W o r l d / N a t io n A m e r i c a n A ir lin es str ik e DEADLINE NEARS Page 3 Voi. 81 No. 88 An Independent Morning Daily Friday, February 14,1997 History maker E x tr a c r e d it s le g is la t io n s la te d fo r v o t e B y K ev in C ulvVell State P ress Legislation that would require out-of-state tuition from in-state university students who take too many hours will be voted on next week in the state House of Representatives. “It simply means students will not be able to exceed 152 total units and pay in-state tuition.” said Damon Pace, state relations director of. the'Associated Students of ASU, Graduate and doctoral -students who exceed program requirements by more than 20 credit hours will also be forced to pay out-of-state tuition. “It would certainly encourage students to want to gradu­ ate quicker.” Pace said. “However, it does have some nega­ tive aspects of it. namely that it discourages students who simply wish to learn more or maybe just decided they’re hot interested in their major anymore.” Christine Thompson, ,executive director of the Arizona Students’ Association, is opposed to the measure, “There’s a mandate in the state constitution that clearly states that the Legislature keep tuition as cheap as possible for students,” she said. “This bill definitely does not adhere to that.” The m easure w ould cost $280,000 to im plem ent, Thompson said. “Students shouldn’t have to pay more because they decide they want to change their major,” T h o m p so n said. “This bill restricts their options arid really isn’t that fair.” “It doesn’t address the issue o f transfers and really should,” she added. ■ T urn to Extra credit, page Lori Cain/State P ress State Senate President Brenda Bum s (center) is flanked by Jim Shipman (left) am em ber of the organization Common Cause and Sen. Tom Patterson, R-Phoenix, at a press conference Thursday announcing Gov. Fife Symington’s pledge to sign the Lobbyist Reform Act. Story page 12 " ' ' 2. ABOR lashes out against community college bill B y V iv i Stf.nbf .rg St a te P ress TUCSON — A legislative proposal that will enable community colleges to teach upper division courses Was harshly criti­ cized by the Arizona Board of Regents at Thursday’s meeting. The regents voted unanim ously to oppose the bill, which was passed by a leg­ islative appropriations committee last week. “This is bad, bad legislation — we must oppose it,” Regent Eddie Basha said. Basha also called the bill “an assault on higher education in this state,” and said it would be a great injustice to Arizona’s stu­ dents. A committee consisting of Regent Kurt Davis and ABOR staff had recommended the regents support the section that aims to expand a partnership between Yavapai C om m unity C ollege and NAU, but to oppose the part that would change the state statute defining community colleges in general. '• Board President John Munger said the funding mechanisms of the bill are “ironic and hypocritical.” He called the bill “bad finance and bad policy.” . .. r, The measure was first introduced to the regents by its sponsor, Sen. Carol Springer, R-Prescott, at a January ABOR meeting. The regents reacted with skepticism then and the sentiments grewn to resentment over the last month. Student Regent Jonathan Schmitt said he was in favor of increased accessibility to students in rural areas, but he suggested that the existing “2+2 model,” where students take two years of class at a community col­ lege and two at a university, shouldcontinue to be used. ~; - y :Schmitt was backed by the rest of the regents, who agreed that the community col­ lege system and the way it already collabo­ rates with the state universities, works well. “Our students deserve to get their uni­ versity degrees from the universities,” Basha said. Law school legislation passes Senate committee B y R eb ecc a M urray S pec ia l t o t h e S ta te P ress The state Senate Education Committee approved a bill Thursday that would permit ASU’s law school to provide a part-tjme program for students currently in the work force. The bill is now headed fora vote in the full Senate. I f it passes, the legislation would allow ASU to offer courses after 5:30 p.m. to students who wish to attend law school on a part-time basis, If the bill is approved, students could egm a law degree while working full-time. Presently, evening classes are limited. For example, no courses at the first-year level are offered during the evening. In addition, the American Bar Association — the organization that accredits programs at law schools across the country — restricts students enrolled in a full-time, three-year program from working more than 20 houfs a week. The limitation does not apply to students enrolled in part-time, four-year programs. Richard Morgan, dean of the College of Law, is con­ cerned that legislation permitting the expansion of the law school is at odds with the University’s priorities. “It is premature to require ASU or UofA to open a parttime program,” Morgan said. “There are pros and cons of part-time programs and law school expansion. These need to be thoughtfully considered.” > “The University, with the (Arizona) Board of Regents, has established a set of priorities, and does not include a law school expansion. If the Legislature decides the law school should have a part-time program, it could detract from the University’s other legislative priorities,” he said. It is too early to determine what sort of financial impact the additional program would have. According to Morgan, the added program w ould req u ire a sig n ifican t o f resources. Morgan noted that there is some discontinuity between the Senate bill and statements House Speaker Don Aldridge made in reference to eliminating one of the state’s law Schools.. Last month, Aldridge suggested that two state law schools were a waste of taxpayer’s money and that one should be eliminated. He said with droves of lawyers mov­ ing to Arizona from other states, a second schooi’was redundant. _ ' ’" • A recent review of the state’s two schools concluded that both schools were necessary to serve Arizona’s population. Morgan said Arizona ranks 35th in lawyers per capita. Page 2 Friday, February 14,1997 Extra credit IO D A Y Cam pus clubs and brijafliza* tions may submit written entries tq the State Press in the basement of the Mathews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. 'f/ Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day ts permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the club, or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the location^ AH requests are subject to editing for content, space and ciarity. incom plete or ille g ib le entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a firstcome, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. C ontinued from page 1. sion meetings at 6 p.m. in the MU, second ffoor. • Asian Bible fe llo w sh ip — General meeting at 7 p.m. in the M il Coconino room 224SJI • AWARE — Vaientine'sDay róse sale from 10 a.m. to 4 MU. • Arizona League Conservation Voters (AZLCV) — Meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Gila room 214, second floor. • Alpha Phi Omega — Valentine carnations for that special someone from 10 Cady Mali . Saturday: • Blade Devils — Roller hoCkey se ssio n at noon at Einstein Bagels at the corner of Rural and University. • Communication Student Association — Bring six dollars to go bowling at 7 p.m. at Temps Bowl, 1100 E. Apache Blvd. • National Organization for • Buddhist A ssociation Women (NOW) — M ake a Showing video about the fife of Valentine in support of Same-Sex the Buddha (in Mandarin) at 10 Marriage Day from 10 a.m. to 1 a.m. in the MU Havasupai room p.m. in the Orange MaH. 2 0 8 ° .„ ¡v’1'Ì & a M ® • Counselor Training Center¡§¡1 • Taiwan Study Society — Free counseling available for full­ History review at 2 p.m. in the MU time students and staff at Payne room208C. HaB, room >402. For more information • Rugby Football Club vs. UC Berkeley at t p.m. or an appointment, call 965-5067. • Bahai Club ¡H Fireside discus- ASU Band Field. 24-hour information hotline 60 2.423.8499 Southw est corner o f McDowell Scottsdale S t a t e P ress Blake Anderson, government relations coordinator for ASU, said an A rizona Board of Regents study showed that just 1.8 percent of state university graduates last year had more than 160 credit units. “(The Board) has already addressed the issue,” he said. “I don’t think this measure is really going to go anywhere.” Pace suggested that students who are not happy with the bill go down to the state Legislature and voice their opinions. “This bill could have a major effect on students who are currently thinking about changing their major,” he said. _____ W orld/N ation______ S t a t e P ress - Friday, February 14, 1997 ^ > ' Page 3 Friday night airline strike deadline looms B y K atie F airbank A sso cia te d P ress WASHINGTON — American Airlines rejected a compromise offer from its pilots’ union as Friday night’s holiday-weekend strike deadline approached. The company’s chief executive urged President Clinton to intervene to avoid a walkout at thè nation’s largest airline. Testifying on Capitol Hill, American President Robert Crandall said Clinton Should exercise his emergency powers to prevent •pilots from- striking at 12:01 a.m. Saturday, Mayors and some members of Congress from areas that would be particularly affected also have asked the president to step in. Although negotiations were scheduled to continue, both sides were preparing for a walkout. The airline canceled most over­ seas flights so aircraft would not be strand­ ed, an d the board o f the A llied Pilots Association planned a teleconference at the strike deadline, At the White House, the Transportation Department sent Clinton a report projecting the strike would cost up to $200 million each day and could strand up to 40,000 passengers, The president, who has emergency pow­ ers to intervene temporarily, urged both sides to reach an agreement. “We hope that that analysis of economic damage won’t need to b ea useful document,” said White House spokesman Mike McCurry. Hopes for a settlem ent rose early Thursday, when the union offered to have its pilots accept lower pay scales for operat­ ing jets on regional routes as long as the edmpany accepted its other demands. But American’s parent company, AMR Corp., says it doesn’t want American pilots to fly the new jets that have been proposed for regional routes. AMR wants its American Eagle subsidiary, with lowerpaid pilots from another union, to fly the commuter jets. “In reality, those jets are going to be oper­ ated as American Eagle or they are not going to be operated,” spokesman A1 Comeaux said. “There are costs involved beyond pilot costs. We have to be competitive.” The regional jet issue has been a stick­ ing point in negotiations for some time. Both sides agree the smaller routes are nec­ essary for American to remain competitive, but they don’t agree on who should fly the twin-engine jets that have up to 70 seats. American mechanics, flight attendants and other workers all have higher salary ranges than their counterparts at American Eagle, a conglomerate of four separate small airlines funneling $1 billion in traffic to American Airlines. The average American Airlines pilot makes $120,000 a year. The average American Eagle pilot less than half as much. The union wants 3 percent pay increases each August for the next three years and a 2 percent raise on Aug. 31,2000. The pilots also want stock options to buy 7.25 million shares at below-market cost and they want to phase out over four years a lower pay and pension scale for newly hired pilots that has been in place since 1983. The company is offering a 6 percent raise over the life o f the contract and options for three million shares of stock. Dan Loh/Associated Press A frustrated Ellen Stone, of Philadelphia, cries in frustration as she waits for her American Airlines ticket from Ed Ennis, Thursday, at the Philadelphia International Airport Stone was frustrated to find that her electronically reserved ticket was no longer Valid due to the impend­ ing American Airlines strike, but she was still able to get a seat after some waiting. M iddle East peace m oves keep C linton encouraged partners as well,” the prime minister said, Clinton opened the news conference by WASHINGTON — President Clinton saying that Israel and the Palestinians have said Thursday there is “ a renewed sense of com e a long way since A rafat and prom ise in the M iddle E ast” after last Netanyahu visited the White House in a month’s Israeli-Palestinian agreement and crisis atmosphere last October after clash­ urged a resumption of Israeli-Syrian negoti­ es in which 79 people died. “Now there is a renewed sense of promise in the Middle ations to keep the momentum going. After three hours of talks with Israeli E ast,” C linton said , re ferrin g to the Prim e M inister B enjam in N etanyahu, Hebron agreement. Netanyahu was the first of four Middle Clinton said he was encouraged “that there are things worth working on” regarding East leaders scheduled to meet Clinton in coming weeks. The president also will see talks with Syria. Netanyahu, appearing with Clinton at a Arafat, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak wrap-up news conference, praised the pres­ and Jordan’s King Hussein. Clinton said he talked with Netanyahu ident as “an exceptional friend of Israel” and said he came out of their meeting with about ways to resume peace talks w ith , “renewed confidence” about the possibility Syria. Those discussions were broken off a year ago after Islamic militants carried out of progress on Middle East peace. The prime m inister suggested Syria suicide bombings in Israel. Syria is insisting that Israel surrender could show its good faith by reining in Hezbollah terrorists in southern Lebanon. the Golan H eights, a strategic plateau He said it was no secret that Syria “has along their border, as its price for peace. Israel captured the Golan in the 1967 Sixmore than a minor influence in Lebanon.” Israel will not withdraw its troops from Day War. C linton said he was convinced that southern Lebanon because “if we simply walked away... Hezbollah and other terrorists Netanyahu “has thought through a way would simply come to the (border) and attack consistent with the security of the people of Israel that a comprehensive peace might be our towns and villages,” Netanyahu said. It was C lin to n ’s first m eeting with achieved.” But he said a lot of things have Netanyahu since the Israeli leader and to be resolved. In the meantim e, Clinton refused to Palestinian chief Yasser Arafat ended a dangerous impasse last month by agreeing pressure Israel to withdraw its forces from to, then im plem enting, Is ra e l’s long- southern Lebanon, saying it was imperative delayed pullout from most of Hebron and that Israel m aintain its border security. “Therefore, I have believed that the United parts of the West Bank. As they opened their talks, Clinton said States should be somewhat deferential Netanyahu and A rafat made “a terrific under these circumstances.” Netanyahu was said to have brought to effort ... and I’m looking forward to the Washington a territorial compromise on the next steps.” Netanyahu, who took office in June Golan, but there was no public discussion vowing to slow down the transfer of land to of its details. The United States believes Palestinians, replied, “I think we’ve taken Syrian President Hafez Assad will not sign a peace agreement without getting back all bold steps for peace.” “It’s time that we see such steps from our of the plateau. B y T erence H u n t A sso ciated P ress The Hubble Space Telescope, top, is berthed to the flight support system in space shuttle Discovery Thursday. The crew of Discovery will perform four spacewalks to make repairs and upgrades to the telescope. Hubble Space Telescope aboard Discovery safely B y M a r cia D u n n A s so c ia t e d P ress SPACE CENTER, Houston — Discovery’s astronauts hauled the Hubble Space Telescope aboard the shuttle early Thursday for a 1-billion-mile tuneup that will allow it to peer even deeper into the far reaches of the univase. Spacewalking astronauts planned to spend four straight nights beginning Thursday installing new science instru­ ments and other up-to-date equipment in NASA’s second Hubble service call since 1993. L ike rep airm en on E arth, Discovery’s seven-man crew kept the customer waiting. The shuttle pulled up a little late alongside the 12-ton, 43foot observatory. Several more min­ utes passed before Steven Hawley, operating the shuttle’s mechanical arm, latched onto the telescope as the two sp acecraft soared 370 m iles over Mexico’s southwestern coast. “Seeing that beautiful spacecraft for the first time in three years was like seeing your best friend whom you haven’t seen for three years,” NASA’s chief Hubble scientist, Ed Weiler, said on Earth. “Not only that, but the friend doesn’t seem to have aged at all.” The only sign of age appeared to be a gouge in a dish antenna, caused by a micrometeorite. The healthy Hubble was a welcome sight; a badly warped or wobbly telescope would have forced NASA to call off the spacewalks. Weiler considered the first spacewalk, by Mark Lee and Steven Smith, to be “the Super Bowl” of the series. Their job: to replace 1970s science instru­ ments with start-of-ihe-art devices. “If that goes well, I think it will real­ ly put Hubble into a position of having world-class scientific capability well into tiie 21st century,” Weiler said. O pinion P age 4 Friday, February 14, 1997 S t a t e P ress Statt P ress I oos &JDravos B O O — To administrators who are considering raising ticket pnces for athletic events. We undera stand there is a need to maintain oar athletics, n « only in order to compete with other Universities,but also to attract high-quality athletes. What makes those guys think that as outstanding football settsOn topped Off with a run at the Rose Bowl justifies soaking students? It will take more than One superb year to cement the reputation of an entire athletics program to monumental status. BRAVO — For AIDS Awareness Week. We hope that some of the myths surrounding AIDS, HIV and how it is transmitted have been dispelled. As a disease tharis quickly permeating Ow country,, the best method we have to curb it is education. AlDS iS such a taboo topic that it is taking over the masses by tgnorance and risky behavior. A lot of hard work and