birthday wish­ es. She truly gave me much more than intended. The scent, the message, it was all the same — a simple reminder of the night before. A night about growing up, getting older and living free. I spent the previous evening in hopeless devotion to American barley as I celebrated my 21st birthday. 1 curled up on the couch, queasy with anxiety, contem­ plating my participation in a night only deemed successful if I prayed to the porcelain god. I jostled myself off the couch and got ready. 1 began to feel this inner sense of being, knowing I had nothing to hide, nothing to mask and nothing to lo se —■I was 21. With uncontrollable motivation, I began ripping the “wonder” out of my wonder-bra, 1 smooched my radiant-red lipstick and stuck the clod-hoppin’ pumps in a bag. A new woman emerged as I ended the days of age infla­ tion. I felt older, wiser and oh-so-important. A childish sense of importance shrouded the faces of six girls and one lucky man as we were chauffeured to our first destination. ' ! strutted up to the door of this college-renowned estab­ lishm ent and handed over my license. I glanced up at Goliath in the doorway and flashed an excited grin laced with my new found sense of power. The gang spotted a perfect comer in the clamoring bar. I began sipping up my expectations and guzzling down apprehensions. Suddenly, my first purple hooter shot out of my mouth as I peered across the male-laden room. Two people, strik­ ingly similar to mom and pop, were squeezing their way over my direction. Mom was holding something above her head, looking like a pizza delivery boy. However, this round delight was glowing with candles, sm othered in creamy white frosting and covered with live daisies. Once they reached our comer, the celebration turned into a party. They snapped pictures, sang the typical and joined in on a B-day toast. 1 knew then that 1 was getting older. I had matured from accepting their presence to wishing they would finish out the night with me. We continued through the night in the gilded pumpkin, arriving at each destination with the same excitement as the first. I enjoyed every sip. even dance and every song with an exhilarating concept of freedom. Doors were now open for me to learn, to experience and to meet the silently insane. It seems almost humorous, even to me, that such a minute liberty holds such profound, intrinsic value. This is only a small liberty; a trinket in the chest of growing old. Presents, gifts, packages àll tell the same story, but freedom cannot be wrapped — maybe only smelled. My hair, still blown to my face, continued to tell thé story my grandma told unintentionally. I grabbed the sym­ bol to my new freedom noticing the fine lines in my palm encircling the plastic. My time line crossed my love linç and lines intertwined prophesizing unimaginable freedoms. I inhaled the perfume, holding in the age and wisdom, exhaling the pure freedom she enjoys with the same anima­ tion of a 21-year-old. H er perfum e hin ted at in fin ite freedom s acquired through age. Freedoms only possible if the pursuit to live, and the desire to continue entering doorways, persists. The 21st year is a scent of things to come. I took one deep breath wishing some day my perfume will breathe a similar story. Tori Evans is a ju n io r journalism major. JA S O N O W S L E Y , E d ito r D A V ID S T R O W , M a n a g in g E d ito r NICHOLAS BA CO N .... ........ Night Editor KRIS FRIDR1CH...... ......... .....Night Editor GARIN G R O F F ............ .City Editor GREG ZEMEIDA.... ........................Asst. City Editor DAVID LASPALUTO.......... ... ...........News Editor A- MARJORY KAMINSKI.......................... Opinion Editor . JIM POULIN....................................................... Photo Editor MARK KRAM ER........................ ..... ......Asst, PhotoEditor JEREMY ST EIN .................... .............Sports Editor DAN MILLER.... ...... .............................. Asst. Sports Editor KEN COLLINS...... „Magazine Editor ANNA ULINICH............................Asst.^Magazine Editor R EPO R TE R S: Kennes Bolig, Lisa Cary, Lom e Cohen, D aw n D e C h ristin a, P atly K ing, T o d d K elly . B etty M ihalopouios, A ngela M ull, David Proffitt, N. Scott Trimble, Kim Watson. SPO R TS R EPO R TE R S: Lee Newman, Damian Shaw, Heather Snow. * C O P Y E D IT O R S : B ryn C h an c e llo r, Kim H erm an, Elizabeth Montalbano. P H O T O G R A P H E R S : D ianne R. B artsch, Sam antha Feldman, Lance D. Teizy. EDITO RIA L W RITER: James Frusetta. C O L U M N IS T S : B rian A nderson. T im B axter, D an Blanco, Tori Evans, James Frusetta, Tina Holder. B am ' K elley, D avid L ana, D iana Lopez, Jim M ahin, D elia Maldonado, Greg Nigh. C A R T O O N IST S : Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Bryce Morgan. PR O D U CTIO N : Marc Aaron, Aaron Brutcher, Stacey Devlin, Beth French, A d riannaG arcia, Jodi Goldblatt, Jeremy Meyer, Skip Schrader, Dave Weber. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : Em ily B erger. D an Ellstfom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, Alisa Jellum, Shane Siren, Bill VanZanten. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include; ’ JASON OWSLEY DAVID STROW A. MARJORY KAMINSKI DAVID LASPALUTO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam peri­ o d s, a t M atthew s C e n te r, R oom 15, A riz o n a S tate University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answ er questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or Student body. State P ress P h o n e N umbers Information.............. 965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising.............. 965-6555 Classifieds............ ....965-6735 Opinion STATE P ress _________________________ Page 5 Thursday, March 2,1995 G O P Legislators get dum b and dum ber The tyranny of the status quo wort its second victory in a month last week, lowering the guillotine once again to the neck o f school choice. You w ould th in k th at after gubernatorial and superintendent races where the question of vouch­ ers was a clearly definable— and dividing — issue, there would be momentum toward expanding edu­ cational opportunities. Add a solid­ ly Republican state legislature and the chances of passing a bill would be high. P erhaps, b u t that w as before the Arizona Extortion — uh, excuse me, Education — Association stepped in. The proposal sponsored by Arizona’s Superintendent Lisa Graham would have provided vouchers worth $1,500/— less that a third of what the state spends annually per student — to 8.000 low-income children over the next four years. After heavy lobbying by the AEA, three Republican senators — “boneless wonders," in Churchill’s words — capitulated and joined five Democrats to nix the bill. ■ One of the betraying Republicans was state Sen, David Petersen of Mesa, a living testament to Plato’s dictum that “those who are too smart to engage in politics are punished by being governed by those who are dumber” Explaining his vote, Petersen said his opposition to vouchers was justified since “the answer is parents getting concerned about their children’s education.” What could be a greater concern for a child’s education than a parent taking the time to choose the school their child attends? Because a parent chooses the food his/her child eats, does that indicate an ambivalence to his/her child’s nutrition? The AEA is now 2-0 against vouchers. Earlier in the month, the Senate Education Committee defeated a bill allow­ ing for vouchers of $2,000 to middle- and lower-income fami­ lies. Most likely, the third strike against vouchers will come later this month when a minimalist bill restricting vouchers to 15.000 students'and has already passed the House comes to a vote in the Senate. Som e things to clarify about on-line Today, when I picked up the Stale Press, I was happy to see it was the same literary gem I have come to expect. I shall, however, confine my comments to “ASU recruits students by going on-line.” I have a few words of advice for Kennes Bolig: 1. While “disc’’ and “disk” may be homonyms, their mean­ ings are not the same. I suggest you invest in a dictionary and actually use it. 2. I have a feeling that N etscape C om m unications Corporation would be very interested to know that Mark Ahns created the version of NetScape which ASU uses. You have confused creating a program with creating a home page — not a slight blunder. 