S ports W o r ld / N a t io n R esid en ts ASU in t h e n o r t h e r n FOOTBALL TEAM MAKES GOOD PLAINS EXPECT MORE FLOODING PROGRESS IN SPRING DRILLS Page 3 Page 15 BIÉKi .feilp ■___ ¿ a g § I n s Id e ! Classifiais ........... ....16 ComiGs,.........___...... .....14 C ro av ro tti... ...... ... i Horoscopes . . . . . . !" Opinion . . . . .......... ........4 S H il S p W I R . --- ... 15 ^Copyright. State Press, 1997 Tempe, Arizona An Independent Morning Daily Vol. 81 No. 69 Tuesday, April 8,1997 Stu d y: fu n d s W a it in g f o r c h i l d c a r e fo r w o m e n ’s s p o r t s la g s B y J osh D eFamio State P ress Nearly 25 years ago, the NCAA passed Title IX an act promoting gender equality in college, athletics. Yet the battle continues for women athletes both at the national level and here in Tempe. ; A study by The Chronicle o f Higher Education on 199596 academic year athletic funding found that women com­ prise 37 percent of athletes at 305 Division I schools and receive 38 percent of scholarship money given to athletes. But almost three times as much money goes toward recniiting athletes and sponsoring events for men’s sports. The numbers at ASU are similar to the national num­ bers. Thirty percent of Sun Devils athletes are women, and those women receive 37 percent of athletic scholarships. Even so. about three-quarters of the budget for recruiting and promoting goes toward men’s sports. However, some of those who work with first-year Athletic Director Kevin White said they feel the situation will improve under his guidance. “Will he ignore the women's side? Absolutely not,’' said Betsy M osher, senior associate athletic director for Administration and Compliance. "They’ll probably have more up front than they have ever seen, and he’s very vocal about that. Very, very supportive.’’ The NCAA has suggested several guidelines to measure compliance with Title IX. * One guideline is the substantial proportion test. Though not legally defined, any school with a five point or less dif­ ference between the percentage of female undergraduates and the percentage of female athletes is generally seen as passing the test. ' With a female population of 50 percent, ASU has a point differential below the national average. Despite this, the con­ cern of the athletic department is not based on proportions. “One of the things (White) doesn’t like to do is get tied with numbers.” Mosher said. "(He feels) that we should run our department because this is the right thing to do, not because some agency is telling us what to do.” ASU uses several methods to increase women’s athlet­ ics. Recently, a women’s soccer program was added. "We did an assessment about three years ago where we did the Title IX test pursuant to Title IX procedure,” said Sandy Hatfield-Clubb, assistant athletic director of student services. “At that point, soccer was the only sport that there was significant interest in and ability for us to recruit. Also, other schools in the Pac-10 are playing that particular sport.” Hatfield-Clubb added that similar assessments will be done every four years to determine if other sports will be added to the list. Other suggestions to achieve equality that have been T urn to F u n d in g , pa ge Children play Monpay outside the Child Development Laboratory of the Family Deyelopment/Human Resources building located on Forest Mall. The childcare center is one of several campus childcare facilities that has a waiting list. Lengthy lin es plague parents seeking on-cam pus childcare B y C a d o n n a P eyton S tate P ress Some parents may find themselves in for a long wait when trying to place their children in campus care facilities. Education major Nell Williams said she was frustrat­ ed in her attempts to find campus carq for her daughter. “There is an illusion that you can find day care,” she said. “But the reality is, you cannot.” Williams said six months ago she checked with two of the five on-campus facilities to locate open slots. An employee at one facility told her there was about a year waiting list while the wait at another facility was indefi­ nite, Williams said. “I had to find resources outside of school,” she said. Now, Williams said she wants her 2-year-old child in one of the campus centers. She is currently on the Campus Children’s Center list and soon will be on the Child Development Laboratory’s list. “For parents to assume they can’t get their child in because o f waiting lists is m istaken,” said Robert Weigand, director for three on-campus child care facilities. But the waiting lists can be long at times, he said. ' “Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn’t. It varies,” he said. “If we are currently full, we put them on a waiting list. The list can be five families long or three families.” Weigand is the director of the Child Development Laboratory, Child Study Laboratory and the Open Horizons Child and Family Development Center. All three facilities accommodate children from around the Valley but don’t give priority to the ASU community. Depending on the age of the child and if full or parttime care is needed, there are spots open right now, Weigand said. When asked about the availability for a 3-year-old child, Marcia M esquita of the Child Development Laboratory said they do have a waiting list. “It’s around a year long,” she said. An employee who answered the phone at Open Horizons said there is nothing available right now for a T urn to C h il d c a r e , pa ge 2. 2. ASASU budget calls for $34K increase in spending L idia E. Kelly State P ress A $688,000 budget proposal for the Associated Students of ASU calls for an increase of $33,836 over last year’s total spending. Additionally, ASASU President Marc Baumgartner is asking the Student Affairs Committee for $10,000 to support the pub­ lication of teacher evaluations. The proposal, prepared by the executive budget committee of ASASU, includes a request for an increase on disbursements with­ in the campus activities department, graduate affairs department and administration. The 1996-97 budget had expenditures totaling $654,164. Baumgartner said the money ASASU is asking for is appropriate, and the $10,000 request soundly justified. “I consider the teacher evaluations a University initiative, not an ASASU initia­ tive,” he said. A ctivities Vice P resident Kolby Granville said his department is soliciting $20,000 for a University Activities Center concert. In all, the activities department is asking for $107,600. “1 really think we should have such a con­ cert, either during the orientation week or the ASU homecoming week,” Granville said. But he said he does not think the office will get the extra money. “It is not really realistic,” Granville said. “It is too much.” The Graduate Student Affairs office, which will go into its second year of service this fall, could get $8,000 more than last year’s budget of $6,100. Andy Ortiz, graduate affairs vice presi­ dent, said last year’s allocation was the absolute minimum the office needed. “The additional money will cover the national conventions’ travel expenses, research and newsletters,” Ortiz said. But the ASU graduate student body -— consisting of about 24 percent of ASU stu­ dents — is still under financed, he said. A novelty in this year’s budget proposal is the move of salary money for individual officers from the administration section into each department’s expenditures. Yet the proposal requests alm ost an $18,000 increase to cover administration costs. Summer Stuart, ASU executive vice pres­ ident, said last year’s debut of the Graduate Student Affairs office resulted in cuts from within the administration department. “We needed to accommodate the areas T urn to ASASU, pa ge 2. Page 2 S tate P ress Tuesday, April 8 ,1 9 9 7 ASASU. Funding. C o n t in u e d C o n t in u e d f r o m p a c t I . include reducing scholarships of the two big money-makers, men’s football and basketball, and putting caps on die expenses o f these programs. HatfieldC lubb, however, rem ains critical o f those measures. ’‘1 think the most unfortunate exam­ ple of that type of action is when UCLA cut men’s swimming,” she said. “They were one of the powerhouses in swim­ ming. ( don’t think that’s tile direction you go. I think you should start improv­ ing women’s sports." Hatfield-Clubb and wom en’s bas­ fr o m pa g e 1. that the money was taken from,” she said. Keith Menard, campus affairs vice presi­ dent, said the budget numbers will change along the way. “M oney has been m oved from one department to another,” Menard said. “Very often we have had to trim some funds in order to give money to different initiatives.” Total ASASU revenues should meet the expenditures, according to the proposal. The majority of the revenues come from a fee included in tuition — currently $16.66 per student. The final draft of the budget may be ketball coach C harti Turner Thorne said that other factors will help reduce the gap between men’s and women’s sports, Turner-Thom e said she feels that programs tike Wings o f Gold, a fund-raising group for women’sathlettcs* .and-the in creased exposure o f women’s sports on TV help to improve interest and revenue. “I think the ground that we’ve opvered in the last 17-18 yearshas been out­ standing,” Tumer-Thome said. “And J think that in tile last five to 10 years, people have really gotten on board.” ready in about two months, Baumgartner said. Presently, it is in the senate finance committee. The first reading of the proposal, previ­ ously scheduled for today’s senate meeting, may be moved to the April 22 meeting because of unfinished actions within the finance committee, officials said. Stuart said the finance committee lost several members who resigned earlier this year. Hence, the committee’s performance has slowed. “We have few er people doing more work,” she said. Childcare C o n t in u e d f r o m pa g e 1. only allow 60 children at a time in the center in order to provide quality care, Lopez s a id ^ “There are so many families on campus that need ser­ vice. We only take about 85 families at a time,” she said. English professor Gregory Castle said he was on a wait­ ing list for the Child Development Laboratory for more than a year. “I was told to put my daughter on a waiting list when she was 2 so there would be a space available when she became 3,” he said. The laboratory only accommodates children between the ages of 3 and 6. Tiffany Winman. a graduate student in English, said she looked into the facilities here on campus, but found alter­ 3-year-old and she is not sure when there will be. “There could possibly be something open this summer.” the woman said. Denise Lopez, director o f the Campus C hildren’s Center, said their waiting lists can be up to 1 1/2 years, depending on the child’s age. Unlike the other facilities, Campus Children’s Center only provides service to the ASU community. o ^ Parents often decide they need child care when their child is 2 or 3. but room in the center for that age group can be limited, Lopez said. There is usually more availability for children who are 4 or 5. she said. Even though the center is licensed for 106 children, they Correction: nate care for her son. “It was very difficult to get information,” she said. “I learned they were difficult to get into. They said they would put me on a waiting list.” The College of Education Preschool is a part-time preschool which provides care to children from 3 to 5 years old. The preschool is currently full but there will be openings in the fall, said program Director Chari Woodward. Sharon Farmer, an office specialist in the College of Business who recently had a baby, said the wait for day care has encouraged her to look outside ASU. “I heard there was about a two-year waiting list for care on campus, so I just didn’t bother,” she said. T h e T o d a y se c tio n h as b een m o v ed to p a g e 13 It was erroneously reported in M onday’s Sta te P ress that a m ulti-site tuition hearing will be held Thursday, April 10, in the College o f Business. The m eeting in which students can testify on changes in tuition and other financial matters will be held Thursday, April 17 in the College o f Business, Room C-328. d u e to sp a ce lim ita tio n s. It w ill ap p ear in its u su a l p la ce W ed n esd ay. C lim b th e c a re e r la d d e r. ■ |E j |p r s r University & Rural The Cornerstone W fS S E F 9 6 8 -8 0 0 8 Choose ASU. A p re s tig io u s A S U d e g re e can a d v a n ce your c a re e r. N o w , ta k e c la s s e s o ff-c a m p u s , e v e n in g s , w e e k e n d s o r th ro u g h o u r v ir tu a l c a m p u s —T V , C D -R O M , I n te r n e t a n d c o r r e s p o n d e n c e s tu d y . COUPO N C O UPO N COUPO N WAREHOUSE PRICES | FREE SHAMPOO I DESIGNER PERM WITH CUT 895 $ Not good with any other offer for sam e service. 10« : ' 2 9 95 Ah Brand N ane Salon Exclusive Products Includes Shampoo, Cut and Perm, (longer hair k specialty wraps extra) Not good with any other offer for sam e service. I REDKEN PRLLMfrCHBJL Sebastian . JÉ8IGIAGE ' T a k e t h e fir s t s t e p ! Call 9 6 5 - 3 9 8 6 fo r a fre e catalo g . j IS U A rizona State U niversity E x te n d e d Cam pu s iSF-FL _ S S . f l I ja f i& j http://www.asu.edu/xed ______ W orld/N ation _____ S tate P ress ' ; Tuesday, April 8 ,1 9 9 7 P ag¿ 3 U.S. girls reach puberty earlier th an b elieved BY B renda C . C oleman A ssociated P ress CHICAGO — American girls reach puberty earlier than commonly believed, with nearly half o f black girls and 15 percent of white ones beginning to develop sexually by age 8, a study indicates. The study raises troubling questions about whether envi­ ronmental estrogens, chemicals that mimic the female hor­ mone estrogen, are bringing on puberty at an earlier age. It also suggests that sex education should begin sooner than it often does, researchers said, “I don’t think parents, teachers or society in general have been really thinking of children that young — sec­ ond- and third-graders — having to deal with puberty,”; said the study’s lead author, Marcia E. Herman-Giddens of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The research is in the April issue of the journal Pediatrics, published by the American Academy of Pediatrics. Environmental estrogens occur from the breakdown of chemicals in products ranging from pesticides to plastic wrap. Real estrogen is used in some hair products, includ­ ing pomades primarily marketed to blacks, said HermanGiddens, an adjunct professor of maternal and child health. She said research is needed to know whether real estro­ gen in products and environmental estrogen can affect sex­ ual development. The study involved 17,000 girls ages 3 through 12. They were seen in 65 pediatric practices around the coun­ try. About 1,600 of the girls, or 9.6 percent, were black. At age 8, 48.3 percent of black girls and 14.7 percent of white girls had begun developing breasts, pubic hair or both. Menstruation occurred at 12.16 years in blacks on average and at 12.88 years in whites. The average age of menstruation for white girls has been unchanged for 45 years, Herman-Giddens said. For black girls, the average is about four months younger than it was 30 years ago, when poor nutrition and poverty, which can delay puberty, afflicted more blacks, she said. ”1 think we may be seeing a catch-up.” HermanGiddens said. She acknowledged that her findings may have been skewed if a significant number of the girls were