W orld /N ation S outh Korean police GUARD AGAINST ANYMORE S ports Inside M en ' s basketball sq uad lose DEFECTOR KILLINGS P age 3 ONCE AGAIN Page 13 ABOR group to probe w ork load, pay issue lower than both ASU and UofA, The issue of work loads was brought up The Arizona Board of Regents ordered a during a review of the first-edition report special work group to deal with the contro­ card for the universities that was presented versial issues of faculty work loads and pay to the board. Several of the board members opposed the “satisfactory” grade given to incentives. The group, established at last week’s describe the participation of faculty in ABOR meeting; will consist of faculty lead­ instructional activities. Regent Hank Amos said he had numer­ ers from the state universities, administra­ ous people approach him, criticizing the tors and members of the board. In the Jo in t L egislative Budget limited credit hours faculty instruct. He Sug­ Com m ittee’s first budget proposal, $8.2 gested changing the grade to “satisfactory million was set aside for salary incentives minus” to elicit increased outcry for change. “L egislators and the public will not that would be given to faculty who are will­ ing to increase the number of credit hours accept this report card if we find the catego­ ry satisfactory,” he said. taught per week. Pacheco warned the board not to be ASU P resident L attie C oor said he hoped the group would resolve the ques­ “overly persuaded by individuals,” who he tions that have arisen p rio r to the Said always have a tendency to rely more L e g islatu re’s fin al decision on the on anecdotes than real data. Coor agreed, saying that simply measur­ University budget. UofA President Manuel Pacheco, NAU ing the number of credit hours taught is not President Clara Lovett and Coor criticized a sufficient method to determine faculty the proposal in a legislative budget hearing workloads. “ We never wanted to shield the reality from for not recognizing the real amount of work anyone,” Coor said. “But we need to improve that goes into teaching. The latest budget draft still has $8.2 mil­ the definition of faculty participation.” Coor said there áre misconceptions of lion set aside for the incentives, but it rec­ “People ognizes the difference between average how faculty members work. think of their high school experience, but work loads at the state’s three universities. A footnote in the budget proposal states that teaching at Universities is very different,” NAU’s faculty will receive pay incentives he said. “There is such a Variety of teach­ when teaching nine credit hours or more, while ing methods,” The board agreed to put together a work the faculties of ASU and UofA must meet a group that will establish appropriate mea­ minimum of six credit hours to get a raise. NAU has an average work load that is sures of faculty work loads. B y V iví S tf.nbf.rg S tate P ress ASU resea iv fters studNjH acids to find secret o f life as left and right-handed. ATI the organ■isp s oh Earth, however, are made from Scientists trying to determine how life left-handed compounds. Pizzafello s ^ t i ^ k b e c a n s e j l i f e is ■was created qoulti get &ixtost fro p ASU lì researchers studyitm eertam t^ in o amd^, : very selective in what it uses. lite findings of Chemistry Professor scientists are intent on finding out exactly Jo b s Cronin and R esearch Associate why life prefers only the left-handed acids. Cronin believes the two types of soys, Sandra Pizzarello, published in the Feb. 14 issue a fS eien c em a ék zm e. suggest from neutron stars influence either left or certain types of cosmic rays affected right-handedness. P o l a i i z e d |^ ^ ^ ^ |t V -amino acids that probably were the build- * - nearby star in the cloud of gas gpd dust from w b ic| i ing blocks of life on Earth. . - The project began during the spring the solar system formed a p p ro ^ fd o ly 1 , 'j 19& rei>i§§i¡i¡ when Cronin learned of a 4 4 billion ynars ag&. To test their , Stanford University professor’s theories analyze amino acids in meteorites, but first they must sidestep a problem with other space rocks. through the ASU Honors CoUegè. ' The scientists chose u» use the rela­ Neutron stars, remnants of suns that , emitted light that tively new Murchison meteorite for anal­ have ■■com pounds in ysis. which crashed into Australia in wasRj (T his created two 1969. For the past two decades it has asteroids in labeled as either been under scrutiny by ASU researchers. kinds o f “ASU has one o f the largest meteorite n g h to f ■ th a t is to say collections in the world, but ail o f the -fb eb etó ■ like your two others were contaminated (with amino that the “One is I mirror acids from Earth) because they had been hands." I (but) they are dif- around for a long time,” Pizzarello said. w tk ctfl So far. the study has come with limited ■ th e other. They J b r e a t.| success, because ihc researchers have | | are similar.” don’t coincide These one-handed compounds are the found excesses of the left over the fight' huii#EB blocks for larger compounds, handed adds ranging from 2 to 9 percent. Pizzarello said she is not discouraged a**» as proteins. When one-handed compounds arc because there is still much research left synthesized in a lab, they turn out « p a lly to do. _____________:......................... .............. B y B e n L ea th er m a n S ta te P ress - Doctoral c an d id a tes in electrical engineering C arlos Nunez (left) and Pram od Parihar, attem pt to rem ove a strin g that is w rapped around a pigeon’s foot. The tw o stu d e n ts w ere feeding p ig eo n s next to th e C ady Mall fountain w hen they noticed th e bird w as entangled. Tests, speech h igh ligh t breast cancer prevention B y R o w e E d c e ix S ta te P ress In coordination with Women’s History Month and a presentation about breast can­ cer, ASU will offer free mammograms to 60 uninsured women. The 15-minute tests will take place in a mobile unit in the Gammage Auditorium parking lot from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 2. Jane Barlow, development officer for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the testing will focus on uninsured women who have had previous breast can­ cer problems or who are at high risk of having problems. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, breast cancer is the most common form o f cancer, excluding skin-related cancers, among A m erican women. The CDC estimates that 180,200 women will be diagnosed with breast can­ cer in 1997; 43,900 of them will die from the disease. A disproportionate number of deaths will be among minorities and women of low income, the CDC reported. Susan Love, author of Dr. Susan Love’s Breast Book, will speak at 2 p.m. March 2 at Gammage Auditorium. Love is the founder o f the Faulkner Breast Center in Boston and co-founder of the National Breast Cancer Coalition. She also teaches and practices breast cancer treatment at the University of California at Los Angeles. The ASU Women’s Studies Program is sponsoring the presentation. Tickets are $5 at Gammage and Dillard’s box offices. The proceeds w ill go to the ASU C ancer Research Institute. For more information or reservations, call Jane Barlow at 727-6186. T oday Campus dubs and organizations m ay su b m it w ritte n e n trie s to the State Press in the basement o f the Matthews Canter. Requests w ill not be taken over Vie phone or via lax. Deadline for requests is noon the day M o re publication and entries will n o t be accepted m ore than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name o f the club or organization, a descrip­ tion o f the event, date, time and the fu ll add re ss o f the lo c a tio n . A ll requests are subject to editing fo r content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calen­ dar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accept­ ed on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • S t a t e P ress Monday, February 17, 1997 Page 2 Counselor Training Center — Free counseling available for full-time s tu d e n ts a n d sta ff a t P a y n e H all, room 402. For m ore information or an appointment, call 965-5067. • Japanese Student Organization — Meeting a t 5 p.m. in MU Cultural D iv ersity C o n fe r e n c e ro o m , third floor. • Coalition of Justice & Peace — W eekly m eeting at noon in the MU Mohave. . • MEChA/Calmecac — G e n e ra l m eeting a t 7 p.m. at the CIMD (5th St. an d Forest). • MUAB Gallery Committee — Meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the MU con­ ference room 1A, third floor • College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Council — G eneral m eet­ ing at 4:30 p.m. in the MU Gila room 214, second floor. • Kundalini Yoga Club — Meeting at 7 p.m. in the MU Gold room 203. • Students Towards Educational Progress (STEP) — G u est sp eak er L eon B ry a n t s p e a k in g on resum es/internship at 4:40 p.m. in the MU Pinal room 215. • Golden Key National Honor Society — Officer’s m eeting at 5:30 p.m. Call 784-8638 for directions. TheS tate P ress online http.7 / news. vpsa.asu. edu A ctivists attem pt to b u y trees to o u tfo x lo ggers B y S c o t t So n n e r A sso c ia te d P ress WASHINGTON — M itch Friedm an thought h e’d finally beaten the Forest Service when he showed up at a U.S. timber auction with cash in hand to buy centuriesold trees. An ardent environmentalist, Friedman has spent most of two decades on the front lines protesting logging in national Forests. He’d helped organize lawsuits and administrative appeals to try to block clear cuts, citing vio­ lations of laws protecting fish and wildlife. This time, he decided on a new tack; Buy the trees for $15,000 and set them aside in his own little public forest reserve. He never dreamed Forest Service rules won’t allow it. “A checkbook won’t get you in. ^ o u need a chain saw,” Said Friedman, who heads the Northwest Ecosystem Alliance in Bellingham, Wash. “Right now, our public forests are being managed like an exclusive club.” Regulations prohibit the sale of the pub­ licly owned timber to anyone who does not intend to cut the trees, Friedman has peti­ tioned the Agriculture Department to repeal the prohibition on private sales. He also traversed Capitol Hill recently seeking support for changing the national forests’ logging rules: “The big question here is whether the Forest Service wants to open up the process or keep the excuse that the regulations force them to log regardless of whether it loses money, harms the environment or other considerations,” he said. The Forest Service cited the rule last year in rejecting Friedm an’s top bid — $15,000 — for the Thunder Mountain tim­ ber parcel in north-central Washington’s Okanogan National Forest. The second-highest bidder, AA Logging of Twisp, Wash., won the right to log the tract on condition it match Friedman’s bid. The site south of the Pasayten Wilderness Area was logged last summer, producing an estimated 3.5 million board feet of spruce, sub-alpine fir and lodgepole pine. The harvest was limited to trees killed in a 1994 fire or those likely to die from insects that attack fire-damaged trees. The alliance contended that cutting down the trees would jeopardize wildlife habitat and stream conditions for salmon. Joining Friedman in his fight arc the Southwest Center for Biodiversity, which tried to buy national-forest trees in Arizona last year, and the Oregon Natural Resources Council. T heir petitio n says the governm ent should accept the bid that is “most advanta­ geous to the nation.” “We can’t see any reason why the Forest Service shouldn’t go for this,” said Mark Hubbard of the Oregon Natural Resources Council based in Eugene, Ore. “If a person or public interest group would give them easy money' and not take the trees, (it) seems like a no-brainer.” Jim Lyons, the Agriculture Department undersecretary who oversees the Forest Service, said the proposed rule change is “an interesting idea we should explore.” “It is an idea worth considering, espe­ cially if the resource and the taxpayer are better off in the long run,” said Lyons, But Chris West, vice president of the N orthw est F orestry A ssociation in Portland, Ore,, said his group opposes changing the rules, “Bidding on a government contract is the same whether it is harvesting a timber sale or building a plane or painting a build­ ing,” West said. “If you don’t intend to do th e w ork, the co n tract should not be awarded to you.” ‘Soft money campaign donations skyrocket in 1996, report indicates B y D eb R iec h m a n n A sso ciate d P ress WASHINGTON — The Democratic and Republican parties raised an unprecedented $263.5 million campaign in largely unregulated “soft money” donations for last year’s election, a research organization reported Sunday . The total was almost three times the $89 million the par­ ties collected for the 1991-92 campaign, and roughly 2 1/2 time the $106.4 million donated in 1993-94, the organiza­ tion said in a report being made public Monday. Increasing soft-money contributions have prompted con­ gressional investigations of irregularities in political giving. Many experts agree that such numbers prove 1970s-era reforms of the campaign-funding system have become largely meaningless. Soft money is given by corporations, labor unions and wealthy individuals and cannot legally be spent directly on a particular candidate’s behalf It may be used for generic advertising, get-out-the-vote efforts and other party-build­ ing activities. In Monday’s report, the Washington-based Center for Responsive Politics said Republicans raised $141.2 million in soft money contributions for last year’s campaign, com­ pared with $122.3 million the Democrats collected. In the 1991-92 presidential election cycle, Democrats raised $37 million and Republicans $52 million. For the midterm congressional races of 1993-94, Democrats trailed with $46.9 million to the Republicans $59.5 million, total­ ing $106.4 million. Hie center, a self-described nonpartisan research group that studies the role money plays in elections and policy mak­ ing, said both parties used soft money to finance television advertising campaigns featuring their presidential candidates. To circumvent spending limit rules for publicly financed presidential Campaigns, the parties called the TV spots “issue ads,” the center said. A 1978 ruling by the Federal Election Commission allowed state parties tb spend money that Would benefit state as well as federal candidates. Only party committees can raise the money, which is intended to build thé parties and not to benefit federal campaigns. . “Because soft money knows no limits, individuals, corpo­ rations, unions and other interest groups can, and do, write checks for $50,000, $100,000 or even more,” the report said. Most soft money contributions came from businesses. The report said Federal Election Commission records indicate companies gave $171.95 million during 1996, or 92 percent of the total. ______ W orld/N ation STATE P ress ■ ; Monday, February 17,1997 : . v Peru new spaper outlines m ilitary rescue approach B y A nita S n o w A sso ciated P ress C hinese soldiers march past an arm ored car, right, and a crowd control vehicle arm ed with water cannons outside th e South71 Korean consulate in Beijing