3. NetScape is not on WWW; it is a program on a PC, Mac or UNIX running X Windows which is a “graphical interface” for WWW. 4. NetScape is not “equipjped with pictures, movies and audio clips;” the aforementioned home pages are. These are only the few “factual” pieces of information which I could understand in your article. Many other ideas you wrote about were not even comprehensible. Perhaps next time you should spend more time researching your topic, making sure your facts are correct. -. Prospects for reform do appear bleak, despite the protesta­ home-schooled students have demonstrated no less of an abil­ tions of Governor Symington and Superintendent Graham. In ity to adapt or excel at Harvard than their public-schooled the event the Senate folds like a deck of cards before the AEA peers. What greater indictment does one need of the moribund once more, both may take heart that the education revolution state of public education, than the fact that the pantheon of the is already taking place. The highest growth in education is not public school stu­ education establishment accepts students who have thorough­ dents defecting to parochial or private schools. Contrary to ly rejected public education with no social or educational what the education unions purport, the great migration is the repercussions? If blue collar parents with no college education abandonment of public schools by parents in favor of — hold can educate equal to a state-certified and unionized teacher your breath — home! No longer are children feigning illness corps, what the hell is the College of Education for? Education’s decrepit state alone would not have compelled to stay home from school — they are in school! Home schooling is die vindicating phenomenon of con­ parents to stay at home with their children. They needed the sumer sovereignty. An estimated half-million children are means. Their prayers were answered with the telecommunica­ tions revolution. Parents not taught at home by their par­ only teach with textbooks, but ents; more than one percent also with on-line services, of the school-age population. CD-ROM and other interac­ W hile this may seepi tive programs. With schools insignificant now, that figure is growing by 15 percent a In the event the Senate folds like a deck so mismanaged, warehoused with obsolete equipment and year. What business would o f cards before the AEA once more, both archaic regulations, middlenot envy com parable fig ­ may take heart that the education revolu­ class and low-income parents ures? are giving their children a Growth in home school­ tion is already taking place. first-class education in the ing began as Christian funda­ privacy — and safety — of m entalists w ithdrew their their own home. children out of disgust for an The A EA is com pletely education devoid of values. oblivious to the changes soci­ But in recent years, the typi­ cal parents to abandon public education are middle-class, both ety has undergone, and therefore in the case of education, it is working and religiously agnostic. Their motivation has more more concerned with self-preservation than delivering a quali­ to do with creativity, not Darwinism; their concerns are ty product. In 1993, when a proposition granting vouchers equal to half of what the state spends per child was on the instructional content, not multi-culturalism. Studies have shown that home-schooled children perform California ballot, the National Education Association affiliate just as well as other class-taught students in standardized test had the choice of spending $12 million to hire 340 additional scores. In Washington between 1986 and 1990, more than teachers or defeating Proposition 174. They chose the latter. Fortunately, the telecommunications revolution and the 3,600 students scored in the top third nationwide in SATs — better than public school students. In Oregon, more than two- ’infoban’ are allowing children to receive something the AEA has long forgotten and what the College of Education has lost thirds scored at or above the national average. To see the value of home schools, all one needs is to look interest in — an education. Too bad, the state legislature is at the red brick walls of Harvard. In 1994, the University was still behind the learning curve. forced to reveal that it regularly admits students who have never stepped inside a public classroom. More to the point, Barry R. Kelley is a graduate student studying Asian history. ~~Letters to the Editor EDU—internet: S ICJBO@ASUVM.INRE A SU E-m ail: ICJBO@ A SU A CA D M ailin g Address: State Press Box 871502 A rizona State U niversity Tem pe, A Z 8 5 287-1502 Please bring back “Peer” pier; it’s missed Why did the University take down the refreshing art installa­ tion between the Art Building and Stauffer Hall? If you missed it, it was located on a patch of lawn shaped like a deep bowl. It was called “Peeri’ and it was a grass-covered pier that started at the rim of the bowl and jutted straight out over the empty space. A quirky little juxtaposition, a water-structure placed in air. It was the only spontaneously creative thing I’ve ever seen on campus, and it has disappeared. Now the artist has outlined his barren site with smooth stones. I say, let him put “Peer” back up; then lean smile at it again as I go by. Caitlin Xenia Cornwall Graduate Student Botany State P ress e tte rs to th e tóete. AHleÉer*awslhefypté, fojtffciaí'SptBedí gfo$|'jfcr e d it o r foi®tsfc*jtofces sb* jfoWMlfofo -fot shy with the University) and phone number. Only signed letters will be fipttfifttifltift for pttbliehtSon. for ándhythity will bfc-gtshted oaly r,femat&ám the oftfoioo page editor for focttwl Miranda Gill Junior English rejected; AS Press frg*&4esk m foe Box ArfódosState fee btoegfo w ilii * hhófo'iDl to'tífo Slate o f the hlaíthews Cgfooc* or sodnessedtt>$&a$e. Press, Aoau ; Sophomoric column doesn’t know difference between women, human issues As 1 read Barry R. Kelley’s misogynist and sophomoric “column,” I had to wonder: what was it that angered him so much to cause him to launch such an invective against women? Was it his conspicuous ignorance about women’s issues and the true meaning of feminism? Was it perhaps a thinly guised revenge at not being able to sit in a sexist establishment, lapping up beers, ogling scantily clad wait­ resses, and belching out racial epithets and moronic judg­ ments about multicultural curricula to anyone drunk enough to take him seriously? Perhaps only he knows for certain. Unmistakably, though, Kelley has not done his home­ work and has engaged in that most vain and common of journalistic errors — hearing or reading something, misin­ terpreting it, and then going off on a series of exaggerations and hopeless non-sequiturs without bothering to find out what “it” (in this case feminism) really is. I doubt if Kelley has truly read Catherine M cK innon’s literature or even studied feminism in a scholarly and organized way beyond glancing at titles on the covers of Ms. magazines. Had he studied it, or even bothered to ask other w om en fo r their points o f views on topics as sensitive and controversial as rape, abortion, and eating disorders (issues w hich he han­ dles with a lack o f journalistic integrity), he m ight not have equated Sex w ith rape, com plim ents w ith sexual h ara ss­ ment, and m ulticulturalism with social decline. Feminism is not about universal man-hating or societyblaming, even though at its core revolve issues that are influenced and shaped by social values and mores, as well as satisfying the male sexual appetite. A feminist is not a woman who indiscriminately blames and shames men, who organizes rallies of burning bras, or who “falls to pieces when her self-esteem is injured.” To be sure, there may be women out there who call themselves feminists and fit that description, however, I think that anyone who cares about any issues that impinge on a woman’s life is a feminist, including men. For the record, Kelley, “mounting stirrups,” as you so crudely depict and minimize abortion, is not an event for public consum ption, but skimpy costum es designed for male satiation are. Also! feminism historically was never just a “political” cause, as you mistakenly believe. It has always been a theory regarding not only the political rights of women, but the social and economical, as well. Besides, why can’t rape and abortion and eating disor­ ders and all the other “causes” Kelley rants about be human issues as well as feminist issues? To a great degree, don’t these problems concern all men who have women in their lives? Why is it that whenever such polemical issues arise, people assume they are “women’s” issues, when the majori­ ty o f the decisions regarding such matters seem to be made by men? Finally, to the dubious question at the beginning of your column about feminism being dead, Kelley; It doesn’t seem as if it is dead, but that you wish it were. Russella G. Serna Graduate Student Social W ork State P ress Thursday, March 2,1995 Pag¡e 6 N ew sum m er bridge program to assist in co m in g at-risk stu d en ts and if you don’t have that, you’re going to lose them.” S ally B ry an t, a sso c ia te d ire c to r o f U n d e rg ra d u a te incom ing freshmen who are academically at risk and Academic Services and coordinator of die program’s logis­ likely to drop out of college are the target of a new summer tics team, said high schools and incoming freshmen should appreciate the program. bridge program slated to begin this summer. “I think they’ll see it as a very positive move on “W e're focusing on that first year o f college because of all of the people who com e in here as freshmen, we ASU’s part," she said. “More and more students are com­ lo s e m o re th a n h a l f o f th o s e s tu d e n ts fro m th e ing underprepared for college-level work, and as educators, it’s incum bent upon us to U n iv e rs ity b e tw e e n th e prepare them to be success­ firs t and seco n d y e a r s ,” ful and compete.” said John Ramage, execu­ More and more students are coming D obson H igh School tiv e d ir e c to r o f underprepared fo r college-level work, counselor Bob Foley said U ndergraduate A cadem ic he lik es the p ro g ram Services, which is im ple­ and as educators, it’s incumbent upon us b ecau se it w ill ease the m enting the new program. transition for students who A dm issions will d eter­ to prepare them to be successful and have a difficult time adjust­ mine who can participate, compete. ing to the University. considering students who “For a lot o f kids, it’s — Sally Bryant, associate director o f have a 50 