brought to their doctors-because of concerns that they were develop­ ing too early sexually. The study, and other research, suggest that blacks and whites have some inherent differences in sexual development. Herman-Giddens said the findings also suggest that some girls who have been diagnosed with early puber­ ty, and perhaps given drugs to delay it, may be devel­ oping normally. She said medical textbooks typically suggest the age of sexual development is much later, based on decades-old statistics from England taken from a relatively small num­ ber of white girls who were mostly in foster care. An expert not involved in the study called the work very important but said it will probably not change doc­ tors’practices. “We’ve always known that there was a range of devel­ opment,” said Dr. Marianne Felice, chief of adolescent medicine at the University of Maryland. “It may vary by race, it may vary by nutritional status and it may also vary by ... how old the mothers were or how old the older sisters were when they hit the same land­ marks in sexual characteristics.” Jim Mone/Associated Press Hundreds of volunteers and Minnesota National Guardsmen fortify a dike in Granite Falls, Minn., Monday, as they fight to keep fioodwaters of the Minnesota River from wreaking more havoc on the town. Crews stack m ore sandbags as spring blizzard intensifies Residents were told to drink bottled water after sewage backed up into the Granite Falls water supply. A highway-model snow blower was used as a pump, GRANITE FALLS, Minn. — Volunteers raced to stack more; sandbags Monday, afraid that the meltdown sucking water off the streets and spraying it in a 100from a spring blizzard could worsen what’s already some foot-high arc over the levee back into the river. In northwestern Minnesota, rising Water from the of the most severe flooding on the northern Plains in years. Across the Plains, fields were sheets of white Wild Rice and Marsh rivers forced the evacuation of stretching to the horizon after a.storm over the weekend about 1,000 residents of Ada, a town of 1,700. “W e’re absolutely overwhelm ed,” Mayor Russ left more than 2 feet of snow in places. In northwestern Minnesota, along the Red River Onstad said from one of the town’s few working phones. which forms the state line with North Dakota, bright sun­ “We’re getting water from north, south and east.” President Clinton signed a statewide disaster decla­ shine melted a little snow, but the real thaw is expected Thursday or Friday, said Mark Seeley, climatologist with ration Monday because of South Dakota’s blizzard and the flooding There was no immediate word on declara­ the University of Minnesota Extension Service, “Everything predicted for the Red is a flood of his­ tions for other states in the region. Thousands remained without power. toric proportions,” he said. Floods across the Midwest in 1993 were blamed for The National Weather Service issued a flood warn­ ing extending for the next two weeks along parts of 48 deaths and $10 billion in damage in nine states. Temperatures dropped to zero Monday at Dickinson, three rivers in other parts o f M innesota — the N.D., and Bemidji, Minn., recorded a wind chill of 37 Minnesota, Mississippi and St. Croix. There was no quick way to gauge how bad the flood­ below zero. Outside Wahpeton, N.D., along the Red River, Tom ing might become once the snow melts, but 4 to 5 inch­ es of heavy, late-season snow could be equal to 1 inch Kubela’s wheat arid bean fields were entombed in ice that was 15 feet deep in spots. of rain, Seeley said. “It’s kind of neat looking,” he said, “There’s ridges in it. In Granite Falls, wind-blown snow stung the faces of workers stacking sandbags on the levees as they worked They look like little snowbanks. There was 50 mph Winds malting whitecaps in the yard. They froze in inidair.” to protect about 40 homes along the Minnesota River. Kubela’s farm is just 100 yards away from the Bois Flood victims and weary out-of-town volunteers trapped by the snowstorm stuck it out in a shelter at thé de Sioux River, a tributary to the Red River. His family has lived there for 110 years, and this is the worst high school gym. “We’ve had so much fun here —- floods, blizzard. weather anyone can remember. “You expect it, but when you get a major flood, and We’re expecting the asteroid next,” said Red Cross vol­ unteer Karen Barck from Marshall, 30 miles away. She throw in a blizzard, and a deep freeze afterwards — nothing like this has every happened here,” he said. had been at the shelter since Thursday . B y C hris T om linson A ssociated P ress Clinton backs Israeli Prime Minister on terrorism issue B y B arry S c h w eid Associated P ress WASHINGTON —- With Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at his side, President Clinton agreed Monday that Israel should never “have to bargain to be free of terrorism.” But their White House meeting failed to produce an immediate formula to resume stalled Mideast peace talks. Clinton said he would explore “any rea­ sonable opportunity” to end the impasse. A P alestin ian d eleg atio n w ill confe to Washington later in the week to broaden the discussions. ■ “We keep our commitments; they violate theirs,” Netanyahu said at the end of the day; signaling dial divisions remain. However, he affirmed that new homes for P alestin ian s should be b uilt in Jerusalem, a gesture designed to offset the harsh criticism surrounding Israel’s project for 6,500 new Jewish housing units. The statem ent was welcomed by the Clinton administration. “That’s obviously positive,” State Department spokesman Nicholas Bums said. The Israeli leader also pledged to carry out commitments for a three-stage pullback on the W est Bank w hether or not the Palestinians accept his proposal to move quickly into negotiations over Jerusalem, refugees and other tough issues. Still, Hasan Abdel-Rahman, the chief Palestine Liberation Organization represen­ tative in W ashington, re ite rated the Palestinian position that the talks would not be resumed until Israel stopped construction of the Har Homa project. The Palestinian official also dismissed Netanyahu’s attempt to focus attention on terrorism. “Mr. Netanyahu knows very well that we oppose terrorism because we feel that terrorism is against our national interests for Palestinians,” he told The Associated Press. „“Mr. Netanyahu bringing up the issue of terrorism is an attempt, in our view, to cover up for his own policies that are very disruptive to the peace process.” Clinton described his two-hour meeting with Netanyahu as “very thorough,” but gave few details. And Netanyahu gave this spare summary at a news conference: “We discussed a number of ideas to move the peace process back on track, assuming that the battle for terrorism is engaged effectively. ‘‘These are prelim inary discussions. Nothing formal, nothing definitive was said. And I’m sure we’ll have the opportu­ nity to continue these exchange of views over the coming days and Weeks.” . At the outset of their meeting, the presi­ dent renewed his call for a statement from Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat of “zero tolerance” for terrorism. Clinton said he would consider “any rea­ sonable opportunity” to get peace talks up and going again. But he indicated he was not prepared to set up a summit meeting between Netanyahu and Arafat under U.S. auspices or make any other dramatic move right away. O pin io n S ta te P ress Tuesday, April 8 ,1 9 9 7 Page 4 Titorial W & ild carefacilities overflewln^m^m OR students who are also parents, som e­ tim es showing up for class can depend on yourchiid case anmigetnents. An ideal situation for a parent with a small child who may not be school-age would be to have access to an on-campus child cate facili­ ty. But it's aot quite that simple. ASU has five child caie facilities to its tuene, but only one o f diem gives priority to A SU par­ ents. The facilities me open to the entire Valley community which accounts for the waiting lis t jg Parents have to really fbi&k ahead if they are considering putting their little ones in day care on campus, about a year in advance or so. That’s the average w aiting period for parents w ho attempt to enroll their kids in on-campus day care. B u t according to a director o f one o f die facilities, there isn’t a waiting list So to speak, j How convenient it w ould t e . fo r a paretic' busy pursuing a degree while raising a family to hhve to make just one trip daily: to campO£. ' N o more fighting traffic to the day care cen­ ter, looking for a spot to park and dragging all dm kid’s goodies out o f the backseat before turning around and heading toward campus for another lecture class. If a parent had access io on-cam pus care ; there would only be one trip to make. Just pull into your normal parking lot or structure, walk the youngster to the child care center (look both w ays b efore cro ssin g the street) and sprint o ff to cla ss know ing that die child is nearby and safe. Many parents who did non have the fore­ sight to get their child’s name on the waiting list at least a year prior are very discouraged. Som e don’t make the attempt to get their child enrolled in the program and others are adyhed to look elsewhere. Finding the right child care center for your child’s needs and that is geographically conve­ nient for your needs is tim e consum ing. And often the cost is outrageous. When you find a , sa fe , c le a n fa c ility w ith trustw orthy care providers, so have h alf the other fam ilies is ; your neighborhood. O ne thing is for sure, A SU is to b e com m ended for keep in g the number o f children enrolled w ell under the allotted licensed number. - Perhaps the parents aren’t the only ones w ho b e n e fit by lo o k in g e lse w h e r e . M esa Community C ollege has a program where child re n c a n b e enrolled at rirtually no cost but only during the tim es that the parent is in class. H us seem s to work very w ell for them and is a d efin ite service to the parent, who may not have the luxury o f fam iljror depend­ able friends living nearby, Hopefully in the future ASU w ill look into serving m oreofigsow n crnnmwnity in this aspect. ■ l STATE PRESS TAFF Sun Devils who live in glass houses ... Now that the passions have died dow n co n cern in g the DAM University of Arizona’s miracu­ SCHIFFER lous basketball endeavors, I Columnist w ould like to take a critica l look at a couple of myths that sw irl around the tw o m ajor Arizona universities. Word around campus is that Sun D evils are supposed to “hate” the UofA basketball team for two reasons. Primarily, they are our “arch rivals“’ Many stu­ dents also point to the regrettable behavior of UofA fans during the football games last fall. On the second point, I must warn my fellow Sun Devils that it is dangerous to judge an entire school by the actions of a handful of students on a single day. Otherwise, we are vulnerable to being judged the same way. ASU basketball fans are particularly vulnerable to this charge, given an ugly incident that occurred a few years ago. Let me review it, for those of you who are new to the state. Arizona point guard Steve Kerr was the most popular Wildcat of all time. He was loved not just for the incredible 3-point shooting that made him a second-team AllAmerican in 1988, but also because of the pain he endured during his five years as a Wildcat. , M any basketball fans rem em ber the excruciating injury that caused him to miss the entire 1987 season, but fewer remember the tragedy that befell his family his freshman year. The day of a conference game, he found out his.father, an American diplomat in Beirut, had been assassinated. Amazingly, he decided to play anyway. He cried throughout the game, but still managed to con­ tribute to the team ’s effort. Over the next five years, Tucson residents fell in love with the hard-working, kindhearted point guard. Now, fast-forward to 1988, the year the Wildcats rose to national prominence. Before their February game at Arizona State, Kerr was warming up with his teammates. Four or five ASU students yelled at Kerr from the stands. When they got his attention, they proceeded to taunt him for several minutes: “Hey Steve, where’s your father?” and so on. ’ Kerr later said that it took every ounce of restraint riot to jump .into the stands and attack the ASU fans. Instead, he channeled the energy into the game, hitting his first five 3point attempts as Arizona beat the Sun Devils by 45 points. Arizona fans, however, were not so forgiving. I recall a Tucson columnist using the incident to criticize all Sun Devils, pointing out that ASU fans sim ilarly taunted Wildcat baseball coach Jerry Kindall when his wife died of cancer. My point is, be wary of using a single incident to judge Wildcats or Tucson residents, lest you be held to the same standards. Regarding our supposed rivalry with the UofA, I must point out that perhaps we are exaggerating its scope a bit. Surely, no one can exaggerate the football rivalry, which certainly stands as one of the most exciting and bitter in the nation. Its upsets, memorable plays and bowl implications are too numerous to count. The same cannot be said for basketball, however. Please, do not think that I am in any way attacking the ASU bas­ ketball team. Despite the bad luck that has befallen the pro­ gram; Bill Frieder has made vast improvements in its quali­ ty from the pathetic Patterson days. T sincerely hope that we become a national powerhouse soon. But over the last 15 years, the Wildcats, the occasional upset notwithstanding, have dominated the games. To Wildcat fans, UCLA is their arch rival. I know this may upset Sun Devil fans, but if you consider that Arizona and UCLA have won every Pac-10 title since 1986, you can understand their point. Who can forget Sean E lliott’s amazing baseline shot to send their 1988 game into over­ time? The UofA and ASU simply have not had games of such high drama. Overall, I must say that our campus, and especially our community, have been quite classy regarding the UofA’s success. When we give in to the understandable urge to attack them, however, we should find better justifications for doing so than the fallacies which I discuss above. Adam Schiffer is a graduate student in political science. BRIAN ANDERSON, Editor DUSTIN KRÚGEL, Managing Editor CARYL MICAUZIO.....................................Night Editor TIMOTHY TAIT ............... RAY STERN ... ... ........... ........ THERESA VALLES. ...... ....... .. CHRISTA CERRENTANO........ LÓRICAIN......... . JIM POULIN............................... RANDY JONES ........ ED ODEVEN........ ........ TIM BAXTER....;.................... LEYLA SALMASSIAN ........ .........Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Sara Bush, Kevin Çulwell, Deanna Darr, Rowe Edged, Lidia Kelly, Ben Leatherman, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Vivi Stenberg. SPORTS REPORTERS: Josh DeFamio, Percy Ednalino Jr„ Lewi Haro, Matt Paulson- COPY EDITORS: Jodi Bafundo, Lorie Roberts; PHOTOGRAPHERS: Erik Guzowski, Pat Shaiinahan. COLUMNISTS: Kevin J. Berlat, Michelle Carson, Olga Fuentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Cordon, Michelle; Hardt, Diane C.Jacobs, George D. Rose, Sr., David Ruffulo, Adam Schiffer, Steven Stein, Karin Wadsack. CARTOO NISTS: Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan T. Inge, Maurice Mitchell, Steve Tansley, Michael S’. Whiteman. PRODUCTION: Jeff Chua, Adrianna Garcia, Kai HaischRisley, Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Wendy Luney, Erik Noland, Sara Pike, Shellie Scott. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Cari Dewald, Dan EUstrom, David Goodwin, Brandon Mudd, Nick Pezzorello, Jess Rankin, Mark Santiago, Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland. CLASSIFIEDS: Heidi Heister, Wayne Hoover* Sarah Kimmel, Stacey Thayer, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion 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 Matthewa Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P h o n e N um bers Information............965-7572 Newsroom............ .965-2292 Magazine.............. 965-1695 Advertising..........-..965-6555 Classifieds..............965-6735 http://news. vpsa.asu.edu __________O pin io n __________ S tate P ress ___________________ ■ ______________________ Pedophiles Mike Royko is ill. In his absence, we are substituting columns by editorial and op-ed colum nist Kathleen Parker. The first thing my son noticed Upon opening his new Boy Scout Handbook was a pull-out section for parents on how to recognize a sex offender. John, a cynic at 12, enjoyed watching me squirm as he read aloud. Naturally, fust chance I got, I asked his two male leaders, both friends of ours, whether they were sex-crazed pedophiles. “No,” they said, but didn’t laugh. Instead, they explained that the Boy Scouts is a perfect place for a pedophile to háng out; Most pedophiles, as a matter of fact, genuinely like children and enjoy their company. They’re usually nice to kids and lure their prey with gifts and affection, George Gantt Jr., a well-liked church member and youth missionary volunteer in Lexington County, near Columbia, S.C.. was such a person. He just loved little boys, preferably between the ages of, oh, about seven to 14. He liked them so much that he frequently invited them to spend the night at his house, to play with his elaborate computer systems — naked — and sometimes to pose for pictures. Naked. Some of those pictures wound up in what investigators describe as four gigabytes of pornographic images on Gantt’s Computer hard drives. To date, prosecutors have charged Gantt with 22 counts of sex-related- offenses,-and moré are expected, investigators say they’ve identified six confirmed victims, but-13 moré children have come for-; ward in the past few days. Parents, meanwhile, have been Tuesday, April 8, 1997 Page 5 the innocence o f children and parents flooding the Lexington County Sheriffs office with calls, asking how to approach their children about possible encounters with Gantt. All the boys met Gantt through the Congaree Baptist Church, Gantt was, by all accounts, a friendly man, caring and interested in other people. Even so, someone long before now should have suspected this guy was up to more than philanthropy. The vulnerability of these little boys and, apparently , the susceptibility of their parents, may say more about parenting today than about pedophilia. C hild molesters aren’t new to society, but the easy availability of children seems to be. As a matter of common sense, you don’t let your little boy spend the night with a single man who isn’t related to you, and maybe not even then. Few are. the men, with such notable exceptions as Michael Jackson, for whom sleep­ ing-over with boys is a first choice for Saturday night. As a matter of manners, you don’t let your children accept gifts from adults when there’s no legitimate occasion, such as a birthday, Gantt reportedly gave the children expensive gifts, including computer games and $100 gym Shoes. I can never remember as a child being offered a gift from an adult, except on birthdays or at Christmas. Never would I have been allowed to accept an expensive gift. In the vernacular of yesteryear, that was considered bad manners. Don’t people learn this stuff anymore? Or is it that par­ ents — overwrought, overworked and often single -— are all too happy when someone else offers to take the kids off their hands for a while? When half of today’s homes are Devils pervert’ campus w ith red and blue Over the past several weeks, the State Press has pub­ lished a couple of articles referring to the UofA’s quest for the national championship. Most of these articles/ Were in reference to the Wildcats’ advancement in the National Collegiate Athletics Association tournament, but a couple called for ASU student support for UofA’s underdog run. The most notable of these articles was written by Josh DeFamio and more recently. David Ruffulo. In the discipline of economics, irrational behavior is deemed perverse. And being that the logic behind support­ ing an arch rival school is irrational, one would be led to the conclusion that DeFamio and Ruffulo are perverts. Don’t take it personal, guys. You’re not the only ones. Dustin Krugel. in his article published April 4, asked a valid question: “When did rivals start wearing the oppos­ ing school’s colors?” To tell you the truth, I really don’t know. It Seems to me though, much like the misguided reporters above, all of the ASU students who are sporting red and blue are also acting irrationally. Once again, because they act irrationally, logic dictates that these stu­ dents are ... well, you get the picture. Look. I’m not saying that someone can’t be both an ASU fan and a UofA fan. but the least a student can do is show respect for his or her own school. Personally, I think that the students wearing Wildcat gear on campus doq’t understand what respect is. If you absolutely feel the need to wear Wildcat appar­ el, please have the decency to wear it off campus. For those students who Will still wear UofA gear on campus anyway, I ask all of the Sun Devil faithfuls out there to join me in calling you a pervert. JohnThorius Senior Economics Support schools in their respective regions I was reading State Press for my daily dose of infor­ mation. 1 am 100 percent behind the point Dustin Krugel made about the UofA National Championship in the /April 4 issue. ;' :J ' ' l ean understand if the general Valley community is in a celebrating mood after UofA’s success. What I can’t understand is that some ASU students proudly-wear UofA national championship T-shirts on ASU campus. Where is your pride? I am sure that no UofA student wore ASU Rose Bowl T-shirts on their campus. I think ASU fans are fair-weather fans. They packed the stadium last year and they stayed away from the University Activity Center this year. I was in the stadium every game in the last four seasons and sat through die years with Bill Frieder at the UAC. It was saddening to see the UAC during home games this past season, knowing that two seasons ago, I could not even hear people talk next to me because die UAC was so deafening, trying to confuse the opponent’s offem sive possession. I think the basketball team could have done better this past season had there been home crowds behind them, cheering. If you don’t have the pride to cheer your oWn team on during the down time, then don’t tell me that you’re happy for UofA at this time. Because that means you are not a Sun Devil, you are a loser... and don’t you dare wear those UofA national championship T-shirts around here. If you are proud of what UofA basketball team has done, go celebrate somewhere else or go to school in Tucson. Only Sparky and maroon and gold are allowed around here. This is Sun Devil Country! Richard Bera Senior Political Science and Economics ‘State Press’ deserves a ‘Boo’ for themselves I read the State Press on a daily basis and enjoy it. This is the second time this year I have found a disturbing article in it. I was reading the Boos and Bravos section in the April 4 paper and came across a disturbing “Boo.” It said, “Boo to the UofA Wildcats for taking home the national col­ lege basketball championship after beating Kentucky.” That is the most childish thing I have heard. I can’t believe you would say something like that about another Arizona school. Sure, we didn’t make it, but we should be supporting the other Arizona team in their national victory. I know we are rivals with UofA, but there is a time when you need to back any Arizona school that brings home a national championship. I have a brother at the UofA. Sure, we have our arguments about which school is best; we know ours is, but I would never bash the basketball team in their time of glory. I hope that in the future, you can put aside your childish views and give credit where it is so deserved. fatherless, it isn’t surprising that little boys are drawn to a man’s attentions and affections. In the absence of a father, they might even confuse sex with love. Meanwhile, having been a single mother, I can imagine the temptation of allowing sons to spend time with a church man for some role-modeling, which these days seems to be replacing parenting. I can also imagine appreciating the generosity of strangers. All moms want their kids to have what others have. Gantt’s biggest draw for the boys was his computers, cleverly located in his bedroom. According to the boys’ accounts, Gantt invited them to play with the machines but insisted they first take off their clothes. Then came sex and pictures. What a guy. Through the years, I’ve worried about over-instructing my son about our dangerous world. He’s heard so much at this point that he and a friend recently made fun of me as I dropped them off at a movie theater. “D on't leave the building,” I began, when John interrupted: “Oh, we Won’t, Mother,” he said with feigned polite­ ness, “not unless a nice man offers us candy and promises us fame and fortune; then we’ll get into his van and make home movies.” Very funny. Children have lost their innocence for all time. I’m afraid. It may be time for parents to lose a little more of theirs. No expensive gifts and definitely no spendthe-night-with-the-nice-man-from-church. Boy Scout days are oyer. It says so in the handbook. Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnistfo r the Orlando Sentinel. Missing airplane does little for peace of mind 1 just had to write in and ask whether anyone is concerned that on April 2 some psycho disappeared with a loaded, military aircraft and no one knows where the hell he went? I may be a little sensitive, but anytime an $8.8 million dollar A-10 airplane “disap­ pears” I immediately begin to question my personal security and confidence in the government to keep us safe from wackos. Notwithstanding, when you add the fact that the plane is also carrying four 500 lb. bombs, then 1 believe there is cause for immediate fear. 1 have not seen anyone from the government, or the papers for that matter, come out and at least inform the public that the potential exists for this to have been an inten­ tional attempt by some terrorist or other group to obtain military resources within our own country for use in an outright attack on its citizens. You can’t tell me that somebody up high isn’t crap­ ping in their pants right now over this incident. Look at it, they have all but admitted that this guy was able to leave other planes he was flying with and that he proceeded to .some unknown destination undetected. Were these other pilots sleeping? Can you say radar? 1 know you can. Does anyone have a radar that says, Arizona on it? Does anyone have a radar that says, United States on it? If you do, raise your hand and someone will be right with you. What kind of security do we have in this country? I am just amazed th at no one seem s to care. H ow ever, I guess I shouldn’t be after seeing Bill Clinton re-elected. I guess it is like everything else these days, if it doesn’t directly affect my life personally, who cares. 1 guess after awhile people will just forget that someone stole a weapon that just so happens to be able to take out a city block with pretty much no problem Does life insurance cover A-10 strafing? Brian S. Smith Sophomore Business Melissa Mate Freshman Agribusiness “ W is e m e n m a k e p r o v e r b s , b u t f o o l s r e p e a t th e m ,” e-mail the editor http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/spress/leted.htmi — Sam uel Palmer S tate P ress Tuesday, April 8,1997 Page 6 Labor issue awareness aim o f events hosted by M E C h A B y R ow e E dgell State P ress f Labor union officials believe the future of unions depends on young activists. For that reason, leaders of the ASU Chicano student group MEChA and a community labor organization, Central Arizona Jobs with justice, will hold a two-day rally and teach-in on campus today and Wednesday. The group is recruiting college students to be union organizers with theUnion Summer Internship program and nationwide campus teach-ins. “This is part of an effort to try and reach out to the younger generation and reconnect with progressive move­ ments based on campuses,” said Andy English, Central Arizona Jobs with Justice organizer. English said students have to realize the realities of the job world they are rapidly approaching. “In the working world the students are graduating into, wages are down one-third and there has been a wave of corporate downsizing,” he said, MEChA, the co-sponsor of the teach-in, is interested in the event as an extension of the social and political issues for lower-wage Chicano workers, said MEChA adviser Ed DelcL At noon today, there will be a rally on the north side of the Memorial Union to defend the rights of strawberry farm workers. At 7:30 p.m., Linda Chavez-Thompson, union execu­ tive vice president of the AFL-CIO, will start the teach-in with a keynote address to students, faculty and communi­ ty members in the Arizona Room of the MU. Her topic will be “The Fight for Our Future.” The event is free and open to the public. On Wednesday at 2:30 p.m., students, local labor activists and copper miners will demonstrate against Phelps-Dodge at the company’s headquarters in down­ town Phoenix. The AFL-CIO claims the corporation is trying to break up the New Mexico miners’ unions. Four workshops will continue the teach-in on Wednesday from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Local labor leaders, ASU faeulty and student activists will make presentations on the workshop topics to edu­ cate students and the general public on worker’s rights and the labor movement. The teach-in will commence with workshops on “Labor and Political Action” at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday. The topics will include “Civil, Human and Worker’s R ights,” “ The Youth and Labor M ovem ent” and “Organizing in the Southwest.” The teach-in will also be a recruiting move by the AFL-CIO to get students involved in the movement and participate in the Union Summer Internship program, which is run by the AFL-CIO, The Summer program is a three-and-a-half-week hands-on experience, said Lisa Farella, campus recruiter for the AFL-CIO. She said 38 students, several from ASU, worked on the program last year. ; , i- C a m p u s -i l C o r n e r -1 7 1 2 S. College 9 67-4049 n e x t to College S tre e t Deli 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 8 58-0567 a c ro s s from C offee P lantation Everyday Low Price 2 4 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS C o lo r C -4 1 P ro c e s s B e s t P ric e in T o w n r AFRAID OF OVER-STUDYING?? TAKE A BREAK! WATCH HARD ROCK UVE PRESENTED BY PONTIAC SUNFIRE SUNDAY 8 P.M. AND 1 A.M., MONDAY 8 P.M., SATURDAY 5 PM. ALL TIMES EST/PST. ONLY Of^ VH1. www.hardrocklive.msn.com St a t e P ress Page 7 Tuesday, April 8 ,1 9 9 7 So, how bad is the water? Above, Jaime Seddon uses the help of a mechanical arm to get an accurate reading of a water sample. Below, life science research technician Traci M. Main, 23, checks water sample data. Biology major, Jaime Seddon, 20, tests over 100 water samples from the Verde River in the sub-basem entAf the Life Science C-wing. 5tiU riding your bike to school? Maybe it’s time you applied for an auto loan from Desert Schools Federal Credit Union. With a low annual percentage rate and special discount opportunities, you'll be out of training wheels and into a sportin' car or truck in no time , to a brand) near you or call us! TANKUPTUESDAY $2.80 Pitchers 60 o z . C o o rs L ig h t A n d B u d L ig h t, Four Peaks 54.58 of Soda W E DELIVER 1 3 0 1 E. University Between Rural & McClintock desest Schools Univèrtlty CREDIT CARDS GOOD ON DELIVERY 433.7000 AB A$U students are eligible to join ¡§ * D e p e n d in g o n in co m e a n d credit history, a co-signer m a y b e required for loon requests. * Page 8 S tate P ress Tuesday, April 8, 1997 ASU student suspect Former drill instructor pleads guilty in- traffic deadiji'v^|;'^1 to sex charges, innocent to rape B y M elody M c D o n a l d 1 S tate P ress ' y ■■ A 25-year-old TeiqK man -wasIlls bicycle early Sunday morning when an ASU stu­ dent, who apparently had béftddifU fig, n t t t a R m a cat. ¡ntHrr.Td!ff\.. “ ■ v. ' ■• ■' / ’!