©Copyright, State Press. 1996 Temp®, Arizona W e d n e s d a y , F e b ru a ry 7 ,1 9 9 6 A n In d e p e n d e n t M o rn in g D a ily V o i. 80 N o . 82 Unknowns add color to Airing it out primary B y R ay S tern S t a t s P ress for president. For m a n y h o p e f u ls w h o s e e k th e When the Secretary of State ’s office informed Democratic presidential candidate Mrs. Frank Ross Stewart that titles* such as “Mrs." could not be part of a ballot name for the Feb. 27 Presidential Preference Election, she said to call her “Frank.” • Stewart said her decision had less to do with her identity as a woman than her fame ’ as an author. v “I write books — have about 185 books already on the shelves — and my official name is Mrs, Frank Ross Stewart," she said Tuesday from her home in Piedmont, Ala. “That’s what everybody in the world knows me as.” Although the Democratic Party has since decided to not participate in the Presidential Preference Election, Stewart is still running nation’s highest Office, getting the world to know them is probably the m ost form idable task they face. “I'm an obscure man,” said Phoenix res­ ident and Republican candidate Charles Holden. “But I feel I’m the man who’s required, the man w ho’s destined (to become president). I’m very confident that if 1 can get to the convention and get national exposure, when people hear me talk on television, then they’ll know:” Holden is running on a platform of revo­ lutionary change. He wants the immediate research, development and implementation of seemingly miraculous machines that will, within his first term, construct housing, reverse aging and create a higher standard of T urn to C andidates, page 2. Student fumes over ASU disabled parking policy B y J eff O w en s S ta te P ress When Jennifer Scehnet found all 17 dis­ abled parking spots in Lot 11 full, she parked in a regular decal space reserved for residence hall occupants. And she received two parking tickets. One of the tickets issued last Wednesday read that her decal was not registered to the car she was driving because she was using another car instead of her temporarily-ailing Taurus. The second ticket indicated that she would have to pay a $50 fine because peo­ ple cannot park cars with disabled plates in regular spaces', y But there was no ticket on the red Paseo without a decal parked next to her car. In addition, half of the disabled parking spaces" ' were occupied by vehicles bearing no dis­ abled insignia, the freshman student said. Although Parking and Transit Services dismissed both tickets, Scehnet said she is still upset. “I don’t know what the deal is,” she said. “Am I just supposed to fail my classes because I can’t find a parking spot? I don’t think it should be my fault if I can’t park in that (disabled) spot because someone is parked there who shouldn’t be.” Parking and Transit Services Assistant Director Linda Riegel said since the start of the 1995-96 school year, 2,114 citations have been issued for parking in disabled or Turn t o P a r k in g , Photo courtesy of Brent Finley S e n io r captian D ave D onnelly of the A S U sky d ivin g team w on tw o ch a m p io n sh ip s last year, the M a ste r’s Pa rach u tin g c h a m p io n sh ip a n d the ove ra ll national p a ra ch u tin g cha m p ion sh ip . S e e story page 15. pa g e P o llu tio n c a u sin g V alleyw ide h e a lth p ro b le m s, p o ll says B y A n d rea M . H ealey Sta te P ress Paul Bosing/State Pros* T h is sm o g blanket is proving to be an ey esore — literally: A recent poll show ed that 54 percent o f V alley re sid ents blam ed the p ollution fo r health problem s s u c h as irritated e y e s and breathing difficulty. S T A T E PRESS Weather Outlook Sunny and unseasonably warm. High 83®, low 57°. About 54 percent of Arizonans experienced health problems this winter as a result of a cloud of smog hanging over the Valley, according to a recent poll. The Behavior Research Center of Arizona con­ ducted its fourth independent and non-partisan poll of 700 Arizona residents in January 1996. The results of the poll registered the highest levels of human reaction to air pollution to date, with 54 per­ cent experiencing vision and respiratory problems in November, December and early January. The poll also revealed that in January, 3 percent of adults reported a member of their household was hospitalized because of air pollution. In one-third of the households surveyed, at least one person consulted a physician for respiratory or vision prob­ lems they believed may be the result of air pollu­ tion exposure. W orld/N ation S ports China reels from the impact of a major earthquake Saturday that killed almost 250 people. In-state rivals will tangle tonight at the UAC as the Sun Devils seek redemption for last month's embarrassing loss to the Wildcats. Page 3 Page 15 But Dr,. Martin Boxer of ASU Student Health said he has not noticed a marked increase in the number of respiratory- or asthma-related problems. “T here’s always people with asthm a yearround,” he said. “Whether it’s more in the last.cohple of weeks, it’s hard to say. There are so many causes and agents for asthma, I couldn’t say it’s from air pollution. “Other times of year you have more pollens to blame. Allergic reactions to things like mold seem to be pretty m uch-year-round. Asthma can be blamed on all those things at different times in dif­ ferent people.” Vi Brown, technical services division manager for the Environmental Services Department, said those who are already ill or not in the best of health may experience an aggravation Of problems due to pollution. Also affected may be the elderly, young children, infants and anyone suffering from T urn t o PouirrioN, pa g e 2. Where To Find It Classifieds.......... 16 Comics........................ „*.„14 Crossword.. ....... .7......8 Horoscopes ................ 19 Opinion............................... 4 Police Report.......................8 Sports.................................15 Today’s Activities.......... 2 World/Nation.......................3 Candidates,__ C ontinued from page Pollution—— 1. living for everyone. There’s just one catch — the plan requires the full com­ mitment o f all of our national resources. Although his plans have not been looked upon with eagerness by any businesses, H olden says you can trust him. “There’s no risk.’’ he said. “You’ve got my word — that's a promise. I’m Charles Holden.” Holden is not the only Arizonan seeking the presidency. So are Republicans Clyde Staggs, who listed his address as Best Hall at ASU (which has no record of him), Anne Jennings of Glendale and Joann Pharr of Scottsdale. Another presidential hopeful is Democrat and self-pro­ fessed “Hemp Lady” Caroline Killeen of Flagstaff. Christian values are a strong theme this year among most of the Republican candidates, though they are a bit stronger with the fringe elements. “We pay more attention to the (homosexuals), atheists and liberals than we do to God,” said Republican Jack Fellure of Hurricane, W.Va. “We started out as a Christian nation: we’re not even close anymore.” Fellure said whether he is elected or not, unless America adopts the main principles in his platform, the country will continue to self-destruct. His answer is to impose Christian principles in schools and elsewhere. “Everybody in society has someone’s will imposed on them,” he said. “If I’m president, I’ll impose mine.” What about Jews or Buddhists who may balk at the new regime? “We were here first; they can take it or leave,” Fellure said. In Barry, 111., American Political Party candidate Roger Thomas Davis has much of the same message. His publici­ ty pamphlets are filled with Bible quotations and words of wisdom written in capital letters. But the 60-year-old Davis is not all fire and brimstone. His brochures contain personal ads in which he seeks a “magnetic, ardent, prudent-loving woman” for his “onewoman countryman.” He will also sell you firewood by the cord, if you’re willing to haul it away. Stewart Is also a big believer in “traditional” values, but her years in the Navy opened her mind to at least one pro­ gressive idea: women on combat ships. “If they are good, Christian women, it would be fine for them to be there,” She said. “But not if they’re lovers of the right and they carry on like animals. And maybe not on ... what do you call those things that go underwater?” Submarines? “Yeah, that would be bad,” she added. Parking_I___ C ontinued S tate P ress Wednesday, February 7,1996 Page 2 from page i. reserved parking spots. Jim Hemauer, ASU’s program coordinator for physical disabilities, said it is not unreasonable for Scehnet to be upset. Although he considers ASU disabled parking as ranging from adequate to in need of work, having a disabled decal does not necessarily guarantee parking anyw here, Hemauer said. He also said ASU does all it can to address the difficul­ ties of disabled parking. “The law requires a certain m inim um num ber o f (d is­ abled) spaces, and we do far exceed them ,” Hemauer said. The number of required disabled spaces changes from semester to semester. The two disabled spaces at Cholla Residence Hall where Scehnet lives are also frequently occupied by unauthorized vehicles, she said. “There’s always someone parked there that shouldn’t be,” she said. “Most of the time, there are no tickets.” In addition to the dismissal of Scehnet’s tickets, a tem­ porary decal was issued allowing her to park anywhere in Lot 63 — the main Cholla lot — when the two disabled spaces are taken. A third disabled space will be designated. . But Susan Scehnet, Jennifer’s mother, said she still has reservations about the parking system. “They were very accommodating to Jennifer, but I don’t know about handicapped people in general,” she said. “There’s no level playing ground in that area.” And Jennifer Scehnet said she remains disappointed with ASU’s disabled parking facilities. “It’s not as good as I thought it would be coming to a state university,” she said. “I thought things would be a lit­ tle bit more organized. I’m a driver, too.” C ontinued from page 1. P resen t ¡ r l'O 'is A ' G- For Free Cometo , : (In the M il: 1 respiratory problems, or respiratory or heart disease. “For a normal person exposed to this (pollu­ tion), a short-term (exposure) is not bad,” she said. “However, a person who is exercising for one hour on a bad air day would be equivalent to sm oking a pack of cigarettes. Long-term expo­ sure isn’t good, even for a healthy person.” According to the Research Center, the higher levels of reaction to pollution may be traced to three things. One is the higher number of days in November, December and early January when Arizona cities and towns experienced stagnant air and high levels of carbon monoxide or particulates. A second reason is increased public awareness of air-pollution alerts. The third is greater public understanding of the pos­ sible connection between vision or respiratory prob­ lems and air pollution. ... The poll also revealed that while minor eye and respiratory problems are the most frequently men­ tioned, 19 percent reported aggravation of existing lung disease problems such as asthma or emphyse­ ma. This number is up 5 percent from 1995 and up 6 percent from 1994. The percent of Arizonans reporting major breath­ ing problems rose from 3 percent to 11 percent. Forty-five percent of those polled experienced eye irritation from the air pollution. In a report that came out last November, the Clean Air Network ranked Arizona near the bottom for its efforts to reduce air pollution and said the Valley has the worst air in the state. The Cleat Air Network also reported that because Arizona violates federal standards for ozone, particulates and carbon monoxides, one in 10 Valley residents face health risks from air pollution. Brown said she was hopeful that the Valley will address the pollution problem. “As this region continues to grow, I think we’re definitely going to have to consider improving our mass transit system because the bulk of our pollution is being driven by the automobile,” she said. W o r ld /N a t io n P age 3 Wednesday, February 7, 1996 S tate P ress China pleads for help follow ing earthquake A sso ciated Press Residents of Lijiang, China sea rch through h o u ses d estroyed b y an earthquake Saturday- The quake hit near the Sino-B urm ese border, killing alm ost 250 p eo p le and injuring at least 14,000 o th e rs. Bosnian troops arrest 2 Serbs for war crimes SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — Pulling the pin on one of the most explosive issues in the Bosnian war, Bosnia’s government announced Tuesday it would press for war-crimes indictments for two top Serb officers arrest­ ed after they made a wrong turn near Sarajevo. Angry Bosnian Serb leaders immediately broke off con­ tacts with the M uslim -led government. Even NATO denounced the arrests of the officers, whom Bosnia accused of slaughtering civilians. “The city of Sarajevo has. sadly, become the Beirut of Europe ... and has disqualified itself as a possible joint Serb, Muslim and Croat capital,” Serb leaders said in a statement. Serb officials said they would no longer travel to areas of Sarajevo held by the Bosnian government. Brig. Andrew Cumming, a spokesman for the NATO force, described the arrests as “provocative and inflamma­ tory,” noting that neither Serb officer had been indicted by the international tribunal investigating war crimes in the former Yugoslavia. “It would be a pity if this encouraged a retaliatory reac­ tion,” Cumming said. “Everything is very fragile,” Bosnia claimed Gen. Djordje Djukic and Col. Aleksa Krsmanovic bear responsibility for mass killings of civil­ ians around Sarajevo. The pursuit of war criminals is one of the touchiest issues in bringing peace to Yugoslavia. The Dayton peace accord requires all sides to cooperate in bringing war crim­ inals to justice, but appears to speak mainly of those labeled as criminals by the international tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands. Only one of 52 people indicted by that tribunal is in custody. The peace accord doesn’t address what might happen if Bosnia decided to charge the two with war crimes under its own laws. The M uslim -led B osnian governm ent d isclosed Monday that it has detained eight Serbs over the past three T urn to A rrests, page 10. BEIJING (AP) — Officials pleaded for help Tuesday for hundreds of thousands of people who survived a devastating earth­ quake only to endure hunger, near-freezing temperatures and hundreds of aftershocks. The quake on Saturday killed at least 246 people, injured more than 14,000, and left 260,000 without homes, officials said. By late Tuesday, 970 aftershocks had been recorded, including a strong 5.6-magnitude jolt. O fficials said they expected more aftershocks of comparable strength. The number of buildings destroyed by the quake climbed to more than 300,000 as rescue workers discovered entire communi­ ties that had been destroyed, “I personally appeal for help for the stricken areas. We need all the help we can get,” said Wang Ze, an official with the provincial government. China’s State Council, or Cabinet, and the ruling Communist Party announced they would send 100,000 quilted cotton gar­ ments, 100 tents, more than 1.5 million gal­ lons of gasoline and diesel fuel, and $2.4 million in relief funds to the stricken area. Military commands provided