percent chance of difficult to go into a new receiving a 2.0 GPA their Undergraduate Academic Services and atmosphere,” he said. first semester. Ramage said T he sum m er coordinator of the program’s logistics team these students will be iden­ bridge program was devel­ tified by high school teach­ ers and counselors and examination of SAT scores and high oped at the request of University committees on intercolle­ giate athletics, quality and diversity and strategic planning. school GPAs. Students participating in the four-week summer bridge A feasibility committee approved the proposal last spring, program in July will take six hours of instruction daily in and Provost Milton Glick turned implementation of the pro­ math, English and university academic success. In addition, gram over to Undergraduate Academic Services. Ramage said the program could' cost the U niversity students will socially integrate into ASU through communi­ ty, counseling and tutoring services. Ramage said it is about $1,500 per student for classes, academic support ser­ im portant for incoming freshmen to receive this social vices, administration, and room and board. Although only 65 students will participate in the 1995 pilot summer bridge interaction while completing the program. “W e’re taking these kids right out of high school and program, Ramage said future programs could enroll 200. putting them in pretty intense situations,” he said. “The No. “Our goal is to make sure we target people who are in the one factor in terms of retention is student-to-student contact, best position to take advantage o f the program,” he said. e a t Yourself to a feUCURE By A ngela M ull State P ress P olice R eport ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: • A m an not a ffilia te d w ith A SU w as c o n ta c te d at University Drive and College Avenue while he was setting up a religious-materials stand. He was advised of trespass­ ing and left the area. • A female student reported that she was assaulted by a man at Forest Avenue and Lemon Street. • A male student reported that someone broke into his vehi­ cle and stole several items while it was parked in Lot 59. • A female student reported that someone broke into her vehicle and stole several items while it Was parked in Lot 59. • A female student reported that someone broke into her vehicle and stole her car stereo and other items while parked in Area 17. • A man not affiliated with ASU reported that someone stoic his wallet from Lot 60. • A female student reported that someone stole her walkm an and $5 from h e r o ffic e in the C ow den F am ily Resources Building. • A male employee reported that someone stole $250 from the Memorial Union Market Place. • A male employee reported that he collided with a mason­ ry wall on the east side o f Lot 63, which damaged the ASU vehicle he was driving. • A male employee reported that someone damaged a state vehicle while it was parked at 1711 S. Rural Road. • A female student reported that she received six disturbing phone calls at her residence at Sonora Center. • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for driving on a suspended license at Rural Road and University Drive. Tem pe p o lice reported the fo llo w in g in cid en ts Wednesday: • A 24-year-old woman successfully bought a pager from Incredible Universe with a forged check, but when she went through another check-out line with a typewriter, the Photo courtesy o f Tempe Police Department This suspect was film ed February 21 at approxim ately 2:14 p.m. robbing Thunderbird Bank at 2077 S. Priest Drive, accord­ ing to Tempe Police. According to the police report, he told the te lle r th at he had a gun, w hich was not seen, and he demanded money. The suspect fled on foot with approximate­ ly $3,350. Anyone w ith inform ation about th is robbery is encouraged to contact the Tempe Police Department at (602) 350-8311, IR «95-026214. cashier realized that her identification didn’t match the name on the check. She was detained by store personnel until police arrived. When police questioned her, she admit­ ted to the forgeries and consented to a search o f a hotel room where she was staying. In the room were numerous items obtained in other forgeries. The checks she used belonged to another woman who had closed the account more than five years ago. • A 33-year-old man was arrested at McKellips Road and Scottsdale Road for an outstanding warrant. Compiled by State Press reporter Todd Kelly U.S. blasts Colombia for lax drug enforcement W A S H IN G T O N (A P ) — T he Clinton administration issued a sweep­ ing denunciation o f Colombia’s anti­ narcotics performance Wednesday but ruled out a cutoff of assistance as con­ trary to the national interest. Colombia was one of 29 drug pro­ ducing or transit countries on which the administration, responding to con­ g ressio n al d irectiv es, issu ed ju d g ­ ments concerning their cooperation in anti-drug efforts. President Clinton had the option o f suspending certain aid programs and trade benefits to Colombia in light of the country’s “lackluster” performance. But Clinton rejected that alternative because, as the world’s leading pro­ d u c e r an d d is trib u to r o f c o c a in e , Colombia is the most important coun­ try in the U.S. drug strategy for the Western Hemisphere, officials said. Contributing to the administration decision not to impose sanctions was its view that to do otherwise could induce Colombia to withdraw all cooperation. In Bogota, the U.S. criticism drew an indignant reaction from Atty. Gen. Orlando Vasquez. “No country in the world involved in drug trafficking problems has paid a higher price in human sacrifice,” he said. He recalled the thousands o f C olom bians, including ju d g e s and presidential candidates, who have died in drug violence in the past decade. A State Department report which accompanied Clinton’s decisions was highly critical o f Colombia’s record in 1994. “Weak legislation, corruption and inefficiency hampered efforts to bring mid- and high- level narcotics traffick­ ers to justice,” the report said. “No d ru g -related assets w ere forfeited, while already lenient sentences were further reduced pursuant to automatic sentencing reductions.” Assistant Secretary of State Robert Gelbard said drug trafficking organi­ za tio n s th re a te n C o lo m b ia ’s very social and political institutions. “Colombia needs an aggressive pol­ icy to capture and prosecute m ajor drug traffickers,” he said. “They need a judicial system and process that really punishes drug traffickers w ith sen­ tences commensurate with their crimes rather than just slaps on the wrist,” Colom bian traffickers control 80 percent o f the world’s cocaine trade. O f the 29 countries evaluated, 18 were found to be fully cooperating in anti-narcotics efforts. Eleven others w ere deem ed not to be cooperating fully but only five were subjected to econom ic san ctio n s, fo u r o f them holdovers from last year: Burma, Iran, Nigeria and Syria. The new addition was Afghanistan, based on a 39 percent increase in opium poppy production. The five subjected to sanctions will not suffer consequences in their U.S. ties since none has been an aid recipi­ ent for years. riM jjphh m . C RIM Fe RUjti 966-5192 350 S. Mill Ave., #104 ÜNdERSTANdiNq ThE Bible A Thursday Night Bible Study Subject: Phil. — 2 Thess. Sponsor: C hristian Students Fellowship Tim e: 7:00 p.m. Speaker: B ill Freeman Place: Tempe W oman's Club 1290 S. M ill Ave. (Across from Gam mage Auditorium) P hillppians to 2 Thessalonians Book & Chapter Subject Date Mar. 2 ..... .... How Christ Relates to O thers.......Col. 4 ..... 9 ........ Adjusting in Christ....... 2 3 .... .....W hat Our Responses Tell U s. .... . 1 ThesS. 1 30..... .... What Is Our Value System..... ......... 1 Thess. 2 C h r is tia n S t u d e n t s F e llo w s h ip For further information call 948-4488 CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 1 Had longings 6 Flower part 11 Shoe material 12 Worth of acting 13 Hunter’s targets 14 Inside pictures 15 Stations 17 Cribbage need 19 Wall climber 20 Stolen 23 G oby 25 Easy gait 26 Atlanta event of '96 28 Some poetry 29 Plant or Palmer 30 French pronoun 31 Stole stuff 32 Ozone, for one 33 Ramos’ capital 35 Oscar's roommate 38 Miller’s salesman 41 Overjoy 42 Deceive 43 Slangily vetoed 44 Property DOWN S H E S N O WH A DS HA L BOG A S A » D S 1 NGUP S T■ N E A MA K 1 NG 1 D C AT AW 1 A S T L0 A N E D C T S O u T E A S p O W I P ADA R E N S AC AMA WA K N E T E S T Y 2 Directing cry 3 Manipula­ R tive UP trickery NA C U 4 Advan­ 1 R AR NS tage M 1 TO P A 5 Loathe S H O N 6 Retire­ ment age, Yesterday’s Answer for some message 7 Blunders 21 Verdi creation 33 Tiny 8 Shooter amount 22 Midterms ammo 24 Thatcher 34 Clark’s 9 Some partner and 1 0 “— Mis635 Marsh Major: rables” 36 Inventor Abbr. 16 Invade Whitney 25 Chemist’s 17 Mexican 37 Not strict milieu money 39 Had a 27 Dian 18 Steer bite Fosse clear of 40 “Wayne's subject 20 Half a World” 31 Sent a team's word modem schedule 1 à 6 3 4É \ 11 rf7 1® i A ■ i' :•8 9 10 12 14 ■ ■ * 24 23 26 ¿8 30 I 16 iS 20 21 *■ a 27 29 ■ P ■ 34 32 39 40 36 41 43 1 Farm animal U L T R A 1 11 3-2 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's h o w to work i t AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation o f the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3-2 CRYPTOQUOTE JNVL CINCBI LEIO U I YI V IBPIV ZN Y IH L HV LENWQE ZHLLIM FM Q LEI LE IJ - JHYD It .