W orld / N S ports a tio n Storm victims try to recover Saturday' s devastation W restling squad competes in Pac-1 0 championship P age 3 P age 1 3 from I O pinion........ Police Report Sports.,........ ©Copyright. State Press,-1997 Tempe, Arizona M onday, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 An Independent M orning D aily V o i. 81 N o. 99 Tem pe bar u n p lu gs p lan fo r h ip -h o p show s B y C a d o n n a P eyton S t a t e P r e ss The owner of Tempe’s Electric Ballroom has a shorter list of bands to fill the stage since indicating he won’t host hip-hop per­ formances. “The hip-hop scene has too many rival­ ries and too much negativity right now,*’ said Jim Torgeson, owner o f the Electric Ballroom, 1216 E. Apache Blvd. R ecently, the bar, know n for its live music, had problems with the state Liquor Board, law enforcem ent agencies and the Tempe City Council. Liquor Board Director Howard Adams filed an order to revoke the Club’s liquor license because of two alleged incidents. One case involved two high school students who were allegedly pulled on stage and sexu­ ally assaulted during a performance by the rap group Onyx. Another incident involved a wait­ ress who claimed she was given free drinks and raped by a Ballroom manager. No charges were filed in either case and the liquor license is not under any threat of being revoked, Torgeson said. Additionally, the City Council voted unani­ mously Thursday to stage a hearing March 13 to reconsider the bar’s use perm it and to review previous conditions of permit approval. Adams said he doesn’t think the Electric Ballroom provides a safe environment for its patrons. “People that go ... should be able to feel safe .and secure,” Adams said. Torgeson disagreed, however, saying he provides more than enough security for his customers. “He’s (Adams) a clown,” Torgeson said. “He doesn’t know what he is talking about. He doesn’t know my biggest expense is security.” Torgeson said he is not canceling the show s because o f A dam s o r the L iquor Board, but solely for the safety of his patrons. “I don’t need to worry about m yself,” he said. “ But I do need to worry about my customers,” Due to recent controversies surrounding rap and hip-hop artists — such as Tupac Shakur, who was gunned down last year in L as V egas — a fe a r has b een c re a te d among m usic venues, said T yree Carter, président of TMC Presents, a hip-hop pro­ motions company. “Hip hop is known for little things hap­ pening here and there,” he said. “The Electric Ballroom has been under so much scrutiny and they don’t want to take that risk.” Rap group KRS l ’s M arch 12 perfor­ mance and The Jungle Brothers’ April 15 performance have both been canceled at the Ballroom, but have been rebooked at the Nile Theater, 105 W. Main St. in Mesa. Hip-hop artist Kid Capri was also sched­ uled to appear at the Electric Ballroom, but his show was also canceled. “I wish the local hip-hop community would step back and realize their tensions are making it hard for people to want to open their doors to them,” Torgeson said. “I really am sorry that I can’t do these shows, b u ll just can’t risk it — not just for me but for whoever.” , T o rg eso n said it m ay be som e tim e before he will even consider hosting hiphop performances. “I may never,” he said. Lecture pops top P h o n y con versation o n b eer b rew in g B y B en Leatherm an S t a t e P r e ss E rik Guzm vski/State Press Junior History major Kaya Bell enjoys a telephone conversation with her sister between classes while relaxing on the ground on Tyler Mall. Thè phone is shorter than standard pay telephones in order to allow wheelchair access. Debate over University budget lingers B y V iv i S t e n b e r g S t a t e P r e ss As Arizona legislators are busy sending approved bills from the House to the Senate and vice versa, the budget proposal for state universities is slowly moving its way through the legislative process Since the 1998 state budget proposal’s introduction by the Joint Legislative Budget Committee in mid-January, legislators have raised the university portion by $1.4 mil­ lion through various funds shuffling. Among these adjust­ m ents, $2.2 m illion w ere added to support enrollm ent growth at ASU. Christine Thompson, the executive director o f Arizona Students Association said there are a lot of issues that need to be m onitored closely as the budget process enters its final weeks. The JL B C reco m m en d atio n to increase law school tuition at ASU and UofA by $1,000 for in-state students and $2,000 for otit-of-state students is o f special concern to ASA. “We have taken a strong stance against it,” Thompson said. “Tuition is not to be set by the legislators, but by ABOR (Arizona Board of Regents).” However, the proposal, along with other budget issues, has yet to be debated in full House and Senate committees. W hen the various budget proposals were presented in January, many university officials were surprised Gov. Fife . Sym ington proposed a $41 m illion increase in general fiinds — significantly higher than other recommendations. ABOR requested an increase piT$39 millioiLand the JLBC’s proposal was $18 million. • JLBC Assistant Director John Lee said he thinks, by the time the budget reaches its final stage, the general funds will be close to the governor’s proposal, Lee said the uni­ versities have strong proponents in the Legislature that will help to see the figures increase over the next few weeks. D am on Pace, the state relatio n co o rd in ato r fo r the T u rn t o B ud g et , page 2 . The dream of a lecture on beer became a reality Friday. Mark Konings, a self-styled expert in the subject of all things ale, spoke on the long history of brewing beer at a public lecture in the M emorial Union. The talk was Co­ sponsored by the ASU chem istry departm ent and the American C hem ical Society:; _ “It’s kind of a tracing of how beer has played a role in the developing of society (and) the origin of civilization — a lot of little trivia, facts and interesting things about beer that made it famous,” Konings said. Konings said modem brewing methods popped up in the 16th century in Southern Germany, in areas such as Bavaria and Bohemia. ‘‘Brewing as we know it was developed back in those times in the monasteries of Europe,” he said. “Beer itself has been around as long as civilization.” T h e earliest recordings o f the m ighty lager were on Sum erian clay tablets in 6000 B .C ., and.according to Konings, they really knew how to hold their liquor. “The ancient Sumerians had 16 different kinds of beer that they made,” he said. “It was very important in dailylife terms o f celebrations and special events.” Konings, who won a 1992 homebrew competition in his hometown o f M inneapolis, also touched on the growing mend o f microbreweries and compared them to some o f the mainstream brands. “For picking out a beer off the shelf that you can guaran­ tee is very good — ju st about anything Samuel Adams m akes,” he said. “I tend to like the m icrobrewed beers which are richer, more fuller flavored, but I’m sure there’s some phenomenally good beers coming out of Arizona. The best beers are the local (ones).” Konings also defended his favorite beer against all other ales, foreign or domestic, even though he admits domestic brands may be a tad weaker. “The American philosophy is (to) make it tasteless so it offends nobody and then market the hell out o f it arid tell people it’s what they should be doing if they want to get women. If seem s to w ork,” he said. “The English and Germans have kind o f felt if they make really good beer ... people will want to drink a lot.” As for the science behind the six-pack, Konings detailed the chemistry o f the fermentation process as well as what makes a beer bad. “Beer has a very short shelf life and it doesn’t travel well,” he said. “That’s why the best beer tends to be drunk­ en near where it was made.” Those in attendance had their favorite brands, but they appeared to come away from the event with some new insight. Chemistry professor Tom Moore said he suspects he T urn to B eer , page 2 . P a ge 2 S t a t e P ress M on d ay, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 Beer. lö D A Y C o n t in u ed from page 1. C am pus clubs an d àrgâriiifè* lions may submit written entries to the State P ress in the b a se m e n t of th e Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over bie pboneor viafax. Deadline for requests is noon th e d a y before publication and entries will not be accepted more than th ree working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries m ust contain the full name of the club or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the location! Ail requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incom plete or illegible entries will 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 are printed a s space permits. • C h ris tia n S cience Organization — Meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the Danforth Chapel, • Golden Key N ational Honor Society — Officer’s m eeting at 5:30 p.m. at Cluck-U. • C ollege of Liberal A rts and Science — College Council gen­ eral meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the" MU Gila room 214, second floor. • Students Towards Educational P rogress -G u e st s p e a k e r C ristina Torres from Student Life will be speaking on leadership at 4:40 p.tn. in the MU Pinai room 215. • “Safe Spring Break" — Get tips on how to h a v e a s a fe sp rin g break a t 7 p.m. in the S ahuaro Atrium. • Kundalini Yoga — M eets at 7 1p m i n t h e MUGotdroom 203: • Coalition of Justice & Peace — Weekly meeting at noon in flie MU Mohave. • Career Services — “Completing the Puzzle Workshop” at 4 p.m. in the C areer Development Center. “Effective Em ploym ent L etters Workshop” at 1:40 p.m. in the MU room 224. • J u s tic e S tu d ies A cad em ic S tu d en t U nion (JS A S U ) — General meeting at 5 p.m. in the MU Coconino room 224. • ASU Triathlon Team — Weekly meeting at 8:30 p.m. in the SRC second floor classroom, • MUAB G allery Com mittee — Meeting at 4:30 p.m. in th e MU conference room 1A, third floor. • Counselor Training Center •— Free counseling available for fulltime students and staff at Payne Hall, room 402. For more informa­ tion or an appointment, call 9655067. vinced the seminar committee in the chemistry department to sponsor him coming out jiere and ACS decided to co-sponsor,” he said. Coincidentally, thei two met during ¡a keg party at the U niversity o f C alifornia at Berkeley. “(In) the college of chemistry, they kind of looked the other way and pulled out a big keg of beer and used it as a social gathering for professors and m ostly graduate stu­ dents.” White said. “Berkeley’s a little bit more relaxed.” wasted more than $10,000 on a mail-order beer service when he could have easily got­ ten the same quality from a microbrew. “That’s part of my question to him, how do 1 know when I’m drinking a good beer,” Moore asked. liI think I’m still not sure, but I’m going to go and try that Sam Adams he spoke so highly of.” The informational lecture was prompted by Chemistry professor Jim White, chair of the Arizona section of ACS. “Mark’s an old friend of mine (and) I con- Budget C o n t in u e d from page 1. Associated Students of ASU, had a positive outlook' on the final budget. “I would like it to be the same as the OSPB’s (Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting), and realistically, 1 think it will be close,” he said. ASASU is planning to put heavy p re s-, sure on legislators regarding both the bud­ get and other University-related bills that are up for vote this session. • Thompson said ASA will also lobby the legislators in matters im portant to all of Arizona's students. “The more they fund, the less tuition will increase,” Thompson said. Legislators are scheduled to hand over their final budget for the governor’s signa­ ture March 18. ^S ta te P ress IF Y O U 'R E C L A S S , R E A D IN G Y O U 'R E IN B IG T H IS IN T R O U B L E ! N G o in g E ^ t b e m e D ir e c t io n -p o s * 0 * A * Who has guided you toward a quality education? Has it been an instructor who is inspiring, knowledgeable, dedicated? Here's your chance to thank those instructors who make learning an exciting experience. S A ]sf D W l C H E S T u rk e y B I T ^ C h ic k e n B a c o n H a m M e lt 1997 College of Liberal Arts & Sciences Distinguished Teaching Award C h e e s e s te a k ™ ’n C h e e s e M e lt N om ination form s fo r th e C ollege o f Liberal A rts & Sciences M D istinguished Teaching A w ard are ava ila b le a t e a t J L o a f M o n s te r™ th e M U In fo rm atio n Desk, R egistrars' Sites, CLAS department offices, and Social Sciences 111 (*). Careful.. thHa’rH loaded! Nomination forms must be received by March 7 .1 9 9 7 . J&l Extrem e Carver™ Com bo O N L Y *3” Arizona State U n iv ersity Include« your choice o f one Extreme Carver™ Sandwich, an individual side item and a regular drink. ^ G ood at all participating Boaton Market locations. Present coupon when otdering. Only one coupon per visit per customer. Coupon is not redeemable for cash, for gift certificates, or with any other coupon or special offer. N o reproductions allowed. Applicable taxes paid by bearer. N o cash refund. Offer expires 4/6/97. . cÀ sì *O r you can send a letter o f nomination to facjhsOasuvm.inre.asu.edu, or print a form from the WWW at http://www.asu.edu/clas/awards.htm l j _____ W orld /N ation______ _ State P ress___________________________ __________________________ ' M o n d ay, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 ' __________ Page 3 Albanian army to maintain public order By M e r it a D h im g j o k a A s s o c i a t e d P r e ss TIRANA, Albania — Facing growing anti-government unrest, parliam en t d eclared a state o f em ergency on Sunday, allowing the army to be deployed to ensure public order and weapons to be used to protect public buildings and key roads. Police, though, will remain the first line o f defense in quelling riots and protests that have grown out of public rage over the collapse last month o f popular, high-risk investment schemes. In a televised address Sunday afternoon, President Sali Berisha called the unrest “a communist rebellion backed by foreign intelligence agencies. ... We promise you we will employ all measures under the law, even the most difficult ones, against this rebellion.” He gave no further details. B e n d in g slig h tly u n d er p re ssu re a p p lie d by the p ro te ste rs, B erish a on S atu rd ay an n o u n ced th at his Cabinet would resign to be replaced by new ministers — still from his D em ocratic Party but approved by the Socialists and other opposition groups. B ut P rim e M in is te r A le k sa n d e r M ek si to ld T he Associated Press on Sunday that a new government would not stop Albania’s descent into chaos. He said he agreed to step down only because a governm ent m ust resign “when it’s not able to handle a situation.” “The situation is more serious than ever,” Meksi said. The government hopes the political shuffling will mol­ lify protesters, who blam e the D em ocratic Party-led administration for not warning them about the riskiness o f the pyramid schemes, in which nearly every Albanian lost money. The schemes pay generous interest rates to early investors but collapse when deposits dry up. Berisha, who did not say he himself would resign, said the new government would face huge challenges, includ­ ing re sto rin g p u b lic o rd er and w inning the tru st o f Albania’s political parties. By Saturday, Albania’s southern region had become a scene o f lawlessness. Carloads of weapons were distributed throughout the countryside, and young men in the port city o f Vlora fired a constant barrage of bullets into the air. Meksi said it would take at least a year to regain con­ trol of the country’s arsenal. “It will be difficult to gather again tens of thousands of guns that the Defense Ministry left in the hands of crimi­ nals, rebels or desperate people,” he said. He blamed “the most extremist elements” in the Socialist Party — the renamed Communists — for the chaos. PatSullivan/AssociatedPress A rag dolt sits atop a pile of debris of what remains of a downtown neighborhood in Arkadelphia, Ark., Sunday, th e town was hit by a tornado Saturday. 