■**■■■¿.- ■ Police said Alexander Sudendorf was r i d i ^ Ms bicycte westbound on Broadway Road when he was Kimberly Bowers, an 18-year-old broadcast major. . The accident happened at about 2 *.m„ at 600 E. Broadway Road, said ASU police Sgt. Toby Dyas. Sudendorf was riding in the far right-hand lane when Bowers bit him, he said. Apparently Bowers, who was also westbound, was driving “all the V ^ d v e ri’ YS'faite Sudefitiditf-was rid* ing several feet from the curb, Dyas said. The point of j impact was right next to the curb, he said. Sudendorf was admitted to the Maricopa County Medical hospital where he died a little after 3 a.m. j j J J | Dyas said Bowers was booked on charges of negli­ gent homicide and released. ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. — A former drill instructor pleaded guilty Monday to having sex with 11 trainees in violation of Army rules but denied charges he raped eight women under his command. Staff Sgt. Delmar Simpson, 32, said he had sex with subordinates in his office, his home and at a hotel on anoth­ er military base. In most cases, he said, the Sex was initiat­ ed either by the woman or by both partners. “She would come to my office and we would engage in conversation and one thing would just lead to another, sir,” he told a military judge, describing one encounter. The 13-year enlisted man pleaded guilty to a total of 16 counts alleging he had sex or otherwise engaged in improp­ er conduct toward a subordinate at the Ordnance Center and School at Aberdeen Proving Ground. Simpson said he had sex with 11 subordinates, kissed another and asked four more either date him, have sex with him or come to his office without underwear. Each of the charges carries up to two years in prison and dishonorable discharge. “Sgt. Simpson is not afraid of die truth. He pleaded guilty to what he did and he’s prepared to take responsibility for his actions,” said Capt. Edward W. Brady, one of his attorneys. M D Association seeking volunteers M EGA DEAL B y R ow e Edgell S tate P ress The Muscular Dystrophy Association is looking for vol­ unteer counselors and activity directors for a one-week summer camp to be held June 15-21. About 40 counselors are needed to provide assistance and friendship for people with the potentially debilitating disorder. “We like to have one counselor for every child,” said Sharon Losey, camp coordinator. The camp will be at Camp Shadow Pines in Hebcr, northeast of Phoenix in the White Mountains, for people with Muscular Dystrophy ages six to 21. More than 60 campers with progressive neuromuscular diseases are expected to attend the camp. The campers will enjoy arts and crafts, fishing, evening dances, playing sports and other activities. The counselors are needed to assist the campers. The activity directors are needed to help organize events such as sports, painting and photography. In the past, there have been life-changing experiences for the counselors, said Losey. Some volunteers who come into the program realize their problems are trivial compared to the difficulties faced by some of the children, she said. All volunteers must be at least 18 years old and will receive training prior to camp. “The only experience you need is be willing to learn and want to be there,” said Losey. To volunteer call the MDA Greater Arizona office at 496-4530, T h ree ch arg ed in prison guard’s death (AP) — Three prison inmates were charged today in the stabbing death of a corrections officer at the Perryville prison last month. Leroy Cropper, 33, Eugene Long, 29 and Bruce Howell, 36, were charged with first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and promoting prison contra­ band, said Maricopa County Attorney Rick Romley. Prison authorities believe Cropper was the man who actually stabbed Brent Lumley, 33, who was found in a secure control room in the prison from which he oversaw die yard and a cluster of cells. The state plans to seek the death penalty against Cropper, said Bill Fitzgerald, a spokesman for Romley. Long, who is serving three years for theft, allegedly passed a steel carving knife to Cropper, Romley said. Howell is accused of unlocking Cropper’s cell, knowing at the time that Cropper had the knife. Howell is serving 2.5 years for drug offenses. Cropper is serving six years for drug offenses. Lumley was stabbed in the neck and died about an hour later at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix. Lumley was the seventh corrections officer to die or be killed in the #ne of duty since 1967. He had worked his regular day shift in the secured “ control room.” The stabbing occurred at the prison’s San Juan unit, which holds 674 medium-security inmates. Simpson pleaded innocent to 21 counts of rape and to 57 other counts, including forcible sodomy, robbery and extor­ tion. He could get life in prison if convicted of a single count of rape. His trial is expected to begin Friday. Simpson, who is married, is charged with raping eight women under his command, five of whom he has now acknowledged as sexual partners. Paul Marone, a special assistant U.S. attorney, said the guilty pleas won’t affect the government’s ability to prove the rape allegations. “The government has to prove it was by force and with­ out her consent,!’ Marone said. “It hasn’t changed what the government has to prove by one iota.” The encounters Simpson pleaded guilty to occurred between March 1995, two months after he arrived at Aberdeen, and September 1996. The court-martial judge. Col. Paul-Johnston, asked Simpson who initiated the sexual encounters. In two cases, Simpson said, the women did. In four cases, he said; both he and the woman agreed to sex. In five cases, he either said he couldn’t remember or didn’t give a clear answer. Simpson is one of 11 instructors charged with sexual misconduct at Aberdeen Proving Ground, about 30 miles northeast of Baltimore. 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He was transported to a care center. ■'■, • A male employee, reported that someone unlawfully entered the Memorial Union Room 203 and removed a VCR. • A male student reported that someone unlawfully entered his vehicle while it was parked in Area 63 and removed his stereo equipment, radar detector and numerous CDs. • A female student violated an order of protection. • A male student reported that someone assaulted him at Sahuaro Hall. • Someone criminally damaged a cement trash can in Structure 4. • A female student reported that a male subject trespassed in her room at Palo Verde Main. Tempe police reported the following incidents Monday: • One adult male and three juvenile gang members were arrested Saturday after a confrontation in Tempe. Police said two members of the WST gang were confronted by a 16-year-old and 17-year-old member of the WBP gang at about 3 p.m., at 1336 W. Fourth St. The WST members, a 20-year-old and a 16-year-old male, left the area to recruit assistance from their friends, police said. When they returned at about 3:25 p.m.. they shouted threats at WBP gang members while the 20-year-old fired four rounds from a 9 mm handgun, striking one person in the upper arm. Police said several non-gang members were also in the area and were almost struck by bullets. The suspects were later located at 1504 W. University Drive and the 1300 block of W. Fourth St. The 20-year-old member of the WST gang was arrested on charges of two counts of aggravated assault, three counts of endangerment and one count of threatening and intimidating to further the interest of a street gang. The juvenile WST gang member was arrested on charges of illegal possession of marijuana and threaten­ ing and intimidating to further the interest of a street gang. 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Tuesday, April 8,1997 S tate P ress Tuesday, April 8, 1997 Page 10 2 0 % o ff “ X * C N ew building in the works for AS U UPS Shipping “ F R E E toS (3i M o n t h s w f 6 B y V i v i St e n b e r g M o n t h s Re n t a l ) St a t e P ress • Construction on a new building that will house four social sciences departments is scheduled to start in January. ASU was given conceptual approval by the Arizona Board of Regents to build a 114,500 square foot, fivestory building at the site of Parking Lot 26. The new building will house the departments of political science, sociology, philosophy, speech and hearing science and a survey research laboratory. The building will be 57.200 square feet smaller than the original plan, which would have placed the building at the site of the ASU Bookstore. University administrators said the smaller building will be more cost-efficient since it does not require the bookstore to be rebuilt. « o p ie s M A I L B O XE S ETC. 903 S. Rural Rd. «967-1414 1739 E. Broadway • 829-3900 1110 S. Alma School • 964-1001 COUPONPfRCUSTOM ERPERVISIT.NOTVALIDINCOMBINATIONW ITHAT OTHEROTTER: V a lid a t pa rticipa ting l o c a t io n s . E xpires 5 /1 5 /9 7 ; • 1 s t p e r s o n pays a d m is s io n • 2 nd PERSON SKATES FREE; • S kate r e n ta l e x t r a O ceanside Ice A r e n a * 9 4 1 - 0 9 4 4 1520 N. Mc C lintock, T empe • E xpires 5/31/97 By Lawrence L. Knutson Associated P ress WASHINGTON — The Federal Trade Commission has opened an inquiry into whether two major beer marketers — Miller Brewing Co. and Anheuser-Busch — aim adver­ tising at Underage drinkers^ com pany officials said Monday. Both companies said they are cooperating with the agency, and one, Anheuser-Busch, issued a statement saying, “We do not target our advertising toward young people, period.” An FTC official said it is agency policy not to confirm or deny that an investigation is under way, , Thé agency’s responsibilities include determ ining whether advertising is unfair or deceptive. And a product marketed to young people not able to buy it legally might fall within that definition. Both Miller and Anheuser-Busch mounted ad campaigns last year on the television network MTV, an estimated about half of whose audience is underage, according to Advertising Age, which first reported on the FTC investigation. In Milwaukee, Susan Henderson, a spokeswoman for Miller Brewing Co., said the company received an FTC request for information on media buying on Jan. 14. “We sent information as requested and are cooperating E x tra-La rg e 2 -Item P iz z a p lu s 2 5 Wings for s1 6 49 350-9122 Student Lunch Special 3 taste Ute- WITH COUPON TAX INCLUDED N .I. CORNER OF MILL & UNIV. NEXT TO RUBY TUESDAY HAPPY HOUR _ l u M O N D A Y th ru F R ID A Y ! r 4 - 7 p m & lO p m t il C lo s e j / ¡ n a y a l l ■■ d a y 1 J t» c l o s e s 9 9 C M a rg a rita s 9 9 C D ra ft B e e r {SelectedBrands} Corner of University 6 Mill fully,” she said. She declined to answer additional questions except to say Miller received an FTC letter, not a subpoena. In St. Louis, Stephen K. Lambright, vice president and group executive of Anheuser-Busch Companies Inc., said the company had not received either a subpoena or any form of legal notification from the agency. Instead, he said, the brewer contacted the agency on its own and “volunteered to provide them information on our overall media buying practices.” “The FTC took vis up on our offer and those meetings have included discussions of the extensive efforts we make to ensure that our advertising appears in media specifically Chosen to reach our customers — those adult drinkers who can legally purchase our products:” Lambright said. Last week, President Clinton said he wants to keep advertising for hard liquor off radio and television and to return to the status quo that existed for a half-century before distillers lifted their self-imposed ban last fall. He asked the Federal Communications Commission to study the impact of lifting the bail and to recommend possi­ ble federal action. Wine makers and brewers have freely advertised all along. \ T U E S D A Y S K ■ The new Social Science Building is estimated to cost $35.5 million. It will include state-of-the-art classroom technology and an 80-station open computer site for stu­ dents. The money Will be provided through the sale of bonds. The new facility was planned to alleviate “severe space deficiencies” in the Collège of Liberal Arts and Sciences. In a letter to ABOR. ASU administrators point­ ed to a list of 14 peer institutions in which ASU ranked lowest in the amount of space allocated per student. Stéphen Walker, chair of the political science depart­ ment, said the new building will benefit both students and faculty through better accommodations. “The concept of the building . . . will enhance the teaching and the learning-experience,” Walker said. “We are really excited about the move.” Parking Lot 26 is not yet planned to be replaced. F T C investigates if beer ads ta rg e t teens Terrace & Lemon WE DELIVER St a t e P ress Look into your future. State Press Horoscopes J >. J ( with purchase of another sno of equal or lesser value. Party Sno Buckets excluded. Coupon good through 4-21-97 Buy one sweatshirt & get 2nd of equal or lesser „.value at HALF PRICE! 1 coupon per customer^ MSSBsb» ^ Expires 5-16-9 7 ' " ..|i||i|||||i||l Rotifer's Pays the HIGHEST PRICES For Your Use* Books A Division of Kimberley Corporation Open 7 days a w eek 6 2 5 E. Apache 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 GRAPHICSTRAINING ONE FR E E M ONTH! When You Buy One LOCK-IT^ LO C K E R S Self Storage C lo s e t o C a m p u s ! 