Sunday, w here North Korean defector Hwang Ja n g Yop h as so u g h t asylum . Security h a s been increased around fhe com pound since high-ranking North Korean official Hwang sought .asylum there W ednesday. Korean defector standoff intensifies after shooting Chinese police have been guarding the consulate around the clock since Hwang’s defection. On Sunday, some patrolled with assault-rifles. A water BEIJING — Heavily armed police backed by an armored car and water cannon guarded the South Korean consulate, cannon was parked behind an armored carat the ftont door of where a North Korean defector Was hiding Sunday. South the consulate. Police blocked surrounding streets with their \ . Korea linked the standoff to the shooting of another promi­ cars and tire-shredding spikes, North Koreans, who have been keeping vigil outside the nent defector in Seoul. Lee Han-young, a nephew of North Korean leader Kim consulate, sat in a few parked cars late Sunday, taking shelter Jong II’s first wife, was shot twice Saturday outside a from the freezing cold. The defection puts China in a difficult position. It does not friend’s apartment in a Seoul suburb. He was in critical con­ ■Want to infuriate North Korea, a longtime ally with whom it dition Sunday. Police blamed the shooting on North Korean agents, and fought in the 1950-53 Korean War. China also has diplomatic South Korea’s prime minister indicated it was linked to the relations with South Korea and wants to encourage growing defection of Hwang Jang Yop, who is holed up in the con­ commercial ties. Following the defection, South Korea put its 650,000sulate in Beijing. “In response to the Hwang incident. North Korea has member military on higher alert and tightened security at air­ threatened to take hundred- and thousandfold revenge,” Prime ports, government facilities, foreign embassies and ports. It stepped up security even further after the shooting, Minister Lee Soo-sung said in Seoul after an emergency Cabinet meeting Sunday. “This attack shows that the threat is throwing up roadblocks near Seoul and tightening protection for politicians and other possible targets of terrorism. something concrete.” • Lee’s real name is Lee II Nam. Because of his ties to the According to South Korean officials, Hwang, a designer of North Korea’s guiding philosophy of self-reliance, walked North Korean leader, he had been under close protection into its consulate Wednesday with an aide and said he wanted since his arrival in Seoul and his 1982 defection had been kept secret until last year, when his mother, Sung Hae-rang, to defect. Communist North Korea, one of the world’s most closed also fled. Friends said Lee, fearing North Korean reprisals, had and secretive states, claims rival South Korea kidnapped undergone drastic plastic surgery to avoid detection. Hwang, 73 and has warned it will retaliate if he is not released. Before the attack, a woman purporting to be a magazine Hwang, reportedly facing a purge, would likely face severe punishment if sent back to North Korea and is depending on reporter called the apartment to ask when Lee would be home, police said. China for protection. A neighbor told police he heard a scream and looked out Negotiators from South Korea and China have been dis­ cussing what to do about Hwang, the most senior official ever of his home to see two men confronting Lee at the entrance to to flee North Korea. There was no word on any progress. the apartment. One man held a gun to Lee, neighbor Park North Korea also sent negotiators, but it was unclear whether Jong-eun said. The man shot Lee in the chest and head, and both attackers fled. they had held any meetings yet. B y R enee S c h o o f A sso cia te d P ress LIMA, Peru — The U.S. and Peruvian paratroopers would plunge into the compound from whirring heli­ copters, plant explosives at six points around the diplomat­ ic residence and storm the building. In a nighttime operation that woulcktake only seven minutes — but could leave as many as 90 people dead — soldiers would seize leftist rebels and try to rescue 72 hostages.' At least that’s the military plan-if the hostage standoff cannot be resolved peacefully, a major Peruvian newspaper reported Sunday. , But Diaro Im República said the army, fearing high casualties, wants to leave the option as .a last resort. The newspaper quoted a Feb. 5 “Intervention Plan” by the Army Intelligence Agency as saying “it cannot be assured that a military action will be clean; there could be numerous... losses.” The plan also said the political atmosphere, both in Peru and internationally, “favors a peaceful solution to the cri­ sis,” the newspaper reported. President Alberto Fujimori has received the proposal, the newspaper said. No one was available for comment at his office Sunday. A spokesman for the U.S. Southern Command, reached by telephone in Panama, denied any U.S. military planning to free the hostages. “We are not involved in the situation down there,” said the spokesman, who would not give his name. “There are no American citizens inside and we are not involved. It is a matter for the Peruvian government.” Im República said that the military plan calls for backup from the U.S. Southern Command, using Hispanic soldiers from the U.S. Special Forces. Fujimori said several weeks after the crisis began he twice turned down offers by the U.S. government for use of its Delta Force commandos to help resolve the crisis. In a column, La República publisher Gustavo Mohme questioned why the document had been leaked. Is it an attempt to pressure the Tupac Amaru rebels “to abandon its demand for the liberation of its inmates, and a warning for them that the government has prepared a mili­ tary plan in case the peaceful plan fails?” he wrote. The report of the military plan came one day after medi­ ators indicated that talks between the govemmenfand the rebels had bogged down. V No new m eetings were announced Saturday after the government and leftist rebels met for the third time in a week. , Canadian Ambassador Anthony Vincent, a mediator in the talks, said the meeting resulted in an agreement “to elaborate a proposal which will facilitate the continuation of the preliminary conversations.” He did not elaborate. The statement indicated that the talks between govern­ ment negotiator Domingo Palermo and rebel representative Roli Rojas Fèmandez had run into trouble. It said the talks would “continue as soon as possible.” Tupac Amaru guerrillas stormed the diplomatic resi­ dence a week before Christmas, seizing hundreds of diplo­ mats, executives and other VIPs. They released hundreds of people, but still hold 72 men. Zairian rebel leader grants reprieve to refugee camp of Kalemie. “ We shall see what we come # up with.” Kabila didn’t set a new deadline, but said KALEMIE, Zaire — Rebel leader Laurent Kabila, responding to a plea from the United he would stay in touch with U.N. officials. Twice in the past week, Kabila has vowed Nations, agreed Sunday to delay a threatened to attack Tingi-Tingi within days to clear out attack on Zaire’s largest refugee camp. Kabila had threatened to attack die Tingi- former Rwandan soldiers and Hutu militia­ Tingi camp, on the rebels’ northern front, this men, who have received planeloads of arms in week unless the U N. High Commissioner for recent days. The United Nations sent representatives to Refugees drove out Rwandans he says are Kalemie, a port on Lake Tanganyika, to plead armed by the Zairian government. The rebel leader said he granted the for a reprieve. Kabila granted it, but insisted it reprieve to give the agency time to figure out would be temporary. “ We talked a little bit of my ultimatum how to separate the armed men from bona there, which is very serious. I hope they fide refugees in the camp of 150,000 people. “ As we are Christians, we shall give understood my position,” he said. The U.N. representatives quickly flew more time to UNHCR,” Kabila told The Associated Press in the southeastern town back to Nairobi, Kenya, without speaking to B y Ka r in D avies A s so c ia t e d P ress reporters. In the past, the refugee agency has said it does not have th£ power to disarm refugees. In the Zairian capital, Kinshasa, Defense Ministry spokesman Leon Kalima denied that the government is arihing the refugees. He said Zaire has only enough weapons and ammunition to provide for its own soldiers. “ It’s well known that we have a problem with materiels,” he said. “ How could we possibly be giving things'to outside forces? We’re trying to outfit our own men.” On Friday, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan also charged that arms were being sent into Tingi-Tingi, though he did not directly accuse Zaire. The United N ations’ special envoy, Mohamed Sahnoun, visited Zairian President Mobutu Sese Seko at his palace in Gbadolite in northern Zaire on Saturday, and had been expected to demand an end to the arming of the refugees. Sahnoun made no statement after the meeting. , Z aire’s defense m inister, L ikulia Bolongo Lingbangi, said in a statement Sunday that Kabila’s threat to attack Hutus in the camp was proof he was being direct­ ed by the T u tsi-led governm ents of Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda. They have denied the allegations. Hundreds of thousands of Rwandan Hutus fled into Zaire after Rwanda’s 1994 massacre of a half-million Tutsis, fearing reprisals from the Tutsi-led government that now controls Rwanda. Many of the fighters taking shelter in the camps took part in the genocide. O pin io n S t a t e P ress Monday, February 17,1996 P age 4 » ..P ress • f g J Eäfiitorial Clinton, Henry Clay Frick chiseledfrom same m old marked what will become known as the smack in the face o f AAmerica’s m odem labor movement. • At precisely 12:01 a.m. EST, menjbers o f the Allied Pilots Association — consisting mainly of pilots from American Airlines — called for a strike after marathon negotiations failed to produce any agreeable results. • A t 12:07 a.m . EST, P re s id e n t B ill C lin to n invoked his authority to thwart the first airline strike in years by signing an order thàt established a three-member emergency board to come up with a solution to the would-be strike. • At 12:25 am . EST, the pilote union called off their 24-minute weak stoppage to the cheers of thousands of airline passengers and American Airlines executives. But should those people be cheering the presi­ dent’s move or jeering him for striking out years of progress working men and women have earned by collectively bargaining far fair wages and comfort­ able working environments? In AAmerica, we have a funny knack foe look­ ing down on standards, vaines and mores of other countries -^-especially the ones o f the third-world type. Last year, people o f die United States — sup­ posedly one of (he most civilized dwellings in the world -r- chided Wal Mart clothing htrekier Kathy Lee Gifford for allowing her clothing line to be made in Honduran sweatshops. Collectively, every­ body wants controls on how businesses work their employees. So why is it that millions o f people applaud the decision o f the president to violate the a x le of working men and women? Bill Clinton was lauded Saturday for signing the emergency hoard papers and, hence, keeping die well-to-do pilots o f American Airlines from raising their annual take-home pay by 10 percent over four years. But as usual, A Americans are only looking at the short-term side o f the issue. They are not seeing how this decision — if imposed o n a more re g u la r basis — w ill g iv e g re a te r le v e ra g e to greedy, self-indulgent corporate bandits. People are not thinking in term s o f the slippery slope, but rather the notion that those “damned pilots” aren,t getting away with financial murder. As working AAmericans, we arc outraged at the president's move to turn hack die labor-movement clo ck to the days o f th e H om estead S trike in Pennsylvania, la that strike, 10 m em bers o f the Amalgamated Association o f lron and Steel work­ ers were kilted in a battle with Henry Clay Frick and union-busting Pinkerton men simply because they wanted improved working conditions. Can we expect dim will happen in the not-too-distant future o f AAmerica? The fact is that Clinton made a terrible mistake in the wee hours o f Saturday morning. He sent a message to all AAmerican workers dial if you fight for fair wages and jo b security, you will be met with executive resistance He is telling us that we should lie down and be thankful for the things big businesses hand us. How far can the threads that hold this country together be stretched before they unravel and drop to the floor o f another third-world sweatshop? I aturday Ptr-l A I A L I l M i lit a r y h a r a s s m e n t r e s e a r c h w a s t e s Sexual harassment in the military is expensive, costing taxpayers up to $1 billion per year, according to a study by researchers at Kent State U niversity. One o f the researchers estimated the Army’s costs at $250 million annually, an amount he said “in Desert Storm could have bought 30 to 40 more advanced Black Hawk helicopters.” Horrified? Good. The solution to the problem of sexual harassm ent in the military is not going to be met by research that makes women’s legitimate complaints a waste of taxpayer money. The waste is in human resources, in emotional trauma to women marginalized by the institution they turn to for help. The cost is not the public relations nightmare that resulted from Tailhook, from the Aberdeen Proving Grounds, from the embarrassment of accusations against a man who is making sexual harassment policy for the Army. The cost is foisted on the women, who must endure not only the sexual harassment, but the military’s refusal to take their com­ plaints seriously. The cost lies in the silence that becomes the only acceptable method for dealing with harassment. Recent allegations by several women in the military claim that Sgt. Maj. Gene McKinney, the top-ranking enlisted man who was on the Army’s sexual harassment policy review panel, engaged in sexual m isconduct. McKinney now faces? charges and has stepped down from the Army’s review-panel and two senators have called for his suspension from the Army until the matter is resolved. The first woman to publicly denounce McKinney was Sgt. Maj. Brenda Hoster, who said McKinney assaulted her in a hotel in Hawaii in April. She said she took her com­ plaint to her superiors at the Pentagon and it was sup­ pressed. No action was taken. Since Hoster came forward, other women have stepped forward to say they also were harassed by McKinney. This shows in all probability that these women were afraid to speak before, or their complaints were ignored, but that once McKinney was given the duty o f creating sexual harassment policy, they felt there was no choice but to go public — no matter what the cost. Since 1991, the Army has received about 1,200 com­ plaints of harassment each .year, but declares about twothirds to be unsustainable. A fter the incident at the Aberdeen Proving Ground, the Army set up a hotline to allow women to avoid the usual line of complaint and received almost 7.000 calls in less than three months. A 1993 study of veterans’ experience with sexual harassment found that 90 percent of women under 50 and 37 percent of women 50 and over said they had been harassed while serving in the military* A 1995 study by the D epartm ent o f D efense found that women reporting “unwanted sexual attention” dropped from 64 percent in 1988 to 55 percent in 1995, although the percentage of women reporting misconduct increased. It seems that women are much more 'willing to report harassment after they have left the military. The cult of silence in the military is clearly a problem that contributes to acceptance of sexual harassment as “just the way things are,” The silence js slowly breaking, and the results have of course been very costly. Preventative measures and means of reporting harassment are increasing, but the recent incidents and the Pentagon’s shock at them show that there is a lot going on in the military that is unspoken and desperately needs attention. If the military spent $1 billion this year in preventative measures such as education, training, reporting procedures and enforcement of punishment, the silence based on shame and fear could become a silence based on what it should be — nothing to report. Karin Wadsack is a graduate student in mass communica­ tion and can be reached at kwadsack@asu.edu. BRIAN ANDERSON, Editor DUSTIN KRUGEL, Managing Editor CARYL MICALIZIO.........................................Night Editor TIMOTHY TAIT ................ ........City Editor RAY STERN .............................................Asst. City Editor THERESA VA LLES............................. .......Opinion Editor CHRISTA CERRENTANO....... News Editor LORI C A IN ....... ..... „.„...Photo Editor JIM POULIN .,.......... Photo Editor RANDY JO N E S.......... .............................. ..Sports Editor ED ODPVEN.................................... ...... .Asst. Sports Editor TIM BAXTER,... :......Magazine Editor i KYI A SALMASSIAN.,.......,,........Asst. Magazine Editor R EPO RTERS: Sara Bush, Kevin Culwell, Deanna Darr, Rowe E dgell, L idia K elly, Ben Weatherman, M elody McDonald. Jennifer Netheiby, Vivi Stenberg. SPORTS R EPO RTERS: Josh DeFamio, Percy Ednalino Jr., Lori Haro, Matt Paulson, John Sheehy. COPY EDITORS: Jodi Bafundo. Lone Roberts. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Erik Guzowski, Pat Shannahan. COLU M N ISTS: Kevin J Berlat, Michelle Carson, Olga Fuentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Gordon, Michelle Hardt, Diane C. Jacobs, David C. Larkin. George D. Rose. Sr.. Adam Schiffer, Joshua Solovskoy, Steven Stein. CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington. David Gould, Stacy H olm stedt, Jonathan T. Inge, Jason M. Lam an, Steve Tansley, Michael S. Whiteman. PR O D U C T IO N : Adrianna G arcia, Kai Haisch-Risley, Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Erik Noland, Shellie Scott. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Can Dewald, Dan Ellstron), David Goodwin, Brandon Mudd, Nick Pezzoiello, Jess Rankin, Mark Santiago,Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland. C L A SS IFIE D S: Heidi H eister, W ayne Hoover, Sarah Kimmel, Stacey Thayer, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial hoard, 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 KRUGEL \ . 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 M atthews Center, Room IS, A rizona Staje U niversity, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. ’ The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers In fo rm a tio n ........... ...9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N e w s ro o m ................. 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M a g a z in e ,.... ;. ».........9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 A d v e rtis in g 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 C la ss ifie d s ................. 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu O pin io n Page 5 Monday, February 17, 1996 S t a t e P ress True status o f nation measured through commercials I t ’s the beginning o f the year again, time for the State OBERT J. of the Nation and State of the LEHNERT State addresses. M agazines Guest Columnist take the “pulse of the coun­ try,” or analyze the American people with a m ixture o f pessim ism and optim ism . Pollsters are out-and-about surveying and* annoying peo­ ple, or more annoyingly, calling them on the phone just when the polled-to-be is sitting down to dinner. But was there a chicken in their pot, or just a car in their garage? Which would she or he miss more with an economic downturn? I have a better way to accurately determine what my fellow citizens truly desire. I sit down at home, ignore my studies and watch tele­ vision. Specifically, I watch automobile commercials. The current Nissan campaign is interesting because I’m not sure they’re really trying to sell cars at all. The “spokesman” is a baseball-cap wearing Pat Morita ripoff who almost never speaks. I guess Nissan is trying to pull in the Generation X-ers who grew up on The Karate Kid movies. ' Mostly, this guy just smiles and packs along a small dog, who I suspect is PBS’s Wishbone, moonlighting to pay for more Bcggin’ Strips. Do we really want cars filled with spacey fireflies? Or, do we really want to encase the Grand Teton mountain range under Lucite? In the latest Nissan commercial, the car company is apparently claim ing that one of their cars can drive faster than militaristic pigeons can fly over and defecate on it. W ow, cars fa ste r than pigeons! A pparently pigeons are equipped with heads-up gunsights (poop- R sights?) and fly to music out o f Top Gun. Perhaps N issan should show women out-m aneuvering such assailants after buying fly-boy-avoidance-capable-personnel-transport-systems. Jeep is willing to promote the belief that if you drive their sport-utility vehicle off road, you will do a matador-like dance against a Spanish fighting bull. After hav­ ing to admit defeat to the bull by driving through a mudwallow (unusual humility for a car company), you will then have to escape the amorous attentions of a lovestarved wild pig. Which is still a less horrible situation than being a female congressional aide trying to escape the attentions of Bob Packwood. According to Harper’s Index, every single light in the former Senator’s office was equipped with dimmer switches. I hope Jeep does not provide dimmer headlights as an option. I ’m really flab b erg asted by V olksw agen. VW ’s appeal to borderline sadomasochists is just going too far. The nice, though rather stark camera shots of a rainshimmered road (anyone have an asphalt fetish?) are shattered by the voice-over of the formerly frail persona of English actor Jeremy Irons. Irons shocked us all in Die Hard with a Vengeance with his buffed German vil­ lain with neo-Nazi kinks. In the commercial, the Nazi villain is back, as the voice of “Otto Bahn.” The viewer is asked, “Do you tink yoo haf vaat it takes to tame me?” Is this a come-on to latent dominatrices and masters? Irons’ career has included many portrayals of sexual­ ly obsessive men, so Volkswagen must know what it is doing. Will these sexual energies be transmuted into an underswell of resurgent fascism? Will the heirs of Dr. F aith, science complementary Steve Forsberg contends that "religion is about believing, despite evidence to the contrary” and “religion is based on faith” whereas "science seems to teach one to question, to doubt, to prove otherwise” and "science is based upon ... disbelief.” Nonsense. F aith and reason ate not m utually exclusive, as Forsberg seems to suggest. Rather, they depend upon each other. Nowhere does faith preclude a critical examination of the facts or application of sound reasoning. Faith simply provides a context for understanding the facts and conclusions we draw frota them. Also, nowhere does science preclude faith, e.g. we believe in the fundamental physical laws as derived from our experiments. If we don’t believe in our results, we can't build on them and we certainly won’t get funding on our next grant proposal! A world view which cannot incorpo­ rate both faith and reason is based on nei­ ther. Forsberg’s editorial shows what happens when people adopt an “either/or” position with regard to faith and reason­ ing. There is an old saying I like: “The truth dial needs to be proven is only half true.” This suggests that there is knowl­ edge that we understand and accept as it is. without “proof,” and there are other kinds of knowledge that we need to con­ vince ourselves to believe only after some process, called logic or reasoning, is applied. The point is, there is no logical reason to use logic as a means of making decisions or holding particular opinions. We use logic and endorse its conclusions because we believe that logic and reason­ ing are valid ways to understand the world. A person o f faith says, “I t's true because I believe it,” while a scientist says. “I believe it because it’s true.” In a sense, it’s a distinction without a differ­ ence. In the conflict between organized religion and organized science described by Forsberg, the problem lies not in the disciplines per se, but rather in the limit­ ed views of the people involved. David W right Research Professional • C enter for Solid State Science Article sparks debate, lacks solutions This letter is in response to Steve Forsberg’s column published on Feb. 10 regarding the differences between religious and scientific views. Forsberg uses a writing style that is designed to get people talking and fighting, without offering any real suggestions or solutions to the problem. His last line reads, ‘‘Let’s give it a couple of hundred years to see.” That sounds like an empty cop-out to On top of font, as I read foe column, I couldn’t help but »Rice how many times Forsberg used the word “they” (or some form o f it) to refer to “religious people ” In two paragraphs, he uses the term 25 times. In one of those paragraphs, the word used averages once per line. Forsberg’s use of divisive language in his column is dntturbing. It gave me foe idea that he has lost the At one point, Forsberg writes, “Human history shows that most societies have a poo( tolerance for radically different belief systems.” Although he is right, the fine that follows reeks of the kind of negativity that perpetuates this poor attitude, "One or foe other will end up destroying its opposite, in all likelihood.” if Forsberg really believes that we are aB that intolerant of each other, why is he try­ ing to influence us with his opinions in foe State Press'? Why does Forsberg think that his efforts are having any kind of impact? Does he really believe foal throwing a prob­ lem out for discussion, with no suggested solution is helpful? Forsberg does have one thing right, his academic emphasis in history puts him right where he belongs, die past. Greg Davit ___ S Porsche revive that vehicular fashion statem ent of World War II, the Tiger tank? After all, some of us with more money than good taste drive Humvees. Speaking of dominatrices, other commercials remind me of Newt Gingrich’s desire to completely dominate the natural environm ent. One sp o rt-u tility vehicle drives sedately into a flow ered m ountain m eadow, opens its door (no human is visible inside) and begins to violently suck the flowers, the bees, the grass, the lake, and even the mountains inside, then slams its door shut like the gates of Hell. I swear I can hear a menac­ ing, mechanical burp. C o m m ercials show A m erican fa m ilies ro arin g through wildness in their sport-utility vehicles. It used to be “See the USA in your Chevrolet,” with its rocksolid smooth suspension. Cars stayed on the pavement where they belonged. Now Junior, strapped in the back seat with teeth chattering and ice cream cone flying, can share in the family “fun” by jouncing and bouncing over bouldery trails. Our tastes in cars and driving have become like our preferences in politics: harsh, intrusive and lacking in grace and subtlety. Mountains are there to be driven up or down; playing Frisbee on separate peaks is just an excuse. Driving for driving’s sake has become its own reason for being — not relaxation, not a vacation, but a power trip. Never mind the world along the way or at the end of the road. Take the curves fast until they blur. Then you can’t see the forest or the trees. As Shakespeare might have said, “The drive’s the thing.” Robert James Lehnert is a senior studying history. Lack o f sense keeps station down tubes In response to all the infantile bickering regarding KASR, the campus radio station here at Apathetic State University, I would like to set the record straight on why no one listens. I was made aware by a highly credible source that at the beginning of the fall semester, Fritz Leigh, the so-called adviser of the station, was offered $40,000 by ASASU to increase power to the station. So, instead of accepting the money like any rational person would do, he turned it down. Make sense? No, not really. You have to start someday if you want your station to be listened to. I was a DJ at the station for one and a half years. Fun, you ask? No, not at all. Why did I keep working there? For the experience. Boy was I fooled. Not one person listened. How did I know that no one listened? 1 offered to give away con­ cert tickets, which I didn’t have, but no one called. If anyone out there is consid­ ering becoming a DJ, don’t get your start at KASR. My neighbor recently bought a stereo and has 15 watts per channel. I think I’ll just plug into that and start my own radio station, seeing how it will have more pofaer than KASR. In the meantime, I will remain apathetic just like the rest of this campus. Rajan Nanda Senior Communications DJ doesn’t understand station purpose In response to Kevin J. Berlat’s article about KASR, I just wanted to say that it is his responsibility as a writer not to give out people’s names or to call them out as part of his personal vendetta — which is due'to his show getting canceled. Second of all, 1 just hope he understands that the purpose of college radio is not to play mostly the commercial oldies other commercial radio stations play already. It’s all about a unity of new songs that don’t get played normally on regular radio stations and about music that is basically hard to find — the new and the independent. 1 thought it was really immature and basical­ ly uncalled for, because there are a lot of people who work hard over there. I have nothing to do with the radio sta­ tion, but I do work for a record company who services them. M att Friscia Junior Communications via State Press GripeLine u o ta b fe s .... “History is a clock that people use to tell their time o f day. It is a compass they use to fin d themselves on the map o f human geography. It tells them where they are and what they are.