24 re p o rte d d ea d a fte r ‘a y e a r’s w o rth o f to rn ad o es’ B y D a v i d A . L ie b A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Nicholas Word was stand­ ing on his front porch when the tornado struck, smash­ ing his tiny wood-frame house off its foundation and hurling him and the wreckage into his neighbor’s yard. “When I woke up, there was just rubble — rubble and fog,” Word said Sunday amid the devastation of Saturday’s killer storms. “All 1 can tell you is, it’s the worst sound that you’d ever want to hear in your life. But 1 guess I cheated death.” The storms killed at least 24 people in Arkansas, ripping through Little Rock, Arkadelphia and smaller towns around. V It seemed like “a year’s worth of tornadoes,” Gov. Mike Huckabcc said Sunday. There was a possibility the death toll could climb as rescue workers worked in Sunday’s driving rain to pull away the wreckage, authorities said. More than 200 people were injured and hundreds of homes, businesses and other structures were destroyed or damaged along a 260-mile path from Hempstead C ounty in the southw est to G reene C ounty in the state’s northeastern comer. At least 10,000 electricity customers had no power. The same huge system o f thunderstorms also killed as many as seven people in M ississippi, Kentucky, Tennessee and O hio on Saturday. Flooding forced scores of people from their homes in W est Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio. Huckabee said he would seek a federal disaster dec­ laration covering at least eight Arkansas counties. “The term I’m using to describe it is ‘apocalyptic proportions,” ’:the governor said after flying over the damage in Little Rock and Arkadelphia. “There is no way to describe the level of damage we have.” Emergency officials conducted a house-by-house search of Arkadelphia for the dead and injured while police evacuated part of downtown because of natural gas leaks. Leaks were also reported in College Station. W eather specialists had not yet determined if the area was hit by one tornado or several, said Renee Fair, warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service office at North Little Rock. Q uake survivor heard final scream s from h is fa m ily B y A n w a r Fa r u q i A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss Mohammad Sayyad/Aaaoclatad Press A man carries a young boy killed by Friday's earthquake In the village of Shiran, in the moun­ tainous ArdabH province northwest of the capital Tehran, Iran, Saturday. Rescue teams fought snow, high winds and w ild dogs Saturday as they tried to bring help to the earthquake-devas­ tated region. Doctors and aid workers placed the death toll in the thousands. GOLESTAN, Iran — The last sound Hussein Sultani heard from his daughter-inlaw was her scream when the earth began to shake. His mud hut trembled as boulders dis­ lodged from the surrounding hills rolled down onto the village, killing a group of women washing clothes at a nearby stream. Among the dead was his grandson and his 20-year-old daughter-in-law, Mariam. Not a single home was standing in this village on Sunday, two days after a magni­ tude 6.1 earthquake left an estimated 3,000 people dead and 2,000 injured in a moun­ tainous region of northwestern Iran. The Iranian quake was the most devas­ tating of several Asian temblors in recent days, in A rm enia, C hina and P akistan. Officials gave a lower death toll — 554 — than aid workers and villagers, but govem- ment said the casualty figures would surely rise às rescuers arrive at the scene. Sultani, wearing a skullcap and walking with a stoop, m ade his way through the rubble with a flashlight searching for his family. Aid workers had given him a tent and cooking oil. “I lost my daughter-in-law and her 3-yearold baby as well as my cousin,” he said. Blood stained the snow-covered ground, and survivors huddled around small bon­ fires in the 19-degree cold. In the distance, howls could be heard from wolves and wild dogs, animals that have attacked corpses and hampered rescuers in other villages. A li D arabi, a construction w orker in nearby Rasht, said he rushed to Golestan as soon as he heard about the quake. “I lost my sister and her three children in the earthquake,” said Darabi as he car­ ried a burning piece o f wood. “W e still don’t know who has died and who is alive.” Opinion P age 4 State P ress M oriday, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 Lditorial Legislature gets poor grades on education aren’t ready to say goodbye to Arizona Gov. Fife Symington, while the state Legislature is on academic probation with Arizonans, according to a survey of 500 of the state’s registered voters. Of the 230 Republicans polled, some 15 percent of the misguided souls preferred Symington to other possible 1998 gubernato­ rial candidates — including Rep. M att Salmon (11 percent), Secretary of State Jane Hull (H percent), Superintendent of Public Instruction Lisa Keegan (9 percent) and Arizona Sen. Tom Patterson (6 percent). About 45 percent said they remain undecided. On another note, 52 percent o f overall respondents said state legislators should get a C on their legislative report cards, 18 percent said they should get a D, and 10 percent said they should get an E. ASU pollster Bruce Memli, who conducted the study, was surprised at the C grade because there has been a great deal of attention placed on tax cuts in Arizona. But he then cited two possibilities for the poor grade: negative pub­ licity around certain legislative members and the Legislature’s “perceived inability” to approach the issue of school funding. We breathe a sigh of relief that 45 percent of the Republican respondents in this study were undecided on die issue of governor candidates; there’s still some hope that they’ll vote for someone new. But w e’re saddened that Symington received the largest amount of sup­ port after the problems he’s had in his time as governor. Symington had his chance at running Arizona, but he was too busy trying to straight­ en out his own financial mess. We don’t think Fife deserves another chance to run this state, it’s time for someone new. Merrill was right about the Legislature’s poor grade having ft», do with ignoring school É funding. If the state' Legislature thinks that proposing tax: cuts is enough to gain the sup­ port o f its constituents, it needs, another approach.; The L egislature needs to ato p ignoring the schools and start considering that the population is truly in favor o f property educating its children. No one is thrilled with looking at their pay-B check each week and seeing how much taxes they paid. But the complaining subsides after about two minutes because we know that the money ' is going toward the country and the take responsibility for educating tbeir chil­ dren; the state should step up to its responsi­ bility and help us help the kids. e p u b l ic a n s ■ if STATE PRESS a I A LL B R IA N A N D E R S O N , Violence not logical way to end abortion Abortion. Murder. As a Christian, I find both of eorged. these to be equally abhorrent, as ROSE should all who claim to be fol­ Columnist lowers of Christ. Christians are supposed to have a different set o f v a lu e s th an o th e r p e o p le . They are supposed to value life both in and out o f the womb. The right to life isn’t ju st for the unborn. I find it disturbing, regardless of one’s opinion or stand on this issue, that a group identifying themselves as “The Army of God” would begin a reign of terror with the intentions of avenging the unborn whose chance at life was stopped by abortion. Just as a fetus doesn’t choose to be bom, bombs don’t choose their victims. More often than not, innocent and uninformed people die from them. This self-appointed “Army of God” has taken responsi­ bility for the bombing of a gay and lesbian club in Atlanta after they claimed responsibility for bombing an abortion clinic, also in Atlanta. In addition to the gay bar, there is some suspicion that they may have been responsible for the Olympic park bombing last year because of the proximity of the park to the AT&T pavilion. AT&T openly supports its gay and lesbian employees. A former abortion-rights activist suggests many lesbians have long been militant supporters of abortion. He felt that the extreme right-to-life movement may have forced the connection between the gay lifestyle and support of abor­ tion. While I do not agree with the lifestyles of gay and les­ bian men and women, I also do not think this is how you stop their behavior. The Olympic park bombing took one life and injured more than 100 people. I concede that innocent lives are taken everyday at abortion clinics and I find this detestable. Some of the methods used by abortionists are repelling — so repelling that they are the targets of legislative action. There are those on the pro-abortion side of the line who have chosen to mislead the government and the public con- B ceming late-term, partial-birth abortions. Instead o f the 400 to 500 “supposedly” performed each year, the Chandler Tribune reported that there are, in actuality, 3,000 to 4,000. Ron F itzsim m ons, executive d irecto r o f the N ational Coalition o f Abortion Providers, does not regret or apolo­ gize for this intentional deception. This misrepresentation was unethical on their part, but it does not justify any additional bloodshed. Their deception is not and cannot be a declaration of war. Those who support life cannot allow themselves to be so incensed on this issue they act in such a manner as to take the lives of others. The Bible speaks against taking an innocent life. The Sixth Commandment clearly says, “Thou shalt not kill.” If th at’s not enough, the Bible also says in Exodus 23:7, “Keep thee far from a false matter; and the innocent and righteous slay thou not: for I will not justify the wicked.” I finçl it irresponsible to set in motion our own modem day Inquisition, regardless of the cause. To lash out with bombs or guns to stop abortion is wrong. It is not what Jesus Christ would condone. You cannot establish or prove it scripturally. Without this backing, there is no foundation for these bombers’ actions. There have been 1.3 million babies aborted annually in the United States, but one cannot answer this with a bomb. Since 1977, there have been 1,700 bombings and arsons committed against these clinics. It was once said that these actions scream “fundamaniac on a mission from God.” Conduct of this type serves no other purpose than to disenfranchise right-to-life sup­ porters from those who can affect change. The U.S. Supreme Court has provided those who “truly” support right-to-life issues an opportunity. They did this by striking down the “ floating” buffer zone and in effect allowing them access to those seeking termination of preg­ nancy. For those who wish to save the lives of unborn chil­ dren, this is an option. There are legislative channels to pur­ sue that can precipitate change. It must be confronted in ways that make people aware and supportive. This can never be accomplished with a bomb or a gun. George D. Rose Sr. is a junior studying public relations and can be reached at WriteSt907@aol.com. Editor D U S T IN K R U G E L , M anaging Editor CARYL M ICALIZIÖ........ ..................... ......Night Editor COPY EDITORS: Jodi Bafugdo, Lorie Roberts. TIMOTHY TAFT......... City Editor PH OTOGRAPHERS: Erik Guzowski, Pat Shannahan. RAY STERN City Editor COLUM NISTS: Kevin J. Beriat, Michelle Carson, Olga THERESA VALLES ........ .Opinion Editor Fuentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Gordon, Michelle Hardt, CHRISTA CERRENTANO........... .News Editor Diane C. Jacobs, George D. Rose, Sr., Adam Schiffer, Joshua LORI CAIN Photo Editor Solovskoy, Steven Stein. JIM POULIN........... ...,...y.„;,M;....;...^r ..v.......Photo Editor CARTOONISTS: Brian Fainington, David Gould, Stacy RANDY JO N E S.......................... .Sports Editor Holmstedt, Jonathan T. Inge, Steve Tansley, Michael S. ED ODEVEN........r...v.r,..i..,->*........ ........Asst. Sports Editor Whiteman. TIM BAXTER.......Editor PR O D U C T IO N : Adrianna G arcia, Kai H aisch-Risley, LEYLA S A L M A S S I A N . . . . . A s s t . Magazine Editor Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Erik Noland, Shellie Scott. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Can Dewald, Dan Ellstiom, R EPO R TE R S: Sara Bush, Kevin Culwell, Deanna Darr, David Goodwin, Brandon Mudd, Nick Pezzorello, Jess Rankin, R ow e E d g ell, L id ia K elly, Ben L eatherm an, M elody Maik Santiago, Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland. McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Vivi Stenberg. C L A SS IFIE D S: Heidi H eister, W ayne H oover, Sarah SPO R T S R EPO R TER S: Josh DeFamio, Percy Ednalino Kimmel, Stacey Thayer, Joy Thompson. Jr;, Lori Haro, Matt Paulson, John Sheehy. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: BRIAN ANDERSON Editor DUSTIN KRUGEL Managing Editor THERESA VALLES Opinion Editor CHRISTA 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 15, A rizona State U niversity, Tempe, Ariz, 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information.............. 965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine................. 965-1695 Advertising..............965-6555 Classifieds................ 965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu Opinion S t a t e P r ess Monday, March 3, 1997 P ag e 5 Réintroduction program on way to salvaging species Im ag in e, fo r unafraid o f people . a m om ent, th at During the late nineteenth century, as IHRISTOPHER y o u c o u ld r e ­ more and more people settled in the south­ PUTNAM p o p u la te an western United States, large numbers of Guest Columnist extin ct species. condors were shot for amusement and many Im a g in e y o u were shot because ranchers feared the birds c o u ld w a tc h an a n im a l th a t b e c a m e were attacking cattle. These beliefs were, of ex tin ct in the w ild and o b serv e how it course, totally ignorant; condors only scav­ liv ed and su rv iv ed , how it reproduced enge food from the carcasses o f already and cared for its young. Sound like som e­ dead animals. They act as sort of a natural thing from Jurassic Park! Not at all — cleanup crew for their habitat. this is happening in Arizona right now. In As early as 1939, b io lo g ists re c o g ­ fact, A SU will host Bob M iles, Project nized that condor populations, then esti­ C o o r d in a to r of th e C o n d o r m a te d a t 150 b ird s , w e re d e c lin in g . R e in tro d u c tio n P ro g ra m fo r A riz o n a C alifornia C ondors w ere recognized as Game and Fish, on Tuesday, to present a ah endangered species in 1967 and seri­ talk about once-extinct condors in a refii* o us c o n se rv a tio n e ffo rts began in the troduction program. mid-1970s. W ith only nine birds alive in L ast D ecem ber, six young C alifornia 1985, the condor seemed to be on a head­ Condors (Gymnogyps californianus) were long rush to extinction. released into the wild at Vermilion Cliffs The primary causes for the Recline of near the Grand Canyon. The release o f con­ California Condors seem to be either direct­ dors into Arizona was the culmination of a ly cau sed by hum ans o r to stem from nearly 10-year effort by an army of environ­ human activity. Pesticide contamination, m entalists, professional biologists, volun­ lead poisoning, habitat destruction and ille­ teers and both government and non-govem- gal shooting, along with collecting of con­ ment organizations. dors and their eggs are all pressures condors It is the continuation o f a daring and must endure. The last nine wild condors ground-breaking experiment in conserva­ w ere cap tu red in 1985 as a d esp erate tion biology and, if successful, will provide a ttem p t to save the sp ecies from total new insight into restoring some of our plan­ extinction. All C alifornia Condors alive et’s most endangered wildlife and protect­ today are the direct descendants o f only ing other species before they are threatened fourteen individuals. with extinction. The first release o f California Condors The California Condor has had a rocky back into the wild took place in California relationship with humans. These large scav­ and is fully protected, while the colony in engers, w eighing as much as 25 pounds Arizona is termed a “non-essential experi­ with a wing span o f 15 feet, are naturally mental population.” What this means is that we are breaking new ground. If this experiment is successful, we move one step closer to the restoration o f the California Condor and its removal from'the endangered species list. We also prove that we can salvage a species which we drove to the point of extinction. T he c o n s e rv a tio n o f C a lifo rn ia Condors has always been surrounded by controversy. Arguments about what type o f science is b est, w hat is eth ical and what is econom ically feasible have per­ vaded dialogue on the subject, and the Arizona project is no exception. When the decision was made to release condors into the Arizona wilderness, there were a few dissenting voices. Some said Arizona was a poor choice, others said it was far too risky, still others complained their communities would be unfairly affect­ ed by the presence of condors nearby. The argument that the community would sustain unfair economic hardship because o f the condors seemed the most ridiculous com­ plaint of all. Intense preparations were invested, well before the actual release o f the birds. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, along with the A rizona Game and Fish, made every effo rt to gather public com m ent and to accommodate the concerns of local commu­ nities. In addition, special arrangem ents were made to ensure that citizens would not be prosecuted for the accidental death or injury o f a condor, and local developers were given assurances that no economic development projects could be stopped due to the presence of the condors. The goal of the project is not simply to re-establish California Condor numbers, but to ensure that the birds and people can co­ exist without driving the condors to extinc­ tion. The communities near the experimen­ tal condor colony stand to benefit if the colony is successful. Beyond the ethical and aesthetic satisfaction o f knowing condors are alive and well in the Vermilion Cliffs and the pleasure o f spotting one of these magnificent birds in flight, if the condors manage to multiply and establish a stable population, ecotourism will give a strong boost to the local economy. Local commu­ nities should consider the presence of con­ dors an asset and Arizona should be proud to contain a condor release site. A ll th e hard w ork is now up to the condors. If the project is successful, the in d iv id u als not only su rv iv e, but they a ls o h a v e a c h a n c e a t s u rv iv a l as a species. If the project fails, we go back to the draw ing board and they die ... per­ haps forever. Good luck, guys. For further information concerning the California Condor re-introduction project, join us on Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in the Life Sciences building C-wing, room 106, to hear Bob Miles speak. Feel free to contact me about this or any other conservation issues at the Central Arizona Chapter of the Society for Conservation Biology, via email, at consbio@asuvm.inre.asu.edu. Christopher Putnam is a junior studying w ildlife conservation biology and also serves as both secretary and treasurer fo r the Central Arizona Chapter o f the Society fo r Conservation Biology'. H istory teaches divided people cause o f civilization fall Asteroid, the recent televi­ sion m ovie, d ram atized the LGA havoc and destruction wreaked FUENTES on the human race as asteroids C o lu m n ist slammed into the planet. The movie illustrated the horrible re s u lts o f a m ass c o llis io n between two different bodies. O v e r 5 00 y e a rs ag o , an asteroid made of Spanish con­ quistadors collided w ith the n a tiv e p e o p le o f M id d le Am erica. Spanish conquista­ dors, com ing as “angels o f m ercy” on the w ings o f Catholicism, destroyed the civilization of the Aztecs and other tribal groups. La Malinche, a play by Carlos Morton and presented by the Arizona Theatre Company, chronicles the 16th Century relationship between the Spanish Conquistador, Heman Cortez and his Indian translator, Malinali. After seeing the play, I recommended it to everyone, especially H ispanics, in hopes that it will awaken a pride in our Indian heritage. The play highlights the son o f Hem an and Malinali, as he is neither Indian nor Spanish. He belongs to a new group o f people born in the new world; they are k n o w n as “ m e s tiz o s .” T o d a y , th e y a re k n o w n as Hispanics. By definition, Hispanics include all people born in H ispanic/Spanish speaking lands — Cubans, Peruvians, G uatem alans, M exicans, Puerto Ricans ... th e lis t is e n d le s s . P e rs o n a lly , I c o n s id e r m y se lf M exican-Am erican — American because I was bom in the United States and Mexican from my Spanish and Hispanics. Indian “idols” were destroyed and replaced Indian ancestry. by C atholic “sa in ts.” Som e believe th at the priests The quest to unite the Spanish with the Indians was not invented a “brow n co lo red ” idol, in hopes th at the a happy one. Blood ran through the streets of Tenochtitlan natives would be more accepting o f this new religion. when the small party of 400 Spaniards defeated the great It w o rk e d ; m illio n s o f In d ia n d e s c e n d a n ts are Aztec empire. How could so few defeat so many? It is Catholics. M otecuhzom a m ust be turning over in his simple; the Aztecs turned against their own and forged grave. - • alliances with the Spaniards. Hispanics willingly bow to the Catholic saints, but call Most people overlook the fact that many Indian tribes Columbus “evil.” If one is guilty o f destruction, both are existed during this time, much as they do today. The guilty. You cannot hate the one and praise the other, as tribes fought among themselves prior to the conquest, and both changed the lives of the Indians forever. this division was part of their eventual defeat. All Hispanics are products of mixed parentage brought Most scholars agree that the alliance o f the Spaniards about by Columbus’ discovery. The Catholic Church con­ with the Tlaxcallan warriors played a great role in the verted many souls to it’s cause — but at the cost o f Indian Spanish victory. Regrettably, history continues to repeat culture. Were it not for the stalwart persistence o f the its e lf, as H isp an ics are n o t a fo rm id a b le fo rc e in Indians, the entire culture would be lost. The strong char­ American politics because they can’t get along. Unable to acter and will of th^ Indians is a proud heritage for all of get beyond the petty differences o f country or culture, their descendants. Hispanics are so busy tearing each other down that they We study the past in hopes that we can learn from our remain at the bottom of the minority chain. m istakes. L et’s not repeat the m istake o f our Indian Indians were enslaved by die Spanish and forced to ancestors by fighting so much that our common enemies extract valuable resources for the Spanish crown. The easily defeat us. We need to join together and fight as one Aztec tribute system made the conquest easier for the for the betterment of all Hispanics. This is our land. We Spaniards. The Aztecs became a great empire by forcing didn’t have to cross oceans to get here. Perhaps the birth others to pay them homage with goods and services. o f our race was not under the most pristine conditions, but Physical domination o f the Indians was not enough. we can take the best from each culture and create a Sanctioned by the Spanish governm ent, the Catholic stronger and better people. Church came to the new world to save millions o f lost Once we unite with those who share our color and souls. They destroyed the sacred temples and gods of blood, it will be much easier to peacefully exist with those the natives, as well as forbade them to continue in their o f all colors. A fter all, the most important race is the native religious practices. The very church which bru­ human race. Como dijo Caesar Chavez, “Si se puede!” talized and humiliated the natives is now home to many Olga Fuentes is a junior studying anthropology. No sympathy for fellow student In resp o n se to thè le tte r on Feb. 24, “Journalism schooj could use re-evaluation of credit system,” it is too bad; is.it not? I am taking ECE 100 and it is a threecredjt class. I have three classes a week with three different instructors. All o f the classes are two hours long. I have assign- ments due for each class every week. That is three assignments and six hours of class for a three-credit class! I guess it comes with the territory. R qjasehgaran “R J .” Padbatan Ju nior A erospace E ngineering uotabfes “One can acquire everything in solitude except character.** — Stendahl 1783-1842 Page 6 S t a t e P ress M on d ay, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 Conference educates students on legislative issues B y K e v in C u l w e l l S t a t e P r e ss More than 30 ASU students arrived at the State Capitol Thursday to voice their opinions and find out more about thé Legislature that represents them. Thé legislative conference, held all day at Wesley Bolin Plaza in Phoenix, featured more than 50 state legislators and 130 students from all three universities. Betw een 60 to 70 students attended from NAU and about 50 came from UofA. ‘‘Usually more students from those schools show up because it’s a chance to get out of town for them,” said Damon Pace, state relations coordinator. “Students here are 30 minutes away from the capitol, so it’s less enticing for them to come here.” The conference consisted of workshops all day and an hour-long lunch that gave students the opportunity to dis­ cuss issues with their legislators. Forums on grass roots movements, the state budget and university issues were just a few of the workshops featured. Also, a role-playing exercise where different students assumed the roles of parents, students and legislators was a major part of the day. “That was the highlight of the day for me because it real- ly showed the different perspectives each side has,” Pace said. “I think everyone got a lot out of that workshop.” “The event went really well, despite the fact that the poor weather shied most o f the press away,” said Regan Larish, public affairs; director o f the A rizona Students’ Association. “I think our goal was met, o f creating an infor­ mative meeting between legislators and Students.” Pace said it was a great opportunity for students to learn more about the legislative System, “The key is people gained a little more knowledge about our state government and that will help them make infor­ mative decisions in the next elections,” he Said. Prop 102 expected to swell numbers o f jail-house students TUCSON (AP) — In a makeshift class­ room at the Pima County Jail annex;, where he’s spent nearly a year awaiting trial on murder and assault charges, Ricky has dis­ covered a world he didn’t know existed. “I never liked school before,” says the 17-year-old, whose full name cannot be dis­ closed because o f federal education laws protecting the privacy o f students. “It’s because I never had a teacher who would sit down and help me.” Ricky, who quit school after eighth grade, dreams of earning his high school diploma. He credits his new-found love of learning to the county jail’s education program, Reserved for juveniles who have been convicted as adults or are w aiting to be tried as adults, the program serves a rela­ tively small population. But the number of jail-house students is expected to increase dramatically because of Proposition 102, the voter-approved ini­ tiative that requires youths arrested for spe­ cific, violent felonies to be tried automati­ cally as adults. Because not only do counties across the state have to find jail space for these addition­ al juveniles, but-also they must educate them. The federal Individuáis with Disabilities Education Act requires each state to pro­ vide free public education to all eligible, disabled people under age 22. Two years ago, the Arizona Legislature created a law requiring every county oper­ ating a jail to provide educational services to all prisoners under 18 and all disabled inmates through age 21. BUt the Legislature put this new law on the books w hile slashing the p rogram ’s funding in half. The situation facing jail education programs today is more students without more money. “There will be a financial, crisis provid­ ing those services,” says Mark Jones, direc­ tor o f detention education for the Pim a County Sheriff’s Department and Juvenile Court Center. A bill that would have restored full fund­ ing to the jail education programs died in the Legislature last week.' Jones hopes the bill can be reintroduced later in the session. In the meantime, pro­ gram coordinators are looking into what other funding options exist. W ith o r w ithout e x tra m oney, P im a County Jail’s school program will have to find room for a flood o f students. And space already is tight. It’s estimated that 126 juveniles will be housed this year at the jail annex regardless o f P ro p o sitio n 102. B ut a c c o rd in g to Juvenile C ourt data, the new legislation could bump the population up to 139 or as high as 268 youths, Jones Says, you E VER DANCED WITH * : THE DEVIL ft IN THE PALE m m 1 in d m m H i ? " o u t a tc o u n c iX Student fares, may require an International Student ID card. Taxes are not included and may range from $6"$33. Fares are subject to change ! Î Council Travel ¡130 E. University Dr., iSuite A, Tempe, AZ Tel :602-966-3544 SPONSORED BY STUDENT HEALTH/BACCHUS • W AM * SRC • RHA • ICA • ACTIVE C O M M U N IT Y SERVICE PROGRAM • RESIDENTIAL LIFE • CHAC MARCH 3 &4 WHAT A GREAT WAY TO BEGIN YOUR SAFE SPRING BREAK! 10am - 2pm P L E A S E J O IN U S F O R T H E S E E V E N T S : on HAYDEN LAW N M U SIC B Y 9 3 .3 H PKB • • • • » • • • • • • • Field sobriety testing N utrition analysis - are you eating well? Learn about alcohol and drug prevention S ee S herri' s truck A lL ABOUT WATER SAFETY S urviving the o u td o o rs S un safety Exercising at your pace T ravel safety tips Rape prevention _ A lternative S pring Break activities C hain of Safety (P ledge n o t to drink & drive over S pring Break) WHOLESALERS ADVOCATING MODERATION DESIGNATED DRIVER PROGRAM Ask your server how you can be a designated driver • Balboa Cafe‘ Long Wong's* Mill Avenue Beer Co, •Beeloe's Cafe & Underground Bar • Calypso • Gibson's •Mill Avenue Sports Grill »Mill Cue Club • Mill Landing •The Vine‘Chili's Grill & Bar* Hooters* Owls Nest •The Paradise Tempe Bar & Grill*Fat Tuesday*Islands •Ruby Tuesday•Timberwolf*Uno Pizzeria City of Tempe Mayor's Office tempe Police • ASU Residential Life WAM I ASU Student Health BACCHUS • ASU Greek Life ASASU/CHAC A S U S R C "N a tu ra l H ig h P io g ra m " P ag e 7 M o n d ay, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P r ess Space m aking Steve M atteson, a senior at Highland High School, spent Sunday afternoon w ith his younger brother W esley, a student at G reenfield Elem entary, repainting the parking spaces in Parking Structure 3. The two brothers work for the family-run business their mother started about a year ago. “I’m out here today because! knew my brother would have been alone,” says Wesley. “It goes faster when we all work together.” ^ UltfZOUITATI y*(ITI*SïTT 1 "’s S tate P ress w ithout using a highlighter r Red M ountain Fa m i l y M e d i c i n M CAT e Phen-Fen Weight Loss Program M m B fl 1 » V V f p e r m o n th ly v is it Includes standard dose of medications Weight loss has never been easier or so successful. • $60.00 OFF Breast and Pelvic Exam includes Pap Smear . • $10 OFF First Office Visit The Princeton Review MCAT training give} you sm alt classes, extensive m aterials, top instructors, an d free extra help. We 'll be there to make sure you g et the score you need fo r entrance into m edical school. ■ (does not apply ;to Phen-Fen Program) Mesa • 1050 E. University #7 : 1 block west of Staples 9^9-0086 • com plete, annotated scien ce review Apache Junction • MON. Idaho Rd. #150 288*8767 N of Apache Tnulon ldato Chandler • 2081 N. Arizona Aye. #128 | 868-7783 * hundreds o f practice passges NE ranter of Arizona Ave. & Warner N.E. Phoenix • 2848 E. Bell Rd. #110 BeURoad east of 28th St. 482*0663 m ultiple full-len gth practice tests Suzanne Bentz, D.O. • Pam Edens, F.N.P. Gary Knighton, D.O. * John Wàytuk, D.O. P ro b lem C la sses? Visit The College Store this Wednesday, March 5th, between 1pm and 4pm and speak w ith Arlynne from the Chemistry Exams & Solutions booklets and Greg from tine Math Tests Package booklets about how their products may help you study better and more effectively. Come on by and talk with Arlynne and Greg and see all of our different study helpers like Cliff's Notés, Schaums Outlines and others. Where to get the things youjjeea. textbooks - used & new ASU clothing & backpacks dorm & apartment accessories posters & prints Rose Bowl gifts 1015 South R u ral Road at Lem on Tem pe, A Z 8 5 28 1+ 8944400 art, engineering & school supplies greeting cards and gifts small household appliances bike accessories M o n - T h u is 7:30*7:00 F ri 7:30-5:00 Sat 104X K k00 Sun 12*00-5:00 Page 8 M on d a y, M arch 3, 1997 S t a t e P ress P o l ic e R epo r t A S U police reported the follow ing inci­ dents over the weekend: • A female employee reported that some­ one entered a locked desk drawer in the Psychology Building and removed $455 in cash. • A female student was contacted at 615 Alpha Drive, where she had become ill. She was transported to a local hospital. • A male not affiliated with the University was arrested, .