9 6 6 -2 6 2 2 1135 W. B ro a d w a y M oniip iiàverS vG rtlièrv O u tlet :r,_^ N o v v ^ p | i e D J Enter below and faite it to the store to wJn$25tn free groc^rtes. 11 ârt/0nptf$*tk P ho ne# Name 9 Ò9 m f l>% rin # n StT-ee t PHOTOSHOP • QUARK • CORELDRAW Intensive graphics training seminars with TDI features: • Instruction by Senior Design Professionals • 4 to 1 class size $199*- 2 Days - Beginning thru Advanced Photoshop, Quark & Corel $99* -1 Day - Intermediate to Advanced Photoshop, Quark & Corel C urrent V alid Student ID R equired S pace is Limited - Enroll N o w ! C all B rad at 423-5056 *Pricebasedon full enrollment. Casses with lessthanfour students may be rescheduledor cancelledwithfull refund. Check out T O N S of CO UPO NS N ext TUESD AY! Don ' t miss ' em! ^Sm TPR EsT Page 11 Tuesday, April 8 ,1 9 9 7 S tate P ress Search fo r fig h ter je t co n cen trated in so u th w estern C olorado B y A rthur H . R otstein A ssociated P ress TUCSON — The search for a missing Air Force fighter jet centered today around Paonia in southwestern Colorado after more radar tracks were discovered and additional ground sightings near Montrose, Colo. Meanwhile, Air Force officials launched a U-2 recon­ naissance aircraft today front Beale A ir Force Base in California to take photos over the area to aid in the search for the A -10. The jet was based in Arizona, Fifteen Civil Air Patrol planes were conducting a com­ prehensive search over a 9.0()0-square mile area northeast of Montrose, between Paonia and Carbondale, Capt. Leslie Pratt said. Radar track information and ground sightings near Montrose enabled Air Force investigators to trace the flight of an unidentified airplane, believed to be the attack jet missing since Wednesday, to thé area about 150 miles Southwest of Denver. Rescuers initially concentrated their search for the A-10 Thunderbolt II jet in Arizona. But sightings of an A-10-like jet aircraft by Colorado residents Wednesday and updated radar information prompted searchers to move their focus to Colorado. : : Those sightings corresponded with the calculated time the jet would have flown over the region, according to Federal Aviation Administration radar data. The FAA intermittently tracked the path of an unidenti­ R e fied plane traveling northeast from southeast of Gila Bend, Ariz., near where the jet was last sighted, across far north­ western New Mexico and into Colorado. On Saturday, the Air Force said the radar faded near Telluride, Colo,, about I pirn. MST. Further radar tracking showed the plane going further north, “up to a point about 100 miles southwest of Denver,” said Capt. Andrew White, a spokesman at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson. Capt. Craig D. Button was on a training mission in the plane, which was assigned to Davis-Monthan. White said today that the last radar track Was registered at 1:40:27, 15 miles southwest of Vail. Vail is about 90 miles by air northeast of Paonia. There was no immediate explanation for the apparent discrepancy in distance. Fifty pilots and 15 planes for the Civil Air Patrol are searching for any signs of the dark grey aircraft, which could easily have been blanketed by a snow storm that hit the area Saturday. Nonetheless, Pratt said, they are assum­ ing Button is alive. “He’s gone through survival training and has plenty of survival gear,” Pratt said. The search was complicated by mountainous terrain and high altitude, as well as an absence of an emergency locator switch. But he added that weather conditions had improved today. Hundreds of people called an Air Force hotline over the c i] c Ye , ij weekend. Some of the reports were “highly credible,” Col. Barry Barksdale, commander of the 355th Fighter Wing at DavisMonthan in Tucson, Ariz., Said both Saturday and Sunday. Air Force officials have hesitated to speculate on why the plane veered so far off course. Button was the last in a three-plane formation headed from Davis-Monthan to a training session at the Barry M. Goldwater bombing range near Yuma, Ariz. The trio had refueled southeast of Tucson, and were headed west when Button’s A-10 vanished. Barksdale said Button could have become incapacitated — anything from a blackout or seizure to a heart attack. The plane’s autopilot could be engaged by pushing a button on the control stick. Button also could have ejected. Pratt and Staff Sgt. Rian Clawson both refuted various “wild” theories, including that someone sabotaged the plane to gain access to the four 500-pound live bombs it carried. ; “Anything you can think of has probably been looked at, but the evidence so far doesn’t indicate any of these wild hypotheses, like he was trying to steal it, or he went off to Telluride to go skiing,” Clawson said, noting that the bombs were unlikely to explode if the A-10 were to slam into something. “We don’t have any reason to believe there was any­ thing unusual about this mission,” Pratt said. The Air Force hot line is 520-228-6350. MËêèÉÊÎÉè*e P r & CROSSWORD A V A L rr A P u s N T E A p ]S T E T R M O U E O C N U A T R FT 1 by THOMAS JOSEPH wk. ACROSS 1 7 11 12 ****** in d o v u t e ? ! * I M P Fries Drains Warrant Out of the wind 13 1967 Mike Nichols film 15 Board 16 Prepared to drive 18 “Candy is dandy” poet 21 Pleat 22 Workout exercise 24 G l’s address 25 Permit 26 Actor Wallach 27 Stylish 291995 Pacino/ Qe Niro film 30 Goose egg 31 Farm cluckers 32 Available 34 1996 Mike Nichols film 40 Topnotch 41 Site of Roma 42 Flower plots 43 Packing a punch DOWN 2 Bat wood 3 Exploit 4 Pulled gently 5 Blundered 6 Theater fixture 7 Healthdub rooms 8 In the fashion of 9 Favorite 10 Catch sight of 14 Bagel's Cousin 16 November birthstone 17 W aive one’s rites? 1 2 3 1 or fast relief from thè nagging ache o f taxés, as retirement income, the money yo u don ’t send we recommend T I A A - C R E F S R A s. S R A s to Washington can w ork even harder for you. are tax-deferred annuities designed to help build W hat else do S R A s offer? A full range of additional assets— money that can help make the investment choices and the financial expertise difference between living and living uvi/ after of T I A A - C R E F —America's largest retirement your working years are over. organization? Contributions to you r S R A s áre deducted To find out more, stop by you r benefits office from y o u r salary on a pretax basis, so you pay or give us a call at 1 800 842-2888. W e’ll show less in taxes now. And since earnings on your you how S R A s can lower y m ir taxes. S R A s are also tax deferred until you receive them D o it today— it couldn’t hurt. V isit us on th e Internet at w w w .tiaa-cref.org Ensuring the future for those who shape it.“ ’ Based on assets under management. C R F F certificates are distributed by TIA A -C R FF individual and institutional Services,;Inc. For more complete information, including charges and expenses, call I 800 842-2733, ext 6609. fo ra current C R F Fprospectus. Read the prospectus carefully before you in v esto r send money. Date o f first use: 2/97. L E S T O V E N T E S T m FR G Ê O P Yesterday’s Answer 31 Couldn't not 33 Journey 3 4 Folder 21 Craze part 22 Apiece 23 Deep hole 35 Garden25 Tèa of er’s need 36 Finish “The 37 Pub order Naked Truth" 38 Martini base 28 Inquiries 39 End a fast 29 Jazz fan 19 Gloss 20 Island dances 5 6 8 9 m 19 20 to 7 12 n 11 14 13 15 16 17 ,e ■ m im 25 m 28 24 27 22 J ■ 33 32 35 ■ 29 : ■ 31 SO 34 ■ 1 23 21 37 36 38 39 41 40 • 1 42 1 1 End of the ■ 4 s s 1 D E A 43 1 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 4-8 HD CRYPTOQUOTE I Z Y YZN K G H D S I KG Q IN QQKQIK N H B B M B Z N Q Y I S Y Z N H D j I K G Q YJ HD — J A KG Z Y A D P D Z N ,D Y esterday's C ryptoquote: FACTS DO NOT CEASE TO EXIST JUST BECAUSE THEY ARE IGNORED —ALDOUS HUXLEY 0 1997 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. State Press Tuesday, April 8, 1997 Page 12 £UB FAGTQfty SJ I ■"»s'OFF" ’ S H O E M ILL ; FREE AN Y SHOE PURCH ASE A T R E G U L A R P R IC E S l B FACTOfty Buy 1 sub with 1 medium drink and chips and receive the second sub of equal or lesser value for FREE! . " A Ìjl» e H e s ^ f I Gourmet Subs Double Meat or Grilled Chicken riot included. s e l e c t i o n ¡ Expires 5-31-97. '- U 2155 E. U N IV ER S ITY - 968-6369 930 W. BROADWAY - 967-7573 \; 0 Ê "* I f I D r. M a rten s i 750 OFF m u ffin *"r 10" Sub or larSer BEER SP E C IA LS -or- 500 OFF SATU8MYS 60-oz. Pitcher $Z50 « la w : 60-oz. Pitcher $2.99 Boernotavailableat Broadway* Hardylocation. Half Sub (6 inch) 2155EUnM»ay 930 W. Broadway 867-7573 1 J R Not Valid with any other offer Expires 5-31-97. ofEngland T H E 2155 £. UNIVERSITY- 968-6369 930 W. BROADWAY - 967-7573 3 9 8 » . M ill • » 6 6 -8 1 8 9 S H O E © M A I R W A L K IL L E X P IR E S 5 -3 1 -9 7 . • • » The State Press is now hiring a qualified student to work days in the State Press production departm ent. QuarkXpress experience is required and must be fam iliar w ith Macintosh software. Stop by the State Press offices in the basement of M a tW w s C e n te r to pick Friday, April 11 Monday, April 7 10:00 am to 3:00 pm * Hayden Lawn -Malaysian Expo’ 12:00 to 1:00 pm • Hayden Lawn. -Lion Dance KungFu Tuesday, April 8 11:15pm to 12:00 »Hayden Lawn -Indian Traditional Dance 12:00 to 1:00 pm • Memorial Union Programming Lounge -Art Exhibition by Haru Kawamitsu 2:30 to 4:30 pm • Ventana Room 226A -Documentary: “Slaying the Dragon” 4:00 to 6:00 pm • Memorial Unkm Cinema -Film: “Super Cop” by Jackie Chan ASIAN coalition Wednesday, April 9 12:00 to 1:00 pm * Hayden Lawn -Filipino Dance 1:00 to 2:00 pm » Hayden Lawn -Tinikling Filipino Performers 6:30 to 8:30 pm * Memorial Union Cinema -Film: “Super Cop” by Jackie Chan Saturday, April 12 Thursday, April 10 6:30 to 8:30 pm » Memorial Union Cinema -Film: “Super Cop” by Jackie Chan up an application today or call the production departm ent at 965 2097 for more inform ation. S tate P ress 11:00 to 11:15 am »Hayden Lawn .-Indonesian Seudari Dance 11:30 am to 12:00 pm »Hayden Lawn -Indonesian Fashion Show 12:00 to 12:30 pm • Hayden Lawn -Chinese Musical Instrument 5:00 to 8:00 pm • Memorial Union Programming Lounge - Cultural Fashim Show & other fecial ev^its. by Haru Kawamitsu 10:00 am to 2:00 pm • Hayden Lawn -Asian Awareness Booth ASIAN SUNews 6:00 to 10:00 pm* Manorial Unkm Pima Roan - “Asian talent Night” i Page 13 Tuesday, April 8, 1997 S t a t e P ress N A I L S ^ N A IL 6 7 5 -9 9 7 8 Complete Noll Core Solon for Lodles ond Gentleman Scottsdole & McKelllps 1442 N, Scottsdale id • Union Hut the alternative copy shop 9 1 5 S o u th M ill A v e . • T e m p o * 829-7992 Southeast C o m e r o f M il l & University C o lo r C opiés 49 * 8.5" x 11* white paper printed on 1 side * no limit (enlargements/reductions A editing are extra) ______ expires 4-6-97_______ c o p y in g • b in d in g • la m in a tin g • c o m p u te r re n ta ls fu ll c o lo r p rin t & co p y • s c a n n in g • ty p e s e ttin g University of Colorado at Boulder USE SUMMER T O T oday Campus clubs and organizations may subm it written entnes to the State Press in the basement of the Matthews Center. Requests w ill not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the club or organization, a description of the event, date, time and the full address of the location. All requests are subject to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events p rin te d as a se rv ic e to the ASU co m m u n ity. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • ASASU CHAC — Meeting at 6:30 p.m. on Hayden Lawn. „• MUAB C ulture and A rts Com m ittee — Meeting at 3 p.m. in the MU conference room 2A, third floor. • SCA College of B rym stonne — Organizational meeting at 6:30 p.m. in MU Turquoise 208F. • Hispanic Convocation Committee/EI Concilio — Rally at 11 a m. in Cady Mall by the Chicano tree area in front of Danforth Chapel. • Jobs w ith Justice — Fighting for Social Justice: A Teach-in w ith the New Labor Movement with keynote speaker Linda Chavez-Thompson, AFLCIO Executive Vice President at 7:30 p.m. in MU • ASU MEChA — Rally in support of the United Farm Workers campaign for Strawberry W orker's Rights. Chavez-Thompson arid Alberto Esparza, UFW representative will speak at noon in north side of the MU. • C a ree r S erv ice s — "H ow to S ucceed a t • Collegiate Job Fair" workshop at 11:40 a.m. in MU 212. • A sian B usiness L e ad er’ s A s s o cia tio n — Documentary of Slaying the Dragon at 2:30 p.m. in MU Ventana 226A, second floor. • Society for Human Resource Management — General meeting with guest speaker Jana George from AEG at 4:30 p.m inB AC 323 • Celtic Society — Club meeting at 3:15 p.m. at the fountain behind the MU. • Student Affairs Learning Resource Center — Free computer workshops: 12 p.m. — word, 1 p.m. — pine, 3 p.m. — excel, 4 p.m. — word and 6 p.m. — internet at the Student Services Building 361 A. • Students for a Free Tibet — Weekly meeting at 3:30 p.m. in MU 208D. • AIESEC — General meeting at 5 p.m. in MU 219. « Communication Student Association (CSA) — Meeting discussing IABC and graduation at 3:30 p.m. in Stauffer Han 315A. • ASASU — Senate meeting at 5:30 p.m. in MU Alumni Lounge 202. • Brazilian Jiu-Jitau Club — Today's class will be taught in Portuguese at noon in the small gym A in the SRC. • Student Environm ental Action C oalition — Meeting, Earth Day and other issues at 2:30 p.m. in MU Hopi 208. • Counselor Training Center — Free counseling available for full-tim e students and staff at Payne Hall, room 402. For more information or an appoint­ ment, caH 965-5067. Discover Your W ild Side! PROGRESS ummersessionontheBouldercampusis somethingspecial. Withover500 campus coursestochoosefrom, it’sarelaxed, com­ fortablelearningenvironment Classesaresmaller. Andwhenyou’renotinclass, youcansoakup Boulder’smellowcharm. OrexploreBoulder’s backyard, ahighcountryplaygroundthatincludes someofthecountry’smostruggedandspectacular terrain. S Summerisagreat timetoget ajumponthe next phaseofyoureducational goals. FOR EXAMPLE: VISITINGSTUDENTS. TakeadvantageofCU resources tocompleteorenrichyourowndegree program. op HIGHSCHOOLSTUDENTS. Takeacollegecourse forexperience, toenhanceyourcollegeapplica­ tion, ortoseeifCUistheright school foryou. TEHCHEBS. Earnrecertificationcreditsandtap intoeverythingtheUniversityhas tooffer. KOFESSIONHL DEVELOPMENT. Increaseyour knowledgebaseandbuildskills toenhanceyour capabilities. ENRICHMENT. Giveyourselfthe pleasureof an academicchallenge atCUthissummer. FOR MORE IMFORMATIOIt Call 303- 492-5146 or800-331-2801 torequest aSummerSessioncatalog. Orvisit ourwebsite WWColorado.edu/conted/Summer Visit the Nation's Largest Adult Superstore. O ver 15,000 videos fo r rent o r sale, along with a bold selection o f leather, lingerie, swim wear and a vast collection o f books, magazines and novelties. A m e r ic a 's S a fe r S e x S u p ersto re . p 5501 E. Washington 231-9837 300 E C am elback Rd. 266-3348 a p BOUTIQUE SUPERSTORES Open 24 Hours ' 365 Days www.castle-boutique.com 8802 N. Black Canyon 995-1641 8315 E. Apache Trail 986-6114 C omics Tuesday, April 8 ,1 9 9 7 Page 14 T A T r ia l s J o cu lar Pa B y J©h a t h a h Im < se r ib u l a t io n s V \ n © R R )/7 DINK.' DlMCDWK! State Press WHAT’S 'l YOUR BROTHER, THE T iO D CAN COME " 1 By NED! h ir e P""""' "• r able AMO A S fm HELL ANX> t’fA N O T C rO IN ó T O » ì TAHYMME E» THE NEDDY BUNCH « J» . I xV/ W o R k i H 6 It O B y M a u r ic e M i t c h e l l u t D iL B E R T ® O FF T H E KARR B y M a r k P a r is i B y S c o -t-r A d a m s Com)SG6#GL'S UrtP£&Cvll£VjNlG EritarTite'R, MATMEHC ZO\GI. ^ BiackJack P izza* I BETTER PIZZA BETTER PRICE LARGE PIZZA X-LARGE PIZZA $C99 order by item number GS1 $£ 9 9 order by item number GS2 N O C O U PO N S N E C E S S A R I E P E E Ò E L I V E P ¡/ STASH Y O U R STUFF For Summer A n d Lock Into A Qood Deal • Specials (on selected sizes) • N o deposits/N o fees " • Clean &m odem facilities _ • Q reat gate hours CAA. . „ . n . 502 N. Hayden Rd. 945-6860 ....... „ . 