W o r ld / N a tio n T ig h ter S ports a i r p o r t s e c u r it y M COULD BE IN PLACE e n ' s h o o p s h o s t su r p r isin g T r o jan s BY THE END OF THE YEAR squad P a g e 15 Page 3 Classified«... .’.....-......17 14 Com ics........ Crossword « . . . . 8 Horoscopes .. .... .......19 O p in io n .................................4 PoliceReport-.............11 Spo*ts. . . 15 ©Copyright, State Press. 1997 Tempe, Arizona Voi. 81 No. 87 An Independent Morning Dally Thursday, February 13,1997 Bike, walker Kickin’ it system poor, official says B y D eanna D S t a t e P r e ss arr University officials are continuing to struggle with alter­ natives that would allow bikes and pedestrians harmonious access to campus byways and passages. Since 1987, numerous discussions have arisen over the hazards bicycles present to pedestrians. No definitive action has ever been taken. “Just walk down any mall -r- you won’t walk 20 feet before a bike gets too close to you,” said ASU police Det. Al Phillips. Phillips said the bike system at ASU is poorly designed and encourages dangerous behavior because bikers are pre­ sented with no alternate routes. None of the current suggestions make sense to bike riders and without their cooperation, no plan will woik, he said. Campus Planner Rick Collins said there are several ideas on how to fix the current problem, but most face funding difficulties. Collins said allowing bikes continued access to the mid­ dle Of campus and discouraging students from using their cars more often are both concerns planners have to consider when formulating alternatives. One proposed action is to make Órange Street a bike path in order to reduce two-wheeled traffic oh Tyler Street. Collins said another idèa is to remove alf bike racks from the front of the Memorial Union. He said having the racks Turn to Bikes, page E rik Guzow ski/State Press BHI Harke, a sophomore outdoor recreation major, hacks a sack while Jason Leupotd, a sophomore landscape architecture major, waits for a pass during a lunch break. 2. Pair integrate AIDS issues, campus class curriculum B y B en L eatherm an S t a t e P r e ss During AIDS Awareness Week, news of the frightening disease seems to be everywhere. Soon it Could be coming to the class­ room. Sue Steiner, a professor of social work, and Kris Ewing, program coordinator for advocacy and assistance, started a pilot pro­ ject this week which integrates contempo­ rary social issues, such as AIDS, info cam­ pus programs and classes. Ewing said there are five instructors who are implementing prepared content into their course in addition to using selected activities and assignments to tie into AIDS Awareness Week. ‘I t was a great kickoff to do this because (AIDS) is one of the largest contemporary social issues,” Ewing said. In addition, the teachers have been dis­ tributing information that tells students how to volunteer or access various AIDS agen­ cies in the Valley. A pre-test was conducted on Monday in some classes that quizzed students’ knowledge of AIDS and HIV. A post-test will be given next week to find out what they have learned. Upon completion of the program, Ewing and Steiner will analyze the results arid m eet with both students and faculty to gauge their opinions. ■ “We’ll talk to them about how we can improve this and what things we need to tw eak,” Ew ing said. “As we begin to learn more from that, we can mature our program.” : Ewing said even if this program proves successful, the issues will only be worked into courses that are appropriate — such as statistics, health or social issues. Ewing said there has been little resis­ tance to the integration of AIDS informa­ tion info course work and, in fact, all of the instructors volunteered. Mike Driscoll, a professor of mathemat­ ics, said the new material has fit rather well in his Statistics as Language course. “It’s not something I’d put in my other math classes,” he said. “But in here I feel it’s appropriate.” Rabbi Barton Lee, professor of Jewish Studies, said AIDS is an important social issue, but it must pertain to the curriculum. “There are obviously some places where it doesn’t work. If I’m talking about revolu­ tionary war, it’s riot time to talk about Turn to AIDS, page 2. Art Carter speaks on race relations, life experiences Art Carter stands In the foyer of Phoenix Symphony Hall after receiving the “Living the Dream” award for his continuing work to advance d v il rights and cultgral diversity in Arizona. Carter received the award In January during the celebration of the Martin Luther King holiday. Carter said he really was not conscious By Sara Bush of being distinguished on the basis-of hi State Press This is part o f a continuing series highlight­ race uBfflTteTlttentls3Tngh school in the 1960s. ing Black History Month. “In high school I ran info the name call­ When Art Carter was growing up in a small Pennsylvania city, only seven other ing,’’ he said. “People had very lim ited African-American children attended his ele­ expectations for us.” Only one history teacher took an active mentary school. Almost 50 years later, Carter, the dean of interest in Carter’s future. He said he owes much o f his Student Life, success to his has observed B i .A C K H i s 1r o R Y M o n t h own self: m a n y d e te rm in a ­ changes in tion, especially during college. race relations in the United States. Carter’s' experiences at York College in “Race relations now, as compared to then, are maybe a little bit more honest, but Pennsylvania and later at Pennsylvania I don’t think as hopeful,” C arter said. State University were punctuated by stu­ “When the civil rights efforts were going dents hollering racial slurs out dorm win­ on, there was so much hope that there were dows. Carter and fellow African-American T u r n to C arter, pa g e 2, unlimited expectations.” State P ress T hursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 P age 2 B ik e s T oday Cam pus clubs amt organizations may sub­ m it written en tries to the State P re ss in the basem ent of the Matthews Center. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone o r via fax. D e a d lin e fo r re q u e sts is noon the day b e fo re p u b lica tio n and e n trie s w ill not be accepted more than three working days before publication O nly one entry per organization per day Is permitted Entries, m ust contain the fu ll nam e o f the dub or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the location. A ll requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete o r illegible entries wM be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the A SU communi­ ty Requests are accepted on a first-come, firstserved basis and are printed as space permits. • C o lle g e o f P u b lic P rog ram s C o lle g e C o u n cil — G eneral m eeting at 4:30 p.m. in the M U C opp er room. • A m erica n M arketing A s s o c ia tio n — G u est speaker O ebra Stevens, m anager of p u b lic re la tio n s fo r SRO Com m unications, w ill be speaking at 4:30 p.m. in the M U Yum a room 2 1 1 . • H ollan d Sum m er S tu d y P rogram — M eeting at 2 p.m. in the M U Santa C tu z room 213. • B a p tist Stu d en t U nion — Free lunch Continued from page t . and b ib le study at noon in the B a p tist Student Union 1322 S . MM. • C o u n s e lo r T ra in in g C e n te r — F re e counseling available for full-tim e students and sta ff at P ayn e H a ll, room 402. Fo r m ore inform ation o r an appointm ent, call 965-5067. • H igher Education Students' Association (H ESA ) — G eneral m eeting at 11:30 p.m. in the M U Santa C ru z room. • A n th ro p o lo g y C lu b & Lam b d a A lp h a A n th ro H o n o r S o c ie ty — M e e tin g at 2 30 p m in the Anthropology Building B- 203. • R eligio u s S tudies C lu b — “The O ccult Underground” lecture and discussion at 3 p.m . in the E C A 371, R e lig io u s S tudies R eading Room . • M U A B M a r k e tin g C o m m itte e —M eeting at 3:30 p.m . in the M U confer­ ence room 2A, third floor. • N A T A S — M e e tin g at 5 p.m . in the Stauffer H all room A132• O m ega Delta Phi«*- R ush inform ation m eeting at 7 p.m. in the M U Pinal room. • Sigm a Delta Tau Sorority — Open bid­ d in g p a rty a t 8 p .m . in th e C o ffe e Plantation on M ill Ave. • P hi Kappa Tau — Recruitm ent inform a­ tion sessio n at noon in the M U Hohokam room , second floor located in a dismount area sends the wrong message to bike riders. The racks would be transferred to the area next to the Undergraduate Academic Services building, just north of the MU. Phillips said ASU police have written tickets to bikers caught disobeying rules as an effort to curb accidents on campus. It is not haying a great effect. He said officers are not writing many tickets because they generate too many complaints. He added that the tickets are not effectively addressing the problems police face when there are between 15,000 and 20,000 bikers on campus each day. Bikers who are issued tickets will face varying fines depending on where they receive the citation. Tickets written on ASU property carry an $18 fine, while those writ­ ten in Tempe or in an area jointly controlled by ASU and Tem pe run $77. Anyone accused of violating a state bike statute will face an $80 fine. C ollins said no m atter w hat plan is implemented, enforcing it will be a problem. “How do you stop them?” he said. “It’s hard to do when you’ve got 15,000 students using bikes. AIDS Continued from page 1. - AIDS,” he said. Lee said if he was discussing a contem­ porary social issue — such as the Jewish community’s response to AIDS — it might be relevant as well as interesting. “I’m always trying to spice up my course with something new so that it keeps me awake and my students awake,” Lee said. “So I appreciate getting new materials.” If the program succeeds, Ewing and Steiner hope to use it for other current social issues, such as-discrimination, during this month’s celebration of black history, or sexism during Women’s History Month in March. “We can tie the students into understand­ ing a little bit more about the issues which are going to liv e on and o ff cam pus throughout their lives,” Ewing said. C a r te r Continued from page 1. students were forced to carve out their own places in uni­ versity life. “We were very resilient,” Carter said about his time at Penn State. “We knew that if we could survive college, we could survive anything/’ Carter’s college experience was not all a struggle how­ ever. He was often ignited by the words of the civil rights leaders who were gaining some influence in America. Penn State was often visited by powerful African American speakers, including Martin Luther King Jr. in 1964. “We applauded until our hands hurt,” Carter said, After college, Carter worked as a high school counselor and has been working in human relations, positions since then! Later he moved to the university level. “I felt that I could be an effective change agent at the University and then I would help students be prepared to go out into the community,” he said. Carter moved to Arizona in 1981. After living in the east­ ern United States for most of his life, he found the Southwest a big change. “1 think the Southwest appeared a land of contrast,” he said. “Housing is more open here, but on the other hand you find people who don’t want an MLK holiday. There is a great contrast.” Carter said despite civil rights efforts and great progress in American race relations, oh occasion he still feels dis- criminated against for being African American. “There is a substantial amount of discrimination that still goes on,” Carter said. “I’ve been in communities where African Americans are routinely stopped by the police.” Carter Said he thinks the nature of American conversa­ tion about race has changed. “Now that we’ve seen Martin (Luther King Jr.), John (Kennedy) and Robert (Kennedy) killed, along with hundreds of others, I think we’re not as hopeful for the future” he said. At ASU, Carter said, race relations are ‘‘fairly benign,” “As the future approaches, people need more opportunities to support families and children,” Carter said. ‘Then our rela­ tionships will improve. It’s an issue beyond race,” C lass S chedule C o lo ra d o A valanche Tonight • 7:00 pm Boston Bruins Saturday, Feb. 15 * 1:00 pm Chicago Blackhawks « Sunday, M arch 2 •6:00 pm Los Angeles Kings Ottawa Senators Tuesday, Feb. 18* 7:00 pm Monday, M arch 10 • 7:00 pm Detroit Red W ings Monday, Feb. 24 • 7:00 pm Pittsburgh Penguins W ednesday, M arch 12 • 7:00 pm E x p e rie n ce th e t h r i lli n g a ctio n o f th e NHL at Am erica West A ren a. P resen t th is ad at th e Gammage Auditorium Box O ffic e and r e c e iv e $8.75 tic k e ts fo r $5.00 o r $26.75 tic k e ts fo r $23.00. V isit us on th e In te rn e t a t www.nhlcoyotes.com T i c k e t s a r e s u b j e c t t o a v a i l a b i l i t y a n d m a y b e l i m i t e d v ie w . L im it o f 4 t i c k e t s p e r g a m e p e r p e r s o n . W orld/N ation State P ress P age 3 Thursday; February 1 3 /1 9 9 7 OJ con fession w orth m illion s to G oldm an B y L in d a D eu tsch A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss Afriine passengers at Boston’s Logan International Airport waft to go through security Wednesday. Tighter airport sect*rtty, including profiles to single out passengers who may pose a threat, was recomended Wednesday by a White House com m ission form ed after h ie TWA R igh t 800< Tighter airport security wanted after TWA. disaster Bv Randolph £ . Schmi5 thè government s inspection program for older air planes; forming a panel to study whether antimissile Associated Puss WASHINGTON — Tighter aiiport security, includ­ technology should be installed on airliners; installatiti g ing profiles to single out passengers who may pose a improved ground proximity warning systems to help threat, was recommended Wetfeiesday by a White House pilots avoid mountainside crashes; requiring that safety seats be used for infants on aircraft, instead of letting commission formed after the TWA Flight 800 disaster. The commission urged that by the end of the year, them ride on parents' laps; and allowing Customs airports implement a combination of passenger profil­ agents to inspect airmail as it leaves the country as well ing, explosive-detecting equipment and bag matching to incoming mail. Commission member Kathleen Flynn, who