cOordination went into this évent to make tí ^successful. Anyone have any extra freecoiKtoms to spate? h, BOO — To APS, A m trak and Onion Pacific Railroad for not making foe creation of mass transit a priority. Cansamos from all walks of life have been pushing for fots baby to come to life, but a commuter train demonstration scheduled for March was pushed back and finally postponed. Come tut guys, more and more people flock to the city, no emu's moving out, and foe congesoon and pollution problems keep get­ ting worse. To be fair, anyone else involved in the postponement gets a bigfatBOO too. BRAVO —- To officials for recognizing that we need to do something about that darned Life Science Building and other high-rise structures that pose a risk on campus. Officials from various different departments are mammg together to discuss foe gen­ eral safety o f hwjMfpffB jifAffU solution will bereachedsoon to prevent other acci­ dents resulting in deaths from BRAVO — To James McNeil, the 17-year-old Mesa boy who braved climbing a 125-foot electrical tower to ensure his autistic brother's safety. James, an Eagle Scout, climbed after his 10-year-old broth­ er John, despite his fear of heights. He really earned a Badge of Bravery or whatever the Scouts give out for this one. B O O — To Jam es M cD ougal, form er Whitewater business partner of President Clinton, for first lying about Clinton’s involvement in a 1986 meeting, then changing his story. This guy just adds to the stereotype o f slimy politicians, but hasn’t McDougal ever heard of loyalty? BRAVO — To foe House o f Representatives for not passing the term limit amendment that was pro­ posed this week. The provision would limit House members to six 2-year terms and senators to two 6year terms. The final vote was 69 votes short of foe two-thirds majority required to clear the House. A 1996 drive for a term limit amendment also failed We say why fire foe legislators if they are doing a That’s what the state elections are for. good job? Th Dub. STATE PRESS TAFF ft- N C të W w as* ? ' QR0UNWKX5 M i= * > ff w l ì m Ethics taught by parents save face In my estimation, Mom and Pop were pretty savvy about a EORGE D. lot of important things in life. ROSE One of those things was ethics Column or ethical behavior. This can be a fairly complicated issue, but I guess the folks figured out the K.l.S.S. principle (keep it sim­ ple, son) early on. All I had to do was hear and heed. It didn’t take an ethics oversight commit­ tee to understand it was good stuff: ~ While a lot of my friends’ parents.w ere clam oring about “d o n ’t do anything I wouldn’t do,” the message I got was far different. My par­ ents were quick to tell me, “Don’t do anything you would be ashamed of if anyone were to find it out.” As a teen, I thought this to be fairly extreme, somewhere out in left field. Their whole point was that I needed to live my life as though everybody was watching me, constantly. They didn't want the things I did being front page news, things I would have to constantly apologize for or things that would be an embarrassment to me. They also said something about how things which are done in secret are shouted from rooftops. Imagine my actions being made public ¡“ That doesn’t happen to people in real life,” I told my parents. I guess I was wrong. I now know that they were right. Another important thing they told me was not to say things I was afraid to have repeated. “Guard your conversa­ tion,” my parents told me. “Don’t say things that you could not say to someone’s face.” “Trust us on this one,” they said. “People, right or wrong, can and do overhear what you say and they will repeat it.” I suppose this includes conversations on cellular phones (sorry, Newt). You always need to tell the truth and speak fairly of others. Imagine having to watch what you say. Scary thought, Along with speech, we also have to watch our actions. My dad told me once, “Sex is a good thing. Be sure you keep it between you and your wife.” I’ve often thought this to be very good advice. Snubbing this advice could lead to some surprises in life. Surprises like, “I’m sorry but your AIDS test is positive,” or “There is a 97.8 percent chance that there is a paternity case based on the genetic testing.” Condoms may break, but fidelity is 100 percent effective when applied by both partners. And most importantly, I don’t have to try to explain some marital indiscretion to my wife. A good example of lost ethics I’ve noticed on our cam­ pus on several occasions is Students not doing their own work. This o n e'h ad me reeling during the previous semester. I watched a student get an attendance slip signed for an extra-credit lab, when those of us who had actually gone to foe lab knew this person had not been there. I alSQ saw another student studying an answer sheet, not a study guide, for a test in, of all things, constitutional law. This person could be an attorney in foe future or even scari­ er, a. senator or representative. Probably foe most important bit o f ethical direction my parents gave me was, “Admit when you’re wrong.” Not this mea culpa, that’s only half sincere. When you admit to your deeds, you own the good and bad, right or wrong. There’s something to be said for being repentant for w hat y o u ’ve done wrong. The A m erican H eritage Dictionary says to repent means a change for the better as a result of remorse for one’s sins. It also says that sins are those things which are shameful or wrong. To admit guilt or involvement and then try to minimize damage is not changing for foe better. It is a lack of character. Someone once told me foe biggest reason people lie is for self-preser­ vation or to save face. Ethics comes from the Greek word ethos, meaning char­ acter. Character is linked to your reputation and how people know you. All they can know about you is what they see you do or not do. They see the result of your choices, ethi­ cal or not, everyday. Ethics are not something you can teach in a class or monitor with a committee. It has to be a part of you, of what you are, of what you become. We have to help each other for it to be so. George D. Rose, Sr., is a junior studying public relations and ean be reached at WriteSt907@aol.com. BRIAN ANDERSON, Editor DUSTIN KRÜGEL, Managing Editor CARYL MICALIZIO ..... TIMOTHY TAFF . . . . . . . . RAY STERN........ THERESA VALLES .. .. CHRISTA CERRENTANO ............... ............N ew s Editor LORI C A IN ........... JIM POULIN......... RANDY JONES................. ED ODEVEN...................... TIM BAXTER................. .......Asst. Magazine Editor LEYLA SALMASSIAN..... REPORTERS: Sara Bush, Kevin Culwell, Deanna Darr, Rowe E dgell, Lidia Kelly, Ben Leatherman, M elody McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Vivi Stenberg. SPORTS REPORTERS : Josh DeFamio, Percy Ednalino Jr.> Lori Haro, Matt Paulson, John Sheehy. COPY EDITORS: Jodi Bafundo, Lorie Roberts. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Erik Guzowski, Pat Shannahan. COLUMNISTS: Kevin J. Berlat, Michelle Carson, Olga Puentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Gordon, Michelle Hardt, Diane C. Jacobs, David C. Larkin, George D .R ose,’ 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: Can Dewald, Dan EUstrom, David Goodwin, Brandon Mudd, Nick Pezzorello, 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 o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: ' ; BRIAN ANDERSON Editor DUSTIN KRÜGEL Managing Editor THERESA VALLES Opinion Editor CHRISTA CERRENTANO News Editor ’the State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-150?. We do not answer-questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information............. 965-7572 Newsroom.......... .... .965-2292 Magazine............... ..965-1695 Advertising.............965-6555 Classifieds.............. 965-6735 http://news. vpsa. asu. edu Opinion jTAlTì,PRESS______________ __ Friday, February 1 4,1997 __________________ ___ _____ ______ P age 5 Arpaio defends questionable policies despite effectiveness I had the pleasure of attending the M emorial Union Activities Board Opinion Forum last week and seeing one of Arizona’s best politicians at work. Unfortunately, he is also in charge o f law enforcement for Maricopa County. Sheriff Joe Arpaio graced the Programming Lounge stage for over an hour talking about his policies and answering questions from thé crowd. I came away from the forum with the opinion that while he is a great politician, he is also an irritable and arro­ gant man who relics more on symbolism and slogans than actual law enforcement. Sheriff Arpaio started the session by talking about his past, including stints with the Army during the Korean War, the Las Vegas police department (“just in time to arrest Elvis,” he joked) and finally retiring from the Bureau of Narcotics and the Drug Enforcement Agency before being elected sheriff of Maricopa County in 1992. However, once he was elected sheriff, he began to use his position for self-promotion and symbolism rather than the Safe and effective detention of prisoners. His answer to deterrence? Making ja il so m iserable that prisoners wouldn’t want to return. He set up tents “to put more people in jail,” but purpose­ ly chose old tents that provided no protection from the chill of a Phoenix winter or the heat o f a 116 degree summer. were still using the restraining chair for punishment despite Arpaio Seemed to relish his description of where the Tent recent deaths and injuries from its use, Arpaio accused her City is located, “between the dog pound and the dump.” of wanting to coddle prisoners and asked her “Do I take the In addition to these measures, Arpaio sought to save guns away too?” money by eliminating coffee, cigarettes, movies and by Arpaio dismissed the recent disturbance at the Tent City limiting cable TV to five channels: Disney, weather, C- as “one little riot,” and when asked if he would face sec­ Span, Channel 12 city television! and Videos of Newt ond-degree murder charges for not improving conditions or Gingrich’s college course (which is just cruel). security, Sheriff Joe dismissed the poor conditions by say­ While it is hard to argue with these methods, Arpaio also ing he didn’t have the man-power to improve it. displayed his ignorance of basic health issues by describing The one audience question that Arpaio enjoyed was the meals for the prisoners. Bologna sandwiches are the mine. I asked if he would enjoy locking up more juveniles meal of the day, but the bologna is so old that it has turned with the passage of Proposition 102, which makes juveniles green. Arpaio was proud of the color of the bologna, but the property of adult court. Joe responded that if you “rape when posed with a health-issue question from someone in and kill, then you have to do hard time/’ the audience, he responded with an irritated, “I’m not a Arpaio is even planning to train German Shepherd dogs butcher. Maybe it’s oxidation.” », to patrol the outside Tent City, so he can continue to underAnd that was the tone of the day. When*Xrpaio was staff his prisons. trumpeting one of his pet projects, he was calm, cool and Joe Arpaio is a politician, and he makes no bones about very ready to discuss it. However, when a hint of criticism it. He believes in his own policies above all else. However, arose, he immediately became very defensive, arrogant, his policies encourage violence against the inmates by tak­ and refused to answer the question, to the point of getting ing away their humanity. into shouting matches with several audience members. Furthermore, the effectiveness of his methods have Arpaio attacked the moderator of the session when he never been proven. Arpaio admitted that he has only started attempted to bring up a New Times article about a prisoner a study of his efforts, but that “if I fail, I’m not changing injured at the Madison County'Jail. Arpaio refused to anything.” Scary words comin'g from a man who seems com m ent about the story, and called the New Tim es undaunted by violence among his inmates and concerned “garbage,” while praising our State Press as “a nice hon­ with high public approval. est paper.” Kevin J. Berlai is a junior studying theater education and When an audience member asked him why his guards can be reached at KevinASU@aol.com. Valentine’s Day is holiday of heartbreak for single guy A s it gets closer to that dreaded day quick»', faster, gnore desirable, but it is for all single people ~ whetiliiilhpy Itea not stronger. F ight the Power! For Professional Single (like myself) or ama­ instance, on Feb. 14, you will find me in teurs and just don't happen to have some­ a comer o f my room with a large blanket one right now — we are all a little on over me. That sounds like fun, doesn’t edge due to “this crazy little thing called it? Well maybe not to you. but In prepa­ love.” Our weak come-back to alt of you ration, I will consume mass quantities of “taken" people is that it’s just a commer­ grain alcohol and after that I will try to cial holiday created by the masterminds talk to the re stless sp irit o f Jim m y at Hallmark in order for you to buy their Stewart (he’s dead isn’t he?) and think products. o f a good holiday like Christmas {Merry These evil people sit in dark, smoke- C hristm as M ovie H ouse, M erry filled rooms deep inside the labyrinth Christmas Emporium, Merry Christmas known as the Hallmark Crown Center, in the most romantic city in the high So this day might be rom antic to p lain s — th o se o f you Kansas City, ...................... Mo. They see Bj ¡■ tiently •. in a how m uch relationship, So this day might be romantic Ian we single [ b u t to a ll -of ■ ip thomofyou people current■ people have ns w ho a re hanging out ly in a relationship, but to all n o t — .a n d with our th e r e arc a of us who are not— and there frien d s or h ell o f a lo t are a hell of a lot more of us going to m ore o f us m ovies by than there are than títere are o f you — it ourselves. Or o f you — it isn’t. they see all isn ’t. W e’ve tiie free time been putting they d o n ’t up w ith all have, due to the fact that they are tied this love crap; it’s in the air, on televi­ down and have to spend most o f their sion, and crammed down our throats time worrying about what their signifi­ from the card companies. So we’re not cant Other would think. To you evil peo­ in the best mood —- in fact,'you might ple at Hallmark and all the other card say some o f os are very close to “snap­ companies, I feel I speak for all single ping” and taking that nice shiny gun people by saying, “W e’re not going we've been polishing nil month, going down without a fight. You haven't bro­ up to our local bell tower and ... welt, ken us in the past; you’re not going to you know the rest. get us tins time 1 Just take it easy on Friday — have This is our motto — well that, and your fun with your significant other. But ‘T il probably just rent a movie tonight.” if you happen to be walking across cam­ But to be honest, we’re slipping. Every pus, kind of hunch over and walk in a year we are losing more sad more peo­ zigzag pattern. So have your fun on ple so your “created” holiday. V alen tin e’s D ay, spend ridiculous Lately I’ve beard my friends say. “I amounts of money in an attempt to buy someone’s love, and remember, we’re D on 't give in to the Dark Side It is j ------------------------------------------------ f t » u E u k ts a DTC’s turn to provide funds Jennifer Netherby notes in her article on Feb. 6, “DTC taking care of business in Tempe,” some of the so-called good things of the downtown Tempe community. Here are some costs to the taxpayer that Netherby was not told about by Rod Keeling, the executive director of the DTC, and the city manager Gary Brown. It costs the taxpayer more than $250,000 annually in additional clean-up expenses to clean the streets and sidewalks daily, even steam-cleaning. Perhaps the DTC members should learn to use a broom and a pooperscooper. This cost is more than the $250,000 generated in assessments. Then there is the matter of the $250,000 interest-free loan that was given to the city — when will it be paid back? Who knows? At least $50,000 of the $250,000 in assess­ ments is paid by the city. The city has paid for $500,000 worth of parking meters for which thè DTC without risk stands to make $200,000 — such a deal. The city provides free restrooms. The city provides millions of dollars in parking variances to the downtown estab­ lishments. And, pray tell, just what increased rev­ enue has the DTC contributed to the city treasury? Why, 1 doubt whether the down­ town generates as much net revenues and repeat net revenues as do the private estab­ lishments on the four corners of Southern and Mill. Would you like to compare and publish thé results? Don’t forget we provide free bus service for the DTC customers, one-half million dollars in the Fantasy of Lights, and a host of other expenditures for the DTC — all at the expense of the taxpayers. Simply , to use a phrase from Ross Perot, the only thing the DTC generates is a “giant sucking sound,” the sound of tax revenues going right into the DTC. Is it not time for the DTC to deliver? How much more of the “giant sucking sound” do we hear before the DTC stands on its own? A rthur D. Jacobs Faculty Associate Retired/ College of Business N o guarantees for civic students I am writing in response to your article about thç Honors C ollege taking more space. Thé space they are planning to use, Best A, also houses residents that are not affiliated with the Honors College for many reasons. W hat the school, specifically Residential Life, doesn’t realize is that those people will be out of a home. Center Complex has been listed as lowcost housing for the three years I have lived and worked here. Now with the addition of many campus communities floors and the removal of Best A as an option, people who need low -cost housing have had their options reduced dramatically. I have lived in Center for three years, two in Best C and one in Best A. I waited those two years to get one of the two single rooms available to males in the complex and now that I have one they, Residential Life and the Honors College, Will not let me keep it. This whole situation makes you wonder if Residence Life really cares about residents, or if they just care about GPA listings. Many of the people who are threatened with losing their homes have done so much for Center Complex, like serving on Hall Council and being an active member of the community, that it seems outrageous they should lose their spots because they just d o n ’t want to be a part o f the H onors College. So while Residence Life and the Honors College would like the students to believe that this change is really great, the average student who is working his or her way through school is left without low-cost housing. Makes you think. Richard “Hotchy” Kiene Junior English P a ge S t a t e P r ess Friday, February 14, 1997 6 W hat are you d oing for V alentine’s Day? Y o u 'll never n H » '-dp . % «afe» UPr ! know u n le s s | . ■ Eg . rj . bp- ». i I you H . HBa*4. i l “For Valentine 's Day Vih going to the bars and finding a Valentine.” Sean Baxter , .f Freshman Real Estate C h e ri S k ib a Cortney Caraway Sophomore Communication Æmm '‘Valentine's Day night I'm taking my girlfriend out to dinner at the Salt Cellar in Scottsdttte.” “I have to work on Valentine's Day. I get to serve all the sweethearts, coffee.” read ¡ I Anne Hendricks-Haugen Junior Social Work * 5 ; , •' your “I ’m a newlywed. On Valentine’s Day I ’m going to spend lots o f time with my "honey.” Horoscope w /Party Bu a ’259 CANCÚN *479 Im M m i M ' ait, Treaehn, HuM, Metis ft ParttM Last chance - less than 20 seats left! “My boyfriend is flyin g in from California. We ’re going out to eat and then see a show at the Electric Ballroom. ” “My girlfriend and I are going to Arcosanti fo r a romantic Valentine's Day weekend.” MAZARAN5339 Dan L. .Junior Social Work Miki Kuroda English , “I ’m spending Valentine’s Day weekend with my boyfriend from Thailand. Friday night we’re going to a dance, and Sunday we are going to. the Renaissance Festival. ” ~ “I am going out with friends Friday night. Early Saturday morning we are going to Sedona.” Michael Gosney Alumnus, 1974 Joy Don Carlos Senior Mechanical Engineering InduU«; M Air, Triad«*, Mutai, Mtalt ft Parttai colnf Fast • IMS than I t »eat, lettl St P A D R E ISs* 149 Induetti HatoVCantfu, MMlt, ActtvttMt A Nrttat Hottest Properties*Redissona Royal«, Sunchaseft Inverness. PartyBus*99 STUDENT EXPRESS, INC. w w w .studentexprcss.com Best Prices Guaranteed! 