I n s id e W o r l d / N a t io n S po rts A SKINHEAD FACES THE DEATH PENALTY AFTER BEING CONVICTED IN A RACIAL KILLING Page 3 M e n ' s h o o p s co m es UP SHORT AGAIN Page 13 © C opyright, S tate Press, 1997 Tem pe, A rizona Voi. 81 No. 98 An Independent Morning Daily Friday, February 28,1997 Newsstand battle continues at meeting By Ray Stem State Press The Tempe City Council voted to deny a lease and city sidewalk right-of-way for a new newsstand on Sixth Street, saying city policy on the matter is hot clear, Randy Hurlburt, Tempe development services director, said city Staff recom­ m ended denying the perm it and lease because of unanswered questions concern­ ing the amount of the lease. The newsstand, which opened in 1992, closed in November on the heels o f a dis­ pute between Herzel Nahom, the owner of the building the stand is adjacent to, and the stand’s former operators, Ed and Judi Tennien. The original permit the newsstand had been operating on before it closed cost $640 each year. Hurlburt said a recent appraisal had city officials wondering if charging $750 per month might be more appropriate considering the value of the space. Anthony Brakto, a Tempe resident who sought to reestablish the newsstand in con­ junction with Nahom, argued that city developm ent staff had m ore than two months to develop a policy that would allow him to open. “I went out and spent the money. I was told this would be a smooth easy process (by city staff),” he said. “I did what I was supposed to do” ■/■; Brakto said he was surprised when city officials told him last week they were rec­ ommending denial of his permit. Up until then, they told him the reopening would run smoothly, he said. In addressing the council, Mahoni also said city officials had turned the tables at the last minute. “’Flimsy, dubious, trumped-up excuses were given for the change of heart,” he said. “I was clearly told ... (the newsstand) would becotne a model for leasing city sidewalk space.” . Nahom, his head wrapped in bandages : T urn to N ewsstandy, page Report: teachers should w ork more n igh ts, w eekends By D eanna D arr State :P ress , ■ '. Teacheis should be willing to work more during off-peak times, including nights and weekends, in order for the r University to improve use of classroom space, according to a recommendation presented to the Arizona Board of Regents., The report, written by the DeMiehael Committee in January , suggests that classroom space at all three Arizona universities could be better used and faculty incentives might be the key. The committee said faculty preferences are given too much consideration in the scheduling of classes. Their report calls for faculty to be more flexible in their schedules. The report also suggested that faculty, as well as stu­ dents, need to be offered incentives to teach and take class­ es during the Off-peak times, such as early morning, late afternoon and Saturdays. ASU Provost Milton Glick said the University is current­ ly working with the deans and chairs of the Various schools to find ways to get faculty to teach at targeted times. As for student incentives, Click said: “there’s no use in offering a lot of courses if no one wants to take them.” Doug Vinzant, director of Strategic Planning and Policy Analysis, said it makes sense for universities to look at how they can better use classroom space. “As long as it’s done in a context that doesn’t force stu­ dents to take classes at times that aren’t convenient to them,” Vinzant said. “Students are our customers.” According to Tony Seese-Bieda, spokesman for ABOR, the DeM iehael Committee was formed to review and assess the effectiveness of the steps the board uses to review various construction projects at the universities. Seese-Bieda said while the board is not currently addressing the issue, a tri-university committee is drafting a reaction to the report along with their recommendations few future changes in classroom utilization. Committee members visited all three universities and observed empty .plassrooms during peak periods as well as large classrooms used for comparatively small classes. Their observations were used as the basis for the suggestions, Academic Senate President Thomas Callarman said classroom space is already :at a prime and-constrains the amount of classes that can be offered. The existing offpeak classes are not in demand among students, he added. “There’s hot enough student demand to warrant having off-peak classes,” Callarman said. The committee stated in the report that because of time constraints they were unable to create any specific methods for changing the current system, but they did write that teachers-should work additional hours to improve the effi­ cient use of class space. As stated in the report, “the Committee was told by uni­ versity representatives that increased utilization of class­ room space would necessarily require additional faculty. The Committee does not accept that conclusion, assuming that it is possible for current faculty members to increase their teaching workloads.” University officials will present their response to the report at the ABOR meeting March 21 at ASU East. Pat Shannahan/State Presa ASU Pharmacy Manager Carl Labbe holds packages of Ovral, also know as the morning-after pill. ASU Student Health has been issuing the pills since 1995. Student Health officials hope FDA recognition of the drug will increase awareness of Ovral A SU gives ou t m orning-after pills nies will recognize the practice and will be able to bill it accurately. A doctor’s prescription is required for the ASU health officials are hoping the Food and Drug pills, which cost $10 for a four-tablet supplement. Possible side effects from using Ovral include nausea Administration’s endorsement of the morning-after pill to prevent pregnancy will alleviate students’ worries and higher blood pressure. Although in use for more than 20 years, the approval about last night’s chance encounter. The FDA requested drug companies submit applica­ of the drug for use as an after-the-fact contraceptive sig­ tions that Would eventually allow them to provide infor­ nals die FDA acknowledgement that birth control pills mation on how birth control pills can be used as emer­ are safe for use in this fashion. R U-486, the sogency contraception: called “abortion-pill” H igher doses o f the drug Ovral, which con­ Wgfthinkjjdmen should know that this is used in Europe since 1989, differs from the tains the horm ones cm^ilablMtaJhem emd is an option when morning-after birth con­ esttogen and progestin, trol p ills. The contro­ can be taken within 72 tWBmvake up in the m ornin^m d versial abortion drug, hours of sexual inter­ regretting the night before.% r ; containing the drug course in order to halt Mifepristone, prevents a pregnancy. fertilized embryo from Carl Labbe, Student Student Health P iu ^ a c y npnager attaching itself to the Health Pharmacy mam uterine wall. Another ager, said the packaging of die newly-approved medication will alert users to the drug, misopristol, is taken a few days later and the fetus fact that birth control pills, when used in higher doses is expelled. Student Health began issuing morning-after pills in after intercourse, can be used to reduce the chances of 1995 and Labbe said springtime is usually when a fertilization. “We think women should know that this is available majority of prescriptions are filled. “W e’ve previously seen an increase because of to them and is an option when they wake up in the human behavior in the spring,” he said. “Basically, it’s morning and are regretting the night before,” he said. Labbe said another benefit is that insurance compa- when people are having more sex.” By Ben L eatherman State P ress 2. P age 2 State P ress Friday, February 28,1997 Newsstand — T oday C ontinued from page 1. C am pus clubs an d organiza* tions may submit written entries to the State Press in th e b asem en t of the Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon th e d a y before publication and e n tr ie s will fi$ t a c c e p te d ; m ore th an th re e jlforking d a y s b e fo re p u b lic a tio n . Only o n e entry per organization per dav|¡¡¡ permitted. E ntries m ust contain th e full name of rite club or organization, a desorption of the event, daté, time arid the full address of the location. Aii requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, in co m p lete or illegible entries wiB be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed a s a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a firstcome, first-served basis and áre printed a s space permits. Music Store in the MU. • ASU P itc h fo rk s W om en’s Acappella — Vocal concert at 8 p.m. in the Architecture Building North room 60. A dm ission is $5.00 and $4.00 for students. • E p silo n D e lta C o -ed S erv ice S orority — Second annual meet­ ing at 11 a.m. at Doc & Eddies in Tempo. • C ounselor Train ing C enter — Free counseling available for full­ time students and stafijat Payne Hall, room 402. For more informa­ tion or an appointment ¿all 965-. 5067. Saturday: • Taiw an Study S o ciety — Review 228 tragedy at 2 p.m. in the MU 208C room • Buddhist Association — Group study (in Mandarin) at 10 a.m. in the MU 208P room. • Phi A lpha D elta P re-Law Chapter — Kaplan Test P rep ’s “Test Drive” a t 8:30 a.m , in the • Farce Side Comedy {Hour —■j Murdock Hall room 201. There will Free original sketch-comedy show be a $1.00 processing fee for the a t 12:40 p.m . in th e MU test, Programming Lounge. • Learning Resource Center — Sunday: Critical reading and writing work­ • ASU W om en’s Lacrosse — shop at 5 p.m. in the LRC. • Asian Student Association — Horne gam e against LMU at 11 M eets at 3:30 p.m. next to Zia’s a.m. on the bandfields. from a recent accident, began haranguing the Council members in frustration. Mayor Neil Giuliano reminded him of Council rules prohibiting direct slandering o f city officials and after a short argument, two police officers approached the podium and led Nahom back to his seat. Nahom was arrested in October and charged With burglary after he broke into the newsstand and carted off $10,000 worth of items. Nahom contested that he was w ithin his rights to do so because the Tenniens had quit paying him $750 per month rent as outlined in their lease, The charges were eventually dropped. The original dispute stemmed from non­ payment of rent. The Tenniens, believing they did not have to pay Nahom as long as they had a permit from the city, detached the newsstand from a wall at 601 S. Mill Aye. in September, The Tenniens closed the Stand in November, saying they did not want to continue the fight. The battle over the newsstand has been in and out of the courtroom and now the issue will again be set before a judge, though on a different front. Mesa lawyer Mark Fullerton announced to the council that Tribune Newspapers had recently filed a lawsuit against Nahom, say­ ing that the Tribune had been the original builder of the newsstand. The council also denied a new permit for a food stand that would have stood between the newsstand structure and a nearby coffee stand. Giuliano asked the city staff to come up with a new policy to deal with the issues as soon as possible, Planning to Streak the MU? C a ii the S tate P ress photographers at 965-6826. Remember to plan ahead! FRIDAY S A TU R D A Y IN-STORE PERFORMANCE E v e M U S i^ fiB k UNKY BON% L ZIA RECORDS • TEMPE • 105 W. UNIVERSITY 5 .9 9 CT 8 .9 9 CD S S S lIrn N O SEE ASHLEY MadSAAC LIVE! AT GIBSON'S 2-28 C heck u s o u t a t: a m d e s t.c o m /a zy te m p e /m s b /m c d u ffy ’s M U M im u iU B iK iu m im i-m -ttB i 1BB38 H.I2HBST■482-3118 [HI UmUfSBU S32KBSU siri ». m im m i -m in a 807 W. IHBIAHSCñOBl - 2410313 US». ÊKinniJY TÍMPI-323-1337 ittf://www.