lost a td reduce die chances of a bomb being brought aboard an airliner. Bag matching is a system that makes sure child in the explosion of Pan Am Flight 103, said: “We luggage doesn't stay on the plane if the passenger who have got to do passenger baggage match, we have got to do passenger profiling, we have got to do explosives checked it isn’t aboard. A variety of federal agencies, airlines and airport detection ... in a comprehensive program.” “We cannot allow terrorists to intimidate a free soci­ authorities will be responsible for acting on more than 50 proposals included in the final report, which was ety,’’ added commission member George W. Williams. Under the commission plan, bag matching would be delivered to President Clinton at the White House. The Federal Aviation Administration said it “will move done for the luggage of any passenger who fits the dan­ quickly to implement the recommendatioas” of the While ger profile, as well as randomly on other passengers, explained commission member Brian Michael Jenkins. House Commission on Aviation Safety and Security. “This has been a contentious area,” he admitted. ‘T h e world is changing and so must our aviation policies and practices,” Vice President A1 Gore said at “Our objective is keeping bombs off airplanes.” While bag-matching wouldn’t be done for all luggage the commission’s final meeting. And President Clinton pledged to use “all the tools of immediately. Gore said that is the eventual objective. The plan drew a quick complaint from the American modern science” to make air travel safer. He urged Congress to approve the $100 million in added annual Civil Liberties Union. T h e proposed profiling system is invasive of priva­ spending for air security recommended by the commission. While the Flight 800 explosion last July, which cy and likely to be discrim inatory,” said counsel killed 230 people, prompted formation of the commis­ Gregory Nojeim, sion, the report was wide-ranging and did not specifi­ - Nojeim contended that only full bag matching can cally address that disaster. Thai crash remains unsolved prevent a terrorist from checking a bag with a bomb in with investigators considering as possible causes a it and then not boarding the plane. S H H H H H H H w prevailed on this commission not to go to full luggage bomb, mechanical failure and a missiie. ; . Among the commission’s proposals are iih^oviHg' match because they don’t 'want to pay for it," he said.' - SANTA MONICA, Calif. — Fred Goldman said Wednesday he would give up his hard-won claim to O J. Simpson’s millions if the football great would admit he is a killer and sigh a detailed confession. “ 1 d o n ’t want to play gam es,” Goldman told The Associated Press in a telephone interview . “But if he GOLDMAN wanted to sign a confession with all the details of his crime and broadcast it all over the country and publish it all over the nation, 1 would drop the judg­ ment.” . Goldman, the aggrieved father who never accepted Simpson’s murder acquittal 16 months ago and doggedly pursued him to civil court, added: “All I ever wanted is justice. It’s never been an issue about money.” Simpson’s lawyer Robert Baker said he was discussing the offer with his client. Goldman admitted the chance of Simpson taking him up on it is slim to none. “Easy to say, easy to do, never going to happen,” Goldman said when he first revealed the offer Tuesday on the Dallas-based Salem Radio Network. “This person hasn’t owned responsibility for any of his actions through his lifetime.” Simpson swore on the witness stand it was “absolutely untrue” that he slashed Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman to death on June 12, 1994. But a civil jury that didn’t believe him found him liable for the crimes and socked him with compensatory and punitive damages totaling $33.5 million — more than dou­ ble what even his accusers predicted he could ever pay. Goldman stands to collect at least half of $8.5 million in compensatory damages and $12.5 million in punitive dam­ ages. He has to split both with his ex-wife, Sharon Rufo. Ms. Simpson’s estate, whose beneficiaries are the two children she had with Simpson, gets $12.5 million in punitive damages. Goldman’s attorney, Daniel Petrocelli, backed his client on the offer, even if it meant he would have to give up his contingency fee if Simpson accepted. “1 think Fred is right on target,” Petrocelli said. “We’d be more than happy to rip up the judgment if Mr. Simpson wants to sign a confession saying he committed these mur­ ders and giving details of how he did it.” Petrocelli suggested that Simpson take the offer seriously. “He has it in his power to save his family from extreme hardship by accepting responsibility,” the attorney said. “It would also do a great deal to heal the wounds in this coun­ try if we could put this to rest.” Attorneys for Ms. Brown’s estate and Ms. Rufo did not immediately return telephone calls for comment Loyola University Law School Associate Dean Laurie Levcnson said Goldman’s offer may be more symbolic than realistic. “I think there is an ongoing fru stratio n by Fred Goldman to get O J. to care,” Levcnson said. “He is look­ ing for satisfaction and the money would never be satisfac­ tion. He is trying to get thrQUgh the denial and he’s willing to pay millions of dollars for that.” On the unlikely chance Simpson accepted Goldman’s offer, Simpson could not be tried again for the killings because of double jeopardy provisions. Settlem ent brings the abortion p ill closer, to U .S . m arket After reaching the licensing agreement with Neogen, the Population Council sued SAN DIEGO — A lawsuit holding up Neogen owner Joseph D. Pike, accusing the introduction of the abortion pill RU-486 him of hiding his criminal past -— he is a in the United States has been settled, mean­ disbarred lawyer accused of forgery — to ing the drug could be on the market by the secure the rights. The Population Council end o f the year, its ch ief sponsor said demanded Pike’s removal from the project. Wednesday. Under the settlement reached Tuesday, The dispute was between the Population Pike has sold much of his interest in the Council, the nonprofit organization that project, the Population Council said. holds the U.S rights to the drug, and The Population Council said it has estab­ Neogen Investors, which was licensed by lished a new com pany, A dvances for the council to manufacture and distribute Choice, to assume responsibility for dis­ RU-486. : , * tributing the drug. B y A m a n d a C o v a r r u b ia s A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss The pill must still receive final approval from the Food and Drug Administration. The FDA declared the pill safe and effec­ tive in September but is awaiting more information on manufacturing and labeling. The Population Council said RU-486 could be the market by the end of 1997. Just last year, the council said RU-486 could be available to American women by mid-1997. RU-486 was first used in France in 1988 and has already been taken by 200,000 European women. But its U.S. introduction has been held up for years by anti-abortion forces, with opponents threatening at one point to bo y co tt French m anufacturer Roussel Uclaf if it sold the drug here. Under pressure from the Clinton admin­ istration, Roussel Uclaf finally donated the U.S. marketing rights to the Population Council in 1994. The Population Council had sued Pike for fraud to force him to relinquish control of NeoGen. The council wanted him out of the picture because his background could scare off investors and provide ammunition to abortion foes. The U.S. rights could be worth $100 million annually. Opinion SW ALLO W T H A T W A F E R OR B U R N IN H E L L , S A TA N IS T I E a istorial A n ti- a b o r tio n p la n s ■ S t a t e P r ess Thursday, February 13, 1997 P age 4 I PICflVUNE, MISSISSIPPI.. m o v e m e n t c r o s s -c o u n tr y sp re e NTi-ABOKTJON activists have com e up w ith ,i;:4oozy o f a aew plan to Sway women gy from having abortions. ' Operation Rescue has announced a nation­ wide tour next month, targeting kids at public : schools. Phoenix mid Tucson are* among die whefe they will be stopping. The Dallas-based right-to-life organization ;_jffasfc stages th e co u n try trie d th is c o n fro n ta tio n a l approach in' their November. Apparently they felt they were so successful, they are willing tO tr y it on a much bigger scale. ■ The group plans to display signs with pic&'t u r e s o f al^iTed-^fetusiilllii^lMiMHih ^Stheo group traveled to Phoenix and Tucson with 6; foot photos. We• kids went home at nightmares. Regardless of whether abortion should he taught as a right or wrong way to handle a pregnancy, this group the wrong public. It is disgusting to think that schoolage children may be u nnecessarily exposed to this type of graphic display. Showing kids “the true horror of abortion” can cut dow n th e ab o rtio n r a te , said O p eratio n R e'scue’s d ire c to r to G an n ett New Service. It seems he recognizesthe shock-valuethat he and h is g ro u p w ill be sh o v in g dow n throats, but chooses to overlook the fragile state o f children’s minds. Children are quite impressionable while they struggle with awk­ ward, pre-pubescent teen crises. Presenting kids with a grisly approach to issues may have detrimental effects. . This equates to showing kids pictures of cut-up bodies o f soldiers as a protest to war. What can it do but desensitize them or make them jaded? ’ No m atter w h at th e fo lk s at O peration R escue say, they w ill n o t re sc u e o u r n atio n fro m a b o rtio n s . O n ly s u ffic ie n t education about sex and birth control methods c a n .. S o fa r as we can see, th is m eth o d o f carrying out anti-abortion protests could serve to increase violence tow ard abortion c lin ic s , p ro v id e rs and w om en seek in g abortions. ; O peration Rescue needs to abandon the scare tactics and focus on more educational means of reaching their objective. Is the m eantim e, close your eyes, kids. Operation Rescue may be coming to a town near you. s TAFF STATE PRESS ©m, mse M arriage secon d tim e around bliss for m om , hell for daughter used to think sitting at home and watching shows about angels It all started about a year ago. was a good time, to this woman who laughed, danced and went My mom started dating. My TCHF.II .F. out to have a great time. It was too new, too different and too mother. The woman who had CARSON scary to think that my mother was falling in love. always been the symbol of comC o lu m n ist She was happy. On the day we met for lunch in down­ 'fort, calm and really good cook­ town Tempe, I saw how very happy she was. I-ignored the ing, started going out and she fact that she was wearing blue eye shadow and I decided started looking good. The whole idea just seemed strange. Here I was in one of not be. mad about my mother’s rebirth as a woman. Then the best college towns in the country and my mother was dating she flashed the ring. “We’ve set the date!” she squealed. It’s a good thing my more than I was. But it made her happy and that’s all that mat­ best friend was there to keep me upright. All I couild do was tered. It helped that things never became too serious. She dated a nod and smile. My best friend asked, “When?” “Valentine’s Day!” few men here and there, but never “fell” for any of them. This So tomorrow while you are having a romantic dinner with summer, when I moved back home to save money and ended up losing my mind, it was like our roles had completely that someone special, or having good time with a bunch of friends, I will be running afound taking flowers, cakes, plastic reversed. I was the one telling her to call if She would be too late. As 1 spoons and photographers from here to there. I will be watch­ drifted off to sleep on a Friday night, I was the one listening for ing my mother start a new life, without me and with Tony. ., And 1 can’t say I am angry anymore. Sure, I had the evil, the hum of a car and flashing the porch light. 1 admit, it sounds ridiculous, but seeing your own mother making out in plain soon-to-be-stcpchild ideas running through my head at first (frogs on the dinner table, turning off the hot water before his sight at two in the morning is a shocking phenomenon. shower) but now I can see But. like a mother would, I what lesson is to be learned told myself that I had taught from this: my mom deserves her aD I could and now it was ........... to be happy and to feel up to her to make her choices. In August, she did. My mother. The woman who had always loved. Now, after a ceremony 1 knew that the guy’s packed full of my feuding name was coming up a lot. In been the sym bol o f comfort, calm and family, too many references fact, she sounded a lot like me realty good cooking, started going out to “obedience,” and a lot of when I was in high school; champagne, I may feel dif­ every sentence started with and she started looking good. ferently. Those of you who his name. There was a lift in have had your parents marry her voice, a sparkle in her eye _______________________ during your adulthood may and before long, there would be able to understand how be a ring on her finger. I was back in Tempe working for the campaign and dismiss­ utterly surreal the whole idea seems. All of you can say a little ing any aspect of a social life. I talked to my mother about once prayer for me tomorrow as I give my own mother away. And Mom, if you are reading this, I wish you all the love a week, listening to her stories about Tony, her giggles about and joy you deserve, and I hope that this marriage lasts forever Tony and her (beams about Tony. Tony is a great guy. I never did have a problem with Tony, (don’t even think of putting me through this again). just the idea of Tony. Tony turned my mother, a woman who Michelle Carson is a sophomore studying journalism. M B R IA N A N D E R S O N , Editor D U S T IN K R U Q EL , M anaging Editor CARYL MICALIZIO.................. TIMOTHY TAIT ............... RAY STERN ................ THERESA VALLES ............. CHRISTA CERRENTANO....... LORI C A I N ......................;.... JIM POULIN......... ,....... ........ RANDY JQN^S........ .............. ...................Sports Editor EDODEVEN....... TIM BAXTER..;. ..... . ....... LEYLA SALMASS1AN................ Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Sara Bush, Kevin Culwell, Deanna Darr; Rowe Edgell, Lidia Kelly, Ben Leatherman, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Vivi Stenberg. SPORTS REPORTERS: Josh DeFamio, Percy Ednalino Jr., Lóri Haro, Matt Paulson, John Sheehy. ■ COPY EDITORS: Jodi Bafundo, Lorie Roberts. PHOTOGRAPHER^: Erik GuzowskiPatShannahan. COLUMNISTS: Kevin J. Berlat, Michelle Carson, Olga Fuentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Gordon, Michelle Hardt, Diane C. Jacobs, David C. Larkin, George D. Rose, Sr., Adam Schiffer, Joshua Solovskoy, Steven Stein, CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Stacy Holmstedt, Jonathan T. Inge, Jason M. Laman, Steve Tansley, Michael S. Whiteman. PRODUCTION: Adrianna Garcia* Kai Haisch-Risley, Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Erik Noland, Shellie Scott. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Cari Dewald, Dan Ellstrom, David Goodwin, Brandon Mudd, Nick Fezzorello, Jess Rankin, Mark Santiago, Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland. CLASSIFIEDS: Heidi Heister, Wayne Hoover, Sarah Kimmel, 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: BRIAN ANDERSON Editor^ DUSTIN KRUGEL Managing Editor THERESA VALLES Opinion Editor CHRISTA GERRENTANO News Editor Tht State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 1$, Arizona State Uni versify, 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 pews and views published in this newspaper, are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff of student body. S t a t e P r es s P h o n e N u m bers Information...,,..«....,965-7572 Newsroom....... ..... ..965-2292 Magazine.... ............ 965-1695 Advertising. .............965-6555 Classifieds..... ....... ...965-6735 http://new s. vpsa. asu. edu Opinion State P ress P age 5 Thursday, February 1 2 ,1 9 9 7 This legal beef about steak starts to rub a raw nerve If you’ve wearied of O.J. but still have a craving for justice, let us return to the Case of David Schlessinger, fussy eater and overgrown brat. As some may recall, Schlessinger, 31, who runs an insurance agency on Chicago’s North Side that his father creat­ ed, went with a couple of pals to vacation at Lake Geneva, Wis. He said he needed the vaca­ tion because he has high blood pressure, for which he takes medication, and was in need of relaxation. He and his friends went to a restaurant, Anthony’s Steakhouse, for .dinner, where Schlessinger ordered his steak medium-well. The steak came, but Schlessinger thought it was welldone rather than only medium well. Schlessinger demanded that it be replaced, but the owner said it was done the way he had ordered it. So Schlessinger had a tantrum. He declined to eat the steak and said he would not pay for the meal unless he was given his way. As George .Condos, the owner, described the scene: “He was running up and down the main dining room with his cellular phone and complains to the waitress about the table, the salads, the meal, everything. She offered to give him somethingelse. He said our food was garbage. “He acted like an immature punk, threatening my father and saying he was going to take our restaurant... He smart­ ed off to the customers. He went up to a local business owner and told him he probably didn’t know what a cellular phone was.” Schlessinger was so angry about his steak and what he thought was a lack of respect by just about everyone in the joint that he called the police. The town’s cops came and told him that it would be best if he ate his food, paid his bill, shut up and left. Or maybe just shut up, pay and leave. That wounded his feelings even more. And, he says, it caused his blood pressure to rise. So being a true creature of the 90s, he hired a lawyer and started suing. He went to federal court and sued the owner of the restaurant. He sued the cops involved in the incident. He Sued the town of Lake Geneva. He sued the Town Board and its members, the town’s police department, and the town’s chief of police. But the court w asn’t im pressed. They thought Schlessinger was kind of a. goof and said so. when they tossed Ms complaint out. So he appealed. And it wound up being pondered by a federal appeals court. They found that his suit was frivolous and that he was “goofy” and a “wise guy.” As the appellate panel’s opinion put it: “Schlessinger’s suit is absurd and likely malicious. It trivializes the consti­ tutional rights he asks us to vindicate. If your meal is. not tasty, you do not throw a tantrum, upset the other diners, and then sue the mayor of the town where the restaurant is located.” And the court did something that judges don’t do often enough. It decided to punish Schlessinger and his lawyer for being frivolous, malicious pains in the neck. “We therefore direct Schlessinger and his attorney to show cause ... why they should not be penalized ... for pur­ suing a frivolous appeal,” Schlessinger is a sensitive guy, and his feelings were again hurt. So he called me for sympathy and publicity, saying: “How dare a judge call me goofy and a wise guy because I called the police? I am president of a company.” Now, the appellate court has ruled again. It has ordered Schlessinger and his lawyer, Andrew J. Shaw, to pay the legal bills of some of the people they sued. They were told to pay the cops $8,320.80. The restaurant got $2,951.75. And the town and the Town Board were awarded $4,810.19. That comes to $16,082.74. But Schlessinger is not a quitter. He says he is going to appeal the whole thing to the U.S. Supreme Court. He’s very upset. The Chicago Bar Association is doing a write-up in its journal on the legalities of the ruling because the judge made a bad ruling. The papers on the legalities have been sent to the top 50 lawyers in the country. And he said that he’s also thinking of suing me, because he doesn’t think 1 treated him kindly in my column. He says he suspects that die federal appeals judge ruled against him because of my column. I find that flattering but a bit bub­ ble-headed. Well, I don’t want to get into a public dispute with this lad. But I should warn him that I too have a blood pressure problem. And I would bet my blood pressure rises even higher than his when I am provoked. And when someone threatens to sue me for printing what he said and what judges said about him, my blood pressure bounces off the top of the meter. So he should watch out, or I might sue him for making my temples throb. And for not having the sense and good taste to order his steak medium. Or maybe just a bowl of pabulum. M ike R o yko is a syndicated colum nist fo r the Chicago Tribune. Sensational focus leaves A m biguous jargon requires country w ithout real stoty adjustment for alien neighbor The coun­ try’s media fa s c i n atio n with the latest events in the O.J. trial brings up an i mportant question. Why is our media H welling on such non­ sense? Why are the nation's mainstream newspapers and TV outlets spending more and more time concentrating on Pamela Anderson’s marriage to Tommy Lee, for example, and less time as the war in Rwanda? Look at what has happened to the media. Once upon a time, we knew what kind of news we were getting. Maybe the evening news and the news­ papers weren’t full of huge revelations and sensationalism, but at least we knew they represented “bard” news as lijpposed to what we see in the tabloid newspapers and on TV shows that blare from the boob-tube. Today, the defini­ tion of news is changing. Shows like Extra Access Hollywood and.A Current Affair have infiltrated the news media to such a degree that mainstream media such as The A rizo n a R ep u b lic and major TV netw orks, have been competing with the “tabloid” press for viewers. j j If the evening news isn’t talking about Michael Jackson’s history of facelifts, it’s busy telling us ad nauseam about Liz Taylor’s ninth divorce and how die’s rebounding so well. And does the aver­ age person really cate whether Michael and L ua Marie got married at ail7 I doubt it. Yet the media thinks these a « imjwMuit n> you, We’re losing the ability to separate news from entertainment. Increasingly, not clearly see why a presiBSH8 Wammmm dential decision to spend more money on education or cut defense spending is more significant as far as the country is concerned than whether O J .’s glove is too small to fit his hand. The media panders to the superficial more often than not at the expense of the signifi­ cant. For a person genuinely seeking a grasp of what’s going on in the world, it ’s getting more difficult finding media outlets reporting about Clinton’s tax cuts rather than about John F Kennedy Jr.’s nuptials, for example. Is this blurring of the news damaging our country on some level? Arc we as concerned as much as we used to be with the major issues affecting our country? I would argue the answer is no. Since so much of what masquerades as news real­ ly consists of nothing but shallow non­ sense, many people tune out the remain­ der of the news that actually is important, or at the very least don’t take it seriously. For most people, there’s too much to do each day to have the patience to hear about O.J. going to Baskin Robbins after his civil trial before they hear details about the Oklahoma City bombing. Some simply tune out. And we all suffer for their subsequent lack o f participation in the system. That’s not to say there shouldn’t be a place to learn about the Heidi Fleiss trial, for example. That place should be the tabloids next to the supermarket checkout counter. Most people know the “truth” and news worthiness o f those publica­ tions. At least there’d be more of a sepa­ ration betw een “flu ff” and bona-fide news if people looked to Weekly World News and Entertainment Tonight ratber than the New York Tim es and ABC to find ou t how many H ollyw ood stars gained weight, got pulled over for DUIs. or cheated on their spouses. Most importantly,! wouldn’t hear the name O.J., no matter what news show I happened to be watching. Steve Stein is a senior studying psychology. American culture, primarily through the I am an alien iIANE C. television, that we are often referred to as in this country. “Americans to the North.” So there should It is a term I fJACOBS be no adjustments necessary living here. hate. It evokes Having lived in the United States years in me memories ago, that’s what I thought, until in one of of the stereotype my first assignments we were asked to do of the alien from a statistical project, doing Comparisons my childhood with Anglos and blacks This was incom­ before m ajor prehensible to me because in Quebec, l am space explo­ a black Anglo (or Anglophone) meaning rations — little that I am an English speaking black per­ green men from son. So at break, I took aside an AfricanMars. Although A m erican stu d en t asking w hat A nglo the dream er in me always imagined that when we finally means — I was stunned to find out that it discovered life on other planets, they would equates with white. Even though we share the same lan­ be seven-foot tall black people. That would guage, there are many other subtle differ­ be poetic justice. A term I like better is international stu­ ences for which I am always on the alert. dent, although this term also gives me grief. I How much more difficult must it be for recently went to the International Student international students- from non-English Office on campus to have some forms com­ speaking countries to comprehend English pleted. There was interest when I said I was a when English speaking people from differ­ foreign student, until I said I -was from ent countries use the same words to mean Canada: “I thought you were from some­ different things? On a concrete level, the biggest adjust­ where more exotic, like West Africa.” My response was that I am, only 300 or 400 ment for me in coming here is understand­ years removed. So I feel like the foster child ing the w hole m anaged care system . of international students. I felt out of place at Coming from a counfry where we have uni­ International Student Office events designed versal health care, I have become accus­ tomed to going to any hospital or doctor primarily to orient students to American life. A more common reaction 1 get when I when something ailed me. I am used to a tell people I’m from Canada is a double- system where whether you are on welfare or take. Of course it is not unusual to meet a affluent, any medical procedure you need is Canadian here. People just don’t expect to available at no cost, and a health plan see a Canadian of African descent, Haven’t means the difference between a ward and a they studied about the underground rail­ Sémi-private or private room. Simply being a Canadian in Arizona is road? And when I tell them I ’m from Quebec, where the only official language is an education in itself! Diane C. Jacobs is a doctoral student in French, they are even more intrigued. Canadians live in such proximity to the social work and can be reached at dianecUnited States and are so bombarded with jacobs @juno. com. Q: u o ta B fe s “The only justification fo r ever looking down on someone is to pick them up.” — Jesse Jackson P age 6 Thursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P r ess Cigarette machines may go up in smoke with FDA ruling B y J e n n if e r N S t a t e P r e ss eth erby Cigarette vending machines will vanish from local businesses if Tempe is denied an exem ption from a strict Federal Drug Administration ruling. The FDA ruled in November that cigarette vending machines cannot be placed in businesses where minors are allowed. Tempe city attorney David Merkel said the ruling will have the effect of banning the vending machines from all businesses in Arizona because minors are allowed in bars if accompanied by a parent or guardian. Tempe passed a law several years ago restricting the •inachiit&VvHQ^^ l^ciket. said the Tempe ordinance is not as strict as the FDA ruling. a ; The current Tempe law requires that all cigarette vending machines be in view of an attendant and the machine must be con­ trolled to prevent minors from purchasing cigarettes, Merkel said. Because of the stricter ruling, the Tempe law will be preempted and made void by the FDA ruling. “If we don’t do anything, vending machines will go by the boards,” Merkel said. The FDA ruling will take effect in August. The city has the option to apply for exemption from the rule, but Merkel said it will likely be denied because the city doesn't meet the criteria. For exemption, the FDA requires the Tempe ordinance be “more stringent” or “required by compelling local issues” that would not cause violation of the ruling. The exemption deadline is May 1997. Vice-Mayor Joseph Lewis said the coun­ cil will discuss the options at its meeting tonight at 6 p.m., but won’t make any for­ mal decisions. Councilman ßen Arredondo said the council hasn’t considered if it will apply for exemption yet. Council members are currently looking at the differences between the Tempe ordi­ nance and the FDA ruling. Art car worth almost $20,000 QUEEN CREEK (AP) — Kris Baxter says that as transportation, her 1982 Honda Prelude is shot but that as art, it may be worth $20,000. Baxter also says she’s giving it away. Purchased used for $900, the car now has 215,000 miles on it. Realizing its days were nearing an end. Baxter came up with the idea of having artist friends adorn it for donation to the Superstition Area Land Trust, a preservation effort. She met the artists — from Scottsdale, Tempe, Mesa and Apache Junction — dur­ ing her four years as a reporter at the Apache Junction Independent. Now its windows, hod, trunk doors, fenders and side panels sport their paintings and etchings. “People do a double take when they sec it,” she said. “They imagine some sort of kid with dyed black hair and a ring in her nose instead of me.” The artists told Baxter that when the last artwork is finished Monday, the car’s total value should be nearly $20,000, although it will be sold in individual art pieces to the highest bidders at a Scottsdale gallery late this month. •»<> i ; ; v S c irtip s f ÍI A ö tu d e n tö ...........................