quilts and tents for the hundreds of thousands of peo­ ple shivering outdoors in near-freezing temperatures — afraid that more tremors would topple the buildings left standing. Officials said they feared the number of dead and injured could rise further as sol­ diers and medics worked in remote villages. A 6-year-old boy who suffered severe burns and broken bones when a w all trapped him on top of a burning stove was flown to the provincial capital, Kunming, the newspaper China Youth Daily said. About 2,000 soldiers continued to dig through the rubble for survivors Tuesday. Local officials said all of the 22 foreign­ ers who had been trapped in Leaping Tiger Gorge during the quake had been rescued and moved to Kunming. One, an American, was"Seriously injured but out of danger, they said. The names of the foreigners were not available, and the government did not permit foreign journalists to visit the disaster site. The Red C ross Society o f C hina appealed for international aid. Several hun­ dred medical workers were sent to the area in the northw estern part o f Vunnan province, 1,300 miles southwest of Beijing, to fight the spread of diseases. The equivalent of $9.5 million in money and supplies poured in from other parts of the province, the Xinhua News Agency reported. Hong Kong and Macao pledged aid, and Japan and Iran also offefed assistance. In a conciliatory gesture, President Lee Teng-hui of Taiwan urged Taiwanese to aid Chinese earthquake victims. “We are all Chinese people,” Lee said. “The po litical disputes we have with (China) should not affect our love for our compatriots.” More than 330,000 people were affected by the quake, which heavily damaged 16 of Lijiang County’s 24 towns, cracked roads and wrecked bridges. M a g a z in e s u e d o v er d ire c t m a ilin g ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — Ram Avrahami believes his name is worth something, and if magazines, record clubs and credit card .companies can buy and sell it, he ought to get a share of the profits. Avrahami, a 33-year-old former marketing manager for a phone company, is suing U.S. News & World Report, arguing that die magazine had no right to sell his name and address to another company without his permission. “It is unfair to’me. Actually it is unfair to me twice,” he said Tuesday. “The magazine sells my name without asking me, and then I receive the junk mail for which I really have no use.” * Representatives of the direct-marketingJndustry say the lawsuit is unfounded, and they fear devastating con­ sequences if Avrahami prevails. “Look at it this way: If I want to send you something and have to call you or write you to make sure it’s OK to send you this material, do you know what it’s going to do. to the direct-marketing industry?” said E$ Burnett, a direct-mail consultant in New Jersey. “It’s going to kill it, that’s what it’s going to do.” The lawsuit is not the first to challenge direct-mail marketing, but it apparently is the first to target the seller of a mailing list rather Stan the buyer. C hallenges to the direct-m ail industry on the grounds that receiv­ ing uninvited mail violates a per­ son’s privacy rights have failed. Since filing the lawsuit last sum­ m er, A vraham i has em erged as som ething o f a cham pion of the American Everyman. His electronic mailbox overflows with the com­ Av r a h a m i plaints of fellow sufferers, and his ; lawyer has gotten so many calls he is considering a class-action case against mailers. “The fact that we cannot escape commercial intrusion, even in the sanctuary of our own homes, is Inherently Turn to Magazine sun, page 10. Unpaid dues deplete UN budget UNITED NATIONS (AP) — With the United Nations verging on bankruptcy, the U.N. chief said Tuesday that he will cut staff and personally appeal to each debtor nation to pay its bills. Members owe the United Nations $3.3 billion, SecretaryGeneral Boutros Boutros-Ghali told a U.N. finance commit­ tee. The United States owes about half that total. “The financial crisis has brought the United Nations to the edge of insolvency,” Boutros-Ghali said. The U.N. chief said he would do all he can to avoid a financial collapse, but added that “only the member states, however, can take the measured decisions necessary.” He said he would appeal to each debtor nation and ask for their plans to make up their arrears. Boutros-Ghali gave no figures for the staff cuts and said the reductions would be carried out after a review by department heads. The United States welcomed the planned cuts. “Although they are painful, they are appropriate,” said James Rubin, spokesman for theU .S. mission. “The U.S. government, other governments* corporations, are all going through downsizing and it is high time this organization go through downsizing as well.” Rubin said the.reductions would make it easier for the Clinton Administration to urge the Republican-dominated Congress to approve payment of U.S. debts. The United Nations is funded solely through member contributions and cannot borrow money on international markets. The organization has avoided bankruptcy by bor­ rowing from its internal peacekeeping fund, but that money is expected to be depleted by the end of this year. Many members of Congress have demanded drastic cuts in the U.N. budget and some question where the world organization is even necessary. Under pressure from Washington, the United Nations approved a 1996-7 budget capped at $2.6 billion, a decrease of $250 million from 1994-5 if inflation and cur­ rency changes are taken into account On Monday, Joseph Connor, the chief U.N. financial officer, told the finance committee that some 10 percent of the 10,000member staff would have to be cut to balance the budget Most of the reductions will be made in New York, arid the cuts will not affect U.N. agencies that have separate bud­ gets, such as UNICEF and the World Health Organization Opinion P age 4 Eas ,j e P ress _ - y *® ito n a l A little respect <25 STATE PRESS TAFF c h a ts a n jg tfc e f, h O v e .'f a p o Y S T he issue o f resp ect and A SU D PS police officers has becom e a heated topic on campus. M o n d ay’s story, “N o R espect,” un leash ed an outpouring o f mail on the subject. Cam pus police com plain that students don’t respect them o r take them seriously. Students claim that the police are on unnecessary pow er trips and treat them as a parent w ould treat a naughty child. So w hat is the answ er to brid g in g the gap between students and the ASU police? A more cooperative attitude between students and cam p u s p o lic e is th e firs t ste p b ec au se respect is earned, not given. Blowing whistles in front o f dismount zones is not the answer. Being defensive and treating stu­ dents like they are peons w on’t help, either. If police want to be treated with respect, they must treat others with respect Instead o f being defensive and assuming that students are going to be disre­ spectful, they should take it case by case. If a stu­ dent’s behavior warrants an attitude, then so be i t If b icy clists a re using p o o r ju d g m e n t and whizzing through crowded pedestrian areas with­ out a care in the world, they need to be pulled over. If someone is exercising caution when bik­ ing through dism ount zones or crowded pedestri­ an areas, pulling them over makes little sense. For years, ASU has been promising to create bike paths that don’t stop before the bike racks. Actually, they’ve been promising to create bike paths that bicyclists can ride on w ithout pedestri­ ans o r dism ount zones interfering, but that hasn’t happened yet. F or the m ost part, DPS officers are aware o f this problem and have tried to be as lenient as possible, but they are also aw are o f their jo b to enforce die law. On the other hand, students m ust understand that police are doing their job. N ot all cam pus police are power hungry. They aren’t out filling quotas or ju st pulling people over because they are on a pow er trip. If you break a law, you have to expect to pay the consequences. Students should continue to exercise caution when riding on campus. When you get pulled over, you are being punished because you violated a campus rule. Whether you think the rule is stupid or not is not the issue. Having an attitude toward the enforcing officer will not help make things any easier. Students want to be respected, but they must first treat police with die same respect. DPS officers go through 13 weeks o f training at th e A riz o n a L aw E n fo rc e m e n t T ra in in g A cadem y to becom e certified police officers. They do have the legal right to make arrests, issue citations and. file reports any where in Arizona. As ASU C h ief o f Police Lanny S tandridge said, “ W ithout com m unity support and under­ standing, w e’re not as effective.” So if we try to treat each other with respect a n d u se b e tte r ju d g m e n t, th e r e la tio n s h ip between students and police can only get better. s S tate P ress Wednesday, February 7, 1996 lo s t % liy b u p l i Codici h a p p en . ^ 9 s H y p e h id e s tru e reaso n fo r G u lf W a r • : S Recently there has been a spate of retrospectives and analysis ITEVE . pieces done on the subject of the FORSBERG Gulf War. This is to be expected. After all, we have just passed the co n flic t’s anniversary. W hat might have been less expected, however, is how litde any of these projects delvéd into the crucial issue of why the war was fought. As a general rule the accounts have simply served up the familiar retreads. Perhaps by the next anniversary of the Gulf War we can have some more substantial interpretations to think about. When the average Joe is asked, “Why was the war fought?’7 most will reply, correctly, “It was all about oil.” There is little doubt that economics did indeed form the bulk of the argument for fighting with Iraq. Excuses such as “Fighting tyranny” and “Freeing the poor Kuwaitis” were pretty much fodder for pub­ lic relations machines. No one in Washington (or Baghdad, for that matter) took such talk seriously. Everyone understood that the. issue Was oil prices and profits. The conventional interpretation, however, is backwards. The U.S. did not fear that the Iraqis, with Kuwait under their belt, would drive oil prices up. Quite on the contrary, the government feared that they would drive oil prices down. It was not the threat that Middle East oil supplies would be denied us, but rather that oil would flow too cheaply, that drove us to drive Iraq out of Kuwait. The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait was not due solely tó “m adm an” H u ssein ’s eg o tistic al quest, for regional dominance. The fact of the matter was that Iraq was broke and desperately needed money. During the years of fighting in the Iran-Iraq war Hussein had built up a large m ilitary and a basket case of an economy. He could see no way to disarm and build a peacetim e economy (we haven’t figured out how to do that our­ selves, either). H is only hope was to stay ohe jum p ahead o f disaster by increasing his oil revenues. The other members of OPEC, however, were not sympa­ thetic to his plight. There was little hope that the Various oil ministers would agree to allow Hussein a larger quota at the expense o f their own nations’ incomes. And, to add insult to injury, many OPEC members (like Kuwait) were cheat- ing on the oil agreements like crazy. Not having a large enough share of the world oil market to go his own way, Hussein probably calculated that if he had control of Kuwait’s oil as well, then he might be a pow­ erful enough player to dictate his own terms. Hence the invasion of Kuwait. Even as the invasion o f K uwait was underw ay Washington’s top analysts were calculating its economic impact if not countered. If Iraq were allowed to keep Kuwait and sell oil, they figured, the result would be a tremendous drop in world oil prices, Hussein was desperate for money, and in order to get it he would have to sell oil like crazy. As world oil prices dropped the profitmargin for j oil would drop as well, and the other oil-producing nations would have had to start selling more in Order to, raise want­ ed revenues. As they dumped their oil on the market, prices would fall further still and the process would repeat itself, all in accordance with economic theory. Horrified policy­ makers Were presented with worst ease estimates that j showed oil, at least in the five to ten-year time span, being , almost worthless ($4 to $8 a barrel, optimistically). The average Joe or Jane would probably jump for joy a t] the prospect of gasoline prices dropping by half. The world’s * economic managers, however, saw no good side. Oilman ! George Bush, for example, didn’t need to be told twice what f an “energy recession” might mean. What would states like his own Texas do to make up for the loss of revenue? Likewise, many of the world’s top financial powers had ‘ made extremely large loans to Third World nations (lik e, Mexico) that could only repay if they could pump oil at a j decent price. What would happen if such nations had, one after the other, announced that they could no longer repay? It might not have looked as bad as the late ‘80s banking crisis, $ but it looked bad enough. In addition, how would nations like « Saudi Arabia be able to buy expensive Weaponry and airlin-1 ers and other such things if they couldn’t make money on | their oil? How many jobs would that cost the U.S.? The decision to eject Iraq from Kuwait was not the doing . of some mysterious, all-powerful conspiracy. Rather it w a s.' a reflection of what has been a common thread throughout »• history. Namely, that major powers don’t like changes in 2 the order of things and will act to protect the status quo. No r doubt it will be some time, however, before we have politi­ cians bragging about how they saved us from cheap oil. Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history. DAVID STROW, Editor DAVID PROFFITT, Managing Editor JEREMY STEIN . . . . KENNES BOLIG....... ........ ANGELA MULL. . ..... CHRISTINA BÀILEY..... . ... BR YN CHANCELLOR. ... JIM POULIN . DAN MILLER DUSTIN KRUGEL . .. .... . .. JOSH KRIST.. . ADRIÁNNA GARCIA........ ............Asst. Magazine Editor REPO RTERS: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Garin Groff. A ndrea H ealey, M elody M cD onald; Jeff O w ens, Ray Stem, Timothy Tait, Kelly Wendel. SPORTS REPO RTERS: Randy Jones, Seth Landau, Éd Ode ven, Ron Matejko, Damian Shaw. COPY ED ITORS: Christa Cerfentano, Liz Montalbano. PH O TO G R A PH ER S: Paul Besing, Tim Hacker. Robert Hendricks, Pat Shannahan. CO LU M N ISTS: Daniel Blanco, Michelle Carson, Bryn Chancellor, Jennifer D odd, Steve Forsberg, Tina Holder, Liz Montalbano. Rebecca Murray. C A R T O O N IST S : Brian Fairrington, Stacy Holmstedt, Steve Tansley. P R O D U C T IO N : A aron R. B rutcher, Jeffre y C hua, Jo Anne Hansen, Diana Kessinger, Jeremy M eyer; Gerry Mueller, Prashant Sampat, Corey Saunders, Eloise Young. S A L E S R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : N aom i C obb, C a ri' Dewald, Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Jennifer Hughes, N ickel le Kastein, M ike Logan, Jess Rankin, M ichelle Marie Sheetz, Shane Siren. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of 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: DAVID STROW Editor DAVID PROFFITT Managing Editor CHRISTINA; BAILEY Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays ami exam periods, at M atthews Center,: Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We. do not answer questions of a general nature. H ie State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. Hie news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Inform ation...............965-7572 N ew sroom ................965-2292 M agazine..................965-1695 A dvertising........... .965-6555 C lassifieds.............,...965-6735 Opinion Wednesday, February 7, 1996 Page 5 D e a th -p e n a lty p o litic s o b str u c t ju stic e rppnrH-çpttino __ ______ _*.ï _ ' Virginia • • ' executed . *a ., 1 - . . ■ 1995 rests as a record-setting The day before these two executions, would have a legal opening to demand a new sentencing year for state-sanctioned homi­ man by lethal injection. This was almost a non-story, except trial. Their reasoned argument would be: I was sentenced to DOLMAN cides: 56 men executed at a cost that death chamber technicians needed 30 minutes to locate die one way and now the rules are changing and I am forced estim ated by Duke University IMCCARTHY a suitable vein, finally settling for one just above the foot. to die another way. I should have another sentencing trial. researchers at $2.1 million per It isn’t likely that executioners in Delaware and Utah Fearing that appeals courts might agree, .states end death. Jan. 25 and 26 are likely will earn this much international and national publicity run this by offering a choice: The condemned aren’t to go into the books also: succes­ again. Delaware switched to lethal injection in 1986 but being forced to accept another.'method, the first one sive days on which one state Bailey, sentenced before that date, rejected the choice. In remains available. hung a man by rope and another Utah, politicians have introduced a bill to ban the firing Trial judges and prosecutors abhor new trials, whether on killed with bullets. squad for future death sentences. questions of guilt or sentencing. Evidence not originally avail­ Both executions were wellMany states are giving condemned prisoners choices in able — either because inexperienced defense lawyers didn’t reported, given the novelty of dying. Capital punishment advocates who see this as an know how to gather it or because it was suppressed by prose­ gallows and firing squads at a unwarranted turn toward mercy — why give these heinous cutors — often has a way of showing up years later. tim e when leg islatu res are m urderers a choice? — Days before the increasingly sanctioning drugging people to death. Lethal need not be alarm ed. — ■— Delaware and Utah execu­ injection has a softness to it, almost a cruelty-free medical Legislatures aren’t getting tions-, Joseph Spaziano, a aura which allows state governments to have it both ways: soft, they’re getting practi­ Florida death row inmate Mqny states are giving condemned pris­ to kill humanely. cal. for nearly 20 years, had The Delaware hanging of Billy Bailey and the shooting oners choices in dying. .. .Legislatures First, they are making one of the rarest of legal 26 hours later o f John Albert Taylor in Utah lacked the capital punishm ent more arfrfi’t genmg soft, they 're getting victories. A Florida circuit ordinariness that might have allowed these two executions palatable, should a clamor court, vacating both his practical. ■ W to pass unnoticed beyond prison walls. The methods of arise that death by hanging, conviction and sentence, killing —- not the killing itself — caused uneasiness shooting, electrocution or ordered a new trial. A among politicians in both states. Bailey and Taylor could gassing is barbaric and bad combination of nonjudicial have chosen to go quietly, laying down on a gurney and for the state’s im age. forces — the doggedness having a vein opened. Instead, they rejected taking up the Second, and far more important, is that the offering of of Spaziano’s attorneys, including Professor Michael Mello states’ option of a lethal drug. choices protects the state against spending still more money o f the Vermont Law School and reporters .from the Miami As a result, international television crews along with major in legal expenses. Herald — persistently presented evidence of grave doubts U.S. networks poured into the remote prison towns of rural Death penalty sentencing is a post-conviction procédure, of the condemned man’s guilt. Smyrna, Del., and Point of the Mountain, Utah. The power of akm to another trial with, full deliberations and arguments. It was said, well, thé system worked. In fact, it was TV visuals was at work. How often does a chance come along In most states, juries decide whether murderers deserve lawyers and reporters who worked. The legal system did its to get footage of a well-constructed wooden gallows and a death. In some, judges rule and in a few, judges, usually powerful best to kill. trapdoor swinging open in a dry run for the cameras? Or to running for re-election, can override juries that reject a cap­ film the firing squad room and its sandbag-supported death ital sentence. Caiman M cCarthy is a syndicated colum nist w ith the chair complete with a spill device to catch the blood? If those now on death row Were not given choices they Washington Post Writers Group. Erer notice hew law en&reement varies Ijy neighborhood? ¿5 DüPONTl ESTÆ TEt fangs#, weæs smp h H a & J ih r —STPRESSaASU.EDU Angry pedestrian poses risk to sign-ignoring bicyclists How’s that for a headline? 1 read the Feb. 5 article regard­ ing the lack of respect for DPS officers and I found myself completely disgusted. The article discussed the sheer “lack of respect” for a police officer standing next to a dismount sign. Excuse me if I don’t give a damn! Geez. Who cares if the police officers aren’t getting .any respect? I’m one of the few brave pedestrians who has to walk down the freeway known as Palm Walk. Sometimes I wonder if there aren’t more bicy­ clists, rollerbladers anil skateboarders out there during the dis­ mount hours than any other time of the day. That’s why I’m going to a nearby hardware store today and buying a whole bunch of wooden dowel rods; Yeah, that’s right, I’m going to play Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade sequences on these bicyclists. There I’ll be, posing as an innocent pedestrian, waiting for my prey — an alone, unsuspecting bicyclist — to come bearing down on me. Then suddenly, out of nowhere, a dowel rod will appear in the spokes of the evil bicyclist’s front tire. Whoosh! Overthe handlebars this bicyclist will go, slamming into the pavement like fresh meat. I am fed up with people who feel “Dismount” is a way of saying this is what they’re riding to work (“I’m riding “D ism ount” to school and back.”) It’s getting really unnerving. I find myself walking down Palm Walk, mind­ ing my own business, when I suddenly look up and see a speed racer with me in his sights, flying towards me at upwards of 20 miles per hour. My heart beats faster and faster as the bicyclist approaches ... T begin to have a heart attack. At the final moment, the bicyclist swerves out of the way, leaving me to limp to Student Health for more unnerving pills. And then, what do I read about in the State Press? Upset DPS officers who don’t get enough respect. Sheesh! A ttitude o f D P S officers causes student disrespect In an article Feb. 5 the ASU Department of Public Safety whines that they do not get the respect they deserve. I would have to agree with half of that statement at least — they don't get much respect. Whether or not they deserve it is another matter. ;f In general, I and many of the people I have talked to appreciate the job they perform (and get paid to perform) on a daily basis. No one would argue the inherent dangers involved in the life of a peace officer. It is not their jobs that grates on the nerves of the students of ASU, it is the attitude they display toward the general student population. Many of these m istreated DPS officers walk around campus with the attitude of sheep dogs that must keep the lowly sheep in their places. When they speak to you, it is with a condescending air o f a superior or parent. Nothing displays this more than Officer Lisa Busse’s comment to the State Press in the same article. She says, “I can give a ticket anywhere I damn well please as long as it’s in the state of Arizona.” This is true Lisa, but isn’t there a more appropriate and tactful way of phrasing this point? Remember, just because you can do something, doesn’t mean it is right to do it. Robert Dellorfano Senior Theatre Education Eric Jacobson Freshman ' Computer systems engineering uotaSCes Hungry men have no respectfo r law, authority or human life. — Marcus Garvey St a t e P ress Wednesday, February 7,1996 P ag e 6 Tempe City Hall undergoes remodeling project Staff relocates during plan calling for asbestos removal, fire sprinkler system B y K elly W endel S tate P ress Tempe city employees are packing their bags — and just about everything else; All departments located in the Tempe City Hall Building, 31 E. Fifth St. will temporarily •move to new digs to facilitate rem odeling and safety upgrades at the complex. "We have had a lot of good use out of that building since 1971, but it’s time (the ren o v atio n s) w ere d o n e,” said Jim McGeorge, Tempe public relations officer. The departments will relocate to 525. S. Mill Ave. and tentatively return to the remodeled city building in November, said Deputy City Manager Dave Brown. The City Clerk’s office started the exo­ dus the first week in February, and other offices will continue moving out until the building is cleared in the first week of March. The city council will move its weekly meetings across the street to the Tempe Police Department auditorium. Although Brown said the new quarters will be cramped, the city’s chief concern was the accessibility of city services. “We are more concerned about cus­ tomers being able to finds us,” he said. Brown said the remodeling project will include the installation of a fire sprinkler system, asbestos removal and renovations to the complex’s Garden level to facilitate a “one-stop-shop” for city permits and licensing. Known as the “upside-down pyramid,” the city hall complex was constructed in 1971 before fire codes required a built-in fire suppression system. Fire sprinkler sys­ tem s w ill be installed throughout the building to bring it up to code, Brown said. ■• “We would like to model what our fire department recommends for other people,” he said. The building will also undergo asbestos removal, a process Brown called quite a project. Brown said although the asbestos T he Tem pe City Hall Building, 31 E . Fifth St., is sch ed uled for safety upgrades and rem odeling, putting city em p loyees tem porarily on the move. is fully contained, poses no health hazard for employees and is not required to be removed, the city is going ahead with the project anyway. “We set up processes to keep it con­ tained, but have never identified asbestos as an immediate threat,” he said. “But peo­ ple will be happy when it’s gone.” A SU u n a b le to c a p tu re C O P S d u e to b u d g e t re stric tio n s B y G arin G roff State P ress ' Two years ago. President Clinton and Congress vowed to make America’s streets and neighborhoods safer by adding 100.000 police officers to boost community-based policing. One-third o f the way through the effort, a Justice Department program called Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS) has spent $1.6 billion to put 33,000 new officers on the beat at police departments around the nation. And with 75 percent of the cost picked up by the federal government, hundreds of communities have applied for — and received — officers through COPS grants. Except ASU. It’s not that the University doesn’t want or wouldn’t ben­ efit from having more officers, said ASU Chief of Police Lanny Standridge, but that the University doesn’t have the money. “We would welcome additional staffing and funding because it would improve the level of service that we can provide to the community,” Standridge said. Standridge said, he strongly supports community-based policing, which puts officers closer to people and increases interaction between citizens and police on an everyday basis, not just after a crime has been reported. But he said an uncertain budget outlook has kept ASU from applying for grants from COPS. COPS funding is not permanent. The program funds 75 percent of officer salaries for three years, leaving the com­ munity to pay the difference. This means the University would have to pay about $28,000 over three years for each officer added through a COPS grant. After three years, ASU would have to pick up the full cost of each additional officer. That’s more than $30,000 a year for salary plus an estimated $7,500 more for related expenses including supplies and administrative support. GET OUTJA TOW N! H T h e O ff ic ia l Spring Break ¡U rline1. COLORADO SPRINGS G A T E W A Y T O G R E A T W IN TER R E S O R T S H ’M i l l VP Vlfestem Pacific A I R L I N E S NEW Y O RK W hether it's for som e extrem e Colorado skiing/snowboarding, o r a Party M axim us in N ew York City, let Western Pacific be your ticket to a well-deserved Spring Break - a t a Super Low fare, «Atlanta ($119), Chicago ($94), D allas ($119), «Houston ($109), «Indianapolis ($109), Kansas City ($99), «Nashville ($139), Oklahoma City ($113), «San Antonio ($89), Tulsa ($99), W ashington D.C ($129) *As o f M onti 1st, 1996 I Thee »re off-pe»k one-wiy fu n . HERE'S ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW. Sots nuy bf sok) out on son* flights th it operate during very busy travel tiroes. Peak travel tiroes ate 7:00 a.m. to 1ljOOaro. Monday, 2fl0 p m to 7:00 pjn. Thunday, 7 « ) a.m. to to 7:00 p.m. Sutday. All other times are off-peak, including all day Saturday. Seats must be purchased at time of booking and at leant 21 aays before departure. Fare does not include up to $12 in passenger facility'charges. All purchases are fully non-refundable. Changes may be n uib oniy pnor to scheduled departure time, for a $35 change fee, plus m y increase in new ¿re. Failure to notify Western Pacific of itinerary changes prior to departure time will result in forfeiture of payment All fares and change fees are subject to changewithout notice. • W: * * » .:*• X; THE BROADMOOR CarRental 800-722-5775 OUR OFFICIAL RENTAL CAR COLORADO SPRINGS CONVENTIONRVIStlORSBUREAU 800-679-3707 8 0 0 -D O -V IS IT Wednesday, February 7, 1996 S tate P ress Page 7 Arizona feels impact o f federal COPS program received another installment •— 46 officers and $3.4 million in By G arin G roff State P ress The federal Community Oriented Policing Services program (COPS), a program working to increase community-based polic­ ing by putting 100,000 more officers on the streets, left Tempe with nothing in its latest round of grant announcements. The Tempe Police Department applied for grants through the Justice Department’s COPS program, said Sgt. Mark Bach, administrator of the Office of Management and Budget He said he was not sure why Tempe received no officers. However, he said he is confident Tempe will get more offi­ cers in the next wave of grants, noting the city already has received 12 officers through COPS. “You have to realize that there are other agencies in need, too,” Bach said. “So it doesn't disappoint me to have to wait my turn.” Arizona has