2422 W. Broadway 968-1021 Elim inate the h assles on ru r r i ^ r *° freedom. Check into our storage fsc,„. lie s end kick back and take ,t , S ports PageJL5 Tuesday, April 8, 1997 S tate P ress Snyder discusses A S U s spring play B y E d O deven State P ress Spring football has given junior college transfer Joe Cesta a chance to prove his worth. The inside linebacker from Saddleback Community College (Mission Viejo. Calif.) has been a solid contributor for the Sun Devils’ defense, Now that spring football is halfway over, Cesta and ASU head coach Bruce Snyder have had plenty of time to evaluate Cesta's performance so far. The adjustment’s been pretty good,” said the 6-foot-1, 235-pounder. “I mean it’s a lot faster than junior college football. Everyone’s a little bigger, a little strong but it’s going pretty well. I’m not picking up the defense as fast as I thought I would” However, he did pick a pass that ASU sophomore quarter­ back Gus Farwell threw Monday during practice. The ball was tipped and Cesta reacted.’received it and ran 15 or 20 yards before the play ended. “1 was in the right place at the right time and got lucky,” Cesta said. ‘ Snyder said Cesta has played well. “I’m pleased with his progress,” he said. “Joe is going to give us good depth if nothing else, and maybe cam a starting spot. He’s a good tough guy.” RKPI.ACKMENT FOR BUSH? Seniors Steve Bush and Devin Kendall gave the Sun Devils two experienced tight ends last season. The duo combined for 36 receptions, 456 yards three touchdowns. Now the position is up for grabs. “It is a heck of a battle. It is a good battle,” Snyder said. Four Sun Devils have shared playing time at the position. Each player has given Snyder something to be pleased about. (Senior) Zack Romero has been in the program and he’s really mature,” he said. “And you can tell it when he com­ petes, that he knows this system. (Sophomore) Kendrick Bates has a lot of natural ability and the one who probably isn’t up to them yet but has been a real nice pleasant surprise for us is Brian Jennings, a walk-on. He’s done a real nice job. And he’s doing a nice job of long snapping. I think before it’s all over Correction: In the Thursday, April 3, 1997 issue the men’s tennis story by John Sheehy concerning the match versus the UofA Wildcats, sophomore athlete Ed Carter was nusqnoted. I, Randy Jones, sports editor, and the rest of the Stale Press sports staff apolo­ gize to Carter, the rest o f the men’s ten­ nis team and all readers for the error and any problems o r confusion it may have caused. -- C yber - S nake ' Fans wishins to chat with Jake Plummer w ill get th e ir chance tonight. “The Snake" is scheduled to ta lk on A m erica O n-Line this evening at 8:30. A n yo n e in te re s te d should visit Plummer’s on-line area on A O L K eyw o rd : A thlete D irect Elizabeth Reid Gymnastics R eid m ade h e r firs t Midwest Regional one to rem em ber on Saturday. The freshman took home first place on both the floor exercise, with a career-high tying ' 9.925, and the balance beam (9.875). She also placed ninth on the bars (9.8). Pat ShannahaiVState Press ASU senior quarterback Steve Campbell launches a pass during practice while senior linebacker Paul Reynolds looks on. (redshirt freshman) Jason Moore is going to be a heck of a tight end. It’s a close battle. But each kind of brings something unique to the table. If we could wrap ‘email into one would be the ideal (package).” Amey’s move; Senior defensive lineman Vince Amey’s recent switch from tackle to end has given the team mote flexibility with its spring drills. ' “I think it was a good move and it gives Albrcy Battle a chance to develop,” Snyder said. It gives more of our guys that I think are going to play more reps. It was the right move for this spring for sure. Amey, a Poway, Calif- product, has accepted his new role in a positive manner. And Snyder has noticed tire effort. “He (Amey) said he likes the move although he likes tackle too,” Snyder said. “He just said he wants to play. I think he’s playing better and at a more consistently high level than I’ve seen him in quite a while.” First day finds men’s go lf in fourth place From S taff R eports After the first day o f play at the N orth Ranch Country Club, the ASU m en’s golf team currently is in fourth place in the U SC Southw estern Invitational. A fter two rounds, the Sun Devils are 18 HANELL strokes over par, while first-place USC is 3-over-par. Pepperdine is currently in second place with a team score of 573, five strokes over par. Oregon State is third with a 15-over score of 583. Par for the tournament’s course is 71. ASU sco red 586 a fte r tw o rounds w hile USC fin ish ed w ith a 571 tally. Senior Chris Hanell led all ASU golfers by finishing 1-over-par. Hanell currently is in fifth place overall with a score of 143. Hanell scored a 71 in the first round, then finished 1-over-par in the second round. USC’s Chad Wright finished the day at 136. Wright finished 6-under-par in the first round, then 1-under in the sec­ ond. Sun Devil Scott Johnson, is tied for ninth overall after finishing 3-over-par. Johnson, also a senior, finished 1-underpar for a score of 70 in the first round, then finished four Strokes over for a total of. 145 after two rounds. Teammate Pat Perez also is tied for ninth with a 3-over-par 145. Perez, a junior, fin­ ished with a 5-over-par first round, then turned around and finished the second round by going 2-under. Pepperdine’s Jason Gore is currently in second place with a 4-under-par 138. Gore shot a 4-under-par first round, then hit par for the second round. m en’s and women’s swimming and div­ ing teams were named to the Pac-10 AllAcademic teams announced on Monday. Sophomore gymnast Lisa Vincijanovic and sophomore diver Katrina Pfeuffer were honored as first team members. Junior wrestlers Adam Friedman and Aaron Simpson, swimmers Juan Beltran (junior); Guillermo Diaz de Leon (sopho­ more), Mike Melley (senior) and senior diver Kathryn Williams all made the sec­ ond squad. Sophomore swimmer Scott Brown and senior diver M elissa Newman achieved honorable mention status. Student-athletes eligible for the AllAcademic team had to have a minimum grade point average of 3.0 on a 4 point scale and be either a starter or a significant con­ tributor to their team. 10 ASU athletes make All -A cademic teams W right n a m e d All -Pac-10 Ten ASU student-athletes from the w re stlin g , w o m en ’s g y m n astics and Katy Propstra & Stephanie Lansdorp Women's Tennis ■ l The Sun Devils’ duo was one of the only bright spots as ASU's home unbeaten streak ended at the hands of the Texas Longhorns 7-2. Propstra. a sophomore, and Lansdorp, a junior, teamed up to shock the nation's No. 3 doubles team of Cristina Moros and Farley Taylor — Texas' top tw osom e — 8-4 Sunday at the Whiteman Tennis Center. The win raised their doubles record to 9-3 on the season. jug wgM. mÆkk Junior gym nast Meagan W right was named to the Pac-10 All-Conference Team for her efforts on the vault this season. Richy Leon Baseball A fte r leaving S a t­ urday's game with a re­ aggravated injury to his left ribs, ASU second baseman Richy Leon returned to Sunday’s lineup. Leon responded with four runs scored and went 2-for-2, both of which were singles.' Page 16 S tate P ress Tuesday, April 8,1997 Bruins’ bronze-medal bomber Glaus earns praise T hose darn ’C ats B y P ercy Ed n alino J r . S tate P ress Forget Lute Olson, Mike Bibby and Miles Simon. F orget the Final Four and U ofA ’s N ational Championship. UofA’s baseball team is hot. While ASU was taking two games out of three against the No. 2-ranked Bruins, No. 25 UofA was busy w orking on a third consecutive win over California. That in itself isn’t special: UofA is currently in second — yes, second — place in the Six-Pac ahead of UCLA and are 3 1/2 games behind conference leader Stanford. ASU currently is seven games behind the Cardinal. W hat m akes the w eekend special is that the Wildcats posted shutouts over the Golden Bears dur­ ing all three games this weekend. The three shutouts were the first time UofA posted three consecutive shutouts against a Six-Pac opponent. “1 watched them on TV the other day,” Murphy said. “They’re playing well. They’re pitching staff is really, really solid.“ Not to worry, ASU fans. The Sun Devils own a 141-92 lead in the all-time series between the two and beat the Wildcats two games to one in March. ASU also hosts UofA on Apr. 25-27 at Packard Stadium to close out its Six-Pac season. Every team in the Six-Pac has at least one player expected to be a high-round pick in this summer’s baseball draft. ASU has ju n io r Dan M cKinley. Stanford has junior Kyle Peterson. USC has senior Randy Flores. Cal has junior Ryan Drese. UofA has senior Jeff Gjerde. And UCLA has All-Am erican shortstop Troy Glaus. Glaus, who leads the Six-Pac with 19 home runs, was originally taken with the 37th pick overall by the San Diego Padres in 1994. Should he decide to enter this summer’s baseball draft, he could be looking at a better deal. Glaus, who also played third base on last summer’s bronze medal-winning U.S. Olympic team, is one Bruin ASU head coach Pat Murphy doesn’t want to face again. During Sunday’s game, the junior from Carlsbad, Calif., sp o ile d a grand slam .in the ninth inning off righthander Ryan Bradley , Murphy had high praise for Glaus and called the Bruin “an excellent hitter,’’ “I hope he doesn’t decide to come back and hold out for more money,” Murphy said with a smile. Jim Poulin/State Press ASU's W illie Bloomquist swings at a ball during a recent game. The Sun Devils capped off the weekend by taking two games out of three away from UCLA. E A R N A B.A. M,iil.ii.il.iil.ii.il.iil.iiil.iil.ii.il.iil.ii.il.itl.ii.il.iil.ii.il.iil.ii.il.iil.ii.il.iil.ii.il.iil.i).il.iil1ii.il.iil.ii.it.iil.ii.rt.iil,ii.il.iil,ii.il.iil.ii.il.iil.ii.iliiil.ii.il.iiliii.il.iiliii.il.iil.ii.i^ DEGREE 1 S U M M E R J O B S !!! & S T A Y I N YOUR OWN COMMUNITY The most innovative and flexible degree prosram for Bachelor o f Arts and Teacher Certification • Individualized Degree Programs • Credit for Ufs/Worli Ciqreneocc | ■' • Personal Instruction based on your own schedule • Environmental Studies • Counseling • Management and other liberal Arts Fields State approved Teacher Certification and Endorsements ^'jjj§ § || Accredited by North Central Assodatfori o f Colleges and Schools | | FEMALE & MALE CAMP COUNSELORS!!! | Counselors needed for Outstanding Maine camps! [ CAMP VEGA for girls • CAMP CEDAR for boys E fr E ach lo c a te d on. m a g n ific e n tia k e fr o n t setting w ith e x c e p tio n a l facilities. 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A lso lo o k in g fo r secre taries , m a in te n a n c e , kitchen. You don’t have to live in Prescott. We're in your com m unity! W om en - C am p V eg a fo r girls M e n - C am p C ed ar fo r boys 1758 Beacon Street '* Brookline, M A 0 2 1 4 6 ccedarme@aol.com RO.Box 1771 • Duxbury, M A 0 2 3 3 2 ¡obs@campvega.com • http://campvega.com 1 -8 8 8 -8 4 4 -8 0 8 0 1 -8 0 0 -8 3 8 -V E G A We will be on the ASU campus on Friday April 11, in Memorial Union, 1 Room 221 (Apache Room), from 10am to 4pm. No appointment necessary.] ■ i M8RÍ ___ I f S C l a s s if ie d s Notice to our readers: Before, responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity Ofthe offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. More Trivia... John W ilkes Booth's brother once saved the life o f Abraham son. APARTMENTS | Attention Summer Students Short term rentals Available. Studio, 1 & 2 bedrooms Gorgeous community. Cal now! Meridian Comers 966-5818 ANNOUNCEMENTS AVON - SUN care, sales, and free skincare evaluations! Call Jodi @ 964-2664 today! HOMES FOR RENT n m n im t iiw 4BD/2 BA Dobson Ranch .. Prvt: pool, tennis, : park, Price/Baseline. $950/mo. 8977892 1 & 2 bd avail, laundry, 2 blks from ASU, quiet small complex. 939 S. Fanner. 675-0928. WALK TO ASU: 2, 3, & 4bd open for summer & fall. Tim 894-0288 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts. 1bd & studios. $50 off move-in w/ad. 966-8597. TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT ASU VILLAGE/ Cortez Ponds: Studio- $395, 2bd- $525, 3bd$625. ReMax 100, Rose 8200500. 2 BD Condo Papago Park $800/mo. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992, BROADWAY & University Ibd den lba covered parking. 947-4999 C la S S lflß d S W O R K ! -----------— — — •——— — STUDIO AFT w/1 year lease. APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT___________ TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA 2BD 2ba walk/bike to ASU, a/c, pool, well lighted, 510 W. University $655 966- QUESTA VIDA lux condo 3bd/3ba, 2 stry, vltd ceilings, sky lights, w/d, dish, micro, 2 pools, spa, rqt ball. 1 mi. to ASU, $1195/ mo. Harris Prop­ erties 829-0902. 0987 : HERMOSA 2BD 2ba walk/bike to ASU, a/c, pool, well lighted, 510 W. University $655 9660987 „ v ; PAP AGO PARK- 2bd/ 2ba, w/d, 2 'pools, 2, Jacuzzis, 1 mi to ASU. $795/mo. Harris Prop­ erties 829-0902 F in d it FAST in th e C lassified s APARTMENTS APARTMENTS SUMMER SUBLET. 1 bd in the Enclave Apts; fully Turn. 5 min from ASU. $550/mo. 7778158. B eat th e Rush! M ake you reservation fo r FALL now. • Spacious Studios • i NEED RMTE to share big house w/2F close to ASU. Big bdrm, w/d, fp $308+l/3util. 491-4403 H P A S S I O N $100 Off W a lk Meridian Corners Apartments RENTAL SHARING HELP WANTEDGENERAL FREE UTILITIES! 1 occupant, 11.7 S. Wilson, Apt 2. Évap. cool. Call 2651413. RENTAL SHARING F o r S a l e s ? Alamo Rent-A-Car, a leader In the car rental industry, has openings for full & part time RENTAL AGENTS • Hourly pay plus bonus • We'll work around your classes • Marketing students a plus! • Highest paid bonus in the business • Exciting airport location • Career options worldwide after graduation 2 4 4 -0 8 9 7 F IE S T A P A R K APARTMENTS 1 2 2 4 E. L e m o n 8 2 9 -6 8 3 8 A la m o APARTMENTS APARTMENTS APARTMENTS LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Mini blinds Vertical blinds with valances Brass ceiling fans European cabinetry Walk-in closets available Private balcony/patio Security alarm systems available ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Free hot water Free cable TV! 3 pools, 2 spas Barbecue areas Covered parking Laundry facilities Large exercise room QUADRANGLES RO O M S FOR RENT NEEDED 2M rmtes to share apt w/ 2F at Apache Commons. 2/bd 2/ba fully furn. $350/mo incl $80 util. Call 784-0055 ROOM FOR rent Chnd Glbt area. Big house, no smk pets party. $300 + 1/2 util. M/F ók. Leave msg. 963-4727 ROOMMATE WTD nice house w/ pool & spa, w/d 275 + 1/3 util close to campus 470-8467 SCOTTSDALE $350 + 1/3 util. 10 min from ASU. Must have ref. 949-2452. ROOMS AVAIL, in home. Util., H2Q, gas, sec. sys., w/d, garage, pool. 8 min. from ASU all for $395/mo. 456-0717 FURNITURE HELP WANTEDGENERAL USED BIKES 1255 E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281 M IN I TUNE-U P ain Restrictions Apply ID Find the State Press on the Internet: http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ COUCHES 8 mo. old, excellent cond. Standard couch & loveseat. $275 obo 938-3879 BICYCLES APARTMENTS S.E, Comer of University & Rural If you earn less th a n $24,000 per year, you m ay qu alify to get a m o n th ly rental discount! ('.all Now! RENTAL SHARING VILLAGE 968-8118 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Page 17 Tuesday, April 8,1997 Stato P ress from $ 4 9 00 $ 1 2 00 M O N G O O SE-U N IVEG A BUY-SELL-TRADE FULL REPAIR SERVICE B ICY CLE ST O R E 1035 E. Lemon 966-45070 Tempe Center 966-7090 AUTOMOBILES AUTOMOBILES 1970 VOLKSWAGEN Squareback, new engine, new interior, very clean. Must sell.. $2,400 obo. Call 996-2325. SHARP !S9 SUNBIRD conv. turbo, 50K, $5900, white, full power, Ph. 730-1957 1984 TOYOTA Celica GTS Slvr and black, needs cylinder hd hi miles, in great shape $1000 GaU 784-9240. 