¡ap¡ctittas¡e.cam H llllr lfl D illard's IIW H H U llll _______ W ORLD / N State P ress _______ a t io n ________ P age 3 Friday, February 28, 1997 A ID S deaths d rop sig n ifica n tly nationw ide B y T ara M eyer A ssociated P ress ATLANTA — AIDS deaths fell 13 per­ cent in the first half of 1996, the first signif­ icant drop since the epidemic began in 1981, the governm ent said Thursday. Officials credited better treatment and pro­ grams. “This is one of the first bright spots we have seen in this epidem ic,” said Christopher Portelli, executive director of the N ational L esbian and Gay H ealth Association in Washington. "But we hope it is seen as a call to arms rather than a chance to relax and breathe a sigh of relief.” The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said about 22,000 people died of AIDS in the first six months of 1996, down from the 24,900 deaths in the same period a year earlier. The CDC saw a slight drop in AIDS deaths in the second quarter of 1995, but researchers did hot see it as significant. There was more good news Thursday: While the number of people diagnosed with AIDS continues to grow, the growth rate is slowing. In 1995, about 62,200 people were diagnosed, an increase of less than 2 per­ cent oyer the 61,200 new cases in 1994. Hie growth rate from 1993 to 1994 was 5 percent The first signs o f the drop in AIDS deaths came in January, when New York City reported a 30 percent drop in AIDS deaths in 1996. “I think this speaks to the success of the dual approach of counseling, testing and treating people with HIV,” said Patricia Fleming, the CDC’s chief of HIV/AIDS reporting and analysis. The CDC credits better treatment for AIDS patients, including new drugs, and better access to treatment through state and federal programs. What’s still unclear is the impact of a new class o f drugs called protease inhibitors. The AIDS death rate leveled off in 1995, before those medicines became widely available. Not all doctors are sure that AIDS is making an about-face, however. “In my view, this decline is unfortunate­ ly only a lull,” said Dr. Irvin S.Y. Chen, director of the AIDS Institute at UCLA. “Not all patients are responding as effec­ tively as the majority of patients. There are some patients for whom the drugs are not effective.” And some advocates point out that AIDS patients, as they live longer, will need more help, not less. “It’s still difficult for a person to walk into a doctor’s office and be treated for AIDS,” Portelli said. “We are concerned that people will misinterpret this news. We would hope to see more money and support for better access to medical services. Néw drugs are not all we need.” “Access to health care is a life-and-death matter,” said Christine Lubinski, deputy executive director o f the AIDS Action Council in Washington. “We are going to continue to urge an increased investment ... because we’re finally beginning to see a payoff.” A growing number of people are living with AIDS each year, the CDC said. In June 1996, 223,000 Americans age 13 and older had the disease — a 10 percent jump from mid-1995 and a 65 percent increase over 1993. As o f D ecem ber 1996, 581,429 Americans had been diagnosed with AIDS since 1981; 488,300 men, 85,500 women and 7,629 children. And some new trends are worrying health officials. Blacks accounted for more cases of AIDS than whites for the first time in 1996 •— 41 percent compared to 38 per­ cent. Hispanics accounted for 19 percent, and other races 2 percent. * Also, the proportion o f women with AIDS is still increasing. In 1996, women made up 20 percent of new cases. AIDS deaths have not declined among women or heterosexuals. P hoto ID now m andatory for smokers under 27 By Lauran N eergaard A ssociated P ress Johnny Horne/Associated Press James Burmeister, a form er U.S. paratrooper, listens as he is convicted of two counts of first-degree murder and con­ spiracy in the shootings of Jackie Burden and Michael James in Fayetteville, N.C., court Thursday. At right is his attor­ ney, Larry McGiothlin. Skinhead paratrooper convicted o f first degree murder o f a black couple row of seats behind him. Prosecutors contended that Burmeister killed the FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — A white former para­ couple on a dirt road hear downtown Fayetteville for trooper faces the death penalty after being convicted no other reason than to earn a spider web tattoo, a sign Thursday in a racial killing that set off a nationwide among racist skinheads at nearby Fort Bragg that the outcry over extremists in the military. wearer had killed a black person, James N. Burmeister, 21, was found guilty of two “The animal who took the lives of these two people counts of first-degree murder and conspiracy in the executed them in as cold-blooded a manner as is possi­ shootings of Jackie Burden and Michael James on Dec. ble,” prosecutor Ed Grannis told the jury during clos­ 7, 1995. ing arguments Tuesday. Jurors were to hear more evidence Friday before The slaying prompted an Army wide investigation recommending the death penalty or life in prison. that found little evidence of extremist activity in the The victims’ mothers split on whether Burmeister service. should be executed. However, the probe did turn up 22 Soldiers at Fort “He has the heart of cold steel and God help him,” Bragg, all white, men and including Burmeister and the said Lillie G. James, who said she didn’t wish to see two other soldiers charged in the killings, with ties or Burmeister get the death penalty. sympathies toward extremist groups. Mary Lou Burden, however, raised her arms in vic­ The three accused soldiers were kicked out o f the tory outside the courthouse and said she hoped the jury Army; where they had been in the elite 82nd Airborne sentences her daughter’s killer to death. , Division. “I’m so happy ... I can’t talk, I’m so happy,” she 1 One, Malcolm Wright, is scheduled for trial next said. month on the same charges Burmeister faced. Civil rights advocates also applauded the verdict. The other, Randy Meadows, was the prosecutor’s “Today a jury affirmed the right of people of every star witness against Burmeister. Meadows testified that background, race and religion to walk the streets of while the three rode around and drank the night of the America without fear,” said Abraham H. Foxman, killings, Burmeister joked about earning a tattoo. Meadows said Burmeister had a 9 mm pistol in his national director of the Anti-Defamation League. Burmeister showed no emotion as the guilty ver­ belt when he got out of the car with Wright. Meadows dicts were read, but his mother, Kathy, sobbed in the said he then heard gunshots. B y E mery P. D alesio A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON —r It’s official Friday: If you’re under age 27 and want to buy cigarettes dr chewing tobacco, you have to produce a photo ID proving you’re old enough — at least 18. The question is how will the government enforce the first wave of its crackdown on youth smoking. Tobacco-friendly North Carolina and Virginia flipflopped Thursday over enforcement, Iji addition, the FDA still hasn’t hired state inspectors to audit cigarette retailers’ compliance. That means, at least until summer, anti-tobac­ co volunteers will have to blow the whistle on offenders. “It’s going to take an army of citizens,” said John Banzhaf of Action on Smoking and Health, which is orga­ nizing thousands of people to report suspected lawbreakers to an FDA hot line. He plans to send teens early Friday to test the new law in Washington and suburban Virginia stores. State laws already outlaw selling tobacco to anyone under age 18. Yet government figures show minors buy $1.6 billion in tobacco annually, and 75 percent of teen smokers say they’ve never been carded — reports verified in states like Indiana, which last summer discovered 41 percent of stores selling tobacco to teens. The FDA, in the first of sweeping new tobacco regula­ tions, ordered retailers to card all customers younger than 27 to prevent mature-looking minors from buying tobacco. Store owners caught selling to teens face federal fines of $250 per violation. The FDA is contracting with states to send undercover teen-agers to catch lawbreakers. But the agency still hasn’t picked the 10 states to share the first $4 million in enforce­ ment- funds, meaning federal stings Won’t happen for at least a month, and can’t hire additional states unless Congress forks over more money. FDA’s inspectors could target states that don’t do their own enforcement. “If we find that a retailer is not complying, we can take appropriate steps ... wherever he or she lives,” warned FDA spokesman Jim O’Hara. Virginia and North Carolina, which joined a pending tobacco industry lawsuit challenging all the FDA’s tobacco regulations, are possible targets. North Carolina Attorney General Mike Easley said in a statement early Thursday that pending the judge’s ruling, “Our department does not have authority to enforce the contested tobacco rules,” In a later interview, however, Easley acknowledged; “It is the law .... North Carolina law enforcement officers respect the law, and they will do what they can to enforce it.” Virginia’s prosecutor’s office initially said it would ignore the law, But Gov. George Allen quickly repudiated that position, and Attorney General James Gilmore later fold retailers to card customers “until the courts have ruled.” While cigarette makers say Friday’s change doesn’t affect them, retailers predicted longer lines as they card Customers who buy tobacco 26 million times a day. Opinion P age 4 Friday, February 28,1997 State Press B State P ress I f oos & JDravos BRAVO — To Rep. Tom Home, R-Phocnix. for p ro p o sin g to rem ove a p r o v isio n in Proposition 200 that allow s doctors ¿0 pre­ scribe Schedule I drugs and LSD. Although critics claim H o e flB p § molesting a voter-approved initiative, doctors should aot be allowed to dole mit hard drugs in the name o f medicine. BOO ■ — l b sheep cloning and the cloning of anything breathing, for that matter. Before too long, mad scientists will be duplicating humans, which opens up a can o f worms the size of King Kong. The entire process reads lik e a page from A ldous H u x ley ’s Braye New World. BRAVO — To C oncerned A rizon an s for Animal Rights and Education for scooping up some 10 feral cats that roam the pathways o f ASU. H ie group is planning to have the cats sterilized and immunized at a local veterinary clinic. After all o f that woric, they are going to liberate the cats back on campus. Why? i BR A V O ~ To s e v e r a l stu d e n ts and University officials for attempting to allevi­ ate the problem o f accom m odating b ic y ­ clists, skateboarders, in-line skaters, pedes­ trians ... it doesn’t make much sense to have rules restricting most modes o f transporta­ tion on cam pus w hen A SU p o lic e d o n ’.t enforce them. Somehow,, some way, we can all get to classes, work and do whatever efeÿ in a safe manner. BOO — To the increase in spring semester en r o llm en t. The grand to ta l o f stu d en ts i attending classes on the Main campus alone is ’ * 39,931. It is logical to conclude that students, faculty and staff w ill be waiting in longer lines at Memorial Union