received nearly 500 new police officers in the last two years as part of COPS. In the last few weeks, the state funding. Tempe uses its officers for patrols, homicide, narcotics, auto theft, environmental design review and mounted patrols. For the most part, police departments can use the officers as (hey see fit “There are really no strings attached other than the officer must be involved in some sort of community-based policing,” said'Janet Napolitano, U.S. attorney from Arizona Napolitano said she has seen officers from COPS make an immediate impact on neighborhoods. Crime has gone down nationwide, in part because of community policing efforts like COPS. “It’s a very reassuring presence,” she said. “One of the things that it does is demysticize the image that police have. People see cops as good role models.” The funding to police departments is not permanent. COPS funds 75 percent of the cost of salaries for 3 years, leaving the community to pay the difference. “This is basically a jump start to get more officers out on the street and give cities and towns a financial breathing period,” said Charles Miller of the Justice Department in Washington, D C. COPS has placed about 33,000 police officers on the streets nationally at a cost of $ 1.6 billion since the program began in late 1994, Miller said. By the time the program expires in 2000, plans are to have 100,000 officers on the street. However, the program faces an uncertain future. Congressional Republicans proposed and voted in favor of a bill to eliminate COPS, but Clinton vetoed the bill. Although Congress failed to override the veto, COPS is only funded at 75 percent of last year’s levels, slowing deployment of police nationwide. Crime nationwide has decreased, in part because of commu­ nity-based policing efforts like COPS. However, crime in Phoenix has gone up, signaling a need for more local police, Miller said. "S t a t e P ress Art & Photography Majors C olor a r tw o r k a n d b la c k & w h ite p h o t o g r a p h y n e e d e d for p u b lic a tio n in H ayden's Ferry Review, A S U ’s n a t io n a l a w a r d -w in n in g lite r a r y m a g a zin e . A ll le v ­ e ls o f e x p e r tis e are e n c o u r a g e d to apply. I f in te r e s te d , p le a s e d e liv e r 5 -2 0 s lid e s , S A S E , r e su m e , a n d a n y o th e r p e r tin e n t m a te r ia ls to th e HFR office in th e b a s e ­ m e n t o f M a tth e w s C enter, or m a il to: H i g h f ib e r , l o w f a t . l O O T H . 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S u ite 201 P h o e n ix , A r iz o n a 8 5 0 4 4 5,H GASH • TEMPE • 9 6 6 -5 6 0 0 Associated Students of Arizona State University Located on the third floor MU • 965-3161 http://aspin.asu.èdu/próvider/ASASU “A CONVERSATION WITH THE PRESIDENTS” ASU PRESIDENT Lattie Coor joins ASASU PRESIDENT Angelo DeSimone FOR AN OPEN FORUM T o d a y - W e d ., F e b . 7 , a t 3 - 5 p m M em orial U n io n P rogram m ing L ounge ^ R e fr e sh m e n ts w ill b e se r v e d ^ Page 8 Wednesday, February 7,1996 Scholar talks on social issues Wilson: Economics play important role in racial divide service crisis since the Depression.” Although racial divisions are evident in American soci­ Economic disparities in the United States have led to ety, W ilson said w hites are not im m une from the urban decay and heightened racial tensions, said a noted inequities of urban life. black author and scholar Tuesday. “Like inner city minorities, lower income whites have The problems of racial segregation were originally felt the full impact of the urban fiscal crisis in the United fueled as an increasing number of whites who once domi­ States,” he said. “Moreover, lower income whites are nated urban areas moved to suburban Communities, more constrained by financial inequality to remain in the William Wilson said to about 300 people in Katzin Hall. central city than their middle-class counterparts and there­ “As cities lost population, they became poorer and darker by suffer the strains of crime, higher taxes, reduced ser­ in their racial composition,” he said. “These demographic vices and inferior public schools.” changes are related to the declining influence of American Increasing employment opportunities in urban areas cities and provided the foundation for the Hew Federalism.” and continuing dialog between different cultures would The New Federalism, Wilson said, was a Republican- ultimately lead to better racial understanding and fiscal proposed plan that cut urban spending to provide funds equality, Wilson said. for mass transit, employment training, block grants, pub-, “Increased employment would help stabilize poor lie works projects and urban development action grants. urban neighborhoods and ultimately enhance the quality “In 1980, the federal contribution to city budgets was of race relations in urban areas,” he said. “Also, given the 18 percent, - he said. “By 1990, it had dropped to 6.4 per­ current urban situation, perhaps at no time in the nation’s cent. For many cities, the com bination o f the New history is it more important to talk about the need for both Federalism and the recession led to the worst fiscal and city and suburban cooperation — not separation.” By B rian Anderson State P ress StäU Press No CO v e r c h arge S t a t e P ress P o lic e R epo rt A SU Police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday: • A student’s windshield was damaged on Adelphi Drive. • Vehicles and doors at ASlTs animal research facility were vandalized. Damage is estimated at $1,600. • An ASU vehicle was damaged in Parking Structure 6. f Several walls at die University Activity Center were .daBatiaSed. • An ASU computer was stolen from a student’s vehi­ cle. The loss is estimated at $4,000. *>.*« § §gj ■ « A VCR was stolen from the AifDepartment. • A Pentium chip was stolen from the Physical Science A-Wing i\ '-h j V 1 • Three electric balances were stolen from the Life SciencesE-Wing. Damage is Estimated at $2,837. • iSftb students were contacted while throwing water bal■loons out of a room on die sixth floor of Ocotillo Hall.: • A CD player, 24 discs, a Polo jacket and $20 were stolen from a student’s vehicle in Area 35. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •Three people were charged with trafficking stolen prop­ erty, theft, possession of stolen property and other changes when they sold a stolen vehicle to undercover officers. • A man was arrested for disorderly conduct when he got into an argument with his wife at a restaurant. When mi officer arrived on the scene, the man repeat­ edly yelled profanities at the officer and struggled when the officer.tried to arrest him. , Compiled by State Press reporter Garin G roff S t a t e P r e s s § M ! E iïï ,§ W e're there w hen you can 't be. C R O SSW O R D by THOMAS JOSEPH to avoid d o in g the sa m e thing fo r the next forty years. 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You've probably heard of the story of the job applicant who said he was a shoe salesman eith fifteen years expe­ rience. ‘ No*, correected the recruiter interview ing him , ‘ y o u 've h a v e six months experience thirty times.“ Isn't there som e way to keep chal­ lenging yourself in new and different areas? czar ACROSS 44 Actress 1 Route Mimi 5 Spread irregularly 45 Thaw DOWN 11 Scope 1 Lacking 12 Friday finder .color 2 Met 13 Incline offering 14 Put on the 3 Preline purchase 15 Have a tryout bite 4 Monopoly 16 Reiser’s token T V costar 5 Wash 17 Uncer­ thor­ tainty oughly 19 Party 6 Photog­ staple 22 Bart's rapher’s mom works 7lron 24 Play­ problem ground 8 Invite fixture 9 Misery 26 Satanic 10 Took first 27 Man, for one .1 2 4 3 28 Acts 'the 11 nomad 30 Subway 13 fare 15 31 Ram's mate 18 17 32 Overturn 34 Prevari­ 22 23 cated 26 35 Laura Petrie’s 28 hubby 38 Bucca­ 31 neer 34 41 Ready for consump­ 38 40 39 tion42 News­ 42 paper 44 worker 43 infamous s E W E D 6 Koppel 33 Jury members 34 Past due 36 Fiery stone 37 Special talent 38 Through 39 Altar promise 40 Equip 41 Crater feature 7 e 9 16 20 : 21 10 ■ 2 14 H24 25 27 j 30 32 33 ■ 35 £■ 41 36 37 43 2-7 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: A X Y D LB A A X R is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another, in this sample A is used for foe three L's, X for die two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ate all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 2-7 CRYPTOQUOTES ARTHUR ANDERSEN & CO., S.C. Where we go from here8 ECVXDIV, LQDBHIPI T DO XP STP A N D ER SEN CONSULTING presents an Information Presentation W ednesday, Feburary 7 , 5:30p.m . - 7:30p.m . ASU Memorial Union, Room 218 (Pima Room) S D QHUTS TP ZCDOK EJAKHCU, SO S EFZ T H J K P E N TEK EXDA S . — X E A I P F E H Q P IF TWO PEOPLE RIDE THE SAME HORSE, ONE MUST RIDE BEHIND.—BISHOP FOWLER Y e s t e r d a y 's C r y p t o q u o t e : O f 996 by King Fsaturas Syndicate. Inc. St a t e P Wednesday, February 7,1996 ress In te r n e t your sports • your news your » your research • your weather • your games • your real estate • your videos • your cars • your films • your food • your magazines • your networks IB B S B • your resume • your library • your books • your pho­ tographs • your opinions • your email • your hometown *|jQ E K S9 tMjlM • your travel • your sports • your news » your research • your weather • your games » your videos « I B W B i l « your cars • your films* • your food • your pets Page 9 Investigator says, Japan m ust m ake am ends for sex slavery GENEVA (AP) — In the first major U.N. condemnation of Japan for World War II atrocities, a key United Nations investigator on Tuesday demanded the Japanese government pay damages and apologize to former sex slaves. Japan showed “extraordinary inhuman­ ity” in forcing 200,000 women from con­ quered territory to work in the infamous “comfort stations” near its military bases, said Radhika Coomaraswamy, the U .N .; special investigator into violence against women. In her report for the 53-nation U.N. Hum an R ights C om m ission, Coomaraswamy said Japan must identify and punish those responsible for the sex slavery during the war, during fighting in C hina in the 1930s and in occupied Korea. The Japanese government rejected the report’s demands and reiterated its claim that it bears no legal responsibility for the abuses. Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto said the government may have to oppose the U.N. recommendations in court. The women who managed to survive being raped as many as 70 times a day were too ashamed to speak of their humil­ iation. Their silence saved Japan from having to face the issue.. But in recent years, human-rights orga­ nizations have taken up the cause of these women. The horrors of rape in the former Yugoslavia helped propel wartime atroci­ ties against women to the forefront, and in 1994, the U.N. ap pointed C oom arasw am y, a Sri L ankan legal expert, to investigate such abuses. The Japanese forced Chinese, Dutch, F ilip in o , In d o n esian , M alaysian and Taiwanese women and girls to become sex slaves. But most of the victims were Korean, and C oom arasw am y’s report concentrated on them -r- many aged 14 to 18 when “recruited,” she said. From interviews and military docu­ ments, Coomaraswamy gleaned evidence of how the sex slavery system worked, from contraception and rules of operation to the use o f force and d ecep tio n to recruit women and girls. The sex slaves w ere housed in appalling conditions, fed meager rations and denied medical treatment, except to discover whether they had caught venere­ al disease from the soldiers. Diseased women often were killed, the report said, and at the end of the war, retreating Japanese troops killed many of the sex slaves who had survived. In August 1993, mounting public pres­ sure forced the Japanese government to issue a blanket apology to these women and it set up a fund for voluntary contri­ butions. Coomaraswamy said the fund was a step in the right direction, but that the governm ent should do m ore: It m ust admit it has legal responsibility, compen­ sate the victims out of government cof­ fers, apologize to the women in writing, and teach this dark chapter in history classrooms. z dHUIR irCUTTERS“ te n e Your C a ll Phoenix Community Internet provided by campusMCI* *$12 MO/GOHRS• FREECRUISIN' 1AM6AM DIRECTCAMPUSCONNECTION• *1110BUSYSIGNALS •* MMImps «fimi i i Up » In d tlMB, M M dsrpi My upfr M u t chump a ■untasi wimRUM Iimi—iaapHprwm n ta , UH. 'OMCtKrmMiaìMyripÉli wr«dnwy1%. jRj What Are You Waiting For? CALL 1-800-446-3309 ■ üw H H ■ COUPON ■ University & Rural Cornerstone Center 968-8008 ■— i - —- bH — m W m M M Ba COUPON COUPON U y | FREE SH A M PO O | DESIGNER PERM | WAREHOUSE IWCES | | W ITH O UT • $4*95 { * 2 9 Notgoodwithanyotherofferforsameservice. | / NOW O P EN Rural & Guadalupe Albertson's Center 839-4282 W h o le F a m ily! IncludesShampoo,CuittandPern. (LonghairA.specialtywrapsextra) Notgoodwithanyotheroffer forsameservice. ! AMBrandNameSalonExclusiveProducts REDKEN taiìBBB Sebastián S tate P ress Wednesday, February 7, 1996 Page 10 Arrests C ontinued from page 3. weeks, and is holding five on suspicion of war crimes. Djukic, Krsmanovic and their driver were arrested Jan. 30 after taking a wrong turn onto governm ent territory near Sarajevo, Gumming said. The driver and two other Serbs being questioned as witnesses will soon be freed, •said the chief of Bosnia’s security service, Bakir Alispahie. Djukic, in his seventies, is the highestranking Serb detained by the government. He was a logistics specialist and close aide to Bosnian Serb military commander Gen. Ratko Mladic during the war. Djukic and Krsmanovic “wete responsi­ ble for the crimes committed by the troops under their command if they didn't prevent those actions... or were even giving orders for mass k illin g s,’ said Bekir G avrankapetanovic, president o f the Bosnian War Crimes Commission. that those who stray into hostile territory should be turned back rather than arrested. Cum ming spoke cautiously on that point. The accord encouraged freedom of movement — which would be deterred by the arrests, he said. But he also said Bosnian authorities were within their rights to attempt to bring genuine war-crimes sus­ pects to justice. Serb official Nikola Koljevic told The Associated Press that he had contacted Adm. Leighton Smith, the commander of the NATO-led force, and that Smith “said he would intervene in this case.” Asked if the incident could seriously harm the peace process, Koljevic said, “It depends whether it is ... one negative reac­ tion or whether it is part of à larger pattern of the Bosnian Muslim authorities.” The Serbs’ commander for the Sarajevo area, Maj. Gen. D ragom ir M ilosevic, blamed NATO for the arrests, saying its troops failed to provide Serb soldiers and civilians with any sense of security. “They were taken to jail without any explanation^” Milosevic said. “They were unarmed.” The international tribunal has indicted 45 Serbs and seven Bosnian Croats. The man in custody is a Serb. Among the indict­ ed are Mladic and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic. U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights John Shattuck and Smith visited two sites of suspected Serb atrocities in northern Bosnia on Tuesday. They found no evidence of crimes at the Omarska and Ljubija mines, but appeared intent on demonstrating that Western offi­ cials could have