— I. U . ENUI .. Y esterday's C ryptoquote: WHAT A MERCY IT WOULD BE IF WE WERE ABLE TO OPEN AND CLOSE OUR EARS AS EASILY AS WE OPEN AND CLOSE OUR EYES!—LICHTENBERG o 1095 bv K ina Features S yndicate. Inc. e re"s soundtrack also won for best musical album for children, w hile a “read-along” recording won for spoken-w ord album for children. “The Circle of Life” track, meanwhile, claimed an instrumental arrangement Grammy. C lo s e t o A SU ! 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M ens swimming heads to Pac-lOs By H eather Snow State P ress As the ASU men’s swim team begins competition at the Pac-10 Championships today in Long Beach, Calif., its main goal is to qualify as many individuals for the NC AA Championships as possible. “Our primary purpose is to try and make as many times for nationals as we can,” Coach Ernie Maglischo said. “We are hoping to send between eight and 10 peo­ ple to the NCAA Championships." ASU finished fourth at the championships last year, and according to Maglischo, the team is predicted to finish fifth this year. He said based on season performances, Stanford is the favorite to win, followed by California, USC and UofA. “Stanford, California, USC and UofA are all ranked in the top 10,” Maglischo said. “So to come in fifth would stillJbe doing very well.” Despite the predictions, the Sun Devils are still going to shoot for the best. jL . “I feel optimisfic, and the team’s been swimming teal well,” Maglischo said. “We’re hoping to do better than fifth.” Seniors Richard Bera, Felipe Delgado and junior Eduardo Piccinini will lead the team into the champi­ onships, Maglischo said. “Richard and Eduardo have performed well for us all season. I’m also looking at Felipe to perform well.” The Pac-10 Cham pionships begin today and run through Saturday. California showed Wednesday night at Tempe Diablo Stadium that replacem ent A ngels can hold their own against Sun Devils, The California Angels used a seven-run third inning to beat the ASU baseball team 13-5 in front of 2,102 people, most o f whom were Sun Devil fans. The gam e m arked the first tim e in M ajor League B aseball history that replacem ent players Were used. Media as far as die New York Post were on hand to see the first use of scabs. Union members Were probably hoping to see the Angels get trounced by ASU, but it didn’t happen. California cranked out 11 hits and committed ju st two errors, both by third baseman Lance Robbins. Although his team was beaten, ASU Coach Pat Murphy was riot impressed with the replacements. “That Was bad baseball. I don’t think (Angel manager) Marcell Lachemann would mind me saying that was bad base­ ball on both sides,” he, said. “No one is going to come and watch that. It’s gpirig to ruin the game. I feel bad for the man­ agers and coaches. I hope they can get this thing worked out.” California did have some scattered fans throughout the ballpark, but their dedication was mixed. Some held up signs that said, ‘Thanks for playing guys,” while others showed up with paper bags over their heads. There was also some animosity in the crowd toward the Angel players. Some fans would yell out “Throw it back” anytime an Angel player would hit a foul ball. ASU had to use seven pitchers in the game; three before there was one out in the third inning. The group allowed 12 earned runs, w alked 10 batters and also hit three California players. “ W e play ed a w fu l,” M urphy said. “ O ur p itch ers couldn’t throw strikes, but I’m not going to mortgage our weekend by throwing a Kaipo or a Billy Neal.” California brought nine players to the plate before ASU recorded an out in the third inning. The seven-run barrage included six singles and three walks. The Angels put the game out of reach in the bottom of the seventh inning with a two-run home run by designated hitter Joel Smith. Since ASU was playing a major league team, it was forced to use wooden bats — something Murphy believes his team couldn’t adjust to. “This game showed what a difference wooden bats can make,” he said. “We were not used to them, which hurt our offense.” ASU begins Six-Pac play Friday at UofA at 2:30 p.m. The same two teams will then meet at Packard Stadium Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 1 p.m. ASU h op es to p u t en d to lo sin g tren d in gam e again st C ougars B y L ee N ewman State P ress Like a recovering alcoholic, there are certain days when thé ASU women’s basketball team falls off the wagon. Although ASU, which finished last season with a 4-22 record, has made great improvements in just one year, there are still games in which it can’t shake old habits. The Sun Devils (8-16 overall, 2-13 Pac-10) want to leave their rocky past behind them for good starting tonight w hen th ey h o st W ash in g to n S tate at 7 p.m . in the University Activity Center. ASU Coach Jacqueline Hullah believes although ASU has the same number of Pac-10 wins as it did last year, she is not coaching the same team. “This group is far more focused on learning and puts forth a much better effort day after day than last year’s team,” she said. “Although we haven’t had the benefit of seeing our wins change with regard to the Pac-10 schedule, 1 still feel this is an improved team.” One reason why ASU isn’t improving its Pac-10 record could be the injuries to starting guards senior Tiffany Krahenbubl and sophomore Liisa Kotilainen. Kotilainen missed four consecutive games. She came back last week but was not at 100 percent and saw limited minutes. Krahenbuhl has missed ASU-’s last six Pac-10 games but is expected to return to the lineup tonight. “It’s unfortunate we’ve had these injuries the last couple o f weeks, because we were really starting to come together as a team,” Hullah said. “We had started the second round of die Pac-10 (schedule), and the kids had an idea of what to expect the second time around. We were really starting to settie in.” There have been games this season when the Sun Devils have proven that they’re not the same team from one sea­ son ago, such as its 99-67 win over Grand Canyon on Dec. 22. Just six gam es into the season, ASU had already matched its total amount of wins from a year ago. ASU doubled its amount of wins from a year ago when it upset 24th-ranked Oregon 79-77 on Jan. 28. The Sun Devils also owned a second-half lead against fifth-ranked Stanford on Jan, 12, but a 15-0 Cardinal run gave Stanford the win, 83-59. However, there have also been games when the Sun Devils don’t seem too different from last season. Those have included an 82-37 lo ss to the team A SU plays Saturday, Washington. Also, a 77-42 home loss to Oregon State, a 102-51 loss to Stanford and last week’s 83-44 and 92-49 losses to Oregon and Oregon State, respectively. Now With ju st three games remaining in the season, ASU is looking to end the season positively. ASU’s final three games are all at home — a place where five of ASU’s eight wins have come. “W ith W ash in g to n h e a d in g fo r the to u rn a m e n t, Washington State on the bubble and the rivalry there has always been with UofA, there’s not an easy game left,” Hullah said. “There’s a disappointment on the team as far as our wins and losses go, but at the same time there’s the attitude of let’s finish strong. The kids feel real strong about finishing at home on a high note and getting some wins to close out the season.” After tonight, ASU’s final two games are Saturday’s 4:30 p.m. contest with Washington and a season-ending battle with UofA on Saturday, March 11. Lance D. Terry/State Press Sophomore M olly Tutor and the ASU basketball team host Washington State at 7 p.m. today in the University Activity Center. Page 12 ______ Wednesday, March 2, 1995_______________________ _ _____ SfATE PRESS ASU looks to continue winning streak against Huskies B y D an M iller State P ress Samantha Feldman/State Press Junior Mario Bennett and the 15th-ranked Sun Devils go for their 13th consecutive win over Washington at 8 tonight at Edmundson Pavilion in Seattle. also tops amamong ong conference freshmen. also tops conference freshmen. The 15th-fanked ASU men’s basketball team is hoping 13 is its lucky num ber tonight when it tips off with Washington in Seattle’s Edmundson Pavilion. T he gam e w ill be te le v ise d liv e on KTVK-Channel 3 beginning at 8 p.m. The P ac-lO ’s third-place Sun D evils (20-7 overall, 10-5 Pac-10), who defeated UW 78-73 in overtime on Feb. 2 in Tempe, have won 12 straight m eetings over the eighth-place Huskies (8-15,4-10). However, Washington is riding high after a 78-72 upset of Washington State last weekend. “ They’re gonna go into this week with a lot of confidence,” ASU Coach Bill Frieder said of the Huskies, who are 7-5 at home this season. “It’s gonna be a very tough bas­ ketball game. It’s a crucial game for us.” The Sun Devils continue to lead the con­ ference in three categories: steals per game (10.6), turnover margin (+4.7) and scoring defense (68.9). But the Huskies are right behind ASU in two o f those categories. They are second in scoring defense (70.7) and steals per game (10.1). Washington Coach Bob Bender said one of the biggest challenges his club has is not having a letdown after last week’s dramatic victory. “One thing that we have failed to do dur­ ing the course of the season is handle the success of a win,” he said. “I think we’ve somewhat got satisfied because of the wins and not played well the next game out.” Junior guard Bryant B oston leads the Huskies with a 15.2 points-per-game aver­ age, while freshman forward Mark Sanford is second on the