¡ted and released at University Drive and McAllister Avenue for driving on a suspended license • A male student was arrested on an out­ standing warrant issued from ASU police. The subject posted bond and was released. • A male student reported that someone damaged a door at 600 E. Unix ersity Drive. •A male student w as arrested, cited and released at Lemon Street and College Avenue for public consumption of alcohol. • A female employee reported that she was bit by an unattended dog at Noble Science Library • A female employee reported that someone removed several credit cards from her office in the Language and Literature Building. • Á mate not affiliated with the University reported that someone assaulted him outside the Chi 1i' s Grj 11 & Bar in the Tempe Center. Tempe police 'reported the fallowing inci­ dents Over the Weekend: • A man allegedly sexually assaulted a 44year-old partially blind, wheelchair-bound woman between 7:30 p.m. atid 10 p.m.. Thursday. Police said the man. described only as having a young-sounding voice, entered the rear door of the woman's resi­ dence at 1018 S. Siesta, knocked her to the floor and removed her shorts and under­ wear. Police said the suspect possibly sexu­ ally assaulted the woman before fleeing the scene after he heard a knock at the door. He is still at large. • A 30-year-old male was arrested at Tempe Mission Palms Hotel. 60 E. Fifth St., on charges of public sexual indecency. Police said the man allegedly exposed his periis and masturbated in front of a housekeeper. He was transported the Tempe City Jail. • A 44-year-old male who was. sleeping in front of the entrance of Susie’s Mexican Cafe, 2405 E. .University Drive, was arrest­ ed on charges of disorderly conduct. Police said when; the man awoke, he began yelling and screaming, tore off his jacket, then challenged an officer to a fight. The suspect was reportedly swinging his fists wildly and running in circles in the parking lot. Later, police said the suspect began running into University Drive and had to be physi­ cally pulled from the street. He was booked into Tempe City Jail. • Police reports com piled by S tate P ress reporter Melody McDonald. Scientists find gene that might help people to lose weight By M alc o lm R it t e « ate. T h a t m e a n s c e lls h a ve to b u rn e x tra A s s o c i a t i n P ress c a lo rie s to m a ke u p f o r the loss. NEW YORK Talk about a feverish attempt ¡o lose weight: Scientists have di'covered a gene that might someday help people shed pounds in exchange for a slightly higher body temperature. rile gene appears to make people bum off calorics, and it might help explain why some people-are prone to getting fat. „ The hope is that researchers can find a drug to make jt work harder, so the body w ill burn off more calories rather than storing them as fat. . That would raise body temperature. A person might be able to lose five pounds a y ear w ith every o n e-ten th o f a d egree increase in body tem perature, estim ated researcher Craig Warden of the University of California, Davis. • It will take further study to see how m uch of a tem perature increase people could safely stand, he said. He and colleagues at Davis and elsewhere announce the discovery in the M arch issue o f the journal Nature Genetics. “I think this is probably a major discovCry for obesity,” said Dr. Albert Stunkard of the University of Pennsylvania. Scientists haven’t known how people’s bodies regulate their weight, steering them toward a given. Weight despite dieting or bingeing, Stunkard said. The newly discovered gene could play a big role, he said. It might lead to a weight-loss drug, he said, adding, “I'll bet you the drug pompaniés are hovering like vultures over this finding.” Cells o f the, body burn calories to get energy to do their jobs — making our hearts beat, our legs move, our thoughts form — and to generate heat for body temperature. Warden believes the newfound gène is an energy thief. It gives rise to a protein that steals some of the energy cells gener- If '.dentists can prod the gene into making more of this energy-stealing protein, cells would have to burn still more calories, Researchers already knew of another gene that promotes energy theft, and drug compa­ nies are studying drugs to make it more active. But that gene, called UGP1. is active only in brown fat, which is sparse in adults. In contrast, newfound gene UCP2 is at work in every human tissue W arden has checked, especially ordinary White fat and muscle, he said. And its protein appears to be about 20 tim es more abundant in the body than thé protein from UCP1. So the newfound protein is probably a better bet for weight loss, he said, Some people may be prone to getting fat: because their UCP2 isn’t active enough, Warden said. Indeed, his group found that the gene was less active in a strain of obesity-prone mice than in a strain that resists putting on weight, , In the obesity-resisting mice, a high-fat diet cranked up the gene’s activity. R esearchers also found that in m ice chromosomes, UCP2 is located in a place previously thought to hold an unidentified obesity gene. T here’s a hint o f the same thing in people, Warden said, W arden’s work is "exceptionally interesting and provocative,” said Dr. Jeffrey Flier, who studies obesity at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Bòston.’ ; Flier agreed the discovery might lead to weight-loss drug. But first scientists have to figure out what turns the new gene on and off, he said, Flier also said that if somebody takes a drug that kicks the gene into overdrive to bum more calories, nobody knows whether the body Would compensate by eating mòre, Still, he said, “I’m pretty excited about where this is going.” ‘ V S tate P ress cr o ssw o r d s Go ahead ... do them in ink. 3 D AYS LODGING 2 D A Y S a I LIFT TICKETS Â I, FORÆ LUCKY PEOPLE£ . See Tues- A ft day’s S ta te A ■ft Press for ■ ft details Break Guide in the Siate Press tú find out how you Page 9 M on d ay, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P ress Bid to merge school districts caused furor last tim e it was tried By Paul Davenport Associated Press Bills that would reduce the number of Arizona school districts have Sailed through legislative committees. But no one is ignoring what happened when a similar effort was tried more than 20 years ago. In 1974, the Legislature enacted a law to dramatically reduce the number o f districts by having a committee in each county draft a consolidation plan. Most refused amid heated opposition statewide. “ There was a firestorm — ‘you're going to take my dis­ trict away from me,’” recalled Henry Evans, a school board member who was a member of the Maricopa County com­ mittee and who later served in the state House. The Maricopa County committee held 64 public meet­ ings over a five-month span in late 1974 and early 1975. “It was something else,” said committee member Robert Usdane. “We went to one district where they came with guns. These people were upset.” Legislators repealed the 1974 law the next year, and no serious attempt to consolidate districts has since been made — until now. “I still think it's a good idea but it burned people so bad that they put it away and forget about it for a while,” said U sd an e, w ho la te r serv ed in the s ta te S en ate. “Everyone gave such heat to the legislature — I wasn’t there, thank God.” But Sen. Tom Patterson said the Legislature’s current interest in school finance presents a golden opportunity. Consolidating school districts could equalize districts’ tax bases while saving money on administrative costs, he said. “T here is no question this is a big tar b aby,” said Patterson, a Phoenix Republican who is the sponsor o f the most ambitious of two consolidation proposals pending in the Legislature. “I have been involved in earlier reform efforts myself to consolidate districts but a lot of the parties of interest don’t liké it and they’ve been able to thwart reform.” Patterson’s proposal, a bill (SB 1300) and a companion resolution (SCR 1013), would ask the state’s voters to allow the Legislature to create a commission to draft a plan to consolidate the current 233 districts into 90. The plan w ould becom e law a u to m atically u n less re jected or changed by the Legislature. A House bill (HB2398) also would create a commission to draft a consolidation plan but it would only be a recom­ mendation to the Legislature. The House passed the mea­ sure 46-9 on Friday with no debate, sending it to the Senate. School looking to raise funds through ads on school roofs, buses By M e l is s a W nearby D allas-Fort W orth International Airport each year. ‘‘We thought maybe in the neighborhood o f $ 100,000 a year” per billboard, said school board president M arion Brekken. “That’s three beginning-teacher salaries.” And that’s just the beginning. School trustees are to vote Monday on an aggressive fund-raising campaign that also could sell ad space on school buses, athletic fields and the district’s cable televi­ sion channel, and even commercials on its il l ia m s A s s o c i a t e d P r e ss DALLAS —f The next time you're coming in fo r a landing at D allas-F o rt W orth International Airport, check out those rooftops down below: that upward-facing billboard might represent some teacher’s paycheck. O fficials o f the G rapevine-Collcyville school district think they can supplement tax dollars by selling space on top of their schools, which just happen to be visible to many of the 58 million passengers who use voice mail system. The d istric t alre a d y h ires o u t spots around athletic fields for cellular phone antenna towers. R ooftop ad v ertisem en t is ap p ealin g because “it clearly doesn’t interfere with the educational setting at all,” said superin­ tendent Jim Thompson. The district has no plans to place ads in corridors, classrooms or other instructional spaces, he said. And Ms. Brekken said the schools could veto ads for alcohol, tobacco or other products. Putting ads on school roofs would be a first in the nation, said officials of DD Marketing of Pueblo, Colo. , which helps schools and uni­ versities link up with advertisers. It signed a contract with Grapevinc-Colleyville last fall. Still, there might be a problem, said Janice Krueger, who owns Studio K Southwest advertising agency in suburban Richardson. “The one thing I would wonder about is how much inform ation can you grasp as you’re flying by.” FREE CAMPUS DELIVERY! Planning to streak the MU? Environmentally Friendly, Daytime Delivery To Any Building On Campus - FAST! H om e o f the ‘K iller’ Calzone Call the S t a t e P ress $10 MinimumOrder T""$3°®O FF 1 b lock East o f M ill A v e . on U niversity . photographers at 894-M AM A 965-6826. R em em ber to plan ahead! M A M A K N O W S » ! A N Y 16" PIZZA ' J WmtifcWHWiWii On ^ The MAMA-MOBILE is back! B E S T MAMA'S PIZZERIA ' KW-MAMA J Employers want graduates experience. COME & GET II The State Press is accepting applications for advertising sales representatives to begin training after spring break and work this summer and fall. Please apply by March 10,5pm at the infor­ mation desk in Matthews Center basement. Successful applicants need a vehicle. Today's employers are looking for graduates who possess strong pre-professional experi­ ence. If you are interested in getting this kind of experience before you graduate, consider apply­ ing for a State Press advertising sales representative position. (WMle « w r it« loot—limit one kook per customer.) Sate nuts March 1-30,1W7 A P P L IC A T IO N S N O W B E IN G A C C E P T E D Pricesm l muiatelty nAjscf to ctoflpe wttout imp# Prioss io US. fàeVW fflttèP iflT M W l A v a ila b le a t t h e ARIZONASTATIUMVtHSITY A SU B O O K STO R E I http://news.vpsa.asu.edu TTVW I AOVOI ¡State P ress • ORANGEMALL I MUI flEEFl 1 HOURS Mon-Thur Fri Sat Value, Selection A nd Convenience On Your Campus! 8am-6pm 8am-5pm 10am-2pm Page 10 S t a t e P r ess M on d ay, M arch 3, 1997 Budget amendment changes suggested in order to gain votes B y J im A b r a m s A s s o c ia t e d P r e ss WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott offered Sunday to alter the Republican-crafted balanced budget amendment, a last-ditch effort to capture the one additional Democratic vote needed for passage". “If we could make a change or two in a minor way that would get us another vote or two, we would consider doing that.” Lott said on CBS’. Face the Nation: A showdown Senate vote is Tuesday, and Lott con­ firmed that he still has only 66 votes, one short of the twoth ird s m ajo rity n e e d e d fo r an am en d m en t to the Constitution. The showdown over the budget amendment came as R epublican leaders renew ed w arnings that P resid en t Clinton’s plan to balance the budget by 2002 would result in tax increases while falling Up to $80 billion short of the balanced budget goal. House M ajority Leader Dick Armey, interviewed on NBC’s Meet the Press, asked Clinton to resubmit his tax proposals and suggested the president should redraft his entire budget. Republican leaders up to now have stood adamantly against changing their balanced budget am endment. It stipulates that three-fifths o f members in both houses would have to approve allowing a deficit in any year and allows waivers for national security only when the nation is at war. In the past three weeks. Senate Republicans have defeat­ ed every Democratic attempt to exempt Social Security from the budget-balancing equation, ease the restrictions on waivers or allow creation of a separate capital budget for long-term investments. Lott said at the end of last week the capital budget was an idea being considered. Elaborating Sunday, he said: “We are considering making a change perhaps in the num­ bers that it would take to get out of the balanced budget in a recession or a national security emergency.” T he c h ie f sp o n so r o f the R ep u b lican b ill, S enate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said on NBC th a t th ere w ere tw o p o te n tia l D em o cratic crossovers. He didn’t name them or offer details when he said that even if he loses Tuesday’s vote, “There are some other things little old Orrin has up his sleeve.” Lott adm itted R epublican votes m ight be lost if the amendment is watered down to pick up a Democratic vote. So far all 55 R ep u b lican sen ato rs and 11 o f the 45 Democrats have announced for the GOP measure. P E © P L E 1 NEW YORK (AP) — Radio shock jock H ow ard Stern, who tells his life story in the new film Private Parts, is a confessed TV addict. After work, Stem stays glued to his 100inch television screen and has even hired someone to come over every day and pro­ gram his nine VCRs so he never misses any o f his favorite shows. “If I don’t watch for a day, I feel very uncomfortable,” Stem says in the March 8 TV Guide. “In fact, most of my great radio b its have been b orn out o f sittin g and watching TV. It relaxes roe so much that I think clearly. If it’s a drug, then not all drugs are bad for you.” A m ong his favorite shows are Larry. Sanders, Babylon 5, Beverly Hills, 90210, Melrose Place, and My So-Called lAfe. “I’m very low-brow in my tastes,” Stem ^ p _ _ admits. Never one to sell him self short, Stern also claim s “ I co u ld do The Rosie O ’Donnell Show