full access to these sites. Ljubija and Omarska are suspected of being used as burial sites for hundreds, per­ haps thousands, of Croats and Muslims killed by Serbs in 1992. ness school at the University of Pennsylvania, owns and that the law was meant to protect is seeking $1,100 — the 8 cents U.S. News is celebrities and other public figures. “We have always maintained this is an believed to have gotten for his name, and the rest for aggravation. Avraharni has already inappropriate use ... and the inappropriate court to decide this case,” said the magaspent more than that in legal bills. Avraharni’s lawsuit cites a Virginia law - zinc’s lawyer, David Fiske. U.S. News has countersued Avraharni, protecting unauthorized use of a person’s name for commercial purposes without per­ asking the higher Circuit Court to affirm mission. The law is generally used to pro­ that the magazine’s marketing practices are tect public figures from others trying to lawful. That case is set for trial June 6. The Direct Marketing Association esti­ cash in on their names. U.S. News and the direct m arketing mates that the direct-mail industry employs industry claim A vraham i’s name as it 18.2 million people nationwide and that 98 appears on the list is not something that he million Americans shop by direct mail. In an interview outside the courthouse, Connie Heatley, spokeswoman for the Direct Marketing Association, noted that people who don't want junk mail can register with the association, which will then ask its 3,600 members not to solicit their business, or they can complain to companies directly. Avraharni claims he did that and more, and still received unwanted mail nearly every day. “There was no real interest in stopping the annoying junk mail, even though I asked,” he said, “and no real way to enforce it unless I went to court.” The other three suspects in custody were believed to have killed civilians in eastern Bosnia and were arrested recently in a civil­ ian car carrying rifles, hand grenades and ammunition, Bosnian officials said. The Bosnian government has asked the U.N. tribunal to examine evidence against the five, and has promised to release them if the tribunal does not indict them. A senior Bosnian army officer, however, indicated the detained officers may be charged with war crimes before a local court. He spoke on condition of anonymity. He also did not rule out that the officers might be exchanged for 300 to 400 war prisoners the governm ent accuses the Bosnian Serbs of pressing into forced labor. A spokesman for the tribunal, Christian Chartier, said the tribunal will examine the allegations, but made no further comment. Serb leaders protested that the arrests violated the peace accord, which stipulates Magazine suit C o n t in u e d fr o m p a g e 3. troubling," Avraharni wrote in an opinion piece this week in the Uffs Angeles Times. "Is this the price of modem society or is this a sym ptom o f d isresp ect for our wishes?” On Tuesday, a judge threw out Avraharni "s case on technical grounds and instructed him to refile his lawsuit in a higher court. Avraharni said he will do that. G eneral D istrict Judge Karen A. H enenberg said her court, which is V irginia's equivalent of a small-claims court, lacks jurisdiction. 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P agejU Wednesday, February 7,1996 S tate P ress S ta t e P r e ss f Think S pring ! CLASSIFIEDS The bargains are in the back. i-C a m p u s -i LC o r n e r s SPRING BREAK PACKAGES MAZATLAN 4 NIGHTS • .FROM$ 3 2 9 * 7 1 2 S. College 967-4049 next to College Street Deli CABO SAN LUCAS 5 NIGHTS • vrom$ 4 3 9 * CANCÚN 7 NIGHTS • .from$ 5 9 9 * Packages « a m * rouhjirp a* from Phoemk H O ta ACCOMMODATIONS BASH) ON QUAD SHARE A bac*! transfers m M exico Internattqnae Abbobt Taxes N o t Incujoed Ca u Fo b M ore D r a i s . SKI COLORADO 4N IG H TS... M OM$415* Included roundtrsp mr wom P hoemx to Denver Condo accommodations based on quad share . . - :3DAY(JR.TICKET. Transfers not included. Council Travel 130 E. University, Ste. A Tempe, AZ 85281 http^/WTRfw.cic«.orÿctsyctthome.htm 6 0 9 S . Mill Ave. 858-0567 across from Coffee Plantation ASU HATS Employers list Internet no-nos SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — No one would dream of sending one of those raunchy “I never thought I’d be writ­ ing this ...” letters to Penthouse on the company letterhead. Nor. would many employees take out a subscription to Hustler and have it delivered to the office. But that’s pretty close to what some employees are doing on their computers at work these days. Using their corporate e-mail addresses, they’re sending letters to sexu­ ally explicit bulletin boards or downloading material such as the “Hottest Babes of Amsterdam.” Employers are getting wise to the situation, and in some cases are warning their staffs to knock it off. In its extremely detailed eight-page memo “Acceptable Internet Usage Policy,” Texaco Inc. tells em ployees straight out that they’re being watched via the computer activity logs and that no funny business will be tolerated. Texaco expressly bars employees from downloading offensive material from the Internet. Violators can be fired. Louis M altby o f the A CLU’s W orkplace Privacy Taskforce said: “It’s the company’s Computer, and they have the right to tell you what you can do with it — and they certainly have the right to tell you you can only use it for work.” , “When you walk into the workplace, you check your privacy at the door,” said Beth Givens, director of the University of San Diego Center for Public Interest Law. “In numerous court cases, employers have retained the right to monitor the work product of their employees — and that included electronic mail, voice mail, telephone conversa­ tions and keystroke monitoring.” Not all employers are as concerned as Texàço. At the Boeing Co. in Seattle, where about 10 percent of employ­ ees have Internet access, Lee Lathrop, Boeing’s Web mas­ ter, said: “Our experience has been that when people first get on, they do spend a lot of time looking around aynd learning to use it. After about 30 days, it falls off and they’re very responsible.” : An acceptable-use policy is being written, however, and Boeing is considering some type of filtering program to bar access to certain key words. “There’s no business reason why anybody might he looking at sex pages at work,” Lathrop said. As for computer giants IBM and Microsoft, neither has spécifie policies in place. $6.99 E V E R Y DAY S M A R T A N D E X C IT IN G ! ’9 5 N i s s a n 2 0 0 S X S p o r t s C o u p e LOVE Air Conditioning. 1.6-Liter 115 HP Engine 4 Dual Airbags S A LE : E q u ip m e n t P k g . 4-Speaker AM/FM Sound System Adult-Proportioned — Rear Seat J3 30 MPG City 5 MPH Impact Bumpers Power Steering OM PGHwy A s k a b o u t o u r g r a d u a te p r o g r a m f o r u p to PZ u a * a * o o o r 1 'R ear Multi-Link Beam Suspension P h o n e ? fii ? n ? 1300 E. CAMELBACK ROAD or 1-800-500^722 #254984. Rebates, if applicable, retained by dealer Vehicle m ay net be exactly a s plctuied and is subject to prior sale. W e cannot be responsible fo r errors hr typography. (1) For qualified applicants. See dealer for details.. Go ahead. Tell that special someone just how m uch you care with a State Press Valentine’s Day Love Line. 3 lines for $2. Each additional line is $1. H urry! Ad deadline is Monday, Feb. 12, at 3 p.m. Ads must be placed in person at the State Press classified offices in the Matthews C enter basement between 8 a.m. & 5 p.m. daily.. Ads will be published Feb. R See order form in today's classified section. ASRALLPRICETOPATFORLOVE Gift certificates to Sunny's Pizza will be given to the authors o f the • most romantic ad • silliest ad • most cryptic ad ENTER TODAY! W inners w ill be published in th e Feb. 14 issue. 4 S tate P ress Classifieds http://aspiD.asu.edu^pn>vjider/State Press/ #f P a g e 12 St a t e P ress W ednesday, February 7 ,1 9 9 6 T h e C a n d l e st ic k M aker Photos by Robert Hendricks/State Press M a rla S t r e a t o r , fro m P o rt Tow nsend, W ash., creates her u niqu e style of can d les In the M e m o r ia l U n io n T u e s d a y a ftern o on . S trea to r s a id s h e has been m aking c a n d le s for 25 y e a r s a n d s e ll s th e m in A riz o n a , S o u th ern C a lifo rn ia a n d W a s h in g t o n , a lt h o u g h A S U is the only co lleg e cam ­ p u s s h e v is its . E a c h c a n d le takes about a half an hour to make. HONDA • ACURA One Day Service on Most Repairs W E H O N O R MOST EX TEN D ED W ARRANTIES mOVDDOÙ twin flRmv C o m p l e t e P a rts D e p t. - F a c t o r y T r a in e d T e c h n ic ia n s THOUSANDS OF OTHER STYLES AVAILABLE WatchCompany Seiko■Citizen-Losolle- Noblio-Pulsar -Joz -Swatch Guess SwissArmy•Fossil •Ellesse -Tissot •Hamilton•Rodo Movado•Anne Klein■NicoleMiller •Casio•Timex■Lorus •Colibri 7123 E. CAMEIBACK ROAD • 990-0432 DouH E S this Summer!^ and earn 14units of ASUcredit Classes Offered S p a n is h 1 0 1 -1 0 2 S p a n is h 2 0 1 -2 0 2 Take ASU classes in Ensenada, Baja Ca., Mexico with ASU Ethnographic Field School from June 17-August 9,1996. F ie ld S tu d y R e se a rc h M e th o d s In d ig e n o u s C u ltu r e s I n d e p e n d e n t S tu d y INFORMATION MEETING MU 215 PINAL ROOM 12:30-1:30 TUES 2 /6 & WED 2 /7 or con tact Sum m er Sessions at 965-0101 or in ASB 109 9 5 4 -7 9 2 3 3039 E. Thomas Rd. Phoenix (2 Blks. W. of 32 nd St.) 9 6 8 -5 9 8 9 1820 E. Apache Tempe (I Blk. E. of McClintock) KnowingChrist a Thursday Noon Bible Study Christian Students Fellowship is sponsoring a noon Bible study every Thursday during the Spring Semester on the various aspects of Knowing Christ in our personal experience. This week we will talk about: Knowing Christ in Baptism Thursday, Feb 8,12:40 -1:30 pm MU Lapaz/223 Christian Students F ellow ship AU are welcome (bring a brown bag lunch) beverages and desserts provided For more information call 921-7270 P age 13 W ednesday, February 7 , 1 9 9 6 St a t e P r ess P r o s e c u to r s a lle g e ‘t e r r i b l e ’ a b u s e W ould-be burglar freezes to death d u rin g break-in CHICAGO (AP) —- Four children, the youngest now 5 years old, were allegedly raped, drugged and fed fried rats and boiled cockroaches at the hands of their own parents — not once, but again and again over at least four years. “It’s a serious case, it’s a terrible case,” Mark Cavins, who heads the county prosecutor’s sexual crimes division,. said Tuesday. “It involves two parents who have systematically and repeatedly abused four of their children.” A 1,200-count indictment against Gerald Hill, 52, gives a hellish description of the lives of the youngsters, now 5, 10, 11 and 12. Hill, father of two of the children, was charged with criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual abuse, aggravated battery to a child and aggravated battery. The 6-inch-thick indictment, filed in January and made public Monday, claims dozens of incidents of sexual penenation. Page after page of battery charges say Hill “stuck a hypodermic needle” in his children to-inject narcotics. Cavins said the abuse occurred over four or five years. Hill, a stocky, muscular man, stood silently during a twominute status hearing on Tuesday. His attorney, Elliott Price, said his client has no criminal histoiy, and that he turned himself in to face the charges. Barbara Hill, 41, the mother of all four children, was WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. n *t the U A C . A ir D onnelly Senior skydiver leads ASU team to top finish at U.S. national championships By S eth L andau State P ress Photo courtesy of Brent Finely T he A S U Skydiving team took top ho n o rs at the 1995 United States Parachuting A sso c ia tio n 's Collegiante National C h a m p io n sh ip s in the form ation event. Charity Amama 1Women's Basketball Amama scored a gamehigh 23 points for the Sun Devils in their 93-77 loss to Washington St. .J j j H I also played well against ■ ■Saturday finishing with 16 points and 8 HO rebounds in A S U ’s 81- w 77 win. Charity shot a H j k combined 17 of 26 in the «2* iH P R M ikel Moreno Baseball Center fielder Moreno, ■ M B B i from his leadoff position, ': 0 ' ' * led the Sun Devils with " " 14 at bats, eight hits and eight RBI's In A S U 's B K l P j sweep over Loyola Marymount this week- I H H | end. Moreno, a sophmore, also hit his first home run as a Sun Devil Jplji in the eighth inning In ®|: ASU's 11-6 victory o v e r. the Lions on Sunday. Dave Donnelly soars thousands of feet above the ground at speeds of over 100 miles per hour, and is regarded as the best collegiate skydiver in the country. As captain of the ASU Sky Diving team, Donnelly and company took first place at the 1995 U.S. Parachuting Association’s Collegiate National Championships at the Marana Skydiving Center in Eloy, a town in the southern part of the state. A team consisting of Donnelly, Dave Kantrud, Jennifer M artonick and Blake Milford edged out 15 other teams to take top honors in the formation category. The chemistry displayed by the four-per­ son formation team is an essential element in achieving success. Meagan Wright Gymnastics W right captured her second consecutive allaround title a g a in st Utah with a 39.075 F rid a y night. The so p ho m o re won the vault (9.875), floor e xe rcise (9.925) and uneven bars (9.775). Wright's floor exercise score tied her careerhigh. ■ B P * ’" Hr ■ W *¡¡1 f H M (^ « » H 1 !7 J im iH lfci.