$ si”(!Cl[?in[r(g,1",)]]—(5S*B!)^~ VöCöoö oc - % - Vg öoö 2 a - % c o ô 4 a + V ^ f B ötudentö $ â in C /s) V5~ (11) mm y ? ,{ lA è T Ö ötudentö . $ V 5 /3 V 5~ (1 1 ) X 5 1 /V 2 .,.*9x11 D ötudentö ..$ 9 9 F ö tu d en tö ........ to M a z a tla n Money is green, (3rd grade level reading,) And you don't need a lot of it to fly on Am erica West, (7th grade level,) O ur incredibly low fares make it more opportune than ever to holiday th is {Spring Break, (11th grade level,) {So, • forthwith and heretofore, for advance booking (Le,, reservations), promptly call, posthaste, your professional travel agent, or Am erica West at 1-Ô00-25Ô-9292, &3ollege:level,) To a ssist in ascertaining receipt of t h e S e ^ ^ ^ ^ _ ^ diminutive expenditures, cordially see the ensuing données enumerated, (Hello, Mensa.) > > D e n v er $49 C olorado {Springs $4Q "Vancouver, B,C, $ ii0 *119 M ia m i A n c h o ra g e *159 *169 A l l f a r e s sh o w n above a re eaoh way, w it h r o u n d - t r ip p u rch a s e , Alt AIRFARES QUOÍED ABOVE aré (rom Phoenix and are subject to change; seats are limited, may not b e available on all flights and are available on America West-operated flights only. Tickets are nonrefundable, but may be reissued for a $ 5 0 change fee. Fares require 14-day advance purchase and 3-day minimum stay, Tickets must b e purchased by 3 / 7 / 9 7 and travel completed by 5 / 2 7 / 9 7 . International taxes a n d /o r fees additional, approx $ 3 2 (Mexico), $ 2 6 (Canada). Only final dollar value stated in non-equation form ab ove will b e honored. Additional restrictions may apply. © 1 .9 9 7 America W est Airlines. Visit us a t http://wvyw.americawest.com State P ress P age T hursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 7 H igher coffee prices brew ing due to excessive rain By H C il l a r y Association of America. Among the 49 percent of Americans who are coffee drinkers, many are not about to give up that daily fix. “We just can’t do without it,” Yvette Kukuk said as she sipped a cup with a friend at a Seattle Starbucks. “Yup, totally addicted ” ‘W e’ll just scrimp for change the days we don’t have enough money if the prices go up,” she said. “We’ll just deal with it.” In Tulsa, Okla., Colin Tucker, a 29-year-old lawyer, said he would curb his coffee habit only if it began to cost more than lunch. C arlos K noepffler, president o f M iami Coffee Merchants, predicted people wouldn’t give up coffee but might think twice about indulging in gourmet beans. hura A P B u sin e s s CHICAGO — There’s a different kind of jolt coming soon to coffee lovers. That cup of joe soon could cost mòre. Too much rain in L atin A m erica and a strike in Colombia have sent prices for future delivery of beans bub­ bling toward two-year highs. The nation’s top seller of regular coffee —* Folgers — already has said it will raise prices 7 percent next month, and others are expected to follow. Coffeehouses could increase prices 5 cents à cup by the end of summer, and grocery stores could raise prices by the end of the month unless the wholesale prices drop back, said Ted Lingle, executive director of the Specialty Coffee “People might buy half a pound — not a pound,” he said. Futures prices have increased 65 percent in the last eight weeks to Wednesday’s close of $1.72 a pound. Folgers announced Tuesday that would translate to a 15-cent increase to $2.41 for a 13-ounce can. r The last time prices were this high was 1994, when a frost devastated the crop in Brazil, the world’s largest cof­ fee producer. But they dropped almost as quickly because plenty of coffee had been stockpiled. This time, a nationwide strike by public-sector workers in Colombia threatens to choke o ff supplies from the world’s No. 2 producer and exporter. It also looks like the entire Latin American crop will be smaller because too much rain has soaked plantations. PEOPLE will perform across the country through early July, then travel to Europe. They return to North America for anoth­ er round o f concerts starting O ct. 26 in T o ro n to ’s Skydome. A concert will also be scheduled in war-tom Sarajevo. Ticket prices, averaging about $45, go on sale Saturday. NEW YORK (AP) — Attention, Kmart shoppers! U2 now available in Aisle 5. next to the lingerie. And not just their compact disc. The Irish rock band took over a K-mart in New York on Wednesday to announce a 62-date world tour. As part of the announcement, lead singer Bono pushed a shopping cart while singing the new song “Holy Joe.” The “Popmart” tour opens on April 25 at Sam Boyd Stadium in Las Vegas. U2, whose new album. Pop, goes on sale March 4, WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Shirley MacLaine went to Warsaw looking for a miracle. The actress, in Poland on Wednesday for the open­ tyifbotyaLtniinjLi Say It Differently This Year! ATTHEMAIN STREETEl ing o f her new m ovie, The Evening Star, v isite d Poland’s holiest Roman Catholic shrine, the 14th-cen­ tury Jasna Gora monastery with its picture of the Black Madonna. The Black M adonna, in the southern city of Czestochowa, draws pilgrims from around the world who believe it to have miraculous powers. MacLaine told the state news agency PAP that, although she is not a Catholic, she has a picture of the Black Madonna over her bed. taxing OFTRI-CITYMALL a S IN G - RECITE • TA LK *BE IN V E N T IV E di-ras» withorigina1 lm r uskaverse. STARDMOSlJStarsDesignedInMotionjwhereyoucreateyour ownvidi ONE LUCKY CALLER EACHr DAY RECEIVES 'A FREE * IR EACH MÉMaj I— VIDEO VALENTINE. UM UBEL $35^""”$50 HMiAUPPUCeHNO HHMAITH. SJL CO&m 0F D0BSON &MAIN iPUTEIl M K COffffl NEXT ID DOCSNOT INCLUDE MAKEOVER m BRMG THREE FRENDS GET YOURS FREE! A ^ W A U U N S ( HOUSE m PAUL CONCEJO AND GOOD TIMES ENTERTAJNMENT BUNG YOU & W 5Ji C A L L 917-8740 Healthy, Natural <*** Vegetarian FÖOdS OirxHn, Delivery, Takeout * teso East Apache, Tempe _PIZZA & M icro B eer N ite E v e r F O U R y T h u P E A K S r s d a y N B R E W IN G i t e C O M P A N Y P a le A le • A r iz o n a P e a c h • S c o ttis h A m b e r $ 4 .6 5 60-oz. P I T C H E R S sr 968-6666 1301 East University Dr. • Tempe University Sunny's Broadway Page & S t a t e P r ess T hursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 Internet Valentines available for the romantically challenged B y A ly so n Y o u n g S p e c ia l t o t h e S t a t e P r e ss The days of writing letters of love and sonnets of senti­ ment have passed and romance may be lost forever. However, there is hope for those who lack the skill, tal­ ent or desire to sculpt the English language into a romantic and intimate art. For these individuals, the cold and uncompromising world of computers has the answer. Anyone can enter a Web site and send Valentine greetings to his or her love interest. The recipient then receives an e-mail notification that a Valentine message awaits on the Web. ASU is just one organization Offering free access to Web sites that provide various ways to send Valentines to any­ one with access to receive them. A Web team from Information Technology set up the ASU Web site and Rob Kubasko, systems analyst and team member, said the purpose was to inspire people to U se ASU’s World Wide Web page. “We tried to think of some fun things to tie into the holi­ days to encourage people to visit the Web,” Kubaskb said. “We want to make it interesting for people.” So far, more than 5,000 people have taken advantage of it. Political science major Nick Materese used the opportu­ nity to send a message to a friend in New York who was dreading the holiday. “I think it’s really nice, and it lets you get in touch with somebody who’s really far away,” Materese said. “It’s a lot more convenient, and this way, I can surprise her at work with virtual roses.” p Materese gave another reason for sending Valentines through the Internet, “It should appeal to everyone who is a procrastinator and who is in a bind, like myself,” he said. Another student was just browsing the net when she dis­ covered ASU’s Valentine’s Day Web site and decided to give it a try. “I wasn’t planning to do it, but 1 saw it and I just wanted to try,” said sophomore Andreina Leccese. Leccese sent a pre-composed card to her boyfriend, a student at Mesa Community College. “It’s just ‘click’,” she said, adding that others should try it because it’s so easy. Both Leccese and Materese said they plan on giving their Internet card recipients other gifts. ASU’s website address for Valentine’s Day messages is http:w w w .asu.edu/asuw eb/events/valentines. Various Valentine’s Day cards are provided. Kubasko said Information Technology has been sending the Valentines to people on campus as well as to other state universities and organizations. Another, more personal option for sending Valentines through the Internet includes the Cyrano Server, through which a person can send specific, eloquent messages inspired by that famous writer of love letters, Cyrano de Bergerac. Upon entering the site, an individual can choose from a number of categories, including desperate longing, intellec­ tual connection, misty-eyed regret and surreal concern. After entering data concerning a loved one, the site will compose an appropriate letter. Also, Cyrano is perfect for those who want to end a cur­ rent relationship. The site provides artistically and thought­ fully composed letters to break the news to the disappointed receiver gently. The ad d ress o f the C yrano S erv e r is http://www.nando.net/toys/cyrano.html. Look for it Today! ¡« 8 % z~rs on/yj FO R R E L E A S E TH U R S D A Y , FEB H U A H Y 1 3 ,1V97 CROSSWORD R e c y c l e ■ -YOUR € L u x u r y n e u tr e s _ Shows before 6PM • A dvance Ticket Soles • Stereo Surround Sound] EE Refit! on targe Popcorn A Large Drink • Best of Phoenix Gourm et Snock BorJ I E THIEVES, (Fri} 2:45,5:10,7:45,10:15 (Sat, Sun) 12:00,2:45, 5:10, 7:45,10:15 (Fri-Sun) 1:00.4:15.7:30.10:30 (Fri-Sun) 1:20,5 2 0 .9:15 (Fri-Sun) 350, 7:15 (Fri) 2:15,4 4 5 i 720. 9:45 (S a t Sun) i:4S, 2 :1 5 ,4 4 5 ,7 2 0 .9 4 5 (Fri) 320,5:30,820,10:05 (S a t Sun) 1 2:15.3:00,5:30,8.-00,1025 EVITA irai THE PES T iPo-t»* . 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Clearly, we must seek new ways of financing park needs in order to preserve our natural resources for future generations,’’ McÇain said. Groups including the Environmental Defense Fund, the Grand Canyon Trust and thé National Trust for Historic Preservation have said they support such measures. for those improvements. The bonds would be gradually paid for by park entrance fees that would not exceed $2 per visitor. McCain and Kolbe introduced similar measures last year, but Congress adjourned before acting on them. “More than a quarter of a billion people visit our national parks DANCEDANCEDANCE H A Y D E N ’S F E R R Y R E V I E W ASU’s Award Winning Literary Magazine • FALL/WINTER ' T enth LSSUE$L9 A n n iv e r s a y I s s u e ■ Includes work by: Ron Carlson, Yiisef Komunyakaa, Alison Deming, Naomi Shihab Aye, Alberto Rios, Jeanine Savard, Beckian Fritz Goldberg and Rick Bass Lambda League’s ON SAIL NOW Valentine's Day Dance Available at: •language 8c Literature Patio 8c MU Mall Mondays & Thursdays, 10-2 •Student Publications in the Matthews Center Basement 7:30pm til m idnight Friday Feb. 14 P V W e st R e s id e n c e H a ll R e s o u r c e C e n te r •Your Favorite Bookstore Co-sponsored by New Times Romance A R IZ O N A S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y AIDSAWARENESS W EEK F E B R U A R Y 10-17 CarinsurancefromGEICO. 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(6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 A c tiv it ies o n g o in g t h r o u g h o u t t h e w e e k □ AIDS Memorial Quilt Display Feb. 11-15 Matthews Center Art Museum 10am-5pm □ Campus AIDS Info & Resources, Ribbon Distribution, Canned Food Drive, Condom Distribution 11am-lpm, Feb. 10-13 Hayden Lawn S t a t e P r ess Page 11 Thursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 QUIT EmPu $S 1 BLt TIRE BEST LUNCH & DINNER IN TOWN« -B U T Y O U 'V E GQTTÂ LQ VE FOOD! The fo o d is succulent, enticing, delicious! Show up after 9pm & receive a free split of champagne! llENTINES YOUR SWEETHEAjrf’S « e r « r 1/2 j 6 . T h é B eer is fresh, puré, a n d n a turali T he M usíais Blues, live Blues! •Full cocktail bar • Late night at the Tomb menu LJam m ¥* G h t ó f J f e E | : | p j \ M O N S fpS WEDNESDAY \m TR i® A R D Sd{i HAPPY HOUR MONDAY-SATURDAY 4-7PM - $1 O F F A L L M IC R O B R EW PINTS! 