better than she does” and that he’s a better interviewer than jay Leno or David Letterman. Referring to his repeated run-ins with the Federal Communications Commission, the foul-m outhed radio personality also said : “ I ’m p ro b a b ly m ore o f a F irs t Amendment poster boy than Larry Flynt.” BLOOM INGTON, Ind. (AP) — John Mellencamp has some advice for fans taken aback by $75 top ticket prices for upcom­ in g show s at th e In d ia n a U n iv e rsity Auditorium — stay home. “I’ve got one thing to say to them: Don’t come,” the singer said, adding that the best seats for upcoming New York shows cost See $100 apiece. Opening a four-night Bloomington run Monday, Mellencamp defended the pricey entrance fees, saying they were necessary because he’s playing smaller venues rather than large arenas. “It’s not like I’m one guy standing out. there under a couple o f spotlights. This is the whole band, the whole production,” he said. “ I ’m m aking less m o n ey , re st assured.” I t’s h is firs t c o n c e rt to u r since Mellencamp, 45, suffered a heart attack in 1994. B eside B loom ington, h e ’s doing shows in Indianapolis, New York, Detroit, B o sto n , C h icag o , M in n e a p o lis and Wallingford, Conn. V ictoria’s dresses will see more than the black gowns that earned her the nickname: ’•The Widow of Windsor,” The display at the Museum o f London opening in May will feature her wedding dress —- circa 1840 — along with a pink and silver dress, baby shoes, coronation robes, caps, bonnets and dressing gowns. The most familiar image of Victoria is the black-clad widow who m ourned the death of her husband, Albert, for 40 years until her death in 1901. The m useum show w ill feature dark clothing, including the black silk dress the 18-year-old Victoria wore on her first day as monarch in 1837. “Some of these clothes are in a very frail condition and this could be the last time th a t som e can be d isp la y e d ,” m useum spokeswoman Jennifer Jones said Sunday. L O N D O N (A P) — V isito rs to an u p co m in g e x h ib it o f th e la te Q uéen if y o u ' re m e n t io n e d i n t h e IPODMCT miWODlBÏÏ. GET T H IN ¡¡¡■m4 /m 1_, Phen Fen For Less 1 1 §¡1111lliili 11 -jjjg1 Paradise Pizza Per ■ Month IIW I Excluding Medications Camaron Ranchera and Diablo (Shrimp) ■ Savory Black Beans Steaming Sides o! Fresh Vegetables I Incredible Fish Tacos FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS otv -HsU ¿Wily * f t jB 1/ 5.less f t ™ affiugk 1 1 |PRIC^4 i^lve|. 1 A^ecohp of j v jrttU V E R T o y o t/l «EAoiAH\emfoe. •Tewpe 1/2 PRICE DINNER ^ «0$ Mesa 2023 W . G uadalupe (Southwest Corher .... Dobson & Guadalupe) -9411 Ove r 960 W . U nive rsity 4-7 p.m . 966-0852 P o e t r y C o m p e t it io n $7 0 0 0 in p r i ze s D e a d lin e : T h u rs d a y , M a r c h 1 3 ,1 9 9 7 ,5 :0 0 p m Entry forms and guidelines available at the Dept, of English, LLB-504 • 965-3168 Awards Ceremony W ednesday, April 23 featuring Swarthout Award Winners 947-S 245 1810 N . Scottsdale Tempe H appy H our B u ff e t Aw w ils In WriHrig a n d ^ W ith the purchase o f one dinner of equal o r greater value. ^ Not good with any other offer o r discount. O ffer good after 2 p.m. Expires 3-11-97. M onday-Friday F ic t io n and Fabulous Fajitas - Beef • Shrimp • Chicken • We 1 le take Kaplan SAY CHEESE! S how o ff y o u r pea rly w h ites & SUBMIT A PHOTO TO THE YEARBOOK- we’ll make you famous! school. Kaplan ■ ■ h a s expert teachers and the most ■com plete arsenal of test prep and ■ Leave a professio n al w a l l e t - s ize d p h o t o <® t h e s t u d e n t p u iu ic a t io n s RECEPTION DESK IN THE MATHEWS CENTER BY MARCH 151ST Classes starting soon [C a ll: 1-800-KAP-TEST ■ to re serv e a sp a c e . O R MAIL T O : ASU Su n D evil Spark Yearbook M a t t h e w s C enter T empe. AZ 8 5 2 8 7 - 1 5 0 2 ORDER YOUR COPY NÖw! m C A LL @ KAPLAN a® 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 w m TW O BU C K S .*4 ! State P P age 11 M o n d a y , M arch 3, 1997 r e ss H o ck e y in ’ around P hotos by Jim P o ulin/S tate Press Above, Ian Pletenik of Phoenix, 20-months-old, stick handles the puck during the NHL Breakout Sunday. About 10,000-12,000 people attended the weekend event featuring a to ller hockey tournament in which 90 teams competed. The event was held at ASU behind Lot 5 9 . Left, Flames player Matt Anderson (left) and Garcias player Adam Suhling (right) battle for the puck. Although the Garcias won this game 2-0, the Flames advanced to the finals later in the tournam ent. S t a t e P r ess L -e tfa tz f a e t J l f a i Diversity of opinion and response. SAY CHEESE! jjjC A T S how o ff your , pearly w h ites & SUBMIT A PHOTO TO THE YEARBOOK- GMAT we’ll make you famous! L eave a p r o f e s s io n a l ' w a l l e t - s iz e d p h o t o RECEPTION DESK (N TH E MATHEWS îïn @ t h e s t u d e n t p u b l ic a t io n s TER BY MARCH 3 1ST : OK MAIL T O A S U Su n D evil Spark Yearbook s ^ Ä a tV ORDER. YOUR C t^ T ’NOW! M a t t h e w s C enter T empe. A Z 85287-1502 GoldsdilciffJ frown * Guiness • Bass • pile Moon) IT 1 C A LL @ 9 6 5 -6 8 8 1 take Kaplan and get into the right school. Kaplan has expert teachers and the most complete arsenal of test prep and admissions consulting tools available staiting soon Call: 1-800-KAP-TEST to reserve a sp ace. Comics S t a t e P ress M on d ay, M arch 3, 1997 P age 12 By G e n e r a t io n H e X e d THe OU? 'P/H 4KS OF7H£ GHOHSeAN:.. THe N ew 'P /R /n es o f t h * exH T/KAAi'. .. S H t a c y TH e 'P r& tres o f -m e e sm e/B e/w ' T tv rr fflv c . ffè & j a c/T a t s g a TOO £OAlG ~ 9rm £ SUPERMARKETS WILL 5EU- MORE 140CHÖPS? { By Jonathan I nge m i l IT MEANS THE BETTERMENT OF ALL MANKIND. THINK OF ALL THF MEDICAL I POSSIBILITIES'. 10 championships. Omdorff in the Heavyweight division. The cham pionship m atches will begin tonight at 7 at the University Activity Center. There is also a consolation bracket, which will decide third places, held today at noon. ASU wrestlers M ichael Kawamura (118), Joey Heckel (134), and Tracy Brown (142) com­ pete in the consolation rounds. Thé fop four finishers in éach class, as well as four other ‘wild cards’ decided by the coaches, will travel to Iowa in late Matoh to compete in the 1997 NCAA Championships. In team points, ASU possesses a comfort­ able lead over defending cham pion Bakersfield, 104.5-85 following the semifinal matches. P age 14 S t a t e P r ess M o n d a y , M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 Gymnasts lose focus, meet vs. UofA B y R a n d y Jo n e s S t a t e P r e ss After a poor per­ form ance against arch-rival UofA Friday night, the ASU w om en’s gym nastics team had much to ponder over the weekend. The Sun Devils (8-3. 4-2 Pac-10) COURTNEY counted five falls during the meet including four on uneven bars, en route to a disappointing 194.625194.2 loss to the Wildcats (104,4-1). During the bus ride home late Friday night, the team met and came to the real­ ization that its performance was not up to par with what it could accomplish. “1 felt like the team came together as a whole on the bus,” junior co-captain Carie Courtney said. “We all figured out our problems. It wasn’t like everyone was off on their own doing their thing. We pulled it together and we all realized that the focus wasn’t there.” Head coach John Spini said that he felt “pretty burnt” after losing to UofA, but after reflection maybe it was good for the team. ‘Two days after the meet, I feel it was a good safety valve for us,” he said. “We have a great team: W e’ve had (seven) meets so far this season and the kids have done great Maybe its a good thing. I never think it’s good to lose, (but) it’s good for them to say ‘hey, we’re not unbeatable.’” The crushing blow for the Sun Devils appeared to be their awful performance on bars. Just weeks removed from establish­ ing an all-time high-score on the event, the team fell five times. Only junior co-captain Meagan Wright was able to hold on, scor­ ing a 9.85. However, the Sun Devils rallied together after the event and were able to establish a new school-record on the vault with a score o f49.45. This, co-captain Bridget Sandman said, shows how resilient the team is. "We had our little meeting between events and I think it helped a lot,” she said. “I think everyone was a little mad at the way things were going, with the things we can control. We didn’t do it on the first event and we wanted to take charge after that” ASU was able to cut the gap to just four-tenths of a point, or less than one fall, after filing down by over two points after die first event With UofA on floor exercise and the Sun Devils on balance beam for the final event, it looked like there Was a chance for ASU to pull out the incredible comeback. Three Wildcats fell on floor, which would have opened a door for the Sun Devils to steal the victory. However, the four-inch wide beam claimed two victims as freshman Elizabeth Reid and Courtney both fell. Spin! said it was a plus that ASU was able to daw its Way back into the match and almost pull out the victory, but it was a shame that they couldn’t pull it out “I don’t know if the team is looking at it as we lost the meet on bars, but I felt we tost the meet on beam,” he said of the event which Sandm an ASU is ranked No. 4 in the country in. "That's something we work really hard on. Not to give balance beam away." . Courtney said the team now has more drive than ever. “Sometimes you lose focus on what you are trying to accomplish,” she said. “I’m not glad it (the toss) happened, but I am glad it happened now and not at a bigger event I think we are talented and can do a tot. It just makes us more hungry for a title.” Next up for die Sun Devils is a trip to Boise State. Sandman said it will be time for ASU to get back to what made the team so successful earlier in the season. “We are definitely going to go at it all out. No holding back,” she said. “If we have a good meet it will help with our seeding (at regtonals). But, I think we want to start focusing on what we did at the beginning. Just going in and hitting. Letting the scores take care of themselves. Go in there and hit our six and focus on each other.” Softball team marches to three wins B y J o s h D e F a m io S t a t e P r e ss For the ASU softball team, the beginning of March meant the start of another tough Pac-10 softball season. . And if the weekend is any indication, the No. 15 Sun Devils (11-3,3-1) could be ready to march into the top half of the conference. After an opening-game defeat at the hands of No. 10 California on Saturday, ASU swept the next three, one from Cal. then two from Stanford the following day. The first game opened with Cal scoring four runs, which was all the Golden Bears needed. ASU mustered only three scores, and Cal hung on to win 5-3. Roxanne Tsosie took the toss, while Holly Yost picked up the win for the Bears. After that game the weekend belonged to ASU. An injury to senior Tammy Lohmann in the first game caused Sun Devil head coach Linda Wells to shake up the line­ up. In turn, ASU shook up Cal in the second game, 7-3. Senior Stacey Slick, replacing Lisa Dacquisto in the leadoff spot, went 2-3 with an RBI and a run scored. Carrie Breedlove notched the victory, with Yost absorbing the toss for Cal. The same lineup worked for the Sun Devils in a Sunday doublehcader at Stanford. Slick and Dacquisto, hitting in the third spot, each went 2-for4, with Slick scoring two runs and Dacquisto knocking two in. Raja Woods also contributed, going l-for4 with two runs scored. Breedlove pitched five innings in the 6-1 victory for her sec­ ond win in as many days. Carrie James picked up the save. Stanford’s Becky Blevins took the toss. With Tsdsie on the mound and Slick and Dacquisto back at the top of the lineup, ASU completed the sweep in the second gam e, 7-3. Both hitters scored tw o runs, with Dacquisto going l-for-4 while Slick went 2-for-4 for the second straight game. Holly Smith and Tonya Hcrmosillo added two RBIs apiece. C Tsosie pitched the entire game to pick up the victory and atone for her defeat on Saturday. Marcy Crouch picked up the toss for the Cardinal. “We had to adjust (for Lohmann’s injury.)” head coach Linda Wells said of the lineup switch. “And we weren’t being that productive in that part o f the lineup anyway. We might leave it that way for awhile.” • ASU concludes its Northern California swing when they meet St. Maty’s College at 2 pm this afternoon. P ager A ctivation U nlim ited Pages 1 Year Airtime! $8999 P ager and A ctivation U nlim ited Pages 2 $11999 Womens hoops loses last road game Fr o m S taff R epo rts The ASU women’s basketball team ended its final conference road trip of die season the same way it ended its first, with a loss. ASU lost 84-70 to Washington State on Saturday in Pullman, Wash. The Sun Devils dropped to 8-18 (2-14 Pac10) while Washington State improved to 10-15 (4 -1 2 ). T he Sun D ev ils dropped their third in a row with the toss to Washington State. ASU is now in ninth place in the Pac10 with its final two games featuring last-place California and Stanford at the University Activity Center. The Golden Bears, losers of their last 11, are on tap for Thursday and ASU faces the No. 3 Cardinal on Saturday. The Sun Devils shot 36.7 percent from the field, yet out-rebounded the Cougars 38-34. Washington State shot at a 57.7 clip from the field. Washington also beat ASU at the free-throw line by connecting on 23 of 29 attempts (79.3 percent). ASU hit 21 o f 32 (65.6 per­ cent). Kristine Sand and Stephanie Freeman both sewed a team-high 17 points for the Sun Devils. Sand also chipped in five rebounds while Freeman notched four rebounds and three steals. ASU forward M olly T uter scored 16 points and chipped in four rebounds while point guard Rameeka Lowe scored six points and shared the team-high in assists with Kalene Carl by handing out four assists. Four Cougars scored in double dig­ its. Washington State’s Amy Saneholtz scored a game-high 24 points on 9-for13 sh o o tin g and p ick ed up four rebounds. Center Yvonne Kunze came one rebound short of notching a dou-. ble-double, scoring 18 points and chip­ ping in a game-high nine rebounds. Washington State point guard Jade Hyett ended the night with game-highs in assists (five) and steals (six). Hyett also scored 13 points. Forward Jennifer Ludwicki chipped in 14 points and two assists. ASU swimmers finish 4th at Pac-10s F r o m S t a ff R e po r t s The Stanford women’s swimming and diving team contin­ ued its reign as Pac-10 champions. The Cardinal won an unprecedented 11th straight confer­ ence crown Saturday in Federal Way, Wash. The Cardinal place first with 1,573 points, followed by USC with 1,205 points and UofA with. The No. 23 ASU women’s swim­ ming and diving team placed fourth. Sun Devil freshmen Carolyn Adel finished third in the 400-yard individual m edley. She also qualified for the NCAA Championships in that event. Her time of 4-minutes, 17,11 seconds was ¿tree seconds faster than her previous season-best. ASU’s Amanda Clegg was fourth in the 200 butterfly at 2:01.46. Freshman Ann-Kristin Riiser was fourth in the 200 breaststroke (2:15.68) In the 3-m eter diving event, ASU sophomore Katrina Pfeuffer placed fourth. The Sun Devils also placed fourth in the 800-yard freestyle relay with a time of 7:25.28 and third in the 200 freestyle relay (1:33.48) ASU junior Erika Sohlen was 10th in the 50 freestyle (23.67). Sun Devil sophomore Casey Murphy was fifth in the 200 freestyle at 1:48.92. She came within a half-second o f quali­ fying for the NCAA’s in that event. She also placed fifth in the 500 freestyle (4:50.32) and ninth in the 1,650 freestyle (16:51.49). The Sun Devils will return to action on March 8 for the Sun Devil Qualifier at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center. Years Airtime! P ager and A ctivation U nlim ited Pages 3 Years Airtime! $13999 1-800-760-PAGE EconoPage O F C A L IF O R N IA U N LIM ITED A RIZO N A PAGING! P H O E N IX 3 7 3 6 E . In d ia n S c h o o l R d . (6 0 2 ) 4 6 8 -3 5 3 3 - F 0 f, ^ WNewLocations* • Out the door! • n o Hidden costs! C am pus C orner •Beer & Seda •Photo Developing •Health & Beauty Aids 609 S. MILL 712 S. COLLEGE 2 LOCATIONS 967-4049 1 858-0567 ' Photo Finishing Everyday Low Price '4 .9 9 24 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS color C-41 process Best price in town. by THOMAS JOSEPH enclosure: ACROSS — Surer IS T e a u m 1 9 M em ber o fth e force 2 0 O rder's partner 21 Sharpen 22 Tea additive 2 5 N ot now 2 6 A t any tim e 2 7 Dietary no-no M ¥ 0 1A C R I B S C AR ET ER R S3 C 1 A 3 T AY BSE D E ER S □ □ ET □□□□ sC1HQQB CROSSWORD 1 Adorable 5 Flow er part 1 0 B ator's cal 11 W ed in secret 1 3 Rem ote button 14C om e into view 15 Exact ir n to w C a n DE E Abbr. DOWN 1 Stays in the woods 2 One of Kirk’s bridge crew 3 Tribal syinbol 4 Driver]slicense datum STeeter 6 Bugs’s rival 7The Raven* writer • Peach’s kin 9 Femur, 1 2 to 3 C A ID 8a U B P A R H A ! R E S P E A R M E N L 0 S 1T E ■ I i 0 VA 1s 1T EM 1 L E S AT ES V is Yesterday’s Answer eg. 12 More profound 16Tennis star Lendl 21 Bowler holders 22 French race site 23 Flatten 24 Actress Griffith 4 25 Den 27 Frauds 29 Wit 30Eye31 Hand and foot 32 Home ofthe brave »O ne­ time f R ” 8 ; 7 13 B 8 It 23 Pat Shannahan/State Press W ashington State’s Carlos Daniel attempts to drive past Sun Devil defender Michael Batiste Saturday at the UAC. “He made a crucial basket when their team needed it,” Frieder said. . SunD evil forward Urit Kelly nailed two free throws to cut the deficit to one, 71-70. Daniel’s short hook shot made it 73-70 with 35 ticks left in regulation. ASU’s Jeremy Veal missed two three-pointers in tire team’s next two possessions. He finished with a game-high 26 points, eight assists, five rebounds and two steals. The Sun Devils’ desperate comeback attempt was halted with 8.5 seconds to go. After Cougar Blake Pcngelly missed a free throw, the battle for the lose ball went to Washington via the pos­ session arrow. That single play — in a nutshell — Summarized ASU’s season, according to Frieder. “You know what, that’s been the whole damn season,” he said Mens tennis hosts Virginia Tech M iss c o v er a g e fractured his hand in the Baylor match three weeks ago. “It w ill be good to. finally get The ASU men’s tennis team (5-4,' 0-2 Pac-Six) looks to rebound from its- back in the lineup,” Maraccio said. three-game losing streak when they “I am looking forward to helping the take on the Hokies of Virginia Tech team again.” Maraccio should be back in the today at 10 a.m. at the W hiteman lineup in time for the matches against Tennis Center. Last time out, the Sun Devils were conference rivals UCLA and USC edged by S outhern M ethodist this weekend. ‘The California schools are tough University, 4-3. ASU won the doubles point, but proceeded to drop four of to beat, but we are improving, and we six singles matches. The two singles might be able to surprise them,’’ fresh­ w ins cam e from freshm en Alex man Miles Rogers said. Osterrieth and Ed Carter. The probable starting lineup for During its recent slump, the team today's match, in order, is — Sergio has been without the services of usual Elias, Osterrieth, Amir Ran, Carter, No. 3 man Gustavo M araccio He Tim Hammond, and Carey Biorkman. B y Jo h n S heehy S t a t e P r e ss YOUR FAVORITE c l u b S po r t ? of 2« _ 26 28 30 31 32 33 35 3 9 Flying toy 4 0 Signs of sorrow 41 W riter's 36 38 40 41 (M e 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 form ation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 3-3 CRYPTOQUOTE EK FVAY Z O KG M CULTURAL DIVERSITY COMMITTEE/OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE PRESENTS 38 DAILY CRYFTOQUOTES - Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW KR Who can blame Bill Frieder for feeling blue? The ASH men’s basketball team suffered more crushing blows this season than a boxer fighting Mike Tyson with his hands tied behind his back. F rie d e r’« team was d ealt another “crushing blow ” Thursday when senior forward Rodger Farrington fractured the fourth metacarpal bone, in his left hand during the game against Washington. Farrington needed just two block shots to tie ex-Sun Devil Mario Bennett’s Pac-10 single-season record (115 blocks). But Farrington spent the final home game of his ASU career on the sidelines with a cast on his left hand. He will miss the remainder ofthe season. “I cried last night about Rodger,” Frieder lamented Saturday after the Sun Devils lost their ninth straight game (74-70 to Washington State at the University Activity Center). “I think it was a crashing blow losing Rodger. I felt so badly for these kids. I’m going to have more chances, but Rodger isn’t I wanted to see him get the shot-blocking record in front of his family. We were going to win this game with him. It just seemed like, ‘What eke can happen to ASU to make sure they can’t get a victory today?”’ The Sun Devils dropped to 10-18, 2-14 in the conference. Washington State improved to 13-15,5-11. ASU senior forward Quincy Brewer said that Farrington’s injury was a major disappointment for the team. “It was heartbreaking, because Rodger is a great player,” said Brewer. “He’s a greater person than he is a ball player. Rodger’s like 6-7 (and) playing center. He’s sacrificed for the team all season.” r ": Farrington Said the injury Was “disappointing." But he also said he had a good season. “Yeah, I am (proud of my performance),” he said. “I don’t have no regrets about what happened this year.” Although the Sun Devils missed the defensive presence of Farrington, Cougar forward Carlos Daniel said it wasn’t an easy game. “He’s a shot blocker, He’s a good inside guy and he’s strong,” said Daniel, who finished with 20 points and nine rebounds^ “But 1 thought they played exceptionally well even without him. They played with a lot of heart and emotion.” The Sun Devils led 40-38 at the half. Washington State’s Isaac Fontaine led all players with 13 first-half points. He was held to seven points in the second half. But Fontaine’s clutch trey gave the Cougars a 71-68 lead with 1:02 remaining. j 22 3 7 C ut coupons IY J B y E d O deven S t a t e P r e ss Don’t w o rry... Sun Devi) Club Sports will make an appearance this week. 19 2 9 Barber's' w ork » L ite r a r y collection 3 4 Kiev’s nation Final home game leaves ASU blue 12 i F 1 iJ ■“ ■* 35 Unfamous «I ** f 38 Swain fi]■ 1 ■ J1 IS 28 Director Brooks Pag;;e 15 M o n d a y , M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 S t a te P ress M LZM MLYVH MK Z OY MZFAYX F E S T IV A L M onday M arch 3rd 1 9 9 7 « if * Student Services Courtyard 10:30am - 3:30pm X VESGEEVKJ RZGFME XYFVQLME MLYI . — Z J XHY I Z G H K V E Yesterday's Cryptoquote: PUT AN END ONCE AND FOR ALL TO THIS DISCUSSION OF WHAT A GOOD MAN SHOULD BE, AND BE ONE.— MARCUS AURELIUS 0 1997 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. by Student Organizations etw ssSh, fo r fu r th e r in fo rm a tio n , please contact Lloyd B rim hall, Program Coordinator In tern a tio n a l Students O ffice • 965-7451 % Page 16 M on d ay, M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P ress Baseball team finishes undefeated weekend B y P e r c y E d n a l in o J r . S t a t e P ress The ASU baseball team beat Eastern Michigan University 28-4 Sunday night to take first place in the Fiesta Bowl Diamond Classic. Since ASU beat UCLA 16-12 on Feb. 23, the Sun Devils have scored 10 or more runs in three of their last five games. ASU came within eight runs of tying the team record for most runs scored. The record of 36 runs, set on April 6. 1974 came against UTEP. ASU took a 19-4 lead after five innings. Kevin Tillman knocked out his first home run of the season with a threerun shot to right field. Tillman ended the night going 2-for-3 with five RBI. The Sun Devils (14-8) cruised through Eastern Michigan (2-5) with relative case, using an eight-run eighth to keep the game far from die Eagles’ reach. Mike Grijalva extended his hitting streak to 10 games. Grijalva finished the night going 5-for-6 with a double in the second. Righthander Ron Marietta picked up his first win of the season and saw his record improve to 1-2. Marietta gave up eight hits and four runs, shuck out six and walked two. Eagles pitcher Brian Mitchell was handed the loss, giving up seven hits and six runs and striking out two. The Eagles utilized four pitchers in the fourth. Mikel Moreno hit a triple to rightcenter field coupled with singles from Andrew Bcinbrink and Chip Gosewisch and W illie B loom quist highlighted ASU’s third. Trailing 4-2, ASU scored four runs in the third, then exploded in the fourth, scoring six runs. ASU won the first half of the doubleheader 14-5. Grijalva, who was named the MVP o f the C lassic, went 2-for-4 with a home run in the third. Grijalva ended the Classic going 10-for-18 with seven runs scored, 11 RBI, a home run, a double and a triple. Andrew Beinbrink went 2-for-3 with a double in the first and a home tun in the fifth. McKinley went 3-for-5 with two doubles. Dan McKinley also took his 10th stolen base of the season with a rob­ bery in the eighth. Eastern Michigan’s Chris DeShetler picked up three hits, including a double in the fifth. Sun Devil righthander Ben Byrd (3-1) threw six innings and earned the win, giv­ ing up three runs and scattering four hits while whiffing five and walking two. Eagles rigfithander Seth Kenny was hand­ ed the loss after being shelled for 10 runs and 10 hits in 4.2 innings of work. Jim Poulin/State Press ASU’s Andrew Beinbrink, right, congratulates Mike Grijalva for a home run during the first game of a doubleheader with Eastern Illinois Sunday. ASU men’s golf squad places 4th Sun Devils’ tennis team hosts Ducks B y J o h n Sh e e h y St a t e P r es s The ASU men's golf team went into the first annual UTEP Intercollegiate this past weekend with a little momentum. They placed third in their last two tourna­ ments in Hawaii. ASU continued its consis­ tent play, finishing fourth. They shot 593 in die two-round tourney. Texas El Paso, the host school, came tram four shots back to win the tournament at 576. It was the Miners third win this year, and second in their last four events. They were led by Ralph Gemoets, who tied for second overall with 142. ‘The guys just played great," said UTEP head coach Tim Norris. T i n really, really proud of the whole team. The weather was tough, but that’s part o f the game. Our guys really coped well with it. They just played fikethey’re capable o f playing.” Southern Methodist caxhe in secoaid, three shots back at 579. The M ustangs’ Hank Kuehne fired a 3-under-par 141 to win the individual title. Oklahoma came in third at 592. Louisiana State and Colorado tied for fifth at 602. Sun Devil senior All-American Chris H anell tied with G ernoets fo r second. Hanell’s 2-under par 142 was his best perfor­ mance o f the year. "Chris has been playing really well,” said ASU head coach Randy Lein. "He hasn’t fin­ ished out of the top 10 all year.” Darren Angel, who has been sidelined because o f injury, shot a 6-over-par 150 in his first tournament since September. Angel tied for 23rd. ASU teamates Scott Johnson and Bryan Gilder tied for 29th, They each shot a 7-over-par 151. Sun Devil Greg Padilla placed 40th with a 9-over-par 153. Due to bad weather conditions, Friday's round, had to be cancelled. The tournament was limited to 36 holes instead of the usual 54. B y Lo r i H aro S t a t e P ress The ASU w om en’s tennis team (5-1 overall) returns to action today as it takes on O regon (3-2 overall) at 1:30 p.m. at the Whiteman Tennis Center. T he Sun D evils have won th eir last fo u r m atches and are lo o king fo r win num ber six to get off to their best start since 1991. Last year at hom e the team sm ashed the Ducks with a 9-0 victory. This season they feel they can do the same. “Lots o f our gam es have been home gam es,” Lansdorp said. “(The wins) I t’s g iv e n us a lo t m o re c o n fid e n c e an d m ade it more exciting. I t’s a lot better than last year.” In th e ir la st o u tin g the Sun D evils b e a t b o th U C L A a n d U S C . A g a in s t U C L A , A S U ’ s to p p la y e r , R e k a C seresn y es, sp rained her ankle during her doubles match. The next day against USC, Stephanie Lansdorp stepped up to com pete in the No. 1 position and won her match in straight sets. Cseresnyes is undefeated at the top position, with five w in s a n d w ill o n ly p la y s in g le s in today’s match. The Sun Devils are coming off a twoweek break. They have spent most o f that tim e practicing their doubles. This past week they worked out, but were unable to hit 'much because *of the Z.rain. L ' ‘ It (th e p a s t tw o w e e k s)w a s g o o d because w e’d played a lot before that,” Lansdorp said. T hese last tw o w eeks have give the team time to think about how they’ll do during the rest o f the season. They are focusing on ju st taking it match by match, but they do hope to make it to nationals. “We just try to take it one match at a tim e,” sophomore Alison said. “And we go o v er each m atch afte rw a rd s to see what we have to do to improve.” Classifieds N otice to o u r readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or myested, you may wish to investigate the company apd offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity oLthe offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, . please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ANNOUNCEMENTS NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tion Vehicle. Som e w ork OK. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. PROFESSIONAL, SINGLE parent seek in g a p t/h o u se to s h a r e ' w ith re sp o n sib le in div id u al. Prefer M esa/Tempe area. Need ASAP. Call 965-5013, days. APARTMENTS More T rivia... The US Postal Service's annual budget is nearly 1% of the US economy. 1 BED RO OM A PT. c lo se , to cam pus near M ill Ave. R eady April 1. Call 968-5255. EL DIABLO APTS. NE corner o f A p ach e & M cC lintock, Tempe quiet luxury living lbd $4 9 0 , 2bd $5 7 0 -$ 6 20, 92 1 0699 HOMES FOR SALE HOMES FOR RENT 1BD 1BA guest house, utils in­ cluded, $510/mo. O ther houses avail. 894-0288 4B D 2BA exc. cond. hew paint, carpet, etc. O sbourne St S c o tt. Rd. $995/nKK A vail, immed. 437-1048. W ALK TO ASU 4bd 2ba pool $1250. 3bd 2 b a $900. O thers available also. Call 894-0288. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Save yourself a 2 BDR72 B, Refrig, Dishwash­ er, pool, spa, gym, avail now, $590.946-7088. little tim e! PAPAGO PARK Village, a rare hard to fin d 3bdr/2b w /loft. Newer carpet & paint, refridg, w ash/dry. A vail now $1190. 946-7088. Place your Classified Ad from the World W ide Web http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ Find it FA ST in the Classifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL classad/classadfm.html HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL BU Y O F THE W EEK APARTMENTS 2 Bedroom 3 Bedroom T ow nhouse Marlborough Park $ 1 1 9 ,0 0 0 Includes garage & yard Bob Bullock. Realty Executives EXCELLENT 9 9 8 -2 9 9 2 Manager-In-Training Program A p a rtm é n ts i m «««»d ia te Move-In HELP WANTEDGENERAL Apache Terrace Apartm ents 9 6 8 -6 3 * 3 Targeting the Next Millennium A t FACS Group, Inc., we provide financial, credit and adm inistrative services fo r a il divisions o f Federated Departm ent Stores, Inc., including Macy’s, Bloom ingdale’s and the Bon Marche, as w ell as other com panies. O ur state-of-the-art fa cilitie s in Phoenix, C incinnati & Tampa have served as the central location fo r credit opera­ tions, credit m arketing, collections, Federated Departm ent Stores em ployee services, divisional support services and sales audit/conirol. We have the industry's best bottom line, a respected reputation arid an aggressive agenda fo r growth. Now we w ant to develop your vision, creativity and business judgm ent so you can take us to the next m illennium . Jum pstart Your Career Think about this: The FACS Group’s M anager-In-Training Program offers the real experience and im m ediate responsibility you need to get your career up and running quickly. You provide the leadership qualities and independent thinking that m ark you as managem ent m aterial and we’ll provide extensive classroom training in all departm ents of our com pany, and on topics such as supervisory skills and com m unication skills. The M .l.T. Program provides oh-the-job training in a variety o f areas: ■ }fa tuonaifcMm .