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KQhH H A lm a S d io o l Se Habla Español .tankedti «astonarserrón o n B ro a d w a y E l l io t I n A u to p fe x i BasedonN«ianimCorap8oyfte8n»f8^ 461-4 llll http://wwwJirimandbrown.com Al pncesplustax, Icense 4dealerdocfees Salepncesnotapplicableonleases Salepnces includeal factorytodealerncenWesi rebates. AbovepricesnotgoodwMtanyotheradvertisedoffer. Vehicles maynotbeexactlyas ihisTatedandaresubjecttopriorsale. S^eendsdoseofbusiness2/17Ä7 P ag e 7 Friday, February 14, 1997 Sta te P éess Assistants’ health coverage bill put on hold f o C f C lt / \0\kt\ ÔtOto Tfoôô year, according to payroll records at ASU’s Institutional Analysis department. Ortiz collaborated with Rep. Dan Schottel, R-Tucson, to help put the bill together and get it ready fo r the meeting. Schottel was to present it to the committee. “Teacher assistants are undercompensated financially, and they’re definitely undercompensated as far as benefits go,” Ortiz said. “We were hoping this bill would be a step to eventually having full medical coverage for them." Schottel was unavailable for comment. Many universities around the country currently give their teaching and research assistants health coverage, The University of Washington and Washington State University provide vision and dental plans in addition to regular medi­ cal benefits. ■ “We want to keep competitive so that we can get the best graduate students to become teacher assistants." Ortiz said, “If we were able to get this bill passed through the legislature, everybody would win." : B y K ev in C u l w e u . S tate P ress Teaching and research assistants will have to wait at least another year to receive financial assistance for medical check-ups*. A bill that would have subsidized half the cost of health insurance for assistants was set to be heard in front of the Senate Education Committee Wednesday, but the committee canceled the hearing because ASU’s budget has already been submitted to the Legislature for approval. The plan to pay 50 percent of all general medical bills for the assistants will not be heard until the fall semester, said Andy Ortiz, graduate affairs vice president of the Associated Students of ASU. Vision and dental benefits were not included in the plan. Assistants at the three state universities currently receive no health benefits. There were 2.279 graduate assistants and associates last Lam bda Leagu e’s Valentine's Day Dance 7 :3 0 p m til m i d n ig h t F r i d a y F e b . 1 4 PV W est R e sid e n c e Hall R e so u r c e C enter C o -sp o n so re d by New Tim e s R om ance CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH ACR O SS 1 Pastram i purveyors 6 Turner and Wood 11 W ield 12 Blow one’s top 13 Spud 14 Arizona State setting 15 Deed 16 Goodnatured 18 Mineral ending 19 Neverthe­ less 20 Snaky swimmer 21 DEA worker 23 Ski-resort sights 25 Force member 27 Dash lengths 28 Settle the bill 30 Salt ‘n Pepa, ter one 33 Saloon 34 In addition 36 Diamond expert 37 Strange 39 Siesta 40 France's longest river 41 Dance for a duo 43 Un­ clouded 44 Olym pics weaponry 45 Cook’s additives 46 Laconic H ayden S quare A mphitheatre mM m DOWN Yesterday’s Answer 1 Hold 2 Track bet 3USPS employee 4 Dudgeon 5 Wander off 6 Beaties hit 7 Scope 6 Bookie's employee 2 1 3 9 Bobbing goals 10 Pittsburgh product 17 Convened 22 Artfully bashful 24 W ee worker 26 Green tools 28 Con’s 4 5 hope 29Luau staple 31 Visions 32 Stand against 33 Gush 35 Singing group 38 Medina native 42 Parrot 7 8 9 See 25 finalists compete in a 12 hour non-stop kiss marathon on Balboa’s Patio to win a romantic trip for 2 to Acapulco provided by America West Airlines 7am-7pm. Sponsored by: ^ A m e r i c a W èst Airlines. 10 IT. S E E M S S f U Y T O P A Y M O R E ? 11 12 13 “ 16 15 18 17 19 j 24■ 22 21 ■ 28 1 * ■ 37 38 40 43 *5 ». 27 26 34 ■3 31 1 32 42 1 2-14 CRYPTOQUOTE I p s i vp XI T V T Y N PHG FY W r46 NIG P, Q C V IT W C YI L i v e C o n c e r t w i t h Soul Cracker 39 41 Singled Out Game Show 36 35 | ■ 30 28 33 FOLLOWED AT 7pm BY Miller Lite’s OFFICIAL KICKOFF OF 2-14 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. Q I T h e K is s T h is M a r a t h o n Walt Richardson & The Morningstar Band The Burnl ackers NPHVY RY I D N 0 C 0 V E R BE F 0 R E 8pm Proof of legal drinking age required at entrance. S I ! Q U V FY Q . — P M D H V M U . B H Q C P V R Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WE CALL OUR RICH RELATIVES THE KIN WE LOVE TO TOUCH.— EDDIE CANTOR 0 1997 by King Feature* Syndicate, Inc. • 4 0 4 South Miil Ave. (Hayden Square) 9 6 0 -1 3 0 0 Page 8 Friday, February 14, 1997 St a t e P r ess P E O P L E NEW YORK (AP) -— What scares Stephen King? The best-selling frightmeister said in a CBS 60 Minutes interview that he fears people imitating the horrifying sce­ narios in his books — particularly a 1977 book titled Rage. “If there’s anything that I regret in my career, it’s pub­ lishing the novel Rage,” King said in the interview airing Sunday. “Never crossed my mind at the time, but it’s a story about — I mean —- I’m even hesitant to speak of it.” In the book, written under King’s pseudonym Richard Bachman, a disturbed high school student brings a gun to school, kills his teacher and holds his classmates hostage, “Since then, several kids have killed teachers or held classes hostage who apparently had read that book,” King said. “One kid in Lexington, Kentucky, had read the book several times.” NEW YORK (A P )—- Whoopi Goldberg finally got to take home the burned and battered cat she fell in love with last October. Goldberg decided to adopt Frankie after she saw a news­ paper photograph o f the feline after he was rescued from a fire, looking frail, singed and with a broken leg. The cat spent months in a shelter recuperating. Frankie is not to be confused with Scarlet, the cat who heroically plucked her five kittens, one by one, from a burning building last year. Those Cats were adopted. SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) — A woman who accused Charlie Sheen in a lawsuit of knocking her out during an argu­ ment is trying to extort money, die actor’s spokesman said. “It’s typical the price you pay for being a celebrity in today’s age,” publicist Jeff Ballard said Wednesday. Brittany Ashland filed her lawsuit last week claiming Sheen slammed her onto the marble floor of his home, knocked her unconscious and opened a gash on her lip that required stitches. The 31 -year-old star of Platoon and Wall Street was arrested in December for investigation of assault, but he has not been charged with any crime. Weekend Escapes s low as $109 d a n d U n it e d A ir lin e s / f e i» Macie) T h e W c ? k e n d W i t h U n it e d A ir l in e s 'j n i i l T ^ i ^ T T ^ F e i l e t C b e v 'S e b ^ L Neu Us¿ ü M o n d a y O r T u esd ay T o I S a v in g s W h e n e rC a rd ® C a rd . Weekender Zone Fare Certificate P ro m o C ode: AV0027 Ticket D esig n ato r: AV0027 Travel C o m p lete: June 6,1997 Use Vbur MasterCard® Car'd F o r Gmeat Savings O n United Airlines. To make reservations, call United at 1-800-241-6522 or your travel professional. Please reference Weekender Zone Fare Certificate AV0027. R o c i n d t r i p “R a t e « ; Within Zone A or B $129 roundfrip Between Zone A & Zone B $189 roundfrip Between Zone A & ZoneC $ 2 6 9 roundfrip Between Zone B & Zone C $189 roundfrip Within ZoneC $109roundtrip Not valid for travel lo/from IL/CO/AK/Hi. To enjoy these low Weekender Zone Fares - plus earn Mileage Plus® credit on your trip - just call your travel professional or United to reserve your flight and redeem your certificate. To receive these savings, use your MasterCard® card to purchase an E-Tickef-*1between Feb 1.1997 and May 15,1997 for travel between Feb 15,1997 and June 6,1997. Outbound travel good on flights depart­ ing on Saturday. Return travel good on flights returning the Monday follow­ ing departure (An exception for travel between zones A-C, Return travel may also be on the Tuesday following departure). Zone Definitions: Zone A - AL, AR, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, IA, IN, KV, LA, MA, MD, ME, Ml, MN, MO, MS, NC, NH, NJ, NY, OH, PA, Rl, SC. TN, VA, VT, Wl, WV Zone B - ID, KS. MT, ND, NE. NM, OK, SD, TX, UT, WY Zone C - AZ, CA, NV, OR, WA Not valid tor travel to/from IL/CO/AK/HI. T E R M S A N D CONDITIONS: P ro m o Code: AV0Q27 V a lid C arrie r: United Airfines/Shuttle by United/United Express. V a lid Routing: Roundfrip travel must begin and end in the 48 contiguous United States (IL/CO/AK/H! excluded). All travel must be via the routes of UA in which UA publishes Economy. Class tares. One Way tfavei/stopovers/cire|etrTp/bpëh segments/', waltlisting/standby are not permitted. Open jaw permitted. (IL and CO excluded as origin/destination; however, connections through CHI/DEN are permitted.) V a lid T ick« ! Date«: Feb 1 ttirougb May: 15,1997, Valid Travel Dales: Feb 15 through Jun 6,1997 All travel must be complete by Jun 6 ,1997 B lacko u t D ates: 1997: Mar 22,29. Apr 5,12. Outbound travel must be on flights departing on Saturday, with, return travel on flights the Monday following departure, or the Tuesday following departure if thepassenger is traveling between zones A-C. C la ss ot Service: V class. (Seals aie capacity controlled and must be available in the required booking inventory at the time reservations are confirmed.) Advance Purchase: Within 24 tirs ot making reservations, at least 14 days prior to departure. M in /M a x Stay: Saturday-night stay minimum. RETURN TRAVEL MUST BE THE IMME­ DIATE MONDAT FOLLOWING DEPARTURE; AN EXCEPTION FOR TRAVEL BETWEEN ZONES A-C. RETURN CAN ALSO BE THE IMMEDIATE TUESDAY FOLLOWING DEPARTURE: M ile a g e P lu s A ccru al: Discounted travel is eligible tor Mileage Plus credit. T icke tin g : E-Ticketing only (electronic ticketing service). Taxes/Service Charges: Ail tees, taxes and surcharges including Passenger Facility Charges (up to $12) are the responsibility of the passenger andmust be paid a time ot ticketing. C a rt R estrlbtion a: Certificate is required for discount and must be presented at time of tidreting. Accept original certificate only: Non-extendible, non-combinable with other air travel certificates or discount fare offers (Mileage Plus awards/SifyerVVjhgs awards/convention/groupAour/senior citizen/student/childrtravel package/travel indus­ try discount/ military/government/joint/interline/wholesale/bulk). . . . not replaceable jf lost or stolen; No cash value; may not he sold or bartered. Protection for flight irregularities will be on United/United Express/Shuttle by United flights only. Discount applies to new purchases only and wilt not be honored retroactively ot in , connection with the exchange Of any Wholly or partially unused ticket One ticket per certificate redeemed.; Void if altered or duplicated. ' T icketing R e striction s: Non-refundable, Non-lransferable after ticketihg. Change in origin or destination is not permitted. Tickets MAY BE revalidated lor a $50 per ticket fee. ©1.997 MasterCard International incorporated . Agency Ticketing Instructions: See S*PMA/AV0027 for detailed information 1. Treat as Type ‘A’ Discount Certificate ' ■-Use Fare Basis Code: VE14NSTU ................. -v • ‘f . ■- VE14MSTD(zones A-C) -Use Ticket Designator: AV0027 -Endorsement Bat: VALID UA ONLY/Non-Ref/No Kin Changes 2. Refer to ARC Industry Agents' Handbook, section 6.0 for details. 3. Failure to comply with promotion guidelines could fesu# in debit memo. UAL ATO/CTO Ticketing Instructions: See S*PM0/AV0027 St a t e P Page 9 Friday, February 14, 1997 ress P olice R eport A SU police reported the follow ing inci­ ing phone calls to her residence. dents Thursday: • A female student reported that her vehicle • A male student reported that someone was removed without perm ission from criminally damaged his white Honda CRX Parking Structure Five. in Area 17. Tempe police reported the follow ing inci­ • A male student reported that someone dents: unlawfully entered his vehicle and removed • A man was arrested for being the passen­ a Kenwood car stereo and Sony Discman ger in a stolen car that was involved in a CD player. chase. Both suspects in the car jumped out • A male student reported that someone; and let the car roll into a tree. unlaw fully entered his Pdntiac and • A woman was arrested on Apache removed a car stereo CD player and a col­ Boulevard for carrying a green leafy sub­ lector’s football card. stance, believed to be marijuana, and two • A male student reported that someone glass pipes. unlawfully entered his vehicle in Area 17 • A man got into an argument with several and removed a car stereo cassette player. others while playing billiards at • A male student reported that someone Prankster’s Gar and Brill. The other peo­ criminally damaged his vehicle in Area 17. ple went outside, where the man confront­ • A male student reported that someone ed them. He assaulted a woman in the unlawfully entered his vehicle in Area 17 group by shoving her with his left hand, and removed several items, causing her to fall. • A female student reported that a male Compiled by State Press reporter Jennifer subject is stalking her and making harass­ Netherby and city editor Tim Tail P u p p y d ig s u p $ 1 3 ,5 0 0 i n b a c k y a r d EL PASO, Texas (AP) — Good boy! A Doberman pinscher puppy apparently dug up $13,500 buried in its back yard Wednesday, sending $100 bills drifting through the neighborhood. “It was like a fable,” said Florence Berger, who lives nearby. Dora Mqya, a housekeeper caring for the home, called police after seeing money swirling through the yard. The owners of the house have been in California for two weeks, neighbors said. Officers found $11,600 in the yard and the rest of the money elsewhere around the neighborhood, some of it with teeth marks. The police and the FBI are investigating. “Because it was such a large amount and such large denoininations, we were imme­ diately suspicious of its origin,” Sgt. Bill Pfeil said. • State P ress © ra n iir® % ■' We're there when you ca n't be. PERFO RM ANCE. PO W ER. AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE. Mm Kj U A N A 6 DU MOUNTAIN BIKE When you take a bike off-road, the word "performance" takes on a whole new meaning. In M this case, the word is defined by a full cro-moly frame and fork, one incredibly responsive set of components and the capacity to take all kinds of abuse and come put grinning, If a bike could grin. Student Discounts .«.99 mm Z P v rfS U ZIAASU • MEMORIALUNION[LOWERLEVEL) 727 - USED(8733) 10639 N.32NDST 482-3119 2510 W. THUNDERBIRD 866-7867 807 W. INDIANSCHOOL 241-0313 105 W. UNIVERSITYTEMPE 829-1967 http//www.impactmusic.com Reg. $449” Lifetime W arranty on Fram e & Fork Full Butted C ro -M o ly Frorfie 21 S p e e d -G rip Shift Shim ano STX/Alivio Equipped A llo y W h eels - Stainless Spokes FREE TEMPE BIKE MAP! DOMENKS c ra m 1004 S. Mill Ave. Tempe, AZ i-j University ■■ •I " 1 10th Street Student Discounts with I.D. (excludes labor & sale items) Open 6 days Apache 9 6 7 -7 7 0 0 LAYAWAY S t a t e P ress Friday, February 14,1997 P a g e 10 Firm is high-tech success for graduate ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY AW ARENESS B y B en L ea therm an Sta te P ress Bright flashes of light and golden streaks of energy shoot from the television, heralding the start of Entertainm ent Tonight. A kid gets sucked into a Pespi bottle. A beer-craving frog gets dragged down a high­ way by a Budweiser truck. AH these attention-getting images came from Novocom, the design firm founded by ASU graduate John Ridgway that specializes in seizing control of viewers. “We like; im pact,” Ridgway said. “People come to us when they want their message delivered with a lot of intensity and when they want it to be remembered.” John Ridgway, an A SU alumnus and founder of Novocom, a graphic design firm, sits near one of Novocom’s portfolio of his exhibits. The show will be on display at the Computing Commons’ Art Galiery until March 23. right-brain material, which includes spots for everything from Carl’s Jr. to MSNBC, A number of the exhibit’s works were created by former will be on display at the Computing Common’s Art Gallery Sun Devils. “A number of them are Emmy-winning designers and until March 23. „ directors now,” he said. Two ASU students created the cur­ The exhibit shows off cutting-edge spots in a high-tech environment of information and sensory overload. Several rent graphics package for Entertainment Tonight, one of large-screen m onitors show quick-cut footage o f Ridgway’s first projects. After getting his photography degree from ASU in 1975, Novocom’s library of work as a fast-paced soundtrack Ridgway worked with a variety of companies ranging from blares in the background. Two projection units also display the same video on the KAET to the New Times before founding Novocom in wall, but on a larger scale. For added ambiance, two mock- 1983. At that time, the company was known as GRFX. One of his first designs was for the fledgling televi­ ups o f Novocom workstations were also brought in. sion show Entertainment Tonight. This led him to sever­ Ridgway was approached by Barbara Eschbach, director of faculty resources for Information Technology, nine al Emmys. Ridgway said he Considers Novocom to be the leading months ago. Novocom provided the ad footage and ASU special effects shop in the nation and one of die three top did the set-up. ' “ I Was very pleased With the way it worked out,” graphic design firms worldwide. He added that some of the best new talent can be found at Ridgway said. After this exhibit finishes, he plans to dupli­ die college level, where students are both creative and untested. cate the display at other universities around the country, “There are a lot of opportunities (at ASU),” he said. possibly for recruitment purposes. .