1986 300 ZX 2+2, blue, ac, au­ tomatic, ps, am/fm cass, 110k mi Nissan car in great shape $3,500. Call 957-2662 1986 TOYOTA Camry $500 ruins. Needs some work. Call Lori 736-1946. 1991 CHEVY CAVALIER, auto; a/c, cruise, very sharp, many other clean cars in this price range, $3995.949-7600 P A R T T IM E ■ Warehouse Operator for small fast-paced company. We n eed a conscientious indi­ vidual With a professional work ethic and good communications skills. Responsibilities include: Pulling, boxing, packing, ship­ ping and inventory management. Hourly rate $6^50 ATTN: Ron . X 1991 TOYOTA CAMRY 5sp., full power, tilt cruise, only 50,00 miles, beautiful Scot­ tsdale trade $7495.949-7600 GOOD DEPENDABLE used car, Chrysler Lebaron. Every­ thing new $4200 314-5728. Call after 6pm on wknds. 9 4 0 -9 2 2 0 y HELP WANTEDGENERAL SHORT ON CASH? R E S ID E N T IA L C HELP WANTEDGENERAL o u n s e l o r s Social Service Agency has FT/PT positions available working with adults who are developmentally a n d . mentally challenged in group homes & apartm ent settings located in Phx., Mesa & Tempe. $6.(X)-S6.50/hr. DOE. v Pd. training. Call 431-9511. Ico n O ffic e S o lu tio n s , Telefund N o w H irin g 10-30 hrs/week a Digital Litigation Support C om pany, seeks to hire $5,50 - $7.45/hr DOCUMENT CODERS Open for Summer Please call fot interview Must type 45 WPM. Relaxed work environment. Flexible hours $8 *$12+ per hour average. 965-6754 Scottsdale Airpark location Call Viki @ 9 2 2 -9 4 4 2 ext. 2 6 or Fax resume to 9 2 2 -4 6 6 9 BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS O F SCO TTSDALE The City of Scottsdale and the Scottsdale Boys and Girls Club will interview for p / t summer employment for two highly motivated individuals with an interest in community-based therapeutic recreation, recreation management, education, early childhood development, fine arts or social work. Position entails leadership of a Scottsdale-area summer program for children ages 6-12. Behavior Management skills and experi­ ence working w ith disabilities is desirable. Please contact Andrew Moss or Jason Lapointe at 994-2331 for more informa­ tion, Resumes must be submitted by the 17th OF APRIL to Vista del Camino, 7700 E. Roosevelt, Scottsdale, AZ 85257, attft: Recruitment. Qualified applicants will be invited to a selection panel interview on April 23. Applicants must be able to work May 22-July 25. Pay is $7,50/hr at 35 hrs/wk. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Instructors Needed F /T , P /T, tem p, substitute workers needed a t agency for adults w/developm ental disabilities. Call 994-5704 or apply 7507 E. Osborn Road, Scottsdale. EOE New Donors Earn \ $80 For Your First y Three; Donations / 8 TRAVEL ADC HAS free cars avail, for most areas. Gas allowance. Auto Driveway Co. 952-0339. EUROPE $269 ; Within USA $79-$ 129, Caribbean $249 r /t - Mexico $209. r/t Cheap fares worldwide!!.!!!! http://www.airhitch.org 1-888AiRHITCH HELP WANTEDGENERAL $$7 HOUR. Beat the heat. Great company, great hrs,, no • exp necess. to work in our a/c Tempe telephone renewal dept: If 3-8pm M-F works; for you & if you have the determination to succeed then cal us at Orca Intemtn'l 438-8095. • Free Supervised Child Cate • Generous Bonuses • $650 Cash Drawing in PHONE SALESPEOPLE NEEDED!!! Telem arketers needed for large banking center in Tem pe. W ill be m aking ou tb ou n d calls to existing custom er base. Previous exp. is helpful b u t n o t required. Pay is S7.31+DOE, plus incentives. ASK A B O U T O U R REFERRAL BONUSES!! April 1334 É. Broadway, Suite 102 Témpe 894-2250 'C 6 N T E O N When school’s out, w ill you need a job? Don’t sell yourself short with fa st food, check out TERMINIX for rewarding SPRING & SUMMER JOBS We’re one of the country’s fastest growing Fortune 500 Service companies. We’re looking for enthusiastic individuals with intelligence and dependable work habits; For this and other opportunities call Gregg Brown @443-0541. EO E M /F TERM INIX. Success Breeds Success As We Grow, So Do You! Interested in getting in on a fast-track for promotion, advancem ent and success? Stuck in a dead­ end job that’s taking you now here fast? Then FACS, the Phoenix area's hottest new employer, wants to talk to you! The FACS Group, Inc. provides financial, credit and administrative services for Federated Departm ent Stores, Inc. including Macy's, as well as other companies. Business is excellent so we're looking for dependable, motivated, service-oriented people to join our dynamic team. In our fast-paced environment, advancement opportunities abound - in as little as 120 days, you can move up to a position of greater responsibility and reward. C U S T O M E R S E R V IC E • C O L L E C T IO N S • A U T H O R IZ A T IO N S C E N T R A L S T O R E O P E R A T O R S • E X P R E S S C R E D IT die dynamic team at our offices in Tempe and enjoy: • $7.50/hour to start for m ost positions » Com plete b enefits for full-tim e » Variety o f full-tim e and part-time shifts • Generous discounts on m ost • Fully paid training on phone and CRT Macy's purchases online applications • Service & performance awards • Recreation and social activities A ll o f this plus with pur casual dress code you can even wear shorts to work! A typing test is required for all positions. Morl-Fri. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. at 1345 S. 52nd Street (northeast com er of 52nd Street and West 14th Street between Broadway Road and University Drive). For more information call: ^ O Q Q 'y Q /i 2 (toll free, 24 hours) 1 - 0 0 0 " Z 0 i " / ï BOB'S BICYCLE Bam 25% off tune up, repairs on all makes, bike rentals. Home of GT mtn bikes ip Tempe, Cornerstone Mall. 894-6852. ASU STUDENTS wanted now. $7-$l i/h r. If you can say "free," call me. Also have cleri­ cal position. Start now. 7842270. Ask for Bill. Plasma Makes a Lot o f Cents! HELP WANTEDGENERAL BICYCLES FACS FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT SERVICES Equal opportunity for all■ SCOTTSDALE CAMELBACK VOLT SERVICES GROUP Tem pe Resort & Spa 730-1808 has the following employment opportunities: r Front Desk Clerk 2nd Shift 3pm - 1 1 :30p m Please apply in person. Interviewing and application hours are from 10 -4, M -F Scottsdale Camelback Resort & Spa is an equal opportunity employer. P A R T T IM E \ f/ Data Entry/Customer Service for small fast-paced company. We need a conscientious individual with a professional work ethic and good commur nications skills to assist in pro­ viding quality service to our customers. Responsibilities include: sales order, data entry/ answering phones and responding to customer requests for information. Hourly rate $6.50 ATTN: Ron V 9 4 0 -9 9 9 0 J 30 DATA ENTRY CLERKS!!!! N eeded for large bankcard center in Tem p e beginning in early April!! Long term positions with great opportunities!!! Must have 10.000K S H . b a y shifts and possibly 2nd and 3 r d shifts avait. P ay is $ 7 .5 0 -$ 8 .0 0 , D O E . \V O L T / A S K A B O U T O U R R E FE R R A L BONU SES!!!! P LE A SE GALL MONDAY!!!!. V olt Services G roup 730-1808 Tem pe S t a t e P ress Tuesday, A p ril 8, 1997 Page 18 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL BOYS GROUP home staff need­ ed @ Tempe Joe. Eve & wknd. Clean MVR & fingerprinting req. Training prov for upward mobilityv Call 864-11$9. HAVE FUN this summer & get paid for it! The Ahwatukee Foothills YMCA is looking for energetic, self-motivating peo­ ple to be Summer Camp Lead­ ers. Teen camp leaders, & swim lesson instructors. Starting pay is $5.25-$6.69 for -15-35 hrs./wk. The YMCA is also looking for soccer referees for April & May. Apply now at the Ahwatukee FoOthills YMCA. 3233 E. Chandler Blvd„ Ste. 6B, Phx, AZ 85044 « CNA NEEDED for 10-bed adult care home in Ahwatukee - all shifts avail, 893-1370 \ COUNSELOR POSITIONS: po­ sition-openings in all team & individual sports + waterfront + art + drama ^ RN’s + coaching. Com petitive salary. Located Berkshire Mts of Massachpsetts - 2 1/2 hrs from NYC/Boston. Call Gtey lock j -800-8425214. Camp Romaca for girls 1-888-2-ROMACA: CUSTOMER SERVICE - $6.50$8/hr. 25 positions;' pt/ft. Several companies located in the Tempe area are hiring cus­ tomer service representatives. Must have customer service ' exjp; type 20 wpm & have great communication skills. Great benefits! Call.Pridestaff at 777Ò707 to learn more about these, great opportunities. For additional job openings, find iis at www.neediVOrk.com FILM PRODUCTION, talent management, & internships avail. Call Creative Artists Mgt. 800-4Ó1-0S45 ; FÓLIAGE/CÀCTI TECH. In­ terior .plant co. needs h ard , worker with clean MVR S co t­ tsdale full/pàrt time 990-8376 GYMNASTICS CQÀCH want­ ed. Must enjoy working w/kids M-F, after 3:15 pm. + ; wknds. G reat. pay,. flex- hrs» immed. & summer positions reqd. .941 -3496- IMAX THEATRE in Scottsdale is currently re­ cruiting staff. All avails needed, flexible scheduling. 15-35 hrs/yvk. Apply in person at 4343 N. Scottsdale Rd. or call 949-3100 x 204 Just minutes firom campus! Come Join Our Team! LAW LIBRARY We are seeking hard-working, enthusiastic students to shelve 6 work behind the front desk. Hrs Currently avail are T 4-7, Sat 12:30-5 and 5-10- Sun 103. Job #4540H at Student Em­ ployment 965-7114 for more info. MODELS/ACTORS IntT scouts want you for music vid­ eos and local print work. ^;9#1'--' 6922. J , . PART-TIME FILE clerk - small company 6 miles from ASU is seeking help, heavy filing and other admin, tasks. Flex,, hours, great working atrhos. $7 ^50/hr. Cal1Sandi 276-1733, P/T OPERATOR for Tempe based answering service. 7am-. 2pm or 2-9pm, some wkend work.' $6/hr. to start 303-2222 Ld cooks & line sups needed. Apply within. 946-0696» Scottsdale Rd. & Oak. SCOTTS. VINE PARADISE BAKERY and Cafe Sky Harbor Airport terminal 4 now hiring. Since our grand opening last October, Paradise has continued to soar. We at­ tribute a majority of our success to the fun, professional people we have been able to attract to our team. If you choose to be a part of our team you will re­ ceive: flex, schedule, great pay - $6-8/hr, free parking* free meals, & a positive work envi­ ronment. You have many shifts to choose from f/t & p/t: days / eves / wknds / grave­ yard. Call 681 -0969 and ask someone how they like their job, then ask' for a manager to set up an interview, EOE SMALL NON-PROFIT compa­ ny seeks Macintosh network administrator for part-time retainer_work $ 15-20/hr. DOE For mote info: 655-1948 OUTDOOR ADVENTURE com­ pany now hiring: Mac fluent of­ fice assistant, adventure sales staff, mechanic & bookkeeper. $5.50-8+/hr to start. Flex hrs Must have own transportation. Gilbert & Mckellips location. Fax resume to 962-0597 or call Ed 962-6620. SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp!i$8 guar, to start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Call Jon for intv. between 3-5,921-8282 >E m p loym en t Opportunities ' Benefits • M e d ica l . ,; ; Mnwaoîrs^™-« C o m e lb û c h ln n and o i t Food & Beverage ★ Golf •k Rooms & Related ★ Spa ★ Plus Other Opportunities H c? Excellent Benefits Package Available 5Ö. o 3 or c ; EOE/Minori^/F/V/D Call our job hotline for current positions • 596-7034 A AZÆ 862 - aBaM iP K 5504-:y ; /- y . ■; Y ■• SWIM INSTRUCTORS Exp., reliable, instructors need for fast growing N. Scottsdale swim; school. Must be good w/young child.' Call 661-0366. TICKET AGENT: part-time af­ ternoons & weekends. Tempe Greyhound 967-4030 TRADER JOE’S p/t clerks & stockpeople want­ ed. Flex hris. & good pay. Must be enthusiastic & energetic. Scottsdale 948-9886 . VALET PARKERS needed. Good attitude. Must ah ve' reli­ able car, be clean cut,, polite. 10 hr p/t. 548-0599 WE WANT YOU Don't call another ad until you hear what we have to offer! Re­ sort Reservations Dept, has 20 pos. avail. 9am -Iput.or 5pm9pm. $9-$12/hr avg, no sell­ ing!! Start immed. Call Beth 491-4921. Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 RESTAURANTS/ BARS VINEONCAMPUS Doorperson, barbaek needed. Apply within. Vine on campus 894-2662. Your ad should be here! Call 965-6735 JOEk OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA EMPLOYMENT I Earn to $3(»h tA^JOO+ymo in fisheries, parks, resorts. Airfare Food/Lodging! Call (600) 968-5197, n t A105 RESTAURANTS/ BARS WOODSHED II i * K w T to M 1 S S S M Neighborhood Bar ! *Òvtòr100 Menu items | *Upscale Atmtisptiem ' ,. * *4 . Cottege &PJ?Vgames . j *1/3Ycsjr Order ¡ 966-5543 1Room D iscounts • Food/Bevcrage D iscounts ACCOUNTING CLERK Part-time (24 hrsTwk) H a rrio tt, SE Comer of Univeristy & Rural Eamlo \ iQJWMmo. phis tree world baici j (Etmipv C.arH»xn,etr)Gettlit U worer. RingMWtWS-äW.rxl j flOS M aütiSnj ■ l » r >mea. RESTAURANTS/ BARS HOTELS • RESORTS » SUITES U-Haul International, located in central Phoenix, has a part-tim e opening for a person with general clerical skills to assist our Tax departm ent. You will answer departm ent phones, file, work on a PC using Windows applications, and process tax returns. You must have; good Communication skills and work w ell under pressure. Flexible hours available. Drug testing may be required. Fax resumes to 351-8989 or apply to: i TO: PART-TIME SERVICE Reps. United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for morning, evening & wkend shifts. $6.87/hr plus shift dif­ ferential for evening hours. Good customer service skills arid pleasant phone voice pre­ ferred. Call 431-9500. Tempe location. Employee drug test­ ing required. EOE/M/F/D/V. avialablc now and in the near future: 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 08C Rasklen&tlSeFvioes 2405 E. Southern Ay». #9 SWIM INSTRUCTORS at client homes valley-wide. WSI + strong exp. $12-14/hr 4- bo­ nuses* flex sched, Christ! 569- -RESOfiT AfiD GOLF CLUB Marriott proudly supports a Drug Free Work Environment. Incentives: Tu itio n R eim bursem ent, P aid Tim e O ff, A dvancem ent P o ten tial, 6 M onth R aises, P aid T rain in g , Full B en efits P ackage HELP WANTEDGENERAL Look for these and many other positions to be Classifieds E arn $ 6 .5 0 - $ 8 .0 0 per H our W orking W ith A dolescents HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL M ountain Shadow s OFFICE/DRIVER POSITION: clean MVR, pt, good hrs. 1pm7 pm; no wkeds, computer work. 24th St./Univ. mature, re­ sponsible 244-1114 D B C needs people to w ork w ith children, adoles­ cents, and young adults w ho a re D evelopm entally, E m otionally, and B eh aviorally challeng ed. ■t» O' /r^ -~ % S Q p Ì T ;'Q O Ì :F . CLUÖ'fc-SPA. Learn the mortgage business. Earn $ now and prepare for a six figure income: upon grad. Call Matt 990-1010 ext. 235. Gain Valuable Experience : OUTSIDE JOBS - Now hiring! National Parks; Beach Resorts Ranches, Rafting Co.’s. Na­ tionwide openings. Benefits! Bonuses! Call (919) 918-7767, ■ext■K105 "■ Y ; MORTGAGE BNKR GYMNASTICS TEACHER en­ thusiastic, fun; coach for. 5-12 yr olds. Exp. pref. $7.50-; $9:00/per hr, 955-7805. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL has openings for: • Front Desk Clerks •AMHost/ Hostess •AMServer I WOODSHED 11 !