eateries, financial aid and most other departments. Hell, pretty' soon students w ill have to pack into Sun Devil Stadium to take those survey classes.. BO O p |j To P resid en t B ill C lin to n for allegedly hawking the Lincoln Bedroom to the highest political bidder. On the flip side, he hasn’t done anything worse than past presi­ dents or politicians and according to a new poll, 45 percent o f Am ericans don't really give a rat's ass what he did. B O O —- To the b eg in n in g o f b a se b a ll's Spring Training. It not only signals the initia­ tion o f another pathetic season o f bats, balls and cry babies, but It means summer is just around the corner. And in Arizona, that sucks. BRAVO —- To the almost certain defeat o f the balanced budget amendment. It w as a bad id ea from the g e t-g o to m ess w ith th e Constitution over such a cut-and-dry issue. Seriously, are w e, as citizens o f the United States o f America, to assume that politid^Bÿ . don’t want to balance the budget? I s STATE PRESS TAFF A ttaching labels to students’ learning abilities is latest in social stigm a trend to excel. “There are two students in this We have spent so much time labeling each student that it is school who we haven’t diagnosed T T 'e v in j . near impossible to distinguish between those students who as special education yet.” J V BERLAT physically and mentally cannot do the work and those who Those words, from a former Columnist refuse to work. The differences 1 have observed between a new mentor teacher of mine, came teacher and a teacher that has been teaching for 20 years are after a hard day of trying to con­ astounding. With the new teacher, all of the students who were trol a drama classroom while being distracted by the special diagnosed with hyperactivity or Attention Deficit Disorder ran roughshod over the classroom, completely disrupting the cur­ education students. It is very diffi­ riculum. With the more experienced teacher, considerably less cult to get a precise number of emphasis is placed on a student's real or imagined disability special education students in a and much more of the class is based on a student’s personal classroom because of the privacy responsibility. If a student chooses to work, then he or she will rights of the student and the reluc­ turn in the work. If a student chooses to fail, then the work will tance of the school districts to speak, to a low-level columnist like myself. But the influence, if not get done. not the number, of special education students is far-reaching. What is the right method? Scholars struggle with this ques­ From personal experience I can report that the mainstream­ tion every day. Personally, I believe that it is the responsibility ing of special education students into elective classes, such as of the teacher to be alert enough to diagnose a real problem with the student, but it is. also the responsibility of the students drama, is destructive to the class as a whole. Today, for example, a set of special education students in to get the work done and take care of any personal needs that they might have. Teacher’s my new observation class­ cannot baby-sit a class full of room, who we will call “Jordan,” “Ashley” and different special needs and They (problem students) all had been “Rick” were seated in a expect to effectively teach. table at the back of the This is what my observation dmgno sm a s special education. It isn’t has taught me. classroom. During the pre­ that they are mentally challenged — So, where to from here? I sentation of a scene, it was impossible for them to sit although f have seen mentally will continue to observe the still. Ashley checked her challenged students perform tSM, we$ programs, ait festivals, speakers and more — all on the request ’o f our very active student body.Remember, this is coming from just a single committee o f the four that make up tite Senate, Second, 1 currently serve as the student representative to the Campus Environment Team, a committee o f the finest adminis­ trators we have here at ASASU. dis­ cussing the diversity issues of our campus and how we can maintain a solemn peace in that diversity through education and aw areness. 1 am proud to be a part of that (earn and to have my voice heard as a stu­ dent, in the name of students. Third, through the contacts with administrators and staff that I have made through ASASU, I took it upon myself to jo in up with a team o f other ASASU members to fight for the cause of free and anonymous HIV testing on campus. The students not directly associated with ASASU even got to be involved by filling out a survey and adding in any comments they wished. The com m unication we made with these students worked wonders for us. Now we have the possibility of having free anonymous HIV testing on this campus as soon as next year. Finally, I have been a part of one of the most cooperative executive boards that ASASU has seen in a long time. Teamwork is a must when it comes to stu­ d en t leadership. I com m end M arc B aum gartner, Sum m er S tuart. Kolby Granville, Keith Menard, Andy Ortiz, all o f the Senators and all of our amazing staff for taking the time to listen to our ideas and turn them into reality. I know that 1 have tangible proof of our effective­ ness as an association. Oh, and by the way, my “paycheck” for being such an “ineffective” member of this “evil empire” amounts to $0. Each senator, including myself, does this for you and our campus, for free Joshua Carr Senator College of Education In responding to Tim Elizondo’s column Tuesday, 1 will also start by being blunt: I have trouble understanding what he’s fuss­ ing about. Elizondo notes that a few sena­ tors were elected with less than 40 votes, total. He concludes that the student body is misrepresented, and I agree. But Elizondo never bothers to question why fewer than 250 students would actively involve them­ selves in the selection of “a handful” of stu­ dent representatives. He prefers, instead, to heap blame upon Associated Students of ASU President Marc Baumgartner. In the end, you have to wonder whether it is even worthwhile to preoccupy yourself with such non-issues. All of my notions of “student government” come from high school and before. At my high school, student gov­ ernment was there to plan proms, speak with forced enthusiasm at scheduled school events and pander to the members of their respective classes during elections. I’ve found that ASASU is much the same, except that there aren’t so many scheduled school events that I can expect its officers to regularly pester me. Campus politics is simply not as important as Elizondo wants his readers to believe. Ix t’s forget about unjust elections for now and make the just ones matter first. Austin W. Spencer % . ...F resh m an Undeclared Comprehension before change I’ve been following the issues develop­ ing around the new student government for several days. Tim Elizondo hit the nail on the head in his article Tuesday when he said that it is time for a change. Every year, I look for something in a can­ didate that should prompt me to vote for them. Having met Brian Masse, I now know why Adrian Fontes supports his ideas so much. This guy isn’t about politics, he’s about get­ ting the students abetter government. The current structure o f A ssociate Students of ASU does not support the aver­ age student. A government that would sup­ port all students would be one that brings together as many views and experiences as possible, under one system, to form a truly representative body. W hat I encourage every student to do is understand the system that represents them now, so they can understand why it must be changed. Joseph Flitner Senior Public Programs Support needed for basketball Calling all basketball fans. This 19961997 basketball season has left the Sun Devils in a rut. I think that the fans make the game as much as the players do. The student attendance has slowly been diminishing throughout the season. I’m see­ ing the same students show up every game, no matter if we are winning or losing; those are the kind of fans our team needs. The team has a record of 10-16i but we do have one home game left. The last game is on Saturday, March 1 at 1:00 p.m. Another incentive to show up to the games is the opportunity for four students every game to shoot a half-time shot for a $100 gift certificate to Phoenix Sports. If that doesn’t motivate you, I don’t know what will. The ASU basketball team needs you, as students, to show your support. Who knows, we may actually win the last two games. Jessica Jones Freshman Finance State P ress Friday, February 28,1997 P age 6 Professors discuss cloning possibilities B y B en L katherman State P ress With the recent duplication of a sheep named Dolly, everyone from Vatican officials to ASU researchers say it’s too soon to send in the clones. ASU zoology professor Elliot Goldstein, speaking on Gady Mall with KTAR-AM’s Pat McMahon Tuesday, said the discovery raises some concerns on the process of human reproduction. “ The danger comes in introducing a new way of creating humans,” Goldstein said on the program McMahon About Town. “We have to decide if this is an alternate way we want to do this.” . Researchers from the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland revealed Sunday that they were able to clone a female sheep by fusing DNA into the nucleus of the unfer­ tilized egg of a ewe. Ian Wilmut, one of the scientists behind the procedure, told media representatives earlier this week the experiment was meant to provide breakthroughs in medicine, not to lay the groundwork for clohing of humans. President Bill Clinton called the developments a remark­ able scientific find, but said the issue needed review and asked a White House bioethics committee to examine the breakthrough. Michael Diskin, assistant chancellor of the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix, said there was no question the Catholic Church would oppose human cloning experiments. “Giving life to a new human being requires an obliga­ tion to nurture that life in a supportive, caring and religious environment,” he said. “(Cloning) holds great potential for misuse.” Georgia Smith, another ASU zoology professor, said she was fairly skeptical of the results. “I would have to see the experiment repeated by another group in order to first of all believe the experiment is valid,” she said. Goldstein said the sheep is already out of the bag: Now that human replication is theoretically possible, the process has the potential to be exploited by anyone wishing to see the rest of the research. “I can readily see someone from a third-world country m S t a t e P r e s s O n lin e h t t p y / n e w s v p s a .a s u .e d u IT ’S N O T YO U R G RANDM A’S TH R IF T SHO P ANYMORE»!! jm c E am ZliMOZ doing this,” he said. “The science behind this is so basic that a high school student with a few thousand dollars can do this.” Smith said while most ethical researchers would not pur­ sue cloning humans, there are some mad scientists out there who might try. “If you take 99.99 percent of the scientists, they just would never do that for all the money in the world. But in life, we know that there are criminal minds and this is all part of the human endeavor,” she said. “We do have evil in the human culture. That’s a given. Somewhere is the possibility that somewhere, somehow, someone Would try to do this.” However, Goldstein said those fearing that doppelgangers of Adolf Hitler and John Wayne Gacy will suddenly be pop­ ping up can rest easy: their genes would have to be well-pre­ served before anyone could clone them. “You would need to have the genes and chromosomes in the exact order,” he said. “And just because you duplicate the body doesn’t mean you can duplicate the person or the upbringing or die experiences.” Sam Vanden A Peele, a computer science engineer junior from Belgium, asked Goldstein during the KTAR show if it were possible to revive Walt Disney or other cryogenically-stored persons with cloning. Goldstein said it would depend on how bad the cartoon­ ist’s cells have decayed during his deep freeze. Some of Hollywood’s theories on cloning, as seen in films like Jurassic Park and Multiplicity were debunked. “You may have been able to have gotten dinosaur blood from the am ber, but you could not clone the entire dinosaur,” he said. “You might have ended up with a giant dinosaur limb.” Because it lacks an agricultural or medical school, ASU does not conduct gene research on the same level as the Scottish facility, Goldstein said. He said a majority of die clone research done on campus involved bacteria and viruses. Approximately 20 to 30 lab courses and almost all of the projects in the molecular and cellular biology department use clones in some form or another. Goldstein himself is using DNA cloned from fruit flies in his research of the types Of cells that cause cancer. u rè ASS ■ 'A ' t o t e u fe! N.E. CORNER OF MILL & UNIV. 