‘ Ridgway already has picked up some talent from ASU. “It’s just What you make out of it.” Exxon SATURDAY MONDAY FEBRUARY15 FEBRUARY17 AIDS M em orial Q uilt Dedication Candlelight Vigil & M arch 1 pm, MU Programming Lounge 5 pm, Palo Verde Complex Friendship in the Age o f AIDS 8 pm, MU Ventana Room A’Sditi, ¿Z* io R °a Pager Activation Unlimited Pages toappeal $5 billion oil spill judgment 1 Year Airtime! B y J im C larke A ssociated . P ress ANCHORAGE Alaska — Exxon Corp. filed papers Thursday, signaling its plans to appeal the $5.3 billion judg­ ment it faces for the 1989 Valdez oil spill. Exxon is asking a federal appeals court to review the standards U S. District Court Judge H. Russel Holland used to arrive at the $5 billion punitive award. Exxon also said it objects to instructions Holland gave the jury during the 1994 trial and to the $6.75 billion letter of credit the judge is requiring Exxon to post. Thousands of Alaska fishermen and natives are in line to collect the punitive judgment, as well as $287 million in compensatory! damages.. Exxon is also appealing the way Holland calculated some of the compensatory damages. The Exxon Valdez spilled about 11 million gallons of crude oil into Prince William Sound in March 1989 when the tanker went aground on Bligh Reef. Exxon has said since it lost the civil trial that it would appeal the matter, so Thursday’s announcement Came as no surprise. In a prepared statem ent, Exxon Chairm an Lee R. Raymond called the judgment excessive and unwarranted and says it should be set aside or substantially reduced. But Brian O’Neill, one of the lead attorneys representing fishermen and other plaintiffs, contended the appeal was part of a long-term Exxon strategy to delay paying the award. “They sprang frivolous motion after frivolous motion after the jury came in to delay payment, and they’ll do the same thing in the appeals court,” O’Neill said. Interest on the award is accumulating at a 5.9 percent annual rate and already has topped $38 million. O’Neill said he expects the appeals process to last at least 18 months. On Campus ! S p in n in g Y o u r F in a n cia l W h e e ls ? D isco v e r th e b e n e f its a v a ila b le to a ll A .S .U S tu d en ts, Faculty, | S taff an d A lum ni. Pager Activation Unlimited^ Pages 2 Years Airtime! $11999 Pager Activation Unlimited Pages 5 Years Airtime! $13999 \ Planned Parenthood is seeking monogamous couples (women 18-40; men 18-50) to study the effectiveness of latex condoms in pregnancy prevention. Partici­ pants receive free condoms for seven months and up to $90 for two clinic visits and three telephone inter­ views. Volunteers may also receive free Pap smears, STD screening and physicals. For more information, call Planned Parenthood at 263-2236. Planned Parenthood* bf Cenbal and Northern Arizona F R E E lifetim e m em bership, F R E E ch e ck in g , L O W co st Jr 'X ' stu den t loan s, F R E E 2 4 -h ou r acco u n t a c c e ss an d a C O N V E N IE N T auto buying program . S to p b y and s e e u s today! $8999 State S avin g s & C re d it Um on A.S.U. West Univ. Center 543-5626 A.S.U. Main Memorial Union 965-4426 AJS.U. East * Opining* Spring ’97 Offices inPhoenix, Mesa, Scottsdaleand ThroughoutArizona O F C A LIFO R N IA U N LIM ITED A R IZ O N A P A G IN G ! PHOENIX 3736 E. Indian School Rd (602) 468-3533 Look F o r E H i n Locations^ fc . Com ing Soon! ^ A ll oth er M otorola m od els a v a ila b le -A d ap p lie s to new p u rch a s e s only. C u sto m e r p a y s a ll ap p lica b le s a le s taxes. Page 12 ______ . _________________ Friday, February 14,1997 STATE PRESS S C N A B tE ( jm E S I P E W T S A S S ^ I^ SAVVY, ALWAYS W INNING her. To the left, an Arizona flag emerges from the floor. Phoenix’s most prominent business people. They had gathered to listen to the new president of the Elephant figurines lay scattered on the coffee table, shelves and desk.. Arizona Senate. The two-minute warning had sounded and Brenda Burns ' Dressed in ivory-colored slacks and a cropped, navy “My days are very long, and typically, quite late,” she still had about 50 yards to go. blue blazer; the petite, black-haired woman from Glendale said. “But 1 plan to succeed, and you don’t do that by slow­ Rushing from the back door of her office, she maneu­ took a deep breath, lifted her chin and strolled easily to the ing down.” vered down the hall and into an open elevator. She barreled front of thé room. Instead, the woman who describes herself as “goal-ori­ into the adjacent Arizona State Capitol Building, where she Waving a neatly manicured hand in small circles, she ented, focused and greatly driven by a sense of responsibil­ faked a smile and shook a hand before darting into an began to explain issues of tax decreases, clean air and Wel­ ity and duty” is staying five steps ahead, which in turn, is already-packed room. fare reform to more than 100 members from the Phoenix earning respect of senators who are impressed by her dedi­ With just seconds to spare, she caught her introduction, Chamber of Commerce — who were spending a day at the cation, intelligence and organization. which was followed by cheers from the crowd of some of Legislature. It was only 8:30 a m., but she was already “The way she conducts herself has raised the profession­ alism of the state Legislature,” said Senate Majority Leader sprinting toward the goal line. “I tend to get involved in non-sexy issues, and work Marc Spitzer, R-North Central Phoenix, who Bums beat them,” she said almost passionately as she continued to paint out for the Senate’s top job. “Some of the older people may have said she wouldn’t die air with her fire-engine red fingernails. ‘These are thé issues that will make running your business difficult, and be better than a man, but she’s proven them wrong — she has absolutely proven them they have to be dealt with.” wrong.” Pleasing the public, . Spitzer said her direct, dealing with change and ^ ^ to-the-point manner has dis­ running on a tight sched­ couraged staff from wasting ule are clearly B urns’ I pMnto succeed, and you don *t do that tim e, and* consequently, strengths. For the first • progress is being made on a time that morning, the 46- by year-old R epublican — B.renc^fj|§rns, number of issues, including finance. appeared relaxed and com­ State SeSfte Pre a ie n t school Burns cites school pletely in control. finance as the No. 1 issue Appearing in control is , 7 -i— ■ on the 1997-1998 Senate essential for someone who ~ ■. majority program, saying wrote herself into Arizona history books on Jan. 13 as the first women president of the the method of financing education and school facilities state Senate. Four years ago, she was also the first woman needs to be improved. In addition, the Senate is seeking to deregulate state control of curriculum and operations of majority leader of the state’s House of Representatives. Unlike her male predecessors, who also had to give local schools. countless speeches while overseeing the Senate, she is set­ S h e im p r e s s e s b o t h s id e s o f t h e a is le ting the precedent for Arizona women in politics. “It’s pretty consuming,” she admitted after she had spo-. Her hard work already is paying dividends; Bums is to tiré business people. She was sitting tensely in a chair in her enormous office, which looks more like a living room making an impression on Democrats, too. “I think she is a hard worker, and an ambitious woman,” than a workplace. The office, on the second floor of the Senate building at 1700 W. Washington St., is the place said Assistant Minority Leader Ruth Solomon, D-Tucson. where she spends die majority of her time. Plush blue car­ “She seems to be on top of what needs to be done adminis­ pet, pastel wallpaper and a neutral-colored couch.combined tratively. Staff seems to be on target.” An Army brat, Burns’ childhood was spent mostly in with photos of her husband, three children and grandchild Europe. Looking back, she said her dad’s occupation as a add a warm touch to tire sometimes cold nature of politics. A bronze statue of an eagle rests on a table just behind sergeant major gave her a strong sense of devotion to coun- B y M elo dy M c D o n a ld P h o t o s by L o r i C ain Sta te P ré » S t a t e P ress Friday, February 14, 1997 Salary Committee seeking classified staff pay increases R S E S B y D eann a D ark S tate P ress T he P r in c eto n Review C la s s S t a r t s F e b ru a ry 22nd! FRIDAY Classified staff at ASU is among the^ lowest paid in the Valley when compared to workers in similar jobs in the private sector, but a University group is trying to change that. ASU classified staff is paid an average of 16 percent less than those working com­ parable jobs outside the University, said Susan Malaga, assistant vice president for Human Resources. Malaga is heading the Salary Strategy C om m ittee fo r the C lassified S taff Council. The committee has been resur­ rected after being eliminated two years ago because of an identity crisis. The previouscom m ittee only represented classified staff, which included middle-management positions not considered classified staff at the other state universities. Before the committee could reconvene, a new title for service professionals was created. That way, the Salary Strategy Committee was better prepared to represent all classified staff, said Jacque Gutierrez, president of the CSC. The committee met for the first time in November to draft a set of goals and princi­ ples as a guide to increasing salaries. One such goal is to create an internal value sys­ tem for the different positions included in classified staff. This would help to guide pay raises to the level of similar positions outside the University, Gutierrez said. Æ *1 I F im * STATC tM H V E flSfT T While the staff has received raises the last two years, Gutierrez said if the legisla­ ture does not appropriate funds for raises, no one will get one. Gutierrez said the CSC has actively been communicating concerns to legisla­ tors making the final budget decision. Besides a letter writing campaign, alumni have hosted coffee receptions where fac­ ulty, staff and students can speak with legislators. Classified employees hold administra­ tive assistant positions or are service pro­ fessionals, among others. A ccording to a CSC survey last semester, an average of 93 percent of 1,458 respondents said the top reason they would leave their job at ASU was for higher pay. The survey also reported that an average of 11 percent feel they are well compensat­ ed for their work. Of the 3,032 employees designated as classified staff, 900 were deemed eligible for public assistance last year, said Gutierrez. Malaga said many employees choose to work at ASU because of the benefits pack­ age offered to employees. She added that the partial tuition w aiver available to employees and their families is another attraction. “There’s a lot of quality-of-life issues,” she said. “People who want to make a'lot of money don’t come to work in the pub­ lic sector.” I W - S tate P ress Something to read without using a highlighter. SATURDAY W O N D E R F U L L Y W IC K E D ! SUSAN GRANGER, CRN INTERNATIONAL & AMERICAN MOVIE CLASSICS l iv e m u s ic W ITH “A C E P E R F O R M A N C E S GRAHAM FULLER, INTERVIEW MAGAZINE “S M A R JEFF TCRAIG, A N D F U N N Y !” SIXTY SECOND PREVIEW ZeBBHIniVRH SAT&SUNOPSN10AM OPS&HOCKI H EAD Q U AR TER Complete NHL, NBA, NCAA Hoops Coverage, Off-Track Betting Drink Specials LASH * 966-5600 ROBERT HOFLER, BUZZ MAGAZINE i Page 13 Friday, February 14,1997 try. He served in World War II, Korea and Vietnam. Her high school days were spent in Newport News, Va., where she attended Warwick High School. She went to Phoenix College, but never received a degree. In the 1980s, when her three children were adolescents, Bums said she found local politics intriguing and began offering support to candidates. Then in 1986, family, friends and other associates encouraged her to run for a recen tly-vacated D istrict 17 seat in the H ouse of Representatives. _ “The age of my children made me reluctant to run for office,” she said. “But I spent a long time talking with fam­ ily about my role and we decided it would be a good thing.” Bums and her husband. Bruce, an optometrist, raised their three children ***- Brock, 20; Bradley, 25: and Bresha, 23 —• in Glendale, where they have lived for more than 20 years, “My sort Bradley walked door to door with me so many days,” she said, grinning. “He was pretty adamant.” After becoming a representative, Bums found herself m oving up in rank at almost break-neck speed. During her four terms in = = = = = = the House of / think she is a R epresentatives, she served as a Com m erce hard worker, and C om m ittee chair and an ambitious majority leader. In 1994, woman, she ran for the Senate, where she served as chair­ woman for the Professions — RuthSolomon, & Employment Committee Assistant Minority as w ell as the E thics Leader, D-Tucson. Committee during her first term. Her peers elected her ________ _________ ' president of the Senate at the beginning of her second term in January. Sen; John Kaites. R-Northwest Phoenix, who met Burns when he ran for a seat in the House of Representatives and presently occupies a Senate seat, said she did a “phenome­ nal” job as majority leader of the House. He added that he has no doubt she’ll serve the Senate just as well. “1 think she’s remarkable,” he said. "In the House, at times, she was doing the duties of the speaker. At times, she was doing the duties of the whips. She’s the kind of person who addresses the problem and takes care of it.” Kaites said he was impressed when Bums left the House to become a senator, then stepped into the president’s chanin just her second term. “She ran when she clearly didn’t have seniority in her favor, but she was able to get the votes,” he said. “She has done a lot with very little. She’s someone I’ve been very proud to serve with.” W ill s h e r u n f o r g o v e r n o r ? While Bums is certainly dedicated to her job as Senate president, she shilly-shallies around whether she’ll try to move up, yet again, and ran for governor. “I spent time assessing, and right now, I’m focused on being Senate president, she said. “I really believe things unfold when they’re supposed to unfold. I’ll know it when the time is right.” So for now, anyway, she’ll spendBer days assigning bills to committees, giving speech­ es and overseeing Senate administration. With all that seriousness and responsibility comes a little fun, too. That side was. exposed when she spoke to the Chamber of Commerce members. “You know, it’s fun getting around the state and meeting people, and of course, it makes' you feel good when people recognize you,” she said, glancing around a room of people who were still rustling papers and getting settled in their seats. “A few days ago, I was on an airplane, and —- as usual — I was reading and working on the plane,” she said. ‘Toward the end of the flight, I was putting my reading material away, and the lady sitting next to me said, ‘We know who you are ... you’re in the Senate.’” “I said, ‘yes I am.’” “She said, ‘yes we know, you’re Sen. Jan Brewer.’” The audience chuckled with delight. Brewer was a senator last, session but recently was elected to the County Board of Supervisors. T h e r e a r e c r it ic s , t o o r People are naturally drawn to Bums’ quick wit and disarming charm, but Sen. Chris Cummiskey, D-Central Phoenix, said the public should be wary of her because she will use her power to push her own agenda. . ... “She has very strong ideas of what things should pro­ ceed, and those on the Other side of the aisle need to be aware of her,” he said. “In the past, there are certain bills that have not received a hearing, and I suspect they won’t this session either because of her leadership.” Cummiskey said one such bill is the Lobbyist Reform Act, which he said would eliminate some of thé lobbying perks lawmakers enjoy. In April, Republican Gov. Fife Symington vetoed the bill. It would have eliminated free professional services, including accounting and legal work, and would have banned lawmakers and other officials from accepting free tickets to sporting and entertainment events and free meals worth more than $25. After the veto, Bums talked to Symington about reviv­ ing interest in the bill and has continued to do so on a reg­ ular basis. In fact, Bums struck a deal with the governor Thursday securing the passage of the bill. Symington pub­ licly pledged not to veto the measure again if lobbyists are still allowed to provide free services to legislators. “ Today’s agreement represents nearly a year of discus­ sions among all o f those who were interested in improving and promoting good state government,” Bums said. Sen. Gus Arzberger, D-Wilcox, said he personally doesn’t have any complaints. “For me she’s done a good job so far,” he said. “As Senate president, sometimes that’s all you can do.” Meanwhile, Bums said she is deeply honored to have^ been entrusted with her position as Senate president, and she aims to prove her critics wrong. “1 am just going to have to work as hard as necessary to produce the best results possible,” Comics St a t e P r e s s Friday, February 14,1997 P a g e 14 G E N E R A T IO N H B e x e d CHOCOLATE GOTT» buy T fpzt something ^O H H o YoU OH HSNHP \ PONT' YOtrpe NOT \/ THEN WHAT \ doing -me s/m e J 'BOYTim CHOCOLATE' ) A M * TONE YOU POe w e r J POTN0P / v VALomNe's PHY'y * CHOCOLATE... m rK X Í2 Q Í y S H t a c y HEP! o l m s t e d t B y M IK E A « i« *J P M AO N PS' t e r sue. help w o decide. e o n » BOY T/PZ.L DlAAONOS.' l H < L % J5 L JL & m m . T riav.