team with 13.7. Sanford leads all Pac-10 freshmen with 15.3 points against Pac-10 opponents. He has scored 20 percent of UW’s points this year, which is Bender added that the Sun Devils’ start­ ing lineup of Ron Riley, Quincy Brewer, Mario Bennett, Marcell Capers and Isaac Burton presents certain problems for his squad that many others don’t. “I think that Arizona State is one o f the most difficult teams for us to match up with w ith th e ir a th le tic is m ,” B en d er said, “ B etw een the tim e we play ed them in Tempe and now, I’ve seen them with even more weapons that make them that much more difficult for us.” B ender singled out freshm an Jerem y V eal as a d an g ero u s p la y e r in A S U ’s already potent arsenal. “I think he’s really picked his game up to a different level and proved to be one of the top freshman in the league,” he noted. ASU w ill round out the road trip on S atu rd ay in P u llm an , W ash ., a g a in st W ashington State (14-9, 8-6), w hich is wedged in a three-way tie for fourth in the Pac-10 heading into this week’s action. The game will be televised on KSAZ-Channel 10 with the tip-off scheduled for 2 p.m. The Cougars are 6-1 in conference play this season at Friel Court, which is consid­ ered one of the toughest venues for a visit­ ing team in the Pac-10. “They’re fans really fire up our kids,” Frieder said. “They’re a talkative bunch." Frieder Said WSU will have no shortage of motivation, especially because Saturday is also its senior night. C ougar ju n io r guard Shamon Antrum w as re c e n tly nam ed the P a c -lO ’s N ew com er o f the Y ear, an aw ard that Burton won last year and Capers, the year b e fo re . W S U ju n io r team m ate M ark Hendrickson is rated first in the Pac-10 in field goal percentage (65.1) and second in rebounds (9.1). Striking players pay w ay hom e for m inor leaguers SCOTTSDALE (AP) — Another civil bargaining ses­ sion produced no breakthroughs Wednesday, and striking major leaguers decided to pay the way home for minor lea­ guers kicked out of spring training for backing the union, : As the negotiators met for the third straight day and the exhibition season opened, the u n io n 's executive board made the pay decision during a telephone conference call. Some teams have told minor leaguers who refuse to play in spring games that they have to pay their own way home. Some minor leaguers questioned union Officials about that during a meeting Tuesday night at West Palm Beach, Fla, The third and final meeting with minor leaguers was held Wednesday night at Phoenix. “ They’re in a hot spot and it’s not of their own action or their own doing,” union head Donald Fehr said. D ie strike, which completed its 202nd day, wiped out its first gam es o f 1995, w ith the A m erican and N ational leagues formally canceling 26 exhibition games. With the strike extending into March, both sides seem more intent on trying to reach an agreement. “The next two, three days, maybe through the weekend ... may be the best opportunity to make a deal,” Toronto’s Paul Molitor said. At night, the California Angels opened the exhibition season against ASU at nearby Tempe, the first major league game since the strike began last Aug. II. Just 350 fans were in the stands at gametime in Tempe Diablo Stadium, which holds 9,785. Some fans wore paper bags over their heads. “This is my first replacement game,” said Mark Werner, 30, of Ahwatukee, Ariz. “I’ve been associated with some bad teams, but I’ve never worn a bag before.” Owners vowed to stage the replacement games despite the difficulties. “I suppose they’ll go ahead with it no matter how silly it is,” Fehr said. M ontreal, m eanw hile, received perm ission from the Canadian governm ent to use replacem ents at Olympic Stadium. In Florida, 20 players left the Expos camp at Lantana and 16 were booted out of the Cincinnati Reds complex at Plant City . The sides did make One small agreement. On Thursday in New York, they ’ll announce a joint deal with six trading card companies. For 6 1/2 hours during the day, small delegations met at the golf club of the Gainey Ranch. Art even smaller group was to continue the discussions at night- “I don’t know if there’s, been any significant change in positions,” acting commissioner Bud Selig said after the day session ended. “But I think a greater degree of under­ standing could lead to that. ... I think there is increased understanding each day.” Selig said the sides went deeper into the central issues of a luxury tax and revenue sharing, but he also said “no num­ bers were evei discussed.” “We got to the heart of the matter on a number of sub­ jects,” he said. “I ’m not any more pessimistic or optimistic than I was 24 hours ago.” ■ Even as they Were talking, the league offices canceled 12 exhibition games involving the Baltimore Orioles, who refuse to use or play against replacement players. Fourteen games were canceled that didn’t involve the O rioles, 10 involving sp lit squads. C lubs a re n ’t sure whether they’ll have enough players to field two squads in one day. Four games were added, all as replacements for games against the Orioles that were canceled on those days. B altim ore ow ner P eter A ngelos has refused to sign strikebreakers. The American League is threatening to fine him up to $250,000 for each missed regular season game or CULTURAL DIVERSITY COMMITTEE/OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE ASU PRESENTS F E S T IV A L Monday, March 6, 1995 Student Services Courtyard BYSTUDENT ORGANIZATIONS ENTERTAINMENT 10:30a. m.-3:30p.m. For Further Information, Please Contact: Jesús Treviflo, Assistant Dean of Student Life for Cultural Diversity 965-6547 or LLOYD BR1MHALL, Program Coordinator, International Students Office 965-7451 tnzoiAsmEmiiEisiu D T urn to Strike, page 13. ^ Vicario cruises in 1st match as No. 1 player ASU Club Comer MEN'S GYMNASTICS CLUB Latest results - The team captured second place in the Southwest Cup on Friday, Feb. 24 with a score of 219.30. The team finished .1 behind the first-place team from the Olympic Training Center. Next up - The team travels to Albuquerque on Saturday, March 4 to face No. 1 New Mexico. LACROSSE CLUB Next Up - The team takes on the Phoenix Club on Sunday, March 5 at noon and Alfred on Thursday, March 9 at 6 p.m. on the ASU Bandfield. Strike C ontinue » P age 13 Wednesday, March 2,1995 State P ress from pa g i 1?. to even take away his franchise. “We have made it perfectly clear that we are willing to play games with only minor leaguers,” Angelos said. “We know what we are doing is right and proper.” In Ai. >apolis, Md., the Maryland Senate a p p ro v e d le g is la tio n to b a r g am es at Camden Yards this season unless 75 per­ cent of the players were on major league rosters last year. The Senate also approved a bill to bar advertising replacement games as major league baseball. Gov. Parris Glendening said he would sign the legislation into law if the bills are p a sse d by the M ary lan d H o u se o f Delegates. ■ : “I’m going to sign it enthusiastically,” he said. The 20 Montreal players cither refused to play, didn’t show up or walked out. “I respect their decision, even though I don’t think it's the right decision." Expos general manager Kevin Malone said. Among the players booted by the Reds Were Kurt Stillwell, Scott Scudder and Rich Sauveur. Owner Marge Schott cheered the 27 players who stayed. “‘Y o u ’re n o t w im ps o u t th e re ,” she shouted. “You guys are men.” In Ottawa, the Canadian Im m igration D epartm ent reversed course and said it w o u ld n ’t en fo rce a reg u latio n barrin g replacement workers from obtain visas to enter Canada. “The original intent of this regulation was to protect Canadian workers involved in a labor dispute against replacement by foreign workers,” Immigration spokeswom­ an Pam Cullum said. “We were finding in this situation that it was protecting foreign workers from replacement by other foreign workers.” Toronto is barred from using replace­ ments by Ontario provincial law, and the Blue Jays have not asked for special con­ sideration. Toronto has asked the American League for permission to play regular-season home games in Dunedin. Fla., where it has a 6,218-seat stadium for spring training games. “We’ll have a decision by the end of the week,” AL president Gene Budig Said, State P ress Police Reports- Too bizarre to be anything but real. IN D IA N W E L L S, C a lif. (A P ) — Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, playing her first match since becoming the w orld’s No. 1 female player, breezed to a 6-3, 6-1 victory over Yayuk Basuki on Wednesday in the second round of the $430,000 Evert Cup. Sanchez V icario overtook Steffi G raf this week in the rankings to become No. 1 for the first time in her career. Graf, the E v e rt C up d e fen d in g ch am p io n , is n ’t entered this year. Sanchez Vicario needed only 65 minutes to dispose of Basuki, who is ranked 27th in the world. “It feels great to be playing in my first tour­ nament at No. I,” Sanchez Vicario said. “I really didn’t feel any different. I was just try­ ing to play my game. But I feel comfortable. “When you have a (first-round) bye and you have to w ait, sh e ’s alread y had a match, and she can be a dangerous player. I ’m looking forward to more matches. I’m trying not to put pressure on myself.” T he to p -se e d e d S p an iard blew four m atch p o in ts in the fin al gam e before putting Basuki away, “She started coming up with some unbe­ lievable shots,” Sanchez V icario