W o r l d / N a t io n S ports TW O BOMBS EXPLODE AT BRm SH C o a c h B ruce S n y d e r expects ARMY HEADQUARTERS IN HIS PLAYERS TO KEEP A ONE-TRACK N o r th er n Ir ela n d P ag e 3 MIND THIS WEEKEND IN L .A . P age 13 ©Copyright, State Press, 1996 Ternpe, Arizona N e w B iU o f R ig h ts to a d v is e s tu d e n ts o f d a tin g e tiq u e tte m I T uesday, O ctober 8 ,1 9 9 6 An Independent M orning D aily Voi. 81 No. 29 B y J ennifer N etherby State P ress You have the right to say no. You have the right to keep and develop friendships with both genders. Should you waive these rights ... It’s not the politically correct Miranda warning — it’s a Dater’s Bill of Rights that the Associated Students of ASU will soon publish in the ASU telephone directory. The goal of the project is to raise rape prevention awareness, said Keith Menard, : ASASU campus affairs vice president. “I t gives people som ething to rally behind,” he said. T h e A S A S U C o u n s e lin g an d H e a lth Advisory Com mittee Sponsored the D ater’s Bill o f Rights in an effort to raise rape pre- vention awareness among students. According to ASU police, eight rapes were reported at ASU in 1995. and many more went unreported. Joanne O'D onnell, associate dean of Student Life and head of the ASU Rape Prevention and Education Committee, said the goal is to remind students of their rights and responsibilities and to empower people. “The idea is to avoid students feeling they're being pressured into something they: don’t know how to deal with,” O'Donnell said. Patricia Pozo, ASASU/C-11AC director, said the Dater's Bill of Rights empowers students and is educational for anyone in a relationship, Pozo said the Bill of Rights does not T urn t o ASASU, page 2. R e s e a r c h to r e v e a l th e ta le s tim e te lls B y J eff O wens State P ress m ■ Pat Shannahan/ State Press Salon Selective representatives treat Amanda Bullard, a ju n io r computer inform ation sys­ tems major, to a free hair styling Monday oh Hayden Lawn.. Salon Selectives also provid­ ed students w ith computer imaging. Students could have their pictures taken and then changed on the computer to show what a new hair color or style would look like. For P eter K illeen, tim ing really is everything. Killeen, an experimental psychologist at ASU, will spend the next five years researching the finer points of behavioral questions concerning timing, Timing has much to do with such ques­ tions as why some comedians are funny and some aren’t, why some conversations go well and some don’t, and why lovemaking can be sublime or disastrous. “Some of the world’s greatest tragedies have been the result of bad timing,” Killeen said. “Whether it’s Michael Jordan passing a ball on the court or P resident (B ill) Clinton passing a bill, timing makes or breaks an event.” •* Killeen’s research prowess has been hon­ ored twice this year. He received a “highly sought after and quite rare” grant in January from the N ational Institute of M ental Health, a division of the U S. Department of Health and Human Services. In April, he accepted an invitation to join the Society of Experimental Psychologists, a nationwide group of 200 of the field’s best researchers. He will carry out most of his research here at ASU, but said his work will also take him to facilities in Massachusetts and Southern California. Much of his work is devoted to constructing mathematical models to provide an understanding of various behaviors. “ H e’s a true sch o lar,” said Barry Leshowitz, associate professor of psycholo­ gy. “I’ve known him for 25 years and he's the most dedicated research scholar in this department. His ability to move from field T urn to M eni al, page 2. Police brutality suit against A B O R , A SU police still alive J « * _ ' „ By M elody M c D onald State P ress A suit filed against the Arizona Board of Regents and ASU police will resurface during a pre-trail conference in May, almost two years after a student alleged police brutal­ ity during his arrest. Michael T. McVerry, a senior exercise science major, was arrested for disorderly conduct in August 1995 by four xilice officers. A judge later dismissed criminal charges against McVerry liter McVerry’s lawyer filed a motion asking the judge to rule on the case following the state’s presentation at his trial. Attorneys for both parties will appear before U S. District Judge Stephen M. McNamee on May 19, to reach a settlement or schedule a trial date Until then, both sides will use the time for trial prepara­ tion, said John MacDonald, director of government affairs for the U.S. Attorney General’s Office. The complaint was filed May 29, 1996 in the Arizona District Court against the Arizona Board of Regents, ASU Chief of Police Lanny Standridge, Lt. Bennett Rowe, Sgt. Marvin Tahmahkera and Officers Terry Lewis, Ron Kelley, Scott Perron and Rory Moran. T ’kThe r a o ocomplaint m n l a i n t r ' lclaims d im c iY N p H AMcVerry /fp V p .T T V t O e officers fnforced to t hthe ground and arrested him without probable cause. Later, according to the complaint, either Kelley or Lewis forced McVerry’s head on the trunk of the patrol car and Lewis told him he would “kick your (McVerry’s) ass.” Shortly after the incident occurred, ASU Chief of Police Lanny Standridge ‘approved an internal investigation into the incident which resulted in one officer receiving disci­ plinary action. Standridge maintains his officers handled the situation in accordance to the law, but said he respects McVerry’s right to pursue the matter. “With regard to the suit itself, we treat all complaints seriously and have investigated when members of our com­ munity feel they’ve been harmed by police,” Standridge said. “But we want the issue resolved, and I believe the out­ come of this case will conform to justice.” According to the complaint, McVerry sustained mental and physical injuries and has incurred about $2,000 in attor­ ney fees. He seeks compensation for the violation of his Fourth Amendment rights — unlawful search and seizure, to be reimbursed his attorney’s fees, and to receive punitive damages in an amount to be determined at the time of trial. I Associated Press Senior exercise science m ajor Michael T. McVerry displayed bruises he allegedly received from ASU police when he was arrested fo r disorderly conduct In August 1995. McVerry filed a law suit against ASU police and the Arizona Board o f Regents that Is scheduled fo r a pre-trial conference hearing In May. Page 2 A SA SU T oday C ontinued Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f Matthews Center. Requests wiil not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries m il not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only One entry p er organi­ zation p er day is permittedEntries must contain the full name of the dub or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address of the location. AH requests are subject to editing for content, space and darity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and ate printed as space permits. A rizo n a O u tin g C lub — G eneral m eeting at 7:30 p.m ."in the MU Pima Room. • Student Life - Learning Resource Center — Free com puter skills work* shops. C all John B loom quist at 9656250 for times and locations. • B aptist Student union — Tuesday P.M. From 8 to 9 p.m. at 1322 S. M ill Ave. • Upward Bound Alumni Association — Now is your time to contribute. Begins at 6:30 p.m. in the MU Havasupi Room 208 D. • NAPM/ASU — Meeting at 4:45 p.m. on the third floor of the MU. • C o lleg e R ep u b lican s — G eneral m eeting at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room 211. • H fllel - Jew ish Student C enter — Tuesday lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Hillel, 1012 S. M ill Ave. • Learning Resource Center — Mid­ term strategies workshop. From 3 to 4 p.m. in the MU Room 224. • S o ciety fo r Hum an R esource M anagem ent — G e ne ra l m ee ting . Begins at 4:30 p.m. in the MU Mojave Room 222. • Coming Out D iscussion. Group — M eeting at 6 p.m. in the M ulticultural • S tate P ress Tuesday, October 8,1996 Lounge on th e second flo o r o f th e Student Services Building. • Career Services — Résumé w riting w orkshop. From 11:40 a.m . to 12:40 p.m. in the MU Room 222. • MUAB — Student Center open house. From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the third floor of the MU. • MUAB Special Events Committee — M ee ting . B egins a t 3 :15 p.m . in Conference Room TA on the third floor of the MU. • University Toastmasters — Develop creative public speaking and communi­ cation skills. Begins at 6:30 p h i- in the MU Yuma Room. • Cam pus A m bassadors C h ris tia n Fellowship — Tuesday Night Together. Begins at 7:30 p.m. in the MU La Paz Room 223. • Women’s Studies Honor Society, Trt lota & F.O.C.A.S. — Orientation for the wom en's studies section. Begins at 2 p.m. in Hayden Library Room C6 (near the Reference Desk). • C o u n s elo r T ra in in g C en ter — Counseling graduate students w ill pro­ vide free counseling to ASU students, friends and family. Call Melinda López at 965-5067 for an appointm ent or more information. from page 1. preach to students. The statement is backed up by projects ASASU/C-HAC is involved in including relationship and sexual assault workshops. A sample of the proposed bill of rights is as follows: • I have the right to say no and to have my wishes respected. • I have the right to end a date or rela­ tionship when 1 choose. • 1 have the right not to dominate or be dominated. • I have the right to tell someone I do not like the way I have been treated. O ’Donnell said the D ater’s Bill of Rights also educates people on their respon­ sibilities in dating. The goal is for students to “understand they need to stay in control of their own behavior,” The Dater’s Bill of Rights program has been used to raise aw areness at the University of Florida and Louisiana State University. Pozo said ASASU/C-HAC is seeking campus support from clubs and organizations to give the Dater’s Bill of Rights credibility. M e n ta l C ontinued from page 1. to field using mathematics is absolutely unique in psychology.” Killeen said he looks forward to taking his work back into the classroom in five years. “ I t’s a great opportunity to make progress in my work, but I leave the regular classroom with an eagerness to return,” he said. “It’s the ability to spend long, uninter­ rupted hours on these questions that permits one to make really radical progress.” Killeen will also study the effects of rein­ forcement and praise in an effort to under­ stand why certain behaviors are repeated when subjects receive favorable reactions. P la n n in g to S t r e a k th e M U ? Can the S tate P ress p h o to g ra p h ers a t 9 6 5 -6 8 2 6 . R em em b er to p la n ahead! SHINYHAPPYPEOPLE I N S T I T U T E E x c e p t i o n a l Results H a i r c u t & Dry F a cia ls B o d y W a xin g M a n icu re E y e l a s h Tint Brow; W ax C o lo rs Perm anent W eaves Updo ADAM SANDLER “ What the Hell Happened to Me?” 7pm • Oct. 9 • MU Cinema THIS IS FREE, TOO! Bring a friend! $ ffOO ■ $25‘0œ ? 00 'arí‘dí,up $ ' 8 00 $ 5 00 $ 5 .0 0 I..00 a n d up T OO a n d up 1.00 a n d up $10.00 AVE DA Carsten Utilizes Exclusively Aveda Products for Hair. ¿ Í Nails. Skin Care & Make-Up:; 3345 SO U TH R U R A L R O A D 4 9 1 -0 4 4 9 T U E -F R I 9 :3 0 - 6 :0 0 S A T 8 :3 0 - 5 :0 0 20% Discount with Student I.D. 'All work performed by Students under the supervision of Licensed Instructors, ________ W orld State P ress /N a t i o n _________ T u e sd a y ^ c to b e ry ig g ^ Palestinian hijacker sentenced to life in prison By C assandra Burrell Associated P ress W ASHINGTON — A federal judge sentenced a Palestinian than to life in prison Monday, moments after the man sought forgiveness from the victims of a violent hijacking that left nearly 60 people dead at a Maltese air•port 11 years ago. . “I cannot accept my own self what 1 did,” Omar Mohammed Ali Rezaq said in broken and heavily accent­ ed English. “I feel guilty for what's happened." When victim s were invited to make statem ents. Edward Leonard of Oakville. Ontario, whose wife and infant son were killed during the incident, told Rezaq: In addition to whatever temporal sentence this_ court imposes on you. I and the families of the: dead and the survivors of your wanton acts, do condemn you to the most miserable sentence of all — living with yourself for the rest of your own natural life." U S . D istrict Court Judge Royce Lam berth then imposed the life term and ordered Rezaq to pay $264.000 in restitution to some of the victims. He ruled Rezaq inel­ igible fot paròle for 10 years and recommended that any request made after that time be rejected. During a month-long trial this summer, Rezaq’s attor­ neys argued that daily bloodshed and killing in the Mideast, and political indoctrination, had driven their Client insane, making him unable to comprehend that what he was doing was wrong. PublicDefender Robert Tucker told jurors that Rezaq, who grew up under Israeli occupation in the West Bank, “snapped” because of post traumatic stress syndrome. But the jury convicted him of a single count o f air piracy on July 19. "How could I go so far from what I am really. ... I lost my life in a spiritual way,” Rezaq told thé judge during a statement that included quotations of New Testament scripture on forgiveness. “At that time,' I could not see that something was wrong.” Prosecutors scoffed at Rezaq‘s defense. “The truth is that the legal responsibility ... lies with this defendant alone,” Assistant U S. Attorney Joseph Valder said. • W itnesses said Rezaq was the m asked man who shoved a pistol against the head of a pilot on EgyptAir Flight 648 shortly after takeoff from Athens, Greece, on Nov. 23, 1985, and ordered him to land on the island of Malta. Rezaq and two companions then announced they were members of the Egyptian Revolutionary Organization, a group opposed to the Camp David agreement signed by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, prosecutors said. The com­ panions died in the hijacking. Maltese officials repeatedly rejected demands for fuel to fly to another destination although the hijackers threat­ ened to kill one passenger every. 15 minutes. Rezaq car­ ried out the threat with five passengers who were either American or Israeli, killing two women — including Scarlett Rogenkamp of Oceanside. Calif. — and wound­ ing three others. Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Glick said prosecutors were pushing for the longest possible sentence, and they asked for restitution in order to prevent Rezaq from prof­ iting from a book or movie about the incident. Prosecutors declined to say why they didn't pursue the death penalty in the case, but circumstances suggest the Clinton administrative gave diplomatic assurances that it wouldn't do so in order to win the cooperation of foreign governments in capturing him. Schools serve up record number o f student breakfasts B y R ic h a r d K eil A sso cia te d P ress WASHINGTON — A record number o f lowincome students used the school breakfast program last year, which worries anti-poverty advocates who saw Congress cut funding that would help expand the program. In the new welfare law, federal dollars were elimi­ nated for startup programs at schools that don’t take advantage of the nutrition program. About $5 million was taken from the School Breakfast budget in the current fiscal year, similar amounts will be taken from subsequent budgets. “The money is for educational materials for local school boards to get out the word that there is a gov­ ernment program that is available, it’s an entitlement,” said Ed Cooney, a child nutrition expert at die Food Research and Action Center, which studies food and nutrition issues affecting low-income Americans. “Without die startup funds, it’s going to be very diffi­ cult to get the word out.” O verall, funding fo r the breakfast program increased by 9 percent this year over la st But die startup cuts are troublesome to Cooney and others, particularly since some 26,000 public and private schools around the nation do not have meaning feed­ ing programs. “It’s ironic,” Cooney said. “ Congress wants to keep this program, but doesn’t want to get the word out?” A survey by Cooney’s group found that during the 1995-96 school year, low-income students at a record 65,000 public and private schools were able to eat fed­ erally subsidized breakfasts. Many low-income families have counted on school meal programs to ensure that their children receive needed nutrition during the day. Numerous studies have shown that kids who have eaten adequately before class find it easier to pay attention. The-survey found that in schools that offer both breakfast and lunch programs, many needy students use both. Seventy-one percent of the schools that pro­ vide lunch also serve breakfast, and 40 percent of the children who eat subsidized lunches also use the breakfast program. The survey found that 5.6 million low-income stu­ dents took part in the program on a daily basis during the 1995-96 school year, an increase of 200,000 from the year before. The School Breakfast Program began with tempo­ rary funding 1966 as part of the Child Nutrition Act. It received permanent funding in 1975. and has existed since then under a plan in which the federal govern­ ment pas reimbursed schools for all or part of the cost of each meal. Children have been required to contribute a portion of their meal costs, if their families are financially able to do so. Associated Press Rescuers aid those injured in the bomb blast that rocked the B ritish arm y's headquarters in Lisburn, Northern Ireland, on Monday. Two car bombs rocked the base wounding up to 20 people, four Of which are in serious condition. Car bombs strike British army headquarters By S haw n P ogatchnik A ssociated P ress LISBURN, Northern Ireland — Bombers struck at the center of Northern Ireland’s security Monday, detonating two car bombs inside the British army’s heavily.defended headquarters and raising fears the province could again become a battleground between the IRA and pro-British paramilitaries. Thirty-one people were wounded. There was no claim of responsibility. Whether the attack was carried out by the Irish Republican Army or bv another anti-British group might determine Whether the province's pro-British paramilitaries call off their own cease-fire — and send Northern Ireland back into retalia­ tory violence. The first bomb wen# off without warning in a parking lot inside Thiepval Barracks, the main camp for the 18,000 army troops in die British-ruled province. A second detonated 20 minutes later near the base s hospital, apparently to ambush passing soldiers, medical staff and people wounded by the first bomb. As flames and black smoke billowed from the blast site, soldiers and paramedics hauled off the wounded on, foam mattresses, Some of the people injured in the second blast . included medical staff attending to the victims of the first. The army said 21 of the injured were soldiers and 10 were civilians — including the three most seriously hurt. One man was critically wounded and four received seri­ ous head, chest and leg wounds. The less seriously wounded included an 8-year-old girl and an 18-vear-old woman who were treated for shock and released. Army forensic scientists estimated that the two bombs contained a total of 500 to 1.000 pounds of homemade explosive. Each left a deep crater in the pavement. The attack inside what, until now. had been Northern * Ireland’s most untouchable army installation deals an embarrassing blow to the British forces. Thiepval lies in Lisburn, a predominantly Protestant suburb southwest of Belfast, and is home to'the army's senior commanders, key officers' families and its elite bomb squad. Thiepval has a single entrance guarded by armed sol­ diers and security cameras, with every car requiring clear­ ance — though most are not individually searched. Among the army facilities damaged were offices, the base's travel agency, the nursery and the chapel. The blasts smashed windows in surrounding civilian homes and at a hospital that is home to 40 senior citizens and multiple-sclerosis patients. The Dublin office of Irish Prime Minister John Bruton said that "the barbaric bomb attacks” were "deliberately calculated to provoke further violence and bloodshed and (are) aimed at undermining the multiparty talks in Belfast.” *‘ O p in io n S ta te P ress Tuesday, October 8, 1996 Page 4 State Press ■ itorial A m erican voter em erges as loser Just when the summer heat is disappearing, voters are faced with more hot air than a caravan crossing the Sahara Desert. The recent presidential debate has both Republicans and Democrats claiming victory and maybe they are both right. Bob Dole didn’t fall off the platform, drool on himself or speak about World War H more than 10 or 12 times. For his part, Clinton didn’t come off as a dope­ smoking. draft-dodging hippie, although there are surely people at the VFW lodge in Casa Grande who think he did, So who really won the debate? No one really knows, but it is clear who lost: the American voter. A presidential debate is meant to inform voters and help them develop an opinion of who they should vote for. The candidates present their arguments and solutions and it is left to the voter to decide the best person for the job. Unfortunately, Sunday’s debate simply restated everything already known about the candidates. Bob Dole wants a tax cut and Bill Clinton wants to build a bridge. In typical fashion, the old Republican war-hórse used cheap-shots and personal attacks rather than well-reasoned arguments and logic. Instead of pre­ senting a vision of the Bob Dole presidency, Dole presented a vision of himself, an image consisting of mean-spiritedness and being tragically out of touch. Rather than engaging in an informed discussion about the mushrooming national debt, which Dole and Ronald Reagan quadrupled, Dole kept chanting tax cut, something sure to increase the debt even more. Of course, neither candidate really discussed the financial condition of America, something every­ one with a future in this country should be worried about. Which is too bad. . America desperately wants a leader they can trust and identify With. Americans are looking for a leader who does what he or she says, without pandering to special interests and double-talking voters. Unfortunately, finding one of these creatures any­ where near Washington, D.C., is about as possible as finding a congressmen who isn’t in the pockets of special interest groups. It is no secret many A m ericans d o n ’t trust President Clinton. Allegations of financial impropri­ ety over Whitewater gnd alleged acts of adultery have m ost A m ericans castin g a wary eye in “slick Willie's" direction. So the question is, why does Bill Clinton have a commanding lead in the polls? Because Bob Dole’s platform is the standard Republican lip-service which has been dished out since Reagan was a B-movie actor in Hollywood. Dole brought no new ideas to the debate. Instead of firing America’s imagination with innovations and solutions to problems, Dole portrayed the same hack­ neyed tax cut package as the solution to everything from poverty to teenage drag use. And that isn’t enough for American voters to elect Dole. Without some new ideas and solid solutions, the Republican presidential candidate is doomed to be a footnote in a dusty history book. STATE PRESS TAFF Conspiracy theories distort reality It's all just a giant conspiracy. I have not been able to break the IM inform ation yet to determ ine ELIZONDO exactly who or what is behind Columnist this dastardly plot, but ASU is knee-deep in a giant scheme to control our minds. The plan starts off innocently enough. First, incoming freshman are asked to fill out questionnaires for student housing. The University then puts these students together in a controlled environment (dorms) and from then on it is nothing but one big monitored psychology experiment. Each dorm room is exactly alike, thus, securing environ­ mental control. In a sense, students become nothing more than little rats being paired off in identical boxes. I haven’t been able to fill in the blanks of my theory yet, such as what ideology we are been brainwashed to believe, or when the day of complete governmental control rushes in. But rest assured it involves top level officials, cpveft operations, and diaboli­ cal motives. Go ahead and ponder it for a few moments. Soon it will become as dear as day. Sounds pretty convincing, eh? Well, maybe not. -W Last week as part of his televised talk show. Republican dem agogue Rush Lim baugh denounced the riots at California State University at Northridge as a Conspiracy by the liberal left to attract attention for the opposition of California Prop 202. According to Rush, liberal fiends hired David Duke to come out and speak so they could ambush him once he was there. But that’s not the only plot to emerge in the media. The Sept. 30 issue of Time magazine ran a feature essay on the possibility that the CIA has been secretly supplying heroin to the African-American communities for years in order to support covert guerrilla-operations in foreign coun­ tries. It’s possible. Most anything in this world is. And it is the “anything is possible” mentality which is at the heart of the growing wave of conspiracy theories. Conspiracy theorists always give me the giggles. Yet, recently I have been a bit alarmed at the growing number of I people I meet on campus who give credit to one or more of the so-call “doomsday” theories. While I can understand their viewpoint and agree with certain points in relation to the “facts” these people cite, deep down I just want to tell these people to turn off the TV, get off the Internet, and Come outside and join the rest of us in this place we Call “reality.” Now I know that it may seem a bit egotistical to suggest my way is the “right” way and, who knows, perhaps those nasty feds have got my name on some list for “Pony-tailed Subversives who need to be rubbed out when the New World Order arrives.” But somehow I just don’t think so. I’ll give you one example why a New World Order can never happen: Arizona State University. There are piles of forms that have to be filled out, lines that need to be stood in, people in the offices who some­ times give off that dazed and confused look when you request help - all mere symptoms of what a bureaucracy is. It’s long, it’s tedious and in many ways it is ineffective. To suggest that somehow it is possible that everyone Working for ASU is getting some cryptic message in their decoder rings that is connecting them to “Big Brother" is ludicrous. We need to stop looking over our shoulders, shake off these modem day “Boogie Man” stories and stop creating grand delusions of paranoia. Conservative politicians do stupid things sometimes and people som etim es do drugs because they choose to. Yammering about “plots” and covert programs sells papers and increases ratings. But, in reality, all it really does is cre­ ate a bunch of suspicion and paranoia. We drop out of political action because the government is out to “screw us anyway.” We refuse to watch the news with any critical view because it’s “liberal” and it’s not giving all those innocent conservatives a fair shake. Meanwhile, Rush and the X-Files will key us in on what the truth really is. Perhaps you disagree. That’s fine. You see, I am not really a senior studying communication. My purpose here at this school is actually much grander. I'd let you in on it, but the mothership has given me direct orders not to. Tim Elizondo is a senior studying communication. ANGELA MULL, Editor BRIAN ANDERSON, Managing Editor KEVIN J. ADEY Editor TIM; BAXTER .'.a ..1.. . ÿ ■.*. :.City Editor ANDREA HEALEY............................. ............City Editor KELLY WENDEL... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Opinion Editor TIMOTHY TAIT.................... .........'.J - ..¡ .N e w s Editor TlM HACKÈR ....... ................................ Editor JIM POULIN ■..................... .•...... Photo Editor JEREMY STEIN ............................. Sports Editor LIZ MONTALBÄNQ,.................,....... Magazine Editor LESLI LINDGREN.....,.................... Asst. Magazine Editor A AKON BRUICHER. . . . . ..Night Production Supervisor REPORTERS: Kennes Bolig. Sara Bush, Deanna Darr, Becky Hill,, Melody McDonald. Jennifer Netherby, Jeff Owens» Ray Stern. SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Cook. Josh DeFamio, Randy Jones, Dustin Krügel, Ed Odeyen. COPY EDITORS: Christa Cerrentano, Theresa Valles. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Lori Cain, Pat Shannahan. COLUMNISTS: Bryn Chancellor, Mark Cohen, Tim Elizondo, ■Steve Forsberg, David Galantowicz, Tina Holder, RickLiijegren, Joshua Solovskoy, Vivi Stenberg, Theresa Valles, CARTOONISTS: Carrie Behrens, Brian Fairrington, Jonatan Inge. Steve Tansley. Kristi/thompson; PRODUCTION: Adrianna Garcia, Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Jeremy Meyer, Corey Saunders, ShelUe Scott. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Cari Dewald. Dan EHstfom, David Goodwin, Nickelle Kastein; Sean Lambright, Brandon Mudd. Jess Rankin, Simon Roberts, Shane Siren. JesseSletteland, Leslie Vegteri CLASSIFIEDS: Lisa Bayless, Heidi Heister, Wayne Hoover, Stacey Thayer, Joy Thompson. 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: ANGELA MULL Editor BRIAN ANDERSON ; Managing Editor KELLY WENDEL Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room. 15v Arizona State University,. Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not. answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those S tate P ress P h one N umbers Information.............965-7572 Newsroom............. ..965-2292 Magazine..... ........ ...965-1695 Advertising............. .965-6555 Classifieds................965-6735 h ttp ://n e w s .v s p a M s u .e d u _____________ O Tuesday, October 8, 1996 STATE PRESS _____________ p in io n ÿ ■ _____ ___________________ Page 5 Indians fight use of obscenity on landmarks A ccording to W e b ste r's INA C o m p reh en sive D ictio n a ry, International Edition, “squaw” HOLDER is an American Indian Woman or wife. Columnist Mr. Webster is way out of date. The word squaw comes from the Algonquin language group and did originally mean woman. That was several generations ago. In the “Thesaurus of Slang" by Esther and Albert E. Lewin, squaw is defined as a synonym for prostitute. This is a little bit closer. History time .... When the French trappers and traders in the Hudson Bay area learned this word from the Algonquin speaking Natives. the trappers promptly began to use it by walking into the camps of the Native people they were trading with, grabbing their genitalia and saying in a loud, clear voice, "‘Squaw!” They weren't asking for a wife — they ;were asking to get laid. Since many of the Algonquin dialects differed, the word squaw meant woman to some people and vagina to others. This was the translation that moved westward with the expansion o f the Europeans across T urtle Island. It was adopted by everyone that heard it to mean an Indian wóman. Hollywood used it quite frequently when making their infamous "cowboy and Indian" movies and perpetuated the misinterpretation to the rest of the American public. ' N a t i v e people would never refer to their wives or daughters as squaws. ■ Another serious m isinterpretation concerning this word is that Indian men treat their women like a lower class citizen, a slave or concubine. This .was never the case, nor is it the case today. ■ Allow me to give you a few examples: S During the gourd dance —*• a w arriors dance per­ formed by veterans — the women dance on the outskirts of the circle: never inside with the men. Chauvinistic? Quite the contrary. The women dance on the outside to protect the men who are calling blessings down upon the earth. Blessings meant to keep the dancers who follow them safe within the circle. Without the women to pro­ tect them, the gourd dancers may become distracted or fall prey to spirits meant to trick them. In many traditional families the woman will walk a few paces behind the man. Sexist? Not hardly. The woman walks behind the man voluntarily, in order to help keep him on a good, straight path. During a woman’s moon time (menstrual cycle); she is not allowed to participate in ceremony. Unfair? Nope. In the spiritual context of many different Nations, a man is said to get his power from the Creator through a series of cleansing and purifying ceremonies. A woman-gets her power directly from the earth — the mother of all. Her power is seen to be stronger than a man’s because she is cleansed and purified naturally, through her moon time. She. therefore, does not need to participate in these ceremonies and is considered more powerful, spiritually, than a man. During her moon time a woman’s power is at its strongest and can render even the most powerful ceremonies ineffective. These are not new concepts. They are traditions of Native people handed down from generation to genera­ tion. Our women are not the disrespected, slave labor that some books and movies would make them out to be. Women have a highly respected and honored place in Indian society. Which leads me back to the squaw issue. Two highly motivated and respected young Native Am erican women have taken it upon them selves to remove the word "squaw" from all landmarks in the state of Arizona. They came up with the idea about a year ago and then found out that two young women tackled this same issue in the state of Minnesota and that state agreed with them, removing the offensive term from all state landmarks. One of the young wom en here in A rizona is of Cherokee and Choctaw lineage and the other is Pima and Lakota. They have launched a massive letter writing campaign to public officials both at the state and national levels. They have been interviewed by radio and televi­ sion stations locally and have made their battle known on the Internet, which has brought them a plethora of support letters from concerned Indian and non-Indian people from across the country. Many times we, as university level students knowl­ edgeable of the world around us, tend to stick our heads in the sand and say: “It doesn’t affect me — who cares,” while younger people stand and try to make a differ­ ence. The two young women I speak o f here are both straight-A students and both are only 15-years-old. They are taking a stand to remove a name from the state of Arizona that they and many Indian people find highly offensive and that they are exposed to on a daily basis. Huge signs scream “Squaw Peak,” or “Squaw Peak Parkway.” Traffic reporters on radio and television talk about the traffic on the Squaw Peak Parkway in their reports every five m inutes during the m orning and evening rush hours. I applaud these two young women and their courage — the courage of Native American warriors — to change something that they can no longer stand by and watch. ; For more information on this highly debated issue contact: Delena Waddle and Seipe Flood. AIM Arizona Youth Council, 140.E. Hampton Ave.. Mesa, AZ. 85210. Tina Holder is a senior studying justice studies. A Republicans should fear facts I urn w ritin g in resp o n se to the Washington: “Republicans Aren't Worried" letter pubVoted against creating the Drug Czar's li shed on Oct. 2. Jon Ramsey took great Office. pains in belaboring some of the events Has consistently voted tor tax increases w hich h a re plagued th e. C lin to n iti his 3.5 year tenure as a member, of Administration, but which have little rele- Congress. varice to the issues that the vast majority ' .* W ants to help Newt G ingrich slash ot Americans really care about. Let s take Medicare and Medicaid, letting it “wither a look at the adm inistration's record on on the vine." thè issues that the American people really: * Has consistently opposed the Minimum care about: Wage Law. while he received S66 an hour * Established the office of the drug czar, to debate on the floor of the U.S. Senate, to step up the attack in the war on drugs. * Has consistently opposed family and * Has reduced the deficit for three years medical leave. in a row. First president to do so since * Has consistently voted to make student Harry S. Truman. loans harder to get, despite the fact that * Has created 10 1/2 million new jobs in he w ent to c o lleg e b ecau se o f the the past 4 years. • American GI Bill. * Signed the minimum wage law, making These are the facts which will decide it easier for families to survive without this election. Look at the facts. Look at both adults having to work more than one the numbers. Republicans aren’t scared? job just to make ends meet. Then explain to me why both Dole and * Signed the Family Medical Leave Law, to Jack Kemp had to visit Arizona within a make sure that parents could take time off month of each other. Why would both of from work when a child is born, without the top GOP standard-bearers feel the having to worry about losing their job. need to visit Arizona, a state that has not * Working with Vice President Al Gore, voted for a Democrat since 1948? Face Clinton has reduced the size of the federal the facts. If Republicans in Arizona aren’t governm ent to the low est it has been scared, they should be. since John F. Kennedy was president. M arcus Milam Now. le t’s take a look at w>hat Bob Ju n io r Dole has really done in his 35 years in Political science uota6C es . . . “It may be necessary temporarily to accept a lesser evil, but one must never label a necessary evil as good.” Pennies can aid in change I am writing this proposal to challenge the faculty, staff and student body o f ASU : to save their pennies to help better our campus and local community. I would like to call on all of the aforementioned groups to join in an effort to raise money to help worthwhile causes and groups that make a difference in our everyday world. I recently read an article in Parade magazine, which spoke of a project organized by the students in a New York City middle school. The project was called “Common Cents.” and simply involved getting students, parents, teachers and community groups to save their spare pennies. During the course of one year, these students col­ lected four-and-a-half tons of pennies. These pennies were used to buy clothes for the homeless and to stock soup kitchens. As one young lady so aptly put it, “People treat pennies like trash. But if you put them all together, they really add up.” What I would like to propose is for student organizations, faculty/staff organiza­ tions, fratemities/sororities, residence halls and office pools on campus to begin saving their pennies in a common receptacle. It could be a tin can or an old milk container (rinsed out, of course). This is an idea that everyone can participate in, yet it costs us nothing except the spare pennies that weigh us down all the time. Just think how much we could help our community and campus with the money that we would amass together. Moreover, I would like to invoke a sense of compet­ itiveness into this challenge by proposing that a traveling trophy be made to recog­ nize the group that raises the most money each academic year. In other words, who “made the most cents.” Some groups have participated in this “harvesting of pennies” and have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars. We are the fourth largest university in America; I believe that we can do just as well — or better. I am more than willing to help coor­ dinate this effort, as the graduate student affairs vice president within AS ASU. I believe that this project could be a successful perennial program on our campus. I ask for your help and participation in this worthwhile endeavor, remembering full well that “a little change can change a lot.” I specifically challenge the Faculty Senate, classified staff and student organiza­ tions on campus to promote this idea to their memberships. If we all cooperate on this project, we will most surely make a significant difference in bettering our com­ munity. By the way, we wouldn’t want to be outdone by a group of middle school kids, now would we? That would make no “cents” at all. If interested, please contact my office at 965-3161. Andy Ortiz Graduate Student Affairs Vice President, Associated Students of ASU Graduate Student Law/Public Affairs — M argaret M ead, in Redbook m agazine. e -m a il t o t h e e d it o r N ovem ber 1978. h r w 2 7 t4 @ lm a p 2 .a s u .e d u S tate P ress Tuesday, October 8, 1996 P age 6 P olice R eport A SU police reported the following incidents Monday: • A male affiliated with ASU reported that someone criminal­ ly damaged an ash can in the Life Sciences Building E-wing. • A male affiliated with ASH was contacted at Best Hall, where he had become ill. He was transported to a local hospital. • A male affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited arid released for assault at Manzanita Hall. • A female affiliated with ASU was contacted at Sahuaro Hall, where she sustained an injury. She was transported to a local hospital. • A male student reported that someone unlawfully entered his room at Manzanita Hall and removed $10 and a black light. • A female student reported that she received harassing phone calls in Palo Verde East. • Three male students were contacted on Alpha Drive in. reference to construction material in the bed of their truck. The material was returned to. the construction site and the owner refused prosecution. tem pe police reported the following incidents Monday: • A woman was arrested at M aloney’s Bar, 955 E. University Drive, after assaulting a woman while involved in an altercation with her boyfriend and his ex-girlfriend» The woman attempted to throw beer at the ex-girlfriend and then struck the woman in the head with a beer glass, caus­ ing a small cut about the victim's eye. She was booked into Tempe City Jail. ■ • A man was arrested at Club 411. 411 S. Mill Ave., for aggravated assault after investigations revealed the man broke a glass bottle over a bouncer's head during an alter­ cation. The bouncer required treatment and was transported to Tempe St. Luke's Hospital. The man was booked into Tempe City Jail. • A man was arrested at 5402 S. 46th Place after investiga­ tions revealed he had violated an order of protection by going to his ex-girlfriend's property. While at the woman's residence, the man proclaimed that he was “sent by the government to kill someone." • A woman was arrested after investigations revealed she bit her husband during an argument over his marijuana. The man sustained minor injuries and refused medical treatment at the scene. She was booked into Tempe City Jail. Compiled by State Press reporter Kennes Bolig. P tetêS •jo;Pi -Yi.rt -V WÉ H * 2 ÏÉ 0 ’ f i ■ F$1U È ìt & Y : fs s m i C a MPUS-1 l C o r n e r -! 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C ollege S tre e t D eli 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 across fro m C o ffe e Plantation C h a n g i n g The Shape Of H orte y The Ü S WE:ST Telecard. It's like money. O nly better. N o m ore scrounging for sp a re c h an g e. Jse Telecards a t a n y U S WEST p a y p h o n e with the yellow c a rd slot Local o r long distance, you'I g e t U S WEST's best rates So g e t Telecard. A nd save-your .change for cleaner, brighter briefs., EVERY DAY Tuesday, October 8, 1996 State P ress ATLANTA (AP) Don't count on any political lectures from Sen. Sam Nunn once he retires at the end of the year. He’s learned a lesson from House Speaker Newt Gingrich. The House ethics committee is investigating a college course taught by Gingrich. R-Ga.. to determine whether it was a political activity that violated tax laws. Says Democrat Nunn, who will give guest lectures at Georgia Tech; "1 am going to go see my good friend Newt and say, 'Newt, give me a checklist of all the things you did.’ And then I'm going to avoid those.” “I’m getting Out of politics,” Nurth said Monday, “They're not going to be getting any political lectures from me.” A form er chairm an of the Senate Arm ed Services Committee. Nunn has been in the Senate for 24 years. He will serve part-time and for no pay at Tech, and said he will probably practice law. "As my wife asks me every day when I get home and tell her about another non-profit opportunity, she says, ‘How are you going to make a living?’ 