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You'll never know unless you read P olice Report ASU police reported the follow ing inci­ dents Tuesday: • A male employee reported that someone stole a vacuum cleaner from McClintock Hall. • A male employee reported that someone damaged a statue at Karsten Golf Course. • A male student reported that someone stole bike parts from his bicycle in Manzanita Hall. • A male employee reported that someone removed his bicycle from Manzanita Hall. • A male affiliate found two tires and rims unsecured at the Building Administration C-wing. • A male student reported that someone removed bike parts from his bike at the Language and Literature Building. • A male student reports that someone removed his bicycle from the bike racks at the Goldwater Center., • A female student reported that someone removed her wallet, credit cards and other items from her purse somewhere on ASU campus. • A fem ale student reported receiving harassing phone calls in Palo Verde West residence hall from an ex-boyfriend who lives off-campus. • A female student and an adult male stu­ dent reported that someone removed clothing from the laundry room at 525 S. Forest Ave. • A female student was contacted at Cholla Apartments, where she had become ill. She was taken to a local hospital. Compiled by State Press reporter Jennifer Netherby. Blind man ticketed for jaywalking CINCINNATI (AP) — A blind man got more than a broken tailbone when he was hit by a pickup truck. He was ticketed for jaywalking, too. Jeff Friedlander said he was going to pay the fine until discovering Ohio law gives the right-of-way to blind people carrying white canes. “By law, a blind person with a cane has the rig h t-o f-w a y ,” F rie d la n d e r’s lawyer, Douglas May, said. The accident happened Jan. 22 as Friedlander Was crossing at an intersection going to his job at a book bindery from the group home where he lives. He suffered a bro- ken tailbone; the truck driver was not charged. Police concluded Friedlander, 48, veered out of the crosswalk. “His jaywalking caused the accident,” Capt. Robert Biddle said. “When we can establish a traffic violation as a cause or a co n tributing cause o f an accident, we issue a citation. “Yes, you have the right-of-way when you have a cane, but you must be lawfully using the crosswalk,” Biddle said. “He’s going to have his day in court.” Friedlander faces up to a $100 fine. He pleaded in n o cen t at a p relim in ary hearing Tuesday . Win a trip to Sunset Beach! Enter the 1-800-C0LLEQ “Anything Can Happen" Sweepstakes IT’SEASYTOWIN!4 m Simply complete a 1-800-COLLECTfall between February 3 and Februaryp, 199| and you are automatically entered! Plus, 1-800-C0LLECT saves up to 44%! your Horoscope FIVE grand prize winners will win a trip for two to the set of SUNSET BEACH in California and a tour of the NBC Studios! io üsè1»800-COLLECT. The mòre t á lís w f f l Chaneesyou have to win! [South P * « /P a rty Tune in to Sunset Beach Weekdays on NBC ANYTHING CAN HAPPCN AT SUNSET 1 -8 0 0 -C 0 L L E C T STUDENTEXPRESS, INC www.studentcxpross.com B est Prices G u a ra n te ed ! Save upto 44% For long distance calls •Savings based on a 3,-minute AT&Toperator-dialed interstate call • No Purchase Necessary • U.S. Residents Only• Void where prohibited < For complete, binding rules and free entrydetails call 1r800-R.ULES 4U. ' P age 12 State P ress Thursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 Two Arizonans Lunch-break ballet m arching band NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A Tucson couple’s trip to Mardi Gras was cut short after they were attacked by a high school marching band during a parade. The attack, which took place near the end of the Orpheus parade Monday night, resulted in the arrests of two band chaperons and a battery citation for a third, police said. The chaperons were with the Frederick A. Douglass Senior High School marching band of New Orleans. “It was just bizarre,” said Carey Cramer., 35, a fund­ raiser for nonprofit organizations. “They were hitting us with their instruments, with these big flag holders. They were kicking us.” Doneya Allen, 22, of New Orleans, was booked on two counts of simple battery and Vernon Edwards, 18, also of New Orleans, was booked on aggravated battery of a police officer, said Lt. Marlon Defillo, a police spokesman. Police did not release the name of the third chaperon issued a summons. Cramer said he and his fiancee, Samara Whittaker, 22, also of Tucson, were attacked after wandering onto St. Charles Avenue just before the band came marching past. After a female chaperon yelled at them to get off the street, Cramer, Whittaker and other parade-goers moved toward the curb, Cramer said. Cramer said the woman shoved Whittaker back into the crowd. A male chaperon then punched her in the face before the band moved on, Cramer said. After finding two police officers, Cramer pointed out the chaperon who allegedly punched Whittaker. Cramer said he was then attacked by about 40 band members. “I probably got hit 100 times before I got out of the crowd,” he said. Defillo said one of the officers was struck in the head and suffered facial cuts and bruises. Cramer said he and his fiancee took a taxi to a hospital were they were treated for multiple cuts and bruises and released. School officials could not be reached for comment. Erik Guzowski/State Press C ecily W oolf, d a n ce major, practices fo r her Se n io r P erform ance during lunch. T h e Se nior Dance Perform ance will be Feb. 21-22 at 7:30pm in the N elson Fine A rts Center. State Press (No m ention of the ASU Marching Band) L it, im Fiesta M all • M etro Center • North Scottsdale • Flagstaff B A C K U P Y O U R Ladies Swimwear 'SPRING BREAK SALE" 10% Off with this ad M E M O R Y . B u y a y e a rb o o k . Mix to Fit Tops & Bottoms Size to DD&E O n ly $44.94 d e livered a sm all p rice to p a y fo r a p ie c e o f h isto ry. H O TTEST A NOW HIRING S t ► In the/ -Cu/utc Arizona's #7 Swim wear Stores phone 602.433.9020 fax 602 443.9119 Corporate Offices: 8350 E. Evans Rd. • Scottsdale, AZ 85260 Coming soon to Arrowhead Mall & Tucson's Eicon Mall •" ~Tle ^ u n tP e v il s4 V s lY yeawo&l call us @ 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 or visit http://news.vpsa.asu.edu S t a t e P ress T hursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 Valentine’s Day Personals DEADLINE IS TODAY NOON 3 lines 3 bucks AH Valentine’s Day personal ads will be on our digital State Press W eb site! Your State Press Valentine ad can be read by your loved one in Cleveland via the Web! http://news.vpsa.news.edu. (Such a deal for three bucks!) r a g e is Comics Page 14 Thursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 (S E H E R A T I o h H e X ê D S t a t e P ress B y S tacy Holm stedt M Et>l « i* B y h ir e * " J Y 'K N O U , C F O A K , e vé K Y o N G G e rs /^ e s e c ra i /m * tw r/a u ¿ Y . AW evezYoNe mas tv Wa y or pe Aung form rr. K F f N P TH etR. O U Ñ S A e a A L T St T r ia is r ib u la t io n s PM SORRY GOT YOU lUROm in ofiiL the mm day. if thereí ANYWAVTOREFRY VOIL. ^ ----- y.W w ^ Wfl / m — J 1N o cular Pa r a b l e wwjljdvdu vAkbitineT B y D avid G ould o f f I'M S O DEPRESSED IC O Ü LD W U - H U tft asK,+®, „ V A LEN T IN E? t h e k a r r B y K aric Parisi « r J - J .i M VSBF By S P lL B E R T ® ft Y RAISE DIDN'T GO THROUGH BECAUSE YOUR SECRETARY DIDN'T DO THE PAPERWORK. 1 DEKAND THAT YOU INITIATE DISCIPLINARY ACTIONS AGAINST HER/ cott Adams CAROL, COULD YOU GET ME ONE OF THOSE DISCIPLINARY ACTION ^ ¡ ¡ ¡ É L T sure , RIGHT1 AFTER IAY SKI TRIP TO l i t TRY, BU T... -------- 1------ 1 TT liiid ü m iiffl} li !A K i y / N ATLAfinc featurf o t997MARkràr»*:*:v :% vî* x* x *: MarkParisi» aoi.com State Press on the morid mide meb — http://news.vpsa.asu.ed U A Life in Focus Is your lifelong dream to be a contestant \ _ J l J h j l \xj nr if ill inI Fouis of the Books of the Mew Teshnueul ____ / on MTV's "Singled O ut?" If so, join Thursday Noon Bible Study Christian Students Fellowship is sponsoring a noon Bible study eveiy Thursday during the Spring Semester on the various aspects of A Life in Focus, a study from the books of the New Testament. This week we wilt talk about : M UAB Special E v e n ts A Life Out of Focus Thursday, Feb 13,12:40 -1:30 pm All are welcome Memorial Union, Mohave/222 (bring a brown bag lunch) beverages and desserts provided Christian Students Fellowship For more information call 921-7270 as w e play GET HOOKED. F r i F eb 14 11:3 0 - 12:30 in th e M U P ro g ra m m in g L o u n g e I f in te r e s te d c a ll 9 6 5 -6 8 2 2 Memorial U nion A otmties B oaro S ports Page 15 T hursday, February 13, 1997 S t a t e P ress Sun Devils must grow up, handle pressure vs. u s e B v Ed O deven S t a t e P ress The Sun Devils-Trojans 7 p.m. showdown tonight at the University Activity Center will be an intriguing contrast between young and old. The young ASU men’s basketball team (10-12, 2-8 in the Pac-10) has'lost seven of its last eight games. The Sun Devils’ lóne senior starter is Rodger Farrington. ASU head coach Bill Frieder said his team will eventu­ ally improve. “It jüst takes time a lo^of times with young kids,” he said. The “old” men of Troy have four senior starters— Rodrick Rhodes, Stais Boscman, David Crouse and Jaha Wilson. USC’s senior leadership has been a major force in the team’s drive to reach the post-season. “You really have a lot of experience and guys that have come together and arc playing extremely well right now,” Frieder said. The Trojans (13-7, 8-3 tied for first in the Pac10 with UCLA) have won six of their last eight contests. But first things first. The Sun Devils want to play the spoiler role and put an end to USC’s four-game conference winning streak. USC defeated ASU 75-56 on Jan. 18 in Los Angeles. In the re-match, ASU sophomore guard Gee Gervin hopes his team can bounce back from its latest dose of adversity — an 87-71 defeat at UofA on Feb. 5. “We are going to calm it down,” said Gervin, who is averaging 8.5 points per game coming off the bench “When you are playing with pressure that’s all you have to do is relax.” Gervin realizes the Sun Devils must find ways to get past USC’s swarming defense. “They apply a lot of pressure because they’re a lot bigger than us,” he said. We have keep moving, make ■smart plays and run ourselves to counteract what they do. That’s the only way we are going to win.” After back-toback wins, USC’s confidence level should be sky high, Frieder said.. "The two wins over Stanford and Cal last week are very, very impressive," he said. "That doesn't make our job any easier... They’ll be very-motivated.” N otes Farrington leads the Pac-10 with 4.45 blocked shots per game (98 swats). He needs just 17 blocks to tie ex-Sun Devil 'Mario Bennett’s Pac-10 record of 115 blocks. The Sun Devils have shot a woeful 37 percent from the field (160 of 433) in their last seven games. T h e A S U m e n 's basketb all team lo o k s to get b a ck o n the w inning tra ck a s it takes on the U S C T ro ja n s at 7 tonig ht at the University Activity Center. Classic’s clim ate coaxes cold-crazy coaches W om ens g o lf fin ish es third B y J o s h D e F a m io S t a t e P r e ss iN H i r u u m v o u u u n e w Senior outfielder Tina Ruff and the ASU softball team open the season with the Coca-Cola Classic in Phoenix today. The 25th ranked ASU softball team will give others a chance to share in the warm weather when they host the 1997 Coca Cola Classic Tournament. The four-day tourney, which starts tonight, will be played at the Cave Creek Sports Complex in Phoenix. The tournament will feature 18 teams, with several teams traveling from the cold weather of the East Coast. There will also be several ranked teams pre­ sent, including No. 1 UofA, No. 17 Florida State, and No. 19 Nebraska. Each team will compete against five or six others. The winner will be based on won-loss percentage, that several teams could tie for the top spot, will face six teams, starting with Illinois State at tonight. After that, they face UNLV and Purdue Friday afternoon, then Texas and Santa Barbara on Saturday. The tournament concludes for the Sun Devils after they play UMass Sunday morning. “We see the Pac-10 teams all the time, and we always face the same Pac-10 teams in a lot of the differ­ ent tournaments,” assistant coach Ann Pedersen said. “So this is good because we schedule out of conference games just so we don’t play (our conference opponents) 8-10 times a year.” Although games played in this tournament do reflect in a team’s record, there is more to the tournament than winning, said ASU coaches. “It’s not a round-robin, and its not a ‘who’s going to win?’ tournament,” said Pedersen, who played in the tournament several times when she was a Sun Devil ath­ lete. “It’s not about how many games you can play in one day and who is surviving at the end, which is how a lot of tournaments work. It’s ‘Here is your set schedule, here are the teams you are playing.’” “Certainly everybody would want to do well, “ head coach Linda Wells said. “But this is everybody’s first chance to get their feet on the ground, and learn some things about their team and find some things out.” Turn to Coca-Cola Classic, page 16. Fr o m S ta ff R e po r t s The ASU women’s golf team finished with a third place tie at the Regional Challenge in Palos Verdes, California Wednesday. After rounds of 310 and 295, the Sun Devils shot a final round 309 and tied the University of Tulsa with a score of 914. UCLA placed sec­ ond shooting rounds of 305-296-306-907. Stanford won the event with scored of 304295-306-905. ASU arch-rival UofA (303-309305-917) finished sixth. Junior Jeanne-Marie Busuttil posted the highest finish for a Sun Devil at ninth. Busuttil also shot a team low five-over 76 to finish with a three-round total of 227. In the previous two rounds, she shot a 79 and 72. Sophomore Jody Niemann, who was fourth after two rounds, ended one shot behind Busuttil (74-73-81-228) and tied with three other players for 10th. Junior Kellee Boothe (78-7.4-77-229) recorded her third top-20 finish of the 1996-97 season with a tie for 14th. Sophomores Tui Selvaratnam (79-79-77235) and Keri Cornelius (82-76-79-237) ended tied for 23rd and 28th respectively. Men’s golf takes third in Hawaii The ASU men’s golf team began its stay in Hawaii with a third place finish at the Mauna Kea Resort Collegiate. In