said of Basuki. “I just kept punching and concen­ trating and playing deep. “Right now, I’m just trying to play good tennis. All thè players want to be No. 1.” In o th e r se c o n d -ro u n d -m atches W ednesday, No. 2 Conchita M artinez of Spain overpow ered K aterina M aleeva of Bulgaria 6-2, 6-2; No. 4 Natasha Zvereva of Belarus struggled past Lisa Raymond 75, 7-6 (7-5); and Chanda Rubin eliminated Amanda Coetzer of South Africa 6-4, 6-4. C oetzer had reached the finals o f the Evert Cup in each of the last two years. The final four second-round m atches will be played Thursday. Among those in action will be No. 3 Lindsay Davenport, who will facing Angelica Gaveldon in her first match of the tournament. D reifort pitches for LA coaches at training camp VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Darren Dreifort threw at what he said was “about 75 percent.” Los Angeles Dodgers general manager Fred Claire said Dreifort threw “all out, 100 percent.” Either way, it was enough to cause pain in Dreifort’s tender right elbow, generating mixed reviews. Dreifort. the Dodgers' No. 1 selection in the 1993 draft who commanded a $1.3 mil­ lion signing bonus, arrived in Dodgertown on Wednesday for an examination. W ith team physician Dr. Frank Jobe, physical therapist Pat Screnar. Claire, man­ ager Tom Lasorda and pitching coach Dave W allace looking on, D reifort threw 39 pitches in nine minutes. ■After that, he returned home to Kansas. D reifort w as the first m em ber o f the Dodgers’ 40-man roster to set foot in train­ ing camp. The striking players union went along with the D odgers’ suggestion that Dreifort com e into camp for a one-timeonly checkup, but only if he didn’t wear an o ffic ia l u n ifo rm w hen he w orked out. Dreifort complied. “I’m throwing hard, but it’s still hurt­ ing," said Dreifort, who first experienced elbow pain last April but kept pitching until A ugust, “Maybe in a few days, I’ll be wor­ ried, Right now, I just don’t know.” Coach Mark Cresse, who caught Dreifort, observed: “It’s hard to believe a guy throw­ ing that hard with his arm hurting.” “W e’d have liked to have him throw pain-free; that would have been id eal,” Screnar said. “That’s not what we had.” Now, it’s wait and see, “In three or four m ore days w e’ll re­ evaluate,” said Jobe, who earlier had detect­ ed a partial tear of the medial collateral lig­ ament in Dreifort’s right elbow. At firs t, it ap p e a re d su rg ery was inevitable. Then it was decided that he rest the arm and give it another try. Classifieds / Food is God— to a man with an empty stomach. \ -Mohandas K. Gandhi AN N O U N CEMENTS FREE FINANCIAL aid! Over $6 billion in private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, incom e o r parent's in­ come. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800-2636495 ext. F59184. L IV E C O M P U T E R C H A T « GAMES Nine lines fo r your needs! 14,400 Baud. he L iv i W in BBS Call w ith your modem 1 7 7 - 0 0 2 5 • 24 hours AN N O U N CEMENTS SPORTING GOODS & Military Collectible Show March 11 & 12 at American Legion Post 2, 2125 S. Industrial Park Dr., Tempe. Sat. 9 -5 , Sun. 9-4. $4 adm ise’ sion. Buy, sell, trade. Free park­ ing. Good food & fun. For table info call 984^9683. Proceeds to charity. ($1 off with this ad!) State Press Classifieds Matthews Caster Basement 965-6735 WE BUY & SELL USED LEW S! QDQS JEAN BUYER PLUS M ODELING Call for Details Break into Modeling by Entering 947-8245 The Me. Wue Model of the Year Pageant •Sizes 12 & Up •Ages 18 & Up •N o experience necessary C A L L 9 9 4 -4 7 0 5 • 1810 Scottsdale Rd (between Cuny & McKellips) 5 minutes from ASU! • 3208 W. Glendale Ave. APARTMENTS 1 BEDROOM apartment to sub­ let. Available March 1 to Aug 31.. Cal! Dave, 921-8804. BEAUTIFUL LARGE 2bd apt., walk to ASU, pool, laundry rm, 1 blk so; of U niversity on 8th St. Cape Cod Apts. 968-5238. - TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT A QUEST A Vida, 2 mstr suites, 2 ba, f/p, w/d, micro. Overlook­ ing pool, spa, rqball, wgt rm, sauna. A vail 5/15 $700-$795; 829-0902. LEASE ENDS June 20- Lrg 1 HERMOSA PL., 510 W. Univesbd , $450/m o > elec. Pool/spa, . ity, 2bd 2ba condo nr ASU, pool, laundry fac. Lauren, 967-4252. w/d, fans, $635. 966-0987, HOMES FOR RENT LG 2BD/2BA, Broadway/College area, new carpet, lots of 1BD1BA guest house, 2blks to ASU, $380/mo. 3bd avail. also. Tim 894-0288. patio , cvrd p a rk in g , looks great, n/s. $595/rao + util. 9458075. HOMES FOR SALE RENTAL SHARING B uy O f T he W eek 3bd House, pool, close to cam pus, nice neighborhood. $ 9 6 ,5 0 0 . B o b B u llo c k R e a l t y E x e c u t iv e s 998-2992 TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 5BDRM 2BA , 15th & College! $ 1500/mo. lbdrm 1ba $460/mo include? utilities. Call 894-0288. FEMALE RMTE wanted ASAP. 4bd h o u se , R u ral/B ro ad w ay . Pool. $275/mo + dep. 929-0140. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE A LPIN E STA IR CLIM BER. B arely used. Exc cond, com ­ pact and fun. Get ready for bi­ kin i season. ‘ $50 firm . 983-5742, HEWLETT PACKARD business calc 19BII does finance, stats, business calcs. A lso lists ap­ pointm ents, names, etc. $100. Joe, ^67-7668. FURNITURE TICKETS M OTORCYCLES SOFA SE T, $265, Q ueen bed $80, Full $70, Chest of* Drawers $40, Dinette $125. 234-5729, SUNS VS Seattle Supersonics Friday. Starting at $50 each. Call Steve, 67^-02116. 1991 HONDA Elite! Ch8Q red, low miles; new battery, rear tire and cloth seat, like new $800. Mike 994-4012 anytime. WHITE AND brass daybed with a . AUTOMOBILES 947-4655. $SELL YOUR CARS Or truck for quick cash! Foreign or domestic same day response, . Leave description & any info INTERNET- GET òri thè infor­ 24hr$. Brian 246-3499 TDG. m ation super highw ay! Slip Slash PPP w ith W W W , FTP, 85 M AZDA 626LX , blue 4 d r news, E-mail, more. $9.99/mo! man, pwr ev w/sun* a/c, ster/cass runs great 140K $2400, 946-2191 Net 99.249-0957. COMPUTERS LAPTOP TOSHIBA 486, 175 hd, 4ram, mòno, $1200 PC 486 dx33, 340hd, 4ram , cd rom , $1200 obo. 994-5197. MAC 2CI w /color m on, 5/80, kybrd, mouse, lot o f orig, soft­ ware. $970. Mary 813-6129. 86 HYUNDAI Exel, 2dr hatch- back, factory a/c, red w/saddle brown int. Xlnt cond. 68K mi. $2250 965-3241 or 831-1852, 87 BUIC.K Skyhawk, wht, 2dr, auto s/r, ac, low. mi, cute, am-fm Cass, turbo. $3500 obo. 820-3290 89 YAMAHA 250 R Î 66, saddle bags, wind screen, 4K mi* like new, $1350 firm. 994-8176. TRAVEL R/T TO Austin, Tx, $150. Lv 310, 5pm , ret 3/20, 6am , Call Akash 965-7406 SHERATON/SPRING BREAK. South Padre Island $199, per per­ son - 5 nights quad occupancy. 1800-Hi-Padre ( 1-800-447.2373 ) Must ask for "No Frills" package. SOUTH PADRE ISLAND Spring Break. Stay at the Shera­ ton Free! H elp w anted during your spring break week. Work Sat., Sun^ and Mon. at high pro­ file locations handling public re­ lations product. Stay free Sat. to Sat. of youf spring break week at the luxury Sheraton, plus earn up to $500 in com m issions for 3 days work. Party the rest oLfhe week. Successful applicants must be enthusiastic; talkative, sales type. You and your friends must provide transportation to South Padre Island and report for duty at 8am on Sat. morning. Accom­ modations will be based on four student employees per unit. Call for more inform ation - 1-800TOUR-USA ( 1-800-868-7872). Page 14 Thursday, March 2, 1995 TRAVEL CHOLLA BAY/ROCKY Point. Cabin rentals. $40-$50 4 persons, add'! add $5/ea. Beds, stove, ba w/shwrs, fpl. %8-8009 msg. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places world­ wide. I also buy transferable coupons/awards. 968-7283. HELP WANTED$10 PER HOUR PT/FT, flex hrs. Member reser­ vations, set appts by phone. No selling & no cold calls. Several p o sitio n s op en , room fo r ad* vancem ent. C am per C lubs o f America, 2338 S . M cClintock Dr , Tém pe; 1-800-369-2267. Apply in person. $10.25/START Nat'l. company has immediate openings in retail. No exp. req. Flex hrs. Scholarehips. Cond. ex­ ist. Secure summer positions ear­ ly. 968-479T S400/W K + 6 people needed immediately. No selling. Must be. friendly, enthu­ siastic & enjoy working with die public. M-F, 3-9pm» Sat 9am1pm. For personal interview call Mrs Bishop, 243-1515; $7P/HR AMS, located at Broad­ way & Mill is hiring 20 p/t tele­ marketers. Set your own sched­ ule, work as few as 20/hrs a week o r more. You will receive $7p/hr + bonus, paid training, casual dress, daily incentives. Call 894^9816 * $7/HR + CA$H! * Set free appointments for health services. Fun office, nearby Fies­ ta Mall. Eves & Sat: Fun phone work! 649-9580. A MEDICAL office in Scottsdale needs pt/ft front and back office. person. W ill train. G ood a d - ‘ vancem ent p o tential, 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste. 108. Apply in person. ' A N SW ERIN Q SERV ICE, all day Saturday, Scottsdale. 