« d 0 M i» d 12.30 (o r fa ta rli - felSpm. Complete in p e n ru ta lilff application ISe. tatta»aaim Ite m » Schott http://news. vpsa.asu.edu/ MOVE • C réd it C ustom er S ervice > H um an R esources • D ivision a l S upport S ervices • C en tra l A tten d a nt O perator • C re d it G ranting •C o lle c tio n s • M ail and Phone O rder • S ales A u d it/C on tro l The Opportunity lo r Excellence The single m ost im portant aspect of jo b satisfaction is a feeling o f m aking a contribution. A t FACS, we take special care to create an environm ent where that is more than possible, it is expected. O ur atm osphere is casual, relaxed, and we hold more than SO corporate events each year. We o tte r a com petitive salary/benefits package...with the opportunity fo r achievem ent, advancem ent and enjoym ent. We believe in more than sim ply getting the job done. We believe in doing it w ith excellence! If you w ould like to schedule an interview , contact the U niversity Placem ent O ffice. Interview s w ill take place on Tuesday, M arch 11th. FACS FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT SERVICES P ase 17 M on d ay, M arch 3, 1997 St a t e P r ess ROOM S FOR RENT PROFESSIONAL, SINGLE parent seeking apt/house to share with re­ spo n sib le in d iv id u al. P refer Mesa/Tempe area. Need ASAP. Call 965-5013, days. ROOM IN 4bd luxury home on Pte S'. M ountain g o lf course, fully turn w/ leather couches & big screen. TV. Move in asap. Fem o r clean male. $340/mo, + 1/4 u til. Daty 800-804-0151. Even 961-1306 ROOMS FOR RENT NEED A room? Have a room for rent? The Roommate Serv­ ice 968-0227 / 80Ö-524-9509. www.roommáteservice.com * A d v w t l M .y o u r In ta rn st b u a ln m s o r W a t t a n a In I I » C la s a ifla d a . C a ll 903-8731 fo r m o ro In fo rm atio n PAP AGO PARK, Questa Vida, & others! 2 & 3 bdrms. Own for less than rent-. Greg, Realty Executives. 966-0016. U N IV ER SITY & HARDY: Newly remld. 2 bd/2 ha condo. New carpet and kitchen. Open house Sun 12-5. $58,500. 9219973. AUTOMOBILES86 MITSUBISHI Tredia L 4dr, 5 spd, tinted Windows,. CD plyr, new tags, dk blue $2600 obo 431-9447 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL 1997 DODGE DAKOTA pick­ up. $289/mo. Call 926-4000 83 NISSAN PICKUP 5 speed, A /C , kingcab, runs great $2,900. Call Dave at 784-8601 83 TOYOTA CÉLICA Supra V6, 5 spd, m idnight blue, very clean, ASU parent, $2,500 831 7208 y--/; - , •; 84 PONTIAC FIERO: auto, a/c; white, very clean, ASU parent $2000 831-7208 N o Atassie C ett Shopping! S a v e Tinte & Money! F re e A s CarFinder Service WWW.AZAUTOMET.COM ! BUY ALL Used Cars/T rucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. HUNDREDS OF SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE 8 7 4 -3 2 6 8 Æ « = » ' 91 HONDA C IV IC DX 4 d r auto a/c. $8,388.834-0220 1990 N ISS A N SEN TRA , red, 2dr, 4sdp, as, am/fm cass, new tires, 100k mi, excellent cond. $3300 @ home 829-6221 CASH TODAY!!! _ AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE RENTAL SHARING .. ■ ■ .- . 95 FO R D A SPIR E 3dr, auto a/c. $6,988. 834-0220. MAKE SURE your Car is taken care o f by professionals. .Call Earnhardt's Dodge service dept, for your repair needs: 756-3663 TOYOTA PICKUP 84 3/4 ton 2 w d / 5 sp / a c / c d /p s / p b / 1 17 k m ust see. $3,100obo Liz @ 966-1706 YOU CAN buy p arts through the in te rn e t. No ha ssle , great prices! www.eamharclt.com TRAVEL D ISCO U N T TRAVEL: Cheap i n your name. Q uick departrs. Buy cou pons/aw ards. M ost places worldwide. 968-7283 SPRING BREAK '97: Do Lake Havasu, AZ! Its a party! 1-8882-H A V A SU Or W w w,party r hard.com M eet Brvn M aw r Placement D irector HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Thursday, March 27th M U -2nd floor TIM E SHARES for rent throughout the US and M exi­ co. 924-0483. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 10am-4pm fo r advance •s • Employment Opportunities • Benefits * Medical applications and job descriptions. , 4- © Call to ll free: Càmemùdiinn l.888.526.2267 m < 3 0 tf CLÜB & SPA a and k M s u n rrs -• - - .... • ; Mountain Shadows 2 GREAT Jobs! Theatre techni­ cian at Dept, o f Dance on camjm s . G reat le arning exp. w / good pay. Flex. hrs. Call KC at 965-5199 or Mark at 965-3016 for details.; ---- --- ------ r e s o t i ano G orr d ue ; Look for these and many other positions to be avialable now and in the near future: 0 0 I DlALAMERICA MARKETING, INC. ★ Food & Beverage * G olf ★ Room s & Related ★ Spa ★ Plus O ther O pportunities im EOE/MiiKMity/F/V/D Call our job hotline for current positions • 596-7034 Room D iscounts • Food/Beverage Discounts Bain Valuable Experience Y Flexible Schedules, A Short (4.5) Shift Of Choice; Early AM, Mid-AM. Early Aft. Mid-Aft, Early Eve, & Weekends. H Excellent Earning Potential—Average SB-Sl 2/Hr. $12-Sl6/Hr. For Our to p Producers. V Paid, Complete Training ($7.00/Hr. Minimum Guarantee). : I I D B C n e e d s p e o p le to w o rk w ith c h ild re n , a d o le s ­ c e n ts , a n d yo u n g a d u lts w h o a re D e ve lo p m e n ta lly , E m o tio n a lly , a n d B e h a v io ra lly ch a lle n g e d . V Nice Offices; Fully Automated; Reps Call Prequalified Leads Nationwide From A Computer-Dialed Data Base. V Invaluable Experience In Sales & Communications. Y 4 miles South of ÂSU campus in Tempe., Please Call (6Ö2) E a rn $ 6 .5 0 - $ 8 .0 0 p e r H o u r W o rkin g W ith A d o le sce n ts In c e n tiv e s : T u itio n R e im b u rse m e n t, P a id T im e O ff, A d va n ce m e n t P o te n tia l, 6 M o n th R a ise s, P a id T ra in in g , F u ll B e n e fits P a cka ge 345-9509 For A Confidential Interview I SubmttApplicatlons To-. DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. *9 Tempe, AZ 85282 756-1223 8 0 Creative, Energetic ¿¡Responsible Residential Director ¿R esidential Counselors fo r summer prosram fo r talen ted ¿ creative adolescents a t ASU. G reat salary. Rm & bd. Submit resume ¿ cover le tte r . ■ specifyins R esidence Hail D irector (¿ SR #0 28 93 ) o r R esidence Hall Assistant D irector (& SR #02892) and names, addresses, ¿num bers o f 3 professional references to: ASU Employment Services Box 87 14 03 Tem pe, AZ Marriott proudly supports a Drug Free Work Environment. Diaiainerica Marketing, a 40. year old téléphoné marketing . company, is growing again! Wè're coiitinually looking for bright,- : ■ enêrgei.ic^pçople to join our staff arid We will be hiring a ! nun) her oi students during the academic year:.’ . I I i JOi$ Excellent Benefits Package Available Close to i f f i SUMMER iBBigiSigigigiBigigigigigiBiglBIBisiBiBi in Telem arketing fo r th e Im a g e C o n scio u s P ro M ark O ne M arketin g S ervices, Inç. < N O W H IR IN G f ProM ark One is now accepting applications for our dynamic Tempe Center. POSITIONS F ull-tim e a n d P art-tim e HELP WANTEDGENERAL ACT NOW!!! Don't call another ad Until you hear what we have to offer! Re­ sort Reservations Dept, has 20 pos. avail. 9am-1 pm or 5pm9pm . $9-$ 12/hr avg, no sell­ ing!! Start immed. Call Becky 491-4921. G R EA T SC H O O L wfcrid job. Caregiver for active quadriple­ gic. Healthy, smoke/drug free, positive attitude; a must. Good pay. Will train. Tom 949-7241 jv. msg. CLUB ÉCLIPSE now accepting a p p lic atio n s fo r prom otions, host/ess, bar backs, bartenders, cocktail wait, staff 919 Ë. Ap­ ache at Rural b/w 1-5pm 9668004 COM PANY SEEK IN G gum taste testers. Earn $10/sample. $ 1,000 max ;/w eek. Send SASE: 3010 W rlsHire Blvd. Ste. 439 Los / A ngeles, GA. 90010. COUNSELOR POSITIONS: po­ sition-openings in all team & individual sports' + waterfront .+ art + drama + RN's + coaching. C om petitive s a la ry . Located Berkshire Mts •of Massachusetts - 2 1/2 hrs from NYC/BoSton. C all G reylock 1-80Q-8425214. Camp Romfica fo r girls lt888-2-ROMACA. Health & Dental Benefits Paid Paid Flexible SdM Professional Promotion From No Experience Necessary Paid Training Advancement Opportunities $ 6 .0 0 An Hour Plus Commisi $8-$9/hr, Top Reps Can Earn • Relocation Opportunities • Cad Today to Sot Up An Interview • 7 7 7 - 0 8 7 7 * • O r stop by a t 3 1 3 6 S . McCHntock S te 7 , Tempo • ‘P ro M ark O ne is th e 166th F astest G row ing C om pany in A m erica* - IN C 500 M agazine ; We are th e 6 th L arg e st, and 3rd F a ste st G row ing T e lem arketing F irm in th e N ation EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER FILM PR O D U CTIO N , talen t m anagem ent, & in te rn sh ip s avail. Call Créative Artists Mgt. at 800^01-0545 ; FITNESS & FUN FUN PEOPLE June 22 - A ugust 20th R ecruiter w ill be on cam pus Thursday, M arch 27th, 10am-4pm in the M emorial Student Union, Rooms 208-C & 208-D. For more in fo call: M AH-KEE-NAC fB ovsl: 1-800-753-9118 DANBEE (G ifts): 1-800-392-3752 LSIn SCOTTSDALE PRINCESS Arizona’s largest resort is in need o f part-time or full-time PBX operators. Must have good communication skills, and able to work in a fast-paced environm ent AM or PM positions available. Please apply in Human Resources on Mon. 9a-12noon, Tues 3p-6p, or Wed 9 a -lla North o f Bell Rd., East o f Scottsdale Rd, EOE Baseball • S o ftb a ll C hildrens P rogram s • A qu a tics ■ M usic • D ram a • Dance • A rts & C ra fts * And M ore... • (/ ) Du a u o c L J APPLY NOW! We are now hiring individuals with education, experience, and interest in leading any o f the summer recreation programs the City of T em pe offers! $5.25 to $11.25 per hour! Applications and position descriptions m ay be obtained from: Parks and Recreation Office 3 5 0 0 South Rural Rd., T em pe, AZ (6 0 2 )3 5 0 - 5 2 0 0 TD D (602) 3 5 0 -5 0 5 0 If y o u 're m o tiva te d and ready to g o to w o rk fo r a g ro w in g , dynam ic o rga n izatio n , AA/EO E/M -F Gr o w in g shipping co. Top sa la ries, room , board, and tra ve l allow ance. (-D etails available upon em ploym ent acceptance) (O ffices soon to be m oving to Hardy & Broadway in Tem pe) fa st needs custom er ser..- person to handle in-bound sales calls & rate quoting. $7/hr + incentives Tempe Call Laura 838-2722 , Counselor positions for talented and energetic students as, available in a ll Land and W ater Sports, Arts & C rafts, Dance, G ym nastics, Horseback Riding, Drama, W oodshop, R oller " Hockey, G olf; Tennis* W SI’s. W aterskiing, Sailing and m ore!!! ’ and AD T S ecurity Services, Inc. 9 16 W . Adam s Phoenix, AZ 85007 DUAL-ENGINE Dual instruction, VFR or. IFR. $70/hr^CalI 917-0484 ■Premiere Brother-Sister Camps in Massachusetts on Campus Interviews TUITION REIMBURSEMENT* Call Today for a personal interview ( 6 0 2 )4 4 0 - 4 2 2 3 DRIVER W / custom er service skills needed by Tem pe based; shipping co. 24ft truck, heavy lifting, pt/ft, $8/hr + incentives. Call Nick 838-2722 Find it FvASTin the Classifieds The ADT com p en sation plan Includes: PAID BENEFITS AN HOURLY WAGE PLUS BONUSES DISTINCTIVE CLEANING p/t positions avail, early morning, mid afternoon. Located on Mill. F or info contact J a s o n 2890621. : vV ; ; V V W anted: O utgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal P ortraits. $6 -1 0/hr. C all Carrie at 777-1054. Evening & Saturday hours • • • • • • • • • • 220- 0000 . DESK CLERK p/t evenings + weekends. Flex schedule, close to ASU. Pay depends on exp. A pply in person 1020 E. A p­ ache Super 8 Motel Seeking motivated people with a sm i|e: Flex. hrs. $$$ 8404098;-. -V APPO IN TM EN T SETTERS ADT, the world's old est and largest security system s com pany, has im m ediate op en in gs for m otivated individuals with excellen t telep h on e com m unication skills to assist us in expanding our custom er base. DELICIOUS DELIVERIES hiring order takers & drivers. Driv­ ers m ust have ow n c ar & in ­ surance. Pt/ft shifts avail. Call COVER R ETAIL help needed at new night club in N. ¡Scot­ tsd ale. B ussers also, needed. Call Buzz Funbar for more de­ tails 991-3866 ' 8 5 2 8 7 -1 4 0 3 EARN W HAT YOU'RE WORTH!! HELP WANTEDGENERAL - Interviews begin in late March - t/) z n Tempe li. AN EQ UAL O PPORTUNITY/REASONABLE ACCOM ODATION EMPLOYER S t a t e P ress M o n d a y , M arch 3 ,1 9 9 7 Page 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP W A N ÏE D GENERAL GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. E x p erien ce & e n th u siasm a must, work well w/children. 612hrs/wk. 940-4041. MAKE GOOD dough at Brueggar's Bagels. Now hiring for all p o sitio n s and tim e s. M -F hours available. Apply in per­ son o r c all: R u ral/C h an d ler 592-9505. 52nd S tr/B roadw ay, o ff I - 10 in T em pe 8291000. RED EYE is now h irin g . J r m anagem ent and sales p o si­ 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 6411506. M O D E LS/A C T O R S. In ti scouts-want you for music vid­ eos and local print work. 9416922. RELIEF MANAGER needed for S aturdays & S undays. 9am 6pm , C an study w hile you work. $6/hr. Call 966-2622 NEED EXTRAS? REWARDING, EXCITING sum­ mer for sophomore & older col­ lege students, c ounseling in the C olorado rockies. B ack­ packing, w estern riding, w ater a ctiv ité s, natu ral scien ce, & many outdoor programs. W rite San B orn W estern C am ps PO BOX 167 Florissant, CO 80816 INTERNSHIP IN financial dis­ trict. At P aineW eber in PHX. Motivation required. 957-5129 K EN N EL W O RK ER needed p/t. M ust be neat, dependable. 7311 E. T hom as, S co ttsd ale 945-7692. L IFEG U A R D S N EED ED fo r Tem pe area. C ertification re q .. Positions for full or part time in la te sp rin g o f e arly sum m er. Call for appointment 423-9923. LIONS CAMP Tatiyee is seek­ ing to hire counselors to work w / h a n d icap p ed c h ild re n & adults in Lakeside, AZ June 1 Aug. 3 Room board & salary & credit avail. If interested leave message at (602)275-2604 LOCAL TEMPE Co. has several jo b openings: shipping and re­ ceiving clerk, custom er service rep, retail sales Clerk (PHX loca­ tion),. handym an w/ light: c a r­ pen try exp. M orning o r a fte r­ noon hrs. av ail. C all B onnie 967-2678 LOCAL TV station seeking p/t telephone researchers. N o exp nee. Exclnt comm skills a must: C all B ecky .Kent 8:30-5:30 @ 243-2966, C u sto m er Service p o sitions a v a il. Prof, en v iro n m ent. Close to campus. M-F, 5^9pm, Sat. 8 -12pm. $7/hr. Call Mike C. 968-2900. N EE D HELP fo r co n cession stand, C handler O strich F estival, March 7th-9th 924-7093 OUTSIDE JOBS - Now hiring! National Parks, Beach Resorts R an ch es;• R afting C o .'s. Nat ionw ide openings. B enefits! Bonuses! Call (919) 918-7767, extR i05 i. PT MARKETING Asst, needed to m aintain web site, produce fly e rs & w rite ' n ew sletters. S trong com . skills: a m ust. Word, Quark & html exp. help; fill. Fax resume to JT at Dillard Ticketing 736-2383 Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! Put it in the Classifieds! W A N IH ) Japanese speaking tour guides for full and part time I work. Immediate and summer positions available. Must have fluent language skills. Experience preferred but not necessary . Please contact Shawn H erm an at^ 27^9757 SAN D IÈQO Padres, S eattle M ariners Spring training base­ ball Box office ticket sales now hiring. Call 878-4337 TRAVEL AGENCY reception­ ist, p t/ft, o u tgoing, fun a t­ mosphere. Great pay. 970-3840 PART-TIM E SERV ICE Reps. U nited Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for m orning, evening & w kend shifts. $6.$7/hr plus sh ift dif­ fe re n tia l fo r evening hours. G o o d custom er service sk ills and pleasant phone voice pre­ ferred: Call 431-9500, Tempe location. Em ployee drug test­ ing required. EQE/M/F/D/y. HELP WANTEDGENERAL VALET PARKING A ttendants for American Valet. M ust be clean cut & polite; PT evenings. $6-12/hr. 861-9182 VALET PARKING attendants, m ust' be clean c u t, good a tti­ tude, $7-$12/hr. 548-0599. HELP WANTEDSALES ■■■V-NINE W EST Group needs ft/pt sales associates. Hourly wage + m onthly bonus DO E. N ichole or Beth at Easy Spirit for inter­ view 423-8990 or 423-9689 HELP WANTEDC L g ra c A ^ _ _ _ $7.50-8.00 47 Positions; ft/pt. Several com­ pan ies lo c a ted in the Tem pe area are hiring Customer Service Reps. M ust have customer serv­ ice exp., type 20w pm & have g re a t c o m m u n ic atio n s sk ills. Great benefits! Call Pridestaff at 777-0707 to learn more about these great opportunities. Find us at w w w .needw ork.com for additional job listings. ACCTING CLERK 10 key PT pm and S at. C om puter exp. Tempe Chris 893-6884. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 4TH FLOOR BAR & GRILLE In stru cto rs N eeded F /T , P/T, tem p, su b stitu te w orkers needed a t agency fo r a d u lts w /developm ental d isa b ilitie s. C all 994-5704 o r a pply 7507 E. O sborn R oad, S cottsdale. EOE Year-around w ork fo r career-oriented individual. Food Handler’s card req'd fo r the fo llow ing positions in o u r BUSY bar & grille. PM W AIT STAFF BUSSERS COOKS HOST/HOSTESS COCKTAIL SERVERS MANUFACTURING NOW HIRING Motivated students to perform various tasks in production. Starting pay at $5.50 P/T and full time pos, available. No exp. necessary Open from 9-6 M-F Call Rob at 967-4224 tid o m Fitness, i located m th e I mm atm .