** ■John Henrik Clarke L’ n U „ o r n 17 S t a t e P ress 1007 P olice R eport Simpson to leave L.A. ASU police reported the follow ing incidents over the weekend. • A female student attempted suicide at 401 E. Apache Blvd. • A male non-affiliate was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol at Rural and Tyler Roads. • Someone criminally damaged a concrete trash can at the Social Sciences Building. • A rizona license plate MRT689 was impounded for destruction by ASU police. • A non-affiliated juvenile female was contacted at Palo Verde West, where She had become ill. Subject was trans­ ported to a local hospital. • A female student reported that she has been receiving harassing phone calls at Cholla Hall. • A male non-affiliate was arrested on an outstanding war­ rant from Glendale City Court. Subject Was not able to post bond and was booked. • A male employee reported that a gunshot was heard at Palo Verde West Hall during an altercation at a dance. • A female student was arrested, cited and released for pos­ session of marijuana at 725 E. Adelphi Drive. A female student was also arrested, cited and released for possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of marijuana at 725 NEW YORK (AP) — O.J. Simpson is planning to leave Los Angeles and the lead attorney in his civil trial is off the case, Newsweek magazine reported. Simpson is heeding the advice of friends and is planning to move, possibly to south Florida, although he probably will wail until the school year ends, the magazine said, citing sources it did not identify. The report is in the Feb. 24 issue, due on news­ stands Monday. The magazine also said lead lawyer Robert -Baker and his son, Philip, arc leaving Simpson's legal team. It said another Simpson lawyer, Dan Leonard, will handle the appeal o f a $33.5 million damage award from a wrongful death lawsuit. Telephone calls to the B akers’ law office on Sunday were not returned. "This is the first I've heard of it. but it wouldn't surprise me,” Simpson attorney Robert Blasier said of Baker's reported departure. “The trial’s over and it was understood that the appeal would be handled by someone else.” Earlier this month, a jury found Simpson liable for the June 12. 1994, killings of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Simpson was acquitted of the killings in 1995. Baker has long said that he would not handle the appeals process, although he was expected to seek a new trial and ask a judge to reduce the damage award. Meanwhile, Simpson has until midweek to post $50 million in collateral —-10 percent in cash — if he wants to stay the liability judgment pending an appeal. E. Adelphi Drive. • A male student was arrested, cited and released for pos­ session of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia at 525 South Forest Ave. • A male non-affiliated was arrested, cited and released for loitering on a college campus at 900 S. McAllister Drive. • A male student reported that someone removed his bicy­ cle from Ocotillo Hall. • A male non-affiliated was arrested for aggravated assault at Sahuaro Hall. • A male student reported that someone removed his bicy­ cle from Ocotillo Hall, where it was secured with a lock. • A female student reported that someone criminally dam­ aged her Honda Prelude in Parking Structure 5. • A male student reported that someone removed his wallet and contents from the SRC. • A male non-affiliate was arrested, cited and released for being an underage person in possession of alcohol at 900 S. Mill Ave. • Fictitious identification was impounded for destruction by ASU police. • Drug paraphernalia and a small amount of a green leafy substance were impounded for destruction by ASU police. Compiled by State Press city editor Tim Tait U S. oil company engineer kidnapped in Yemen SAN‘A, Yemen (AP) — Tribesmen involved in a land dispute with the government kidnapped an American oil engineer in southeastern Yemen, Western oil company offi­ cials said Sunday. Joe Dell’Aria, an engineer with Houston-based Halliburton Energy Services, was kidnapped Feb. 11, said a field engineer with the company who spoke on condition of anonymity. He said that Dell'Aria, 50, was held by members of the powerful Murad tribe, who are locked in a dispute with the government over a valuable piece of land near the presi­ dential palace in San‘a, the Yemeni capital. D e ll’Ària was w orking on fields ow ned by the American Hunt Oil Co. when he was kidnapped in the Mareb region, 80 miles east of San’a. A Halliburton official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said negotiations for his release were under way. Several American, French, British and Canadian diplo­ mats, tourists and engineers have been kidnapped and freed by tribes in Yemen, on the southwestern tip of the Arabian Peninsula, over the past three years. Kidnappings Usually are carried out to pressure the gov­ ernment into providing money or new projects. The cap­ tives generally have been well-treated and eventually released unharmed after negotiations. HUGH t JL I BLUMEMFELD t 1 State P r e s s H o r r o sc o pes G u a r a n t e e d o r double your money bacr ! ASU CLOTHING GAPS • SHORTS • SWEATS J a~* a n r ~ IC L I Á D T C : rn ' c A lo t m ore than books! fflfl 'a songw riter's songw riter University ottc^JB EXPRESS t/U C A T C . " ^JenT odo ïn të r* 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 70 4 S. C ollege In tw o p erfo rm an c es in th e M U: 1:30 p m M U P r o g r a m m in g L o u n g e and at the » O p e n P o e tr y R e a d in g 7 - 8:30 p m M i l G a llery m TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18 call 965-6822 FOR INFORMATION ■1 ■ ) 1 1 ■ > L-Jv 1 — / J C u l t u r e a n d A r ts C o m m it t e e M em orial Union A ctivities Board C O N G R A TU LA TIO N S TO T H E DEVILS’ ADVOCATES NEW MEMBERS A PO TE 1 . A riane Aguilar-Ullom 2 . B ecky Fox 3 . G uy Gas ter 4 . Stephanie Gilbeau 6 . E ric G ronstal 6 . Vojtek K arpuk 7 . Julie Meeks 8 . N atalie Paila 9 . Stephanie Puthoff 10 . Trey S cru ggs 11 . W yatt Sm ith 12 . K ristin Stangeland 13 . Christopher Zook ALTERNATE 1 . Jay A lpert 2 . N ellie Cho 3 . Am y Darby 4 . A lison Doud 5 . Daria G iansanti 6 . K irstin Groat 7 . Jenny Holsman 8 . Phoebe K in g 9 . Deborah Lambert 10 . M ark M acKenzie 11 . Sam antha Nelson 12. K risten Richardson The Devils’ Advocates extend a special thanks to the University community for its nominations and to those who participated in the selection process. Car insurance from GEO. Because its never too earivfo begin making sound financial decisions. Whether you already have your own car insur­ ance policy o r you’re ready to start one, our great student rates make GEICO a wise choice. We'll answer ques­ tions and handle claims 24 hours a day. And in many cases, your claim can be serried within 48 hours o f reporting the details of an incident. And GEICO offers a variety o f co n v en ien t payment plans to meet your needs. Join over 2 million drivers who have already sw itched • to an auto your own insurancepolicy? Call GEICO to learn how. insurance company that's got an A++ rating. Gall GEICO today, and find out just how much you The sensible alternative. could save. (602) 931-0766 State P ress Page 7 M onday, February 17,1997 Sunday s a x l e ss o n Above, Heidi Kloos, graduate stu d en t in psychology (right), tak es instruction from doctoral candidate in education Glenn Smith in a secluded and quiet stairwell of Payne Hall Sunday. Left, Smith helps Kioos with th e co rrect fingering for a 0 major scale. This w as Kloos’ first saxophone lesson. AIDS AWARENESS WEEK Candlelight Vigil TODAY PV B E A C H Feb. 175-7pm PaloVerde Complex 5-6pm 6-6 :05 pm City Jazz Band AIDS March Welcome & Remarks Mark Baumgartner President ASASU 5:30pm A short ceremony relaying the significance of the veil. T urkey BLT M e lt 6:05-6:15 pm Speaker: Stella Godel Vice-Chair Women’s Task Force C h ick en G h eesesteakrTM 1 HL ■■■■ B a co n H a m ’n C h eese M elt 5:35pm 6:15-6:25pm SHARP. The Candle Light Vigil silent walk Speaker: Art Alvarado Volunteer Phoenix Body Positive begin. ^ ^ k M eat L o a f M o n ste r™ [a r a f u ll. . t h B H ’ P B lo a d e d ! E x tr e m e Carver™ C om bo Route of Candlelight Vigil ALL WELCOME PalmWalk O N L Y *3” rr ^ i- B H l ASU AIDS Awareness Week Candlelight Vigil Includes your choice of one Extreme Carver™ Sandwich, an individual side item and a regular drink. Good at all participating Boston Market locations. Present coupon when ordering. Only one coupon per visit per customer. Coupon is not redeemable for cash, for gift certificates, or with any other coupon or special offer. No reproductions allowed* Applicable taxes paid by bearer. No cash refund. Offer expires 4/6/97. State P ress Monday, February 17,1997 Page 8 Desert a hot spot for high-tech firms B y J erry N a c h tig a l AP B usiness W riter GILBERT — If Martians land in this Phoenix suburb where, long rows of futuristic satellite dishes are sprout­ ing, Gov. Fife Symington will hold media baron Rupert Murdoch responsible. “Mr. Murdoch, I think because of the advanced tech­ nology that you’re bringing to Gilbert, when the extrater­ restrials finally do visit- Earth they’re probably going to land next door and take a hard look at exactly how advanced we are,” he quipped at a recent groundbreaking. When completed this fall, the $130 million American Sky Broadcasting Co. center — a joint venture between Murdoch’s News Corp. and MCI Communications Corp. — will beam hundreds of TV channels to subscribers around the nation, plus business data, audio and text. From cutting-edge telecommunications enterprises to industry giants like Intel, M icrosoft, M otorola and Honeywell, Arizona has become a high-tech hotbed and center of semiconductor and electronics manufacturing. Once dependent primarily on agriculture and tourism, Arizona’s economy has been enlivened by more than 2,000 high-tech firms that have sprung up among the saguaros and palms in recent years, mostly in Phoenix and Tucson. ' From start-up software firms employing a handful of workers to M otorola, a Phoenix standard since 1950 with more than 19,000 employees, high tech directly accounts for 95,000 jobs and another 85,000 indirectly, state officials say. The annual economic impact of the industry is $ 10 billion, MCI officials cited the weather plus a skilled work­ force, affordable costs, high quality of life and proximi­ ty to Hollywood as reasons for locating the satellite uplink center in Arizona. The state’s pro-business approach — and generous tax breaks —- haven’t hurt either. Symington called Ole Legislature into special session last year to approve $7 million in tax breaks sought by the Murdoch-MCI venture. Other high-tech companies have also received tax breaks to lure them here. The Arizona chip industry is expected to create 5,000 new jobs over the next three to five years, state and industry officials say. OPEN 11AM2AM DAILY! FA ST , FREE D E L IV E R Y ! 829-0064 M0NDAV MADNESS 14"LARGE 1-ITEMPIZZA *5.50 C lin to n se ts p r e c e d e n t in ord er to p ilo ts B y D an B lakf. A P B usiness W riter NEW YORK — The word “strike’’ doesn’t conjure up such scary images to the flying public anymore. That is the precedent set by President Clinton in order­ ing American Airlines pilots back to work within minutes after they declared a strike early Saturday, averting chaotic disruptions to hundreds of thousands of passengers. If pilot negotiations at four other of the nation’s biggest airlines get to the brink of a walkout, airline chiefs and pas­ sengers almost certainly will be looking to the White House to keep the planes in the air. Clinton made a hugely popular decision by effectively rem oving the one potent negotiating weapon in the American pilot Union’s arsenal. There was little obvious, sympathy for the pilots in their quest for more compensa­ tion, largely because at $120,(XX) a year they already are among the most highly paid professionals in the country. But Clinton also sent a signal to all airline workers, par­ ticularly pilots, that could severely restrict their bargaining power. Encouraged by the stronger possibility of presiden­ tial interventions to prevent strikes, airline bosses now Have LAM BD A LE A G U E little incentive to accept union demands. “I think it has some implications for the industry that aren’t all good,” said Ron Keever, an American pilot. “Management can just sit back and let the government step in, instead of negotiating in good faith.” Clinton’s decision marked the first time in 30 years'that a president declared an airline strike an emergency and ordered the workers back to their jobs. To some extent, Clinton’s decision to intervene was a special situation that would not necessarily apply in future crises. He held in his hands the fate of holiday travel plans for many families traveling with children who got a weeklong break from school. Making matters more ominous, the pilots had indicated repeatedly they were planning to be out for at least 30 days. Clinton’s intervention doesn’t automatically mean he would take the same step if the choice arises again. It’s pos­ sible he might come down on the side of the labor move­ ment that so generously supported his re-election Cam­ paign. White House reporter Ron Fournier contributed to this report. ParadiseJggzza CA M PU S CALENDAR I CODG (Coming Out Discussion Group) Student Services iSkig. Multicultural lounge * 6pm PROGRESSION (Graduate Student Network) Call for ▼ Wednesday F e m H H H H y RAINBOW Al I Ä sU Ä ly I/5 less A T jfc jW ta r j oit lu au» pki* ¿ 0U3U A M11 ?nH Floor LESSER VAUÆ » ATHALFPRICEJ LAMBDA LEAGUE OFFICE 965-9756 by THOMAS JOSEPH signals 1 Stare 4 Patella's stupidly place 5 Bowling 5 Guitarist site Paul 9 Linda of 6 Actress Gardner "Alice” 10 Happen­ 7 Of axons ing and 12 without dendrites 8 Supplies help man Club" with 13 — Arabia author 14 Re­ 28 Greek grants 22 Gum letters strained 9 Old 16 Director flavor Bochco29 Track trips 23 Topper Howard 30 Damas­ series 24 “Cool as a 17 Greek cus’s 11 Music's god of war cucum­ nation Turner IBCanada's 15 Conversa­ ber,” e g . 33 Some capital radioers 25 Computer tional 35 Airport part 21 Unite filler sched. 22 Rivera 19 Deuce 26 Sheets abbr. 27 Hand­ beater paintings 23 Compare 20 “The Joy 36 “Stand" some band Luck 24 Like a rail 2 3 26 Chemist’s 4 6 7 8 5 place 9 11 10 29 Deceived 30 Flank 12 31 First 13 14 ,6 name of 15 20-Down 17 18 19 20 32 “Let's!" 34 Hamelin 21 22 character 23 37 Concert site 24 25 26 27 28 38 Agenda 29 39 Short 30 skirts 31 32 33 40 Dutch cheese 34 36 37 41 Pertness ACROSS ■V lor the week of February 17 ▼ T uesd ay F eb ru ary 1 9 »Tewpe S.L Cdriiev dp Kill i t SOuHtêvn 2 Sworn I eo lu rin g X a r Selections to I iiliin ice Your ¡ le n ititi/ L ifestyle Fabulous Fajitas- Beef • Shrimp • Chicken ■ CamaronRancheraand Diablo (Shrimp) I SteamingSides of FreshVegetables ■ SavoryBlackBeans ■ Incredible FishTacos FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS 172 PRICE DINNER W ith the purchase of one dinner of equal o r greater value. Not good with any other offer or discount. O ffer good after 2 p.m. Expires 2-25-97. 39 ■ 2023 W. Guadalupe (Southwest Comer Dobson A Guadalupe) H appy H our B u ffe t 4-7 p.m. M onday-Friday I 40 41 ■ 3 Eye DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G FE L LO 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. 2-17 CRYPTOQUOTE A Z E Q Y G X M P PQ M R R TMS I RJ V G Z Y L NEZ R R G J X Mesa H 38 1 Plentiful Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week ■ I DOWN Bringing Fine Food and Friends Together Since 1963 Mama Rosa's Traditional Sonoran Mexican Food Recipes Are Simply the Best! ft- A N A S ERUP T T E MP E 1A B L E T EE L BARS ;E N S T R 1O O U MP C NA P T A N6 o EP EEs T ERS E C RO SSW O RD N E Z R R G J X SZ YYQ R A E ZJ Y G X PQ R TM Y AG MP B G Tempe 960 W. University (Northeast Comer University & Hardy) 966-0852 EM IG M R . — N VE R Q Y PT GGY Y esterd a y 's C r y p to q u o te: BEFORE YOU LOVE, LEARN TO RUN THROUGH SNOW LEAVING NO FOOTPRINT.