- “Our first jum ps to g eth er we ju st clicked,” Donnelly said. “We knew it was going to happen.” Donnelly, a senior, who captured both the Masters Parachuting Championship and Overall National Collegiate Parachuting Championship last year, regards his “best collegiate skydiver” tag modestly. “We train really hard, and we’re lucky to live 55 minutes from the best skydiving center in the country,” he said. “We had very good coaching, excellent training and excellent aircraft. The coaching and facili­ ties are excellent and that’s what I attribute it to.” Growing up the son of an avid skydiver — his father was a national champion in the late 60s — Donnelly took up the family T urn to S k y d iv in g , Logi Knstjansson Men's Swimming S e n io r K ris tja n s so n Sparked ^ASU S dHBp**'’ ’'* ^ pag e 16. Page 16 S tate P ress Wednesday, February 7,1996 Top-ranked men’s golf team bites dust in Tucson B y Seth L an d a u St a t e P ress The No. 1 ranked ASU men’s gtolf team got off to a slow start Tuesday, tying for sixth place at the Ping Arizona Invitational at Tucson’s Raven Golf Club. Joey Snyder, who tied for 10th place, was the highest ASU finisher. Snyder shot a final-round 67 to finish at Iunder par for die tournament with a total score of 212. “We didn’t play very good, it was just a bad week for the team,” he said. “It (the sixth place finish) was just one of those things that we might as well get behind us and play good the rest of the semester.” “Joey finished strong, he birdied four of the last five holes,” ASU Coach Randy Lein said. “It was a nice way for him to finish.” * ASU senior Chris Hanell and freshman Sam Flam tied for 20th with total scores of 217. attack the pins.” Lein said he is not at all disappointed with ASU’s aggressive style of play, which he vehemently supports. “We were a little rusty out of the gate,” he said. “They didn’t hit the shots they needed to but I’m not disappointed. We ’re going to get better and better.” The rest o f ASU’s individuals were: ju n io r Scott Johnson, who tied for 23rd with 218; freshm an Brad Cannon, who tied for 45th with 225; freshm an Greg Padilla, who tied for 48th with 226; freshman Darren Angel; who tied for 50th with 227; and sophomore Pat Perez, who tied for 65th with 231. •■ The Sun Devils will have a shot at redemption next Monday at the Mauna Kea Invitational in Kona, Hawaii. “A lot depends on the wind (at Kona); w e’ve got to think our way around and play good golf.” Lein said. “The team didn’t play as well as they wanted.” Flam said. “The overall feeling was that they were very disap­ pointed.” ASU was in fifth place after Monday’s first two rounds. The clutch play of UofA’s Ted Purdy, who finished with a 13-under par score of 200, allowed the host Wildcats to take top honors and finish 9-under par with a team score of 843. “Ted’s (Puidy) a good player and they’ve (UofA) been playing the course every day for the last two weeks,” Lein said. “It was a really good win for them. They played really well.” Stanford, the tournament’s runner-up, finished even at 852. Cardinal sophomore phenom Tiger Woods took sec­ ond place individually, shooting a 7-under par 206. “We were a little over-aggressive,” Lein said. “We’ve got good players toying to shoot low numbers and trying to ASU-UofA C ontinued from page IS. “We had so many new players and having lost twice on the road that’s about the worst time to have to go in there.” Frieder said this game will be different from the lest time that the Sun Devils faced the Wildcats because ASU has Won three of its last four and is playing with more confi­ dence. “We go into this week probably with the most confidence we’ve had all year, and com ing o ff a win is g ra tify in g ,” said Frieder; who was quick to caution against the difficulty UofA will present. “Now playing Arizona, that can destroy your con­ fidence in a hurry the way they play because they play very well.” O lsen also said that ASU is playing much better now than during the team’s previous meeting. “Just in watching the tapes it looks like they’re a lot more confident right now, and of course it’s a lot different playing at home than on the road,” Olsen said. Both coaches say that ASU senior for­ ward Ron Riley will be a key to the contest, Riley is averaging just under 20 points a game for ASU and is just 45 short of break­ ing Stevin “Headache” Smith’s all-time scoring record o f 1,673 points. Olsen said that Riley wasn’t playing as well the last time the two teams met and that he expects more out of him tonight. “I think we got them down here at a time in which Riley was struggling, and I think for theiii to be a good solid ball club, Riley has to be the guy that steps up,” Olsen said. “It seems that he was out of his rhythm when (ASU) was down (in Tucson).” Riley and sophomore guard Jeremy Veal are the only Sun Devils averaging in double figures, bUt each UofA starter and then som e co n trib u te to the offense. The Wildcats have five players who average ip double figures and one just under 10 points a game in senior guard Reggie Geary. Olsen said that his squad will need all those points and móré in facing ASU at home before playing three moré road games. “This is our first of four on the road away front Me Kale, so we’ve got our hands full,” Olsen said. Skydiving C o n t in u e d f r o m page 15. • trade during his freshman year at ASU. “I just got hooked and I couldn’t stop,” he said. Donnelly is fortunate enough to have never been involved in an accident since he started skydiving. “I’ve got just over 700 jumps and I’ve had no malfunc­ tions,” he said. “But when you’re a student, you’re trained to overcome just about any situation that can arise.” Kantrud explained how much of an advantage the ASU team possesses with Donnelly running the show. Donnelly was a member of last year’s team which performed over 150jumps. ■“Dave is a big help. He’s the only guy with real team experience and he knew what we needed to practice and lie money, however, is the loss of Donnelly next season. But according to Donnelly, next season’s team should fare quite well without him. “Once they get up to speed, I think there’re going to do great,” he said. .“They’re going to have a solid three coming back.” . Donnelly indicated that, if possible, he will travel with the team to Florida in December as a coach for next sea­ son’s national championship tournament. Anyone interested in the skydiving team is encouraged to call First Jump Skydive at (520) 466-3753. knew the people we needed to go to for help,” Kantrud said. “We had the top four-way team in the nation on the pro level helping us, and th a t’s partly because he (Donnelly) knew the guys,” ASU’s team benefiteddrom experienced professional formation divers thanks to the world-renowned Marana drop zone in Eloy where both teams compete. A lot of practice and patience is needed to perform a four-person formation jump, but it also requires a hefty price tag. , Each member of the team spends around $80 a week for training in order to maintain their competitive edge. What would appear to hurt the ASU squad more than Classifieds N otice to .o u r readers: B efore 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?j721. t T h e to p user o f u n le a d e d g a s in E u rop e is A u stria. Sourpe: The Top 10 o f Everythin g Russell A8ri ANNOUNCE MENTS M e s a ANNOUNCE MENTS COMICBOOKS Huge comic book sale. Sat. Feb. 10 & Sun. Feb.. 11 from 8am 5pm . -O v er 10,000 com ic books, $ .2 5 /ea c h o r 100 fo r $20. M arve 1/D C /Im age/V aliant/D ark H orse and many oth ­ ers. All m ajo r lin es & ail in M int c o n d itio n . 1 m ile from ASU, 1040 W. 19th Str., cross streets B roadw ay/B eck (Look for the KFC) in Tempe, call 8291501 o r e-m ail Provic@ goodnet.com for more info. ANNOUNCE MENTS FREE FINANCIAL Aid! O ver $6 B illion in public & private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, in­ come, or parent's income. Let us help. C all S tudent Financial Services: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F59183. ' ' UP ALL NIGHT College Come­ d y Tour! Featuring The Farce Side & ASU T o p Stand-U p Comics. Friday Feb, 9 @ 7:30. Come to MUAB for free tickets today! Third floor of MU. CONGRATULATIONS BUDDY EARLY APARTMENTS $399 TOTAL move in special! 1 & 2 bdrm u n its .. W alk to A SU. R eq u ires ex clu t tenant history & landlord refs. 121 E. Broadway 967-7372. EL D IA B LO APTS. 1201 S M cC lintock Dr. Tem pe quiet lu x u ry living lb d $480, 2bd $550-600i 921 r0699. LARGE 2BD apt., walk to ASU p o o l, laundry room , 1 blk south, o f U niversity on 8th St. C ape C od A partm ents 9685238 ANNOUNCE MENTS Winner of the Raleigh Mountain Bike from Bicycle Wheelers for entering the State Press "Best of Tempe" Contest! WAY TO GO, BUDDY! P ick up your c o p y o f th è d o lly State Pre$s on M C C ca m p u s a t th è e n tran e« o f th è àdm infetrcition building. Awesome Web site? Put it In the Classifieds! TOWNHOMESJ C O N D O S FOR RENT i .. .. „ • • 3bdr/2ba, p o ol-side. 8127, leave message. 966- H ERM OSA PLA CE, 2bd/2ba, w alk/bike to A SU , w /d, all . ap p l., c eil, fan s, $665, C han 966-0987. RENTAL SHARING IM M ED . O PE N IN G , Fem ale p ref, ow n m aster rm + ba, wd. Sng mom ok! 340+1 /2u ti 1. Lea 827-8991. M A TU RE NS Fem ale. O w n bd/ba in a 2bd/2ba apt. nr A SU . $273/m o + 1/2 u til. + $150 dep. C all A nnette 9668615. OW N B R /B A in 2 b r/b a co n ­ do. Need ns female prefer. Ma­ ture Jr/S r undergrad/grad. N o pets please! $32}7 + jitil. JoAnn 303-0693. Community G o lt o Q * 3 BDR 2 BA W/pool, w alk to ASU- S900/mo. Call T im 8940288. ____' _ _ LA M IRAGE Apts! A vailable Now! lb d $550. lb d ,2 b a $700. H urry! 968-2042. Party animals not welcome: RENTAL SHARING HOMES FOR RENT 5th & M ill, Tempe Behind CM Stone Crees>ery ad j bath R esp+ m at. 8683. $30 0 + u til ea. G ood re fs 351- R O OM M A TE NEED ED in 2 b r/lb a apt. in S cottsdale. $270/m o + 1/2 util. A vailable now -M ay. F em ale/m ale/ns. 3 m iles from A SU, M ike 481 9817, HOMES FOR SALE CUSTOM TEMPE HOME This 3K sq. ft. luxury home is absolutely incredible. C ustom EVERYTHING...from the par­ quet kitchen floor to the tiled granite entry Way! 3BR, 3BA, super insulation, tile roof, brick block co n s., n atu ral stain ed w oodw ork, large LR and DR, large e at-in kitch en , m arble window sills, 2 ovens, built-in stove and m any m ore builtins/extras. This home is elegant and beautiful. $230,000, 1223 E, Sunburst Lane, Tempe. Call 838-7890 for appointment. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE AAA D ESCR A M B LER $155, G ets all cable tv channels im e lu d in g pay per view , Suns/boxing, HBO, Spice etc. 840-1535. NEW D A RT board for sale. Cheap! Coes to best offer. Call Adam at 829-3655 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE SAAB (C LA RIO N ) radio/cassette and am p lifier w ith a n ti­ theft protection. Call 965-2565. ; FURNITURE FOR SA LE B e ig e , sectional couch w ith b e d , good c o n d i­ tion, $100 obo. 940-5783. COMPUTERS 486D X 50 4M B RAM 345 mb 4xcdrom 3 .5 " sdundcard m odem 3bm ouse key b o ard ’►software* ho m onitor $975obo. Call 784-9665 Jimmy. BROTHER INK Jet W P Whisp$375 obo. 2329. A nthony 921- TICKETS GREASE TIXS ! (2) - Row 18 m ain flo o r c e n te r $100.Q0 . o.b.o. for pjair. Call 829-8165 Julie. PHOENIX SUNS & New Jersey T hursday $20 & u p . S eattle Feb. 13 $33 & up. Steve 678, 0316. AUTOMOBILES '78 S C IR Ò C C O RUNS great, good for local, good tires, stero only $850 obo. 413-1679 S ta te P ress AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES AIRPLANES i v à j n il i is u B ià iij 1 recti a 62,000 orig miles, at, cold air, runs like new, $2650 obo. Gall Jay at 968-5346, TE R R IFIC TRA N SPO R TA TION. Blue '79 Honda Accord. H atchback. 5spd. $1500 Mary/Don 998-9046 LEARN TO Fly airplane rides. 1st lesson free. Become a pilot now! Call Roy at 827-0867. 1984 C O N V E R T IB L E M U S­ TA N G LX y white, good cond $2500 obo. 965-4067 USED TRUCKS for sale. ABC N issan W orld Fam ous T ruck C a p ito l. M ike M urphy 2642332. . ; ' -, ' 6 6 FO R D C U STO M 500, re ­ built 289, a/c, am/fm cass, runs great, $1,950 obo. 306-1378. W ANTED 1984 PEÜGOT 505 manual. Looking for parts to re­ pair. 969-5127 85 B U IC K R IV IE R A . G reat c o n d itio n ! A m /fm c assette, pow er seats, w indow s, leather, air, runs great. One family own­ e r, $ 2 ,9 0 0 . C all D avid 396«882. MOTORCYCLES 90 DODGE Shadow ES Turbò. 5spd, a/c, ain/fm cd, alarm , 1. O w ner, eXc. co n d . $4.900 obo, m ust sell. 821-4008 or 7154)633 94 DODGE SHADOW, ps. pb, a /c , stereo , 5spd, $7.300 oboi Must see, call Matt 921-7374, CASH TODAY!!! I BUY All used cars/tnicks/jewelry/misc. items. 481 -9053. : $7.50 AN HOUR p/j, f/t T em pe busin ess needs six individuals to sell tools to c o n tra c to rs. C all S cott 966576 5. ASU SUMMER School to Hol­ land and Caribbean info meet­ ing Thurs., Feb. 8 MU nil. 206, 2 pm or call 965-4630 for pack­ et. :... $ VALENTINES MINIMUM WAGE Not making the bills? Set. apt. for resorts and earn 200*400 w eekly on a part-tim e basis. L ess than 27 hours a w eek. B rendon 3030939; ... y - D ISCO U N T TRAVEL: C heap iq your nam e. I spec ia liz e in quick departures. M ost places worldwide. I also buy transfer­ able _coupons/a w ards. 968-7283 7 OFFICE CLERKS, neat, de­ pendable near Sky Harbor A ir­ port C all 1r800-888-2749 ext. 155Liz. ‘ .. • HELP WANTEDGENERAL M INT CÔNÎX 1990 Kawasaki N in ja ZX -6 w /only 4000m i, Yoshi'mura Pipe, new battery & < racing tires, viper alarm, éustom $1750 WEEKLY Possible mailpaint. Only $2i900 obo. Call ing our circulars. For info calk 967-7565, leàve message. 202-393-7723.- BICYCLES 1995 bike $350 2329. TREK 850 M ountain 18 inch* lo ts o f extras, obo. A n th o n y 921: • A H W A TU K EE FO O TH ILLS YMCA is seeking recreaftonal supervisors, and assistant teach­ ers, enrichm ent instructors, in­ tram ural: .c o a c h e s . F lexible ho u rs $5 -1 0/hour. A pply at 3233 E, Chandler Blvd., Phx 44) (4)\J)*4)q) ip q) 44)44) Advertise your internet business in the Classifieds! Call 965-6555 for more information \J)q) \J)u) u)^u) u) ij)«4)(4)*4)u) $$ JOBS $$ Numerous positions available for a large, Tempe-based transaction processing center. Summer school experience. R o c k y P o in t Spring Break Earn 6 A S U elective and global awareness credits. Informational meeting Thurs., Feb. 8 M U Chrysocolla, Rooms as low as Various shifts available $ 4 0 a night, going fast! New facility close to campus Full training provided N o phone work or sales C h o ice of 8 hotels 5 8 7 -0 3 4 5 FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: MANPOWER Call 965-4630 for Info. 838-7507 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL A LA SK A EM PLO YM EN T StUderifs N eeded! F ish in g In­ d ustry. Earn up to $3,000$6,000+ p er m onth. Room & Board! Transportation! Male or Female. No exp. necessary. Call (206) 971-3510 ext. A59184. A LA SK A EM PLO Y M EN TFISHERIES, parks, resorts! Earn to $ 3 ,0 00-$6,000+ /m onth! Alirfare! Room/Board! Free Fish­ ery V ideo w /program ! SEI (919) 932-1489, e x t A29 A LAS KA ST U D E N T J o b s ! E a/n to- $ 15,000. R oom / Board/Tran sport often provid­ e d . G de. 9 1 9 -933-0188 ext. A 1050. A R IZO N A ARM Y N ational Guard. Part-time Military Jobs. C all S ergeant T am erdn 2672416 $6 PER HOUR O utgoing, e nergetic a p p o in t­ ment setters for. Universal Por- _. traits. Call Rachael, 777-1054. Excellent opportunity for students! a r ib b e a n Rm. 206 - 2pm HELP WANTEDGENERALZ HELP WANTEDGENERAL TRAVEL TRAVEL H o lla n d & C 78 SCIRO CCO , RUNS G reat, only $850 obo. Digital stereo, good tiré s , p e rfe c t fo r local drive,- Call 967-3936, Ive msg, Find it FAST in the Classifieds! TRAVEL th e Page 17 Wednesday, February 7,1996 Have a great summer experience! C A M P C A N A D E N S IS , an excellent residential coed sum m er cam p is looking for caring counselors who love children. W e need counselors to help teach: baseball, basketball, tennis, soccer, clim bing wall, ropes course, m otorcycles, mountainbikes, water-skiing, jet-skiing, sailing, dance, drama, arts & crafts, new spaper & yearbook, radio station, video, and much more. Sum m er sessio n is 6-19 thru 8-16. Stop by Student Em ploym ent for an application and to sign up for an interview. CA M P TA K A JO For boys. Outstanding Maine camp noted for magnificent lakefront setting and exceptional facilities. Over 100 positions for heads apd as­ sistants iri tennis, baseball, bas­ ketball;, soccer, lacrosse, golf, stre e t hockey, ro lle r hockey, sw im m ing, sailing, canoeing, waterskiing; Scuba, archery, riflery, w eight training, journal­ ism , p hotography, videography, woodworking, ceramics, crafts, drawing & painting, na­ ture study, radio & electronics, dram atics, piahp accom panist, music instrumentalist, band di. rector, backpacking, ro c k c lim b -’ ing, whitewater canoeing, ropes co u rse, general: (w /youngest campers), secretarial. June. 17August 18. Top salaries, room & board, travel provided, Call ... 