1 think that is a rele­ vant question,” Nunn said. MILWAUKEE (AP) —** James Lovell Jr. is finally get­ ting his due in his hometown, more than 25 years after the mayor scrapped plans to name a museum wing after the Apollo 13 commander. His popularity as commander of the Apollo 8 flight prompted wooing from the Republican Party and a promise in 1970 from city officials to name the science wing of the Discovery World Museum in his honor. It never happened. Mayor Henry Maier scrapped the plan, saying he was worried that Lovell would come after his job. “Old Mayor Maier was sort of paranoid about it,” Lovell told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. , Not to worry. This time, the whole museum will be named for Lovell. He will place his footprints in cement at the front door Oct. 18 with the inscription “Don’t Be Afraid of Tomorrow.” Lovell was played by Tom Hanks in Apollo 13 about the 1970 space flight crippled by an explosion. BURLINGTON. Vt. (AP) — Martin Sheen praised a new documentary that profiles the life of William Brennan, calling the retired Supreme Court Justice one of his heroes. “It’s hard for us to look anywhere ... that he has not touched,” Sheen said. “And thank God for him.” Sheen, 56, who narrates the film, may get a chance to meet Brennan. Nancy Brennan has invited Sheen to meet her father in November. BURBANK, Calif. (AP) — Madonna’s latest single “You Must Love Me,” from the soundtrack for the soon-tobe-released film Evita, debuted Monday on the World Wide Web The film stars Madonna as the ambitious Eva Perón, wife of former Argentine President Juan Perón. ' The song, which will be released to radio stations W ednesday, can be found on W arner Bros." Online Jukebox and on the company’s home page. Madonna isn’t breaking new ground here. Rock star David Bowie last week released his latest single, ‘Telling Lies,” exclusively on the Internet. coooacopqc MIGUEL'S MUSIC CENTER T O N I G H T > METRONOMES • ACCESSORIES • ETC. > ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS >A M P S •ELEC TR IC EFFECTS • SHEET MUSIC > LESSONS (Hock • Contemporary • Folk • Classic Guitarj > REPAIRS > On A ll Instrum ents! ‘ ...a n d much MORE! In The Arches Shopping Center 130 E. U niversity Dr. 968-2310 KJ NEW MUSIC FORMAT >V V V V V V ^V V ^V V V J w it h D J JO E State Press Tuesday, October 8, 1996 Page 8 W ho won debate depends on who answers B y L idia E. Kelly S pecial to the S tate P ress . M onday's big question at ASU was who won the presidential debate — it depends on who you asked, “Clinton wins.” said Lee Bolin, president of ASU Young Democrats/Students for Clinton/Gore ‘96. Bolin said President Clinton offered a "striking vision of America," adding that a number of students sw itched v oter re g istra tio n from R ep u b lican s to Democrats Monday. “ASU is a Clinton/Gore country," Bolin said. R obert K errigan, chairm an o f the C ollege Republicans, Said Dole came out ahead, and the former Kansas senator “came across as a man from middle America.” Kerrigan said Dole addressing youth in his closing remarks was a necessity. “ Even if Dole does not w in ,” he said , “the Republicans will go into the 21st century with youth supporting them,” Kerrigan called the debate an “old time” one. saying that it resenibled the debate between Kennedy and Nixon. “It wasn’t like the attacking shows we watched during last few debates.” Ed Delci, adviser for ASU Young Democrats, picked Clinton as a winner. “President Clinton left the debate with a prize,” Delci said. “This prize is his re-election in November." Delci said Clinton clearly addressed all the key issues and his focusing on education is “future oriented.” while Dole is “stuck in the past.” Richard Dagger, a professor in political science, said that the debate was “interesting but not exciting." “It was not a real debate.” Dagger said. “It looked more like two separate press conferences, where candi­ dates answered the questions.” Dagger said that while the debate was useful in out­ lining the differences between the two candidates, in general such debates are not necessary. “Everyone has pretty clear opinions going into the debate." he added. "Those who favored one of the can­ didates before the debate do so after the debate.” A CBS news poll on Sunday night showed that 50 percent of viewers chose Clinton to “win” the debate. while 28 percent favored Dole. t Dagger said that neither of the candidates clearly pre­ sented their agendas on educational and drug issues. “Dole never said what is his position on private schools,” he said. “Clinton never clearly commented the drug problem.” Donald Dalgleish, professor in military science and adviser for the College Republicans, said he believes that not many people are influenced by debates. “Today people don't care about the issues the candi­ dates carry.” he said. “What they care is the image and visuality.” Dalgleish said that young people are not impressed by wisdom or experience. “They react to a sudden impact and spontaneity,” he said. He said he agreed with Dole’s stand against using tax money to pay for education. “Who the hell entitled students to go to college on som eone’s expenses?" D algleish asked. “The other thing is that there are too many damn students to be in college anyway. Why should we pay for their going to bars every Friday or watching sports events?” S tate P ress S ports W e T H E R E W H E N Y O U C A N ’T BE CRO SSW O RD b y THOM AS JO S E P H W hile you’re collecting seashells, Y o u r after-tax annuity could be * collecting * returns. And that’s just what you want: an annuity that works harder than you do. TIAA’s Teachers Personal Annuity* is specifically designed to provide tax-deferred growth potential to people who are already contributing the maximum to before-tax retirement plans, or who currently have after-tax money in taxable savings or investments. With TIAA’s long-term, after-tax savings annuity, you can take advantage of the security of the Fixed Account, the growth potential of the variable Stock Index Account, or a combination of the two accounts. TFAfTTFRÇ .PERSONA] A N N U IT Y You also benefit from ■ Low initial investment require­ ments ■ The convenience of making regularly-sched­ uled deposits to your account via Electronic Funds Transfers ■ No current surrender charges ■ No-fee transfers between Teachers Personal Annuity accounts* ■ The flexibility of having no minimum withdrawal requirements at age 70 V/ ■ The retirement expertise of the largest pension system in the United States (based on assets under management). tf you’re looking forward to collecting seashells, now is the tim e to request a fre e inform ation packet. Call 1 800 842-1924, Dept. 85K. Also, look for TIAA on the Internet: http://www.tiaa-cref.org Thachers Insurance and Annuity Association 730 Third Avenue, New Yoik, NY 10017 For more complete information about the Stock Index Account, including charges and expenses, call 1 800 842-J924for a prospectus. Please read the prospectus carefully before you invest or send money. The variable component o f the Teachers Personal Annuity contract is distributed by Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary o f Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association. * The minimum amount you can withdraw or transferfrom either account is $1,000. Because o f the long-term nature o f the Fixed Account’s investments, transfers and withdrawals from that account are limited to once everyjS months. fThe earnings portion o f a withdrawal is subject to regular income tax, and before age 59'^, may be subject too 10% federaltax penalty (and in some states, premium taxes will be deducted). -r 0 1996TeachersInsuranceandAnnuityAmocuukxi ACROSS com poser 1 P ool-table 42 Fencing swords props 6 Passover 43 V isionar­ dinner ies 11 W orship DOWN of Allah 1 Talk-show 12 Garlic unit host Lake 13 Sautded 2 Pale Mexican 3 Singer Y e ste rd a y’s A n sw e r dish Patsy 15 Barbie's 4 ------------El 10 Takes Chagall (Super­ beau offense at 30 Pours 16 Abrade m an's 14 Pound 31 She 17 R efinery Krypton sterling played 3need name) Down in 19 Byway 18 Indisposi­ 5 In a 22 W aiting“Sweet tion to stylish room call Dreams” move way 23 Embassy 32 M ystery 20 Stim py’s 6 Diving w orker w riting pal style 24 Manaward 21 Archaic 7 Yale handle 33 Crowd player 22 Tree 2 5 E .L . sounds house 8 “— Doctorow 38 W est of 23 O rder C laiborne” book Hollywood 9 Asian . 26 D efeats 26 Groups 39 Pub 27 Hopping peak 28 Painter order critte r 1 2 3 4 5 7 8 9 1 0 28 W riter 6 1 1 Brand 1 2 29 Pull 1 4 1 3 gently 1 5 30 W estern serpent 1 8 2 0 19 34 Repre­ sentative: 2 1 2 2 Abbr. 2 3 2 4 2 5 2 6 35 C ircle b it 36 Bother 2 7 2 8 37 Fried Mexican 2 9 3 0 3V^3 2 3 3 dish 3 4 3 5 3 6 40 Kind of nature o r 3 8 3 7 3 9 rights 41 “Pomp 4 0 4 1 ; and 4 2 4 3 Circum ­ stance” . 1 ■ 16 J ■ J1 ■ ” uÂm 1 ■I1 ;■ 1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOIES — H ere's h o w to w o rk it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W O n e le tte r stan d s for an o th e r. In th is sam p le A is used for th e th re e L's, X for th e tw o O's, etc. Single letters, ap o stro p h es, th e le n g th a n d fo rm a tio n o f th e Words are all h in ts. Each d ay th e co d e letters are d ifferent. 10-8 cry pto q u o tes S Z O O M Z Y G W G Q Z J V B G DG M D MV S Z P V G S K V Z V M A T SZ P M SJ S A U K A K J E Z O Q A S W M T G D M S J S F M V B A U V B G A K KA O VJ TMV X. — V G A O Y G W G O T Z O C D B Z F Y e s te r d a y 's C r y p t o q u o t e : HISTORY IS FROM DAY T O DAY; A N D IT IS N O T EVENTS; IT IS THE P R O G R E SS O F T H O U G H T .— A LFR ED N O R T H W HITEHEAD Page 9 Tuesday, October 8,1996 St a t e P ress FLAGSTAFF (AP) — U S. Rep. J.D. Hayworth, attacked by his oppo­ nent for opposing environmental caus­ es, is earning praise from one comer after passage o f a bill to expand Walnut Canyon National Monument. Betsy McKellar, co-coordinator of the F riends of W alnut Canyon, applauded the efforts of Arizona’s entire congressional delegation in backing the expansion proposal. But it was Hay worth, a Republican and the bill’s sponsor, who drew the biggest praise, \ “He worked really hard, he really did,” McKellar said. The bill was passed last week at the end of the 104th Congress and is expect­ ed to be signed by President Clinton. It would expand the federal park south of. Flagstaff by 50 percent to protect 800year-old Sinaguan cliff dwellings found outside its old boundaries. Hayworth cited the Walnut Canyon expansion as another example of the “balance” he is trying to create when dealing with-environmental issues. Steve Owens, H ayw orth’s D em ocratic challenger in the 6th District, downplayed the bill’s signifi­ cance. He said it was not controversial add was m erely a gift from Republican leaders. Owens said GOP leaders almost let the Walnut Canyon measure go “down the tubes” because of their insistence on controversial amendments to the legislation. VALUABLE COUPON SAVINGS! JUST RIP THIS STRIP, CLIP THEM APART AND SAVE BUCKS! H ayw orth lauded for work in W alnut Canyon expansion Under threat o f C linton’s veto, Republicans eventually stripped the bill of measures that would have given ranchers preferential grazing rights and increased corporate sponsorship of national parks. , Owens also noted Hayworth has voted to cut the budget o f the Environmental Protection Agency and denounced his opponent’s efforts to create a review commission for the national park system. Hayworth said he voted for the review commission as a way to make the system more cost-efficient. He said criticism that smaller parks would be shut down and auctioned off were “blatant untruths” intended to scare voters. M a ro o n a n d G o ld w ill s a v e you so m e g re e n . % of f Mitsubishi Spyder Eclipse 20% off regular daily or weekly rental rates. To get this great deal, ju s t make a reservation 2 4 hours in advance and ask for account 5 4 9 0 0 . You m ust present your student I.D. a t time o f rental to receive a 20% discount o ff our regular daily or weekly rental rates. This offer cannot be combined with other offers or used for hourly rentals. Some restrictions and blackouts apply. A surcharge applies for drivers 2 1 through 2 4 . Offer expires December 1 5 ,1 9 9 6 . Scottsdale 4 5 4 5 N. S cottsd ale Rd. 6 7 5 -8 8 0 4 V a lu e Rent-A-Car 1-SOO-GO-VALUE Coupon m ust be presented a t tim e o f rental. Coupon has no cash value- Discount does not apply to optional services, taxes, governm ent fees, fuel, underage drivers surcharge, o r a irp o rt access fees. 3 I" State P ress Tuesday, October 8, 1996 Page 10 PHOENIX PHOENIX PHOENIX Supreme Court shields judges from taxes WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court, saying its hands were tied by potential conflicts o f interest, shielded som e federal ju d g es M onday from having to pay certain taxes imposed o n m ost Americans. A N Y F R E SH PASTA F O C A C C IA F IO R E N T IN A “A U T H E N T IC IT A L IA N F O O D , SERV ED FA ST” 6 th St 8i M iii B ehind C offee M arnatim i • 9 6 6 -0 9 0 0 L0CK-IT« LOCKERS Self Storage Two Months for the Price of One! 1135 W. Broadway ASU football fans Cittk Little Szechuan invites yòo to celebrate. Good luck in pursuit o f th e Rose Bowtt Szechuan Buy one Dinner Combo or A La Cartel dish and get the 2nd A 1/2 price, 1 966-7660 j 524 W. University Í tëôWafter 3|»m M-Sat. valid «Itti seafood. If , 'Otherco«pan. Limit-ane cotçton per table. r Exfwes: 9*^0^ ": . : || -É 50% OFF H airc ut RLLS I Ä n a il s w ith N a d in e o n ly IW7H G ina o n ly • 1st person pays admission • 2 nd person skates free 7 • S kate'rental extra O ceanside Ice A rena • 941'0944 Four justices who might have a financial stake disquali­ fied themselves from considering the case. Their action kept the court from gaining a quorum of six jurists to take the case, and thereby sealed the outcome in a way that could benefit them financially , Monday’s action, although not a precedent-setting deci­ sion. had the effect of upholding a lower court's ruling that said it was illegal to begin requiring federal judges to pay Medicare and Social Security taxes in 1983 and 1984. The order, one of more than 1,500 issued as the court began its 1996-97 term, was extraordinary. Court officials could not immediately find the last time the justices had been so stymied. The result is a victory for 16 federal judges who sued the government in 1989 over tax-law amendments enacted earlier in the decade. Those amendments for the first time extended Social Security and Medicare taxation to the president, vice presi­ dent, members of Congress and the president’s Cabinet, federal judges and all new employees of the federal gov­ ernment’s executive and legislative branches. The 16 federal judges, all already appointed to their life­ time jobs when the tax laws were changed in 1983, con­ tended that new taxes unlawfully diminished their salaries and thereby threatened judicial independence. The impact of Monday’s order may not be limited to those 16 judges, however. Justice Department lawyers, who had urged the Supreme Court to tackle the case, argued that the lower court’s rationale might prohibit Congress “from applying any increase in the rate of any tax, including the income tax, to sitting judges’ salaries.” In other action, the court: • Rejected the appeal of Theodore Kaczynski, who con­ tended that his prosecution on Unabomber attacks has been so tainted by news leaks that the government should forfeit its right to make him stand trial. • Let a New York public school district continue to make charitable community service a high school gradua­ tion requirement. • Passed up a chance to decide, in a T exas case involving allegedly outrageous behavior by junior high school boys, whether educators violate federal law when they fail to stop students from sexually harassing other students. • Rejected a challenge by five Wisconsin anti-abor­ tion protesters to a federal law that protects access to abortion clinics. • Turned down the bid of former Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker and two others to quash charges brought by Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr that they plot- ted to hide profits from a m ultim illion-dollar cable television deal. « Heard arguments in a dispute over a federal law that requires cable television systems to carry local broadcast stations. Cable operators told the justices the “must carry” law violates their free-speech rights, but government lawyers said without it, some broadcast stations might be forced out of business. In the tax dispute involving federal judges, Justices John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O’Connor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer disqualified themselves from con­ sidering the case. All had been federal judges before the 1983 law change. Although C hief Justice W illiam H. Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and Anthony M. Kennedy were federal judges before 1983, they agreed to participate in the case — apparently convinced they were ineligible for the favorable tax treatment because of their respective promo­ tions since thep. Only two o f the ju stices — David H. Souter and Clarence Thomas — were not federal judges as of 1983. “Since the effect was to create an affirmance of the lower court’s ruling, they were probably more circumspect than they had to be,” New York University law professor Stephen Gillers said of the four justices who disqualified themselves. _ “There is something called the ‘rule of necessity,’ which allows the court to act when the interest in having the mat­ ter decided is deemed more important than the potential of having a conflict,” he said. Gillers, a legal ethics expert, said it’s possible the court might sonie day revisit the issue if one of the four disquali­ fied justices is replaced by someone who was not a federal judge in 1983. • The Constitution, which makes federal judgeships life­ time appointments, further protects judicial independence by stating that judges’ “compensation... shall not be dimin­ ished during their continuance in office.” The 16 judges’ 1989 lawsuit contended that exposing their salaries to taxes they were not required to pay when they took office amounted to an unlawful diminution of compensation. A claims court ruled against the judges but a federal appeals court — comprised of three judges who took office after 1984 — reversed that rilling and said the 16 judges who sued need not pay the challenged taxes. The appeals court sent the case back to the claims court to decide what refunds should be made. Each of the judges had paid over $40,000 in challenged taxes by then, The Clinton administration took the appeals court’s decision to the Supreme Court. It is unclear whether any judge Who waited longer than six years — the statute of limitations on tax issues *— to challenge the 1983 and 1984 tax changes still may do so. M a n a g e m e n t T r a in e e s / S a l e s C o o r d in a t o r s BUILD SUCCESS As ihe notion's #1 heavy equipm ent rental company, H ertz Equipment Rental Corporation can build careers like no one else. Here, you'll discover o ff the success and stability an industry leader can provide, com bined w ith all ihe opportunity an aggressive, growth oriented organization can offer. A t HERC, w e're looking for only the most motivated individuals. Am bitious college graduates w ho are eager to learn and are genuinely interested in pursuing a career-track opportunity. As a p art o f our M anagem ent Training Program, you'll be ab le to select your own career path — in Sales, Branch M anagem ent, Regional M anagem ent, or Corporate. O penings are currently available throughout the Mresiem region. Limit out coupon kr customer kr visit. Not yam mi combination with any oimer offer. tall A TM RTieifM HKLO CA TIO N S.EXPIRES12/31/96. FREE B A L L O O N S !! with a $15 minimum purchase Your dedication and hard w ork w ill earn you imm ediate m onagem entlevel responsibility; on-the-job training; an excellent salary with bonus potential; and generous benefits (induding m edical and lile insurance, denial assistance, vision and hearing coverage, retirem ent plan, income savings plan, tuition reimbursement, paid holidays, vocation, and em ployee discounts). A ll w ith the support of the nation's largest, most recognized nam e in renting and selling, construction/ industrial equipm ent to contractors, industry and government. If you've got w hat it takes to succeed, H ertz Equipment Rental is equipped to g iv e you the future. For imm ediate consideration,please rax o r send your resume to: Attn: Dept JH, Herts Equipment Rental Corporation, 18881 Von Karman Avenue, Suite 1100, Irvine, CA 92713, FAX* (714) 995*1092. Check«»* ptrb•*N*»*X AnEqual Opportunity Employer E quipm entR en ta ! Page 11 T u e s d a y , O c to b e r 8 , 1 9 9 6 Sta te P ress G e o r g e B u s h ‘t r o u b le d ’ b y C lin t o n ’s c h a r a c te r ^ ▼ The State Press is km now hiring qualified students to work evenings in the State Press production department. Experience with QuarkXPress, Adobe Photoshop, and Aldus Freehand in a Macintosh environment required. Stop by the State Press offices in the basement of Matthews inter to pick up an application today call the production department at 965-2097 for more information. RESS N e tw o r k w ith th e V alley's A d v ertisin g & M ark etin g P r o fe ssio n a ls... (AP) — Form er President George Bush said Monday he remained ‘'troubled” by character questions : surrounding President Clinton, but stopped short of sug­ gesting that Bob Dole turn it into a cam ­ B ush paign issue. “If Bob Dole goes after some of the contem porary tria ls and trib u latio n s (faced by Clinton), he’s going to get clob­ bered,” Bush said. “He’ll get clobbered by his opponents and he’ll get clobbered by the press.” ■ Bush tried to avoid election-year com­ mentary during an appearance before an international gathering of Best Western hotel executives;. But he waded into the fray during a question-and-answer session. Bush made a veiled reference to Clinton as an example of the declining level of trust in public officials, recalling his own failed re-election Campaign four years ago. At the time, Bush painted Clinton as a closet liberal and warned voters to “hold onto your wallet” when listening to his opponent’s campaign promises of a middleclass tax cut. Clinton instead raised taxes in the first year of his administration. ' “I’m deeply troubled when people are asked of any public servant, *Do you believe what he says,’ and the answer is no," Bush said. * But asked whether Dole should emphasize problems dogging the Clinton admin­ istration, including allegations of fraud in an Arkansas land deal arid the misuse o f secret FBI files by White House staffers, Bush hesitated, “I don’t know that I’m in a position to give advice,” he said. “You saw what hap­ pened to me.” But despite “ugliness” that has crept into contemporary politics, Bush said public State P ress SjPQDlfiTO service Still requires leaders with a vision fo r th? future. “I think politics is a noble calling,” he said. “If people sit on the sidelines, then you get the lowest denominator of people running.our country." Bush trumpeted the foreign-policy tri­ umphs made under his administration and that of his predecessor, Ronald Reagan, saying the Soviet empire crumbled as the result of a “war of ideas.” But he warned against complacency in future relations with other countries, saying the United States should not give up its role as the world’s only remaining superpower, “The chance of a nuclear exchange between superpowers is now nonexistent, but we can’t get complacent,” Bush said. “We can’t neglect our obligations in fund­ ing a well-maintained defense,” . In a far corner of the Phoenix Civic Plaza complex, about a half-dozen people protested Bush’s appearance. The group demanded an investigation into reports that Bush, as vice president under Reagan, headed a covert operation that flooded the streets of Los Angeles with crack cocaine as a way to fund the Nicaraguan Contras. “George Bush was running the opera­ tion,” said Maria Elena Milton, a Democrat challenging U.S. Rep. John Shadegg, RAriz.., in the 4th District. “W e have hundreds of thousands of principally Hispanics and blacks in jails. We've got so many tough-on-crime politi­ cians out there, but why don’t they go after the crack cocaine kingpin of the world? That's George Bush.” The demonstrators unfurled a banner calling Bush the “Grand Old Pusher of the R epublican P arty ,” playing on the Republicans’ GOP monicker. Bush, ushered to a waiting car imme­ diately after his speech, was not avail­ able to answer questions regarding the cocaine allegations. W e're th e re w h e n y o u c a n 't be. 00 HUMANS HAIR STUDIO O FF 966-5462 Located in The Arches Plaza M-TH U n iversity Fri. Sat. 9-8 9-6 9-5 CONSULT • SHAMPOO CONDITION • CUT Reg. s17 men/s19 women Expires 10/23/96 H ii NATIONAL COMING OUT DAY W EEK ACTIVITIES TUESDAY OCT. 8 WEDNESDAY OCT. 9 FRIDAY OCT. 11 Sponsored by Lambda League ▼ Coming Out Discussion Group 6 pm SSV M ulticultural Lounge ▼ Panel Discussion 1pm MU Programming Lounge v Rainbow Alliance Meeting 7:30 pm 209 Yavapai Room Memorial Union ▼ Rally on Hayden Lawn 10 am-1 pm ▼ Reception MU 3rd floor 1-3 pm V Dance/ 7-11 pm Student Services Building Terrace FRID AY IS N C O D - Su: our \n in t o m o r r o w 's S ia t i: P ri ss S t a t e P ress Tuesday, October 8, 1996 Page 12 Sym ington defense calls for prosecutors to specify charges (AP) — Gov. Fife Symington’s lawyers said Monday his trial defense lacks focus because prosecutors refuse to itemize how he allegedly lied to lenders. Symington's.lawyers asked U.S. District Judge Roger Strand to order federal prose­ cutors to specify what portions of various Sym ington financial statem ents are allegedly false. Because of the amount of information on each of the 20 or so statem ents which Symington Submitted to potential or current lenders, it's unfair for prosecutors not to have to itemize what specific information is in dispute, Symington’s lawyers argued. ; “That’s an enormous amount of informa­ tion to have to prepare to defend if we have Get Creative Get Published to assume that every entry is false,” said defense lawyer Luis Mejia, “It makes it very difficult to prepare for trial.” Assistant U.S. Attorney David Schindler said the requested information had been provided in grand testimony and other material already turned over to the defense. Symington, a former real estate develop­ er, is scheduled to stand trial March 18 on a 23-count grand jury indictment issued June 13. Among other things, it accuses Symington of submitting dramatically vary­ ing financial statements to lenders as he tried to obtain new loans or get out of guar­ antees he’d made on old ones. “This is a wholesale false entry case,” Schindler told Strand. Go ahead. Make our day. The 1 9 9 6 / 9 7 Spark Yearbook is accepting entries for the Reflections section — you know, that cool part of the book where t h e r e V n o rules? We're accepting pretty much everything this year, so give us your best shot! We'll make ya famous! S h o r t sto ries - 8 0 0 words or less P o etry - 3 0 lin es or less Photography p p p p ip IBM IMHRMI ' P -^ ì ì m W '- . S tate P ress o n l in e - .... . .......... .. m http://new s.vpsa.asu.edu Bring yoar boat pieces te the besement ef Matthews Center, room SO (Yeorbook office) er room IS (State Press reception) by Doe. 6* 1996 p — — —— COUPON D e s e r t i 2 weeks T a n n in . ■ Unlimited tanning N a ii 1 For more information, call 965-6881 or 965-6838 I ‘19 Please include this form with your subm issions Not Valid With Any Other Offer • Exp. 10/31/96J — — — — — — — — — COUPON — — — — 1 M O N TH $ 2 0 9 5 j U N L IM IT E D 2 I Not Valid with any T A N N IN G other offer • Exp. 10/31/96 You w ant to be th e N a m e :____ 1 Student ID: I Major: Year: _ f ir s t M a c in to s h . to M o re f l e x i b l e th a n e re r* We don’t know how you’ll fill In the blank. That's why we make MaidntooH’ computers so flexible. To help you be the first to do whatever you want to do. And with word processing, easy Internet eocene, powerful multimedia and cross-platform compatibility, a M eC m akseiteveneuiertodolt. How do you get started? Visit your campus computer «tore today and pick up a Mac. ^1996 Mple CoH^mter. Inc Ml nxbkresenud Apple, tlx Apple logo. Macand Macmtosbare ngatend trademarks ofAppiè Computer. Inc. Ali Maanlosb computm are designedlo be accessibleto mdaiduals uilb disabildy.lb learn more(US. only), call800-600-7808or TTY809-755-060I. (form may be photocopied) Tuesday, October 8, 1996 State P ress P a g e l3 O n e y e a r la te r , A m t r a k p r o b e p lo d s o n PHOENIX (AP) — After two years of living in motels, Mitchell Bates had just found a new apartment and Was looking forward to meeting a friend to buy a futon at the end of his workday as an Amtrak attendant. But his dream of furnishing his haven ended before dawn Oct. 9, 1995, when Amtrak’s Sunset Limited hit a section of vandalized track and plunged into a gulch in the Arizona desert. 55 miles southwest of Phoenix. Bates, a 4 1-year-old sleeping car attendant, was killed and 78 other people were injured. The FBI declared it sabotage within hours. But a year later, investigators still have not been able to say who was the saboteur. Agents still are stumped by a bizarre letter found at the derailment site. It was signed "Sons of the Gestapo" and referred to the federal standoffs at Waco and Ruby Ridge, Idaho. , Jack Callahan, an FBI spokesman in Phoenix, said the agency doesn’t even know whether the group exists, except “in the mind of the person who wrote the letter.” He insisted the FBI believes it will solve the cáse, but others, were skeptical. “I feel it's going nowhërè,” said Sidney Carson, a long­ time friend of Bates who was supposed to pick him up in Eos Angeles and take him shopping on the ill-fated day. “Eve asked myself: Why him, but then again, why any­ body?” The Sunset Limited was Close to finishing its trip from Miami to Los Angeles when it derailed. Someone had pulled out 29 spikes anchoring the track and rewired a sale- ty device that would have warned the crew of damage. The FBI has questioned railroad buffs, hotline callers and people who live near the derailment site. The agency did a “psycho-linguistic” analysis of the anti-government note and even appealed for help on the television show “Unsolved Mysteries.” The FBI has declared no suspects, but says the investiga­ tion's focus has narrowed. The team investigating the derailment also has slimmed down, from 150 people a year ago to 15. “The focus right now is Arizona,” Callahan said. “1 think there are people who have some information we feel would be vital to the successful outcome of the investiga­ tion." The FBI appeared to have a break in the case when they raided the home of John Olin in Val Verde, Calif. Olin. a former Arizona man and a railroad contractor, once had a dispute with the company that owns the tracks where the train derailed. Olin was never arrested. His lawyer, Allan Sarkin. said the raid and media frenzy was just like that surrounding Richard Jewell, the hero-tumed-suspect in this summer’s deadly Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta who is still wait­ ing for an official apology. "Getting accused of something is big news,” Sarkin said. “The fact that you’re not is not news at all.” The Sunset Limited no longer runs across the stretch of ' Associated Press desert where the derailment happened. Amtrak scrapped its Federal investigators search fo r evidence at the scene o f the use of the track because it didn’t have the money for need­ Amtrak Sunset Lim ited wreckage near Hyder on Oct, 10,1995, ed improvements. a day after the train derailed- W ithin hours of the derailment, the FBI declared it an act of sabotage. spmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspmspnnspmspm m N C I T O N M \ Il W every thursday MCAT Early A c c e s s S t a r t s Nov. 16! IN THE MEMORIAL UNION BUH-Ö1NG LOWER LEVEL M-F 10-6PM 9 6 5 -7 2 2 2 1 -8 0 0 -2 R E V IE W ADVERTISEMENT A R IZ O N A S U N D A Y , OCTOBER 2 0 , 1 9 9 6 REGISTER TODAY 602-265-W A LK | A 5K FUNDRAISING WALK STA K IN G AT PATRIOTS SQUARE • D O W N TO W N PHOENIX HOSTED BY A ID S PROJECT A R IZO N A BENEFITING AIDS Project A rizona * AGAPE N etwork • Aunt Rita's Foundation • Aid to Adoption o f Special Kids • Concilio Latino de Sdud • Compassion in Action • The V alley of the Sun G ay and Lesbian Community Center • H IV Care Directions • Interfaith AIDS Ministries • Joshua Tree • H IV /A ID S Law Project • The M alta Center • Phoenix Body Positive • Phoenix Shanti Group • TERROS • Volunteers in Direct Aid The Princeton Review is not iffiHtted with GMAC or Princeton University Swiss Scientists Discover New Energy Product ■ Lugano, Switzerland-After 25 years of research Lightning 828 was developed with the help of Swiss Laboratories. After exten­ sive testing with amazing-results. Lightning 828 is now available in the United States. Scientists are amazed at Lightning 828's results on improved memory, attitude and athletic performance. In a double blind cross-over trial on university students in Italy, Lightning 828 was given twice daily for 12 weeks. The results were astonishing. Students obtained higher scores in math, logic and physical education. This new discovery has been a windfall for working and active people that seem to run short of energy around mid-afternoon and need a little extra lift, Lightning 828 when taken in the morning gives a sustained, balanced form Df energy throughout the day. During an interview in Chicago, a beautician stated, “I used to go home exhausted after being on my feet all day. Now it’s just incredi­ ble. I go home with extra energy and really enjoy my family more.” Lightning 828 is a necessary boost for students, professionals and senior citizens. 