941 4890 AS U GRAD student seeks at­ tendant for eves/wknd moms. No exp nec. Good pay Tom 949-6041 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELPWANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ASU STUDENTS. Short sur­ veys. Easy. $6/hour base + bo­ nus, clerical 'positions Start now. 1 block east o f ASU. 784-2270 or 1000 E. Apache, Suite 212. CRT PHONE operators wanted. Basic typing skills (20 wpm) p/t shifts. Sat. req'd. $5.71 per hour/steady increases. Great op­ portunity ■»431-9977. ASU STUDENTS, the ASU Tel­ efund offers the best part time jo b on campus! A position with us, will work with your schedule while allowing you to excel in your studies. We contact alumni to update inform ation, inform them about advancem ents and seek financial support. Choose the evening & weekend shifts you want to work, and gain sub­ stance for your resume. Call 9656754 DAILY WORK, daily pay. Misc jobs. Earn more with a car. Re­ port 6 a.m. any day to: 806 W. Madison St, INTERNS - Bankers or Biomed­ ical engineers. Pref Tempe can­ didates. Avail June-Aug in Ger­ many. German pref but not nec. Resumes only to: TSC, c/o 286 W. Palom ino #175, Chandler, 85224. POS SYSTEM S, INC. F/t, p/t custom er service, PC literate with varied software exp. Send re­ sume or apply in person (8am5pm ) to: POS System s, Attn. H um an R esources, 10027 S. 51 st Street, Ste. 102, Phoenix, AZ 85044. SUMMER JOB- M aine sports camp. All land, water, adventure & in dividual sports. O utdoor sum m er w orking w /children. Great facilities available to coun­ selors. Fun summer!! C all now, 6 17-277-8080. C am p C edar, 1758 Beacon St., Brookline, MA 02146. BROKERAGE INTERNSHIP po­ sitio n s a v ailab le at M errill Lynch. Flexible hours, great ex­ perience. C ontact Chris Marinakos at 954-5894 or 954-5083. CA N YOU w ork 8;3 0 -1 0:30 a m. daily? The State Press Clas­ sified advertising department has a student worker position avail­ able. Responsibilities include an­ swering phones, helping walk-in customers place classifieds ads, filing and typing. You need á cando attitude, a smile and excellent spelling and typing skills. Pick up your application in the north basement o f Matthews Center to­ day! We need yO. to. start March 20. v C LE R IC A L PRO D U CTIO N , light industrial, temporary ft/pt. 956-3444. CLUCK-U CHICKEN Looking for a fun cluckin' job? Come join the Cluck-U-Chicken Team! We are now hiring cock* tail servers, bouncers« drivers, cooks and C h ick en M ascots. Apply in person 855 S. Rural Rd. DELIVERY DRIVERS needed part time/full time-on call posi­ tions. Must have own car, truck preferred, knowledge of Phoenix area. Call Bob and leave message, 831-8159. EXECUTIVE ANS Svc needs re­ liable, cheerful operators with '‘You Bet" attitude. P/T days, eves, wknds. $6 starting, Must type 4 5 w pm , know 10-key, com jf exp, have reliable trans. Call 264-4000 forint. FIELD MKTNG Promo Co. in Tempe seeks ener­ getic team members in entry level positions. M ust be outgoing & able to handle resp. Fax res: 602949-9744. FLEX HRS. your sched. Door to door canVasers, including team leaders w/car & appt. setters. For more info. 897-6961 G EN ERA L A SSISTA N C E & cleaning for ASU faculty family. Refs.$6/hr 968-9922 Iv msg. GET A summer job now! Attend the Summer Job Fair '95 Wed., March 29 Cady Mall. Meet with dozens of potential employers! GREAT PART-TIME job even­ ings 4-8 p.m. Mon-Fri, $6.25/hr. Call Vann, 894-9442. IF YOU have the désiré to succeed, we have the desire to meet you. Our co. offers a salary of $7/hr + commission. Your re­ CO M PU TER M A JO R S, N o sponsibilities include conducting unix? Growing national internet ■ promotions for businesses in the service provider needs you. Net Phx area. Bus. & Comm, majors 99. 2494)957. encouraged to apply. Please call 921-7755 to schedule appt. C O U N SELO R S W ANTED. Trim down-fitness, co-ed, NYS IMAX THEATRE camp* 100 p o sitio n s: sp o rts, Scottsdale. Come join our team! crafts, others. Camp Shane, Ferndale. NY 12734. (914)271-4141. The Imax Theatre in Scottsdale is looking for enthusiastic, smiling C O U RIER D RIV ERS needed faces to fill hosting positions^25Mon-Fri mornings or afternoons. 30 hours per week. All shifts. Light pickup helpful. Exp pref. Call 949-3100x204. Starts $5/hr. 248-7977 Iv msg. CLASSIFIEDS WORK! ■ ACTIVITY LEADERS Educational/Recréàtional opportuhity to supervise before & after school program. Req's cre­ ative, energetic team player. P/T positions avail M-F. Director; $6.22-$7/hr, 4 prs/day (req 21 yrs age; 2 yrs exp w 2/yrs relat­ ed education); Counselor leader, $5-$6/hr, 3.5 hrs a day (req 18 yrs age). Paid training and YMCA membership privilege. Apply with references at: TEMPE YMCA 7070 S. Rural Rd. State P ress EARN $350-$400 PER WEEK OR MORE! P eople N eed ed T o D o Fun, E asy , R espectable; P art o r F u llT im e W ork A t H om e. 24 Hr. M sg Gives Details C A LL S O W ! 1-809-474-2821 I n t i Ld rates apply. Earn some cash after class! If you're comfort­ able with phones, we have several customer service p o sitio n s o p e n for ev enings an d Saturday! Bring a friend! Interview s taken 9am-4pm. Social Security card a must. WANTED: LIFEG U A R D W A NTED , f/t weekdays, 9am-5pm. The Phoe­ nix Country Club, 263-5208. MAH-KEE-NAC FOR Boys/Danbee for G irls. C ounselor posi­ tions for Program Specialists: All Team Sports, especially Base­ b a ll, B asketball, G olf, Field Hockey, Roller Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; also Archery, Riflery, Pioneering/Ovemight Camping, Weights /Fitness and Cycling; other open­ ings include Perform ing Arts, Fine Arts, Pottery, Figure Skat­ ing, G ym nastics, N ew spaper, Photography, Yearbook. Radio Station, R ocketry, Ropes and Rock Climbing; All Waterfront A ctivities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing, W indsurfing« C anoeing/K ayaking). G reat salary, room, board and travel June 18th -August 18th. Inquire: Mah-KeeNac (Boys) 190 Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, N.J, 07028. Call: 1800-753-9118. Danbee (Girls) 17 W estminster Drive, Montville, NJ, 07045: Call: 1-800-392*3752. M AIL BOXES, Etc.: Cust svc p/t. Need clean cut hard worker for packing & shipping. Car needed. A pply at 1739 E. B roadw ay, Tempe or 1110 S. Alma School Rd., Mesa. MARKET RESERCH Co. seeks people to conduct opinion sur­ veys. D oor to door, phone, & m all. N o exp. nec. F /t & p /t avail. Own transp. a must. 2776678. . •' ' M ESSEN G ER , SCH LEPPER and general all-around gopher needed for the advertising de­ partment in the State Press, You need a car, a positive can-do atti­ tude and must be available 10am2pm each Tuesday and be willing to work on an as needed basis. Opportunity to make some bucks without heavy commitment. I f this is appealing to you, call now. 965-6555 .ask for Jackie Eldridge. MODELS: NYC, Toyko, Paris, Milan. Local scouts want you! Scottsdale, 941-6922. Looking Student who would like some­ day to be a stock broker. 1 want a HARD WORKING, PRO­ FESSIONAL, INTELLI­ GENT person. One that is willing to work for the experi­ ence of being connected with one of the biggest and most successful brokerage and finan­ cial companies in the world, Merrill Lynch. You must be willing to listen and learn as you go. Cold call­ ing will be required. I want a hard charger char real­ ly wants a chance, to get into this business. Now for P/T W ork ? H iring for C ustomer S ervice R epresentatives! C urrently S eeking C andidates T h a t H ave T h e F o llo w in g / . ' Q ualification ^: • M ust be A ble to T ype 30 vvpm •INTERPERSONAL COMM S kills • P revious S ales / C ust S ervice E xp a P lus ! • M ust be A ble t o W ork S aturdays Call K Call me at 898-6635. e l l y S e r vic e s T oday! 838-8405 T empe L o ca tion KEUy Jeff Korte Vice President SERVICES STIVERS 64 E. Broadway, Ste 205 966-1100 Free C hild Care W hile You D o n a te ! CONCESSION MANAGER S6.07-S8.39 DOE The V alley's BEST p lasm a donation center w ill begin p roviding FREE childcare (during donating) effective M onday, CONCESSION ATTENDANT S4.50-S6.04 DOE Temporary, seasonal position. Hours vary & include some evenings/weekends. Previous experience as cashier and in food production and service industry desired. Requires knowledge of proper money han­ dling and change making, and ability to operate equipment. APPLY IMMEDIATELY AT City of Tempe Kiwanis Recreation Center 6111 S. All America W ay • Tempe (602) 350-5201 M otivated take-charge person needed for QC position to start up lab. Technical background a must- Chemistry or Food Science degree pref . 921-1991. RESORT Reservations Specialist. Orange Tree Resort has 35 perm, posi­ tions avail, in new dept. $7/hr base w /bonus. $225-525/w k, mgmt. opport. no Selling, 8:301:30 & 4-9, training, must have exceptional attitude and be ex­ perienced w/the public. 874-8613 ext. 212. Jarrett. RIO SALADO Suites, 1429 N. Scottsdale Rd,, Teippe, is accept­ ing applications for front desk & housekeeping positions. Apply in person on or after Feb. 25 or call 956-4900 on Feb. 24. SODASTOCKERS Needed immediately! Two shifts a v a il to stock g ro c e ry store w/beverage products. $5/hr plus 28£/mile. If you are reliable, de­ tail oriented, have good math sk ills, & ow n tra n sp o rta tio n please call today! 838-8405. We encourage a diverse workforce. Kelly Services. Never an applic­ ant fee, EOE. SPA ATTENDANT- Hiring in­ div id u a l to w ork v a rie d a.in. hours. $5 /h r + com m ission. Apply Village Racquet & Health Club, 4444 E. Cam elback Rd., • Phx. SPORTS M INDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start a t 15-30 flexible hrs/wk. Call Mike for int, 921-8282. STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE needed to run marketing project on campus, P/T, great earning po­ tential: 4-800-459-VISA x35. 