8Q 0-409-C A M P. O r w rite: C am p T akajo, 525 E ast 72nd S treet, 25th floor, New Y ork, NY 10.021. O r fa x ; resume to 212-988-0212, We w ilTbe On cam pus W ednesday, February 14th, i0am -4pm , Rooms 208H opi and 208D -H avasupai Tn Memorial Union. W alk-iriswel- HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1)0 YOU; have lots of energy & love wbrking w/people? We are looking for you to tw ist b a l­ loons at restaurants & parties. We w ill train you. All you need is reliable transportation. Pt/flex hrs.G reat m oney. C all 486-5879. F/T, P/T p o sitio n s a v ailab le providing assistan c e to adult indiv id u als w ith m ental & physical disabilities. Paid ben­ e fits & training, no exp. nec. Call 438-8617. FLEXIBILITY NEED M ORE Tim e fo r yo u r studies and still need to make m oney, N ational R eservation C tr. h irin g , re so rt w ork, 6-9 hourly. Part-time, call Gregg 3Q3-Ó939. DELIVERY DRIVERS wanted $5/hr to start + $ 1 for runs & ..'tips. .Tempe. 945-8850. DESK HELP; Part-time or full­ time for a motel. 273-7121. C R U IS E J O B S S tu d e n ts N eeded! Earn up to $2,000+/m o. .working for Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies + . World Trayel. Seasonal and Full-Time employment •. ' available^ Call: (206)971-3550 ext. C59183 I M ountain Shadow s Í----- '■ HESOfri ANOGOLFCLÙ9 ' his openings for • RM Fnd & Banquet Servers • Pool Attendant • Turndown Attendant • Reservation Agent (full tine) AccepiiagiifUcatiiis XtiTburs. Dam-\n i t-1Jtl-ipm 3641C. Lincoln Br. SecUsdale F in d the C la s s ifie d s on th e Internet: SET YOURSELFA PAw r ^ m_________________________________________________________________________ ■ Centeon Bio-Services, Inc. f City of Tempe Working with chil­ dren (K-5th) before and after school. Hours vary. Position descriptions available W ith application. I R E C E IV E (formerly Associated Bioscience, Inc.) W h y d o n a te p la s m a ? Help save lives • Earn up to $185 each month . • Supervised care area for your children to play » Watch your favorite movie While you donate . . •. W e have many A S U donors.' • Extra bonuses possible if you've had your. Hepatitis “A?1shot :;'."V New E x te n d e d H o u rs $25 • COUNSELORS . • SPECIALISTS With this coupon new do no rs will receive $25 for their first donation!! M-F Sat Sun 7:30am r 8pm 8ani - 4:30pm 10am -4pm 1334 E. Broadway Rd. Suite 102 (across from the Native New Yorker) For a limited time only, New Donors receive $30 for their first donation!! (SundaysOnfy) $6.75/hr. 10 28 hrs wk ... SALARY RANGE $1100-2000 '1 •■; . 1. 1. ' D I A L A M E R I C A M A R K E T I N G , IN C . A S p ecialty In stru cto r $7.84/hr. 6 20 hrswk Various subjects. S M , CREATE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE Apply at City of Tempe Social Services Dept; 3500 S. Rural Road. Tempe (602) 350-5400 TDD (602) 350-5050 W E'R E N C M , F § —Y I ß L l e x Top FIFTEEN List • Crea te a shift betw een the #15 Beer Tasting Job Was Already Taken! #14 Casual Dress! . #13 Brand New Office Just Opened! #12 Your Parents New Number is 1-800-KID LOAN #11 Paid Training - No Experience Necessary #10 Getting a Tan Just Doesn't Pay #9 We Pay $7/Hour Guaranteed + Bonuses #8 Physical Labor Gives You "The Willies" #7 Receive Paid Days Off #6 "Would You Like Fries With That" Enough Said! #5 Learn A Skill You Can Use In The Future #4 You May Not Have Already Won $10 Million #3 Create Your Own Work Schedule & Days To Work! #2 Within Biking or Walking Distance to ASU #1 It's a Free Call hours of 6:00am and 9:30pm (We're totally flexible) ' $8.0 0 GUARANTEED PAID TRAINING A Three Generation Tradition! • Weekly paychecks r ic n o l y P in e s • No experience necessary C a i w > !% • Helpful, friendly trainers 933 FMendly Pines Rd*Prescott, AZ 86303 • Non-stressful, fun, friendly environment 2554)650 (toil free from Greater Phx area) WE NEED A FEW TOP COUNSELORS For the 1996 Summer Season, beginning May 26th Please call today to schedule a confidential interview. 894-9816 For an application please stop by the Student Employment Office We will interview on campus Wednesday, February 14th Inc. If you are looking for a full-time or part-time job, here are FIFTEEN good reasons, just in from our home office in Tempe, AZ why you should call NCM, Inc. PART-TIM E Equal Opportunity / Reasonable ■Accommodation employer. f OUR 5 CAMPUSES INCLUDE: 6 separate lakes, 3 swimming pools, superior athletic facilities, modem craft shops, quality Jewish programming On Campus interview at Arizona State University on Monday, February 19th from 9-5 PM in the Student Services Building, 3rd Floor. For more information; or to set appointment: New Jersey YM-YWHA Camps (201) 575-4268 ext. 24. P2 Activity L eader : NAH-JEE-WAH - GRADES 1-6 CEDAR LAKE - GRADES 7-9 TEENAGE CAMP - GRADES 10-11 KISLAK ADULT CENTER . ROUND LAKE CAMP FOR ADD/LD (C all fo r N ew D onor Hours) 968-6139 T H E N E W JERSEY Y M -Y W H A C A M P S A R E L O O K IN G FO R PEOPLE W H O W A N T T O M A K E A DIFFERENCE!! 345-9509 1310 E. Broadway, Suite #103 Tem pe, AZ 85282 *2 Z Z U S a i Z A A a a a a a a .a a a a a Page 18 HELP WANTEDG E W State P ress Wednesday, February 7, 1996 y ù W _ ^ FLOWER DELIVERY Drivers w /ow n c ar needed Feb. 13 & 14. $3.50/delivery. Call 894• 3419, /; - , GET Y OUR taxes done fo r as 1itti« as $25.00. Includes F e d ftS ta te fo rm s. T eara 844; 1748 7 \.> ' GRADUATING AND ready to start yotir career? W ould you like to w ork w ith a leading w o rld w id e ,c o n su itin g o rg an i­ zation?. A ndersen C o n su ltin g w ould lik e to ta lk w ith you. Find out all about us at the In­ form ation Presentation on Fe­ bruary 7 from. 5:30 to 7:30 pm in the Pima Room in the Memo­ rial Union. Submit ÿour resume to Career Services by February 8, C ontact C areer Services for more information. HELP WANTEDGENERAL O N E O F The v a lle y 's fa ste st g ro w in g , fin a n c ia lly secure moving co's is seeking pt help. We have eve & wknd work on a regular basis. Start at $6/hr w /review a fte r 30 d a y s. No exp; nec., will train. Apply in p erso n : D ireks M oving Serv­ ices. 4440 E. Elwood, Phx. O U TSID E JO B S N ational Parks, Ranches, R esorts! Earn to $ 1 2 h r -^benefits! A ll 50 states! Free V ideo w/program SE1 (919) 932-1489, ext. Ü29. PART-TIME POSITIONS avail­ able: General Warehouse f t De­ livery. Local shipping com pa­ ny searching for mdtjvated, dep en d áb ie, h o n est stu dents to jo in ó ü r team . E arly m orning and afternoon shifts available. W arehouse, packaging and/or co m p u ter ex p erien ce a plus. $ 5 .0 0 + p ec h r. to s ta rt, d e ­ IN D IV ID U A L S W / ’phone p en d in g on q u a lific a tio n s. skills, cold calling forJbrOkers Please apply in person between w/major brokers firm 957-51^8*^“^ : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 at Total Fulfillment, Inc. 2850 S. R oosevelt. Ste. KENNEL WORKER needed p/t. 102 Tempe, AZ 85282, Must be neat, dependable. 7311 E. Thomasi Scottsdale 945-7692. PR E S T -O -FIT MF<3. H iring .LAW FIRM N eeds stu d en ts, Í 5hfs+/w k, to review business d o cum ents, 3 -6 m onth co m ­ mitment. $7/hr.. pref. science or environmental backgrounds. C am pus in terv iew s Feb. 9th, 8;30 - 4, Sign-up at student em­ ployment office (#5121-j). LIVE IN needed p/t child care for 8 yr. old boy. Some house .work. Free room & board to re­ sp o n sib le stu d en ts & biking distance from campus 829-6930 LOOKING FOR a challenging an d w ell p aid sum m er in tern ­ ship? W ould you like to intern with a leading Worldwide con­ sulting organization? Andersen C onsuiting w ould like to .talk with you, Find out all about us at the Information Presentation o n Feb ru ary 7 fro m 5:30 to 7:30 pm in the Pim a Room in the M em orial U nion. Subm it your resume to Career Services b y February 15. Contact Career Services for more information. MECHANICAL TECHNIC! AN ft o r pt, good advancement, start $6á /h r, 15 m in. to ASU: 956- stu d en ts S ta rt at $ 5,50/hr. F le x ib le h o u rs to fit ypur sch ed u le C lose to ASU C all 967-4224 M-F 9-6. PR O FE SSIO N A L S SEEK hou seh o ld help, su p ervision fo r o ld er ch ild ren . H ours ap ­ prox. 3-6 pm d aily . M ust be flexible, hard w orking & have own transportation. G ood pay personal references required. Po­ sition till end o f May. Cal) 820, 5178 evés. for interview. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL U N ITED BLO O D S ervices, a SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Res­ no n -p ro fit org. has positions idential director & counselors. Program fo r academ ically ta- ■ avail, for telerecruiters. Appt. Setting-N o sales. R eq. good lented students, grds 5-11. Sal. cust. service skills & a pleasant com p. rm . f t bd. C O E 965phone voice. Pt., eve & wknds 4757., ' ; •■• •; • ' Located in NW Phx, relocating SUMMER JOBS- female coun­ to Tempe in the Spring. Call: selo rs fo r c h ild re n 's cam p, 242-4800. n o rth e a st/to p -salary, rm/bd/1 a u n d ry , tra v e l a llo w ­ WATERFRONT JOBS- W.S.I.summer children's camp- North-ance. Must have skill in one of the follow ing activities: arch­ east-T each ch ild re n to swim , coach swim team, dive, waterski ery, arts f t crafts (ceramics, stainglass, jew elry), athletic trainer, (slalom , trick, barefoot, jum p­ ing), sail. Good salary, room, basketball,; can o e in g , k a y ak ­ bo ard , laundry, tra v e l allo w ­ ing, dance (tap, pointe, modern ance, Call 1-800-838-VEGA or jazz), drama, field hockey, golf, write: Camp Vega fo r Girls, PO gymnastics (instructors o r quali­ Box 1 771, D uxbury, MA fied spotters), horseback riding02332. We w ill be on cam pus hunt ¿eat, lacrosse, nature, pho­ W ednesday, F ebruary 14th, tography, videographer, piano 10am-4pm, 208-Hopi & 208Daccom panist, pioneering/cam p H avasupai on the M em orial c ra ft, rp p es(ih n erq iiest-ro p es Union. N o appointm ent neces­ challenge course,*25 stations), sailing, soccer, softball, tennis, sary. th e a te r te c h n ic ia n s ,1tra c k ft W ORK AS a M an u factu rer’s field, volleyball, W .S.I./sw im representative. $9 /h r to start, instructors, w indsurfing. Also, $10 after 6 months. Marketing O p p o rtu n ities fo r kitchen co. seeks highly motivated, selfcooks, m ain ten an ce, nurses, d irected in d iv id u a ls to assist sec re ta rie s. C all 1-800-838part-time in training f t demon­ VEGA or write: Camp Vega for strating in a retail environment. G irls, PO Box 1771, Duxbury, C onstruction experience help­ M A 02332. We will be on cam­ fu l, but n o t re q u ire d . In te r­ pus W ednesday* February view s held in Phx. Feb. 8-11. 14th, 10am-r4pm, 208-Hopey & Fax resume to Prosell 916-872208D-Havasupai in the memo­ 2711; For in fo call 916-872ria l U nion, No a p pointm ent 8141. necessary. RESTAURANTS/ BARS TÈNNIS JOBS- summer child­ ren's cam p-northeastrgood ten­ nis background, pollege-Ievel' player who can teach children to play te n n isi G ood salary,: room , board & laundry, travel • New Timee 1995 Bast allo w a n ce ; C all 1-800-838Neighborhood Bar RECEPTIONIST - DUTIES incl ■VEGA", or write: Camp Vega for .; • Over 100 Menu Items taking appts, answ er phones, + G irls, PO Box 1771, Duxbury, • Upscale Atmosphere retail .sales. Ico n 'H air, Seotts. •AS Appetizers on Happy MÀ 02332. We will be on cam­ F ash io n S q . C h arlen e, -941Hour:' ,y 8656 ■;;> ' v ' C - / ' ■. ' ' pus W ednesday, February • 4 Satellites- 20 Screens 14th, 10am-4pm, 208-Hopey & Home of me $1.25 Shot' S A M 'S C A FE I n the A rizona 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE 208D-Havasupai in the M emo­ Sun. & Mon. C enter, voted b est Southw est­ ria l U nion. N o app o in tm en t ern R estaurant ip P h oenix, is 8 4 4 -S H E D necessary. U n iv e rs ity & D o b so n hiring wáit staff. Looking for ' qualified, experienced servers to w ork in a v ery busy e nyironm entv Stop in & ap p ly or call 252-3545, ; ^ WOODSHED It RESTAURANTS/ BARS SINGERS/ENTERTAINERS ALL ag es. S erio u s in q u iries only. D ream H ig h er S erv ices 8405990 8200. SPORTS m o d e l s /Ac t o r s /b c t r a s a l l C o o rd in ato r: G rads. & flit. . types needed imirted, for music grads,, the Saipan Diamond Revid eo s. Pays $ 2 5 0 up 941- ;. so rt w ants ath letic,' o u tgoing 6922. f people to work in our sports & rec dept. This will be the tropi­ MR. GQODCENTS & Pasta is cal ex p . o f a lifetim e: Gen. now hiring for daytime help & Comp, w ork, travel,- save $. shift managers. Flexible hours. Info, meeting Thurs. Feb. 8 11Please /call 894-6065 or come Í or 6-8pm O ohf. Rm- A 2nd in at 528 W. Broadway, corner flo o r SSV. C o n tact CRC for Of Broadway & Roosevelt, more info. Finally a t A S U ! TRY OUR N E W SPICY H O T P IZ Z A Large 1 item pizza Sc P A S T A N A TIO N A L PARKS H iring Positions are now available at National Parks, Forests f t W il­ dlife Preserves. Excellent bene­ fits + bonuses! Call:. 1-206-9713620 ext. N59182. DOC & EDDY'S N EED ED TW O G rill cooks* w ill train, fle x ib le schedules. D ay or night shifts $5.50 p/hr RESTAURANTS/B ARS + tips. 909 Minton, Tempe HELP WANTEDSALES (Baseline/Rural) 831-0635. BUSINESS IS booming' Madi^ so n 's B istro & B eer C o. now hiring for all positions. Apply in person at 7108 E. Stetson. D R IV E R S, C Ó O K S, C ounter help. D ep en d ab le, e nergetic BE YOUR ow n boss, m ake yo u r ow n hours. Sim ple yet , people needed, flexible hours, n e a r W est cam pus. A pply in very lu c ra tiv e , 834-7339 lve person; Submarinos 51 st Ave msg ■& Northern, 10:30-9 M-Sat. MODELS/ACTORS KILOWATTS A ll ages. S e rio u s in q u iries only. D ream H igher S ervices 840-5990: New store opening soon. The Kaptain needs drivers, cooks & fly e r d is trib u to rs. No ex p eri­ ence re q u ire d . M any shifts available. 804-0635. HELP WANTEDC L g y C A L -— - CLUB T R IB E C A now h iring for all positions. Apply in per­ son M -Th lr4p.m* at ,1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. PETS SNAKES/ BURMESE Python 4 ft * C olum bia B oa 3ft. both very fam e $100 ea. obo. Rob 917-4709 MAJERLE'S A FT ER N O O N S/W EEK EN D S CLO SE to ASU. Phones, filing, dispatch. M ust know val­ ley. 966-8795. C ity W ide Plumbing. HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE C O O K S, COUNTER* prep & bus positions. Exp. pref., various hours. M am a’s P izzeria. Darlene after 2pm, m -f 894-6262 Classifieds WORK! SERVICES H IR IN G A LL P o sitio n s, exp. nec. Apply in person b/w 9-11 & 2-4* 24 N 2nd St, Phx. FREE LOST/FOUND ST O CK Y A R D S R EST A U ­ RANT now hiring lunch serv­ e rs. A pply in person M -F 10am^5pm, 5001 É. W ashing­ t o n East o f 48th St. 273^7378. L O S T f! B LA CK end w hite footlocker wallet with ID's and everything else. Please call 3037301 if found. Thank you!! FUNDRAISING HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE B A B Y SITT ER S & N annies needed. All shifts. Need car. N. Phoenix, Seotts. f t Ahwatukee 460-1200 FA ST FU N D R A ISE R -R A ISE $500 in 5 day s-G reek s, groups; clubs, m otivated indi­ viduals. Fast, eaSy-no financial o b lig a tio n . (8 0 0 ) 8 6 2 tl9 8 2 Ext; 33- SERVICES SERVICES MONEY FOR COLLEGE ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! H undreds & Thousands of Grants & Scholarships GRANTS & SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED BY PRIVATE SECTOR. BILLIONS O F DOLLARS IN GRANTS. TO QUALIFY CALL: available to all Students. Immediate Qualifications. No repayment E V E R ! CALL 1-800-585-8AID 800-400-0209 CROSSROADS $ 6 .9 5 SWM'S P IZ Z A $35,000/YR, IN CO M E poten­ tial. R eading books. Toll Free ( I ) 800-898-9778 Ext. R -1676 for details. DELIVERY DRIVERS needed, C ardinal's Pizza is now hiring d riv e rs , fle x ib le h o u rs, great pay. M ust have ow n car, in­ surance, f t clean driving record. A pply in p erson 1340 E / A p ­ ache B lvd. A sk fo r M ike or Dave. WRESTLING Perfect p/t jbb. Flex hrs. Need athletically inclined people to w ork as p ro -sty le W restling partners. No exp nec, m ust be at least 18 yrs o ld, 110-160 lbs. $iQ/hr to start. Send name, ad d ress, phone, age, h e ight, w eight & exp to: W . D unn, 4409 N. 16th St., A -130, Phoe­ nix, AZ 85016. B A R R O 'S P IZ Z A HOT! SPICY! HOT! C JO B OPPORTUNm H_ HELP WANTEDFOO D SERVICE HELP WANTEDGENERAL 350-9122 . '. 