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Tuesday, October 8, 1996 State P ress No time for reminiscing as ASU heads to L.A. B y D ustin K rugel S tate P ress ASU head coach Bruce Snyder, shown here before last year’s game against UCLA, let it be known Monday that the only thing that should be on his players' minds this weekend is the Sun Devils’ game w ith the UCLA Bruins. The two teams meet at 12:30 p.m. Saturday at the Rose Bowl. When the No. 4 ASU football team arrives in Los Angeles Friday night to play UCLA Saturday in the Rose Bowl, family and friends beware. “We are not going to Disneyland," Head Coach Bruce Snyder said. “This is nothing but a serious trip to L.A. I’m going to tell them (the players) 1 don’t want any families around. It's all business. You’ll see them after the game:” Snyder said in his Monday press conference that swap­ ping stories with friends and relatives is not an option. ASU has over 50 players on its roster who are from California. “Parents and friends are well intentioned. They all love little Johnny to death and they want a lot of his time, (but) little Johnny is there to do business,” he said. The Sun Devils (5-0. 2-0 Pac-10) will need all their attention when they face an upstart UCLA team (2-2, 1-0), which beat Oregon impressively 41-22 in Eugene last Saturday. ASU has not played a road game since a 38-29 victory over California on Nov. 11. 1995 and this game is the first of six straight games against Pac-10 competition. “I think it is going to be a nail-biter,” Snyder said of this weekend’s game, in which ASU is a four-point favorite. “They (UCLÀ) are in the hunt and we are right in the hunt (for the Rose Bowl). That is what college football is all about.” Against the Ducks defensively, the Bruins contained an Oregon offense to just 266 yards. The Ducks came into the game ranked No. 1 in the Pac-10 in total offensé. ASU is now ranked No. 1 in the conference and ninth overall in total offense with an average of 479 yards per game. The Bruin defense has been a team strength, despite changing defensive schemes to an unorthodox defense that often lines up with three defensive lineman, three lineback­ ers and five defensive backs. The Bruins start only one T urn to Snyder, pace 16. Phoenix gets 1st win o f season with 5-2 victory over Boston BOSTON ( AP) — All the Phoenix Coyotes needed was a little change of scenery-. The team that couldn't beat’Boston when it was known as the Winnipeg Jets did it on its first try as the Coyotes on Monday night, getting three first-period goals in one minute. 49 sec­ onds to beat the Bruins 5-2. “We have a lot of new guvs on the team and a new identity,“ said Mike Gartner, who had his 17th career hat trick to give the franchise its fifst victory over Boston since 1992. “l donT thin k th o sep asftbingscarryoverm uch.'’ Gartner. Norm Maclver and Oleg Tverdovsky sco red 109 seconds apart and N ikolai . Khabibulin stopped 30 shots to give the Coyotes their first win. They lost their opener. 1-0 to Hartford on Saturday, As the Jets, the franchise had lost its last five to the B ruins and had won ju st three of 23 games in Boston. “I'm not really concerned about what they’ve done in the past,“ rookie coach Don Hay said. “It’s what we do in the present and the future that concerns us.“ ■ . Ironically, the Coyotes were still playing in front of th o u san d s o f em pty seats. The announced attendance of 13.649 — that's not including the no-show s — was tbe B ruin'-sm allest since m oving to the 17 ,5 6 5 -seat FleetCenter last year. : The crowd saw Boston, which was coming off an inspiring opening-night tie over the New York Rangers, give away the game early. After Boston took a 1-0 lead on Jeff O dgers’ spin move in front 2:16 into the gam e, Phoenix scored four consecutive goals. Adam Oates had a giveaway in the Coyotes’ zone and Keith Tkachuk broke out. taking it all the way to the Bruins crease before G artner knocked in a loose puck at the 7:11 mark. Seventy-three seconds later, Craig Janney’s Turn to Coyotes, page 16. Phoenix Coyote Keith Tkachuk, rig h t, celebrates Mike G artner’s th ird goal against the Boston Bruins during the third period o f Monday’s game In Boston. Pittsburgh rumbles past Kansas City 17-7 Pittsburgh Stealer running back Jerom e Bettis (36) is stopped by safety Brian W ashington (right) a s cornerback Dale Carter (left) strips the ball during the first quarter of Monday night’s game in K an sas City. of KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — If Neil O ’Donnell got $25 million, what’s Mike Tomczak worth? The 33-year-old career backup who replaced O’Donnell, who led the Steelers to the Super Bowl last year then took the New York Jets’ money, threw for 338 yards Monday night to lead the Steelers to a 17-7 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs. It was Pittsburgh’s fourth straight win since an opening-day loss in Jacksonville and the first loss for the Griefs in their last 12 reg­ ular-season games at Arrowhead Stadium dat­ ing to Dec. 4, 1994. It was also their second straight loss after starting the season with four wins and left them a game behind Denver in the AFC West. So while O’Donnell sits with a separated right shoulder for the 0-6 Jets, Tomczak, who was 20-of-30 Monday night, excels after 11 years in and out of lineups in Chicago, Green Bay, Cleveland and now Pittsburgh. He had lots of help Monday night i Jerome Bettis, gained 103 yards on 27 Turn to Football, page 16. Golf in 2nd heading into final-round play Fro m Staff R eports The ASU men’s golf team finished the second round of the Ping-Golfweek Preview Invitational in Lake Forest, 111. Monday in third place with a score of 598. Heading into today’s final round, the Sun Devils trail leader Oklahoma State (592) and UNLV (593). Clem son (600) and East T ennessee State (605) round out the top five. Individually, senior Scott Johnson leads all Sun D evils. Jo h n so n sh o t rounds o f 75 and 70 on Monday to put him in a third-place tie at three over with UNLV’s Ted Oh with one round to play. The only other ASU golfer in the top 20 is senior Chris Hanell. His two-round total of 149 puts him in a tie for 12th place. ■' ' 1, The tournam ent concludes today w ith finalround play beginning at 8:30 a.m. CDT. S tate P ress Tuesday, October 8, 1996 Page 16 S n y d e r — __ C ontinued from page 15. underclassmen — sophomore defensive end Damon Smith. “What we are trying to do defensively? I want to know myself,” UCLA head coach Bob T oledo jo k ed via teleconference Monday. “It’s mass confusion over there. It’s an attacking style of defense. Wc don’t line up the same way all the time. We come from all different angles of the field. We play a lot of man-to-man and that is good and bad.” ' After already losing to No. 7 Tennessee and No. 14 Michigan on the road, Toledo said ASU’s offense presents just as much problems as those two powerhouses did. “Offensively, I think they run the ball better than Tennessee and they throw the ball better than Michigan,” he said of the Sun Devils. UCLA on offense is led by sophomore quarterback Cade McNown, who has com­ pleted 50 of 95 passes for 591 yards. After a surprising freshman season, McNown has tossed only two touchdowns, while oppo­ nents have intercepted five. Against the Sun Devils last season, McNown was brilliant in a losing cause and passed for 289 yards. "He obviously has a lot of courage (and a) great work eth ic,” T oledo said of McNown. “He’s a talented young guy. But he’s a young guy still making mistakes that get you beat at times. We just have to not put too much in his hands.” While the Bruin passing attack has been inconsistent, UCLA has shown a resurgence in its running game in recent weeks. Last year. UCLA was set with current Miami Dolphin starter Karim Abdul-Jabbar at tail­ back, but there was a big question mark sur­ rounding the Bruin tailbacks this season. Skip Hicks has apparently answered the critics with a career-high 175-yard perfor­ mance against Oregon, including 153 in the third quarter and two touchdowns. “It seems to me that UCLA found them­ selves a bit with their running attack,” Snyder said. T im e ch an g e Kickoff for the ASU/USC game on Oct. 19 at Sun Devil Stadium has been changed to 12:30 p.m. to allow ABC to broadcast it regionally. As of Monday, only 2,400 tick­ ets remained for the contest. Associated Press Boston Bruin Steve Hienze moves over the blue Mite as he is checked by Phoenix Coyote Kris King during firs t period action Monday night in Boston. C ontinued C o y o t e s ___ C o n t in u e d fr o m page F o o t b a ll— 15. Everything that came at the net just went in.'" Said Kasper: "if anyone thinks I'm putting it all on Billy, they are making a m istak e, because th a t’s not the case." ' . ■ B ailey sto p p ed alI 14 shots he faced, including a sprawling save with nine m inutes left that tem porarily denied G artner his 17th career hat trick. Gartner eventually got his third goal on an empty-netter with 40 sec­ onds left on a feed from Tkaehuk. who passed up the open net. : Tkaehuk had three.assists. ~ shot from behind the goal line deflect­ ed in front, where M aclver sent it through traffic and past the out-of­ position Bill Ranford. Thirty-six sec­ onds after that. Tserdovsfcy put in a slapshot from the point to make it 3-1. In the final minute of the first peri­ od. Gartner broke free oyer the blue line and went in on Ranford all alone to make it 4-1. Ranford stopped just six of 10 shots before Scott Bailey relieved him to start the second. • "Hd; (coach Steve Kasper) had to do som ething; ' Ranford said. "Everythine that 1 tried to do w asn'tw orking. from page 1 5 .. carries, his fourth straight 100-yard game. It included Pittsburgh's only touchdown, a 6yard run with 2:41 left in the third quarter. Charles Johnson caught six passes for 125 yards and the Pittsburgh defense limited Kansas City to only one trip inside its 20 — the second-quarter drive on which Marcus Allen's 6-yard TD run gave the Chiefs a 7-0 lead. ’ . It was the 107th rushing TD of Allen's career, putting him one ahead of Jim Brown and three behind Walter Payton on the career list. Allen also passed Tony Dorsett for second place behind Payton on the all-purpose yardage list. For a long time, it looked like that would hold up. Pittsburgh got inside the Chiefs' 5-yardline three times in the first 42 minutes and came out with just six points — field goals of .21 and 32 yards by Norm Johnson. A third field goal attempt early in the third quarter was blocked by Kansas C ity's Derrick Thomas. Johnson capped the scoring with a 43-yard field goal with 1:10 to play. The blocked field goal didn't give the Chiefs the lift they should have received. Starting at their own 14 on their next pos­ session, the Steelers took just eight plays to score, the biggest a 45-vard pass from Tomczak to Johnson. Tomczak also had a 12yard completion to Andre Hastings that put the bail at the 5. One play later. Bettis bulled in for the score and then Tomczak hit Mark Bruener for the 2-point conversion that made it 14-7. This was a game that might have been played in the playoffs last season had the Chiefs not been upset i 0-7 by Indianapolis one game short of the AFC championship game. It matched Kansas C ity's M ain Schottenheimer against Pittsburgh's Bi 11 Cow her. who got his coaching start under Schottenheimer in Cleveland. * . •. MKfVEST NEW S E R V I C E CAMPUS CONNECTI ONS C HA NG E S E R V I C E ADD F E A T U R E S g e t p hoi© s« r * ic e s O n 3 iîie- * Classes I’KINCI TON KHVII.W D E C . 7! 1 -8 0 0 -2 REV I EW h o o k - U p W L t* csulX * Needtotalktoyour studentgovernment TIRED OF CALLING MOM & DAD Visit the 3rd floorof theMU FOR MONEY?... CHECK THE CLASSIFIEDS FOR AN ASSORTMENT OF JOBS AVAILABLE. ^ S T aT T P r e s s - The Princeton Rtview is not affiliated with GMAC or Princeton University . * . ' C l a s s if ie d s State APARTMENTS APARTMENTS the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section f*nr more itiformatipri and assistance regarding the investigation of ait,advertisement, . please contact the Better Business Bureau at 2^4-1-72.1. ri-, yi—» , iff— J!—W-T». ¡y a ,/ 37- .9 ; 9 9 9 .9 9: 9. 9 9 & 9 S 339/M O N TH W alk to ASU. Q u ie t, spacious, 1 bedroom , u n fu rn is h e d o r fu r­ nished, A/C, poolside apartments , Hmrln Tnlan Hpnh—il FREE UTILITIES! 8 9 4 -2 6 8 0 Cy Young won a record S II major league JL ANNOUNCEMENTS MODELING Enter the Miss Arizona Model Of the Year Pageant • No Experience Necessary • No Height Requirement • Ages (I3 d 7 ) & {1^23) • Agents Invited 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartmen ts available Jan . 1 st. I taking re se rvations George Ann Apts. Mere T riv ia ... games Page 17 Tuesday, October 8. 1998 P ress ♦; Private balcony / patì© . . ♦ Free hot water • ♦ Free cable TV-37 stations; ♦ Covered parking • QUADRANGLES ■VILLAGE: 1-255 E. University prive Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-8118 W a lk to ASU. S p a c io u s , 2bedro o m a p a rtm e n ts . A /C f u r n i s h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d a v a il­ a b le . F r o m S 5 2 5 / m o n th . B e a u tifu l p o o l area, la u n d r y fa c ilitie s a va ila b le . FIESTA PARK APARTMENTS 1224 E. Lem on 894-2620 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL . APARTMENTS APARTMENTS l BD/l BA. 2 blocks from cam­ pus pool. spa. lâündry. cov­ ered parking, available now. no pets. 1700 S. College Ave. 967-7212 , 1214 K. OR ANGE. Mar rail na ' Apts. - Studios'. $50 b ff move,., in w/ad. .’966-85.9.7., HELP WANTEDGENERAL D IS C J O C K E Y S N E E D E D A Z ‘s #1 m obile D J s e r­ v ice is looking for DJ's. • Transportation & weekend availability a must • Earn S10-S40 per hotir • Will Train Call TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT TOWN HO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT PAP AGO P ARK a . 2bd, 2 ba, TOWNHOUSE 3 bd 1 5 ba, TEMPE. ASU -walk to campus. Vw/d./2 pobIs; .2 jacuzzis. Avail. fiiily. furnished w/xtras;. Ig. Nice Ibdrm. New carpet, fans., imrned:. S750/rnov 829-0902 ■; pool. fee. room w/kitchen. 2 pool; laundry. ■ Quiet. . covered parking space-. Close RURAL /UNIVERSITY 2bd/> $350/mth. 921-2561. : . tp free way s. a i r port, clo.se; t o 2ba w/laundry from S69i>, 3bd/ ASU, Nice:quiet complex. Only 2ba w/laundry from $895 pool-. HOMES FOR . $756/mo/ 279^4940. , " / . V . side/ covered parking. Ray. RENT Wisely 942-1410, / v . > \ ^ jUNIV./ HARDY 2bd/2ba. w/d. pool, sp a .: volleybal 1. •new 2BD 1BA, AC/evap, carport, SUPER 2 BDR/Ba condo in paint & carpet, $675/mo. 945w/d hook-up, near ASU great complex. 