the tournament, which was held Sunday through Tuesday at the Hapana Golf Course, the Sun Devils shot rounds o f293,300 and 294 for a final of 887. The University of Texas El Paso (299-287293-879) was second and the University of Arkansas (294-285-291-870) walked away with first. Sun Devil Chris Manell shot rounds of 70-73-74 over the three day span and cap­ tured seventh with a final score of 217, the highest ASU finish. Scott Johnson added T urn to Golf, page 16. ze 16 State P ress Thursday, February 13, 1997 Coaches’ or scouts’ poll, which one tells it like it is? Sports editors. You’ve got to love ’em. Last week, as the boss EDNAUNOJR, looked over my preview to the ASU Florida State matchup, he pointed out that I had the Seminoles ranked at No. 1 in one part of my story and No. 2 in another part. Being the inquisitive chap that he is, he wanted to know which ranking was the correct one. Both, I said. In Collegiate Baseball's poll, the Seminoles were ranked No. 1 in the preseason while Baseball America had them at No. 2. The same disparity in the rankings held true for the Sun Devils, ASU was ranked as the preseason No. 7 in Baseball America's poll, No. 12 in Collegiate Baseball, This week, he wanted to know why there was such a dif­ ference between the two polls. Both publications released their updated polls this week, with ASU maintaining Its No. 12 spot in Collegiate Baseball while dropping a notch to No. 8 in Baseball America. The Seminoles, by virtue of a 4-1 record, are now No. 1 in both polls. Stanford, the preseason No. 1 team in B aseball A m erica ’s poll, dropped to No. 3 (No. 9 in Collegiate Baseball). So, which poll is more accurate? The rankings in Baseball America’s poll are compiled from information given by scouting directors with the 30 major league baseball teams. The Collegiate Baseball poll is compiled from information given by coaches from each conference, along with input from the publication’s editors. “I think the coaches poll — within our conference — is probably the more accurate one,” Stanford head coach Mark Marquess said of the Collegiate Baseball poll. Local baseball writers feel otherwise. Don Ketchum of the Arizona Republic said the Baseball America poll is the one he follows, although both polls have been Used from time to time. Bob Moran follows the Sun Devils for the Mesa Tribune and said the Tribune’s preference also is to use Baseball America’s poll. “I think it’s a little more reliable,” Moran said of Coca-Cola Classic Continued from page IS. With several returning stars, such as All-American outfielder Lisa Dacquisto and pitcher Roxanne Tsosie, along with a few new players, including freshm an Christine Gill and junior transfer Raja Woods at third and second base, respec­ tively, Wells is concerned about how the team will blend together. “Our middle infield is new and (senior Tammy) Lohman is new moving over from shortstop to first base,” Wells said. “We have a lot of experience, but at the same time we have some new faces out there. I think we’re ready to see where we are.” Wells has already decided that Tsosie will start the opening game against Illinois State, but is unsure what rotation she will use throughout the tournament. The players themselves are anxious to break the practice routine and get on the field against a real opponent. “W e’re very eager- to p lay ,” senior pitcher Carrie James said. “We’ve been practicing a lot and I think everybody is ready to get out there and just see how we are. We prepared as well as we can, and we just won’t know until we step on the field.” “I’ve been ready to play for a while now,” Gill said. “Because we’ve been prac­ ticing and practicing. I think everybody on the team is just ready to play now.” Baseball America’s rankings. “The Baseball America poll seems to take the politics out of it.“ And how. One of the major flaws with the coaches poll is favoritism . B aseball A m erica ’s poll is one that is arguably bias-free. Here is where things get tricky. Baseball Weekly, pub­ lished by USA Today, has ASU tabbed at No. 15. USA Today also publishes a coaches poll for college football. Get die picture? For the time being, I’m sticking to the rankings of the major league scouting directors at Baseball Weekly. So, are the Sun Devils the No. 8, No. 12. or No. 15 team in the nation? All three. It all depends on which poll you follow. Notes ASU’s win over the Seminoles on Saturday was the first time the Sun Devils have defeated Florida State on its jiome field. Sophomore Chip Gosewich will be out for two to three weeks because of a dislocated shoulder he suffered during the second game of the USC series. Percy Ednalino Jr. can be reached at percy2S@asu.edu Golf. Continued from page 15, another top-twenty finish for the Sun Devils. Johnson tied for 11th with rounds o f 78-75-69 and ended at 222. Greg Padilla (7274-83-229) and Jonas Runnquist (73-83- 76-232) finished tied for 33 rd and 40th respectively. KENDALL Kendall finalist for scholar award ASU senior tight end Devin Kendall was one of 20 football finalists selected for the •NACDA Preseason Games Scholar Athlete Postgraduate Scholarships, the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics announced Wednesday. Kendall, who has a 3.73 grade point average, is a communications major. j The finalists were chosen from 55 nom­ inees, all football players. Ten of the final­ ists are from Division I-A institutions, while 10 are from non-Division I-À institu­ tions, Fifteen additional finaists, represent­ ing all sports other than football, will be chosen in April. The NACDA’s Blue Ribbon Committee will review the finalists and select 10 win­ ners who will each receive a $5,000 grant to be used towards postgraduate studies. The winners will receive their awards at the NACDA’s 32nd Annual Convention on June 15-18. Rink plan on thin ice Bonds finds his heart in San Francisco SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (A P ) — The Phoenix Coyotes may be seeing their plans for a practice rink melting away again in the heat o f residential opposi­ tion, though the planned site is a mile from any homes. Homeowners broke up the NHL team’s initial plan for a Scottsdale site, and environmentalists checked a subsequent proposal for arink in a dest^Pfroeajk park, j Now, though the Coyotes had conducted four pub­ lic meetings as an extra precaution in proposing a 15acre site within an area intended for recreational use, homeowners are once again against tEm.-' . City Council is to vote Tuesday on rezoning a k ^ ^ H approved by the Scottsdale Planning A coalition o f residents nonetheless is urging the council to just say no, pledging it will force a public vote if the council says yes. “T his is not a threat. We are doing it,” said Madeline W illiamson, the head o f the McDonald Mountain Ranch Land Coalition. The group is made up of- McDowell Mountain homeowners who live about a mile east of the proposed ice complex. OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Barry brothers and sisters. How hard is that?” Bonds may not have a reputation for a Bonds visited Anthony Lee soft heart, but the San Francisco Giants Franklin. 13, a pitcher for the world star left fielder found time to visit a champion Babe Ruth Bambinos, who is young fan with leukemia and then reg­ now at Oakland Children’s Hospital istered to donate bone marrow. receiving chemotherapy and being Bonds provided a blood sample to evaluated for a bone marrow transplant. the National Bone Marrow Donor pro­ It may take a year or more to deter­ gram, saying he hopes his act will mine whether Lee, as his friends and increase donations among blacks. family call him, will need a transplant. “We, as African-Americans, are still After leaving the hospital, Bonds not coming to the table,” Bonds said - went to the Alameda-Contra Costa Tuesday. “It’s just being there for your County blood bank and gave two vials of blood so technicians can type his mar­ row, which is unlikely to match Lee’s. “If he’s not a match for Anthony Lee Franklin, maybe he’ll be a match for a kid in New York or somewhere else,” said Bert Strane, the real estate executive who suggested Bonds visit the boy and help publicize the program. Even if Bonds can’t donate bone marrow to Lee, he has given his young fan something else — a promise he’ll get on the field at a Giants game, and Bonds’home phone number. e-mail the sports EDitor ponyboydPasu. edu Pull some tubes this spring! BOARDSHORÎS AND TOPS FROM: ^ » l c o x n CO 4360 W. Mi lo ts more too. * C l a s s if ie d s Page 17 Thursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 St a t e P ress Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of die offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. More Trivia... C hief Crazy Horse in Thunderhead M ountain, South D akota, standing at 5 6 3 ft., is the tallest free-standing statue in the world. '$ C o u p o n B o o k M ade for ASU students, by A SU students to save you money all over town! ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS AIDS AWARENESS WeekActivities on-going throughout the week: Campus AIDS In­ formation & Resources, Ribbon Distribution, Condom Distri­ bution and canned food drive. Hayden Lawn - Feb 10-13 lla m -lp m . College of Busi­ ness Courtyard - Feb IT & 12 11 am -1pm. North end o f For­ est Mall - Feb 11 -1 lam-lpm. PROFESSIONAL, SINGLE parent seeking apt/house to share with re­ sponsible individual. Prefer Mesa/Tempe area. Need by March!.Call 965-5013, days. AIDS AWARENESS Week: Activities on-going throughout the week: AIDS Memorial Quilt Display - Feb. 11-15, 10am5pm - Matthews Ç tr Art. Mu­ seum. AIDS AWARENESS WeekToday: Safer Sex Valentine Kit distribution - 1! am- 1pm - Hay­ den Lawn. BUY A heart $0.50 Write names of those you've lost to HIV/ AIDS or to recognize those living with HIV/AIDS or write messages relating to HIV/A IDS. Hayden Lawn 11«lpna until Mon. Fdb. 17th. This should be your ad Call 965-6735 APARTMENTS' 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd & Studios. $50 off move-in w/ad. 966-8597. EL DIABLO APTS. NH corner of Apache & McClintock, Tempe quiet luxury living lbd $490, 2bd $570-$620. 921 0699 LARGE 2 bedroom apartment. TV, cable, pool, laundry. Walk to ASU Very quiet. 966-4797, HOMES FOR RENT 4BD 2BA house exc. cond. new paint, carpet, etc. Os­ bourne & Scott;. Rd. $1100/mo. Avail, immed. Call 437-1048. 5BDR HOUSE, pool, garage, w/d, dishwasher, a/c, etc, B r o a d w a y / M e C 1i n t $l,300/mo. 437-1048. APARTMENTS HOMES FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING WALK TO ASU. 3bd/2ba, fire­ place. I'm gorgeous! $975/ month, Tim 894-0288. NEEDED: RMMT to share lux­ ury apt. on Rural & Baseline. ~ 'C O N D O 2BR/2BA upstairs 752-7589 unit, Berber carpet, vaulted ceil­ ing, ceramic tile, ceiling fans &, PAPAGO PARK 3bd condo. all appliances. ASU close. Very clean, pref. mature stud$75,000921-7432 ent/professional. W/D & all amen. $350 392-5738. UNIVERSITY & HARDYNewly remodeled 2 hr/ 2 ha PROFESSIONAL, SINGLE parent condo. Ceiling fan & applianc­ seeking apt/house to share with re­ es. $58,800.921-9973 sponsible in d iv id u al.. Prefer Mesa/Tempe area. Need by MISCELLANEOUS March 1. Call 965-5013, days. TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2 BDR/2 B, Refrig, Dishwash­ er, pool, spa, gym, avail how, $590.946-7088. NEED RMMT m/f to share 2bd 2 l/2ba townhouse. w/d in unit., move in 3/1 $337.50/mo. + 1/2 util & dep. req'd. 1/2 mi. from campus. Call 496-5908 Iv msg for Kay to see this unit PAPAGO PARK Village, a rare hard to find 3bdr/2b w/loft. Newer carpet & paint, refridg, wash/dry. Avail noW $1190. 946-7088. RENTAL SHARING FML RMT writ- 2bd/lba@Univ & McClntk near ASU avail now 303+i/2util 303-8385 TOWNHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE F O y A tf_ _ _ _ RMMT. WANTED own bd, ha & door. 2blks from ASU. $350 + util. Silly people only! 9680461, • . y FURNITURE QUEEN WATER bed, waveless mattressy complete $ 100 924- ROOM AVAILABLE 4 bed house, pool, hot tub, pool table, lakes, $330 mth, 1/4utl :491-8776 ^ M/F SHARE house 3bd 2ba priv. spa com. pool 2 car porch Scott $350/mo. Guy 951-9337 3176 Wednesday, Feb. 12 10-11am (ML) 221 Apache) or Thursday, Feb. 13 2-3pm (MU 213 Santa Cruz) Open to all ASU Students Call 965-9047 COMPUTERS PENTIUM 150, new systems, Internet ready, no credit need­ ed, will finance. 972-5380. HELP WANTEDGENERAL BECK TICKETS 4 s§le Feb, 20th, sec. A5, row 6; seats 8,9. Call asap 921-1314 3 B ucks 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 Apartm ents H Vsheimne Special! Super Studios »/private polios Immediate Move-In HELP WANTED Front Desk Clerks Apache Terrace Apts. Van Drivers 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 Terrlfk 2 bedrooms w/spadous storage ntove-bi by 2/14 & get 1/2 oB IDarch rent. eBtitiTODBy; Full/PartTime Bonuses/Benefits Super 8 M otet 3401 L Van Buren Phoenix, AZ 85008 HELP WANTEDGENERAL TRAVEL HELP WANTEDGENERAL F L Y C H E A P !! FLEXIBLEHOURS 60-90% O FF ALL FAR ES 1Air Courier International GREAT MONEY Will TRAIN GALL 508-3623 8 0 0 ^ 2 9 8 - 1 2 3 0 24 hr 1-800-328-7513 F R E E FOOD. DRINK & P A R T Y S P E C IA L !? ! U p to S200 D isco u nt C o u po ns on ou r W ebsite www.student.advtrav.com 'M N ew M L odeling A odel 5 c o t t .vd ai .e & T 89 TOYOTA Corolla GT-S, red, fully loaded, exc. cond. 96k, $3500 obo 921-7874 Kazu 94 MITSUBISHI MIRAGE 2dr, auto, a/c, cass. $8,488. 83495 GEO METRO 3dr, 5sp, a/c, cass. $7995 834-0220 MAKE SURE your car is taken care of by professionals. Call Earnhardt's Dodge service dept, for your repair needs: 756-3663 YOU CAN buy parts through the internet. No hassle,.- great prices! www.eamhardt.com TRAVEL SPRING BREAK in Las Barajitas Canyon, San Carlos Mex­ ico. Party secluded beaches and rugged desert. Info call 1-888241 -3521 or http://www.imparcial.cqm.mx/exploradores SPRING BREAK in Mazatlan. Beautiful condo on beach. March 17-24. Sleeps six. Great pool. $450 per indi­ vidual: Call/leave msg. (815) 397-1332 or (815) 229-0616. SPRING BREAK is coining! Get your tickets now to ensure lowest fare. B & C .Travel 3967447 Point Reserve your room now for ASK FOR DOUBLE DISCOUNT!! Spring Break 5 8 7 -0 3 4 5 gency o o k in g fo r n e v f a c e s P latinum P lus M 1997 DODGE DAKOTA pickup. $289/mo. Call 926-4000 C A N C U N -P A D R E -M A Z A T L A N SPRIN G B R E A K S H O TTEST TRAVEL 966-5818 '88 MUSTANG, 2 dr hb, 5 spd, pwr locks, am/fm cass, moon roof, maroon. $2600 491-9336 v c v s H i n o r M ir > s d r e s vc London $99, Mexico $150, Rk> $250, Tokyo $350, Sydney $420 (all RT) meRiDiBn c o m e r s APARTMENTS V / ; ; / '■• TICKETS l & 2 Bedroom A SU Summer School In Holland Informational Meetings: .' ; SOFA/ QUEEN SIZF sleeper w/ matching lounge chair. Santa Fe style. $300/set. 491-9336 APARTMENTS 3 L in e s '86 VW Quantum Sta. Wagon, 5 spd, 100K, good cond, must see to believe. $400.981-4707. 