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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR Is L O N G F E L L O W PREMIERE GOODWILL OPENING THURSDAY MARCH 6 AT 9AM 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. 2-28 Y Z O L M C SOUTHERN & MCCLINTOCK 3 1 2 2 S . MCCLINTOCK DR V ALSO VISIT YOUR EXISTING NEIGHBORHOOD GOODWILL BASEUNE & HARDY 7 5 5 WEST BASELINE REUSE, RECYCLE, REINVEST INTO THE COMMUNITY. AV Q FV Q M V PA F H H O M KKN M V ML UF V .U NEW LOCATION CRYPTOQUOTE KSM Z H Q O S N K G S ï’ O Vf A , F .F V Q A . •- U F C P ZK F Z C A H N Z K AfA J Y esterday's C ryptoquote: A HIGHBROW S A PERSON EDUCATED BEYOND HIS INTELLIGENCE.—BRANDON MATTHEWS 0 1997 by King Features Syndicate. Inc. 8 A A ^ . A t A * i i k ' k vA' A' A’A ,A' ' d! 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Broadway Rd. ; Sports Friday, February 28, 1997 S tate P ress P a ge 13 Pac-10 W restling Cham pionships come to UAC B y J osh D eFamio State P ress It looks like the road to the NCAA wrestling championship heads through Tempe, Ariz. — in more ways than one. ASU plays host to the 1997 Pac-10 Championships begin­ ning Sunday at the University Activity Center. . The Sim Devils feature three wrestlers ranked at die top of die conference in their respective weight classes. In addition, three ASU grapplers are among several contenders in wide open weight classes. Junior Matt Suter, ranked No. 9 in the nation, is the favorite to win at the 158-pound weight class. Suter (20-12) earned the Pac-10 tide in 1995, but finished runner-up last year. His biggest challenge comes.in the form of Cal Poly sophomore David Wells, whom Suter defeated 17-6 in early February, Sophomore Casey Strand ranks at the top at 167 pounds. Strand (31 -3) is coming off a shutout loss to Oklahoma State’s No. 1 Mark Branch. ASU head coach Lee Roy Smith, however, feels Strand will be ready to face the competition Come Sunday. “I think he has refocused at a very conscientious Smith said. “I think he’ll take that experience and turn it into a positive.” At the 177-pound class, junior Aaron Simpson (28-4) rests at the top. Simpson handled his biggest challenger, Bakersfield’s Dan Corpstein, in January. Despite the big gap between Simpson and his opponents in the rankings, he is unconcerned about taking the tournament too lightly. “Not at all,” Simpson said. “Because its home, I really try to dominate and get the crowd involved. And get the others guys involved, (I want to) really push them and help them get ready for nationals. Because that is what this is, a tune-up for nationals.” No. 6 Shawn Ford (27-6) ranks second in what could be Turn t o Lori Cain/State P rats Senior Joey Heckel works on locking the legs of his Oklahoma State opponent. Heckel is one of 10 Sun Devils who w ill compete In Pac-10 s, page 14. the Pac-10 championships this weekend. Valley spring training hom es get facelift for 1997 season B y L uanne M uuer Special T o I B e State P ress Spring training is here and so are the players. There is nothing new about that What is new is the look of the stadiums. Many of die Cactus League stadiums have been upgraded modernized standards. The biggest change concerns Tempe’s own Diablo Stadium. The California- Angels no longer play there. It’s now tire Anaheim Angels. The stadium and the team boast a new logo. Dennis Boddy, assistant stadium coordina­ tor of Tempe Diablo Stadium, doesn’t expect this to cause any changes in attendance though. What will attract more people, howev­ er, are the changes that were made to the stadi­ um in 1993. “The stadium needed to be renovated, and the city wanted to keep the Angels here,” Boddy said. The stadium holds nearly 10,000 fans. Concession stands and restrooms now face the field, as opposed to being behind the con­ course, so you can watch the game while waiting in line. Mesa Hohokam Park, home of the Chicago Cubs, was tom down and completely rebuilt. The small, out-dated facility gave way to a big­ ger and better park. What used to house 8,900 fans can now accommodate 12,500, the largest capacity in the Cactus League. James McKnight, manager of communica­ tions for thé Mesa Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, said the changes were made to keep up With the increasing number of fans and the other Valley of the Sun stadiums that were being upgraded. It’s a safe bet that the Cubs will once again sell out every spring training game as “ticket sales are up at least 10 percent from last year” McKnight said. The San Francisco Giants are experienc­ ing a new look, too. Their venue, Scottsdale Stadium, was rebuilt in 1991. The old one had been there since the 1950s and the Giants wanted a new stadium, said Bob Linyard, sta­ dium coordinator of Scottsdale Stadium, The new stadium holds 11,200 people and as many as 5,000 more fans have attended each of the Giants’ spring training games since the stadium was built, Phoenix Municipal Stadium, which had been tiie oldest of the Cactus League stadiums was in “dire need of modernization” said Roger Brcndecke, an administrator for the Maricopa County Stadium District The Oakland Athletics now play in a stadium that has new concession stands, restrooms, ticket offices, team offices and locker rooms. Since Maricopa County bought Chandler Compadre Stadium in 1993, “the parking lot has been paved, and accommodations have been made to facilitate the TV broadcasting net­ works,” Brcndecke said. The Milwaukee Brewers, who play at Compadre Stadium now, will be moved to a stadium with better amenities and facilities, said Frank Pezzerola, general manager of Compadre Stadium. “We expect an atten­ dance boom like the other upgraded valley stadiums have seen since the new stadium will ¡better accom m odate the people,” Pezzerola said. Sun Devils booked by Huskies University Activity Center. Frieder said it would be hard to motivate the team for The Washington Huskies’ senior floor leader booked its final home game Saturday. “Take out your frustrations on Washington State the fate of another devastating last-minute collapse by the Saturday. 1 don’t know what else to tell them. It’s a Sun Devils as they lost 72-69 Thursday night. Point guard Jamie Booker stole an erratic inbounds shame they didn’t win this basketball game. It’s going to pass from ASU’s Michael Batiste with 7.5 seconds be hard to recover. And to do it by one o’clock Saturday is going to be real tough,” remaining and con­ Frieder said. verted a three-point The Sun D evils final play to give home game of the season Washington a 7(L69 “Take outyour frustrations on Washington is Saturday against lead. State Saturday. I don't know what eke to tell Washington State at 1 p.m. B atiste was them, ft's a shame they didn *t win this Triggered by seven points sw arm ed by an from Veal, ASU went on a aggressive trap-style basketball game. It's going to be hard to 13-5 run to take a 65-59 defense by the recover. W kl to do it by one o’clock Saturday lead with 2:54 remaining. H uskies and was But Booker’s three-pointer unable to pass the ) is going to be real tough." trimmed the lead to 65-64 ball to team m ate with 1:40 left, ^ Lamar Richardson. The Sun Devils trailed ■ — Bill Frieder, ASIJ head coach ASU coach B ill 38-34 at the half Frieder said Jeremy Husky Deon Luton had Veal needed the ball 17 points, including five three-pointers. MacCulloch in that crucial clutch situation. “We just got to get the ball in his hands in that last added 14. Mark Sanford and Booker had 13 apiece. ASU senior Rodger Farrington had 12 points and nine possession,” Frieder said. “We just gave it to them. I feel bad for Batiste. To give rebounds. Batiste added 11 points and five rebounds. The Sun D e v ils (1 0 -1 7 , 2-13 in the P ac-1 0 ) up a three-point play in that situation is just again inexpe­ rience and just not being quite good enough. It’s a shame dropped th e ir eig h th straig h t gam e. W ashington improved to 16-8,9-6. for these kids, because they played their heart o u t" Veal, who scored a game-high and career-high 31 Notes Farrington had three blocks in the game. He now has points, was unable to make a layup with 2.1 seconds left 113 swats this season, which is two shy of former Sun in regulation. Husky center Todd M acCullloch nailed two free Devil Mario Bennett’s Pac-10 record (115). ASU is now 2-15 in games the squad trails at the half. throws to account for the game’s final margin at the By E d O deven State P ress ASU's Quincy Brewer goes up'end over Washington's Mark Sanford during the Sun Devils’ 72-69 loss Thursday at the UAC. \ S tate P ress Friday, February 28, 199? Page 14 No. 5 ASU heads south for rumble with Gymcats F rom Staff R eports The No. 5-ranked ASH gymnastics team travels down south to face arch-rival UofA tonight at the Me Kale Center in Tucson. Meet time is scheduled for 7:30. UofA (9-4, 3-1 Pac-10) comes into the meet ranked 17th in the nation, with an oyerall average of 192.902. The Sun Devils (8-2, 4-1) have the fifth-highest average at 195.413, After a brutal weekend schedule includ­ ing a home meet versus Cal on Friday and a quad-meet in Lincoln. Neb., on Sunday, the Sun Devils look to continue their torrid scoring against a team which they possess a 24-3 dual-meet record — the Gymcats. Cast season UofA defeated the Sun Devils iti Tempe 195.325-194.7. It will take a mammoth effort for the Gymcats to repeat that result. The team is nursing many nagging injuries, including the loss of beam specialist Nancy: Milberger. who blew out her anterior cruciate ligament in practice. Because of flu and injury; thè Gymcats only traveled nine athletes to Washington last weekend where they lost to both thè Huskies and Boise State. Their score of 191.925 barely tops ASU's lowest score, which came in the first week of the season at Oregon State. The Sun Devils fared much better on their road trip, also with only nine gymnasts. Their score of 195.6 in placing second at the Master's Classic in Nebraska continued the scorching pace they are Setting —- a 196.033 average score the last six meets. S un D evils moving up the rankings: ASU now ranks in the top 11 in every