'j C o m er Lem on & Terrace Where ASU Coes for Pizza E piscopal C h r istia n s O n C am pu s 968-6666 1301 E. University F ebr u a r y 7,1996 PREMIERE BROTHER-SISTER CAMPS IN M A S S A C H U S E T T S (7 " P IZ Z A & PA S IA Where A S U G o e s for Pizza O N C A M P U S INTERVIEW S Counselor positions for talented and energetic students las Program Specialists in alt Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey,Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; also Golf, _ Archery, Riflery, Pioneering/Overnight Camping, Ropes and Rock Climbing, Weights/Fitness and Cycling; other openings include Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Figure Skating. Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station, Cooking, Sewing, and Rocketry; A ll Waterfront/Pool Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing, Windsurfing, Canoeing/Kayaking). Top salaries, room, board and travel. June 18th-August 17th. W ACKY W EDNESDAY T O N I G H T LIV E ! [Radicali I Mix 70 D RAFTS $2.81 Call for interview times and information: PITCHERS DANBEE (G irislM -800-392-3752 Recruiter will be on campus Monday, February 19th 10am to 4pm in the Memorial Student Union Room 206A. Bud Light • Coors Light 3pm ■Close 968-6666 TUTORS TUTORS A lg e b ra C alculus/Precalculus Finite M ath Statistics Physics C hem istry A dvan ced M ath A p p lie d Eng ineering Molson Ice Bottles Balboa Cafe followed by 404 S. Mill Ave. 966-1300 TUTORS *** * , { ' '■ ‘W HORSESHOES at y D aly Park '• D o n 't m iss t h is g reat o ppo r t u n it y ! ♦ 7 :0 0 P M . a t S t . A u g u st in e 's P a r ish H all M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117 M A T 210, M A T 270, M A T 271, M A T 170 M A T 119 QBA PHY CHM MAT CON 221, PSY 230, STP 226 111, PH Y 112, PHY 121 101, C H M 113, C H M 115, C H M 116 272, M A T 274, M A T 342 221, C O N 323, ECE 210 Registration for Spring Semester is going on now - call us today for information. Successfully helping students since 1980. MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • "SIMON' FR IE N D SH IP & FELLOW SHIP IN C L U D IN G SU PPER AN YO N E C A N CLAIM T O BE TH E "B ES T", B U T O U R REPUTATION SPEAKS LOUD ER T H A N A N Y W O R D S... W e offer tutorial for the following classes: FO R A N E V E N IN G O F “ $ 2 “ 1301 E. University TUTORS A n O pen Invitation to the A SU C ommunity Students , F aculty & Staff ~) Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 N E corner o f College & Broadway C ome ♦ O nly three blocks from campus w orship w it h u s a t S t . A u g u s t in e ’ s E p is c o p a l C h u r c h 1735 S . C o l l e g e S t ., T e m p e Sundays at 8 and 10 am For more information about our programs, please call 967-0990 Page 19 Wednesday, February 7,1996 State P ress $19.99 FOR a full set o f nails at W izzards H air Studio is an awesome deal. 967-2360. A LPHA GAMMA D el­ ta ...frie n d sh ip . fu n , & s is te r­ hood. C om e jo in in the fu n !! Thurs. Feb. 8th. For more info, call 784-9085. AUDITIONS. ACTORS Reper­ to ry one act p lay s, co ld read ­ ings fo f Spring/Summer season. Call 949-5442. Ask for Jan. C EL EN A AGD - C o n grats on recording! You w ill be great, v , Kim. CONGRATULATIONS TO the new F IA members and officers O rder o f Q welcomes your new c h a p te r an d lo o k s fo rw ard to working with you! ERICA - HAPPY Late birthday v always, Kim.. PERSONALS PERSONALS JOIN US NOW Or work for us later. Jo in D elta Sigm a Pi! Learn about p ro fessio n alism and brotherhood. We are the coed business fraternity on cam­ pus. C om e see o ur tab lés at MU & Deans. Patio 2/5 - 2/9. UP ALL NIGHT College Come­ dy Tour! F eaturing The Farce Side & ASU T op S tand-U p Comics. Friday Feb. 9 @ 7:30. Come to MUAB for free tickets today ! Third floor of MU. M IC H A EL-H A PPY 22ND Bday! H appy A n n iv ersary , I Love U ÎLové, Melissa PIGGY, I’LL see you at my lily pad at the MUAB Recruitment R eception in the MU today from 10-2pm. Love Kermie. THE LADIES O f Alpha Delta Pi a r e c u rre n tly ’ ho ld in g SpringRush, 2/5 - 2/8. For more in­ formation, call 784-8490. ' THE WOMEN o f Sigma Sigma Sigma would like to invite you’ to Our Spring Rush on Feb. 79. Please call 303-7214. WHERE DID That folding chair come from? -Happy Birthday SERVICES EL EC TR O LY SIS BY D egna. All methods-. Low rates. Rural/Southem area. 92 i t 1146. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS DV-1 greencard program avail­ able. l-SOO-ôôOT) 67. SERVICES SERVICES WE N EED Y ou! Jo in A lpha Phi O m ega - a n atio n al coed service fraternity! Info meeting tonight at 5:30 MU (see moni­ tors for room). Call Hung Sa at 784-8411 fo r info. Tom orrow 8pm ImpfOvfH S C H O L A R S H IP S /M O N E Y AVAILABLE fewcollege. Recorded m essage g iv e s d e ta ils. (6Q2)83$-3123 HEALTH & FITNESS TYPING/WORD PROCESSING L O p K IN G FO R h igh energy, positive pers. trainers, nutrition tech. & sales people 893-8041. APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typin g /w ord p rocessing. N eed it fast? Call Jessie,945-5744. NEEDED: 20 Students who are seriously interested in losing 5100 lbs. Call today (303) 3843917. INSTRUCTION TYPING/WORD M |O C ! & |N G _ _ _ $1.99 PG . E xp'd e d ito r. Fast, accurate. APA/MLA. Rural/ Uni­ versity. JIM. 967-2360. AFFORDABLE- TERM papers, reports; theses, resum es, F ast turnaround. Tow nsend W /P, Maureen, 955-0969. PERSONALS Greek Review The regrets to announce an error in the February issue. In the advertisem ent the special "$24.95 u n lim ited t a n n in g fo r o n e W a n te d : W o m e n o v e r 18 y e a rs of a g e with o n e of the following: m o n th " • Vaginal itching "w ith tw o m o n th • U nusual vaginal, discharge, indicating a yeast infection p u rc h a s e ." Greek Review • F re e m edical evaluation, including P A P sm ea rs The • F re e study medication • C o m p en sa tion of $75.00 a p o lo g izes for any MATH WHIZ W ANTED TO Learn and then tu to r ' a c a lc u lu s hybrid. 5 hours p/w eek. $ 10/hr + b o ­ nus. Eric 966-044?. MIRACLE TUTORING: help in math. 967-1236 http://www.indiiect.com/www/tut6ring TU TO RS N EED ED To work, w ith a u tistic c h ild using. be*: havior m o d ifica tio n , tra in in g provided. Call 483-1701. WANTED PLACE NEEDED For summer M ay 1- A ug 3 1 c lose to A SU ; nonsm ker.fem pref. adder 21, p ric e neg. 7 84-8848 ask for Hannah 1996 O LY M PIC S: h ttp :// www.atlanta.olympic.org/ m in im u m Q u a lifie d p a rticip an ts will receive: — INTERNET URLS~~ should read • V a gin a l burning or irritation TUTORS I BUY C D 's fo r cash! ! ! ! Any condition^;w ill com e to U. 1800-807-7168 for T h e T a n Lin e, Do you have a vaginal yeast infection? W WW LEA RN T O W rite HTML for fun and profit. Small group c la sses form ing now . Call 829-9585 for details. inconvenience. ASU FINANCIAL AID Interac­ tive Service may be reached at: http://www.asii.edu/fastt/ WANTED WANTED DONOR EBBS NEEDED Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ mously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. A ccepted donors com pensated $1500-2000. PERSONALS If yo u are currently opt on any treatment for a yeast infection and For m ore inform ation call a re interested in trying an investigational form of M onostat vaginal 602-860-4792 cream , call: St. Luke's Health C en ter 4444 N. 32nd St., #150 » Phoenix 266-1621 IRISH MUSIC 9 p m -1 am • NO COVER • THE CHOICE IS YOURS BANDERSNATCH 5 th St. & Forest 966-4438 • C O M P L E T E BIRTH C O N T R O L C A R E . Depo-Provera. Birth Control Pills. IUD, Morning After PHI ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST • P R E G N A N C Y TESTIN G No appointm ent necessary Abortion with Twilight Sleep Evening & Saturday Appt. Available by S y d n e y O m arr W ednesday, F eb ruary 7,1996 • G Y N EC O LO G IC A L EXAM S Pap Smears. Infection checks, STD exams. FA M IL Y P L A N N IN G IN S T IT U T E 1 7 —------------- • . ■ •A Friday, Feb. 9 PHOENIX SCOTTSDALE TEMPE 7806 N, 27th Ave. 2334 N. Scottsdale Rd. 2525$. Rural Rd.#7C 997-7493 945-4999 968-7471 III 8pm • N e e b Hall G et tickets at the State Press- in the Matthews C enter basem ent info desk S H Ü S I r — ------------------------------------------------------------ ----------------------- - - ---------- — --------------- -— i w S tate P ress V alentine O rder Form w : N a m e — — 1—— — —— -----—— A d d r ess— _— —— ------------— --------- ---- — V alen tin es w ill run W ednesday, February 14 Rates: 3 l i n e s - $ 2 (28 characters p e r line) : $1 e a c h ad d itio n a l lin e » N o ab b re v ia tio n s, b o ld in g o r c e n te rin g • P lease w rite clearly ! » O N E 1.F.TTF.R P E R B O X D eadline: February 12 at 3 pm B ring to the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter • (R oom 46H ) - ad m ust be placed in person. P hone —: • v C ity/St/Z ip J —-—. 'V;;.. ' M ethod o f Paym ent a C a s h □ C h e c k (include driver's l i ce ns e #) Q Vi s a / Ma s te r Ca r d/ Am e r ic an Ex p r e ss N a m e on Card — , C a r d No. ___ _____ _— Exp. date ------- — —-— ■■ —------—-----—— —.— - S ta r t v o t ir a d h e r e : □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a anything—use words," whether ver» Moon Talk: Whether it be the bal, written. You’re invited to join “Man In The Moon“ or correla­ exclusive group-—acquiesce with­ tions betw een the M oon and out w atering dow n principles. when and how people make love Gemini represented. or go berserk, the Moon holds SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): eternal fascination for people on Winner! Lunar position highlights Earth. Sportsmen claim fish are popularity, ability to gain allies and m ore lik ely to bite when the influence people in various walks M oon is fu ll. There is more; of life. Focus on where you live, human and animal mating activi­ ty during a FulI Moon. People : marital status, receipt of valuable gift. born under Gancer are more SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 22-Dec. likely to respond to phases of the 21); View with skepticism, offer Moon than are most persons. made by individual who makes What-about you? grandiose claims. Say politely, ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Aqpnd “Please put it in writing!” Element to practical m atters previously of deception exists. Protect self in placed on back burner. You’ll be •close quarters! dealing with individuals who make CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Ján. 19): organization a fetish. Line up prior­ Emphasis on elements of timing, ities, outline prospects. Capricorn surprise. Powerful forces are at in picture. work, ride with tide, don’t be TAURUS (Apr. 20-M ay 20); intimidated- Long-range prospects Despite Whirl of confusion around bright. Big money awaits at end of y où there js timp for creative journey. Hurrah! endeavors .love. Communication AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb: 18): from foreign land verifies views, T Key words are trust, romance, love, could eventually lead to journey, investment, possible inheritance. promotion of product. GEM INI (M ay 21 -June 20): ; Added' recognition due, refuse to be restricted to one area Of activity. More light shed on areas of home, Love relationship reignites, coin­ life previously cloudy. Focus on cides with Havel. initiative, independence, fresh start PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): in different direction: Relationship Remarkable comeback! You win may be too hot not to. cool down. despite odds, those who counted CANCER (June 21-July 22): you out will be embarrassed, apolo­ Relative helps gather information getic- Scenario highlights legal vic­ necessary to put across legal tory, marital status. Leo will play points—utilize intuitive intellect, dramatic role. refuse t6 be dragged down to low IF FEBRUARY 7 IS YOUR level. A quarius another Cancer BIRTHDAY: You are iiitrospecnative represented. tive, mysterious, serious, fascinated LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22): by Oriental philosophy, astrology. Suddenly good fortune! Cash flow People claim you are psychic, gets started social activities accel­ iqany secretly seek your counsel. erate, you’ll be called upon to par­ Pisces, Virgo persons play unusual ticipate in political, community roles in your life. Y6u are unortho­ programs. Gemini, Sagittarius per: dox^ independent, your own most sons involved. severe critic sinpe you seek perfec­ VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22): tion. Despite having been disap­ Cycle high, take charge of your own destiny, emphasize originality, v pointed in romance, you remain independence, courage of convic­ sentimental, optimistic and hold love in high position. September tions. W hat appeared to be an and October .Will be your most pro­ obstacle is transformed into stepductive months of 1996. pingstone. Scorpio involved., LJBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Talk your way into and .out o f almost ' ©. 1996. tbs Angeles Times Syndicate S tate P ress Wednesday, February 7,1996 Page 20 ^ e x lfa ij •over 50 hours of course time*practice on over 30 tests*small classes»excellent teachers»215 points average improvemenMree extra help*the only paper and p e n c il test a v a ila b le until D e c e m b e r 19 9 6 » co n ven ien t tim es»m ath review»vocabulary bullding»analytic skills*starts February 24»we score more* 967-1480 w/FREE 32-oz. DRINK Expires 2/21/96. 216 E. University Oust east of Forest) • Tempe «829-6026 Züatmr •T I « X 644-1201 ONLY 3 MILES FROM A SU - ftfcoAsrmt eco ast to L u m n e a m /te t m um A im r T *9 EXPRESS K M obil. C h a n g in g oN fo r o v e r 12S years. 0 be combined with another offer on same product's®rvice of 1 to reduce outstanding debt. Plus $1.75 Environmental Fee. 1 9 0 DAYS NO PAYMENT*** 9 0 DAYS NO INTEREST *** NO ANNUAL FEE LOW MONTHLY PAYM ENTS A M E R IC A N 8 8 WITH COUPON Lubricate your vehicle & ch a ssis • Drain old oil • Add up to 5 qts. o f new oil • Install a new oil filter • Includes a 17 pt. inspection • D iesel extra • M ost ca rs and light trucks - Our Tire & Service Warranties Are Honored A t Over 8,000 Affiliated Dealers Nationwide —OAC not affiliated with LSAS or Princeton U'niver L U B E • OIL • FILTER a. .A u t 'o m o t • V c 2033 W. UNIVERSITY, M ESA DOBSON & UNIVERSITY www.review.com email at paula.ph6emx@review.com THE P R IN C E T O N R E V IE W COMPUTERIZED WHEEL BALANCE & 4 TIRE ROTATION 19 88 WITH C O U PO N Check Inflation On All Tires * Com puterized Balance On 4 Tires • Fou r Tire Rotation * M ost Cars & Light Trucks • Ndt tp be combined with another offer on sameproducVservkieor * used to reduce outstanding debt. Martini Ranch Wed Ladies Night No Cover for Ladies • Incredible Drink Specials Thurs . . . . . Chadwicks w ith Punkin Head w ith K atie s D im ple and M aissa Sunday Sat . . . . . . . . . Rock Lobster 70s D isco E xplosion w ^ h Qoo^ie K nights 7295 E. Stetson Dr., Scottsdale 970-0500