• CASH Pool Tourney - Sat. Nile 9:00- Cheap beer & Pool Leagues Tonight Live LEFT OF CENTER S1 Domestic Bottles&Drafts >Pool & Darts I» Homo of the $1 25 Shot >Satellite TV (NBA) 8 (MLB) ¡•Greeks Welcome j !• Ladies NiteThuis $2 Teas j " >1/2 Your Wing Order FREE i Sufi. & Mon. $2 Everything Else at the Bar g a ll fon Info REVERSE HAPPY HOUR Balboa Cafe 404 S MrflAvB. s. m Ê É U Ë Ê Ê m jljy U -H aul In tern atio n al 2727 N. Central Ave. Phoenix, AZ 85004 ISON YOU v> :«r EOE A DRUG-FREE ENVIRONMENT! '' A H O ST o f Job O pportunities! TAKE CENTER STAGE EARN S 16.00/HOUR 0RM 0RE MCl's average telemarketers earn $9/tiour - $13/hour. Join MCI at $7.50/hour plus great incentives. Stop by any time M ondaytliH #3|feK £y between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm. Meet our managers and employees to learn about our great benefits: •Tuition Reimbursement;, •40i(k) and stock p u rc tw tg te t' . 1 ¡fig . »Medical, Dental, Vision, Ufe •Free long distance credit S • ;,,v •Average earnings are >%»» Host Marriott Services, Corp. is the nation’s leading operator of Food, Beverage and Retail concessions servicing the traveling public at over 170 airports, travel plazas and tourist attractions worldwide. C urrently a t Phoenix Sky H arbor A irp ort we have positions for: Food & Beverage Assistant Manager • Food A Beverage Store Manager • Food Servers/Cashier • Sales Associate ■ Maintenance Technicians • UtMIty OUTBOUNDSALES REPRESBftJWi • Various fulltime and p a rt-b m g fS iifip s ill • We have 2 new shifts: • 6:00 am -12 noon M oAgaM lw • 7:00 am 5:45 pm F tid ^ B M a fty Host offers excellent benefits including: « Medicat/dental/life • 401(k) • Tuition reimbursement, • Free meals • Psid parking or partial bus pass reimbursement • S7.50/H0UR PLUS CONTESTS W g LUCRATIVE INCENTIVES ' Take your place with MO, Come to1801 6,,; Cameiback Road, Suite 201, Colonnade M lK Phoenix, AZ or call our Job Hotline a t (602) -i 2486812 MCI Is proud to be an equal oppbh tbnity employer, M/F/D/V. E Apply in person at: Host Marriott. Sky Harbor Airport, Terminal 3, west end level 3, Monday - Friday, 8am • 4pm. Apply by phone at 1-800-555-5718 ext. 4003. jT MCI H ÍH o st M m k io t t Sekh ces D rug-Free W orkplace M /F/V/D An E qual O pportunity Em ployer. When Does Part-Time ◄ ► Hours = Full-TimePay? ◄ ◄ ► ► ► ► ► ► ► > ► When you work for tjje nation's largest telepafklting f i m f f s B H i i HE DIALAMERICA M A R K E T IN G #^ welcomes students. If you have morning, afternoon, or e v è n to classes, wè cÉ% ^fate a schedule aroypd your education. W eekly Checks i G uaranteed Salary N o Colpi Calls Paid Training Flexible Schedules ( Avg $ 9 to $15 /h r ◄ ◄ ◄ ◄ ◄ CALL TODAY 345-9509 ◄ Located at K/lill & ‘Baseline in Tempe ◄ RESTAURANTS/ BARS HELP WANTEDSALES PAY ATTENTION My rep made 7k comm/bonuses his first mo. Who’s next? Career minded and part-tim ers;'-952* •7331V!;;' ' "\v v. ■ & Lemon Terrace $ 7 Page 19 Tuesday, April 8,1997 S tate P ress 9 S £ f tt r a L a r c e 1 it e m He DcLùicr! 3 * 0 -9 U a PT/FT PROFESSIONAL sales consultants to help us grow in '97 in the telecommunications service industry; Commission + salary . Fax resume to 731-9656 WINNERS ONLY Make $100 a day guar; Start to­ day, Call Paul (800) 396-2836. Only $44.94 Call 965-6881 TieJlmCi*/ for more info eanno*} pm a Q PERSONALS ;■■■> K Ueamooi * SERVICES Thorbecke's Gym ADOPTION? PREGNANT? Think about It! Choosing the right family to adopt your baby involves more than reading ads and calling 800 numbers. I'm an adoption consultant w ho can help. With us, you read about the couple and decide if they are the right family for you and your baby before you speak to 1 them. Open or closed adoptions. You CHOOSE! 1-800-675-3407 966-6621 ±$2 per workout plus $10 membership or yearly ; membership $200 vpvN LO W A LO W C O S T HEALTH INSURANCE • Lowest Cost Plans per semester or m onth • Most pre-existing conditons OK • International Health Rons • Dependent . .. Health Plans Call now for your FREE Enrollment Kit! ¡ Find th e TO D A Y ] section on page 2, o r on the In tern et at i http://news.vpsa. asu.edu/ SERVING ARIZONA SINCE 1.983 Western Health Services EXECUTIVE ANSWERING Service (A Tempe Co.) has openings for f/t 3-9:30 pm Fri & Sat J 1prh-7am. Full benefits.. P/T -M,W,F 7-10am & Sun 128pm. P/t T,Th 7 -lpm and Sat 12-8pm. 45+ wpm, ten key by touch, comp. exp. Call 2644000. ALASKA WAIT STAFF: immediate open­ ings fof lunch & dinner shifts. $3/hr. + tips. Also need host/eSs. Sushi Bar Sakana 5061 E. Elliot 598-0506 Workers needed for Commercial fishing June - Aug. 917-5727. ■ ALASKA EMPLOYMENT Earn to $3,000-$6,000+/mo. in fisheries, parks, resorts. Airfare! Food/lodging! Call (919) 9187767, ext. A105. HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE CHILDCARE NEEDED in my home. M/T/W 6:30am-8:30am & M-F 3pm-6pm. $6/hr. Must be reliable/have exp. & car. Full time in summer. Call Deb 9662263, Leave message, HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CORK’NCLEAVER Accepting apps. for lunch host(e§s) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern W/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 9524)585. CRUISE LINES hiring - earn to $2,000+/mp, plus free, world travel (Europe, Caribbean, etc.). Room/ board. Ring (919) 9187767. ext. Cl05. CHILD CARE provider needed: Exp'd, flex, hours, p/t. TuesThu'r. from boon to 7pm. Re­ ferrals req'd. Must have can Central Tempe area. Call 3509545. ' MIKE PULOS Spaghetti Com­ pany at 4th and Mill needs hosts and bussers. All shifts available: Apply in person bet­ ween 2-4pm Mon-Thurs. FREE LOST/FOUND FUNDRAISING FAST FUNDRAISER - Raise $500 in 5 .days - Greeks, Clubs, motivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obliga­ tion. (800)862-1982 E x t 33. LIKE CHILDREN? Person to work 1 on 1 w/autistic child in : behavior mod prog. No exp nec. Patient, caring, reliable & enjoy, work w/ children. Stud­ ies "in spec, ed, speech or psych . helpful. Good $$.497-9515. RED ROBIN MAKE UP to $2,000 in one week! M otivated student or­ ganisations (fraternities, sorori­ ties, etc.) heeded for marketing project. Call Dana @ 1-800357-9009. SUMMER CHILD care, FT, MF, 7am-5pm, my home, 5-yf" old. NS, ref req, 961-3639 . SERVICES “ LOST: MEN'S gold bracelet. Reward. Lost near speech and hearing bldng. Call 982-4244 DAY CAMP counselor. Great exp for Rec/Ed majors. 2040hrs/wk. $5.25-$6 DOE*. Six locations in Mesa. Apply in person @ 207 N. Mesa DrV. Attn: ,Jen. *Prev. exp. preferred NOW HIRING cooks & wai­ tresses for exciting new Famous Sam's Restaurant & Sports Bar in Scottsdale. Apply in person at 7134 E. Thomas Rd; M 10am-4pm, T 10am-2pm .. Tempe has immediate openings for experienced waitstaff & cooks. Have fun & make good money. Apply today 1375 W. Elliot: JOB OPPORTUNITIES HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDCLERICAL This should be your ad Call 965-6735 SERVICES SERVICES TH E CH O IC E IS YO U R S PERSONALS TUTORS CAMPUS! VIDEO contest! Stud­ ent video clips wanted. Excit­ ing prizes for funniest clips. Share your funniest moments! Send 3 minute VHS clips to Campus Video Contest, Net­ work Event Theater, 149 5th Avenue, 11th floor, NY,NY P/T COMP, tutor for local busi-" ness. Need to know Windows, WP 5.1, Excel, & gen. comp, knowledge. 'P atrick at 8296611. ■ . 10010. HEALTH & FITNESS" THE BEST network market, opp. Easy sales, high profit, high consumer, satis. Makes the world a better place. 244-1400. TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING INTERNET-RELATED SERVICES NEED HELP getting better grades in chemiistry & math? Call Tutor John 483^6043 $$ FOR YOUR used books. Visit -w w W .usedbook.com Sell/buy your used books SERVICES SERVICES 2334 N. S cottsdale Rd. P E R F'l HAIR SALON E C n Nails: Sculptured Fills Fiberglass Gels Nail A rt M anicures Pedicures 675-0211 9 45-4999 997-7493 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST Student gov.: http://www.asu.edu/ studentlife/ASASU TUTORS SCOTTSDALE M INTERNET UR[S $ 1.99/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed. APA/MLA, Same day. DTP. Near ASU . Brian 967-5987 FAM ILY PLANNING IN STITUTE H SECRETARIES DAY April 23rd. Name a star for your sec­ retary. Call 1-800-383-6928 SPERM & egg donors needed! Earn $2,000 in your spare time! Call our 24hr private informa- , tion line: (602) 280-9266. • Cuts • Spiral Color • Perms * H i-Lites No appointment necessary Abortion with Twilight Sleep Evening & Saturday Appt. Available B NAT’L TEACHERS Day May 6th. Honor your favorite teach­ er, name a star. 1-800-383^ 6928 y :- T • P R E G N A N C Y TESTING PHOENIX MISCELLANEOUS 2240 NORTH SCOTTSDALE ROAD • TEMPE. AZ 85281 Depo-Provera, Birth Control Pills, IUD, Morning After Pill 7806 N. 27th A ve . Reviews for MAT 119, & 210 by Luis Ast. $20 for 2 to 4 hrs. Ph. 967-3774; On the web www.miracletutoring.com HOUSE MUSIC: NYC, CHI, L.A. underground parties & ev­ ents. Info, line 602-530-8750. DT0RA • COMPLETE BIRTH C O N TR O L CARE MATH TEST CAMPUS VIDEO Contest! Student Video Clips Wanted. Exciting prizes for the funniest clips. Share your funniest mo­ ments! Send 3 minutes VHS clips to: Campus Video Con­ test, Network Event Theater, 149 5th AVe, 11 th. floor* NY,NY 10010. by Frances D rake Tuesday, April 8, 1997 set out to do. ARIES (March 21 to April SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 19) Consider joining a club or 21 ) How you say things makes organization, but refrain from a ll the difference in getting getting involved in other peo­ your ideas across. With a part­ ple's financial problems. Your ner. there’s a need to he eoopleadership qualities are to the erative. Good news comes foie. from an adviser. TAURUS (April 20 to May SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to 20) Some people you know Dec. 21) You could be intro­ just can’t keep a secret, so it duced to a potential romantic ‘would he foolhardy to confide interest who lives far front in them : Financial interests prosper, but there could be a ; you, Your timing is off. Look ; for a busy round o f career mix-up in communications. negotiations in the near future. GEMINI (May 21 to June CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to 20) A .domestic chore could be Jan. 19) Consider investing in : more difficult than you had art or an o ther collectible. anticipated You'll feel better Undercurrents affect relations if you get something off your with a close tie after dark. chest concerning your rela­ tionship. Home life is cheerful You’ll be consulting more with an adviser in the coming after dark. CANCER (June 21 to July - months.: ■ ■>■■■ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 22) A lthough dating is 18) It is a good time to ask for favored, you could have some a raise or to make some other problems getting along with a request. Although you’re on friend. Keep certain financial m atters to yourself. The the right track where making money is concerned, you're evening; promises a pleasant also inclined to be extrava­ surprise. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) gant. Ingenuity brings you gains on PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) the job. B ehind-the-scenes You derive satisfaction from developm ents are in your your job. A talk with an advis­ favor. A void extravagant er goes well. However, during spending on home or family. evening hours there could be a VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) mix-up in plans. YOU BORN TODAY have a You are intrigued by a new mental interest. A new adviser steely determination to suc­ could enter your life. Plans for ceed. You are at times idealis­ travel fall into place, and your tic, but you’re usually practi­ social life proves rewarding! cal. An academic life appeals LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) to you because of your curious Although business prospects m ind. You also could be improve, you need to compro­ effective in the corporate mise with a close tie about a world, because you are a nat­ financial concern. By day’s ural leader. ©1997 King Features Syndicate Inc. end, you accomplish what you ASU Box 871502 Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 S ta te P re s s C lassifieds M atthew s C enter, Basem ent O ffice: 965-6735 Classified Ad Order Form N am e H om e Phone Business Phone A ddress C ity, S tate Z ip TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING T H E W R IT E S T U FF Professional Word Processing& DesktopPublishing Services 9 63 -3 5 3 7 Term Papers *Thèses *Dissertations APA/MLA/Greduote Collegeformats Resumes *Graphics P lease print one letter p er box, lea v e a blan k box betw een w ords. You could win F 2 CONCERT TICKETS P ick u p th e n e w c o p y of fPE A L S Please be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the S tate Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility o f the S tate Press shall not exceed the cost o f the ad and cre d it may be given fo r the firs t insertion o n ly ; M inor spelling errors do hot q u a lify fo r m ake­ goods No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a cre d it w ill be held on account fo r future advertising. R A T E S Private Party j -4 days, $1.62 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.57 per line, per day ICM days, $1,42 per line, per day Commercial 1 day, $2.47 per line 2-4 days, $1.89 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.67 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.52 per line, per day for details. 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for thè cost of 2 lines. http://news. vpsa.asu.edu/ Made for ASU students, by ASU students to.save you money all over town! Page 20 S tate P ress Tuesday, April 8, 1997 Invitation to apply for S ta t e P E d it o r S tate P ress O n l in e http:news.vpsa.asu.edu r e s s s h ip The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the State P ress editorship for the Fall Semester 1997. Y O f T C A N S U B M IT . . . Applicants for the position of editor: must be a full-time student at ASU in good standing (not on academic or disciplinary probation); : must have a cumulative grade index of 2.50 or better; must have served two semesters on the staff of the State P ress; must have completed a minimum of 15 hours of journalism : courses including news writing, reporting, editing and journalism law; must not graduate prior to the completion of the term of appointment. Applicants must also: submit at least two letters of recommendation from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses; submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the State P ress or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the functions and responsibilities of previous positions held on the staff of the State P ress or other newspapers. Letters T#Y§« é Editor I Story/T opic I deas To T he N ewsdesk Classified ads x ALL Ä YOU* (o n fro m THt C o m m o n s ) Applicants must pick up application forms at the State P ress office, Matthews Center north basement. The completed forms must be typewritten. The deadline for receipt of applications will be noon, Wednesday, April 9,1997. D irector, Student Publications M atthew s Center, Room 133 School is tough enough!! L iv in g s \ s\o ia eriAr Close y ^p^clous * $ I e! S' )¿A \>& C oi*\t*\ov\s VKisll e # Fiavv » FvievvaA.ly - $T7S~ # y o u r O w v\ R ooiav Serving Lunch andD inner 7 Days a Week jHs Bringing Fine Food and Friends Together Since 1963 Mama Rosa's Traditional Sonoran Mexican Food Recipes Are Simply the Best! H