sta­ tistical category in thé nation. Strongest events for the Sun Devils are the floor exercise and balance beam, where they rank No. 3 and No. 4 respectively. Going by regional qualifying scores (RQS) the ASU floor team is the second-best in the nation, with only Georgia topping them. The vault team currently ranks 1Ith. while the uneven bars squad comes in at No. 7. Individually many Sun Devils are shoot­ ing for the top of the Charts. Junior Meagan Wright leads the way — ranking No. 10 in the all-around (39.202), No. 5 in the vault (9.905) and No. 14 in bars (9.837). Following closely is freshman Amy Shelton, who ranks, No. 9 in the all-around (39.223) and No. 20 on bars. Other ranked Sun Devils include : senior Bridget Sandman (No. 15 on bars at 9.824), sophom ore Wendy Ellsberry (No. 16 on beam at 9.793), freshman Elizabeth Reid (No. 10 on floor at 9.871) arid sophomore Lisa Vincijanovic (No. 14 on floor 9.84). : - Last Chance for indoor team as track season draws to close B y L ori H aro S taff. P ress The ASU track and field team antici­ pates the upcoming outdoor season, but first will conclude their indoor season at the NAG Last C hance m eet Saturday in Flagstaff. The NAU Last Chance is traditionally a meet to give those athletes who have not qualified for the NCAA Indoor Cham pionships a last chance to do so. Since the Sun Devils are on probation they are not able to participate in any post sea­ son meets. Last weekend, the Sun Devils competed in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Championships and failed to earn any invi­ tations'to the USA Championships that take place this Saturday in Atlanta. Despite ASU head coach Greg Kraft’s high hopes for the women s 4x400-meter relay team., the Sun Devils placed second. "Overall we were disappointed because we di.dn’t make the time to go to Atlanta,” junior 4x400 team member Joronda White said. “Because it was a championship meet people were putting pressure on them ­ selves. I think if we were more relaxed we would’ve done better." The team plans to use Saturday’s meet to. reach their personal bests. Kraft plans to use this meet as a way to measure how they will do in the outdoor season. “We're just trying to bring closure to the indoor season and evaluate the course of the last five weeks,” Kraft said. During the indoor season Kraft Said that all of the athletes made progress, but for the, w om en’s team C hasity W alker, Karen Vigilant, Erica Johnson and Erica Larson especially improved. For the men's team K raft recognized distance runners Ari Rodriguez and Matt Repak as having great seasons. He also said that Jeremy Staat, a newcomer from the football team, has been a pleasant surprise in the shot put event. “I feel that once it starts heating up. I’ll start competing better;” Staat said. “In out­ door, I hope to break 63 feet in the shot and 200 feet in the discus.” P a c -1 0 s C ontinued from page 13 . the most challenging weight class, 126. B akersfield's Coby Wright (29-4), who defeated Ford in January, is ranked fifth in the nation. Smith, however, downplays any hype of a big showdown between the two. “Right now we can’t be looking to the finals,” Smith said. “And they can’t presume that they are going to finish where they are seeded. They have to wrestle to that.” In addition, two other Sun Devil grapplers are expected to challenge in their weight class­ es. Seniors Danny Faqir (13-7 at 190) and Joey Hecke) (10-9 at 134) are tentatively ranked second and third in their classes, respectively. As far as team strengths, host ASU and defending champion Cal St.-Bakersfield come in as favorites for the team title. However, Smith feels that many teams, such as Oregon, Oregon State, and Boise State could “have something to say about how things are going to fall out.” The tournament consists of two rounds on Sunday, with the quarterfinals beginning at noon and the Consolation and semifinals rounds beginning at 7 pm. The tournament will conclude on Monday with the consolation rounds and the final matches. The top three wrestlers from each weight class will advance to the' national champi­ onships, as well as 14 at-large bids, who will be decided by the conference coaches after the tournament. The 1997 NCAA W restling Championships will be held Mar. 20-22 in Cedar Falls, Iowa Read Tuesday's pre-Spring Break Guide in the State Press to find out how you tan enter to win this extiting ski vacation for two! Notesii * Die Fiesta Bowl Diamond Classic’s opening-day action Thursday was postponed) due to rain. Host ASU’s baseball game against Eastern Michigan was rescheduled as part p f a Sunday doubleheader. The two teams will play at 1 p,ra. and 7 pm . The BYU -Oklahoma ’s game was rescheduled for 10:30 a.m. Satuday. All tourney games will be played at Packard Stadium. * The wom en’s basketball team lost to the Washington Huskies at the Hec Edmundson Pavillion Thursday night, 68-59. ASU drops to M 7 , in tie 2-13 Pac-10, y M l p - State P ress P a g e lf) Friday, February 28,1997 No. 15 Sun Devils head north for Pac-10 battles vs. Stanford, Cal-Berkeley B y J osh D eFamio State P ress Jim Poulin/State Press Junior Raja Woods is one of several new Sun Devils who hopes to lead the ASU softball team to the top half of the tough Pac-10 conference. After hosting two tournaments in two weeks, the No. 15 ASU softball team changes course this week. The Sun Devils (8-2,0-0) travel to northem California to take on two Pac-10 opponents over the weekend. ASU starts off at Stanford on Saturday. The Cardinal are one of only three nonranked teams in the Pac-10, but ASU’s players refuse to take them lightly. “As a team, as a whole, we want to w in,” team captain and first basem an Tammy Lohmann said. “But...Stanford is a team you don’t want to (overlook) and let them get a lead.” On Sunday, the Sun Devils head to Berkeley to face the eighth-ranked Golden Bears in a game that could have major conference ramifications. “I think a pivotal game is Cal,” ASU head coach Linda Wells said. “We need to be competitive with Cal and that would give us an opportunity, hopefully, to move up into that fourth spot in the Pac-10. I think that is realistic for us (at this point).” For three of ASU’s starting infielders, the conference games will be the first of their ASU careers. But coaches and teammates show little concern as to how Raja Woods, Holy Smith and Chris Gill will respond to the pressure. “We tried to talk (to the new players) in terms of the overall picture and how you get into the championship,” Wells said. “But the new players have shown a level of maturity beyond what most new players show.” “l just want them to play like they’ve been playing,” Lohmann said, Notes •Senior Lisa Dacquisto was named coPac 10 Player of the Week for her efforts at the ASU Classic last week. Dacquisto, an outfielder/dcsignated player, batted .438 (7 for 16) with five runs, a triple, four RBIs, and five stolen bases during the four-day tournament. She is currently fifth in the Pac-10 with a .512 average, »Senior Stacey Slick has also risen quickly in the batting rankings. Despite hitting ninth in the order, Slick sits 10th in the conference in batting (.464) and has scored 10 runs. •Although the Sun Devils are the only Pac-10 team not to hit a home run, they have made up for it in other areas. The team ranks first in the conference in walks per game (3.9), second in steal (27 in 29 attempts), and third in runs per game (7.1). «In the latest USA Today/NFCA poll, the Sun Devils rose ten spots, jumping from th eir preseason No. 25 to No. 15. C onference foes A rizona, UCLA, Washington and Cal also ranked among the top 25. Pac-10 conference race looks to be three-way struggle By J osh D eFam io State P ress After three weeks of beating up out-of-conference oppo­ nents, teams from the toughest softball conference are ready to battle for conference supremacy. Although four Pac-10 games have been played thus far, the majority of teams open up their conference schedule this weekend. The conference features five of the eight teams (traditional Pac-10 schools USC and Washington State do not have softball programs) with top-15 rankings, and one more team that is one the bubble of cracking the USA Today/NFCA rankings. Yet, despite all of the high rankings, the Pac-10 remains a thrce-ticrcd league. The top tier consists defending national champion Arizona UCLA, and Washington. The No. 1 Wildcats (15-0,0-0) arc not only winning, they are dominating every aspect of the game. The team leads the conference in both ERA (1.09) and batting average (.412), while their individual players lead the conference in several sta­ tistical categories. They have outscored opponents 140-18 and have hit 21 homers, while giving up only three. The Wildcats are led by pitchers Carrie Dolan (8-0) and Nancy Evans (7-0). The two hurlers have combined to start — and complete — every game for their team this season. The Bruins (13-4, 3-1), ranked No. 2 in the conference and the country, have the best chance of unseating the Wildcats, both in the conference and nationally. Although the Bruins hit­ ting is not as strong —- they are averaging 5.1 l runs per game — more than four runs less than UofA, the Bruins are led by starting pitcher B’Ann Bums (6-0, 0.80). She has tossed two Rural store only. shutouts in six starts. Pac-10 games. As a unit, UCHLA’s pitchers carry an ERA of 1.37 and have The third and final tier, consists of three non-ranked teams: tossed eight shutouts in their 17 games. Oregon, Stanford, and Oregon State. Fourth-ranked Washington (12-3,0-0, No. 3 in the Pac-10) Oregon (7-4, 0-0) received some consideration for presea­ rounds out the Pac-10 teams in die top 10. The Huskies lost in son rankings and has a strong batting order. Freshman Lindsay the title game to UofA last year and is considered once again a Welch earned co-Pac-10 Player of the Week honors last week contender for conference and national honors. and the team is second in the conference in both hitting (.358) On the second tier rest California and ASU. and runs per game (7.45) The Golden Bears of Cal (9-6,1-1) have been a relative dis­ The pitching, however, is suspect. The Ducks have a appointment. Ranked eighth in the preseason, Cal has struggled respectable top starter in Petrina Martinez (4-0, 1.52), but at the plate (.284, seventh in conference) and on the mound remain thin after that. The squad is second to last in ERA in the (2.98, sixth in conference) and have dropped two places to No. conference, despite having played a relatively weak schedule. 