-rEDWARD P. MATHERS 0 1997by King Feature* Syndicate, Inc. Monday, February 17, 1997 S t a t e P ress B r o c c o li h a te r s ta k e h e a r t: I t s a ll in y o u r g e n e s B y D a n iel Q . H aney DONOR EGGS ^V fD o lu n te e r Eg g o n o r N eeded I Couples in need are ¡¡requesting your help. ft 20-30 years of age jl In good health, with 1 no hereditary disease §1 factors. All m edical expenses paid H p lu s fee paid to donor. pFor more informatipn please call I (602) 956-7481 EAII responses kept in | strict confidence. AP M ed ic a l E d ito r SEATTLE —f- Knowing this may not make broccoli taste any better, but if you find the stuff disgusting the reason may he in your genes. Scientists studying people’s food preferences are finding a strong inher­ ited tendency to like or reject all sorts of foods — including many that the health gurus say are good for you. “We can’t just assume that people don’t follow healthy diets because they don’t have the information. Taste plays a big role in what people eat,” said Valerie Duffy, a nutritionist from the University of Connecticut. Foods like broccoli, brusscls sprouts and mustard greens, which are nat­ urally bitter anyway, can seem unpleasantly so to some because of the taste genes inherited. Indeed, it seems the whole world can be split up into three categories—non-tasters, tasters and super-tasters — depending on the intensity of the way they perceive bitterness, sweetness and other taste sensations. Scientists working in this emerging field of research presented their lat­ est findings Sunday at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. “Super-tasting children will probably not like brussels sprouts or broc­ coli, no m atter what you do. The reasons are genetic,” said Adam Drewnowski of the University of Michigan. The researchers categorize people by the way they respond to the taste of a thyroid medicine called 6-n-propylthiouracil, or PROP. About 25 per­ cent of white people cannot taste PROP at all, so they are known as non­ tasters. Half are considered tasters because they find it mildly bitter. Another 25 percent, the super-tasters, find it grossly bitter. Women are more likely than men to be super-tasters, and Asians and blacks are more apt than whites to have this trait. • Many foods that are considered healthful, such as the cabbage fami­ ly, grapefruit and Some kinds of roots and, berries, are also bitter. While clearly many people develop a taste for strong flavors — even ones that at first seem unpleasant — the researchers wonder if super­ tasters might be more likely to avoid bitter foods with possible cancer­ fighting properties. Drewnowski is beginning a study of women with breast cancer to see if there is a link between the disease and inherited food preferences. Experts assume that at some point in human evolution, being a super-taster might have improved the chance of survival in parts of the world where there were lots of poisonous plants, since these tend to taste bitter, while being a non-taster could have been an advantage in safer environments. The field of research is so new that some of the findings seem to conflict with each other. In general, here is what the studies show: • Super-tasters are apparently more sensitive to tastes because they have more taste buds on their tongues. • Super-tasters are more likely to find bitter foods to be nastily bitter and sweet things to be cloyingly sweet. Dairy fat tastes creamier, chili peppers arc hotter and carbonated drinks may be unpleasantly bubbly. • Non-tasters are likely to say saccharin tastes fine, while super-tasters find it has an unpleasant aftertaste. • Female super-tasters are less likely to be obese and appear to have better cholesterol levels. Furthermore, they seem to enjoy cooking more. ■So what about that most famous broccoli hater, former President Bush? “I’d really like to know if he’s a super-taster,” said Linda Bartoshuk of Vale University, one of the field’s pioneers. “There’s a good chance he is.” FACULTY&STAFF A.C.S. KARATE Southeast Comer of Broadway &. 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University Ave. (3 blocks east o f Rural/Scottsdale Rd) Based on a 12 month membership St a t e P ress Monday, February 17,1997 Page 10 Pain in the butt Above, C urtis Oswalt, junior accounting major, reclines and puzzles over th e crossw ord while Michael Hoffman, tattoo artist a t Living C anvas, p u ts th e finishing to u c h e s on Oswalt’s tattoo. Right, Hoffman fills in th e highlights of O swalt’s tatto o with white paint. Oswalt h a s been spending each S aturday for th e p ast few w eeks with Hoffman in o rd er to finish h is tattoo. Health gimmick products sell well, but lacking in proof B y L au ra n N eergaard A sso cia te d P ress WASHINGTON — Matt Aukofcr heard all,the hype about zinc helping colds. So he popped the lozenges when his sniffles hit — and suffered a week with the flu, a virus that zinc isn't known to affect. “I had a hard time telling if it helped or not,” said Aukofer. 34, of suburban Washington, who’s considering giving zinc another chance on his next cold. Zinc lozenges are selling as fast as stores can stock them, the latest in a series of health fads that have Wall Street and manufacturers raking in big dollars even before science determines whether the therapies really work. S ta te P ress “I never told anybody it was a cure for the cold,” said Dr. Michael Macknin of the Cleveland Clinic, whose study of Cold-Eeze zinc lozenges kicked off the fad — and who then found himself embroiled in controversy when he made $145,000 on Cold-Eeze stock. “This doesn’t deserve the publicity it’s gotten for a pre­ liminary study.” But the $6 billion, mostly unregulated dietary supple­ ment industry is growing 10 percent a year, fueled largely by news reports touting preliminary research that send con­ sumers racing to the store. , ta k e beta carotene, hailed as a possible cancer preven­ tive with annual sales of $100 million. Scientific testing online h tt p : / / n e w s . v p s a . a s u . e d u ’i j o n n g f & concluded last year Americans are wasting their money on it. Books proclaiming DHEA an anti-aging pill are best­ sellers, despite doctors’ warnings that the hormone may be dangerous. Side effects include permanent masculine hajr growth and deeper voices for women, troubling signs that the pills, which the body turns into estrogen and testos­ terone, might be active enough to hormonally stimulate can­ cer growth. “We’re a quick-fix society,” laments Dr. Lewis Green, ; an Emory University family physician. “We get blindsided with patients coming in with all kinds of demands for things that haven’t been tested and proved.” HAY D EN ’S F E R R Y R E V IE W ASU’s Award, Winning Literary Magazine F A J L L /W IN T E k IS S U E & 9 T e n th A nniversay I ssue Includes work by: Ron Carlson, Yusef Komunyakaa, Alison Doming, Naomi Shihab Aye, Alberto Rios.Jeaninc Savard, Beckian Fritz Goldberg and Rick Bass B Q ^ 9 7 ON SALE NOW Available at: •L anguage & L iterature Patio 8c MU Mall M ondays & Thursdays, 10-2 ROCKY POINT& SANCARLOS PithayaBar «GranadaDel Mar 4,5 or 7Nightsaslowass19Quad •S tu d en t Publications in the M atthews C enter B asem ent M E X IC O TOURS 1-800-759-7810 •Your Favorite Bookstore Expose Yourself, (and your friends, if you want.) R x t r a it s win be taking group shots | for the Sun Devil Spark yearbook. If you got excited about Sun Devil football this year, wait until you see the 1996-97 Sun Devil Spark, It's cheap, and w ell make you famous, IkjSmtU Stack ■ ' • ■ @965-6881 fo r details @ 8 3 9 -3 70 9 fo r an appointm ent Only $44.94 delivered a small price to pay for a piece of history. call u s o r s t u d io call us @9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 or visit http://news.vpsa.asu.edu f Page 11 Monday, February 17,1997 S t a t e P ress P E O P L E LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kevin Bacon isn’t only an actor. He’s also a musician. “It’s like when (basketball star) Michael Jordan plays baseball,” Bacon told the Daily News o f Los Angeles. “Why 1 'shouldn’t he be allowed to play baseball? Performance is performance.” The actor with film credits including Apollo 13 and Sleepers teams up with his brother, Emmy-winning com­ poser Michael Bacon, as the Bacon Brothers. They have a gig Monday at the Troubador, a legendary West Hollywood rock VenueBacon adm itted h e ’s no virtuoso, saying “I ’m a mediocre guitarist at best.” The Bacon Brothers began three years ago at a friend’s bar in Philadelphia and now do regular gigs. “It kind of took on a life of its own,” Bacon said. NEWBURY PARK, Calif. (AP) — Carroll O’Connor is living out his late son’s dream of refurbishing classic cars. O’Connor, who played Archie Bunker and later a small­ town Southern sheriff on In the Heat o f the Night, now owns Carroll O’Connor’s Classics, a car restoration business. ’ “My son and I were always interested in classic cars, and we were going to do this somewhere before he died two years ago,” O’Connor said. “Then I said, ‘I think Hugh would like me to go on with this thing.”’ Hugh O’Connor, despondent over marital and drag prob­ lems, shot himself in March 1995 at age 32. The 72-year-old O’Connor opened his shop in April. “1 don’t know as much about this as my son, but I-think he’d like me to do it and he’d get a big kick out of this place.” O ’Connor said. NEW YORK (AP) — Norm Macdonald talks tough as the caustic comedy news anchorman on Saturday Night Live. He hopes it doesn’t give people the wrong idea. “People think I’m going to be arrogant or mean because some of the jokes are a little hard,” Macdonald says in the, Feb. 22 TV Guide. “I’m not intimidating; I’m intimidated by everyone. The gangly cotnic has no immediate desire to join fel­ low Saturday Night Live cast Members who’ve gone on to make movies. “I would love to stay at SNL forever,” he said. “But you can’t stay in the same place. People think you’re a loser. Whatever I’ll do will be worse than what I’m doing now, so I’m trying to really enjoy myself here. Because I know this is the funniest stuff I’ll ever do.” NEW YORK (AP) — As Walker, Texas Ranger, Chuck Norris doesn’t start fights; he finishes them. “Walker is a man who doesn’t advocate violence, but he can deal with it,” Norris says in the Feb. 22 TV Guide. “Everyone wants to be able to do th at... and in Walker, the bad guys who create the violence endup in prison.” The 4-year-old show is such a success that CBS gave the go-ahead to a Walker spinoff, Sons o f Thunder, slated for next fall. Norris’ series is now a family affair. Younger brother Aaron helps produce the show. Both of Norris’ sons and his fiancee work on the show too. “Aaron took all that load off me, the pressure of worry­ ing about the editing and writing,” Norris said. F ren ch m a n n ears e n d o f p e r ilo u s r o u n d -th e w o r ld y a c h t race By J oseph Schuman Associated Press LES SABLES D’OLONNE, France — With one sailor missing and three more res­ cued from icy Antarctic seas, a round-theworld yacht race neared its end Sunday with organizers looking for ways to make the regatta safer. C hristophe A uguin, a 38-year-old Frenchman 1,500 miles ahead of his near­ est competitor, was expected to step ashore Monday morning for the first time in 3 1/2 months. If Auguin arrives as expected —* 106 days-and 26,500 miles after he left Les Sables — he would best the current record for a solo round-the-world trip by three days. The regatta’s rules don’t allow the sailors to stop. W hile French news m edia hailed Tito La Auguin as a hero Sunday, boat designers and sailors discussed how to avoid the con­ ditions that left three competitors stranded thousands of miles from land — and led a fourth to disappear. Canadian Gerry Roufs, one of 16 initial competitors in the third Vendee Globe race — held every four years -— last made Con­ tact Jan. 7. The Chilean air force reported, and then denied, making brief radio contact with him a week later. A satellite search for his boat was unsuccessful. Three other Vendee sailors had to be rescued in the Antarctic Ocean ■ — one by a fellow com petitor and two by the Australian navy. Tony Bullimorc, a 57year-old Briton, waited four days in the cabin of his capsized yacht before rescuers could reach him. Six others dropped out of the race for different reasons, leaving only six competi­ tors known to be making their way toward Les Sables. The head of the British Whitebread roundthe-world race, Ian Bailey-Willmont, has blamed the Vendee organizers for the mishaps and accused them of being too lax in the structural requirements of competing boats. Vendee organizers aren’t accepting the Criticism. They insist they are optimistic about Roufs, saying his communications equipment may have failed and that he could still be on his way to Les Sables. “It’s not because we’ve had no news for a month that you have to worry,” said Philippe Jeantot, a two-time, winner of round-theworld races and creator of the Vendee. “If his radio broke down eh route, (his arrival) is completely possible,” Jeantot said. “That’s a possibility, but there are oth­ ers. Since we don’t have his position, we can’t search for him;” Jean-Marie Finot, who designed Roufs’ boat and spoke with him by radio during the race, said Roufs’s family has not given up hope. “We’re still dreaming that he’ll make it,” he said. A working group of boat designers and skippers, including Jeantot and Finot, who also designed Auguin’s boat, will meet this spring to discuss better safety for the 2000-2001 race. And Finot has created a six-page ques­ tionnaire for the skippers, asking them for details of their boats and how each part of design and equipment withstood stress and conditions of the Antarctic storms. “You can ’t have absolute security,” Finot said. ‘T o go out in the street is always dangerous. Mount Everest is much more dangerous than the Vendee Globe.” F r ito -L a y C o m p a n y Ever wonder what it takes to becom e the world’s leader in salty snacks? A n s w e r : L eading Edge Inform ation S ystem s (Of course, having 8 out of 10 of America’s favorite brands helps.) W • • • • • h o W e A r e ... 50% share of the $12.1 billion snack chip category Over $5 billion in domestic sales annually 9% volume growth compounded annually $1 billion in sales growth every year 30% global market share in 42 international markets A b o u t th e l/T S T e a m ... Client/server application architectures Sysplex & SP mainframe processing architectures C, C++, MF Cobo! environment Leading-edge Java & Inter/Intranet development environment Industry-leading EDI capabilities Powerful use of OLAP technologies Come and talk to us..