« A T ribulation « By J onathan Inge LOVE SUCKS. THERE'S OVER *<0,000 I THINK J WHEN YOU'VE students on campus. 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Programs are free to the pjblic and held at Borders Books and Music 2402 E. CanelJbeck Road, Ehoenix (in the BLltnoBe Rashicn S jere) 7:3 0 p .m . State Press Classifieds S ports Friday, February 14, 1997 S t a t e P ress P a g e T S H P l^ ^ ^ fc c ^ K ^ N T IN IJ E ! Bv Ed O deven S T M ñ f 'h H K The paths o f NBA legends G eorg« O erv ta and Marques Johnson crossed eig&k years ago HpHU | 8 H Down Under. ' I Gervin and Johnson were members of a traveling all-star team that included former Los Angeles Lakers Michael Cooper and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to Australia in 1989. 1 The trqi p so foreshadowed a showdown between their sons cm Saturday. “George hod I kind o f looked into our crystal balls;” Johnson recalled, “and thought it would be kind of neat if our sons followed in our footnÉ M ^|t;“U ’s a culm ination o f a ; dream , th at are p ath s d id cross,” said Johnson, whsafl was a three-year starter at UCLA to m W W M and:] also played in the NBA for J IÔ seaso n s w ith . t i n i Milwaukee Bucks and Los d Angeles Chppees.”;' ■ Gervin agreed. ' I HHHHHHH H H w s / M n r id Q h r i a , who played colH lege ball at E a s t e r n M ichigan and was a 12 - t i m e NBA AHStar. . | The sons. Gee {Servin' and Kris Johnson, Will i I S l y M meet for the second time in their collegiate careers 2:30 W b U M p.m. Sunday at the University Activity Center. On ■■ V y U n Jan. 16, UCLA defeated ASU ' 79-62 at '• ™ * ' « ¡ J i g Gee and K ris were only youngster,,' when they accompanied their fathers to • Atislm&ft^titit f tin ee But 1 beat p m him the la st gam e,” b 4 | Johnson said. ■■ — ......... ______ a w eekend i - u r 1 H i c • Men’s Golf @ Taylor Made/Big Island @ Kona, Hawaii Friday & Saturday • Softball® Coca-Cola Classic @ Cave Creek Sports Complex, Friday through Sunday • Swimming & Diving vs. BYU (men only) 3 Friday @ Mona Plummer Aquatic Center @ UofA (both) 1 p.m Saturday '• Track & Field @ NAU Invitational Saturday @ Flagstaff • Men’s Tennis @ USC 1:30 Friday @ UCLA noon Saturday . • Women’s Tennis vs. UCLA 1:30 Friday vs. USC noon Saturday @ Whiteman Page 16 Soccer inks six F r o m S ta ff R epo r ts A S U w o m e n 's s o c c e r c o a c h T e r r i R a tra w a n n o u n c e d th e s ig n in g o f s ix s tu d e n t a th le te s t o te tte rs o f in te n t to js tu d y a n d {May s o c c e r f o r th e next f o u r y e a r s . Included are Valley natives, Arianne Stramiello, a mid­ fielder from Phoenix, and Jessica] Bohl. a midfielder out of Glendale. The other four players are midfielder Erin McGinnis (Aurora, Colo.), defender Jaclyn Clark (Rochester Hills, Mich.), forward Karine Inoue (Laguna Hills, Calif.) and midfielder Antoinette Marjanovic (Los Angeles). All six players will enter as freshmen. Patraw was pleased with the class, stating that it was important to get players tor all over the field and not just single, areas. Also, she said, the class will improve the speed of the team greatly. Friday, February 14, 1997 Sta te P ress Wrestlers out for vengence vs. Bulldogs By J osh D eFamio State P ress Revenge and redemption will be on the minds of the No. 9 ASU wrestling team when it takes the mat tonight at 7, The Sun Devils, coming off a 28-12 loss to second-ranked Iowa, will try to regroup on the road against 14th-ranked Fresno State. The Bulldogs beat ASU 25-12 in Tempe last season. “On paper its almost dead even,” coach Lee Roy Smith said. “I consider them a top-ten team, with top-ten capabilities.” Fresno State is led by two ranked seniors at the 134-and 142-pound weight classes. Yero Washington, ranked third at the 134-pound weight class will wrestle ASU’s Joey Heckel. For Heckel, it will be the second of three consecutive matches against the top three wrestlers in his class. Last week, he took on topranked Mark Ironside of Iowa, and fin­ ishes up his regular season against sec­ ond-ranked Steven Schmidt of Oklahoma State. “If (Heckel) can survive these matches, he’ll be ready for postseason,” Smith said. Fresno State will send out fifthranked Brendan Buckley against Tracy Brown at 142 pounds. It marks Brown’s second stint in the lineup. A knee injury sidelined him last week against Cal-Poly and Iowa. “I’m hoping that I just can get back in to (wrestling).” Brown Said. “I’m just going to go out there and wrestle my match, and hopefully I’ll come out with a win. I don’t care who I’m wrestling.” Of Course, ASU also features four ranked wrestlers in Shawn Ford, Matt Suter, Casey Strand and Aaron Simpson, which should make for a very competi­ tive match. “I expect a really good challenge,” Smith said. This marks ASU’s last road dual meet of the season. They return home next Sunday to face top-ranked Oklahoma State before hosting the Pac10 championships on March 2-3. D ifficult Saluki’s squad up next for N o. 8 baseball team By P ercy Ednalino JR. State P ress They’ve proven that they can stay in step with the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the country. Now the ASU baseball team has to prove it can endure a four-game homestand against two potential NCAA regional teams. ASU (6-5) hosts Southern Illinois (0-0) at 7 o’clock tonight for the first game of a three-game series. The Sun Devils then host Oklahoma State on Monday for one game. ASU holds a 10-3 edge over Southern Illinois and a slim 7-5 lead over Oklahoma State in the all-time series’. It may seem a little crazy for the Sun Devils to face two difficult teams in the span of four days, yet there’s a reason ASÜ coach Pat Murphy fit these two teams in the schedule ^ it’s a simulation of what the conditions of the rcgionals are going to be like. “You can’t look ahead and you’ve got to stay focused game by game,” Murphy said. “If you want your team to mature and you want your team to be the best, you have to play this type of schedule. One of the reasons we did this is because the rcgionals are four straight days and we want to be able to prepare for that type of thing.” And how. Murphy said the Salukis are a good team. Southern Illinois was tabbed in the preseason to place third in its conference behind Southwest Missouri and Wichita State. “They’re a team that finished high in the Missouri Valley Conference behind Wichita State,” Murphy said, “th is will be a tough weekend, especially because we’re coming off playing No. 2 (USC) and we’re coming off playing No. .1 (Florida State). It’s very easy to have a letdown.” Junior Richy Leon said he doesn’t plan on letting that happen against either team. He added that the challenge of playing four straight games is appealing. “They’re both going to be tough teams,” Leon said. “Southern Illinois is probably going to be in the tournament at the end of the year and Oklahoma State is a ranked team. We’re going to try and prepare as much as we can through­ out the week. Yeah, a four-game set might be a little bit tough, but that’s what we’ve got to do.” The Salukis finished last season with an 18-12 conference mark (29-26 overall). Leading the Salukis on offense is first baseman Aaron Jones, Jones hit 380 and notched 63 RBI last season. Tory Hatten and Dave Piazza lead the Salukis’ rotation. Hatten, a senior,-led the team with six wins and a 4.80 ERA while Piazza notched a 5-1 mark (4.48 ERA). MUrphy said ASU’s performance thus far is not at the level he wants it to be. “We’re a long way away,” Murphy said. “You can never get in a rhythm because you’re playing the top teams in the country. It’s tough to get into a rhythm with a young club. “We’re just scraping and clawing and biting and scratch­ ing for everything we can get. We’ve been very inconsistent and I’m really surprised we’ve maintained whatever top-10 ranking we have. I’m really shocked by it.” Updated polls were released this week with ASU main­ taining its No. 12 ranking in Collegiate Baseball. Baseball America dropped the Sun Devils one spot to No. 8 while Baseball Weekly’s coaches poll tabbed ASU at No. 15. Leon said consistency will be important if.the Sun Devils want to dp well during the next four games. “At times, we’re going to face adversity in every game, no matter who we’re playing,” Leon said. “We’re going to try everything possible to be consistent throughout this fourgame set. Hopefully, hard work throughout the week will show up throughout the weekend.” On De g e at h jf# w P ackard S tadium No. 8 A SU (6-5) O n The M Southern Illinois (0-0) ound f t Probable startersfar this weekends series Today Sat. 'Sun. 7 p.m.* 2p.m.* 1 p.m.* Tory Hatton (0-0) Dave Piazza (0-0) Donnie Chester (0-0) ♦ all tim e s a r e E S T Sun D e v il s U pdate S a l u k is U p d a t e Southern Illinois opens up its season against A S U ... Last year, the Salukis finished w ith a mark o f 29-26 (18—12 M VC) ... Southern Illinois is expected to finish in third place in the M issouri V alley Conference behind first-p lace W ichita State and S o u th w est M issouri :.. The Salukis are led by first baseman Aaron Jones, a preseason A llConference selection. Jones, à senior, led Southern Illinois ■ last season w ith a .3 8 0 average and 63 R B Is ... A “Saluki”, as defin ed in thé Merriam W ebster’s .Akk..C olleg ia te D ictionary, is á hunting d o g o f northern African and Asian breed. T h e Sun D e v ils are com in g o ff an 11-5 road lo s s a g a in s t F lorid a- S t a te . T h e S em in óles fe ll 9 -6 on Saturday, the first tim e A S U has beaten Florida State on the Sem in óles' hom e field ... A SU com m ands a 10-3 lead in the all-tim e series over Southern Illinois ... T h e S u n D e v ils d r o p p ed to N o . 8 in B a s e b a ll A m e ric a ’s poll, but remain at N o. 12 in C ollegiate B a s e b a ll... Junior Richy Leon has seen time as both a N p itch er and sec o n d basem an for the team . L eo n has notched a 1-1 record with 13 strikeouts-and a 0 .96 E R A in 9.1 innings o f work. A t the plate, he is hitting .323 with 10 hits and five RBIs. Richy Leon —compiled by Percy Ednalino Jr. A drianna Garcla/State P ress )-mail the shorts editor pony boy® asu. edu you can men e-mail him a ^lalentine! WÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊI you w ouldjtbelieve what we ^ aushtoiäUm thùÉm r. Buy a yearbook and S d out. ^ U > Only'44.94 delivered -MjjAUgHfflajfa, ; HjML. jj •jjjjjg , ■ r - '•«*- price to pay for a piece of history* o r - v is it t* ttp :/ / n e w s m .e d u S t a t e P ress Page_17 Friday, February 14, 1997 ASU squads all around country in weekend play B y J o h n S heehy State P ress Darren Angel’s seventh place finish, ASU placed third in this event behind Oklahoma State and Southern Methodist, Angel will be unable to compete this year because of an arm injury which has kept him out of the line-up for some time now. “I am healthy again, but it is too early to start competing,” he said. The men’s tennis team (5-1), riding a fourm atch w inning streak, travels to Southern California this weekend with dates against No. 21 USC and second-ranked UCLA. The Sun Devils, who are ranked 50th in the country according to Rolex, will have Track back in Flagstaff their hands full with their PacThis Saturday the ASU track six rivals. W eeken d and field team heads back to This trip will be a definite Flagstaff to compete in the NAU measuring stick for the Devils, U pd ate who have yet to face this type of Invitational. competition. Despite the 0-2 record, both “Southern California is a tough place to play,” the men’s andwomen’s teams feel they’re doing head coach Lou Belkcn said. the best they can in a season full of sanctions and Despite being underdogs, the team remains probation. optimistic;.. ■ . “I think it’s (the season) gone pretty well so No. 1 singles player Sergio Elias has come far,’’ head coach Greg Kraft said. “Our student out of his slump just in time. He got off to a Slow athletes are placed in a difficult situation and start in ‘97, but with the help from coaches, and they’ve responded really well.;” support from his teammates he has managed to The Sun Devils have produced low numbers in find his game again; , the two meets they’ve had so far this season. “I watched a lot o f video with the coaches, These low numbers are mostly due to their small and they were a big help to me. I would also like team. In some events they have no one to com­ to thank my teammates who showed me such pete for them. great support while I was in the slump,” he said. “When you’re in a competition it really is Alex Osterrieth has been dominating oppo­ predicated on balance and depth and right now" nents at the number two position. He is on an because of where we are in our program with, incredible winning streak that has. now reached probation we’re really basically at 50 percent of 11 matches. During the streak, which dates back the NCAA funding as far as scholarships are to November, he hasn’t even dropped a set. concerned,” Kraft said. Another problem the Devils have faced this “Alex at No. 2 is money in the bank,” team­ mate Miles Rogers said. season is not having an adequate .facility to train Men’s golf in Hawaii in. Sun Angel Stadium is Under reconstruction Those poor ASU golfers have to spend anoth­ For now thè Devils practice at Tempe High er weekend in Hawaii. School, but some of the field events are not able The golfers are coming off a strong third to practice there. place finish at the Mauna Kea Resort Collegiate. : “Everyone’s disappointed with not being ab le. They were led by Senior All-American Chris to train in our own facility,” high jumper Fiona Hannel’s seventh place finish at onerover-par. Daly said. “Most of the field people can’t really Hannel and the rest of his teammates are now do their event, there’s no way for me to practice. getting ready for the Taylor Made/Big Island But for this weekend. I’m ready to jump.” Invitational in Kona, Hawaii. Last year, led by Aside from these problems the team remains positive for Saturday’s meet and the rest of the indoor season. “All the kids ate doing well. You have to look at where they Were and where they are now. They’re all improving,” Kraft said. — Lori Haro Women’s Tennis hosts pair The ASU women’s tennis (3-1) team prepares for another duel-win-weekend against UCLA Friday at 1:30 and USC Saturday at noon. “We’ve started off strong. We’ve been really well prepared for our matches,” freshman Kerry Giardino said. th is weekend the competition will be tougher as the Devils take on No. 7 UCLA and USC who is ranked 19th in the nation. Last year the Devils were Swept by both UCLA and USC. “It’s so far so good. I think we’ll have a good fee) again after this w eekend,” head coach Sheila Mclnemey said. “Both SC and UCLA are good teams, but I think they’re both beat­ able. W e’ll ce rtain ly know a lot m ore on Saturday night;’’ According tp Mclnemey UCLA has a young, but talented team this season. They feature fresh­ man at their number two and three seeds. . Mclnemey said that USC has struggled of late losing to Fresno State and San Diego, two teams that she feels they are probably better than. ‘‘They (USC) realize for them how important this weekend is for them against the Arizona schools,” Mclnemey Said. Some of the Devils know What they’re up against for this weekend. Before the beginning of the season the D e v ils’ top player Reka Cseresnyes lost to UCLA’s Katy Kocsis in the quarterfinals at the Pac-10 Indoors. Kocsis is ranked sixth in the nation. So far this season Cseresnyes is undefeated in singles. Also in the Pac-10 Indoors Giardino defeated UCLA’s Alyson Gray in the quarterfinals of a singles consolation round and senior Anna Moll beat Pam Trump of USC also in the quarterfinals of the singles consolation. Working with the Best The.pace is fast We’re gutsy, stable anil growing. Opportunities abound. We don't let success go to our heads. And hard work is handsomely rewarded. That's Cypress. CYPRESS WILL BE ON CAMPUS! MCA RECORDING ARTISTS THE SAMPLES WILL BE PLAYING AN ACOUSTIC SET AND SIGNING AUTOGRAPHS AT ZIA TEMPE (MILL & UNIVERSITY) AT 5:00 P.M. SATURDAY FEB. 15 . THEN SEE THEM AT GIBSON’S THAT NIGHT ZlhrtSU LOW ER LEV EL OF THE M E M O R I A L UNION 10639 N. 32ND S T -482-3119 (N.E. CORNER OF SHEA & 32ND ST) 2510 W. THUNDERBIRD - 866-7867 807 W INDIAN SCHOOL - 241-0313 105 W UNIVERSITY, TEMPE - 829-1967 ZIA ASU (MEMORIAL UNION) - 727-USED http://w w w .im pactm usic.com INFO SESSION FEB. 20 Memorial Union • 6:00-8:00 p.m. ON CAMPUS IN TERVIEW S FEB . 