*m m -M to g , Canot s , life g u a rd s , C & Aerobics, mm Com e join o u r staff where we offer com petitive wages, uniform s, free employee meal and m uch more. Please apply in person at Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd., M , T, W o r F, 8:3010:30am o r 2-4pm . Scottsdale Embassy Suite supports a Drug-Free Workplace. EOE fflcomomm R e s id e n t ia l Co unselo rs HELP WANTED Front Desk Clerks Van Drivers Full/Part Time Bonuses/Benefits Super 8 M otel 3401 E Van Buren Phoenix, AZ 85008 Social Service Agency has FT/PT positions available Working with adults who are developmentally and mentally challenged in group homes & apartment settings located in Phx,, Mesa & Tempe. $6.00-$6.50/hr. DOE. • Pd. training. Call 431-9511. •Basketball •G o lf • Swimming •W aterskiing • Riflery •Photography •C eram ics • Nature Study •P iano Accompanist • Rock Climbing J u n e 1 6 - A ugust 2 4 . T o p s a la rie s room &bo ard, tra v e l prowded Call 1-800-250-6252 Camp Takajo eta Mike Shartm n 7366 C ascad e T errace G rand R apids, Ml 4 9 5 4 6 . FAX resum e to (616) 954-2950 I wi# be on cam pus Thursday, March 6 Or write: from 10am -4pm in the MU, Room 22 2 NEED $ before Finals? Recep­ tio n is t n e ed e d now! P/T thru Apr. $7/hr flex hrs. M ust have car. Contact Nielle 829.4628. RECEPTIONIST/OFFICE ASSIS­ TANT for busy management office dependability & people skills a m ust. W ord pe rfe c t help fu l, com m on sen se & a sense o f hum or h e lp fu l,. C oncord V il­ lage 63 I E . L exington Tempe. Full or part tim e. C all for ap ­ pointment 423-9923 HELP WANTEDF O O D S |R V IC |_ CLUCK-U N ow h irin g c o u n te r, servers, bartenders & chicken m ascots. Apply: 855 S. Rural Rd. CORK'NCLEAVER A c cepting apps. fo r lunch host(ess); & lunch food server. W ill train, p/t. C oncern w / ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ a lity are im p o rtan t. A p p ly in person M -F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585: HELP WANTEDFO OD SERVICE FO O D SERVERS needed. All sh ifts. S teve’s G rill, 139 E. Adams, Phoenix. 252-2742. HELP W A N TED D eli c le rk wanted. Rinaldi's on 3rd. 9219344. Ask for Diane. MADISON'S IN Scottsdale now accep tin g ap p licatio n s 3-6pm for hostess & server. Apply in person 7108 E. S tetson D r. Scottsdale JOB OPPORTUNITIES B a R I E N cIE: W an i td Earn SIS io SMIpíR hoUR EarnI h H k Ì Ì P ' e F un ' (You C m ^ H K lE N d ¡N < j Resort & Spa has the following employment opportunities: Front Desk Clerk Classifieds 965-6735 JOB OPPORTUNITIES W ork in Exotic locations, m eet fui) people, A N D get paid! For in d u stry inform a­ tion, call the experts! (800) 276-4948 e x t C59181 We are a research & publishing co. BartencI S AcAdEMy 1 2 5 0 E. J mcIie Blvd, # 1 0 8 r Tempe 92L9925 ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Get the #1 source on the Alaska Fishing industry. Learn how thousands combine high earnings + adventure with no experienceFor information: (800) 276-0654 ext; A59181 We are a research & publishing co. - Mr Off Tuition With Coupon • Local & Nationwide Placement • Be A Certified Bartender WITHIN 2 FUN WEEKS A m e ric a n B a rte n d in g S c h o o l Tempe Phoenix 968-7657 957-3770 2nd Shift 3pm - 11:30pm P/T Night Auditor HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Graveyard Office Help (filing) 9am - 5pm Please apply in person. Interview ing and application hours are from 10-4, M -F Scottsdale Camelback Resort & Spa is an equal opportunity em ployer: f you're smooth at talking on the phone, giving and rectivin g a ccu rate inform ation and consider y o u n e tf a good manager o f tim e, then consider ExetH A a en t Services. Our DIRECTORYASSISTANCE SERVICE are setting new standards in the way people get info over the phone. Our DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATORS don’t sell a thing! B at they’re smooth at providing long distance operator services. Full* ft Part-Time Opportunities Available! L IK E D O U G H ? If chocolate chip cookies make you feel at home, how about a career that does the same? Doubletree would like you to join one of the fastest-growing companies in the hotel industry. Looking for Fun, Friendly, Professional people who are committed to Providing Quality Guest Service! Ft/Pt positions Quality Paid Training Accommodate School Schedules Currently hiring for Reservation Sales Agents srapo $1001 ® CASHIERS: NIGHT shift $8/hr. W ait staff: immediate openings fo r lunch & d in n e r sh ifts. $3/hr. + tips. Sushi Bar Sakana 5061 E< Elliot 598-0506 ATWjt 19) $1 99 w l|i ASU ID SCOTTSDALE CAMELBACK HELP WANTED* FO O D SERVICE CRUISE SHIP EMPLOYMENT HELP WANTEDGENERAL J ° e era,tV Outstanding Maine camp noted for magnificent lakefront setting & exceptional facilities. Over 100 positions for heads and assistants in: HELP WANTEDCLERICAL H ire-On Bonusl APPLY NOW! For a limited time, you may tie eligible for up Is a $100 Hire-On Bonus. Come join us in our casual environm ent You’ll: g et : paid training, a competitive starting salary: incentive pay opportunities, excellent benefits and innovative schedules from which to choose. A pplicant with prior custom er service experience will qualify for elevated base wage. With Excel), making good money is o s easy as answering the calf. < s? D o u b l e T r e e H ot ELS C o RPO R A T I O 410 N. 44th Street, Suite 700 Phoenix, Arizona 86008 M-F 8:30am - 4:30 pm NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! EOE Call us a t 8 0 8 -0 0 0 8 to learn more! Apply a t any o f the following locations Monday-Friday, 8am -6pm or Saturday, 9am-1pm 1906 E. Main (NWwriter of Moto ft Gilbert) PHOENIX: 4250 E. Camelback, Bldg. K, Ste. 160 (CamelSguare Atrium) 1919 W. Fairmont (off 48th St Between Broadway a Southern, near 1-10) hr You can now find State Press Classifieds on the W orld W ide W eb! http://news. vpsa.asu.edu S t a t e P ress ! RESTAURANTS/ BARS jStntüví/ rk- HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE HELP WANTEDCHILD CAREi . -¡liniV JOB OPPORTUNITIES TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING AFTERNOON NANNY needed i m m e d . M ust have a ref. Car w ith a/c, be aVail. from 2:307 6pm M -F, and. lik e sp orts & shopping. $6/hir+gas. Loc. Shea/Scotts R d N. to Pinnacle Peak Rd. 998-3154 day, 5854651 eve; ask for Carrie Martz B A BY SITTER S & N annies, flex schedules. Car req'd. $4.757/hr. 460-1200. NANNY P/T. 1 & 3 yrs. old. 3 days, morns. English speak­ ing, Paradise Valley. 607-9524 $ 1 99/PG , $15/RES. Proofed. A PA /M LA . Sam e day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 N U RSER Y a ttendant. .Sun., 9 a m -12pm N azarene C hurch: ASU East Campus 988-9150 NANNY/M OTHER’s helper. 4 mb old infant care: light house­ hold chores: /12-20 hrs/w k. » Non-smoker; must have reliable transp. CPR certif. Education or Nursing major a plus, 62nd St. & Green way. C all D ebra 998■5158. -■ . ' / , ■ ' - . /■./ A LA SK A EM PLO Y M EN T Earn to $3,000-$6,0d0+/mo. in fisheries, paries, resorts. Airfare! Food/lodging! G et all the op­ tions. C all (919) 918-7767, ext. A 105. IJeatbool O rder yours today! $44.94 C a ll 9 6 5 -6 8 0 1 RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS BIG MONDAY 11 a m - 11 p m 1 /2 Pound B urger 4 -7pm 7 Days a Week M S rS il I SPSS I I I $900 I I OFF I I ANY I I PIZZA I I I 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 I { Page 19 M on d ay, M arch 3, 1997 P IZ Z A & PASTA Where AS U Goes fo r Pizza PERSONALS Lemon ' & Terrace ADOPTION? PREGNANT? H e d . lit e m *3.25 with U wins» 3 2 o z. BIG BEERS $ 9 49 Bud Light Coors Light HeDekiiier! $2.50 [FREE FRIES] B annoli I With Any Burger I 1 With coupon. Expires Today 3/3/97 I P ig ia 1-800-675-3407 Mill Ave. Beer Company 829-6775 6 0 5 S. Mill Ave. iSSSFSKi U P l 1301 E. University Bladder Buster JOB OPPORTUNITIES A C T Ó R /M OD E L /C O M MERCI AL TYPES. Don't spin your' w heels! N eed riecess. :tools& c o n ta c ts to ' b reak .into industry? Contact Talent Scoutfor consultation: 569^2954. . ' 10 D ra fts TONIGHT LIVE! SERVICES WAXING & ELECTROLYSIS; Men: back, chest, etc. Women: legs, bikini, etc. 994-0059 ASU's Coupon Book SI 00 D r in k s Q ftT R S 966-5543 SE CORNER-UNIVERSITY &RURAL Balboa Cafe 404 S. MiR Ave. 966-1300 y ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST by Frances Drake M o n d a y , M a rc h 3, 1 9 9 7 21) C reativ e types aré visited b y a m u se ; D e a lin g s- w ith agents and advisers are favored. Travel is .a plus, but don’t spoil an o u tin g by a rg u in g a b o u t money. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to DeC, 21) Others, cooperate with you. Talks regarding domestic .interests áre fav o re d . Enjoyment comes through fam­ ily and entertaining. CAPRICORN (Dec; 22 to Jan. 19) Y ou’re a trifle im patient as the day begins, but it’s a good ; tim e fo r contacting others and fo r g ettin g y o u r id eas across; Others are willing to work with you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) It’s not a good day for busi­ ness in terests, but social prospects are wonderful. You’ll be touched by the kindness of a friend who comes to your res­ cue in some way. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) V isitors could drop by at an inconvenient time. You want to spend time alone with family. Artists feel inspired about their work. YOU BORN TODAY are a true crusader and set out early in life to change the world for the better. Armed with the best intentions, you are one who thinks individual freedom can be sacrificed for the greater good. T hat attitude is apt to cause you some trouble. You are passionate about the envi­ ronment and ate likely to find work related to it. An animal lover, you could be attracted to veterinary sciences. 6 1997 King Features Syndicate Inc. http://new s. v p sa .a su .e d u / MISCELLANEOUS SPERM & egg donors needed! Earn $2,000 in your spare time! Call our 24hr private information line: (602)280-9266, SPRING BREAK is here! Look sensational in Jo-B’s swimsuits. Call 1-888-470-JO-BS for cataloge. G uys, the 1997 swim suit calendar is still available. INTERNET URiS C H ECK OUT yo u r student g Qr. V- ë r ri m e ’ n t . h tip : / / w w w . a s u . e d ù /s t u d e n tlife/ASASU YOU CA N buy p arts through the in te rn e t. No hassle, great prices ! w ww.eâmhardt.com Your ad should be here! Made for ASU students/ by ASU students to save you money all over town! Call 965-6735 SERVICES SERVICES PERSONALS Resumes fo r jobs, in ternships & career fairs. CVs, cover le tte rs, updates &. salary historie s. Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ mously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. T em pe 602-860-4792 Couple looking for egg donor of Mediterranean descent. Must be between 21-30yrs. with health Insurance. 7-10 clinic visits and daily Injections involved. Armenian, Greek, Lebanese or Syrian preferred. $2000 per attem pt. Please call for more information. 602-860-4792 9 6 8 -7 7 3 5 M on;-Sun. 8am -8pm DON’T GET STUCK! Free re p o rt showing h o w to keep phone charges separated betw een roommates. Reconilng (3 1 0 ) 3 3 5 -6 9 4 6 F or Your CD 's For m ore information call til someone pees | HAPPY HOUR ' FA ST FU N D R A ISER - R aise $500 in 5 days - G reeks, C lubs, m otivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obliga­ tion. (800) 862-1982 Ext. 33. A ccep ted d o n o rs co m p en sa ted $2000. REVERSE AM Night FUNDRAISING D O N O R EGGS N E E D E D Starts a t 9pm Any Questions! CRUISE LINES hiring - earn to $2,0004/m o. p lu s free w orld travel (Europe, Caribbean, etc.). No exp. n ecessary; R oom / board. Ring (919) 918-7767, ext.C105. CREATIVE, PROFESSIONAL -¡¿ V * SSNEED CASH? We buy used m usical instruments. T op $$ paid, 548-1114. M-Sat fO-6 CRUISE LINE entry level posi­ tions avail. G reat benefits. (714)549-1569. RESUMES FROM SCRATCH E very M o n d a y N ight CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Don’t force issues with a supe­ rior. Otherwise, things go your way . The combination of charm and good sense serves you well. Take advantage. LEO (Ju ly 23 to A ug. 22) Mix-ups in communications are possible. A work development might surprise you. Things set­ tle down by day’s end, when you enjoy socializing with oth­ ers. '• VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Someone could keep you wait­ ing, L isten carefu lly so you don’t m isinterpret an o th er’s in te n tio n s. A n u n ex p ected expense arises. Evening hours favor romance. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to O c t 22) You could be touchy as the day begins. G uard ag ain st argu­ ments with co-workers. A long­ time business project begins to pay off for you. At night, relax. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. Think about it! Choosing th e right fam ily to adopt your baby involves more than reading ads and calling 800 numbers. 1m an adoption consultant w h o can help. W ith us, you read about the couple and décide If they are the rig ht family for you and your baby before you speak to them. Open or dosed adoptions. TEACHER ASSISTANT needed for child cafe center. AM P/T hours avail M -F. Im m ediate openings. 839-5953 . You CHOOSE! 12" or 16" 1 Coupon Per Pizza Dihe-ln or Pick-Up or S1 Off Delivery A RIES (M arch 21 to A pril 19) D o n ’t le t a littl e th in g b e a source; o f c o n ten tio n -betw een y o u a n d a h ig h e r-u p . N ew rom ance is possible for .single’s. The bond betw een parent and child grows stronger. T A U R U S (A pril 20 to M ay ' 2 0 ) Y .our h a rd w o rk an d patience pay o ff as you receive re c o g n itio n fo r g o o d w o rk . N ew o p p o rtu n itie s a ris e fo r financial gain. Relations w ith a friend are touchy after darkGEM INI (M ay 21 to June 20) Y ou c o u ld h a v e c ro ss w ords with a friend. Y our judgm ent is sound w here financial interests are concerned. Buying and sell­ ing are favored. EARLY CHILDHOOD Educa­ tors needed-Toddlef-Sçhool agers. P/t pos. am/pm. Great hrs. C all 9 85r0221 L ig h t & Life Christian Preschool and Daycare WANTED Disc - Go - Round [ M ill & U n iv e r s ity !!!! F R E E !!!! ] ; Free Caller ID Box From U S West! Free Installation! O nly $5.95 per month Call Brad at 630-0877 ¿c To Place Your Order ' r H Page 20 S tate P ress Monday, March 3, 1997 SPRING FUNG? FACULTY & STAFF A.C.S. KARATE Earn 1 College Credit w hile having fun in San Carlos, Mexico SC O T Tax & Accounting W Leant practical, street-sm art s e lf defense. ' KENP0 Learn to Dive! Student m ust provide own KICK-BOXING personal equipm ent! (2 private training te u to n s and 1 group c la n —$ 35 Value) 968-2068 Scottsdale Scuba • 99 8 -1 9 0 0 405 W. Southern #7 • Email: Ascottax@aol.com • 894-2944 TAI CHI Mention this ad for 50% off the Introductory Training Package II $ 349 “ ALL T A X P R E P A R A T IO N ALL ST A T E S Southeast Comer of Broadway & McClintock 1061 i N 7.1st 14 • S co llstlalc. A rizona iS5260 Retro clothing. Early ’80s music Used term m oer ever new Present these M asterC ard Exclusives™ coupons along with your MasterCard,® and save some money on things you could use. Like maybe a great pair o f jeans — preshrunk and faded to look old, o f course. http:/ / www. mastercard,com/college © 1997 MasterCard International Incorporated ÉPAY-TIMER* FREE SINGLE Purchase any two compact discs with a regular price o f $9.99 each or higher with your MasterCard* card and receive a FREE CD single or cassette single. Offer Not Valid WMfcwrt TMe Ceepae. O ffer and coupon vaM 2 /1/9 7 to 5/3 1 /9 7 . O ffer v a lid on ly on pu r­ chases usin g a M asterC ard* card . Coupon m ust be redeem ed a t th e tim e o f purchase/ L im it one pe r custom er. Cannot be used in co n ju n ctio n w ith a n y.o the r coupon o r o ffe r. .Any rep ro du ction , copy o r fa c s im ile w ill n o t be accepted. O ffer va lid on reg ular-priced , in -s to c k m erchandise o n ly a t any p a rtic ip a tin g Sam G oody or M usiciand s to re . STORES: ENTER MARKDOWN CODE #046 UPC CODE 00100-00046 The hottest fashion trends from London to Tokyo—-all in one place. 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