10 in the polls. Stanford (9-8,0-2), ranked seventh in the conference, isateam Much of Cal’s hopes hinge on outfielder Jenny Ackley. in transition. New coach John Rittman came down from Ackley, an All-American her freshman year, slipped badly last Washington and inherited a team that has been poor at the plate season. She looks like she has returned to form and is currently — last in the conference in hitting (.271) and runs per game (4.06) third in the conference with a .523 average. “It’s kind of a transition year,” Rittman said. “But at the No. 15 ASU (8-2, 0-0) is the last of the ranked Pac-10 same time, we don’t want to use that as an excuse. The future teams. The Sun Devils bring ah interesting mix to the field, of the program at Stanford is now. We definitely want to make with new players at three of the four infield positions. If third thing happen this year.” bagger Chris Gill, shortstop Holly Smith, and Raja Woods at On the bright side, Stanford’s pitchers are led by Becky second base mesh well with veterans Lisa Dacquisto and Blevins (5-0,1.79) and are currently third in the Pac-10 in ERA Tammy Lohmann, the Sun Devils could be the surprise team of (2.10) the conference. Thus far, the team has risen 10 slots from pre­ The Beavers (6-5,0-0) rank dead last not only in conference season No. 25 ranking. rankings for batting, but in pitching as well. OSU’s ERA is One thing ASU does lack is power. Through 10 games 3.39, by far the highest in the conference. the Sun Devils have failed to hit one out. However, they One bright spot for the Beavers is Tarrah Beyster, who leads average 7.1 runs per game, third in the conference behind the Pac-10 in batting (.556) and has hit as many homeruns (3) UofA and Oregon. as the entire team did last season. “I think this weekend will give us an indication of where we Predicted order o f finish: UofA, Washington, UCIA,ASU, are,” ASU head coach Linda Wells said of her team’s opening Cal, Oregon, Stafford, OSU & SA LA D S P a g e 16 Friday, February 28, 1997 S un D e v il State P ress C lub S po rts M e n ’s R ugby The ASU m en’s rugby team will be in the Los Angeles area this weekend to run with Long Beach State on Friday and UCLA on Sunday. The games will be the Sun D evils’ final tuncup before they face UofA in the season finale. W o m e n ’s R ugby The ASU women’s rugby team will also be in Los A ngeles on S unday and w ill p lay a team from Claremont, Calif. Game time is 11 a.m. M e n ’s V olley ba ll T h e ASU m en’s volleyball team w ill host the United States Volleyball Tournament on Sunday at the P.E. West building. The tournament lasts all day arid games begin at 9 a.m. Twelve teams will participate, including in-state squads form NAU, Pim a Com munity C ollege arid UofA. M e n ’s L a cr osse The ASU men’s lacrosse team will be in southern California this weekend for games against Occidental on Saturday and Pepperdine on Sunday. Both games start at noon. The Sun Devils (3-1) will be without top goal scorer Derek Murrell on Saturday. He will serve a one-game suspension for fighting. M urrell was involved in a scuffle in ASU’s last game against San Diego State. W o m e n ’s L a cr osse The ASU women’s lacrosse team will host their first home game of the season on Sunday when they play Loyola Marymount. The game will be played at 11 a.m. at the band ASU lacrosse co-captain Tray Reeeder (17) battles with San Diego State’s Brian Looper for a loose ball while Bill McAlister field. ASU (1-4) is looking for its second win of the looks to help in a game earlier this season. ASU visits California this weekend for two games. year. Saturday and Sunday along with 11 other teams to Lawrence said. “UT (Texas) and Florida will be tough, compete in the Longhorn Invitationalbut I’m confident we’ll do well.” W a ter P o lo Coach Chris Lawrence prepared for stiff competition. The State Press Club Box is complied by reporter M att The ASU water polo team will be in Austin, Texas “ I t ’s going to be a very tough to u rn a m e n t,” Paulson. He can be reached at 965 2292. BACK UPYOUR MEMORY. Buy a yearbook. Only $44*94 delivered a small price to pay for a piece of history* the ^un U J call us @ 9 6 5 - 6 8 8 1 o r visit http://new s.vpsa.asu.edu e-mail the sports editor ponyboy@asu.edu Classifieds P age 17 Friday, February 28,1997 St a t e P ress N otice to orir readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent Orinvested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in puf classified section. For moie information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. APARTMENTS 1BD/1BA, OPEN space. Small complex near downtown Tem­ pe. $385/mo. Call 731-9460. EL DIABLO APTS. NE Corner o f A pache & M cClintock, Tempe quiet luxury living lbd $490, 2bd $570 -$ 6 2 0 . 9210699 Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 More Trivia..i If the U.S. Post Office were a private company, it would be the 9th largest in the country, k 2 Bedroom Apartm ents Immediate Move-In H O M ES FOR RENT 1BD 1BA, guest house, utils in­ cluded, $510/mo. Other houses avail. 894-0288 4BD 2BA exc. cond. new paint, carpet, etc. Osbourne & Scott. Rd. $995/m o. Avail, immed. 437-1048. WALK TO ASU 4bd 2ba pool $1250. 3bd 2ba $900. Others available also. Call 894-0288. F in d it F A S T in th e C la s s ifie d s APARTMENTS 2 BDR/2 B, Refrig, Dishwash­ er, pool, spa, gym, avail now, $590. 946-7088. PAPAGO PARK village I, 2bd overlooking pool $900, incl. fum. Call TJ. @ 966-1555 PAPAGO PARK village I, large 3bd/2ba near pool $1200 & 2bd/2ba $800. Very nice & avail. Call. Brent @ 496-9872 PAPAGO PARK Village, a rare hard to find 3bdr/2b W/loft. NeWer carpet & paint, refridg, wash/dry. A vail now $1190. 946-7088. BUY O F THE W EEK 9 6 8 -6 3 8 3 APARTMENTS ITS YOUR don-tsettle best! I MOVE... PROFESSIONAL, SINGLE parent seeking apt/house to share with re­ sponsible individual. Prefer Mesa/Tempe area. Need ASAP. Call 965-5013, days. BASELINE/MCXUNTOCK. Rmte to share 3bd, 2ba house. Own room. N /S . A vail, immed. $330/mo + 1/4 util. 345-9199. ROOM AVAILABLE 4 bed house, pool, hot tub, pool table, lakes, $330 mth, l/4u tl 491-8776 R O O M S FOR RENT 3 Bedroom Townhouse Marlborough Park $119,000 Includes garage & yard Bob Bullock, Realty Executives ROOM FOR rent, own ba, w/d n/s, $350/m o + 1/4 util. Chris or Mitch 755-8376 Female pref. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL duMeader positions ' available, working directly ^ktilifKa Vario» dtifts awrifaftlfr in LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Mini blinds ♦ Free hot water . Vertical blinds With valances ♦ Free cable TV! Brass ceiling fans ,♦ 3 pools, 2 spas European eaMnetiy '.'♦' Barbecue areas Walk-in closets available ♦ Covered parking Private baicony/patio ♦ Laundry facilities Security alarm systems available“ ♦ Large exercise room QUADDÀNGLKÓ VILLAGE APARTMENTS 1255 E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281: 9 6 8 -8 1 1 8 S.Ë. Corner of University & Rural p e r y e ar, you m a y q u a lify to get a m o n th ly re n ta l d is c o u n t ! C a ll N ow ! Oscar's, one o f the nation's fastest growing & most popular fam ily style j restaurant groups is now hiring fo r ail positions: Cashiers, bussersfrunners, eixoks, dishwashers) etc. FT & FT avail. A pply in person March 1st A 2nd, 11am - 5pm. A hw atutee Foothills Towne Center (M O A Ray Rd.) next to AMC 84 Theater. 705-0059 ■ . t ,.riainlRestrictions SCOTTSDALE HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Internship Opportunity! AUTHORIZED APPLE* DEALER is Looking lo r 2 ambitious students Typing Skill» and general com m unication eklUe required. M acintosh, A dvertising, Repair, ond M arketing sklls recommended. $8 to $10/hour (Depends on Experience) Apple* Macintosh* I J Appte*Mu)tipteScm 15 CAMELBACK Resort & Spa has the following employment opportunities: Front Desk Clerk 2nd Shift 3pm - 1 1 :30pm und 12:30497 6; 15p m . C o n n a te we*lähnandnwuwal | ' Kyrene School District & Kÿi*nefti*t«ippe it. *^ I in rebate Dteplay&Ke^wwl S15519 **—*** •after mail ________ P/T Night Auditor Graveyard Fa* Resumes o r Q uestions to : 602-267-7400 Email Raj Abhyanker rabhyankerBaoi.com Com puters Plus Com pany 4451 E. O ak Street Phoenix, AZ 85008 602t267-7300 (Voice) 9am - 5pm »imariMSd—i* P a p a J o h n ’s I s L o o k in g F or Y O U T o H elp U S M a k e P er fec t P iz z a s! We're the fastest growing pizza delivery company in the country and have grow n to over 1,200 locations in over 30 states in only a decade. Here is the perfect opportunity for you to join the leader in the industry. We are looking for in-store personnel and drivers. We offer our team members: tr cash nightly for mileage reimbursement (drivers) m ability to earn up to $12.00 an hour (drivers) m health insurance ■r 401(k) Plan ■r flexible hours or advancement opportunities m pizza discounts nr safe driving awards for drivers tr fun; friendly environment Conducting Interviews. Please apply in person: M onday-Saturday: 11 a m - 5 pm 3108 8 . McClintock (next to Baskln-Rotobins) Sto.3 Tempe, AZ 85282 or FAX resume to 602-831-7821 g a te A n equal opportunity employer Office Help (filing) Please apply • in person. Interviewing and application hours are from 10-4, M-F Scottsdale Camelback Resort & Spa is an equal opportunity employer. MANPOWER* TEMPORARY SERVICES | « FULL. AND PART-TIME OFFICE PO SITIO N S IN THE TEM PE AREA I • EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR STUDENTS • NO SALES OR TELEPHONES INVOLVED ■ •IM M E D IA TE OPENINGS • COM PETITIVE PAY • DAY AND EVENING HOURS AVAILABLE . APPLICATIONS TAKEN BY APPOINTMENT I CALL 838-7507 MON-FRI 8-5PM 700 E. Baseline, Suite D-2 Tempe, AZ 85283 An Equal Opportunity Employer UNIVERSITY & HARDY. Newly remld. 2 bd/2 ba condo. New carpet and kitchen. Open house Sun 12-5. $58,500. 921- ^ M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE DELUXE FUTON bed/couch w/ blk metal frame & cream pad-ex thick. $ 1?0 obo. Also: sml mi­ cro wave, iron, toaster, electric typewrttèr, b & w 12in Tv, .2 blk m etal bar stools w / teal seats. 417-1585 '86 MITSUBISHI Tredia L 4dr, 5spd, tinted w indow s, CD plyr, new tags, dk blue $2600 obo 431-9447 G• ; v 199.0 NISSAN SENTRA, red, 2dr, 4sdp, as, am/fm cass, new tirés, 100k mi, excellent cond. $3300 @ home 829-6221 ¿c application in person with | | | Q & m r. Kb Fkjssle Car Shopping! Save Time & Money! Free As CarFinrier Service WWW.A2AUTOUET.COM 1994 HONDA C ivic dx, 3 dr, teal green, 5 spd, 4 spkr stereo/cas, tinted win, 25k mi, $10,500 obo 241-3056. 1997 DODGE DAKOTA pickup. $289/mo. Call 926-4000 9 1 WRANGLER 5spd, 4cyl, black, soft top, w/bikiiii, pull­ out stereo & hewer tires. Won’t last long. $7500917-8727. ; 9 3 N ISSA N 240 SX coupe. Auto a/c. $9,995. 834-0220 95 N ISSA N 2 00 SX SE 5sp. sunroof, spoiler. $11,488. 834- ..0220 " *v • MAKE SURE your car is taken care o f by professionals. CallEarnhardt's Dodge service dept, for your repair needs: 756-3663' SEIZED CARS from $175 Porsches, C adillacs, C hevys, BMW’s, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD,s. Your area. Toll free 1800-218-9000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. . TOYOTA PICKUP '84 3/4 ton 2 w d /5 s p /a c /c d /p s /p b /11-7 k must see. $3, l.QOobb Liz @966-1706 TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL;.Cheap in yoiir name. Quick departrs, Buy eoupons/awards. Most places worldwide. 968—7283 SPRING BREAK '97: Dp Lake HayasU, AZ! Its a party! 1-8882-HAVASU or www.party- ; hard,Com. 6pnhqPœ ak*)7 Personal S upport P r o v id er Looking for individual to work w ith developmerttally and physically handicapped m en in dur Personal Skills Program. Employees w ill teach various living skills and involve the individuals in recreational and social activities. FT positions available. $7.00-$7.50 DOE. Call Vince © 431-951L EOE * . ZIPDrivcUl* ¡7 i PtTforrm *640O /1H O I* I Iomega 10 Pack ZIPS $119* Ii HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ■school-based * between the hours of 6:30am - TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE A U T O M O B IL E S " 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL AUTOM OBILES ROOM IN 4bd luxury home on Pte S. M ountain g o lf course, fully fum. w/ leather couches & big'screen TV. M ove in asap. Fern or clean male. $340/mo. + 1/4 util. Day 800-804-0151 Even 961-1306 9973, NEED A room? Have a room for rent? The Roommate Serv­ ice 968-0227 / 800-524-9509. Www.roommateserVice.com HO M ES FOR SALE Apache Terrace Apartments R O O M S FOR RENT RENTAL S H A R IN G TO W N H O M E S / C O N D O S FOR RENT - , Tennis JobsSummer boys & girls sports camps iii Mass. Looking for instructors . with tennis background who can teach Children . . to play tennis & who will enjoy a professionally run , sports environment. Great facility & staff! Salary, room & board, travel allowance all included. Many positions still available. . Men call Camp Winadu 800-494-6238Women call Camp Danbee. 