21 Cypress is seeking candidates for the following positions: Design En g in e e rs P ro d u ct En g in eers Test En g in eers FOR INTERVIEW CONSIDERATION, PLEASE SIGN UP AT THE CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT OFFICE Opportunities «xist in locations including California, Texas, Minnesota, Mississippi, Colorado, and Washington. K you cannot make our campus visit, send us your resume by fax to (408) 943-6859. On-line via http://www.careermosaic.com/cm/cypress. Or mail to: Cypress, Human Resources Dept, 3901 N. First Street, San Jose, CA 95134. Page 18 i Friday, February 14, 1997 S o ft b a ll w in s F r o m Staff R eports It didn’t take long for Chris Gill to find her niche on ASU’s softball team. Playing in her first collegiate game, the true freshman from Saugus. Calif., singled, doubled and drove in three runs. She also scored a run and stole a base in ASU's 7-1 victory over Illinois State in the first game of the Coca-Cola Classic. Senior Lisa Dacquisto went 2 for 3 and scored a run and sophomore Carla Fortune knocked in two runs as ASU won its opening game. Senior Roxanne Tsosie (1-0) set­ tled down after a shaky first in which she Walked two. allowed two hits, and gave up a run to pick up the win She struck out four and gave up only five hits over six innings. The Sun Devils continue the' toutnam e n t to night Wi th t Wo g a m e s . Junior Carrie Breedlove is expected to start against UNLV in the opening game, while senior Carrie James will get the nod in the second game. against Purdue. They will then play Texas and Santa Barbara on Saturday. The tour­ nament Concludes for the Sun Devils when they play UMass on Sunday morning. St a t e P ress Sun D evils lo o k to crash T hunderbirds B y R andy J on es S tate P ress A battle-tested Southern Utah squad invades the University Activity Center at 7:30 tonight as the No. 4-ranked Sun Devils' gymnastics team returns home. The Thunderbirds’ (2-5) schedule makers must have been angry with the team as they are coming off a loss to No. 1-ranked Georgia, have already lost to No. 6 Nebraska and has an upcoming meet with No. 2 Utah. SUU coach Scott Bauman expects ASU (4-1.3-1 Pac-10) to be just as tough. “ASU is another incredibly talented team,” he said. “They’re the real deal. At this kind of meet, we can’t worry about what the other team is doing. We just have to go in there and hit our routines." $un Devils’ coach John Spini said he expects the Thunderbirds to be ready. "Southern Utah is about a 190 team this year,” he said. "I think they lost a tew upper classmen this year. They were a lot stronger in some ways in different events last year. (But) I think they will be a good solid team. Scott (Bauman) will put a good team on the floor. ASU will be hard pressed to up its performances of the past few weeks. Two- weeks ago they set an all-time record score (197.125), while last week they eclipsed the all-time roadscore (195.75). Freshman Amy Shelton said the team will be looking to continue the streak of high-scoring meets. That way .they can keep their goal of top seed at the Midwest Regionals alive. “We are just going to have to look at it as just another competition“’ she said. “We are going to try and break another record. So we can go into regionals ranked No. 1. We need to just stay con­ fident and hope for the best.” ASU’s individual event average scores place them in the élite of gym­ nastics. They are ranked No. 13 on vault. 8th on uneven bars, 3rd on bal­ ance beam and 5th on floor exercise. The team average score of 194.92 places them in fourth. Particularly impressive is ASU’s vault, Bauman said. “ASU’s vault team is equal to (Nò. 1-ranked) Georgia’s,” he said.“ They have a very strong floor team as Well. They’ve already hit a 197, which basi­ cally speaks for itself.” Injurynotes: Junior Kim Keever is still out with a bad ankle, but is practicing on uneven bars. Sophomore Lisa Vincijanovic will sit but at least this week] s meet with lingering problems with her injured ankle. Tests Were done earlier this week and no break was found. Spini said it is mostly precautionary to insure Vincijanovic does not further injure herself. P at Shannahan/S tate P ress Freshman Amy Shelton and the rest of the ASU women’s gym­ n a stic s team h ost Sou thern Utah at 7:30 to nig ht at the University Activity Center. W om ens basketball team looks for second Pac-10 w in B y P ercy E d n a l in o JR. Sta te P ress It would be fitting if the ASU women’s basketball team ended its six-game losing streak with a win over UCLA, the only team in the Pac-10 it has defeated this season. Ask ASU forward Molly Tuter. and it also would be fit­ ting if the Sun Devils snapped their skid against the team that started its skid, DSC. One or the other could happen this weekend when the Sun Devils travel to Los Angeles for a weekend series against USC and UCLA. ASU faces USC at 8:30 tonight then plays UCLA on Sunday at 3 p.m. ASU head coach Charli Turner Thorne said dropping two more games is not an option. ASU is a mere 1-9 in the Pac-10 (7-13 overall) while the Trojans (9-2, 15-5) are in second place in the conference behind Stanford. UCLA (47. 10-10) is tied for sixth with Oregon State. “It’s going to be a tough road trip,” Turner Thome said. “USC is playing very well- The thing about the USC game is we did not play well- It’s certainly our objective to com­ pete for 40 minutes and just play better. ” ASU lost 82-55 to USC on Jan. 18 after pulling out a last-second one-point win over UCLA two days earlier. Turner Thome said defense won’t be a problem against either team. Offense — shooting in particular — will be a sore spot ASU needs to improve upon, however. “We got good shots (against USC), we just couldn’t put them in,” Turner Thome said. “We missed a lot of layups and we missed a lot of open shots. It was just one of those offensive-nightmare nights for us.” • Against UCLA, Tuter put in the game-winning threepointer with less than two seconds to go. ASU had to climb out of a 22-point second-half deficit to beat the Bruins 66-65. Tuter said she doesn’t expect to beat UCLA with anoth­ er last-point three-point shot. “I think we’re just going to have to work harder,” Tutor said. “We just have to ask ourselves ‘How bad do we want it?’ and get it together.” S u n D evil C l u b S p o r t s IceHockey The ASU Ice Devils will be in action for two games this weekend against USC. Both games will be at V eteran’s Memorial Coliseum. Saturday’s contest begins at 2:30 p.m,, with Sunday’s game starting at 3 p.m. Sunday is the final home game of the sea­ son, and three senior Ice Devils, Stefan Richardson and brothers Brian and Ross Sternberg, will be honored before the game. Richardson is a two-time first-team Academic All-American, who is ranked in the top five among all time ASU scoring leaders with 31 goals, 48 assists, and 79 points. He holds team records for games played (100) and most consecutive games played (69). Brian Sternberg is a transfer from UofA who has played one season for ASU. He is the team’s top defenseman. Ross Steinberg, a goaltender, has a 3-2 record, ,910 save percentage and two shutouts this year. Earlier this week, ASU (16-8-1) earned its second consecutive berth in the American Collegiate Hockey Association National Tournament. The top ten ranked teams make the tournament, and the Ice Devils are cur­ rently ranked eighth. Men’s Gymnastics ‘ Today and Saturday, four members of the ASU men’s gymnastics team will be in Battle Creek, Mich, for the USA Winter Cup. Senior Rob Kjar, junior Jon Portillo, freshman Randy Sooter, and sophomore Peter Wieging will all be competing in the individual national tournament and vying for an opportunity to try out for the U.S. National Team. Sun Devils are 2-2 on the young season and have already matched their win total of the last year, Men’s Lacrosse Men’s Rugby After playing its first’ game ever last weekend, the ASU women’s lacrosse team has no plans of slowing down. Saturday and Sunday, th e team will be in Santa Barbara, Calif., to compete in the Santa Barbara Shootout. The shootout is a national collegiate! tournament and also will feature a few games between national teams from vari­ ous countries. The ASU men’s rugby team will face its stiffest Competition of die year on Saturday when they host the defending national cham­ pions’ University of California Berkeley. The The State Press Club Sports Box is com­ plied by reporter Matt Paulson , He can be reached at 965-2292. In their first competition of the season, the ASU m en’s lacrosse team will be in California this weekend for two games. On Saturday, the Sun Devils will run with the University of San Diego, and on Sunday they Will face the University of California at San Diego. Both games start at noon. The Sun Devils finished 10-1 last season. Women’s Lacrosse • B e e r & Soda 712 S. C o lle g e ( C o lle g e & U n iv e r s ity ) 967-4049 f BRING your ID’S? • Photo D eveloping • H ealth & B ea u ty A id s 609 S. M ill ( A c r o s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ) 858-0567 C l a s s if ie d s Page Ï 9 Friday, February 14, 1997 S t a t e P ress N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested you may wish io investigate the company arid offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-172Ii More Trivia... Since the Middle Ages, Valentine’s Day has been dedicated to lovers because it is believed to be the day birds choose their mates. APARTMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS A ID S . A WA RENES S W ee kActivities on-going throughout the week: AIDS Memorial Quilt D isplay - Feb. 11-15, 10am5pm - Matthews Çtr Art Mu­ seum. • AIDS AWARENESS W e ek -. Tomorrow: AIDS Memorial Quilt Dedication - lpm - Prog ramming Lounge. M lj. Com­ pleted panels .presented to rep­ resentatives o f the NAMES Pro­ ject Foundation (sponsor of the AIDS Memorial Quilt). HOM ES FO R RENT RENTAL SHARING 4BD 2B A house exc. cond. new paint, .carpet, etc. O s­ bourne & Scott. Rd. $ 1 100/mo. Avail, immed. Call 437/1048. ; M/F SHARE house 3bd 2ba priv. spa com. pool 2 car porch Scott. $350/mo. Guy 951-9337 5BDR HOUSE, pool, garage, w/d, dishwasher, a/c, 'etc. B r o a d w a y / M c C 1i h i . $:l ,300/moi 43T4Q48. WALK TO ASU 4bd 2ba pool $ 1250. 3bd 2ba $900. Others available also. Call 894-0288. BUY A heart. $0 .5 0 Write TOW NHOM ES/ names o f those you've lost to r C O N D O S FOR HIV/ A iD S or to recognize RENT those living with HIV/AIDS or write m essages relating to 2 B D /2B A 1 block from ASU. HTV/AIDS. Hayden Lawn I ICredit check and rcf; C d l i 3 i / i Jpm until Mon. Feb, 17th; 3851 or 831 -9024. PROFESSIONAL. SINGLE parent 2 BDR/2 B , Refrig, Dishwash­ seeking apt/house to share with re- ; er, pool, spa. gym. avail now, sponsible individual. Prefer $590. 946-7088. Mesa/Tempe area. N eed by March L Cal) 965-5013; days. ; NEED RMMT m/f to share 2bd 2 j/2h a town house, w /d in APARTMENTS unit. move, in 3/1 $337:50/mo. EL DIABLO APTS. NE Corner \+ 1/2 util & dep.. reqd. 1/2 mi. ; o f /A p a ch e. & McÇlintock,: from campus.. Call 496-5908 1v Tempe quiet luxury living 1bd msg for Kav. to see this unit $490, 2bd $570-$620., 921 PAPAGO PARK Village, a rare 0699 hard to find 3bdr/2b w /loft. LARGE 2 bedroom apartment. Newer carpet & paint, .refridg. 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B AG EL S HOP/D ELI 10 minutes from AStI in Scottsdale seeks friendly, responsible peo­ ple to work counter & sand­ wich prep. Parttime mornings & afternoons Call 970r6J 65. BECOME A mobilè dj. Work weekends. We train. Dependr able vehicle. Call 820-8220 BUSY DELI inside University of Phx located off University 1 counter help pt 4-8 M-Th & Sat. 7am-1pm Call 967ri 411 : CLUB TRIBECA now hiring for ali positions; Apply in per‘ son M-Th 1.2^3 pm. 1420 N. Scottsdale Rd. 423-8499.- F U N P EO P LE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits! $6-10/hr. Call Carrie at 777-1054. TRAVEL S.E. Corner o f U niversitv & Rural ARIZONA COUNTRY Club is hiring pm p/t food servers. Great p/t job. Nò exp. necc. Apply at 5668 E. Orange Blos­ som Ln. Phx (56th St./Thomas) •E.O.Ë;'y.. ' •: FI TNES S TR AINERS needed. Seeking energetic people for personal training positions, ex­ cellent physical condition, and sound knowledge o f weight training. 5 V alley locations. Call 945-8857 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 GYMNASTICS COACH need­ ed central Scottsdale 3-7pm. Robin 946-8894 or 991-6880 C A N C U N -P A D R E -M A Z A T LA N S P R IN G B R E A K S H O T T E S T F R E E FO OD , D R IN K & P A R T Y S P E C I A L ! ? ! U p to S 2 0 0 D is c o u n t C o u p o n s o n o u r W e b s ite w w w .s tu d e n ta d v tr a v .c o m * C e rta in R estrictio n s A pply IDA PROGRAM Opportunities Available Weekdays 9am-6prri . 6. Saturdays 7arn-2pm Do You Have The Following Skills or Experience? •inbound Call Environment • Computer Expenehce • interpersonal Skills *Automotive Background a Plus • Problem Solving Skills • Bi-Lingual a Plus $ R -$ 1 0 /h o u r b a se d o n e x p e rie n c e Federal Mogul is a global distributor &. manufacturer of auto, industrial & heavy duty parts. Mail or fax Federal Mogul resume to: Attn: Susan Lauretti PJF/PTCS 2 2 ION 23rdAve. Phoenix. AZ 85Q09 Fax (602) 253-9086 Are You Lonesome HELP WANTED ***Sciente and PreMed Majors*.* H E L P ! ! Student workers needed for facility setup at the ASU Downtown Center. Must be able to move tables weigh­ ing 30-50 lbs. Location is 502 E. Monroe in Phoenix. PO TENTIAL FO R S T A FF POSITION WITH BEN EFITS INCLUDING TUITION W AVER. Call 965-3046 to dis­ cuss possibilities. Ask for Cheryl or Dan, Harris Laboratories has opportunities available for persons to m onitor activi­ ties o f Study Participants and collect and do cu m en t data. G reat experience for science, nursing or prem ed m ajors. This is a variable scheduled position. $6/hr. with opportunities to increase pay through training. tor sand in your crotch, a suntan and great parties? Sign up now for Spring Break Mazatlan! Front Desk Clerks Van Drivers Full/Part Time Bonuses/Benefits Super 8 Motel 3401 E Van Buren Phoenix, AZ 85008 . ASK FOR DOUBLE DISCOUNT!! HELP WANTEDGENERAL C LIN IC A L C O N D U C T ASSO C IATES A A /E O E 94 NISSAN SENTRA 2dr XE, auto, a/c, tilt, cruise. 834-0220 Apache Terrace Apts. Part-Time C ustom er Service Coordinator H u m a n r e s o u r c e s , J-S P R 4 6 3 9 S o u th 3 6 th S t r e e t P h o e n ix , a z 8 5 0 4 0 91 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 5sp. cass, only $4,988. 834-0220 ADJUNCT FACULTY needed. Computer hardware knowledge desired. Bachelor's degree req. Eye hfs. Fax resume to 9430960, 1 -8 0 0 -3 2 8 -7 5 1 3 HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL O HARRIS 89 TOYOTA Corolla GT-S, red. fully loaded, exc. cond. 96k, $3500 obo 921-7874 Kazu I m m e d ia te M ove-In ■I P a id T ra in in g 1997 DODGE DAKOTA pick­ up. $289/mo. Call 926-4000 A p artm en ts 9 6 8 -8 1 1 8 . 1990 TOYOTA Tercel 2-dr dlx. Great tfans. A uto, p/s, a/c am/fm, tinted. Mint cond, low milage. $5000. 789-9523. ' HELP WÀNTEDGEN ERAL C all 271-4896 HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL IB A tten d an ts N E E D E D for students w ith disabilities Point Reserve your room now for Spring Break 5 8 7 -0 3 4 5 H o u r ly & live-in a v a ila b le F le x ib le s c h e d u le s f o r s tu d e n ts ! C a ll D e e 9 6 5 - 1 3 6 2 L e a v e message HELP WANTEDGEN ERAL DISC JOCKEYS NEEDED is lo o k in g fo r D J 's . • Transportation &weekend availability a muat 1 • Earn $10~$40 per hour C a ll 9 6 6 - 9 9 0 0 GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR ' for mobile prog. Kids 3-12 yrs. Rei. trans,, pos. attitude- $ 8 : l()/hr. DOE 443-8817 ; HELP WANTED to distribute phone cards.. E xcellent commissìònS. Call Ray 833-6451. Harriott. HOTELS • RESORTS • SUITES has openings for: • Front Desk Clerks • Banquet Setupi • Sales Assistant • • AMServer • Human rces Page 20 F r id a y , F e b r u a r y 1 4 , 1997 HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL IMAX THEATRE in Scottsdale is currently re­ cruiting floor staff! All indi­ viduals needed. 15-30hrs/wk. Day & even ing. Apply at 4343 N. Scottsdale Rd. Ste 2501 or call 9 4 9 -3100x204, Just minutes from campus! Come join our team! LIFEGUARDS/WSI NEEDED. City o f Scottsdale is looking for LFG/WSI for spring/summer. App's being accepted. Cer­ tification classes for LFG/WSI are avail. Call 994-7665. NEED STUDENT for MD office, Stotts-,' 12-20 hrs./wk. General office work, local errands. Must have own transp. Call 947-.. 7651: _ V _ ORDER PICKERS male & fe­ male $8 -1 0/hr p/t, flex. sch. Autom 5226 S. 31st Place, Phx PERMANENT RESIDUAL in­ com e. We need one person, Call Mark now 800-411-3349 RED EYE is. now hiring. Jr management and sales posi^ lio n s are available at out local retail stores. We Offer: fuh work environment, flex, hr«., excel, training. Our stores are n/s; Gall N ickol for an interview 6 4 1 1506' C l a s s i fie ^ d s HELP WANTEDG EN ER AL > START MODELING today! Call B illy at Hot Shots now! 530-8621 Portfolios too! SUMMER JOBS: creative ener­ getic À responsible residential dir. & residential counselors for summer prog, for talented & creative adolescents at A SU . Great salary. Room & board. Submit resume & cover letter specifying residence hall dir. (& SR# 02 8 9 3 ) or residence hall asst. dir. (& SR# 0 2892) & names, addresses, & numbers of 3 professional r e f s to ASU e m -, ployment services box 871403, Tempe, ÀZ 85287-1403 THE PHOENICIAN is hiring. C all our job hotline for listings. 423.2555, EOE W ANTED PT help. Som eone comfortable in a light industrial environment, some mechanical ability pref., non-sm oking, flex, hrs., close to ASU $6.507 ,5 0 DOE. Send inquires to . Ray Germaine 2851 $. 44th St. Ste. 2 Phx:, AZ 85040 HELP WANTEDG EN ERAL HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDCLERICAL WE WORK around your sched­ ule. Retail sales, f/pt, base plus comm., benefits, drug-free work­ place. Apply in person only, Space Age, 707 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa. SPORTS MARKETING. Firebird Int'l Raceway is now hir­ ing part time phone sales posi­ tions. Hourly + Commission. Please apply in person 1-10 east exit Maricopa Rd. MESA/ FIESTA Mall area. P/T reception!st/phone person. Fri & Sat, $6/hr. Remax 100, 8200500. Ask for Rose. YARD WORK/ handy man 1 block from A SU. Flex. 10-15 hrs./w k. $7- 10/hr. Apply in person with references. Sat Feb. 15 1 la m -12 noon @ 122 E. 15th Tempe HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDSALES ENERGETIC SALES people needed! Ft/pt inside sales, flex­ ibility, optional travel. Base + comm. Exclt opportunity for ad­ vancement. Call Stan 4370127 or fax resume to 4370755 ' ' PT REALT Estate, fix hrs, pay hourly + comm. Avail imme­ diately. 437-1048. ’ Find it F A S T in th e C la s sifie d s BUZZ FUN BAR ACCTING CLERK 10 key PT pm and Sat. Computer exp. Tempe Chris 893-6884. EXECUTIVE ANSWERING service ( a Tempe Co/j needs cheerful, upbeat p/t supervisor. 1 lpm -7am Fri & Sat. Comp, ex p : 45 wpm, 10 key by touch, good speller. Call 2644000,7am-4pm M-F. is currently accepting app's for cover/retail, bussers, & door host/ess. No exp. nee. for these pos.’s just a positive attitude & the ability to sm ile. 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 Daily Queen M-F 9-1 lam & 4-6pm GREATMONEY L Prescott, Arizona WE NEED A FEW TOP COUNSELORS! 1. Shipping & Receiving Clerk 1997Season: 6/1 to 8/3 2. Customer Service Rep We Will be interviewing on cam pus all day Feb. 20th. P l a t in u m P l u s M 5 P ick up app. and schedule interviews in f lm C-222 (Student Employment) of the Student Services Bldg. 4. Handyman with light carpentry exp. M orning o r a ftern o on h o u r s a va ila b le C all K aren 9 6 7 2 6 7 8 Call or write Mark tor info: 933 Friendly P in es M , P rescott B6303 (602) 255-0550 o r : ¡T n 'i City of Tempe i fo r o k i. T T 5D A l e ATTN. ELEMENTARY Ed majors: looking for extra $? Need som eone to watch 2yr. old boy. in my home. Flex, to your sched. Call Mary 4857656 MAJERLE'S . Currently hiring hostess/host; w aitstaff, & night cooks. Apply in person, 24 N 2nd St., Phx. This should be your ad C all 965-6735 BABYSITTERS & N annies, flex schedules. Car req'd. $4.757/hr. 460-1200. CHILD CARE $6/hr. 36:30pm. Rural & Southern. 