0220 NAME A Star for someone it is the number one gift in America. $33 Star registration. 1-800383-6928 RMT NEEDED m/f, 1 mile from ASU. $375 a month, incl. utils. Call 858-0680. ROOMMATE WANTED M/F to share 3100 sq.ft. 4bd/3ba luxery home w/ private pool. Tempe Chandler area 500/mo incl. util. 857-3407. A U T O M om ys^ alent A gency . 8 7 4 -0 9 E 4 Sp rin g Break M AZATLAN AMERICA’S #1 SPRING BREAK TOUR OPERATOR 29 YEARS EXPERIENCE • 400,000+ SATISFIED STUDENT TRAVELERS Complète 7 night A ir & Hotel Packages Available 2 BEDROOM BLOWOUT A LL COLLEGE TOURS SPRING BREAK PACKAGES INCLUDE: I J T T I .E C O T T O N W O O D S • R ound Trip Non-Stop Airfare • 7 Nights Hotel A ccom m odations • R ound Trip Airport-Hotel T ransfère 1 8 2 0 E . B E L L D E M A R , 8 2 0 -5 0 0 6 (M C C L IN T O C K , S O U T H O F G U A D A L U P E ) ID E A L FLO O R PLA N S FO R K O O M A TES S PA C IO U S G A RA G ES A V A ILA B LE CAMPUS REPS NEEDED'ORGANIZE A GROUP AND TRAVEL FREE! LOWEST PRICES • BEST HOTELS • BEST FLIGHTS • BIGGEST PARTIES R A N C H O M U R IE T T A 1717 S. DORSEV, 966-5184 (DORSEY, NORTH OK BKOADWAV) ID EA L G A T E D C O M M U N IT Y M IN U TE S F R O M A R IZ O N A S I A T E U N IV ER SITY • C ollege T ours fam ous VIP Party Package: FREE cover c h a rg e s, FR EE p arties, FFIEE food & drinks EXCLUSIVE special events. OVER $150 in savings! Our pay has increased to $7.50/hour plus great incentives! To take center stage, come visit us - \ COLLEGE TOURS 800-244-4463 O R ... 271-4896 V Prices per person, phis taxes. Public Charters via Miami Air Inn. Tour Operator is Funquest Vacations. Details In Op/Part Contract. Thursday, Fdb. 13-Saturday, Fdb. 15,8 am - 5 pm HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL CALL TODAY/WORK NOW! I Qualified Candidates CU STOM ER SERVICE REP. Type 2 5 w p m & great p eop le skills. This large and grow ing inbound call center offers PT 8. FT opportunities. Will work with school schedules. W oik for a corporation w h o values their em p lo y ees & offers paid training, casual business attire & great benefits. $ 6 .5 0 -$ 7 .5 0 per hour to start DOE, O/T available. 2 2 5 5 N. 44th St. # 1 7 0 * Phx. 8 5 0 0 6 2 2 0 -9 2 9 2 • Fax 2 2 0 -9 4 8 0 - EOE 1801 Camelback Road, Suite 201 Colonnade Mail, Phoenix, Arizona HELP WANTEDGENERAL Come in anytime between 8:00 am to 5:00 pm and meet with manageriiand employees to learn more about things like: excellent benefits, paid . training, tuition reimbursement, 40l(k) and employ­ ee stock purchase plans, gfeafcpompensation packages, bonuses and ce n ^ S ;th a t bring the average earnings up to $ 94 l? ^ i 0ur! Full-Time Outbound Sala»IIa|l!il|(ttdtive8 •7:00 am to 3:45 pm, M cm d ayfitdfca •S7.50/HOUR PLUS C0mWt||MWENTIVE $ Part-Time Outbound SatesRepresentatives •4:00-9:00 pm, Monday-Thursd^f - -* t >~\< •S7.50/HOUR PLUS CONTEST $ AND INC®ffiVE $ To take center stage with MCI,f please call our Job Hotline at: (602) 2486812. MCI is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, M/F/D/V. www.itKi.com HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL BACK TO SCHOOL B u t T hinking SPRING BREAK!!! QSM will give you the chance to earn $1,000.00 or more for spring break and then give you spring break week off. Plus upon returning from break work until finals week and receive a $250.00 bonus to end the school year on. 60% of our employees are students so we can meet your needs. Q S M offers the following: • Flexible schedules FT & PT (Days & Evenings) • Guarantee of $7.00 -i- bonuses • Paid training (no experience necessary) • Fully Automated Center • Casual Dress environment • Walking distance to ASU • Advancement Potential C all to set and Interview 894-9816 Page 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL AAA ND engnr/elec stud i n ­ create prototype: similar to mtl detctr: hrly + %. 234-9808. BUSY DELI inside University. of Phx located off University, counter help pt 4-8 M-Th & Sat. 7am-1pm Call 967-1411 ADJUNCT FACULTY needed. Computer hardware knowledge desired. Bachelor's degree req. Eye hrs. Fax resume to 9430960. ARIZONA COUNTRY Club is hiring pm pVt food servers. Great p/t job. No exp. necc. Apply at 5668 E. Orange Btos-: som Ln. Phx (56th St./Thomas) E’Q E ... > .y • , -, ' ASÙ TELEFUND is now hir­ ing. Looking for fun, outgoing students to call alumni & up* date them on our programs & ask for their financial support. Req to work 10 hrs./wk but can work mòre. Starting pay $5,50:- Cali now for more info, 965-6754. ATTENDANT/NA MALE quad has PT shift avail, M-F, 10am2pm. AZ dl req. Info 273-7775. ATTENDANTS NEEDED for students w/ disabilities. Hourly & live-in avail. Flex, schedules for students! Call Dee 965r 1362, lv, mesg: BECOME A mobile dj. Work weekends.; We train. Depend­ ableyehiclé. Call 820-8220 CLUB TR1BECA now hiring for all positions. Apply in per­ son M-Th 12-3 pm- 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. 423-8499. FILM PRODUCTION, talent management, & internships avial. Call Creative Artists Mgt. at 800-401-0545 FITNESS TRAINERS needed. Seeking energetic people for personal training positions, ex­ cellent physical condition, and sound knowledge of weight training. 5 Valley locationsc CUll 945-8857 : ; : FUNDRAISER - MOTIVATED groups heeded to earn $500+ promoting A T& T/ Discover, gas and retail cards. Since 1969, we’ve helped thousands of groups raise the money they need. Call Gina at (800) 5922121 ext, 1 10. Free CD to qualified callers. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR for mobile prog. Kids 3-12 yrs. R e l trans., pos, attitude $810/hr. DOE 443-8817 : r / HELP WANTED to distribute phone cards,: Excellent com­ missions. Call Ray 833-6451. HELP WANTEDGENERAL IMAX THEATRE in Scottsdale is currently re­ cruiting floor staff! All indi­ viduals needed. 15-30hrs/wk. Day & evening. Apply at 4343 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste 2501 or call 949-3100x204. Just m inutes from campus! Come join our team ! LIFEGUARDS/WSI NEEDED. City of Scottsdale is looking for LFG/WSI for spring/summer. App's being accepted. Cer­ tification classes for LFG/WSI are avail. Call 994-7665. MAKE $6/HR. in a fun at­ mosphere walking dist. from ASU. Very flexible hours, no exp. nee. Call Mike 921-4282 MESA, YMCA looking for en­ ergetic custorner-service-minded individuals to work,-the front desk. Flex hrs, great at­ mosphere2Q7 N. Mesa Dr, NEED STUDENT for MD office, Scotts. 12-20 hrs./wk. General office work, local errands. ,Must, have ow n transp:- Cui I 947765L - S 1997 Season: 6/1 to 8/3 We w ilt be interview ing on cam pus a ll day N b . 20th. Pick up app and schedule interviews in Rm C-222 (Student Employment) of the Student Services Bldg. Can or erite Mark tor Wo: 933 Friendly Pines Rd., Prescott 86303 (602) 255-0550 or email: tp cO a m u g .o rg R e s id e n t ia l Co u n sel o r s Looking for individual to work w ith develop; mentally and physically : handicapped men in our Personal Skills Program. Employees will teach various living skills and involve die individuals in recreational and social activities. PT positions available. $7.06-$7.50 DOE. Call Vince @ 431-9511. EOE. Social Service A gen cy has F T /P T p osition s available w ork in g w ith ad u lts w h o are d ev elo p m en ta l^ and m entally challen ged in group h o m es & apartm ent settings located in Phx., M esa & Tem pe. $6.00-$6.50/hr. DOE. Pd. training. C all 431-9511. HELP! ! Student w orkers needed for facility setup at the A S U Downtown Center. M ust be able to m ove tables w eigh­ ing 30-50 lbs. Location is 502 E. M onroe in Phoenix. P O TEN TIA L FO R S T A F F POSITION WITH B EN EFITS INCLUDING TUITION W A VER . RED EYE is now hiring. Jr management and sales posi­ tions are available at our local retail stores. We offer: fun work environment, flex, hrs., excel, training. Our stores are n/s. Call Nickol for an interview 641' 1506. • y ■' ■ . ■' . : START MODELING today! Call Billy at Hot Shots now! 530-8621 Portfolios too! SUMMER JOBS: creative ener­ getic & responsible residential dir. & residential counselors for summer prog, for talented & creative adolescents at ASU. Great salary. Room & board. Submi) resume & cover letter specifying residence hall dir. (& SR# 02893) or residence hall asst. dir. (& SR# 02892) & names, addresses, & numbers of 3 professional ref's to ASU em­ ployment services box 871403 Tempe, AZ 85287-1403 THE PHOENICIAN is hiring. Call our job hotline for lis t­ ings. 423-2555. EOE HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELPWANTEDSALES WANTED PT help. Someone comfortable in a light industrial environment, some mechanical ability pref., non-smoking, flex, hrs,, close to ASU $6.507.50 DOE. Send inquires to Ray Germaine 2851 S. 44th St. Ste. 2 Phx., AZ 85040 SPORTS MARKETING Fire­ bird Int'l Raceway is now hir­ ing part time phone sales posi­ tions. Hourly + Commission. Please apply in person I-10 east exit Maricopa Rd. MEDICAL OFFICE in Scot­ tsdale needs p /t/ft front and ‘ back office person. Will train. Good advancement potential. 4020 N. Scottsdale Rd. Suite 108. Please apply in person. STUDENTS TO distribute phone credit cards to college students. Xlnt pay. 649-9981 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE WE WORK around your sched­ ule. Retail sales, f/pt, base plus comm., benefits, drug-free work­ place. Apply in person o n ly / Space Age; 707 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa. YARD WORK/ handy man 1 block from ASU. Flex. 10-15 hrs./wk. $7-10/hr. Apply in person with references. Sat Feb. 15 11 am -12 noon @ 122 E. 15th Tempe HELP WANTEDSALES ENERGETIC SALES people needed! Ft/pt inside safes, flex­ ibility, optional travel. Base + comm. Exclt opportunity for ad­ vancement. .Call Stan 4370127 or fax resume to 437-J. 0755 Premiere Brother-Sister Cam ps in Massachusetts on Campus Interviews C ounselor positions for ta le n te d a n d e n erg etic s tu d e n ts a s available in ail Land a n d W ater S ports, Arts & Crafts, D ance, G ym nastics, H o rseb ack Riding, D ram a, W oodshop, Roller Hockey, Golf, Tennis, W Si’s . W aterskiing, Sailing a n d more!!! * Top salaries, roorri, board, and travel allowance. June 22 - August 20th Recruiter will b e on c a m p u s Thursday, M arch 27th, 10am -4pm in th e M emorial S tu d en t Union, R oom s 2 0 8 ^ 0 & 2Q8-D. For m ore info call: MAH-KEE-NAC (Bovs): 1-800-753-9118 DANBEE (Girls): 1-800-392-3752 C a li 965-3046 to d is­ cu ss possibilities. Ask for Cheryl or Dan. .Akarnott. HOTELS • RESORTS * SUITES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL ACCTING CLERK 10 key PT pm and Sat. Computer exp, Tempe Chris 893-6884. EXÉCUTIVE ANSWERING service ( à Tempe Co.) needs cheerful, upbeat p/t supervisor. 11 pm-7am Fri & S at. Comp, exp. 45 wprh, 10 key by touch, go speller. Call 2644000,7anT-4pm M-F, This should be your ad Call 965-6735 RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTEDCLER1CAL BUZZ FUN BAR is currently accepting app's for cover/retaiL bussers, & door host/ess. No exp. nec. for these pos.'s just a positive attitude & the ability to. smile. This is a great way to get into/ the bar business. Please apply in per­ son at 10345 N. Scottsdale Rd. Just E. of the Dairy Queen M-F 9;llam &4-6pm RESTAURANTS/ BARS GRATEFFL DEAD NIGHT with E X T R A T IC K E T Featuring Don Young -Every Thursday!* W O O D SH ED II I New Time« tU 9 £ B e st PERMANENT RESIDUAL in­ come. We need one person. Call Mark now 800-411-3349 u p p o r t P R O V ID ER HELP WANTEDGENERAL ORDER PICKERS male & fe­ male $8- l0/hr p/t?, flex. sch. Autom 5226 S. 31st Place, Phx PERSONAL WE NEED A FEW TOP COUNSELORS! S t a t e P ress Thursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 SCOTTSDALE PRINCESS A r iw iA larg est re so rt is in n eed o f tb e b illo w in g p o sitio n s; o M M iw /v u n iN M c n n a •Over 1Ü0Menu hems ~r‘ ► Upscale Atmosphere * 'v , »All Appetizers » I »We show ALL NHL' Cottage &FPVgames > 1/2 Your WhigOnde* Buri* & M ori, Kin-tiroc evening position. 6pm-12 midnight shift. b m I ( M S , provide im jut I 11m we I ni liner Must be extremely outgoing and able to handle cub m t BOSTON'S M c C lin to c R & C u rry • 921-7343 ¿v. 8 4 4 -S H E D University &Dobson ( n i t ASSO CIATE nr- P art-tim e o r fu li-tim e evenings in d ie m ain g ilt sh o p . C u s to m e r s e rv ic e e x p re t), r e ta il e x p peeC. 2 p m -1 0 i^ o p n t s h if t TQN1GHJJJ A ppB eadoos accep ted a n d Interv iew s co n d u cted in H um an K csotirees o n M on. h U e m n ife u Tacos, Burra Rice & Beans T n c s 3 p - 6 p , u r W e d 9 x -1 l a N o rth o f B ell X d. g u st o f Scottsdale Kd. p a rk h> tb e l a H acienda k n a n d follow tb c Soul Cracker j WSteakoiCt m SI S h o ts a t O o ld s e h la g e r 1 * 2 ." Happy HoUJ, f R u m p e l m ln z 7 D ays aV^oeW , 1 / 2 P rice A p p e a l J e g e r m e is t e r i C ity o f Tem pe 4-7pm . TENNIS INSTRUCTOR Apply at: C k y e fT e m p e Kiwanis Recreation Center Balboa Cafe Lunch Special 11am -9pm $8.00 - $10.00 per hour Approxim ately 8-12 hours per week (hours vary). Experience in teachins adult and junior sroup lessons. Happy Hour Free Food Buffet 5-7 M-F “ $1.50 MargantajP -750 Drafts’* JO B OPPORTUNITIES B a r t e n c Ie r s W an re d houR Attn: Tim Barnes 6111 S. All America Way Tempe, Arizona (602)350-5711 (602) 350-5050 TDD http://www.tempe.gov BariencJi^ AcftdfMy Subject to dosing w ithout notice when needs o f City met. Equal O pportunity/ Reasonable Accom m odation em ployer. S 199 wif< ASU ID Earn Fun - (You c^^^^BftiENdiNq 1250 E. ApAckE Blvd. #108 i Tempe 92147925 V 966-1300 y JOB OPPORTUNITIES P A m e r ic a n - B artencIer s ■ Shorn, h". riirnsr • FUxiblt tl*n «cbrduln • lout &»AtioNwiib job ptxCEMEW Tempe 96U-7657 PhoEMix 957-5770 S199 whh ASU IU has openings for: • Front Desk Clerks H H^Y-A-XT * Banquet fe tu p j f Sales Assistant AMServer •••Science and PreMed Majors*** CLINICAL CONDUCT ASSOCIATES Harris Laboratories has opportunities available for persons to m onitor activi­ ties o f Study Participants and collect and docum ent data. Great experience for science, pursing or prem ed majors. This is a variable scheduled position. $6/hr. with opportunities to increase pay through training. O r" HARRIS H um an R e s o u r c e s , J-S P R 4 6 3 9 S o u t h 3 6 t h S treet P h o e n ix , a z 8 5 0 4 0 A A /EO E • Pool Server • Front Desk • Barback, days • Host/Hostess • P/T Spa Attndt • Busser • Room Service Cashier • Door Person • Reservations JO IN T H E HYATT TEA M EXPERIENCE THE BENEFITS AT THE HYATT REGENCY SCOTTSDALE • Medical/Dental Insurance • Life Insurance • 401 (k) Plan • Vacation/Sick Pay • Tuition Reimbursement • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates Interviews available Mon. Sam-Noon; Tues. 3pm-6pm; At the Per^pnnel office (w, side of bldg next to loading dock). 