800-392-3752. CA$H TODAY!!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. ) ROCKY POINT« SAN CARLOS PithayaBar• GranadaDelMar 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 _ 4,5or 7Nightsastowaa*149Qwd MEXICO TOURS -800-769-7810 TRAVEL F ree Cafe M ocha @ Gold Bar Use in the U.S 81 around the world! “Sam e Day Delivery” Call 1-888-591-4167 or 899-6415 25 min for 8.99 = riiA 60 min for 17.99 = 3 0 0 min 90 min for 2 4 9 9 = 2 8 0 min Cards are rechargeable F lat rate 24 hrs, 7 days a week teleca rd HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL NOW HIRING • Production Personnel • Sales Associates Apply at G O O D W ILL Southern & McClintock St a t e P ress Friday, February 28,1997 P a g e 18 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL SPRING BREAK in Lais Barajitas Canyon, San Carlos Mex­ ico. Party secluded beaches and rugged desert. Info call 1-888241-3521 or http://w ww .im ^arcial.com.mx/exploradores HELP W ANTEDGENERAL COVER RETAIL help needed at new night club in N. Scot­ tsdale. Bussers also needed. Call Buzz Funbar for more de­ tails 991-3866 KENNEL WORKER needed p/t. Must be neat, dependable. 731 I E. Thomas, Scottsdale 945-7692. SPRING BREAK in Vail Lndpkg 450»5nigh ts/6days 4adult ski passes Christina 8291498 DELICIOUS DELIVERIES hir­ ing order takers & drivers. Driv­ ers must have own car & in­ surance. Pt/ft shifts avail. Call 220-0000. TRAVEL HELP W ANTEDGENERAL 2 GREAT jobs! Theatre techni­ cian at Dept, o f Dance on cam­ pus. Great learning exp. w/ . good pay. Flex. hrs. Call ICC at 965-5199 or Mark at 965-3016 for details. A C T N O W !!! Don't call another ad until you hear what we have to offer! Re­ sort Reservations Dept, has 20 pos, avail. 9am-1pm or 5 pm9pm. Ì9 -$ 1 2 /h r avg, no sell­ ing! f Start immed. Call Becky 491-4921; GREAT SCHOOL wknd job. Caregiver for active quadriple­ gic. Healthy, smoke/drug free, positive attitude a must: Good pay. Will train. Tom 949-7241 Iv,m sg.; * ^ ; - V, ’; . ■. CLUB ECLIPSE now accepting applications for prom otions, host/ess, bar backs,“ bartenders, cocktail, wait- staff 919 E. A p­ ache at Rural b/w 1 -5pm 9668004 DISTINCTIVE CLEANING p/t positions avail, early morning, mid afternoon. Located on Mill. For info Contact Jason 289062L , • - - y ' . DRIVER W / customer service skills needed by Tempe based shipping Co. 24ft truck, heavy lifting, pt/ft, $8/hr + incentives. Call Nick 838-2722 D U A L -E N G IN E Dual instruction, VFR or IFR. $70/hr. Call 917-0484 FAST GROWING shipping co, needs customer ser: person to handle in-bound sales calls & rate quoting. S7/hr + incentives Tempe Call Laura 838-2722 FILM PRODUCTION, talent managem ent, & internships avail. Call Creative Artists Mgt. at 800-401-0545 / : MAKE THE money you de­ serve! Excellent earning poten­ tial w / explosive new eo. Sim­ ple product, corporate giant. Looking for m otivated ind i­ viduals. Recorded m essage 1800-640-2374 LIONS CAMP Tatiyee is seek­ ing to hire counselors to work w / handicapped children & adults in Lakeside, AZ June 1 Aug. 3 Room board & salary & credit avail. If interested leave message at (602)275-2604 * MARKET RESEARCH phone interviewers & supervisor. No sales. Eves./W knds. Tempe. Flex sched. 967-4441. LOCAL TEMPE Co. has several job openings: shipping and re­ ceiving clerk, customer service rep, retail sales clerk (PHX loca­ tion), handyman w / light car­ pentry exp. Morning or after­ noon hrs. avail. C all Bonnie 967-2678 . V LOCAL TV station seeking p/t telephone researchers. No exp Dec. Exclnt comm skills a must. Call Becky Kent 8:30-5:30 @ 243-2966; MAKE GOOD dough at Brueggar's Bagels. Now hiring for all positions and tim es. M-F hours available. Apply in per­ son or call: Rural/Chandler 592-9505. 52nd Str/B road­ way, o ff I - 10 in Tempe 8291000. MINDER BINDERS now hiring PT mgrs/ FT. Apply in person 3-5pm. 715 S. McClintock. MODELS WTD. for new agen­ cy in Scotts. r training/pics. provided if chosen, 947-4255 M ODELS/ACTORS. In ti scouts Want you for music vid­ eos and local print work. 9416922. Customer service .positions avail. Prof, environment. Close to campus., M-F. 5 -9pm, Sat. 8-12pm. ,$7/hr. Call Mike C. 968-2900. NEGD HELP for concession stand, Chandler Ostrich Festi­ val, March 7th-9th 924-7093 INTERNSHIP IN financial dis­ trict. At PaineWeber in PHX. Moti vation required. 957-5129 O u ts ta n d in s M a in e c a m p n o t e d fo r m a s n ific e n t la k e fr o n t s e ttin g & e x c e p tio n a l fa c ilitie s . mnaHUHtHnimHaBm O v e r 1 0 0 p o s itio n s fo r h e a d s a n d assistants in: Basketball Golf Swimming H ^ Y -A L T Waterskiing • AM Servers >Barback, days >Golden Swan Servers »Room Service Cashier ■Reservations Riflery Photography Ceramics Nature Study Plano Accompanist Rock Climbing • Front Desk • Host/Hostess • Busser • Door Person • FT Receptionist J O IN T H E H Y A T T T E A M EXPERIENCE THE BENEFITS AT THE HYATT REGENCY SCOTTSDALE • Medical/Dental Insurance • Life Insurance • 401 (k) Plan • Vacation/Sick Pay •Tuition Reimbursement • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates OUTSIDE JOBS - Now hiring! National Parks, Beach Resorts R anches, Rafting C o.'s. N a­ tionw ide openings. Benefits! Bonuses! Call (919) 918-7767, ext R105 . ' TRAVEL AGENCY reception­ ist, pt/ft, outgoing, fun at­ mosphere. Great pay. 970-3840 ' PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe. p/t, $6.55/hr, no exp Dec, Heavy lifting req'd. 804-0300. RED EYE is now hiring. Jr management and sales p osi­ tions are available at our local retail stores. We offer: fun work environment, flex, hrs.; excel, training. Our stores are n/s. Call N ickol for an interview 6411506. Find it FAST in the Classifieds JO B OPPORTUNITIES 1 it’s Back Again From T he Home Office In TEMPE, AZ TOP TEN REASONS TO JOIN QSM! 10. 8. 7. JOB OPPORTUNITIES $100 They will work around my school schedule Walking & biking distance from Campus GET SPRING BREAKOFFWORK! Corporations tend to hire business workers not Sandwich artist 6. Learn Business skills and Advancement potential 5. Partying is not free!! 4. Casual Dress & Relaxed Environment 3. ! Earn $200 signing BONUS! 2. Free Vegas Trip Giveaway 1. IT’S A FREE CALL 1 I O ff Tuition RELIEF MANAGER needed for Saturdays & Sundays. 9am6pm. Can study w hile you work. $6/hr. Call 966-2622. SAN DIEGO Padres, Seattle. Mariners Spring training base­ ball Box office ticket sales now hiring. Call 878-4337 | • Local & Nationwide Placement • Be A Certified Bartender WITHIN 2 FUN WEEKS I A m e r ic a n B a r te n d in g S c h o o l Tempe Phoenix a l k - in s w e l c o m e ! APPOINTMENT SETTERS Year-around work fo r career-oriented individual. Food Handler's card req'd fo r the follow ing positions in our BUSY bar & grille. PM W AIT STAFF 3USSERS COOKS HOST/HOSTESS COCKTAIL SERVERS Come join our staff where we offer ' com petitive wages, uniform s, free employee meal and much more. Please apply in person at Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd., M, T, W or F, 8:3010:30am or 2-4pm . Get the #1 source on the Alaska Fishing industry. Leant how *, thousands combine high earnings + adventure w ith no experience.. For information: (800) 276-0654 e xt. A59181 We are a research &' publishing co. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED Front Desk Clerks Van Drivers Full/Part Time Bonuses/Benefits Super 8 Motel 3401 E Van Buren Phoenix, AZ 85008 Scottsdale Embassy Suite supports a Drug-Free Workplace. EOE HELP W ANTEDGENERAL FIESTA IN N is hiring : ■ Reservation Agent ■ Conference Center Assist. PT/FT PT/FT ■ Front DeshAgent PT Apply in person Personnel Office M -F MIR-4pm n o n S Priest Tempe • EOE I f you're smooth at talking on the phone, giving and r ^ e M h g aecuratc Inform ation and consider yourself a good manager o f tim e, then consider Excell Agent Services. Our DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE SERVICES are setting new standards in the way people get Info over the phone. Our DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATORS don't sell a th in g ) But they're sm ooth a t providing long distance operator services. “ $100 Hire-On Bonus l APPLYNOW! E A R N W H A T Y O U 'R E W O R T H !! fo r a lim ite d tim e, you m ayb e e lig ib lc Hdre-On Bonus. ADT, the w orld's oldest and largest security systems company, has immediate openings fo r m otivated individuals w ith excellent telephone com m unication skills to assist us in expanding our customer base. Come Join us in our casual environm ent. You’ll get paid tra in in g , a co m p e titive s ta rtin g salary, in ,« ^ m < 0 p y ’ opportunities, excellent benefits and Irmovatli/fc schedules from which to ciioose, Applicant, w ith prior « » w rw s e rv ie e experience may qualify rot additional Incentives. W ith Excell, making Evening 6r Saturday hours :o learn more! PAID BENEFITS AN HOURLY WAGE PLUS BONUSES JO B FAIR Saturday: March 1st Join us between 2:30pm-5pm a t our Phoenix location. and TUITION REIMBURSEMENT* (-D e ta ils a va ila b le u p o n e m p lo ym e n t accep tan ce) If you're motivated and ready to go to work for a growing, dynamic organization. corner o f M ain f t GHhtK) (602) 440-4223 ADT Security Services, Inc. 9 1 6 W . Adams Phoenix, A Z85Ó 07 (O ffice s soon to be m o vin g to H a rd y & B roadw ay in T em pe) £ PH0ENIX:4280E. Camelback, Bldg. K, Ste. 160* Call Today fo r a personal interview AA/EOE/M-F J 968-7657 957-3770 A LA S K A E M P L O Y M E N T The ADT compensation plan includes: 9. PART-TIME SERVICE Reps. United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for morning, evening & wkend shifts. $6.87/hr plus Shift dif­ ferential for evening hours. Good customer Service sk ills and pleasant phone voice pre­ ferred. ^ Call 431-9500.' Tempe location. Employee drug test­ ing required, EOE/M/F/D/V. Full- Ft Part-Time Opportunities Available! H yatt supports a drug fre e w orkplace. C ertain positions m ay require testing. A ffirm ative A ction Em ployer, EOE M /F/D /V QSM , June 16 - August 24, ; Top salaries, room & board, travel provided. - C all 1-800-250-8252 O r W itte : Camp Takajo c/o M ike Sherbun 7366 Cascade Terrace Grand Ftapids, M l 49546. FAX resume to (616) 954-2950 I w ill be on campus Thursday. March 6 from 10am-4pm in the MU, Room 222 .W Interview s available M on. 9am -N oon; Tues. 3prrP6pm ; A t the P ersonnel o ffice (w . sid e o f bldg next to loading dock). 750G E. D oubletree R anch Rd. • F or m ore in fo : 991-9670 STOCK BROKER trainee need­ ed. Please call 314-4515. Leave message.. BAR & GRILLE GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR Experi ehce & e n th u si as m -a. must. Work well w/children. 