2 children 8 & 11 yrs. Transp. req. 829-1129. RESTAURANTS/ BARS vP-H, n c v & T gency •C ASH Pool Tourney - Sat Nite 9:00- Cheap beer & Pool Leagues • Pool S D arts ■H o m e o f th e $ 1 .2 5 S h o t •Satellite TV (NBA) & (MLB) >Greeks Welcome >Ladies Nite Thurs. $2 Teas ■ 1/2 Y o u -W in g O ld e r F R E E S u n & M on ' 'HR f ä c e j alent A gency , 8 7 4 -0 9 2 4 'M S C G lT S D A LE P R IN C E ^ IS . A**mwn* l»«rt\ Summer boys & girls sports camps in Mass: . Looking for instructors . «• with tennis background . whp can teach children . : to play tennis & who will enjoy a professionally'run > . sports environment. ■ Great facility &, stafP. Salary, room .& board, travel allowance all included. Many positions still available. Men call Camp Winadu : 800-494-6238, . Women call Camp Danbee TENNIS INSTRUCTOR co CAU508-3623 Tennis Jobs- 3. Retail Sales Clerk (Phoenix location) o o k in g CORK'NCLEAVER A ccepting apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern W/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. A pply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. IWOODSHED I N ew M odeling A FLEXIBLEHOURS HELP WANTEDCHILD C A R E . HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDF O O D SERVICE RESTAURANTS/ BARS 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.: WillTRAIN L ocal T em p * C o . Indi; s ev e r a l jo b o p en in g s: em ail' f p c @ a m u g .o r g HELP WANTEDF O O D SERVICE WE WANT YOU Don't call another ad until you hear what we have to: offer! Re. ' sort Réservations Dept, has 20 pos, avail. 9am-lpn» or 5pm9pm. $9-$l2/H r ayg, no s e ll­ ing!! Start immed. Call Becky 491-4921. \ rftiewo iv P ines . S t a t e P ress 800-392-3752: to « , Arizona’s largest re so rt is to o f the follow ing positions: COUNTRY/WESTERN BAR GREETER Part-tim e evening position. 6pm ! 2 m idnight s h ift ‘ G reet guests, provide unique country/w estern flavor. Must b e extrem ely outgoing and able to handle cash. RETAIL ASSOCIATE . Part-time o r hill-time evenings in the m ain gift shop. C ustom er service e x p req, retail ex p pref. 2pn>-l(k30pm shift A pplications accepted a n d interview s conducted in H um an Resources on Mon. 9a.l2noon,Tucs3|><>p, o rW e d 9 a -U a . N orth o f BeU Rd., East o f Scottsdale Rd. Park in th e La Hacienda lot and follow the MgrotoShiraXnHmotiiiWm,'^®’. $8.00 - $10.00 per hour Approximately 8-12 hours per week (hours vary). Experience in teaching adult and junior group lessons. \ f ou may be a sm ooth operato r when it com es to g e t t i n g a d a te , b u t we ' r e t al ki ng a b o u t a w b s o m e e m p l o y m e n t o p p o r t u n i t i e s . At Excell Agent Services, our DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE SERVICES are setting new standards in the way people get info over the phone, Excell is an Independent Call Center Company th at provides long distance directory assistance for a variety of major telecommunications companies .throughout the countiy. Apply at: CHy of Tempe Kiwanis Recreation Center Attn: Tim Barnes 6111 S. All America Way Tempe, Arizona (602) 350-5711 (602) 350-5050 TDD http://www.tempe.gov Our DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATORS doit't sett a t hi ng! But th e y 'r e sm o o th a t p ro v id in g long distance operator services. , Full- f t Part-Time Opportunities Available! Subject to dosing without notice when needs of City met. Equal Opportunity/ Reasonable Accommodation employer. you a both m i- u y v v l t JO B * OPPORTUNITIES W a in t íJ Earn s i » to $ 3 0 pen Lour Earn M oney , H ave Fun (You CAN «AM bARIfNdiNr, B a r t e n c Ii Nc) A cac J e m y ApAchi A m l r íc a n B a r i fncIf r s • Shout, >u n i o t ms • i Irxilili i Iass V uriiiilix AK|||pp9) 1250 E. JO B OPPORTUNITIES • Loca! & NAliONU/idc job pl«F«»>l Blvd. # 1 0 8 1 Tempe 921-9925 Tnept 968-7657 P bocvx 9 5 7 -5 7 7 0 $199 ttH iliSD ID $ 1 9 9 w i| i A S U ID • Pool Server • Front Desk • Barback, days • Host/Hostess • P/T Spa Attndt • Busser • Room Service Cashier • Door Person • Reservations Come; join; us In our casual environm ent You'D get paid training,acom petitivestartingsalary,incentive pay opportunities, excellent benefits and innovative schedules from which to choose. Our excellent client satisfaction and reputation are creating explosive growth opportunities. With Excell, making good money Is as easy as answering th e call. JOIN THE HYATT TEAM E X P E R IE N C E T H E B E N E F IT S A T T H E H YATT R E G E N C Y SC O T T SD A LE • M edical/D ental Insurance • Life Insurance • 401 (k) P la n • V a catio n /S ick P a y • Tu ition R eim bursem ent • F re e U niform s • C om plim en tary Room R a te s Interview s a v aila b le M on. 9am -Noon; T ues. 3pm-6pm ; A t the P erson nel o ffice (w. sid e o f bldg next to loading dock). . 7500 E . D oubletree R anch Rd, For more info: 991-0670 H yatt sup p orts a drug fre e w orkplace. C ertain p o sitio n s m ay require testing. A ffirm ative A ctio n E m ployer, E O E M/F/D/V *m V Tr Cull us ;il fiOH-OOOli to learn more! MESA: PHOENIX: 1908 E. Main (NW corner of Main ft Gilbert) 4250 E. Camelback, Bldg. K, Ste. 160 (CamelSqiwe Atrium) 1919 W. Fairmont (off 48 th St. between Broadway 8 Southern, nearl-10) Would you prefer a more.., up-to-date way to finda buyer forthat ugly old couch? /S r Use the State Press Classified Advertising orderformon the WorldWide Web! http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/classad/classadfm,html Page 21 Friday, February 14, 1997 S t a t e P ress HELP WANTEDCHILD C A R E HELP WANTEDCHILD C A R E HELP WANTEDCHILD C A R E JO B OPPORTUNITIES COMPUTER ED. Dir Technical MAC knowledge necessary. Exp w/childr?n helpful. Must be 21 w/clean MVR. Boys and Girls Club, Scottsdale, 8601601. GYMNASTICS & pre-preschool instructors wanted, to teach kids ages 4mp.-12yrs. For info, call The Little Gym 596-9310 TEACHER ASSISTANT needed for child care center. P/T hours avail M-F. Immediate openings. 839-5953 CRUISE SHIPS hiring - earn to. $2,000+ /m o. plus free world -travel (Europe, Caribbean, etc.). No exp. necessary. Room/board. Ring (919) 9187767, ext. C105. PERSONALS PERSONALS ADOPTION? PREGNANT? Think about it! Choosing the right family to adopt your baby involves more than reading ads and calling 800 numbers. I'm an adoption consultant who can help. With us, you read about die couple and decide if they are the right family for you and your baby before you speak to them . Open or closed adoptions. You C H O O S E ! 1-800-675-3407 JO B OPPORTUNITIES z AIDS % AW ARENESS WEEK Happening This Weekend ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Earn to $3,000-$6,000+/m o. in fisheries, parks, resorts. Airfare! Food/lodging! Get all the op­ tions. Call (919) 918-7767, ext. A 105, BUSINESS ORIENTATED stud­ ents 10 hrs./wk. can easily earn your tuition + expenses +. Seri­ ous inquires only. Call Steve Thomas 214-6967 Saturday, Feb. 15 AIDS Memorial Quilt dedication 1pm Programming Lounge - MU F o r m o re inform ation call F red d y R o m a n at • 9 6 5 -4 7 2 1 A Made for ASU students, by ASU students* to save you money all oyer town! SERVICES RESTAURANTS/ BARS INTERNSHIPS International students, majors 703-671-4885 all MARKETER: SMALL Tempe co. . seeks mature marketing student p/t. Call Greg 968-3070 WILDERNESS TRIP leaders wanted for boys’ camp in N. Wisconsin. Prior exp, a must & clim bing background pref. Counselors also needed. Skills in 1 or more of: waterskiing, guitar, rifiery, clim bing, pot­ tery, scuba, teiinis,; gymnastics. Good pay, free room & board. Call (800) 480-1188. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES $ 1000’S POSSIBLE Reading books. Pari Time. At home. Toll free 1-800-218-9000 Ext, R-1676 for listings. SERVICES ROXSAND Restaurant :hiring host/esses, line cooks, bussers & asst. mgr. Apply at 2594 E. Camelback in Bilt. Fash. Pk., 2-5pm. FREE LOST/FOUND LÖST: GREY cat with feet and belly wearing collar. M ale, neutered. near S. Mill & Hermosa. reward. 303-0917. white black Lost $100 PERSONALS TUTORS $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. A void the 'chop shops'. W izzprds Hair Studio. 967-2360 MATH TUTOR experienced, pa­ tient, recent grad $10/hr. Trudy 834-8199 or 431-2825, HELP US find the funniest students on campus! Enter the live, on-campus standup come­ dy com petition! Get applica­ tions at MUAB on 3rd floor of MU. Deadline is Feb. 18. Call' 965-6822 for more info. AD O PTIO N MINOLTA MAXXUM 7xi + lens + bag. Bought for $900, sell for $700 obo 929-9538 FAST FUNDRAISER - Raise $500 in ;5 days - Greeks, Clubs,, motivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obliga­ tion. (800) 862-J982 Ext. 33. ADOPTION: COUPLE w / adopted twin girls looking to adopt once more. Call Randy & Tracy collect (520) 529-3394 . $$NEED CASH? We buy Used musical instruments. Top $$ paid, 548-1Î 14. M-Sat 10-6 PERSONALS TYPING/WORD PROCESSING FUNDRAISING $ 19.99 FOR a füll set of nails is an awesome deal at WizzardS Hair Studio. 967-2360' S1.99/PG. $ 15/RES, Proofed. APA/M LA. Samé day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 $5 OFF W /this ad. L ooong stem roses, Valley wide del. Order a dôz at thé MU info desk C la s s ifie d s W O R K ! SERVICES SERVICES * ********** * * ★ Friday, February 14,1997 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) YoU enjoy social activities relat­ ed to culturakpursuits. Re-exam­ ining your philosophical atti­ tudes concerning marriage and romance: is a possibility after dark. However, it’s not the time to make radical changes. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You can accom plish a lo t o f work around the house. Bitten by a domestic “bug, “ you are apt to dabble in gourmet cook­ ing. H ow ever, use necessary care with sharp tools such as knives. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You can increase the degree o f confidence others have in you. How ever, be discriminating in what you choose to share with, those around you. Be aware o f other people’s motives. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You make a greater effort to establish a respectable position in s o c ie ty . A t work, you are more duty-bound in the manage­ ment o f co-workers’ productivi­ ty. Make an effort to grow more comfortable with this. LEG (July 23 to Aug. 22) You have insight into the secret moti­ vations o f others. Thus, you tend to probe into psychological, or intimate matters you’d normally le a v e a lo n e. T here is som e deception in the financial area. VIRGO (A ug. 23 to Sept 22) Your intuition guides you to dis­ cover hidden truths regarding intimate concerns. Greater job security is also on your mind. Make an effort to improve work methods. LIBRA (S ep t. 23 to Oct: 2 2) You research ways lb improve productivity on the job. You are also emotionally concerned with your réputation since someone is trying to undermine your credi­ b ility . A co n fro n ta tio n is inevitable. SCORPIO (Oct 23 to* Nov. 21) Y ou’re not on your to es and should avoid making any major decisions, whether personal or business. A c lo se friend pro­ vides a welcome distraction, later in the day. SA G IT T A R IU S (N ovi, 2 2 to Dec. 21) It’s not a good idea to. lo ck horns w ith that certain crabby co-worker who is never going to be satisfied, no matter what you do. Ignore this person and tend to your own tasks. At night, a social outing is fun. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Friends and family are sup­ portive o f you, so take advan­ tage o f this. A renewed spirit o f cooperation takes center stage. Evening hours are best for quiet, relaxing activities. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) You want to kick up your heels and have a good time. However, you need to catch up on your rest and guard your ph ysical health. U se evening hours for catching up on sleep. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Your intensity w ill put others o ff. A void focusing on minor details that are unimportant to the big picture. A child needs youf help after dark, YOU BORN TODAY tend to have a rational and communica­ tive disposition. You exemplify intellectual access to ideas, data and factual information. Your attainment to mental concepts can m anifest in your need to share with your partners, your enjoyment o f your friends and your c u r io sity to learn new things. You are creative-minded and have a good technical sense for knowing what methods and resources w ill best combine to bring die desired effect. ©1997 King Features Syndicate Inc. HONEST State P re s s Classifieds A SU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 Matthews Center, Basem ent Office: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone ' Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Please be sure to check your ad. Make sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the Slate Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds will be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit will be held on account for future advertising. 098 065 010 020 061 064 051 077 Adoption Airplanes Announcements Apartments Automobiles Bicycles Books Business Opportunities 054 Computers * * * ********** * N ot valid w ith any o th e r o ffe r. E xp. 3 /K H 9 7 by Frances Drake $.19/MIN PHONE cards: In dorms? Phone blocked?. Traveling? Our card is rechargeable, no ac­ cess fees, ju st $. 19/min. in USA - anytime. $30/157mins. Call PIN & start calling. 3509799x2154 SERVICES h ttp ://w w w .g e o c itie s / h o lly w o o d /6 0 3 8 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST M ISCELLANEOUS YOU CAN buy parts through the internet. N o hassle, great prices! www.eamhardt.cbm FREE Return address labels Previously Rented Movies- S3 SASE for list of available titles ASU, POB 92128 Industry, CA 91715* I WANTED INTERNET URLS A C A D E M Y RESUMES (6 0 2 ) 2 8 0 -7 6 4 2 This coupon is good for one free 1/2 hour of _ SHUFFLEBOARD at the I IVIU Recreation Center PHOTOGRAPHY" Á LOVING couple longs to adopt Caucasian newborn into home filled with .joy, happiness and security. E xpenses paid. Please call anytime Grace and Fred 800-574-9590. • Resume designed for college . students • Personalized consultation • Professional results , “We meet you at ASU for no extra charge!" r NEED GERMAN tutor-1 am in­ termediate to advanced level & need a German tutorr Miist be available 2-3 days a week from 9-10:30 am. $10/hr. On cam­ pus. Would prefer a German. Call David 970-9002 086 088 052 049 101 074 Free Lost/Found . Fundraising Furniture Garage Sales Health & Fitness Help WantedChikJCare 072 Help Wantod-Clerical 073 Help WantedFbod Service 070 071 030 040 .102 107 103 135 Help Wanted-General Help Wanted-Sale8 Homes for Rent Home for Sale Houéecleaning Instruction Insurance Internet-Related Services 1d0 Internet URLs p A _ Private Party 1-4 days, $t.62 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.57 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.42 per line, per day Commercial 1 day, $2.47 per line 2-4 days, $1.89 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.67 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.52 per line, per day E 3 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. 056 076 015 420 050 045 063 082 090 Jewelry Job Opportunities Legal Notices Miscellaneous Miscellaneous for Sale Mobile Homes Motorcycles Music Personals 084 110 097 047 035 080 037 100 081 058 Pets Photography Pregnancy Counseling Real Estate Rental Sharing Restaurants/Bars Rooms for Rent Services Sports & Recreation Tickets 031 Townhomes/Condos for Rent 041 Townhomes/Condos for Sale 060 Transportatiori 067 Travel 108 Tutors 105 Typing/Word Processing 115 Wanted State P Page 22 Friday, February 14,1997 ress HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO PICK THE BEST VALENTINE LOVE LINE OF 1997! AND, YOU GET ENTERED INTO A DRAWING FOR FREE STUFF! How do you enter? • Call it in - 965-6731 or 965-6735 • Fax it - 965-4706 • E-m ail it - lovecontest @ asu.edu •Drop it off in person - Matthews Center basement YES! Enter me in the drawing lor ail the great give-aways! Here is my vote for the best Valentine of 1997: What we’ll do: 0 O W e ll put all the entries in a big bucket and draw a winner on Wednesday, Feb. 19 (deadline is noon, Wed., Feb. 19). The winning Valentine and the winners names (yes, more than HU) will appear in the State Press on Thursday, Feb. 20. f What can you win: Name_ - 2 lift tickets to Telluride - A $25 gift certificate to Mam a’s Pizza - 4 brand new, unopened, assorted CD s - A free pizza, just the way you like it, at Barro’s Phone V a le n t in e VALENTINES VALENTINES VALENTINES VALENTINES VALENTINES v a len tin es * ¥ A G A T A w Your beauty is not in the seeing o f you, but in what you leave with me. Your power is not in what you tell me to do, but what you’ve in­ spired me to be. Always yours, Dan K. BEQ IF buying this classified doesn't show how crazy I am about you, 1 don't know what does. Leave Friday open for some bad to the bone. C CARRIE: EVER since 2nd grade we’ve been very close, you taught me to speak Eng­ lish and I never got to thank you for being such a wonderful friend. Happy Valentines Day! Love, Agata DEAREST KRISTIN, To the next red hair blue eyed 5’8" brilliant men's et corpre world leader. Happy V-Day. Greg FROM ONE cowgirl to anotheri'v e enjoye getting to know you. Hope the trend continues, Happy Valentine's Day! HEY AIESECÈRS! Happy VDay to new members. Great job, officers. ' DEAREST NATASHA, I love you very much and cherish each moment we spent together. I hope this beautiful feeling continues for the rest o f our lives. Love yours, Imran. GARY M Nothing here below is profane 4 those who know how 2C it All is sacred &IvU KW 2 MY Bungi, UR the botty 2 my bench, & the chocolate syrup in my vanilla icecream. ,1 love 0 4 ever! Love BPBB/ mus m us/chu nc h un/pudd i ngbear! 