* we’ll even spring for the Pepsi and pizza. (By the way, you definitely want to come casual.) Wednesday, February 19, 1997 Memorial Union Building» Room 215 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. C omics; Page 12 Monday, February 17, 1997 Generation HeX ed T r ia ls * T S t a t e P ress By S t a c y H o l m s t e d t By Mike A «Ji* hep! r ib u l a t io n s THE OLD NED IN A CAN TRICK J o c u la r Pa r a b By David C ould le ALU READY J a w Wo F O R IW C O FF T H E KARR By HARk Parisi MarkPaiisi@aol.com ATLANTIC FEATURE C 1997 MASK PARISI t STAR WARS PART/? I <£ \ s TVwfVwh«F happens iriKen le s e J* "O >£ o PlLBERT® By S c o t t Adams w M t ó G É r t& v h & A w m ti REa LlY G a r é s WOOCÔJ 7 2 Z W Home o / í A e ‘K iU ë r 'C n lm * g ^ J ^ în m v ersa ry H W M 1 block East of Mil! Avenue on University B W H H While They Last e e t T h e “B u d W i G ir ls ” B u d S tu f f , M o v ie T ic k e ts & S ä iÄ F k -O.% ¿features L a v in s N o . 2 4 B r u in s q u ell F rieders terrorists B y E d O deven St AtE P ress Led by renegade long-range bombers Eddie House and Jerem y Veal, Bill Frieder’s “T errorists” posed a security threat to Steve Lavin’s troops Saturday afternoon. But the superior fire power and deter­ m ination of the No, 24 UCLA Bruins quelled ASU’s rebellious instincts 92-81 at the University Activity Center before 4.823 fans. “These guys are dangerous, almost like terrorists because they don’t have a lot to lose,” said Lavin, the Bruins first-year coach. “They can play relaxed. They can play loosy-goosy and they’re going to come at you hard.” , House scored a game-high 24 points, but was less than thrilled with the outcome. “I would rather have wins than put any points on the board.” said House, a fresh­ man guard from Union City, Calif, The Sun Devils (10-14, 2-10 in the Pac10) have lost eight of their lastmine games. UCLA improved its record to 15-7, 10-3. Frieder said the Sun Devils gave a solid effort, “We ca n ’t play much better than we played them,” he said. “We just couldn’t defend them in the paint and that was a (joint of emphasis to keep them out of the paint.” D espite ASU’s hard-w ork ethic, UCLA’s superior talent was too much fór Frieder’s squad. “They’re just so strong/’ Frieder said. “They don’t hurt much when they go to the bench: That’s what makes a good team.” UCLA’s good performance led to bal­ anced scoring. Five B ruins scored in double figures. Senior point guard, Cameron Dollar said the Bruins performed well on the road. “1 think we were able to get some pretty easy shots,” said Dollar, who finished with 19 points, four assists, three steals and three rebounds. “Anytime you can come into somebody else’s house and get a ‘W’ you know you’ve got to be pleased.” The Bruins shot 54 percent from the field (37 of 69) and held ASU to 43 per­ cent shooting. The Sun Devils trailed 45-38 at the half. But ASU ju n io r guard Jerem y Veal scored 13 of his 19 points in the second half and brought the Sun Devils within six, 6862, after hitting two free throws with 7:43 remaining in the game. Both teams then exchanged baskets, but sharpshooter Toby B ailey sank a three-pointer and gave UCLA a 73-64 lead, and triggered a 12-4 run that gave UCLA a commanding 82-66 lead with 2:32 remaining. Frieder said ASU just couldn’t contain the talented Bruins down the stretch. “They’re just so good around the glass,” he said. “That "was a real key to the game. When we stayed with people they were too! good one-on-one and whoever we doubled off of went inside and hurt us.” Notes ASU se n io r fo rw a rd R o d g er Farrington had three blocks against the Bruins. He now has 103 blocks this Sea­ son. He needs 12 blocks to tie ex-Sun Devil Mario Bennett’s Pac-10 record of 115 blocks in a season. ASU sophom ore forw ard M ichael Batiste grabbed a season-high 11 rebounds as well as netting 16 points. •/ L o ri C ain/S tate P ress UCLA cen te r Jelani McCoy attem pts a layup a s ASU sophom ore Michael B atiste (24) closely d efen d s him in UCLA’s 92-81 victory on Saturday. UCLA’s Henderson showcases basketball IQ. versus ASU B y E d O deven S tate P ress L o ri C ain/S tate P ress UCLA junior forward J.R. H enderson (52) battles for position with S un Devil R odger Farrington Saturday a t th e UAC. S B aseball No. 8 ASU sw eep s Salukis. un Two days after dem oralizing 14,474 U ofA W ildcat fanatics in Tucson, UCLA junior J.R. Henderson was at it again — this time in Tempe. Henderson delivered the game-win­ ning jump hook shot with 18.4 see* onds left, to give the Bruins a 66-64 upset victory Thursday evening over No. 10 Arizona On S aturday afternoon, Henderson’s heroics were showcased at the University Activity Center. He fin ish ed with 19 points, eight rebounds, three assists, two blocks and four steals to help the Bruins defeat ASU 92-81. UCLA coach Steve Lavin praised Henderson’s peformaoce. “H e’s a fundam ental m achine,” Lavin said. “He really understands the game. J.R. is 6-9 and he can play all D e v il W o m e n ' s T e n n is U five positions. What I talk about him a Jot is he has the highest basketball I.Q. of any guy I’ve ever been around.” Defensively, Henderson was a big nuisance for the Sun Devils. His inyour-face approach helped limit the productivity of ASU forwards Michael Batiste and Urit Kelly, who combined to m ake only 8 o f 23 field-goal attempts. That was exactly what Lavin wanted. “When we attack on defense that usually generates or jump starts our offense at the other end,” he said. “I think that gets the heart fired up, the blood pum ping (and) gets the adrenaline flowing.” Despite Lavin’s concerns of a pos­ sible let-down following the dramatic victory over UofA, Henderson and his team m ates did not disappoint their coach, “I ’m really proud o f our guys, pdate especially coming off of an emotional win over Arizona,” he said. “(It was) hard fought, exhausting, down to the last second of the game.” Henderson said that defensive pres­ sure was a key for the Bruins . “We just did that to slow the team up and gamble a little bit,” he said. “I think we are playing real good basket­ ball right now. We just got to keep it up and keep playing hard, keep play­ ing team ball.” L avin said: “J thought the key down the stretch was our ability to execute in our half-court offense and we were able to get the ball down low in what we call our Red Zone offense. Kind of like close to the end zone, we get it close to the basket.” The inside game was a big part of Henderson’s solid play. He scored six of his eight field goals from inside the painted area. S t a t e P ress Monday, February 17,1996 Page 14 Softball team w ins four in C lassic ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY A ID S AW A REN ESS J E B y J o s h D e F a m iq S ta te P ress The ASU softball team was both gracious and stingy to its guests when they hosted the Coca-Cola Classic Tournament over the weekend. The Sun Devils (4-2) won four of the six games they played, but were victimized by last-inning rallies in both of their losses. ASU started its tournament Thursday night with a Convinc­ ing 7-1 victory over Illinois State. Freshman Chris Gill provid­ ed the offense, going 2-for-3 and driving in three runs. Senior Roxanne Tsosie pitched six strong innings to notch die victory. Kathy Ponce tossed the. seventh to notch her first save. With four games in the next two nights, the Sun Devils looked to continue their winning ways on Friday night. The team took both contests Friday, downing UNLV 7-6 in eight innings in the first game, then knocking off Purdue 7-4 in the second. Carrie Breedlove earned the victory against UNLV, while Carrie James picked up the win against the Boilermakers. Ponce notched her second save in the Purdue game. The good fortune would not last for the Sun Devils. Breedlove again took the mound in the first game, this time against the University of Texas. By the time Ponce replaced her, it was still the first and the Longhorns had built a 5-0 lead. “I just really believe our defense let her down,” Breedlove’s catcher. Carla Fortune said. “1 think that’s what hurt her the most. We fell apart on her, and it’s hard for a pitcher if you can’t trust your defense.” The Sun Devils responded in the fourth. With runners on second and third and two out, the Longhorns walked Lisa Jim Poulin/State Press Dacquisto to load the bases for Raja Woods. Woods responded Freshm an Chris Gill is hit o n th e leg by a b e rr a n t pitch from with a bases-clearing triple to give ASU a 7-5 lead. U M ass p itc h e r D an ielle H e n d e rs o n in th e firs t in n in g of “I wasn’t really offended (that they Considered me the lesser Sunday’s gam e. ASU b eat th e Minutewomen 14-2. hitter),” Woods said of Dacquisto's walk. “I just figured that if ing against UMass. Already up 1-0, ASU sent 17 batters up to they were going to walk her. than I would have to get the hit.” Texas answered, scoring four more runs, including three in the plate and scored 12 runs to break the game wide open. Breedlove bounced back from her outing on Saturday night, the final frame, to notch a 9-7 win. retiring die first nine batters she faced. Breedlove (2-0) finished • James (1-1). who relieved Ponce in the seventh, took the loss. The heartbreak did not stop there for ASU. Before the Texas with a three hitter and a 14-2 victory. The team was disappointed by the two close losses, but loss had time to sink in, ASU was on the field again, battling gained a lot of insight on where the team was headed for the Santa Barbara. Tsosie (1-1) was on the mound — and for the first five rest of the season. “Every game is a must win,” captain Tammy Lohman said. innings was unhittable — retiring 13 hitters in a row at one “But I think that after the first game (against Illinois St.), we point. She took a 4-0 lead into the sixth when everything came just wanted to See what we had. We- could have had those apart. She gave up three runs in the sixth, then two more when games (Saturday) night, but those things happen.” “Obviously, there are a few tilings we need to work on,” UCSB’s Sarah Davies knocked one over the left field wall to Wells said. ‘‘Our pitchers have to keep the ball in the park. But win the game, 5-4. “It was tough,” head coach Linda Wells said. “We were up f Was impressed with thè new playcrs(Woods and Gill).” ASU Will continue ite season with another tournament. The by one and with one swing of the bat we lost We had to be Arizona State Classic will be held next weekend at the Sun able to bounce back from that.” , .* The Sun Devils bounced back in a big way the next mom- Devil Club Stadium. T e n n is te a m ta k e s t w o t o u g h tr iu m p h s said , “We played well especially when we needed to. They competed The ASU wom en’s tennis team really well. It was a tough match, a ro u te d tw o m ore S o u th ern good match to win.” Saturday was better for the Sun California schools this past weekend as it b eat U C LA 5-4 F riday and Devils as all of their singles Wins USC 6-3 Saturday. were in straight Sets, Cseresnyes was The wins improved ASU’s record not able to play so each p layer to 5-1,3-1 Pac-10 South. stepped up a seed. Friday afternoon the Sun Devils No. 1-seed Lansdorp easily beat battled in their singles matches. Three U S C ’s N icole L ondon 6-2, 6-4. of their four singles Second-seed Propstra w ins w ent to three beat Ditta Huber 7-5, eekend 6-1. A S U ’s num ber sets. The Devils’ topseeded player Reka four and five players ound p Cseresnyes knocked also won. M oll beat off No. 7-ranked Kati Eva Jimenez 6-2, 6-4, Kocsis 7-6. 2-6, 6-0. Second seed and Giardino controlled her match Stephanie Lansdorp beat Elizabeth against Veronika Safarova Winning Schm idt 4-6, 3-6, 6-3. Freshm an 6-1, 6-4. Kerry G iardino beat, B randi In doubles action, Lansdorp and Freudenberg 3-6. 6-4, 6-3,■'::. Propstra easily beat Huber and Pam Only Anna Moll dominated in her Trump 8-0, and Nash and Pratt beat match against Katia Roubanova win­ Bakalarova and Safarova 8-4. The ning in straight sets 6-4,6-3. team o f Moll and Giardino lost to By beating Kocsis, C seresnyes London and Jimenez 8-4. remains undefeated in singles so far ‘‘It was a great effort by our kids,” this season.* Mclnerney said. “I think we competed “I think we competed real well,” real well. Not having Reka everybody head coach Sheila Mclnerney said. else stepped up, which I think is real­ “The singles were really good, but ly, really important. (In doubles) We our doubles needs work though, no had to mix and match, but the kids did a good job.” question.” In her doubles match Cseresnyes Swimming and Diving went down with a twisted ankle and The No. 10 ASU m en’s sw im ­ Kocsis and Cooper won by default. ming team won back-to-back meets Giardino and Torey Pratt also lost last weekend over BYU and archri­ th e ir doubles m atch 8-4 to val UofA. Freudenberg and Kelly Rudolph. The Sun Devils captured a 184-111 Only the team of Lansdorp and victory over visiting BYU Friday at Katy Propstra won in a tough match the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center in against Schmidt and Roubanova 9-7. the team’s final home meet this season “D oubles was great,” Propstra by winning 11 of 16 events. B y L o r i H aro St a t e P ress W R D Sun Devil seniors Mike Melley, Felipe Delgado and Nelson Vargas all won events, Melley placed first in the 500 and 1650-yard freestyle events. Delgado anchored ASU’s Winning 200 medley race. Vargas was a winner in the 200 backstroke. ASU sophom pre Sprinter Francisco Sanchez finished first in the 50 freestyle with a pool record 19.84 seconds . He broke his own record (20.02), which was set seven days before. ASU beat the host Wildcats . 141102 on Saturday in Tucson. In w om en’s sw im m ing, the W ildcats defeated ASU 188-112 Saturday in Tucson. UofA Won 12 of the 16 women’s events. ASU freshman Ann-Kristin R iiser placed first in the 100 and 200 breastroke. ASU freshman Carolyn Adel won the 400 individual medley and sopho­ more Katrina Pfeuffer placed first in the 1-meter diving competition. — Ed Odeven Women’s Hoops The ASU w om en’s bask etb all team ’s woes co n tin u ed over the weekend as it lost two Pac-10 games on the road. On Friday the Sun Devils lost 7763 to USC (16-5, 10-2 Pac-10). Sunday ASU could not repeat its early season heroics versus UCLA (11-11, 5-8) as they fell 91-61. The Bruins are the only Conference team to lose to ASU (7-15, 1-11) this season. Men’s Tennis The ASU men’s tennis team (4-3, 0-2) lost to USC and UCLA over Turn to W eekend, page 16. I d G ra n d F in a l e EVENTS i' SA TURDAY MONDAY FE BRU ARY 15 FE BRU ARY 17 AIDS Memorial Quilt Dedication Candlelight Vigil & March 1 pm, MU Programming Lounge 5 pm, Palo Verde Complex Friendship in the Age of AIDS 8 pm. MU Ventana Room E xpress” Pager Activation Unlimited Pages 1 Year Airtime! $8999 Pager Activation Unlimited Pages 2 Years Airtime! $ 1 1 9 9 9 Pager Activation Unlimited Pages 3 Years Airtime! $13999 1-800-760-PAGE Ec o n o Page OF CALIFORNIA U N L IM IT E D A R IZ O N A P A G IN G ! PHOENIX 3736 E. Indian School Rd. (6 0 2 ) 4 6 8 -3 5 3 3 . Look F or, rio New, Locations' Coming Soon! All other Motorola models available-Ad applies to new purchases only. Customer pays all applicable sales taxes. S t a t e P ress Page_15 Monday, February 17, 1996 G ym nasts show depth vs. T ’birds B y R a n d y J on es State P ress In the past, depth has been a sore spot for the No. 4-ranked ASU women’s gymnastics team. If the Sun Devils’ 196.675-190.35 thrashing of Southern Utah Friday night is any indication — the times they are a changing. ASU (5-1,3-1 Pac-10), cruised passed the Thunderbirds (26) with ease, despite not having two of its top performers, sophomore Lisa Vincijanovic and junior Kim Keever, both of whom are nursing ankle injuries. Head coach John Spini was quick to praise the way his team responded to the adversity. “All of the freshmen stepped up,” Spini said of the four newest Sun Devils. “They have to do the job. But what I think was the highlight of the meet was when Carie (Courtney) and Wendy (EUsbeny) hitting on all four events. Those two did a great job in the all-around.” • . Ellsberry (39.075) and Courtney (38.725) both set career-highs in the all-around, while the freshmen all scored high in leading the Sun Devils to their fifth straight victory. Leading the way for the freshmen was Elizabeth McNabb, earning her third consecutive 9.95 on the floor exercise. Also strong was Michelle Hess who earned a 9.75 on vault, Amy Shelton with two 9.9s (vault and bars) and a 9.825 on floor and Elizabeth Reid, who scored a 9.925 on floor, 9.9 on beam and a 9.775 on bars. Junior Meagan Wright said the team is far superior, depthwise, then any she has been a part of. “This team is way deeper,” she said. “We have confi­ dence in everybody. Lisa and Kim really mean a lot to our :•writefear-. 