8 min* from Cam­ 3002 $600/mo lyr ls 520-774r4393 pus. Pool’ at door. $500/mo. Contact Todd W illiams 813RENTAL 4BEDROOM; HOUSE w/pool 1900, Avail, now. 968-4128. After 10/7 call Frankie at 242^8294. TEMPE c Q n DO for rent. PAPAGO PARK I 2 bd/2 ba 2bd/2ba: W/d, new carpet, 1mi. from ASU, $800/mp. Will rent , fully furnished w/ W/d avail imnjed .$350 96^-3909. HELP WANTEDquickly, so call now! 894-3307 S H A R IN G GENERAL 9 6 6 -9 9 0 0 Find it FAST in th e C lassified s JOBS Flexible hours RMMTE NEEDED to share 3bd Papago Park townhouse $337mo + l/3elec. Avail im ­ mediately ask for Steve or Mike 967-5899. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ASSISTANT RETAIL MANAGER S te p in to a g re a t career. A lle n -E d m o n d s is in ternationally recognized as a 1994 W inder Kathleen Flem ing signed w ith E lite Call Today 994-0880 $ 8 per hour to start WORK in the heart o f where it's happening in Phoenix! Located near the Arizona Center, America W est Arena, and Civic Plaza, the ASU Downtown Center NEEDS student workers fo r facility set-up at 502 E, M onroe, Phoenix. Need help fo r afternoons and some Saturdays. Some flexibility w ith class sched­ ules accommodated. Own transportation a MUST. Primary duties: furniture, equipm ent, and beverage .set-up. $6.25 hr. Ask fo r Cheryl o r Dan at 965-3046- F ir id th e S ta te P re s s o n th e In te rn e t: h ttp ://h e w s .v p s a .a s u .e c lu / p re m iu m m en's dress and casual foo tw ear business w ith retail locations in Scottsdale and Phoenix. W e stand for qu ality and custom er service b a r no ne. W e re lo oking for a c an did ate to Join o u r te a m w h o leads by e x a m p le a nd isn't satisfied w ith status q u o . The successful can did ate is a self-starter w ith e x c e lle n t custom er service and Call sales skills. This Is a hands-on position requiring skills to assist in th e total store op eration s on a daily basis. A C olleg e business d e g re e required. If 470-2500 this sounds like th e fit yo u 'v e been lo oking for, for interview lim itless g ro w th po ten tial n atio nw ide- c o m e ta lk w ith us. W e offer an exc e llen t c o m p e n s a tio n /b e n e fit packag e w ith Please send y o u r resum e w ith salary re q u ire m e n t to: Men Edmonds T o w n an d C ountry S ho pping C en ter 2 0 3 5 E. C am eiback Rd. WHAT CAN Phoenix, A Z 8 5 0 1 6 6 0 2 -2 6 7 -1 4 1 0 Y O U D O ABOUT AIDS? FAX 6 0 2 - 9 5 5 - 4 9 8 6 w w w .a lle n e d m o n d s .c o m il i i r i l i .4 R > o< ir< fl Join the steering ■ committee to help plan ASU AIDS Awareness Week! COME TO THE FIRST MEETING to find out how you can volunteer. TUESDAY OCTOBERS 3-4:30 Memorial Union, Rm. 209 Questions? Call Freddy at 965-8276 or e-mail icfxr@asuvm. inre.asu.edu GET % . INVOLVED! •. . . W e lls F a r g o l i a s w h a t : y o u ’r e l o o h x n g f o r ! If you cake pride in a job well-done and thrive in a team-oriented environm ent, let Wells Fargo p u t you on the trail to success! As one o f the leading employers in Arizona* Wells Fargo has the rewarding Opportunities yóuye been looking for - including hourly and part-time openings that are perfect for. the homemalter, semi-retired worker or student! AS U 's C o upon B ook lË É É r die country ‘ jr -" i T E M P E O P E R A T IO N S C E N T E R Part & full-tim e Hay, evening and n ig h t sh ifts available • Clerks • Vault Tellers • Senior Accounting Clerks Data Entry Clerks Proof Operators1 Equipment Operator V A L L E Y W ID E O P P O R T U N I T I E S Hourly & part-time Part-time • Tellers (Valleywide) • Financial Service Agents (Central & West Phoenix) Full-time • Expeditors (Downtown Phoenix) » Legal Clerks (Downtown Phoenix) Start your new career by picking up a job skills testing brochure, em ploym ent application and basic skills testing calendar a t the First Intcrstatc/Wclls Fargo branch nearest you. For basic skills testing information, please call (602) 528-1186. Wells Fargo Bank is an Equal O pportunity Employer M /F/D /V . D End your ? workday early/ F u ll-tim e and p art-tim e sh ifts available s ta rtin g a t 4am , Sam A 6am. Excell Agent Services offers our Directory Assistance Agents a competitive starting wage of $7.04, based on meeting adherence and attendance guidelines, with the potential to earn up to $8.24 per hour. There is no selling involved, these are Inbound directory assistance positions. Excell also offers paid training and excellent benefits. Apply in person Monday-Friday 8am-6pm, Saturday 8am to 4pm or call our Job Info Line at 1-888-623-6796 Phoenix T em pe 4250 E. Cameiback Building K Suite 300 CameISquare Atrium 1919 W. Fairmdnt . 1906 E. Main (off 48th Street (NW corner of between Broadway Main & Gilbert) & Southern mear .1-10) ; r? v / Find it FAST in th e C lassified s YOO. So climb aboard today and experience for yourself why Wells Fargo is one o f the m ost respected banking institutions in Wells Fargo offers industry-competitive pay, flexible work schedules and comprehensive benefits for opportunities that exceed 17.5 hours pbr week! O pportunities available in thcTem pe operations center are open-ended and regularly rim past scheduled times. ■ ; 7: Made for ASU students, by ASU students to save you money all over town! THEM. t ?t M esa t A G E N T S lvR V IC I 4S W E L L S FARG O EO E M /F A //D Drug screening is a condition o f employment. Page 18 Tuesday, October 8,1996 RENTAL SHARING MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE ROOM AVAILABLE 4 bed house, pool, hot tub. pool table. lakes, $330 ruth. l/4utl 491-8776 ' -I 7 TELEVISION 25" oak counsel, remote control, exc cond. $150. Must sell 254-7628. ROOM FOR rent w/own bath. Quiet condo near ASU. pool, w/d. prefer female. $290/mo. + 1/3 util. $100 dep. 303-0289 WESTONE BASS guitar for sale. Good cond. $175 oho. C all'Joe at 668-7276 or 9652145 COMPUTERS TÉMPË. RÉSP m/f to share luk. -2’ bd/ba apt, All amens. AMBITIOUS? BUILD a busi­ ■$400- + 4/2 Util, Close to ASU, ness part-time while in school. 777^974^: - . ; . ■Call 3464626. , / ,7 ;7 :v HOMES FOR SALE TERRIFIC 4 BDRM‘. 1 full bath and' two car garage honie just 25; minutes from ASp._ Ex^ cellêot condition with >new car­ pet and : fresh .paint:. Priced .'below cornps for. à quick sale— only $1 i 2:900. Call Scott at; 267-0500 V ;.... 7 TÔ W NHÔ M ËS/ C O N D O S FOR SALE R U R AL/y NliVERSI TŸ 2B D; ,2ba,< 3 bet; 2ba. from the 50*s. Pulified/ coyeféd parking Ray Wisely 942-1410. LAPTOP P90, 8mb. cd-rom, 28.8. Alt Mat scrn. .Sager SyS. ' $2.200 + software. Call Tim 813-6995. AUTOMOBILES1975 2 802 New; br rehuilt eve­ ry thibg. 5 spd, .sunroof.. etc.:/Having kids, must sell: $4000 obo. 839-5368 i 986 HON D A Prelude Si $3700... Everything pwr. auto., ac, white, garage; kpt. Need2- seli 731-4689 .... 7 ;7 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE REAL ESTATE S P E E D LO V E R S UNDEVELOPED LAND in Northern A^ for. sale. 2 .172 ) acres just north of Ash Fork in kaibab Estates. Call 894-2150 for more info, . Save S100's fighting and avoiding speeding tickets. Know your rights. FREE caU 2 3 0 - 4 3 3 4 AUTOMOBILES 1996 TOYOTA Paseo, black, a/c, 1300 miles. For lease or sale. $325/mo; or” $ 13,000. ■213-5970 . 7 •' HELP WÀNTEDGENERAL $8/H R + C O M M . Appointment setter, travel in­ dustry, friendly atm., no sales. Eves.. Tempe. Call now! 2319500. - 7 ■' 73 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD Broughm. 472 cubic in. very reliable, passes emissions, very $100 TO keep homeopathic cheap registration, $800 obo 921-1624 . - r' - ; -V . journal for 7 weeks. Healthy people needed. 274-1340 M-F days. 84 JEEP CJ7 Laredo, red/tan ininterior. 6 cyl, 5 spd. ac. load­ ACCOUNTING & office 2nd+ ed, new top. gorgeous 4x4. year acctng. major. Pt/ft, flex, $5850.392-5525 hours.. $6,50-8,50/hr d.o.e. Approx; 3mi from ASU. Fax re­ 93. MUSTANG LX auto, air, sume to 437-5037.; low mileage, pwr, wh. blue in-r ter. Asking $7500 8384333.. 96 DODGE Ram 1500ws V-6, 5 spd. 10K. emerald green. $.13,785. 473-0705 , HELP WANTEDGENERAL FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Universal. Portraits, $6- 10/hr. Call Carrie at 777-1054: STATE FAIR JO B S Part time help needed for night and weekend hours to help load/unload passengers from buses or trams at special events held in the Valley, i.e. State Fair & P.I.R. $6.00/hr. Flexible schedule. Gall Leslie at 935-2799 for further information. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL BECOME A mobile dj, Work weekends. We train; Depend­ $8- 10/HR TAK1NG ‘ orders,: able vehicle. Call 820-8220 weekly pay, flex, schedule. Fill applications at Autom 5226 Sr. , GREAT SCHOOL job. Care­ 31st Place Phx;. Az 85040. giver for.active., quadriplegic. Healthy, smoke/drug free, posi­ tive attitude. Will train. Tom C la ss ified s W O RK ! 949-7241 ly; mss. LDDS/WORLDCOM The nation's 4th largest long distance provider is hiring ar­ ticulate; assertive college grads, for outside sales, exp. a +. Sal­ ary--»- comm. & benefits. Send resumes to Mark Bland, 645 E. . M issouri, #450. Phx.. AZ. 85Q12. 7 . 7 7 7 /; LIVE-IN SITTER, over 18yfs. Up .to S810/mo. + car & tuition . assistance. 713-789-2360 Telemarketing for the ¡mage Conscious P ro M a rk O ne M a rke tin g S ervices, Inc. f NO W HIRING < ProMark One is now accepting applications for our dynamic, new Tempe Center. ^ P O S IT IO N S R ill- t in e and E & rt-tirre The G olf C lub at Eagle M ountain • Health & Dental Benefits Paid Vacations Paid Holidays • Flexible Schedules Professional Work Environment • Promotion From Within • No Experience Necessary • Paid Training • Advancement Opportunities • $ 6 .0 0 An Hour Plus Commission (Top Reps Can Earn $ 1 2 ,0 0 + Hourly) • Relocation Opportunities W eekends: O u ts id e an d Inside; Experience Preferred: 2 0 y r s +; H ourly plus incentives C ontact D.B. T e m p le @ 8 1 6 - 1 2 3 4 HELP WANTEDGENERAL IN HOME providers. Ft/pt workers needed to provide care to developmentally disabled persons living in natural family settings. Salary $7-7;60/hr. College tuition reimbursement program, health, denial, and op­ tical coverage for f/t. B.R.I.T E Inc. Call Sokol 254-2785 ■ : ÂN1MÀL HOSP. in Chandler, P/t evenings, clean-up/ver àsst. ; $4; 50/hr to sta rt. Call off ice mhgr.,963-2340. ; '■ . ATTENDANT P / t 20-25 ; hrsç/wk. 10am-2pm M-F Assist quadriplegic male in pleasant surroundings. ÂZ drivé lie. No substance abusers. 273-7775 HELP WANTEDGENERAL DRIVER/COURIER TRICOR DELICIOUS DELIVERIES is America has immediate't^n’ & hiring experienced drivers, earn P/T postions available. Profes­ $10 to $15 per hour,, make your own schedule, meet beau- • sional attitude and good MVR required. Insurance necessitates tiful women and Impress your applicants be 21 yrs. min. friends. Call 220-0000 Hourly rate + benefits. Various shifts available. We also have DIRECTORY INFORMATION openings for owners operators operator, 20 wpm, good area with insurance. Apply in per­ .knowledge, all shifts, $6.50/hr son at 2425 W. 12th St. start; 225-9661. Metro One, Tempe or call 967-2939 bet­ 5025 E. Washington #110. ween 8am-5pm. ACCOUNTING ASST, p/t, flexible hours, close to campus: Call Kevin 967-9115 S ales/M erchand ising Assistant HELP WANTEDGENERAL State P ress Centeon Bio-Services, Inc Why donate plasma? . « Help save lives • Earn up to $195 each month • Supervised chilclcare • Watch your favorite movie while you donate »We have many ASU donors! New Extended Hours M-F - 9pm Sat "Sam - 6pm Sun 9arri -, 5pm • Call Today to Set lip An Interview • 7 7 7 - 0 8 7 7 • • Or stop by at 3136 S. McClintock Ste 7, Tempe • 1334 E. Broadway Rd; Suita 102 ' (across from tire Native Naw Yorker) "ProMark One is the 166th Fastest Growing Company in America" - INC 500 Magazine W e are the 6th Largest, and 3rd Fastest Growing Telemarketing Firm in the Nation 8 9 4 - 2 2 5 0 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER C la ss ified s W O R K ! BANQUET SERVERS V ery busy season fo r on-call Call Today! Work Tom orrow! experienced bqt. servers & bartenders. M UST have you r ow n black and whites and a Food H andler's C ard . You Pick the Hours Full and Part Time Available All Shifts We need SO data entry clerks in the Tempe area. $ 7 .0 0 per Hour to Start + Shift Differential Remedy INTELLIGENTSTAFFING (6 0 2 ) 8 9 0 - 1 1 1 2 Scottsdale Em bassy Suites Hum an Resources 500 1 N . Scottsdale Rd. Please app ly M , W , o r F only betw een 8:3 0 a m - 10:30am o r 2pm *4pm . Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a drug-free w ork force. EEO Customer Service Representative A nsw ering phones, co m p ute r & fa xin g a b ility. M in o r paperw ork, Plenty o f d o w n tim e to catch up on studies. $7 00 p er h o u r N eeded fo r n ig hts & w eekends. Call Karen 9-5 © 235-9515, ext. 108. WE HIRE STUDENTS B ecause s tu d e n ts like o u r I ! 111/ • • • • • Flexible Hours G re a t Pay (avg. $9-$12/hr.) G uaranteed Paid Training Fun/friendly environm ent Learn C om m unication skills/resum e b u ild e r • N o experience necessary. Easy jo b - w e tra in Please call today to schedule a confidential interview. DialAmerica 345-9509 As We Grow, So Do You! Interested in getting in on a fast-track for promotion, advancement and success? Stuck in a dead­ end job that's taking you nowhere fast? Then FACS, the Phoenix area's hottest new employer, wants to talk to you! The FACS Group, Inc. provides financial, credit and administrative services for. Federated Department Stores, Inc. including Macy’s, as well as other Companies. Business is excelient-so we're looking for dependable, motivated, service-oriented people to join our dynamic team. In Our fast-paced, environment, advancement opportunities abound - in as little as 120 days, . you can move up to a position of greater responsibility and reward. C U S T O M E R S E R V IC E • C O L L E C T I O N S • A U T H O R I Z A T I O N S C E N T R A L S T O R E O P E R A T O R S - E X P R E S S C R E D IT Join the dynamic team at our offices in Tempe and enjoy: ‘ .v • S7.50/hour to start for most positions • Complete benefits for full-time ; - Variety of full-time and part-time shifts • Generous discounts on most • Fully paid training on phone and CRT Macy’s purchases online applications • Service. & performance awards ' ■ - Recreation and social activities All of this plus with our Casual dress code you can even wear shorts to work! A typing test is required for all positions. Vlon.-Fri. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. at 1345 S. 52nd Street (northeast comer of 52nd Street and West 14th Street between Broadway Road and University Drive). For more information call: ^ O O O /. (toll free, 24 hours) l - 0 0 0 " Z o 4 " FACS FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT SERVICES Equal opportunityfor all HELP WANTEDGENERAL MANAGEMENT Mgr. traînées. No exp; needed, will train. Rapid advancement. Managers earn $4000/month base. 252-6711. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES artencI ers W antecI Earn $15 to $50 per Ikxjr Earn M oney, H ave Fun MODELS/ACTORS In ti scouts want you for music vid­ eos and local print work. 9416922. P/T YOUTH director for Con­ cord Village teen center. Apply in person only. 631 E. Lexing­ ton, Tempe 8am-2pm NEED M/F to be assistant paint­ er f/t or p/t, w/hourly pay. Call for more info. Gary 720-1344. PICTURE FRAMER wanted. P/t positions in busy south Tempe custom framing shop. Must have exp. & great cus­ tomer ser. skills. Call 820-9426 OFFICE ASST- Bookkeeping, good com. skills, organized, & dependable. Near ASU 4371048 y ,, y •; ON-SITE VIDEO is seeking pro­ duction specialist for v ideog­ raph y, pre & post production. Strong academic background/ desired- See career services of call Betsy 967^5062, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES (YOU CAN START bARTENdiNq 921-9925 $199 with ASU ID Tire d o f m aking m oney fo r everyone b u t yourself? O pportunity with, g ro w ­ in g te le c o m m u n ic a tio n s co . o ffe rs a g g re s s iv e s e lf s ta r te r s p e rs o n a l fre e d o m . F u ll o r p a rt-tim e - CaU fo r m ore info. Bambi Bass OaobER.ONty 420-1093 HELP WANTEDGENERAL RED EYE is now hiring. Jr management and sales posi­ tions are available at our Mésa retail stores. We offer: fun work environment, flex, hrs., excel, training'; Our stores are n/s. Call Melinda for an interview 8339207. STUDENT PRODUCTION worker heeded for nights, 69pm, M-Thurs. Mac exp req’d. Quark exp pref. Call 965-2097 between 8am-5pm, ask for Joe. Entrepreneur AT ACfE 19) B/VRTENdiNq ACAdEMy HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ' LOCAL SUB shop liiring coun­ ter help p/t M-F days. 40th Str/University. 921-7827. ,:i B Page 19 Tuesday, October 8, 1996 State P ress S HELP WANTEDGENERAL RESTAURANTS/ BARS W OODSHED I ■CASH Pool Tourney Sat. Nite 9:00 • Pool & Darts • Home of the $1.25 Shot > Satellite T V (NFL) (NBA) $ (MLB) ¡•G reeks Welcome • Ladies Nite Thurs. $2 Teas ►1/2 Your Wing Order FREE Sun. & Mon. Baseline & Mill HELP WANTEDSALES $8/HR + COMM. Appointment setters, make full time pay for part tim e work. Call 736-9500. HELP WANTEDCLERICAL LEGAL MESSENGERS needed noon-5:30 pm M-F paid hrly + mileage, 253-1155. ASim OGICAL FORECAST by Frances Drake POSITIONS AVAIL, at fun cajiin restaurant at both loca­ tions. Please call Baby Kay's and mention this ad before 1lam or after 3pm at 955-001L WAIT STAFF & host/ess: immed. openings for L/D shifts. $3/hr. + tips. Sushi Bar Sakana 5061 E. Elliot 598-0506 HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE NANNY NEEDED P u t it In th e C la s s if ie d s ! } RESTAURANTS/ BARS Í& » TA N K UP TUESDAY $2.81 PITCHERS • Cappuccinos • Espressos ■• Cafe Lattes • Regular Coffee 60 oz. Coors Light • Bud Light Honey Brown S3.27 500 TONIGHT LIVE! 98« Iced Coffees Now Available BANDERSNATCH PASTA PAYTON'S SPORTS Grill needs clean-cut, dependable, honest, cocktail wait staff & line Cook. 957-2462; 3626 E. Indian School Make your.advertising $$$$ w ork harder! RESTAURANTS/ BARS * & MAJERLE’S Currently hiring hostess, waitstaff, & night cooks. Apply in person 24 N 2nd. Sir, Phx. Tues-Fri days. 3 kids 10, 7, 5 $150 wkly based. Must: have car. Baseline/Alma School Call Shelly @ 491-2801. Find it FAST in th e C lassified s P IZ Z .A CORK’NCLEAVER Accepting apps, for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St, 952-0585. Where ASU Goes for Pizza (3-epmM-F) C ig a r N ig h t WE WANT YOU Don't call another ad until you hear what we have to offer l Re­ sort Reservations Dept, has 20 pos. avail. 9am-1 pm or 5pm9pm. $9-$l2/hr avg, no sell­ ing!! Start immed. Call Beth 491-4921. C HAPPY HOUR! H O T W IN G S C O O L JA Z Z VALET PARKING Attendants, must be clean cut, good atti­ tude, $6/hr. 602-639^6962 Call l2-3pm GIRL/GUY FRIDAY, p/t 20+ hrs./wk. Computer skills help­ ful. Will train. Apply in person at: Phoenix Spring Co. 1535 W. Elna Rae, Tempe, 967-7733 8 3 1 -W O O D F U N ! E A S Y ! Ideal fo r s tu d e n ts P / T u p to $ 1 0 0 / d a y + + N o In v e s tm e n t R e q u ire d A p p ly o n c a m p u s W e d n e s d a y , O c t. 1 0 th , b e tw e e n 2 - 4 : 3 0 p m a t th e M U , R m 2 0 3 N (G old N o rth R o o m ) HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE r O p en M ie > v N igh t y Pitchers of Soda {222 E. U n iv e rs ity D r. aT e m p e • 9 6 7 -7 7 4 4 ^ 968-6666 Lo n g Is la n d T 's 966-5543 UNIVERSITY & RURAL T u e s d a y , O c to b e r 8 , 1 9 9 6 21) Remember that old; saying, ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Don’t be alarmed if there 's= business and pleasure d o n ’t mix, now especially. Your pri­ •som e com petition on thé job, orities should be centered on the These joint ventures will only home; front. Plan a special make you look better. Benefits romantic evening. also, cóme from thé help of lov­ SAGITTARIUS (Noy. 22 to ing friehds. Dec; 21) if you use extra drive . TAURUS (April 2 0 to May on the job, you will excel and 20) Make sure that you are kind come out on top. Remember, a and giving to an unfortunate Career block is only temporary . friend or family member down A dreahi you've had becomes a on th eir luck. ; Also ; accept a social invitation from a promi­ Vreality, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan nent person on the job. 19) T here could be a m inor GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) delay ih a promotion you were Make sure you keep Up with counting on. This is only a tem­ ■chores around the home front, A porary setback. In fact, your surprise visitor from the past financial future looks very could stop in or call unexpect­ promising. edly. Be alert for new money­ AQUARIUS (Jan 20 to Feb. making opportunities. 18) A friend could be argumen­ CANCER (June 21 to July 22) tative, but stand up for your It is important to consult with a rights. You will make your partner before making a finan­ point, as you are more level­ cial decision. Don’t fuss too headed. Stress cooperation in much if this person doesn ’t financial interests. agree with you, It is important PISCES (Feb. 19 to March to listen, as you could learn 20) If a deal sounds too good to something. be true, then it probably is. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Call Always remember to read the it a bit of luck, but your charm fine print on any agreement you brings revealing news about a, sign. A problem on the job job opportunity. Domestic plans could mean some overtime. also fall into place. A career YOU BORN TODAY have a move made a while ago pays very strong sense about right off. and wrong and have no toler­ VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) ance for injustice. Early in life, A surprising personal twist in if asked to cheat on a test or your life gets you back on track; homework, you often find your­ A can tan k ero u s co-w orker self taking some flak from your heeds your understanding. peers because you always take Don’t be impatient. the high road ethically. Later in LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) life, this integrity serves you Your best bet for happiness is to well. You can imbue this same follow the advice of a trusted quality in those around you. A friend. Don't be stubborn or you career in diplom acy or law will regret it. Now is the time to appeals to you, as well as the concentrate on fun, rest and academic life. relaxation. © 1996 King Features Syndicate Inc. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to NoV 9 9 0 A n y D rin k 9pm - close C ustom er A ppreciation N ight - Live Band 4 0 4 S . M ill A ve . 9 6 6 -1 3 0 0 ENJOY LIFE -Retire before your parents. Earn $4370+ per month for life just giving away free calling cards.. $49 invest­ ment gets you started toward your future. Call now, 1-800493-2665, 24 hrs. Source code 3531. EXCELLENT INCOME + busi­ ness experience while going to school. Independent distribu^ tors needed to market revolu­ tionary automotive product Call now for free information, 1800-788-9546, ext. 1 or fax 1808-878-3057,24 hrs. FIESTA MALL Job Fair Oct 11 & 12, 10 am - 2 pm Over 5( stores hiring! Questions? Cal 833-4121 *43 CONCERNED ABOUT depres­ sion in yourself or a friend? Check out National Depression Screening Day 10/10/96 at the Union from 10 am- 6 pm. ~ 9 i ~ DELTAS - HERE'S to friend­ ship, fun and sisterhood! We've had a great semester so far and there's much more to come! SO YOU missed rush? It’s never too late to experience the sisterhood that a strong soror­ ity provides! If you are inter­ ested in going Greek, call Wendy at 784-8925. SIGMA DELTA Táu Sorority Rush-Open House. Gome arid ; see what our sisterhood is all • about! Wed., Oct. 9th 7:30 SALES & PROMOTIONSManzy classroom . For (nore Tempe bars, Earn cash daily info call Tracy at 755-917Q. Up to $600 wkly. Call, 3105141 SERVICES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ARE YOU WOKING FOR GRANTS OR SCHOLARSHIPS? Read this first. FREE CASH: Earn spring break A SV Student Financial A ssis­ tance can help fin d money fo r money now! $500 gift can give you $2000 in as little as three . you without charging a pro; cessing,fee. Call 965-3355. I f days. Call 917 2205 for info. you .choose to use a private MAKE MORE money in one ;. company to oh ta in g ra n ts or day than most people make in a : scholarships, be sure to. get month. Cali l -$00-899-0035 verifiable réferences before re­ ext. 540 . mitting. RESTAURANTS/ BARS FREE INFORMATION on find­ ing & •obtaining grant money. dling tô DCE Publications PO LIGUORI LOUNGE Phx. 957 Box 54027, Phx, AZ. 85078; 2444.: Best of Phoenix 1995 7 dáys Happy Hour ,10amUCÄITM A 10pm, domestic pitchers $3,00, piEfjplil ® Kami & well shots $1. Guin- ; FITNESS ness on tap WORKOUT AT the valley's M USIC 1 best health clubs for only . . 1 ■ .. -. : " $19.95, N.0 strings! Call 990BEST MUSIC of W itchcraft -6199i vidéo series. New ltd. ed; cd scored by composer; Miriam TYPING /W O RD Cutler $ 17.99: plus $ 1.2? tax PROCESSING & $3 s&h/cd.; Check or money order to Circa Limited 2839 W. 49th PI Phx, AZ 85008, ¿wk . S1.99/PG. $15/RES. Proofed. . APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. delivery. . Near ASU Brian 967-5987: FREE LOST/FOUND APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/word processing. Need it FUNDRAISING Balboa Cafe y BE YOUR own boss. New co. looking for dist. Seeking the #2 motivated people. Call 9453107 . ;■, ; , PERSONALS IF YOU picked up a blue Editing servicesavailable. ” . bOokbag from Eng; Dept. (6th ; ... y . J; .■ floor) on Fri. Please return. ReTYPING - accurate, honest ward! CaU 784-0490 ASAP work. Reliable. APA/MLA $2 1301 E. University JOB OPPORTUNITIES y : TUTORS FAST FUNDRAISER -Raise $500 in 5 days-Greeks. clubs, COMPUTER INSTRUCTION/ motivated individuals. Fast internet/word procès tng/typ easy-no financial obligations. ing services available. Reason(800) 862-1982 Ext. 33. able rates Jared 868-1NET. (pag| y yy er# ) . . y ;.y SERVICES ATTENTION A ll «mmFlMT«;!!! G r a n t s &S c h o l a r s h i p s A V A ILA B LE F R O M S P O N S O R S ! N O REPA Y M EN TS EVER! ; $:$$ Fo r In f o C all: 1-800-400-0209 SPANISH TUTOR. BA in Spanish lit. $10/hr. 261-6680 please, leave message. WANTED NEEDED EGG donor immed! Between the. age of 16-25, must be African-American, in excel­ lent health. Will pay up to $1,500. : Contact Lorna ainc : mention Bernice Albert 956?481: | J D o n 't re ly o n lu c k t o m a k e r j* L y o u r a d w n rtis in s w o rk f'' S A S t a te P re ss C la s s if ie d s m a k e it h a p p e n ! J Call David to o d w in - *65-6736 W ould you p refer a m o re... u p -to -d a te w ay to find a buyer for th at ugly old couch? U se th e S ta te P ress C lassified A dvertising o rd er form on th e . W orld W id e W eb! http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/dassad/classadfm.html S tate P ress Tuesday, October 8, 1996 Page 20 T A K E A P R A C T IC R fiU N If you* took the test today, how would you score? Còme find o u t Call 1>«00-KAP-TEST to reserve a seat. practice exam »computer score analysis »1-hour At ASU on S ( ^ O i ^ > e r 12 B p s III II k lls ll KAPLA . m .m ¡¡¡ft2pm -4p m PW AIPMA D 0 M » S * * B o n at * x * M K M i ( ÄxAmr LU B E • O IL • F IL T E R $9 TIRI «. RR10M0TI VI 2 0 3 3 W. UNIVERSITY, MESA DOBSON & UNIVERSITY ONLY 3 M ILES FROM A SU f t ¿ECOA5TTO WLIMC O A S tm t ITEDSCfrwerW4JVUWTYIT ' 968-8008 WITH COUPON Includes Shampoo & Style, ‘ (L o n g er H a ir, H ig h lig h tin g & Special Effects Extra) C hanging oN for ovar 125 years. ' Not to 6é combinad .with another otter on same prpducvseryiceor.. ' used to reducé outstanding debt.- Plus ST:75 Environmental Fee.’ CO UPON CO UPON u CO UPON u FREE SHAM POO | DESIGNER PERM | WAREHOUSE PRICES | Our Tire & Service Warranties Are Honored At Over 8,000 Affiliated Dealers Nationwide 90 DAYS NO PA YM EN T” 90 DAYS NO INTEREST ” * NO ANNUAL FEE LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS "OAC HdIR CUTTERS’ University & Rural The Cornerstone 8 8 Lubricate your vehicle & . chassis Drain old oil Add up to 5 qts. of new oil Install a new oil filter includes a 17 pt. inspection Diesel extra Most cars and light trucks 644-1201 ew|^-p ra p C O M P U T E R IZ E D W H E EL B A LA N C E & 4 T IR E R O T A T IO N $1 9 • • • • 8 8 WITH COUPON Check Inflation On All TiresComputerized Balance On 4 Tires fo u r Tire Rotation Most Cars & Light Trucks AMERICANISAI 1 s 7 Q95 ; 1 0 « $*T95 I W ITH CUT m ’J 8 H T . . In c lu d e s S h a m p o o , C u t u d r e m . (Longer h a ir An sp e c ia lty w ra p s extra) N ot g o o d W ith a n y o th e r o ffer fo r s a m e serv ice. N at g o o d w ith an y o th e r o ffe r fo r s a m e serv ice. ■ I All B rand N am e Salon Exclusive P ro d u cts Rc r)|/C K ¡ REDKEN I g jg ¡ iR PRULMrrdHBLÜ Sebastiar Sebastian mii-rno ^90rt- & r S e product/service or EXPRESS B W S C H O L A R S H IP S S P R IN G 1 9 9 7 ASU INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAMS IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE AVAILABILITY OF SCHOLARSHIPS FOR ASU INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAMS FOR SPRING 1997 5 5 5 $ 1 0 0 0 SCHOLARSHIPS $ 7 5 0 SCHOLARSHIPS $ 5 0 0 SCHOLARSHIPS YOU MUST APPLY AND BE ACCEPTED TO AN A S U SPRING 1 9 9 7 PROGRAM (applications available at IPO) Spring 1997 Programs Eligible for Scholarships: BOLIVIA La Paz Universidad Catolica Boliviano CAN ADA V ancouver University o f British Columbia EGYPT Cairo, American University in Cairo, courses in English ENGLAND Brighton, Brighton University W olverham pton, Wolverhampton University Cam bridge, INSTEP program London, Richmond College FRANCE Grenoble: Université Stendhal (Grenoble III) intensive language program GERMANY Tübingen, Universität Tübingen - intensive language program and exchange Köln, Fachhochschule Köln ITALY Florence Dante Alighieri - intensive language program MACEDONIA Skopje, Kiril and Metodij University - language and culture program M EXICO H erm osillo, Universidad de Sonora G uadalajara, Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara; M onterrey, Universidad Autònoma de Nuevo León Cuernavaca, Centro Bilingue - intensive language program Puebla La Universidad de las Americas M exico City Universidad La Salle NORWAY Oslo, Norweigan School o f Management PORTUGAL Lisbon, C.IAL intensive language program SPAIN ISRAEL M adrid, Universidad Carlos III G ranada, Universidad de Granada, Centro de Lenguas Modernas Jerusalem , Hebrew University courses in English Beer Sheva, Ben Gurion University o f the Negev courses in English ITALY Florence Richmond College courses in English Kalmar, University College o f Kalmar courses also available in English THAILAND Bangkok, Thammasat University courses in English SWEDEN F o r m o re in f o r m a t io n , c o n t a c t : O FFIC E OF IN T E R N A T IO N A L P R O G R A M S M O U ER B U ILD IN G 1 2 4 ( 6 0 2 ) 9 6 5 - 5 9 6 5 *** f f