4 1 1 **4#05#6#8#308104#6*0 7#607*76#83*06#3#0806*71 04*09*4#5#5#80206*9#08#2 *5#368*4*6315510##. ^ 4PETE MY soulmate i n dream come true in Davtfina Beach 42994-nevei^ W eët Ihows^ we began & dreatn about what we will accompli|h in the future, thanx 4 making me so happy BERT, HAPPY V alentine s Day, study bug!! Have a great one! Love, Kristin BIG D, roses are red, violets are bliss. Did you ever think Pink Floyd would lead us to this? VT Day # tres! Love and kiss­ es, M. Sally. BILL- IT all started with the sil­ ver chain, now I am completely in love with you. Thanks for being so incredible. Love, yp |f. %rai%y J h L * % AARON- HÆWPY^Vâlentine's Day . Manhattan j^eac^will he so memorable this we&end^Av Brooke AMANDA LOVES Karl fpev er. Happy Valentine's Day ! AMI’THANX 4 being die spark in my life & m y special som eone Happy V alentines Day sweetie. I love you! Brian Urman BRAD: THIS pussy cat knows exactly where she belongs & Who she belongs to. I w ill never stray away from home!! Much love Love, Dantzelle ASU LACROSSE, Share the love boys! We are going all the way this year. Good luck in Cali! ATE B, happy V-Day & I hope the 2 years we've shared to­ gether were the best in your life, cause they were for me. Mahal Kila, Big-Sucka BRADLEY Q L itvin I w ill make you the happiest man alive. You complete me. v D m * die most beautifully stupid girl you ever caught in the world. BRION- WE finally found each other despite the ox-cart m od­ e st! Yon R my sun & n i a . il love you, Crystal ¥ J ¡1 j | ¡¡p X O SUSAN, Thanks fw touch­ in g my heart d ie past few months. Love, Mark , . W jm CALI^^ BATMAN TO my ultimate guy Happy Valentines Day! Good luck in San D iego this w ee­ kend! Your forever in my thoughts and dreams! I Love you Janet i't stray too mn T ifa li yjur eyes is a shooting Ciar. Love, In.. w # sanity. CARRIE B: I hope you have a wonderful Valenlàpes Day! Your êx-roommate. Trevor B & SMIT - you guys rock! Lows, Certo. Matt - 1 love you this mudi!! -D. Carin & Moni­ ka - be mine! Love, D Forever and a day CHINKY, THANX 4 being da meaning in my life da inamona in my poke and da giggle in my day. M aligayang Anniversery! ang rig Mamahal your valentine 4 ever. Padangdong - i26r97M ^ mÆ ÊÊmÊÈm A FIERCE lion roars cinnamon purrs, leap out of the rabbit, my lo v e, for eight years, my strength and fhgpiriikm. CHAD-HAPPY VALENTINE’S Day! I love you with all my heart Buba, you complete me! kelly | g p E ; WISHING you a great Valentine's Day. May you always enjoy life, pbve always, Mom* Ray & T ^ B ^ iLove you tanana na) wM - f COREY NATHAB^L J% tinYou’re the only man fiupm y heart desires to be with on this day especially meant fbr k>vers. I desperately try to contain my desire for you, bi^ns extpmely hard to d o when I see you in your speedo. Your sbody re­ sembles that o f p G|bek God, t o n e d « I will alValentines Day. fSHTstfn are my number one guvgff lo v e you. Love yòur Élrcedteart Scarecrow. DADDY, HAPPY Valentines D ay! I m iss ypu! V Your Clown D A N N Y DIAZ: I hope you have a wonderful Valentines Day! From your physics lab partner. DEAR ?, I love you so much! Right now might be rough but we are so special that our love will only grow stronger! I love you so much XOXO14388. DEBBIE - THESE 3+ weeks have been heaven - You make me so happy ! Happy Valen­ tine's Day, Cutie! Love, Matt DENISE - HERE’S hoping that your Val. Day will be just as good as your New Years. Lové you lots! Princess. DOMINIQUE- TO my beautiful valentine. The past two years have been thè best of my life. Our first o f two will be a pre­ view o f the greats to cóme. I love you always- Brian ED, PLAIN and simple, my loye for you is like a truck. I'm smil­ ing!V Heidi ERIC OF Phipsi I think you're fine won't you be mugg2, Let's get together & do Wh&tw|pr^ Can't wait for you meet fagf Love, "B" GOOD THING seeing an advi­ sor is mandatory!! Congrats to Lattie's right hand women. Happy Valentines Day. Love, A.D. GUSANA, YOU make me the happiest Gusano around. Be my valentine again, Gusano HOLLY'S GOT green eyes HoK ly’s got blue eyes Holly's got grpy eyes. To nay Holly-gator, This I must tell Happy V-Day With love from your Mel. I HOLD your heart, you hold mine; I swear to you that I will never let it go. Together forever in love. JACKIE GOODWIN. I love you! Happy Valentine's Day. David Goodwin. DEAREST HAN, I love you more than Jabba the cat, and I hunger for you: more than Lando Catrissian. Won't you pick me up in your swift yel­ low x-wing and take me into hyperspace? Love Always, Leia HAPPY V-DAY to the State Press, ARE fellas, Jen, Jess, Steph, and to all the girls I'jft. before or w i l l S ^ * ^ S futum—“ Luv Muasbfer-- iu 1 M HOLA, MI flamenco dancer. Ill be your Valentine, say you'll be mine. Besame Mucho If Si. Con Amor, Honey 1st gedmr... im p waukTve ifay JAMES - YOU'VE made me soooo happy. You're die best. I am so lucky. See ya tonight. Ek JAMES, I just wanted to let you know in a special way just how much I loye you. Happy Valentine's Day. Love, Kim JASON MY love, you've made me the happiest woman in the w | ^ . I know w ell have a wonderfm llfe together. I'll love you ^re\w.-j^ather a lifetime com es LWfor becpm' look together. fo r- m FOR ^^b^gdfid.Prinee^ You have m h d m y jfiy * and nights with i ble pass ioa, and sw eet romance. On ÿ a le j ^ p » : Day' and forever, IL Wft YmËtÎÿL, FRAN, THROUGH iM rie l e a p o f our liv e s there has nffüdr been a time quite like this, a time o f love and hope and pas­ sion together. Love George. DEAR CARE Bear, you are a very special person in my life. Have a wonderful day, I w ill see you tonight. Love, Grizz FRED-DOG.TRODDE DU na- DEAR JENNY, I love you and hope you have a happy Valen­ tine's Day. Love, Mike. gonsin att roka den dar Cigar­ etten pq min balkong skulle leda dll allt det har? du ar fantastisk!- Beef HAPPY VALENTINE'S Day Heidi! I'm the luckiest husband HAPPY^yUENTINE'SDaylTSgr H A P P » A L E N T IN E 'S Robby, I ióye y o n w y m n e fe , tmright! Lots o f love, Shaw». ^ V a l e n t in e ; â f a f i * girt Bke y»u. tjn # Happy Vale^ine%Pay SweetP j a p P P i P O ¡» T E S T gift i received was you ^ life . I love ways—Jodi J lm E R D ig, Joakim, Gririt, Du-Du, Charlie, jjl, Ed & Juli! You guys best! Luv, Gennygoat JENNIFER, KERRY, Susan, Kim, Happy Valentines Day to the greatest friends! May Cupid be good to you! Love you guys! Stefdianie. ITINES Day (htTof my Can­ ty taco W-and ut tr Te Amo, JENS-WE r a iN K you are spe­ c ial and we love your body and your tight buttocks from the Boyss at die BATH House!!! HEAVENS EVANS! Happy V alentines from one o f your only sin g le friends, S h ellie (DUR) JESSICA, THOUGH you're far away I feel you close to me so with thèse precious days, I'd love to spend them with you. I miss you and love you, Jess H A P P r VÀ Berto! M d die the sa|s^ the beat unm Karebear S t a t e P ress Page 23 Friday, February 14,1997 VALENTINES JIM, "I love the way you love me." You've taken me, "places I've never been" before. I'm so glad you're the "man o f mine." It's "shameless" the way "I think about you" all the time. "To eternity tuid beyond!" 143, "love me" KANINCHEN - ICH kann nicht warten. Ich liebe dich Schätzchen -Deine SusseWange KDC, YOU are the one that makes me smile; corrects me when I've wronged; & drives me to succeed. You complete me. Happy V alentines Day! Love, JJG KEITH MCCOWAN: Our thud V alentines Day together is . looking to be the best ever. I love you, Bunny. Rhonda. KELLY, I think you are almost as perfect as you think you are. I love you lots! Andrea KERI H: I wi§h you the best Valentines Day and hope, that all your dreams come true like you deserve them to. Loxft^ your friend, Agata VALENTINES VALENTINES VALENTINES VALENTINES VALENTINES MELISSA, TRIX are for kids, purple horseshoes are for you, wicked Wickets are for me, and Valentine's day is for us :) Happy V-Day » Bill MY W ADE, I love you so much I feel I might burst, this S t Valentine's is our very first. The past three months have been absolutely divine, oh please, please say- you'll be my Valentine! Love, hugs and kiss­ es, your Sunshine. PIÉ, APART we merely exist, together we truely live. Happy Valentines Day, My Love. Al­ ways and forever, SweetPea STACY L: I tend to get a little sentimental when Valentines Day comes around each year. 1 think about relationships I cher­ ish; the people that I love just being near. I realize how rich and full my life is because of all those special people; those who have mV heart's apprecia­ tion; those who mean a lot to me like you. Happy Valentines Day! Love; Agata TO MY Sweetboy, This Valen­ tine's I won't be making any Wishes because I finally found my Valentine! I love you! Mon­ key. MIA, BAM, Dereck, Joey* KevKev & the boothaus, ASULAX, Jamie & Heidi, mom & family-1 loye you guys. MICHELLE, HAPPY V-Day to the one I love, who makes me happy and life so! funny- We love you, Poomba & Cody, MON ChERI-STACEY... YOUR eyes are like pearls yout lips like lasaunga...kiss, kiss. ..John F. Kennedy Jr. MONKEYBOY - Just one more year, I am thrilled to be becom­ ing your wife! Have a fabulous Valentines. Love*BabvdoH NALA, MY soft and furry bud­ dy: you don't talk much but you speak volumes with your eyes. Thanks for the best hugs. Mom NICOLE (AKA Poop). You're not the cat's m eow, but my pup's bowwow. You're the jam in my jellyroll. Have a most ex­ cellent Valentine's Day. I love Michael and Bean, NOBB Y-CHAN AISHITERYO. Shiawase-na seikatsuni gambarou. Your husband. RJ OLIVIA - I have lots of candy and puppies for you if you'll Valentine! Love ya little pup! Mommy MORON f H E R P ^ o ^ w o n - í derful weekend o f rattN§ì< sur­ prises fo#'V -D ay. 1 hope to O r d i n a r y n o , really don't show yep just how much J ^bink so- That ftjpne sums up the love of my life, myluvpi. kweyö&jhitz KIMBERLY, I love you now^, more than ever, I hope that this 1 day will-be special forever. KJB PIGLET, I love my Honeybuns more than ever! Love always, Pooh POOHNÉSS YOU are my sunshine. I love you. LpVe your sweetie. PUSSYCAT, YO creí que el amor era un mito, un tesoro per­ dido en el mar, que.está vida tan gris que llevaba no iba a cambiar. Pero ahora que té ' tengo aguí, me doy cuenta que nada es verdad, que el amor cuando esta para uno no tarda en llegar. Love You Bori QUERIDO ABE: Tu eres el pal­ pitar de mi corazón. Te amo Gra­ cias por estar conm igo. Te quiere, Juanita SUZANNE: A special Valen­ tine's Day w ish for you at w w w .public.asu.edu/~develop/v-day/romance 1 TO THE 2nd floor PV West: You are all my V alentines! REBECCA, YOU are the Itesi DAN, whenever y ^ Πin k of Great group effort! in the bath­ Vulentioc anybody could ask me* thtj|k o f the w o Â É fu l room! Love, Wendy for? You are so sweet and lov- i times w&fead in Califo&lia. 1 ing. 1 couTdai*t ask fo r any- \ : tove yo»! Agata 4 ^.JO THE 3 girls I love- Happy dung more. Low. Chris. ^ ^ ^ n tines day! I love you Missy,^garah. and Allyson! Love, _____ ' TGpHEthree women who have rw ^ K fe^ ^ sin ce last Valenj Day: n ^ b e you choke P ^ y p u r cham ^pgn. Love, K fltjU W e e k e n d w e had a bonding experience. You guys are too gieat, too going unde-, feared! Cheers, beers and Wom­ en's rears! W~ ^ la st Hame o f the ■ ‘K iller’ Calzone T C W IL L lU aF o|lc 11e Happy Vahsptine's Dav!tl p a love you ^ a lot!! Lots of lo ^ p C h lo e & Don’t Forget Your “Mama” on Valentines Day! B uy Your Sweetie A Heart-Shaped Pizza f LENA, HAPPY Valentine's Day! ThanklMor all you give me. I'll Jove you jftways. Jon. LISA- I choo-choOrchoo.se you to bee my friend. It says, be and there's a picture o f a bee on it. That's funny. Hey that duck stole my badge1- Ralph LORD, PLEASE give my friend Ren $1,000,000, a fridge W/ a padlock & huge pectoral mus. cles.%». Stimpy LOVE YA Babe. This year will be better than last year, I prom­ ise. I love you so much and my life is so much happier with you in it. Meow! LOVELY, FOREVER is not long enough i love you. MARGO, I'M so glad that I met you-agaihf You've brought so much back into my life. Be my Valentine? Love, Matt 894-MAMA 1 block East o f M ill Avenue on University MY D E ^ g S T Ed Tfood. I love you moire than words can say! You are the my wings, you're my Gienaa!Love, Criswell (Plan 9) MY DEAREST Hud, I love; you with all o f my heart! Happy. Valentine's Dày bàbe! I love you, Faye MY SWEET little angel- We've been on top o f a mountain, w e've gone into a pit, We'Ve loved and laughed and accept­ ed the fact that our lives don't seem to fit. We'Ve been to Hell and back and I want you to see,-that I've always loved you and I always will- you are the world to me. C h ris Karpman, W ill you b e my MEE, FELIZ Dia de San Valen­ tine! Tu mejor amiga -del mundo, L.O. rmo RUSSELL- THANKS for being'' w oo» my best friend! Will you be my Valentine too? Love BeekyXO! TLC - ^ p iS . Tender Loving CarîM Ê m ere comes the dày I SAMMY SUE & Abby too!I gÉ âpPafdesert island - Be my CARLOS C.» Happy Heart Day luv ya&Happy Yalentine’&ijDay! j ^ralentine forever’-Ditto/JWR Tracey hagggHb-day 1 ^ 0 ||j |^ my Spanish Val^Btine! Watch —igglllP' TO MY Bill. You are my Su­ out fo r strijjrises? Te quiero S C O T tf ’r w hB p perman. "Always and forever." I mucho! Hugs & kisses? ^ looking for. You're the'ohe love you. Love Peg xox Steph^^^been waiting for. When TO MY Dear Dawn, from the taking my ■heart tilm your^T)arlene hearts of fire, the arrows shoot — ÉÉ----S up. Then, I hope you will join jp | ' S h i p , I hope you have a nie in the night sky. From wonderful day! I'll meet you Mahasse, you will always be N.S.O. outside just after you’re done to my special valentine* A ll my give p&u a little surprise. I love TO MY Divas; Keep on danc­ love to, forever and ||^^ pi>; you with all my heart, DZ. ing! Happy V alentines Day! Love your wife, Kim Love Kristen . Sft$§N O N - YOU fill my heart with so much love and laughTO MY favorite Pike: Sorry my ter. Have a wonderful ValenLaCroSse tournament is ruining . Un^pDay! Love always, Ryan Valentine's Day but I'll be POOH, I can't wait til July 4, thinking of you in Santa Bar­ 1998!! Happy Valentine's Day!! W E L L Y BELLY, get o ff the bara. Love, me. Love, Baby greens w /the Lord & go on the TO MY friends at PVC, Manzy blacks. I'll make sure you don't PAAL-BUNNY. JEG elsker and beyond (D em ian too): fall. Happy Valentines Day! / deg! I'm glad that we worked Keep in mind...Lovin' is what I things out. You mean a lot to got, I said remember that! SHELLY: YOU'RE a wonderful me (& to our new puppy). Happy V-Day, y’all. Love and friend! Happy Valentines Day! Love, Dana kisses, Sarah (Grimace/Tigger) Agata voi ¡10 y°ffl ^ PETE A Padilla: Happy Valen­ tines Day! I. love you ! All my . love, Miriam PS TAOI f u 2 ! Valentine? Love, MATT, HAPPY V alentines Day ! You mean the world to me. 1 lo v e you with all my heart! Shannon ----- w --------- - ; T O N I ? A - I w iragfove y o u a l. w ay s yo u are r^ p b e a u tifu l in - . ^ ^ |h o n . R y a n . I | | WIL, 7 planets might be ? 'aligned ii| the year 2000 caustl^,|||tnan race to end; but long as I am with I will live 4 ever. A + W- Tonight 5pm-7pm MARK DEAN I love you! Happy Valentine's Day. Thanks for eleven great years too! xxoo MARK, SINGE I met you my life has never been better. You are my one and only. I would be lost Without you. I didn't know I wa$ capable o f such strong lo v e, yet my love fof you increases; every day. Happy Valentines Day. Lecia ' TO t^fcLLIAM Eiri: I hope you have « very happy Valentine's Day I f ! you very much! . Love,Bu% . WENDY, HA p | | Valentines Gvmnas- I LESLIE K J, I hope you'll be I my Valentine until next year. T Your greatest com kemal a guy could have---Todd. ps. ghat's up with the bthrm. LINDA D: When it’s a specialjl day and even when it's not. 1 You are someone I appreciate j i and think about a lot. Y ou 'rei| are an angle of a friend. Happy V alentines Day and Happy birthday day! Your, friend, Agata / TO RAPP, I don't know what I .ever, did to deserve you but everyday I thank God for bless­ ing me with someone like you. I love you with all my heart. I look forward to spending the rest of: my life with you. Love T icia.; TO THE Owner: W oof W oof SWEATPEA, WHEN I think W oof / / Aroo Roo Roo 1 & about good times,'happiness, 1/2 hours // Gmr Gritr GrmT my and love, I think about y o u .: bed .// W oof W o o f Woo // Happy Valentine's Day Baby. , Love the puppies & mom dog You're the best Pie TO THE perfect V alentineBrooke- you're the best! I love you! Love always, Aaron. You are my only Valentine!! I love you! -Q uis^ KITTEN M Y 'ftv e 4 U is so deep that words on paper can not begin to describe It. Give nie some time and ypu win real­ ize what y o u r lo v e m e a ns to me. rrrow Love. Snuffy,: TO P-HAPPY Valentine’s Day. I love you. Love, G Your romantic girlfriend Jew el PETE; HERE'S to us! We rock! W e are fin ally o fficial! Me yubba you"very, very much me too!" TGIFs? OK! But no pizzadillas! Love, Olivia SHERYL, HAPPY Valentine's Day Sweets. I love you, always Marc SMOOCH A .K .A. M ichelle: You can torment me anytime :) Happy Valentine's Day. Scott TO MY HIGHLANDER, Do ya ' know how fine ya are to me! LoveDrea. TO MY little burrito baby. Aldiough i see you everyday it is still not enough. You are tny soulmate, Dan, and i love! you. Your anoka sweetie. TO MY sister and fellow sun ; devil Marsie- Happy Valentine's Day! Love your brother, Shawn. ¡ P r ò t i: ARE the addiction I can­ not break. The dream from which I Cannot wake. EV’ery day more into you I fall. It's : you and me, my amazing. Paul, forever. I. shall not let go. YOU WERE a!t our lacrosse party & are in M Ù S354 @ 12:40, you. sit near thè back, Happy Valentine's Day. »HAPPY VALENTINE S Day » » » »T im Puckett » » » • » » » L o v e you, Shannon»»» »L.C. There's apiece and a time . for everything, for everyone. We can push with all our might but nothin's gonna change. All good things in good time. 143 J.P. Z-AGATA-Z, YOUR beauty is not in the seeing of you, but in what you leave with me. Your power is not in what you tell me to do, but What you've in­ spired me to be. Always yours, Dan K Carla Mink, I can never thank God enough for blessing me withuone of his lovliest angels. I love you. Orlando To my Sweet BaboO- I have to share you with your Lissa this year, but you’ll always be my Valentine. »Mom Didn’t get your Valentine in on time? Use the space below and write it in! Page 24 Friday, February 14,1997 mm ill ■ ■ jp iBBiBBl m v r 1 A U TO P le a s e p re -s c h e d u le w ith o u r E x p re ss L u b e D e p a rtm e n t. 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AMOUNTS VARY BASED'ON CREDIT RATING: EXPIRES 2-£7-97 t fo o d up some free human resomees reorese P o w e r B u ild e r . " P Visual C o m p o n e n t s . •dos’î 1 Sybase 4. on e^ on e. « ideeven ,™ùty to explore (and St a t e P ress