7500 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd. Fbr more info: 991-9670 Hyatt supporte a drug free workplace. Certain positions may require testing. Affirmative Action Employer, EOE M/F/D/V Find the State Press on the Internet: http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ HELP WANTEDGENERAL The Arizona Republican Party needa you! $ 6 /h r - M ik a 957-7770 HELP WANTEDGENERAL W aterfront JobsSwimming/Sailing/ Waterskiing Prestigious boys & girls sum m er sports camps in Mass. High salary, room & board, travel allowance. M en call Cam pW inadu 800-494-6238j W omen call Cam p Danbee [Exceptional Summer j p Opportunity C/wp WAHNE. HÉ PA Sports- I amana» cowsooa Specialist FOR S UNOMATIR SPORTS. MCLUOMS TERMS, CAUPIW. CU M »«. ROPES. MOtMI-NN BOIES ROCKETHT MUERHOCAEY | SAILING, WATERSXflNG, AM. ■ CvniiMteicwNnatiBL 1-800737-929« 800-392-3752. . DISC JOCKEYS NEEDED AZ1« *1 m obUe O J aervica I« looking for W|| • TMotponaihn A «Milani aMMHWpainust • Earn ÎI0Ç4O per n Ä • Will Train C an 9 6 6 - 9 9 0 0 Page 19 Thursday, February 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P ress HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CHIMAYO GRILL Tempe's pre­ miere southwestern rest, is now hiring bussers (up to 9.00/hr), servers, prep cooks and line cooks. Exp. preferred but will train qualified candidates. Apply 2-5pm M-F @ 1761 E.Warner Rd. B5, Tempe. EOE. Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! Rut it in the Classifieds! PERSONALS HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CORK’NCLEAVER MAJERLE’S Accepting apps. for lunch hbst(ess) & lunch food server. Will trai n, 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. Currently hiring hostess/host* w aitstaff, & night cooks. Apply in person, 24 N 2nd St., Phx. GARCIA S 44TH St. & Camelhack now hiring pt/ft food serv­ ers for am & pm shifts. Apply in person. ATTN. ELEMENTARY Ed majors: looking for extra $? Need someone to watch 2yr. old boy in my home. Flex, to your sched. Call Mary 4857656 PERSONALS HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE Hi// Top R esearch is conducting a research study CHILD CARE $6/hr, 3 6:30pm. Rural & Southern. 2 chi 1d ren 8 & 11 y is.. Tra nsp. req. 829-1129. for a new medication for h o p es. You may qualify for this study if you’re not currently raking medication to prevent the; outbreaks and are interested In getting new treatments on the market. For more information about this study call us PERSONALS m at 946-3600. Participants will receive ■ free medication x\A up to g | DONOR EGGS NEEDED Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ mously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors compensated $2000. For m ore inform ation call Think about It! C hoosing th e right family to ad op t your baby involves m ore than reading ad s and calling 8 0 0 num bers. I'm an ad op tion consultant w h o can help . With tis. y o u «bad about d ie cou p le and d e d d e V they are the right family for y o u and your baby before y o u speak to . t h e n . O p en or d o s e d adoptions. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS ORIENTATED stud­ ents 10 hrs./wk. can easily earn your tuition + expenses +; Seri­ ous inquires only. Gall Steve Thomas 214-6967 LOST: GREY cat with feet and belly wearing collar; Male, neutered. near S. Mill & Hermosa. reward. 303-0917. all AIDS AWARENESS WEEK FAST FUNDRAISER - Raise $500 in 5 days - Greeks, Clubs, motivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obliga­ tion. (800) 862-1982 Ext. 33. Happening Today PERSONALS $19.99 FOR a full set of nails „is an awesome deal at Wizzards Hafr Studio. 967-2360 Hayden Lawn $5 OFF W/this ad. Looong stem roses, valley \vide del: Order a doz at the MU info desk For m ore information call Freddy R om an a t 1-800-675-3407 965-4721 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by F ra n ce s D rake SERVICES SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov; 21) Business dealings are not favored since someone is being deceptive. You are right.to be skeptical; These feelings will pfove to be warranted in the long run. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec, 21) It’s a good time to pay special attention to the condition and safety of your home envi­ ronm ent. Your professional affairs are prone to disruptions as restructuring and renewal take place. ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Take some time to sit down and assess your goals. New responsibilities are thrust upon you. However, these bring with them the chance for additional financial reward. AQUARIUS (Jap. 20 to Feb 18) Your interests turn toward cul­ tural, religious and philosophical concerns . Involvement in travel, law and education can put you in contact with a more professional class of people. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Communications in business and professional matters increase to your benefit. Short trips for busi- ' ness purposes are possible. Your intellectual interest turns toward secrets, mysteries and science. YOU BORN TODAY dften direct your concerns toward the perform ance o f some task or function. Usually, you try to accomplish this in an entertain­ ing manner. You are most com­ fortable with people who are stimulating and fun, while you tend to clash with people whp are indecisive, boring or fail to stim ulate you. You like to be known as a person who is always ready to get people fired up and inspired. You are almost hypnotically charismatic. 01997 King Features Syndicate Inc. AAA WELCOMES its new mem­ ber class: Christy Joehorir, Kris­ ty Westcott, Jenn Smith, Jenny Voiland, Nirusha Naidoo, BrOoke Beaty, Leslie Pewitt, Fe­ licia fielone & Asadeh Sherafshehi. SERVICES ELECTROLYSIS BY Degna. All methods. Stud. disc. Rural/ Southern area. 921-1146, GAMMA ALPHA Om ega in­ vites'you to come see what sis­ terhood is all about. Spring rush meetings will be held Monday thru Thursday. Stop by, the tables on Hayden Mall for more info. $T.99/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP, Near ASÜ. Brian 967-5987 TYPING/WORD PROCESSING WE TYPE resumes, term papers, thesis papers + other papers. Reasonable rates, use a variety of software. We will not write it for you, but we will check grammer and spelling. Call 8331682 or fax 898-7366. TUTORS MATH TUTOR experienced, pa­ tient, recent grad $10/hr. Trudy 834-8199 or 431-2825. PHOTOGRAPHY THE-BOARD members of thé American Marketing Assoc, would like to thank all the new/oid members for a great 1st meeting. Hope to see you to­ day. Get ready for a great social. MINOLTA MAXXUM 7xi + lens + bag. Bought for $900, sell for $700 obo 929-9538 MISCELLANEOUS SPERM & EGG donors needed! Earn $2,000 in your spare time! Call our 24hr private informa­ tion line: (602) 280-9266. TONIGHT’S THE night! Coffee and talk with the sisters of SDT! Mill Ave. Coffeè Planta­ tion, 8 pm. INTERNET URLS ADOPTION CHECK OUT your student government—http://www.asu.edu/ studentlife/ASASU A LOVING couple longs to adopt Caucasian newborn into home filled with joy, happiness and security. Expenses paid. Please call anytime Grace and Fred. 800-574-9590. YOU CAN buy parts through the internet. No hassle, great prices! www.efflnhaidt.com Y o u r ad sh o u ld be here! Call 965-6735 SERVICES SERVICES THE CHOICE IS YOURS COMPLETE BIRTH C O N T R O L C A RE. D e p o - P r o v e r a , Birth C o n t r o l Pills, IUD, M o rn in g A fte r PHI PR E G N A N C Y TEST! N G N o a p p o in t m e n t n e c e s s a r y Thursday, February 13, 1997 ARIKS (March 21 to April 19) You are less shy emotionally and are comfortable in your relation­ ships . It’s a góod tíme for fami­ ly activities and enterprises. After dark, you feel content and relaxed in the bosom of family. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Your finances are strong and you can be generous .to those less fortunate. It’s a favorable time for travel, learning, vacations and purchases fo r the home. Changes made at w ork are to your benefit. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Pleasant, unexpected visits from family and friends are possible, New situations stimulate your feelings of independence and im agination. Y our intuition guides you to settling business affairs. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You have a lot o f determination and can successfully break nega­ tive physical or emotional habits. It’s a favorable time for enters prises involving real estate and commodities, LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You enjoy harm ony in business, social and rom antic relation­ ships. Friends aré cooperative, and artistic endeavors bring sat­ isfying results. You wish to sign up for a sem inar Or lecture series. ' VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Power struggles on the job pre­ sent obstacles to your security and confidence. Impatience on your part can inhibit your deeper understandings o f a romantic relationship. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) This is not a good time for initi­ ating any major sort of change as you could, go to extrem es . Friends, groups or organizations could be involved in pow er struggles. Try to cooperate for the good of the whole. ADOPTION: COUPLE w/ adopted twin girls looking to adopt once more. Call Randy & Tracy collect (520) 529-3394 $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. Avoid the 'chop shops'. W iz- . zards Hair Studio. 967-2360 Couple looking fo r egg donor o f Mediterranean descent. Must be between 21-30yrs. w ith health ‘ Insurance. 7-TO clinic visits and daily injections Involved. Armenian, Creek, Lebanese or Syrian preferred. $2000 per attempt. Please call fo r more information. 602-860-4792 The MU Recreation Center Staff white black Lost $100 FUNDRAISING 11am-1pm ANOREXIA/BULIMIA SELFHELP, M, W, Th 6:30-8:00 pm, $5; Call Psychological Pathways 994-9773. HELP US find the funniest + $. Credit card fundraisers for • students on campus! Enter the fraternities, sororities & groups. live, on-campus standup come­ Any campus organization can dy cbmpetifion ! Get applica­ raise money by earning tions at MUAB on 3rd floor of $2l0O/gas card application. MU, Deadline is Feb. 18. Call Call 1-8Q0 932-0528 ext. 65. 965-6822 for more info. Qualified callers receive-a free Tshirt. SEE GYPSY Wind 7:30pm to­ night at Bandersnatch. Look FREE for the great violinist! See you LOST/FOUND there. CRUISE SHIPS hiring - earn to $2iOpO+/mo. plus free world travel (Europe, Caribbean, etc,). No exp. ; necessary: Room/board. Ring (919) 9187767, ext C 105. Safer Sex Valentine K it Distribution ADOPTION PERSONALS FREE T-SHIRT PERSONALS You C H O O S E ! Good hick to all Sun D evils participating in the ACU Ì Regional Tournam ents this weekend! ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Earn to $3,000-$6,000+/mo. in fisheries, parks, resorts. Airfare! Food/lodging! Get all the op­ tions. Call (919) 918-7767, ext. A105. • _ International students, majors 703-671-4885 PR E G N A N T? 602-860-4792 WILDERNESS TRIP lead ers/ wanted for boys’ camp in N. Wisconsin. Prior exp/a must & climbing background pref. Counselors also needed. Skills in 1 or more of: waterskiing,, guitar, riflery, climbing, pot­ tery, scuba, tennis, gymnastics. Good pay, free room & board. Call (800) 480-1188. INTERNSHIPS A D O P T IO N ? lot lomptettng the study MARKETER: SMALL Tehipe co. seeks mature marketing student p/t. Call Greg 968-3070 COMPUTER ED. Dir. Technical MAC knowledge necessary. Exp w/children helpful. Must be 21 w/clean MVR. Boys and Girls Club, Scottsdale, 8601601. ’ JOB OPPORTUNITIES BABYSITTERS & NANNIES, flex schedules. Car req'd. $4.757/hr. 460-1200. ■ Heipes Research Study Xf JOB OPPORTUNITIES HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE A b o r t io n w ith Tw ilight S le e p SERVICES SERVICES E v e n in g & S a t u r d a y A p p t . A v a ila b le F A IVI 1L Y P L A N N I N G I N S T I T U T E Oise - Go - Round i SCOTTSDALE PHOENIX 777 South M ill Ave 829 - 4990 orner of Mill & University 7806 N. 27th A ve. B W «& 1 2334 N. Scottsdale Rd. 997-7493 W e B u y & S ell C D ’s 945-4999 N im M ktfliitf fh o you want to conimi the U t outcm ofyourdivorce,ortrust a t.o u e To»* ^ * f c / O t+ C tj ¿i í m £ 1 w w 9am • 12 n oon M on. - Fri. (câsh or checks only) (3 Lino M inim um) 120 E. U niversity 966-6650 Deadline is NOON, Thurs. Feb. 13 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I IT I I 11 I I I I I 1 111 l i 1 I 11 1 ITT n :j j j I Q É fjg | i m i m CM i i r n r m A SU IO H H nw Mm i a^oyouwanttospareyourself Uo U -T A N c / 8 a m - 5 p m M -F • 9 6 5 - 6 7 3 5 S ta te Press C lassifie d s ' court to decide for you? iti ff, i' m¡¡Kp ; I WÊÈWÈÊÊbÈ fflÊgiÊmmm ¿ Attention Parents Starving Student Care Packs >oyou need a neutral third a partytohdpbothofyou Mediate .„to ft litigate! Call Lowell C ray Gilbert Mediator-Attorney 503-1238 Monday through Friday, 8 to 6 . Variety of o r em ail cra ry O sp ry n et.co m Gourmet Goodies Free Delivery bnpskw jpnirU offiipn'irttrin $20 Mountain Man Nut & Fruit Co. 602-894-9424 Poe «Ì4titin4i lnfaHTMtfo!i, see Wefotte Page 20 State P ress Thursday, February T 3 ,1997 W here ya GONNA THUR Hi A N Y DRINK TIL N -PLUS A FREE M ID N IG H T F O O D BUFFET O e/efin FR I SAT y ?& / / £>• / } / / %.S JP S..S - '' 7**.—-^: ANY DRINK - 9pm W, W I L D - 10pm UNIVERSITY L U B 966.8004 T H E N E W P L A C E TO B E I N T E M P E !