3g„* i . . team. And even though they are out (now) we have people who can step up.” Wright also stepped it up a notch. She scored a 39.55 in the all-around and once again brought down the house with her floor routine. With the crowd screaming “Ten! Ten!” the judges smiled and proceeded to grant their wish, giving ASU its second perfect score of the year, Vincijanovic got the score two weeks ago on the balance beam, and only the 10th in school history. Her teammates said the score was long overdue. “(The score) was Well deserved,” Shelton said. “She’s got a routine just full of difficulty. She plays to the crowd with it. (The routine) is a lot of fun.” During the meet, the last team-score record left standing by the Sun Devils two weeks ago was soundly defeated. ASU’s uneven bars score of 49.2 easily outdistanced the previous high o f48.875. “Bars, When we are clicking, we are really tough there,” Spini said. “We are tough in every event. But I’ve got to give (assistant coach) Kyle Jenne so much credit. Not only spotting and keeping them safe, but just for what he does technically with these kids.” . When asked if one last-record breaking performance — a 198, a score only achieved once in NCAA history, by Alabama in 1996 —- was possible, Wright smiled. “198? We’d have to be perfect to get that,” she said of the score. “Or at least dose to it. “But we could do it,” she said after a pause. That chance could come 7:30 Friday night when the California Golden Bears visit the University Activity Center for the first of two meets for ASU that weekend. The Sun Devils also travel to Nebraska for a quad meet on Sunday at noon. E rik G u zow ski/S tatoP ress ASU gym nast Meagan Wright flies through th e air during her perfect 10 floor exercise routine on Friday. Wrestlers pm N o . 8 b a se b a ll te a m s w e e p h a p le ss S a lu k is N o. 13 /Dogs B y P ercy E d n a l in o J r . S tate P ress ‘ W m y -; I P ress ; . The ASU wrestling te*al will coast into its showdown with top-ranked Oklahoma State right where it wants t o b e - ~ o a a win­ ning streak. ■ No. 10 ASU (13-4) bounced back from its | loss to Iowa to beat tire 13th-ranked Bulldogs of Fresno State 20*13 Tire win was particularly im pressive because it came on the road. "It was a good win on the road,” head coach Lee Roy Smith said. “And against h good are on therighlfrack, especially as we look .-forward toward' state.”« The Sun Devils started the night effw itb a loss, as freshman Michael Kawamura (5-9) fall to Fresno State’s Sean Kim (13-4) 6-2. Junior Shawn IBsedli l ning ft» ASU, defeating | 2 to at din«. C*-.“**' The next two matches featured ranked Bulldog wrestlers, No, 3 Y« k| Washington (24-3) downed ASU’s Joey Heckel, 14-6, to ; seme a four-point decision for : For Heckel, it was the second o f three consapariwtfM ^hesia which be face* a tnp- three opphaent. When ^ e s a o State’s Brendan Buckley defeated Torey Brown (1-2) ffcrBsi&Ofs All doubt as to when the ASU baseball team’s hitting would finally click ended Sunday when the Sun Devils obliterated Southern Illinois with a 25-9 win at Packard Stadium. ASU racked up a season-high 24 hits against the Salukis with several players setting season highs in RBI and home runs. Now if only the team could find a solid third starter in its rotation. ASU (9-5) swept the three-game series against the Salukis (3-0) with pitcher Ryan Mills whiffing 17 batters and toss­ ing a com plete-gam e 9-0 shutout on Friday, and the Sun Devils posting a 10-4 win on Saturday. Mills’ 17 strikeouts set a career-high for the sophomore lefthander. ASU head coach Pat Murphy said that while Mills’ effort on Friday and ASU’s hitting on Sunday were exceptional, pitching is still an area that needs to improve. With ASU commanding a 9-2 lead going into the fourth, starter Jason Verdugo was pulled in favor of Ben Byrd after allowing the Salukis to rally with hits from Matt Dettman and Bret Horace. Verdugo gave up five runs on six hits, walked two and struck out two. “Jason’s way better than he showed today,” Murphy said. “It’s very easy to get off your focus when you’re up 9 t2. He knows better and he’s really looking for great challenges. I think he just lost his focus a little bit. Hopefully, h e’ll learn from it.” Pitching also was a problem for the Salukis. Southern Illinois utilized six pitchers against the Sun Devils, As a unit, the Salukis were ineffective, striking out four and walking 11. “I don’t know if they ran out of pitch­ ing, or if we ju s t cleaned up our act around the plate,” ASU third baseman Andrew Bcinbrink said. ASU scored seven runs in the seventh, the most the Sun Devils had produced in a single inning this season. The Sun Devils gelled offensively with Beinbrink, Dan McKinley, and Willie Bloomquist picking up multiple hits. McKinley hit his fifth home run of the season with a two-run shot to left-center field in the eighth. He ended the night going 4-for-5 with three RBI and five runs scored. Beinbrink extended his hitting streak to eight games and picked up six RBI with four runs scored. He went 2-for-3 .With a triple in the second and knocked out a three-nin home run to left field in the fifth. “That was the turning point,” Murphy said. “He went up there looking for that pitch and did something with it. That’s a sign o f a good player, to go up there with a plan and execute the plan.” Beinbrink’s plan came with a bit of help from Murphy. Before Beinbrink stepped up to bat in the fifth, Murphy H ayden's Ferry Review T & and TIK E i i i; s i> \ V N i ci h i it i: \ i> i N ( i s i ; 11 i 1 : s 1 a tr n r 644-1201 $9 • • ONLY 3 MILES FROM ASU • • • • • N I T E D r V 90 DAYS M0 PAYMENT*" 90 DAYS NO INTEREST“ * NO ANNUAL FEE LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS a l AMERICAN I P ^ T , T EXPRESS W ITH COUPON Lubricate your vehicle & chassis Drain old o il Add up to 5 qts. o f new oil Install a new o il filte r Includes a 17 pt. inspection D iesel extra Most cars and light trucks Call fo r appointm ent > C hangingo« for over 125 years. - Our Tire & Service Warranties Are Honored A t Over 8,000 Affiliated Dealers Nationwide l/A 88 N ot to be combined wRh another offer on same product/service or used to reduce outstanding d e bt Plus $1.75 Environmental Fee. 'C O A S T W t f U LUBE • OIL • FILTER A U T O M O T I V E 2 0 3 3 W. UNIVERSITY, MESA DOBSON S UNIVERSITY AÌ gave th e 6 -fo o t-3 sophom ore som e advice. “He said, ‘Get up on the dish, crowd the plate and look for a fast ball. Get som ething you can pull and yank it down the line. Just drill it as hard as you can ,’” B einbrink said. “I got a good pitch to hit, got extended, and the ball went out of the park”’ Beinbrink wasn’t the only Sun Devil to hit a home run. Bloomquist stroked a three-run home run in the second and knocked in a double in the eighth. ■ “1 knew I’d get a shot, an inning here and an inning there,” Bloomquist said. “And when I did, I’d have to do the best I could and hope that I could get a lot more (playing time).” Bloomquist’s performance Sunday may just be the think that gets him more playing time. The freshman shortstop went 4-for-7 with seven RBI. Bloomquist’s seven RBI are a singlegame team high. Horace led Southern Illinois by going 3-for-4 with two RBI and a solo home fun in the fifth. Teammate Joe Schley went 2for-4 with two runs scored and two RBI. Jeff Cermak (1-0) was credited with the win for the Sun Devils, while Donnie Chester (0-1) was handed the loss for the Salukis. Cermak, who replaced Byrd in the fifth, gave up two runs and scattered three hits. Chester was shelled for seven runs on six hits, walking three and strik­ ing out one. J “T COMPUTERIZED WHEEL BALANCE & 4 TIRE ROTATION 19 8 8 W ITH COUPON 1Check Inflation On A ll Tires Computerized Balance On 4 Tires Four Tire Rotation M ost Cars & Light Trucks • C all fo r appointm ent Not to be combined wNh another o ile r on same productfseretoe « used to reduce outstanding debt Page 16 Monday, February 17, 1996 S tate P ress N o. 8 Ice D evils trounce Trojans B y M att P aulson S tate P ress Sophom ore J a s o n P earce attem p ts a backhand sh o t ag a in st USC during the Ice Devils’ 10-0 shellacking of th e Trojans Saturday. In its final regular season home games, the No. 8ranked ASU Ice Devils looked more like Stanley Cup Champions than a Division I college club team when they thoroughly destroyed the visiting Division II USC Trojans twice, 10-0 and 12-2. Thé wins improved the lee Devils record to 18-8-1 and should help their chances for hosting a play-off game. The top-six ranked teams host games in the postseason. In the two games, all 27 Ice Devils were able to get some playing time. Head coach Gene Hammett was impressed by his team’s performance, but knows the real challenge of the season is only now beginning. “We used everybody on our roster,” Hammett said. “(They w ere) tw o good w ins for us. Good games for our seniors, they all played well. (But) now it gets serious.” Sunday’s game was Senior Night for ASU. Rightwing Stefan Richardson, one of three seniors hon­ ored before the game, saved his best game for the end. Richardson Set a career mark for points scored in a game with six on five assists and one goal. Richardson was called for high-sticking, a two- minute penalty, with 1:36 remaining in the game and hinted that getting the penalty was a little bit of a damper on his otherwise spectacular game. “I d o n ’t think I ’ve ever had a six goal game before,” Richardson em phatically said. “This isn’t how I wanted to go out, though. I get in for the final shift of my final home game and the ref calls me for high-sticking.” Senior forward Troy Prosser also put in a career performance for the Ice Devils. He led the team with four goals and added one assist. Twelve different players posted points on the evening for ASU. Goaltender Ross Steinberg (4-2), another senior honored, saved 23 of 25 shots. In front of 1,324 fans on Saturday, the Ice Devils put on another hpekey clinic. Junior centers Mark Parris and Steve Hammett and sophomore goaltender Greg Powers were the heroes this contest. Powers scored three-goals for his second hat trick in three weeks and im proved his team-leading goals mark to 27. Hammett added four points and a goal. He now lead s the team in p o in ts w ith 48 (20 g o als, 28 assists). Powers (12-6-1) blocked all 16 shots on goal and posted his second shutout of the year. Wrestling W eek en d C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 5 . C o n t i n u e d from p a g e 14. the weekend. coach at Oklahoma State since 1995, was Against the Trojans, top seed Sergio hired to be the linebackers coach at ASlh Elias defeated George Bastl, 6-4, 1-6,6-4 S ub Devil, head coach and No. 6 seed Tim Hammond defeated announced Friday. Scott Willinski 3-6,7-6 (7-3), 6-2. Barr replaces ex-linebacker coach The lone winners against the Bruins Lyle Setencich, who deputed from ASU were No. S seed Hammond 2-6, 7-5, 6-1 last week to become the defensive coorover Vince AUegre and No. 6 seed Carey dinator at California. He began his coachBiorkman 7-6,4-6,6-2over Jason Cook. ing career in 1969 with Oklahoma. New football assistant Before coaching at Oklahoma State, Johnny Barr, who has been the defen- B arr spent six season at O klahom a sive coordinator and inside linebackers (1989-1994). Micela (7-16) in that match to give Fresno State (12-5) its final three points. The match also marked the final road meet of the year for the Sun Devils. They W ill take on the Cowboys next Sunday at the University Activity Center in their final match of the regular season. “We’re going to have to even raise the expectation levels even higher, (against Oklahoma State) but that is why we have them on our schedule.” After that, ASU will compete in (he Pac-10 championships, held Mar. 2-3 at the UAC. had a 10-3 lead and control of the match. But ASU responded in typical fashion, dom inating the m iddle weight classes. Michael Douglas (14-17) notched the first of five consecutive wins, scoring an 8-4 deci­ sion victory over Gary Quintana (18-10) to narrow the gap to 10-6. Matt Suter (20-10), Casey Strand (31-2), Aaron Simpson (29-4), and Danny Faqir (13-6) took the next four matches for the Sun Devils, increasing their lead to 20-10 and clinching the match before the final bout was even wrestled. Darin Preisendorf (18-7) defeated Joe C l a s s if ie d s N otice to o u r readers: Before, responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau, at £64-1721. ANNOUNCEMENTS COMPUTERS APARTMENTS A ID S A W A R EN ESS W eekToday: Friendship in the Age o f A ID S - 8pm V entana Room , M U. N a tio n a lly ac­ c la im ed p rogram fo cu sin g on the experiences o f two fraternity b ro th e rs a fte r le a rn in g one is HIV positive. BU Y A h e art $0.50 W rite nam es o f those you've lo s t to H IV / A ID S or to recognize those living with HIV/AIDS or w rite m essages re la tin g to H IV /A ID S H ayden Law n 11lpm until Mom Feb, 17th. 1 B ED R O O M A PT. c lo se to cam pus near M ill Ave. Ready asap. Call 968-5255 A ID S A W A R EN ESS W eekToday: C andlelight V igil and March - Spin - Palo Verde Com­ plex. R em arks By com m unity le a d ers activ e in the fig h t to end the AIDS epidem ic, and a march around the ASU campus. Classifieds WORK! TRAVEL NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tio n vehicle. Som e w ork OK. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. PROFESSIONAL, SINGLE parent seeking apt/house to share with re­ spo n sib le in d iv id u a l. P refer M esa/T em pe area. N eed by. March 1. Call 965-5013, days. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Prescott, Arizona Sprihqûm ak<) 7 . APARTMENTS WE NEED A FEW TOP COUNSELORS! 1997 Season: 6/1 to 8/3 ROCKY POINT t SAN CARLOS WnwBr* Gram* Del Mar 4,5a 7NighS «low ss‘149Cmid We will be interviewing on campus ell day Fab. 20th. -800-759-7810 1 & 2 B e dro om A p a rtm e n ts Immediate Move-In Apache Terrace A pts. 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 Point EL DIABLO APTS, NE corner o f A pache & M cCU nlock, Tempe quiet luxury living Ibd $490, 2bd $570-$62b. 9210699 AUTOMOBILES 4B D 2BA house exc. cond. new paint, c arp et, etc.; O s­ bourne & S co tt. Rd. $ 1100/mo. Avail- im m ed. Call 437-1048. 