56 41 E. L in co ln D r. S co ttsd a le HELP WANTEDCLERICAL TELE SURVERS 4-8pm M -F $6.25 per hour + bo­ nus. No selling. No experience required. After 3 months $7.75 p er hou r+ b o n u s. C all Jen, 894-9442. TELEMARKETING TRAVEL p ackages. $ 8 /h o u r to start. $800/week potential. Start today! Call 264-4186. TUX & Tails needs enthusiastic people to work in a ftin & chal­ lenging environment PT/FT po­ sitions avail; Dave, 838-3193. W HO SA ID great test scores never got anyone a great job? The Princeton Review is seeking bright, enthusiastic & dynamic individuals with high scores on the SAT, GRE, GMAT, LSAT or MOAT. P/t eves/wknds 9671480 YMCA CAMPING Services (SkyY Camp & Chauncey Ranch) lo­ cated in Prescott, AZ is now hir­ ing dedicated, fun-loving, crea­ tive, caring professionals to work with co-ed campers between the ages o f 7 & 17 in a residential camp setting. Come be a part of the magic & share in an experi­ ence that w ill last a lifetim e. Camping season begins last week o f M ay and runs through early August. Call for application & in­ formation at 254^1571. FINANCE CO. seeking p/t data entry clerk. 20 hrs/wk. Must be flexible eves/w knds. 48th S t7 Southern. 438-2511. RECEPTIONIST NEEDED im­ mediately for local Tempe firm. $5/hr to start. Brenda, 243-1515. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE ARENA CANTINA New restaurant next to Majerle's downtown, very busy lunch hour; Need wait staff, hostesses & bus help. Apply in person, corner of 2nd St & Wash. 495-9969. AZ COUNTRY Club hiring p/t pm food servers.,N o exp nec. M ust work weekends. 5668 E. Orange Blossom, Phx. EOE. CLUB TRIBECA - All positions available. Apply within, 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. CORK 'N CLEAVER Ace. apps. for lunch host(ess), lunch food serv er & evening cocktail. Will train, p/t, concern w/appearance, reliability & per­ sonality are important. Apply in person. M -F 2-5pm or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. ENVIRONMENTAL CO. look­ ing for f/t or p/t mgmt sales peo­ ple. Call Jean 969-9178. COSMIC PIZZA now hiring exp pizza cooks, delivery drivers, daytim e sandw ich m akers & nighttime flyer distributors. We o ffe r flex hours, com petitive wages, a fast track to manage­ m ent & great w orking co n d i­ tions. A pply 1523 E. Apache Blvd. (No phone calls please.) GRAD STUDENT w/Marketing background for p/t sales - Car al­ low ance, salary, com m ission DOE. Call V P. at 921-3003. DAYS BTWN. 8am-3pm, $6/hr start. Kenny Rogers Roasters, 3530 N. Goldwater Blvd, Scotts. 874-0028. SA LES PERSO N needed f/t. Apply at Leonard's Luggage at Fiesta Mall. 835-7000. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES M arriott's M o u n ta in S h a d o w s h a s a n o p e n in g fo r p o o l a tte n d a n t p o sitio n s. Partt i m e a .m . & p .m . h r s a v a ila b le . CPR c e r tific a ­ t i o n r e q u ir e d . M a r r io tt M o u n t a i n S h a d o w s is c o m m itte d to a d ru g free w o r k p la c e . A c c e p tin g a p p s M o n -T h u rs, 9 a .m .N o o n & 1:30-4 p.m . YOU’RE HIRED! Int'l environmental Company ex­ panding m Phoenix seeks 2 out­ going in d iv id u a ls fo r sales reps/mgrs - Immediate opening. Will train. FT/PT. 940-3804. P r o M a r k I, th e n a tio n 's 1 6 6 th fa s te s t g r o w in g F i m c o m p a n y , is se e k in g e n e rg e tic , h ig h ly m o tiv a te d | | | | *X I fl in d iv id u a ls to be a p a rt o f its te le m ark etin g team . • Both full a nd part-tim e positions available. • $ 6 -$ l4 per ho u r depending o n performance. • Previous experience preferred b u t n o t necessary. • Excellent o pportunity for advancem ent. Apply in person at 1232 E. Broadway, Suite 205, Tempe, AZ or call (602) 784-1599 -P r o M a r k ^ Telemarketing for the Image Conscious ProMark On« Marketing Services. Inc. EOE H ATTENTION: Logistics and Engineering (ME/EE) Students • Are you a quality-minded, results-oriented professional with the desire and ability to do more? • Do you have a track record that demonstrates excellence and achievement? TEM PORARY PERSONNEL Temporary, seasonal position. Hours vary & include some evenings/weekends, Previous experience as man­ ager or supervisor in food production and service industry desired. Requires knowledge of proper cash management program, ability to operate equipment, experience in product cost analysis and food/beverage profit margins/retails. QC MGR HELP WANTEDSALES • Would you like to work in a fast-paced, challenging environment, with high visibility and opportunity to make significant contributions? I f you answered YES to Ouse questions: .stpyken February 27th. (Some restrictions apply.) This will b e offered 10 a.m.-4 p.m. M on-Sat & 10 a.m.-3 p.m . Sunday. W e have 54 m achines to serve y ou better!! This is y o u r perfect opportu n ity to perforin a vitally needed service a n d earn $150»$185 per m o n th a t th e sam e time!. It cou ld n 't be easier! N ew donors earn $25 C ASH their first donation! O p en 7 d a y s a w eek for yo u r convenience! Open Moiiday-Friday til 8 p.m.I Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102, Tempe Broadway & Dorsey (A cross fro m N a tive N ew Yorker) 968-6139 O pportunities available in San Jose, CA and Kalam aaoo, M I If interested, please lax or mail your resume by M arch 10,199$ to: Stryker Instruments, 4100 E. Milhmn, K alam aioo, MI 49001. Fax: (616) 323-3168. No phone calls please. EOE 1 i i i HELP WANTEDFO O P SERVICE JO B OPPORTUNITIES DELIVERY DRIVERS needed. Must have own car & insurance. Day & night shifts available; big money, big prizes, great perks, working out o f Tempe's hottest new club The Electric'Ballroom. Apply in person at Kilowatts Piz­ zeria inside H ie Electric Ballroom 1216 E. Apache. Mon-Fri. 12-6. C RU ISE SH IPS how h irin g Earn up to $2,000+/month work­ ing on cruise ships or land-tour companies. W orld travel. Sea­ sonal & full-tim e em ployment available. No experience neces­ sary. For more information call 1-206-634-0468 ext. C59185. EDDY'S GRILL is looking for host/hostess. Please apply M-Th 24pm . Ask for Tracy - 4747 N. 7th St., Phoenix. 241-1188. BLIMPIE Help Wanted days & week-ends, 4-6 brs/day. Apply in person, Blimpie, 911 E. Broadway. OZZIES BAR & Grille is looking to hire qualified Wait staff posi­ tions. Apply, in person, corner of Forest'and University. PARADISE BAR & Grili will be accepting applications for wait staff thru Friday 3-3, between i?-» 5pm, 401 S. Mill Aye. RED ROBIN Tempe's cooks receive, top wag- : ■es.-pd. v acations & b onuses. Apply today 1375 W. Elliot.. SANDWICH PRP/DVR flex hrs. ASU area. Apply: Browns on 6th, .570 S. College, tem pe; 968-4884, SWENSEN'S TEMPE has openings for sandwich cooks & wait staff. No exp dec. Apply T-F 45pm! Price & Baseline. WAITERS. WAITRESSES, bar­ tenders, p/t for private, parties. Must have exp; 956-3444. DRIVERS W AN TED S50 S100 Cash Paid Daily Immediate positions available! 2 1 9 7 $ . Rural, Tem pe A p p ly in person a fte r 4 p.m . _________N o p h o n tc a & t HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE BABYSITTERS & NANNIES,. Set your own schedule. Days, evenings &/or weekends. $4.25$6.70%. 345-2433 CHILD CARE - Hiring exp'd in­ d iv id u al to w ork v aried a.m . hours.. $5/hf. Apply at ¡Village Racquet & riealth C lub, 4444 £. Camelback Rd. PROVIDE CHILD care for a Sun­ day a fte rn o o n ; $ 7 .50/hr. Exp p ret 464-3937. JOB OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA SUMMER jobs! Earn thousands this summer in canner­ ies, processors, etc. M ale/ Fe­ male,..Room/bqard/travel often provided! Guide. Guaranteed suc­ cess! (919) 929-4398 ext. A 1015. ALASKA SUMMER jobs. Earn up to. $6000+/mo-F»shing indus­ try. Free transportation! Room & board! No exp nec. 818-774-1199 ext. A48845. AA CRUISE Ships Hiring! Earn big $$$ + free world travel (Car­ ibbean, Europe, H aw aii, etc.)^ Summer/permanent. no exp nec. Guide. (919)9294398 ext C 1015/ in the Clutifiedi! ir e tf M— "3. D _ _ w - ,, - F lo rid a , the R o ckie s; Alaska. New England, etc. Earn up to S12/hr+tips! For m ore in fo c a ll RESORT EMPLOYMENT SERVICES: (206) 6 3 2 -0 1 5 0 ext. R 59581 tipiobn fc»w re betune « mint), .et lina Horte*. pkaiefnjki, r ‘ on « ftff t* t* t Qppvtto 5pud f H 55 io Stud tfcrbor PubHMtMg Oeui. 5. 1H 6A *lh St. f » T Manhattan Beach. CA 90766 SPORTS & RECREATION RAPPELING ADVENTURES learn confidence, speed, or com­ mando style. Bill 967-7475 MUSIC BASSBYEAR PLAY W hat U Hear! All levels/styles. H ouse call rates too. Nat 864-1786. ■LOOKING FOR a musical com­ poser for a pop project. Must be talented in keyboard, guitar, bass,' & drums to create music at a high­ e r level: C all a fte r 7pm 2451289. Mon-Fri 247-8008 FREE LOST/FOUND FA ST FU N D R A ISE R - R aise $500 in 5 days - Greeks, groups, . clubs^ m otivated individuals., F ^ t, e a sy - No financial obliga­ tion. (800) 775-3851 ext. 33^ . RESTAURANTS/ BARS fiRATEFU DEAD XlfiDT with E X T R A T IC K E T Featuring Don Young P0LIW0G ■ ^ M cC lin to ck & C u rry • 921-7343 CIUCK-U CHICKEN Haw You Bo m Cuten» Ytr? */ I J LONC ISLANDS A ll Night 990 TA LL BEERS til 9 p.m, JA G E R S ■ M9 p m P ¡I' - /- fe tam ps J §18 esAfe. &. C3KIL.L.E NEW MENU NEW STAFF NEW ATTITUDE •M IM M I« M i Daily 7-10:30 am. •1/2 Price Espresso Coffees . Dally 6 30 am -1pm •S3.25 Daily Lunch Specials •Í3 Pitcher* De8y 4-7 p-m. T h u r sd a y : SOe Rum D rin k s 2 f o r i La dies Night Grask Night AZZ IZZ Cool P itea BANDERSNATCH (206)632-1146ext.J59183 5th St. & Forest BREWPUB HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE NOTICE TO our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ATA LARISSA - You are the best dot ever. Can't wait for Mon­ day. Love always, Mom. G A M M A PHIS Brady and Suzanne- r u ready for Vegas? For­ mal is going to be a blast. Be prepared for a nonstop party. Love, ^ i c and Brent ConwofFomt K and Urtvaraity. T«np> T o n ig h t $ ^ 0 0 34 q ¿ 1743 E. Cam elback R