612 hra/wk. 940-4041. COMPUTER LITER ATE re­ search assist, for Tempe Market Research firm. PT/FT 967-4441. ORDER PICKERS male & fe­ m ale $8-10/hr p/t, flex. sch. Autom 5226 S. 31st Place, Phx HELP W ANTEDGENERAL 4T H FLOOR Wanted: O utgoing, energetic appointment setters Tor Univer­ sal Portraits; $ 6 -1 0/hr: Call Carrie at 777-1054. . HELP; WANTED to distribute phone, cards!. E xcellent com ­ missions. Call Ray 833-6451. HELP W ANTEDGENERAL W ith Coupon N EE D E X T R A $? FU N P E O PL E COMPANY SEEKING gum taste testers. Earn $ 10/sample. $1 ,0 0 0 m ax./w eek. Send SA$E:': 3010 Wilsbijri Blvd. Ste. 4 3 9 L os A ngeles, C A, 90010 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL ■ K 5 ljll.0 Vkt Faitmortt (off4d0i St. between JktNRhwy 0 Southern, near W 0 ) :; Page 19 Friday, February 28, 1997 State P ress HELP WANTED* GENERAL VALET PARKING Attendants for American Valet. Must be clean cut & polite. PT evenings. $6-12/hr. 861-9182 B ill Every Thunday RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTEDSALES HELP WANTEDSALES POWERHOUSE GYM & Fit­ ness needs highly motivated fit­ ness counselors that would like to make fitness a career, earn $20+/hr., work fle x . hrs. immed. management opp. Apply in person 1301 E. Uni­ versity Dr., Tempe. NINE WEST Group needs ft/pt sales associates. Hourly wage + monthly bonus DOE. N ichole or Beth at Easy Spirit for inter­ view 423-8990 or 423-9689 NEW INTERNET Company looking for consultants, Full training program. No computer req'd. Internet on your TV. Commissions paid wkly. Call 1800-813-9501 ACCTING CLERK 10 key PT pm and Sat. Computer exp. Tempe Chris 893-6884. RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTEDCLERICA L ACCTNG ASST for inv, b ill­ ing, filing, etc. Self-motivated & acctng experience. P/T, flex, sched. $7/hr. Send app/res to 3875 N. 44th St. #200, Phx, AZ 85018 or fax 952-5250, attn controller. RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE HELP WANTEDCLERICA L FOOD SERVERS needed. All shifts. Steve's G rill, 139 E. Adams, Phoenix. 252-2742. NEED $ before finals? Recep­ tionist needed now! P/T thru Apr. $7/hr flex hrs. Must have car. Contact Nielle 829-6628. HELP WANTED D eli clerk wanted. Rinaldi's on 3rd. 9219344. Ask for Diane. HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE N ow hiring counter, servers, bartenders & chicken mascots. Apply: 855 S. Rural Rd. MADISON'S IN Scottsdale now accepting applications 3-6pm for hostess & server. Apply in person 7108 E. Stetson Dr. Scottsdale CORK'NCLEAVER MAJERLE'S A ccepting apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. Currently hiring hostess/host, w aitstaff, & night cooks. Apply in person, 24 N 2nd St,* Phx. CLUCK-U PERSONALS ADOPTION? PREGNANT? I 7 95 £ a u a fc á ra e 1 Ite m 11am - 9pm TONIGHT tte Debitier! 3 * 0 -9 1 2 2 e a n n o ^ s Pina Q1 Saturday Night ^...BIT O ’...^ . j ane y SERVICES You CHOOSE! 1 800 675-3407 - CASHIERS: NIGHT shift $8/br Wait staff: immediate openings for lunch & dinner shifts. $3/hr. + tips. Sushi Bar Sakana 5061 E. Elliot 598-0506 EARLY CHILDHOOD Educa­ tors needed-Toddler-School agers. P/t pos. arn/pm. Great Hrs. Calf 985-0221 Light & Life Christian Preschool and Daycare - THE CHOICE IS YOURS Sunday Night Isa b e l l a • COMPLETE BIRTH C O N TR O L CARE. S t a r fu d g e J Depo-Provera, Birth Control Pills, IUD, Morning After Pill Balboa Cafe • P R E G N A N C Y TESTING 40 4 S. M ilt A ve. 966-1300 F A M IL Y P L A N N IN G IN STITU TE by Frances Drake Friday, February 2 8 , 1 9 9 7 • ARIES (March 21 to April; J9) A. quarrel about money could : erupt if you insist on being Stub­ born. You could renew a friend­ ship from lo n g ago.., Group a c tiv itie s are favored. The evening brings.a pleasant sur­ prise; , T AURUS (April 20 to May ; 20) You aren’t likely to agree with an adviser during morning hours. A longstanding home"related problem is. resolved to your sa tisfa c tio n . E ntertain guests in the evening. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) You’re pleased with the results o f a private talk. You want to spend sòme, tim e by y o u rself later in the day. A pet project . has your attention. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) It should be a day o f social suc­ cesses for you. You’re right to turn dow n so m e o n e ’s risk y financial proposition. During evening hours, your popularity is òn the rise. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Be sympathetic and supportive, but think twice before you agree to lend someone money. You are inspired about ways to improve home decor. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to S ep t 22) Morning hours could bring an un exp ected expenditure; Couples are on the same wave­ length. It’s a romantic time for married folks and singles, par­ ticularly once the sun sets. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You find the workplace dreary at times. A new project offered you could be too risky. If out sh op p in g , you c o m e across som ething appealing, but be sure.you’re getting a bargain,. SCORPIO (Oct; 23 to, Nov, 21j You are apt to b ecom e involved in other people’s prob­ lems^ le a v in g little time' for yourself. Y ou’re e ffectiv e in co mm u ni cat j p n s and should make important phone calls. SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 22 to Dec. 21) You’re hot getting all the facts about a business or financial proposal. Make- certain :you“return an important phone call, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan, 19) You might be happier alone for a while; Devote some time to the completion o f a project at home. Family activities are ful­ filling after dark. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Y our ju dgm ent is g ood about shopping and dom estic interests, but you need care in financial dealings with others. You’re right to be suspicious o f evasive associates. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) C ontinue with the w onderful progress you’re making. Don’t count on much feedback from others for a while. Rest assured that you’re on target. YOU BORN TODAY are pos­ sessed o f wanderlust and travel much, particularly early in life. Y ou are likely to be someone who thinks it great fun to run with the bulls at Pamplona, for example. That reckless quality is attractive to the opposite sex, but you are not quick to settle dow n. B le ss e d w ith w ritin g skills, you are likely to chroni­ cle your adventures. O 1997 King Features Syndicate Inc: PHOENIX 7806 N. 27th Ave. r B B . W SCOTTSDALE 2334 N. Scottsdale Rd. 9 9 7 -7 4 9 3 PERSONALS $19.99 FOR a full set o f nails is an awesome deal at Wizzards Hair Studio. 967-2360 $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. A void the 'chop shops'. W iz­ zards Hair Studio. 967-2360 CAN MAN live .without God? Read and find out! Quo Vadis Books 120 E. University XQ WILL kick a** inkickball. XQ v s 2E SERVICES WAXING & ELECTROLYSIS Men: back, chest,, etc. Women: legs, bikini, etc. 994-0059 CRUISE LINES hiring - earn to $2,0OO+/mo; plus free wor? d travel (Europe, Caribbean, etc.). N o exp. necessary. Room/ board. Ring (919) 918-7767, ext. Ci05. TYPING/WORD PROCESSING $ 1,99/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed. APA/M LA. Same d a y D T P . Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MISCELLANEOUS $ 1000'S POSSIBLE Reading books. Part Time. At home. Toll free 1-800-218-9000 Ext, R-1676 for listings, SPRING BREAK is here! Look sensatioria) in Jo-B's swiriisuits. Call 1-888-470-JO-BS for eataloge.. Guys, the 1997 swimsuit calendar is still available. AMAZINGLY SIMPLE! Earn $400 w eekly plus cd's galore! A lso good fund raiser. 3452465 : D O riT GET STUCK! Free report showing how to keep phone charges separated between roommates. Recording(310) 335-6946 INTERNET URLS CHECK OUT yoilr student g - q. v ie r n m e n t . htt p :/ / W:w w . as u, ed u/s tu de n tlife/ASASU YOU CAN buy parts through thé internet; No hassle, great prices! www.eàrnhardtxom SERVICES ! ! ! !FREE! !! ! No appointment necessary A b o r tio n with Twilight Sleep Evening & Saturday Appt. Available ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST FAST FUNDRAISER - Raise $500 in 5 days - G reeks, C lubs, motivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obliga­ tion. (800) 862-1982 Ext: 33. CRUISE LINE entry level posi­ tions avail. Great benefits. (714) 549-1569. : SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES FUNDRAISING N ANN Y/MOTHER's helper. 4 mo old infant care: light house­ hold chores: 12+20 hrs/Wk. Non-smoker; must have reliable transp, CPR certif. Education or Nursing major a plus. 62nd St. & Green way. Call Debra 9985158. ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Earn to $3,000-$6,000+/m o. in fisheries, parks, resorts. Airfare! Food/lodging! Get all the op­ tions. Call (919) 918-7767, ext. A 105. BABYSITTERS & N annies, flex schedules. Car req'd. $4.757/hr. 460-1200. SINGER FOR professional la­ dies' group, alto, good sitereading skills. For further info, call Mrs. Lewis 866-2077. NANNY P/T. 1 & 3 yrs. old. 3 days, morns. English speak­ ing, Paradise Valley. 607-9524 JO B OPPORTUNITIES AFTERNOON^ NANNY needed immed. Must have a rel. car with a/£, .be avail, from 2:30-' 6pm M -F, arid lik e sports & shopping. $6/hr+gas, Loc. Shea/Scqtts Rd N. to Pinnacle Peak Rd. 998-3154 day, 5854651 eve; ask for Carrie Mart? MUSIC ENTHUSIASTIC PEOPLE want­ ed! Arizona A thletic C lub'is looking for part-time employees to work with our children's pro­ grams. Dedicated, energetic peo­ ple are encouraged to apply at 1425 W. 14th St. in Tempe. SERVERS WANTED for busy catering co. M ostly Weekend work. Restaur, exp. a must. 470-1644 ask for Jill HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE Think about it! Choosing the right fam ily to adopt your baby involves m ore than reading ads and calling 800 numbers. I'm an adoption consultant who can help. W ith us, you read about the couple and decide If they are the rig h t fam ily for you and your baby before you speak to them. Open or closed adoptions. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE 9 4 5 -4 9 9 9 Free Caller ID Box From U S West! Free Installation! O nly $5.95 per month Call Brad at 630-0879 To Place Your Order Thorbecke's Gym ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 96544706 S ta te P r e s s Classifieds M atthews Center, Basem ent Office: 965-6735 966-6621 $2 per workout plus $Ì0 membership of yearly membership $900 ' C lassified Ad O rd e r Form * ★ * * * * * * * * * * * * H O N EST ★ * * ********** * P lease be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the S ta te Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the S ta te P ress shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit m ay .be given for the first insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify fo r m ake­ goods. No refunds wHI be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit w ill be held on account tor future advertising. d Private Party : 1-4 days. $1.62 per line, per dày A 5-9 days, $1.87 per liné, per day _ . 10+ days, $1.42 per line, per day T v it']. 3 Commercial 1 day, $2.47 per line 2-4 days, $1.89 per line, per day 5-0 days. $1.67 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1.82 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. http://new s. v p s a a s u .e d u / Made fo r ASU students, by ASU students to save you money all over town! P age 20 State P ress Friday, February 28, 1997 V^ " ■ K Hü r CLUB RlO lnvi Saturday, March 9 LernorïJirayoiay 'ISt.* T h URS d AVS i — ■ fc V 1Wv Ir / -• . .'Wl m I I « ¡ 1 1 9 9H99HK99I iiiiia is Ä 'i-' FRIDAYS $2 MONSTER BEERS $2 L.l. TEAS W ÈÊÊÊÊÈM ÊÈ& SATURDAYS 2 FOR 1 DRINKS 4 -7 COMPLIMENTARY B U FFET DIG ON GROOVY V IBES O F T H E 70S & 80 S $2 MONSTER BEERS • $2 TEAS 25C DRAFTS LIVE ON PATIO - LEMON KRAYOLA a I 1 I B ¡S®!® ÊIÈ^ïïÊbÎ'î Mar MP^KXED OUT^«1 Mar i| I - fttrfessional Boxing . MW 13-EDGE NIGHT with 106.3 J if y SINGLED OUT with Pistol Pete Mar 15-St. PATRICKS