5BD R HOU SE, pool, garage, w /d, d ishw asher, a / c , . etc. B r o a d w a y /M e C l i n t . $1,300/mo. 437-1048. 587-0345 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2 BD/2BA 1 block from ASU. Credit check and ref. C all 8333851 or 831^9024. PAPAGO PARK Village, a rare hard to find 3bdr/2b w /loft. Newer carpet & paint, refridg, w ash/dry. A v a il' now $ 1190. 946-7088. 2 BOR/2 B, R efrig, D ishwash­ er, pool, spa, gym, avail now, $590.946-7088. 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 _ Exceptional Summer Opportunity W aterfront JobsSwimming / Sailing/ Waterskiing Prestigious boys & girls sum m er sports camps in Mass. High salary, room & board, : travel allowance. Men call Camp W inadu Camp Wayne NERA SportsORIENTEDCOUNSELORSPECIALIST FORAU. uno /Watsi SPORTS. BKXUDINC TENNIS. CAMPING, f UMBINE, RCPES MOUNTAIN BIKES. ROCKETRY ROUERHOCKEY. SAILVi. WATHS-fl NS AU. Campus Interview March 26. 1-800737-9296 8 00-494-6238, HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL CASH TO D A Y !!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. C la s s ifie d s 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 Find it FAST in the Classifieds WALK TO ASU 4bd 2ba pool $ 1250: 3bd 2ba $900. O thers available also. Call 894-0288, W omen call Camp Danbee 8 00-392-3752, Work at the Airport!! Apply by Phone 1 -8 0 0 -5 5 5 -5 7 1 8 Ext. # 4 0 0 3 CaN or write Mark for info: 933 Friendly Pines Rd., Prescott 86303 (602) 255-0550 or email: fp c d a m u g .o rg PHONE SURVEYORS Need people to É . do telephone surveys. We train. SCOTTSDALE PRINCESS \ \ A fcfertH s*’« I f o r g e e t itsl a ' 'ft' o/tsed ttypôtütàtVMb' > $ Host M arriott Services ! P a rt-tim e e v e n in g p o s itio n . 6 p m -1 2 m id n ig h t s h ift. - ‘ Nation's leading operator o f food, C to e e tg i*e w ts , p ro v id e tu o iq u v c o u n try /w e s tc m fla v o r . M u s t b e e s tr c m c ly o u tg o io g a n d a b le lo feam É lC e*¡p$u beverage, & retail concessions ||M Reserve your room now for Spring Break TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Pick up app. and schedule interviews in Rm C-222 (Student Employment) o f the Student Servioes Bldg. MEXICO TOURS A PR IL 1 to July 31 Baseline/H ard y 2/1, $ 6 2 2 .3 8 /m o. $250 ref. dep. C all Dana 7559114 HOMES FOR RENT jUNìOCS4B C u s to m e r s e rv ic e e x p re q , *- t tttN fc ^t o Httmtm turn I i liiM M i i i i i i l l *r 170 Airports, Travel Plazas and tourist attractions world wide.” le x j> A p p lic a tio n » a c c e p te d a m i in te r v ie w s c o n d u c te d 5, / / » , servicing the traveling public at over Ìg&\ ¿"'/s '*-* o r i t a & l f t t h e I # H a c ie n d a ï o t a m l M o w **' 0m § EOE ................... g k n « to H u m a n R e so u rce s« «rurwH................... Drug Free/ M /F/V/D EEO Employer I Page 17 Monday, February 17,1997 S t a t e P ress RENTAL SHARING RENTAL SHARING M /F SHARE house 3bd 2ba priv. spa cbm. pool 2 car porch Scott; $350/mo Guy 951 -3337 RMMT. WANTED own bd, ba & door. 2bjks from ASU. $350 + util. Silly people only! 9680461 PROFESSIONAL, SINGLE parent seeking apt/house to share with re­ spo n sib le in d iv id u al. P refer M esa/Tem pe area. N eed by March l Call 965-5013. days! 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Gather consumer opinions and use your peo­ ple and clerical skills at our Scottsdale phone room. Flexible evening shifts. Lots of variety. Flexible part time. Looks great on a resume. Start at $6/hr, or . higher if exp. Be part of an industry that Makes Opinions Count. Call Judy at 874-2714 at Focus Market Research. Earn $ 6.5 0 - $ 8 .0 0 per Hour Working With Adolescents Incentives: Tuition Reim bursem ent, Paid Tim e Off, A dvancem ent Potential, 6 Month Raises, Paid Training, Full Benefits Package SubmitAppHattons To: DBC Residential Services 2 405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 Camelbocklnn NAME A Star for someone it is the number One gift in America. $33 S tar re g istra tio n . 1-800383-6928 U SED SU PER N intendo for sale. R uns good; Includes: tw o c o n tro lle rs, S oper M ario World, Super Street Fighter II & Baseball sim ulator 2000. $60 obo. C all 829-1501, ask fo r Wayne.- HELP W ANTEDGENERAL u AUTOMOBILES ^ '88 MUSTANG, 2 dr hb, 5 spd, pw r locks, am /fm . cass, moon roof, maroon. $2600 491-9336 1990 TOYOTA Tercel 2-dr dix. G reat tra n s. A uto, p /s, .à/c am/fm, tinted. M int corid, low milage, $5000.789-9523. 1997 DODGE DAKOTA pick­ up. $289/mo. Call 926-4000 96 N ISSA N 200 SX SE, 5sp, a /c , m oonroof, spoiler. $12,988 834-0220 96 N ISSA N M AX IM A 4dr sports car, ' GXEv loaded. $18,995.834-022Ó HELP WANTEDGENERAL MAKE SURE your car is taken care o f by professionals. C all Earnhardt's Dodge service dept, for your repair needs: 756-3663 YOU CAN buy parts through the in te rn e t. No hassle, great prices! www.eamhardt.cOm TRAVEL ¡-R - ; golf cl HELP WANTEDGENERAL $15/HR. HELP learning Windo w s 05 /W o r d /I n t e r n e t / ï n t e g ratin g W P filés. C am elback/24th street. Call for info. Francie 956-9306. CALL TODAY/WORK NOW! Q u alified C andidates CUSTOM ER SERVICE REP. R E S ID E N T IA L T y p e 2 5 w p m 8 . g re a t p e o p le skills. C O U N S E LO R S This large and g ro w in g inbound call cen ter Social Service Agency has FT/PT positions available working with adults who are developmental^ and mentally challenged in group homes & apartment settings located in Phx., Mesa & Tempe. $6.00-56.50/hr. DOE Pd. training. offers PT fk FT o p portunities. W ill w o rk w ith school schedules. W o rk for a corporation w h o values th e ir e m p lo y e e s 8 . offers paid training, casual business attire 8 . g re a t benefits. $ 6 .5 0 - $ 7 .5 0 p e t hour to start D O E , O / T available. 2 2 0 - 9 2 9 2 • Fax 2 2 0 - 9 4 8 0 • EOE N E E D E D for students w ith disabilities ___ — 4*. M ountain Shadows - — '~ ~ : R E S o m A w o o t f c u b - Look for these and many other positions to be avialable now and in the near future: Hourly & live-in available ★ Food & Beverage „★ Golf ★ Rooms & Related ★ Spa ★ Plus Other Opportunities Flexible schedules for students! Excellent Benefits Package Available Marriott proudly supports a Drug Free Work Environment. 3 EOE/Minority/F/V/D O" Call our job hotline for current positions • 596-7034 55 • Room Discounts • Food/Beverage Discounts Call Dee 965-1362 Leave message H i— . . “ SPRING BREAK in Las Barajitas Canyon, San C arlos M ex­ ico. Party secluded beaches and rugged desert. Info call 1-888241-3521 or http://w w w .im parciaLcom.mx/exploradores CaH 431-9511. A ttendants and . 225 W A TT F isc h er rack sy s­ tem , dual cass. EQ, 5 disk ch an g er, P io n eer spkrs $300, 731-3630. ^ 2 2 5 5 N . 4 4 th St. # 1 7 0 - Phx. 8 5 0 0 8 !© ~~r~ £§IJ£kL=== a utom o superior ■Employment Opportunities • Benefits • Medical Q MISCELLANEOUS W E HIRE S T U D E N T S because students like o u r • • • • • Flexible H ours/15 to 35 hrs wkly Great Pay (avg. $9-$11/hr.) $7/hr. Paid Training Fun/friendly environment . Learn Communication skills/resume builder • No experience necessary • Guaranteed pay'vs. commission Please call today to schedule a confidential intA /iew . DialAmerica I f you’re smooth a t talking on the phone, giving and receiving accurate ■ information and consider yourself a good manager o f tim e, then consider ExceH A gent 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 fo r a variety o f m ajor telecommunications companies throughout the country. Our DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATORS don't sell a thing! But they're smooth a t providing long distance operator services. 345-9509 NEED TO EARN EXTRA MONEY ON THE WEEKEND? Zales Regional Credit Center is seeking motivated individuals for: P/T COLLECTORS Select your schedule from the following shifts; Thurs. 4-10pm; Fri. l-6pm Sat. 8am-lpm; Sun. 12pm-6pm ALL POSITIONS offer excellent paid training and a competitive salary and benefits package through: Fuji- f t Part-Time Opportunities Available I ZALE CORPORATION the world's largest jewelry retailer. If you would like to become part of our suc­ cess, we invite you to find out more about these opportunities. ___ : Apply in Person 9am-4pm, M-F ■ iK 'K jr. Jewelers 2035 W. 4th St. .5 |S r r Financial North of University/ West of 52nd St. V ' Services Tempe, AZ • 829-5804 $100 Hire-On Bonus! APPLY NOW! For a lim ited tim e, you may be eligible fo r up to a $100 H ire-O n Bonus. Come jo in us in our Casual environm ent You'll get paid training,.# com petitive starting salary, incentive pay opportunities, excellent benefits and innovative schedules from which to choose. Applicants w ith prior custom er Service experience may qualify fo r additional incentives.Qurexcelient d ien t satisfaction and reputation are cresting explosive growth opportunities. W ith Excell, making goodmoney is as easy aS ansurering the call. «*-■ JOB FAIR — ^ Thursday, February 20th Join us between 8am -7pm a t either our Tempe or CameISquare locations Equal Opportunity Employer • Drug-Free Environment B A C K TO S C H O O L M&Ë B ut T h in k in g S P R IN G B R E A K !!! QSM will giveyou the chance to earn $1,000.00 or m ore to r spring break and then spring break week off. Plus upon returning from break work until finals week and receive a $250.00 b o n u s to end the school year on. 60% of our „.iplcysos are students so we can meet your needs. QSM offers the following: E. Main (MW corner of Main B Qilbert) 4250 E. Camelback, Bldg. K, Ste. 180 (CameISquare Atrium) 1919 W. Fairmont (off 48th St. between Broadway Et Southern, near 1-10) ■■ • Flexible sch ed u les FT & PT (Days & Evenings) G uarantee of $7.00 + b o n u se s Paid training (no experience necessary) • Fully A utom ated Center >C asual D ress environm ent Walking distan ce to ASU A dvancem ent Potential , Call to set and Interview 894-9816 * Page 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ADJUNCT FACULTY needed. Computer hardware knowledge desired. Bachelor's degree req. E ve hrs. Fax résum é to 9 430960. ' W anted: O utgoing, energetic appointment setters for Uni ver­ sa! P o rtraits. $6 -iO /h r. Call Carrie at 777-1054. NEED STUDENT for MD office, Scotts. 12-20 hrs./wk. General office work, local errands. Must have ow n fransp. C all 9477651. - V ' GYMNASTICS COACH need­ ed c en tra l S co ttsd ale 3-7pm . Robin 946-8894 o r991 -6880 ORDER PICKERS male f t fe­ m ale $ 8 - 10/hr p /t, flex, sch. Autom 5226 S- 31 st Place, Phx LIFÈGUARDS/WSI NEEDED. C ity o f Sco ttsd ale is looking fo r LFG /W SI for spring/sum mer. App's being accepted. C er­ tification classes for LFG/WSI are avail. Call 994-7665. PART T IM E employee to work . fle x ib le sh ift. A vailable 15 hours a week. Starting at $7 an hour. Cali 967-8641 Jeanna FUN PEOPLE ARIZONA COUNTRY Club is h irin g pm p /t food serv ers. G reat p/t jo b . No exp. nece. Apply at 5668 E, Orange Blos­ som Ln. Phx (56th St./Thomas) ; E.O.E ATTENDANT/NA MALE quad has PT shift avail. M-F, 10am-^p m . AZ dfreq. Info 273-7775 A TTEN D A N TS N EED ED fo r Students w/ disabilities. Hourly & live-in avail. F le x sch e d u le s fo r sttidents!. C all Dee 9651362, Iv. mesg. B A GEL SH O P/D EL? 10 minutes from ASÜ in Scottsdale seeks frièodïy, .r esponsible peo­ ple to w ork c:ounter & sandwich prep. Parttime mornings & afternoons Call 970^6165 . , BECOM E A m obile d j. W ork W eekends. W e train . D epend­ able vehicle. Cqll 820-8220 DUAL-ENGINE LOCAL TEMPE Cò has several jo b Openings: shipping and receiveing clerk, customer service rep, retail sales cleric (PHX loca? tion). handym an w / light carcoentry exp. M orning o r a fte r­ noon hrs.. a v ail. C all B onnie 967-2678 • p \ '; M ARKET RESEA RCH phone interview ers f t supervisor. No sales. Eves./W knds. Tem pe. Flex sched. 967-4441. MODELS WTO. for new agen­ cy in S còtts. - train in g /p ics. provided if chosén. .947-4255 Dual instruction, VFR o r IFR. $70/hr. Call 917-0484 FITNESS TRAINERS needed. Seekrng e n erg etic p eople fo r personal training positions, ex­ cellent physical condition, and sound know ledge o f w eight : tra in in g . 5 V alley lo catio n s; Call 945-8857 N tv M ^ ’ S tate P ress Monday, February 17,1997 Instructors Needed F/T, P/T, temp, substitute workers needed at agency for adults w/deveiopmental disabilities Call 994-5704 or apply 7507 E. Osborn Road, Scottsdale. EOE m ake your ow n hou rs. N eed d is trib u to r for cam pus. C all David 482-1180. PERMANENT RESIDUAL in­ com e. We need one person. Call Mark now 800-41L3349 O n ly $ 4 4 .9 4 A HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDSALES RED E Y E 'iS now hiring. Jr m anagem ent and sales posi-* tions are available at our local retail stores. We offer: fun work environm ent, flex, hrs., excel, training. Our stores are n/s. Call N ickol fo r an interview 641. 1506;'; .. W ANTED PT help. Som eone comfortable in a light industrial environment, Some mechanical a b ility p re f., non-sm oking, flex, hrs., close to ASU $6.507.50 DOE. Send in q u ires to Ray Germaine 2851 S. 44th St. Ste. 2 Phx., AZ 85040 WE WORK around your sched­ ule. Retail sales, f/pt, base plus cotnm., benefits, drug-free work­ place. A pply in person o n ly , Space A ge, 707 S. C ountry Club Dr., Mesa. EN E R G E TIC SA LES people needed! Ft/pt inside sales, flex­ ibility; optional travel. Base + comm. Exclt opportunity for ad­ vancem ent. C all Stan 4370127 o r fax resum e to 4370755 START @ $7/HR WE WANT YOU 4 openings tel. renew al dept. No exp. nee. Great hours! Great m oney! G re a t people! G reat company! Call O rca Int’I 4388095 Today! Don’t call another ad until you hear what we have to offer! Re­ sort Reservations Dept, has 20 pos. avail. 9 a m -lp m o f 5pm9pm. $9-$12/hr avg, no s e ll­ ing!! Start immed. Call Becky 491-4921. THE HEADQUARTERS is now accepting creative applications for part-time help. Apply wilh.f' in. 966-6093 ; Make yo u r a d vertising $$$$ w ork harder! k \ Put i t in the Classifieds! tflratiioaZ * JOB OPPORTUNITIES F un - (You can uart fwmtNcliNq Ar*qc 14) gency RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS WOODSHED I ! • CASH Pool Tourney - Sat. Nile 9.00- Cheap bear & Pool Leagues • Pool & Carts • Home of the $1.25 Shot • Satellite T V (NBA) S (MLB) • Greeks Welcome • Ladies N ile Thurs $2 Teas • 1/2 Your Wing Order FREE Sun. & Mon. * «tari* tkm m *995 B est N plgtihorriood B ar [ ► Over 100 Manu Heins / »U pscale Ahnospbees . '/ * A ll A ppetizers on Happy Hr * 4 S atellites - 21 Gereons M 94 * W O Show A L L NBA, N HL, A B CoHsgo & p p y games *1/2 Your Whig Order FREE Son. & Mon. m e r ic a n a rten cJe r s • F I e n í W f c Ia s s s c h f d u U v • Foul & NAiioNwidc job phtCEMENT Tfmpf 9 6 8 ,7 6 5 7 PhoENix V 5 7 -Ï7 7 0 $ 1 9 9 whh ASU ID $19? whííÁSU ID ffttra bara« 1 Ite m REVERSE HAPPY HOUR • Shorn, fun course 921 "9925 T a l e n t A gency O sT? TONIGHT LIVE! Earn $ 1 5 i® S îO p tR Iiqur Mowty, H ave 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 RESTAURANTS/ BARS JOB OPPORTUNITIES BAIlTtfNldtRS W A NTfd Earn Ciessifleets THE PHOENICIAN is hiring. C all our jo b h o tlin e for list.irigs. 423-2555. EOE fojr more info C a ll 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 Zjte