W In S ports o r l d / N a t io n A S U GYMNASTS BRING HOME SECOND AT N C A A C h a m p io n s h ip s T he A ir Force believes it f o u n d THE MISSING A - 1 0 WARPLANE PAGE 3 s id e Class lieds II Crossword | S IhiroH.iws H Opinion . ■ "Police Report.............| Pa g e 1 3 Spotli>i»j>...........»..........».•■•13 ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ©Copyright. State Press, 1997 .Tempe, Arizona Monday, April 21,1997 An Independent Morning Daily Voi. 81 No. 128 Ortiz, Ness w in ASASU runoff election r - je By L id ia E. K elly State P ress After seven yeafs of campaigns, elections and even more elections, Andy Ortiz will take over the role of Associated Students of ASU president. Ortiz received 1,470 votes while his opponent, Brent Maddin, finished with 930 votes, according to runoff results released late Friday afternoon. Autumn Ness won the race for the activities vice presi­ dent spot with 1,234 votes, leaving competitor Erik Noland behind with 899 votes. “Oh, what a good day it is,” Ortiz said, puffing on his victory cigar. “1 am very, very excited,” Outgoing ASASU President Marc Baumgartner said he thinks Ortiz can provide the student government with the integrity and stability it needs. “Andy has a lot of understanding for ASASU on many levels,” Baumgartner said. Ortiz currently holds the graduate student affairs vice president position and has been involved with the student government for seven years. He said the high number of votes he received is due to his focus on groups that historically "did not vote. “My campaign manager introduced me to communities that were never approached before,” Ortiz said. Ahmad El-Dardiry, ASU student organizations, said he focused on networking between organizations during the campaign. “We approached all of the organizations and we tried to get every single person involved,” El-Dardiry said. “Many of them responded in a high voting turnout.” C haran A nand, president o f the India Students : Turn to Runoff, pace 2, P a t S h an n ah a n /S tate P ress Andy Ortiz raises his arms in celebration moments after he was named Associated Students o f ASU president Friday afternoon on Hayden Lawn. Ortiz beat his opponent, Brent Maddin, by more than 500 votes. Cardinals pluck All in the family: dad, daughter Plummer in 2nd duo to share graduation honor round o f draft B y C a d o n n a P ey ton S tate P ress Paul Brown, a 66-year-old fine arts m ajor, w ill graduate with M s daughter Rebakha who w ill receive a degree in French In May. Senior Rebekha Brown always knew her father would be at her graduation, but she never imagined he would be graduating with her. Rebekha Brown, 23, and her father, 66-year-old Paul Brown, will share a memorable experience on May 16 when they both become ASU graduates. Rebekha, a French major, said it was unusual having her father on campus with her, but she liked it. “The m ajority o f our conversations are about school,” she said. “It is kind of cool being able to talk to him about papers and professors and stuff. But it’s strange telling my friends I can’t go out tonight because I have to study with my father.” Brown thought his formal education was finished when he graduated from UCLA in 1959 with a zoology degree. Little did he know, years later he would end up a Sun Devil In the fall of 1993, Rebekha invited her father to ASU to hear an archaeologist speak about art history. He thought the speech was so interesting it led him to take a course. “That sucked me in so I took another and another,” he said. Brown said he already had 124 credit hours when he enrolled here, and he had taken most of his general studies classes back in the 19S0s. “I only needed 45 credits for the major,” said the retired commercial art entrepreneur. So he decided to go for the degree. T urn to G raduates, page 2. B y J o s h D e F a m io S ta te P ress Jake Plummer, renowned for his mobility in college, will do the least amount of moving of any player selected in the 1997 NFL Draft. By selecting the Hometown hero with the 42nd overall pick, the Arizona Cardinals relieved the quarterback of at least one pressure every rookie faces. “I’m happy I don’t have to completely relocate and get a U-H aul and ship everything to some o th er city ,” Plum m er said “I live ju st down the street here and I’ll SEE RELATED be looking for somewhere to STORY, PAGE 13. stay in Arizona for awhile.” Steve Plummer feels his son’s legend can grow even more now that Jake is a Cardinal. “Jake’s going to stay here and keep the story going,” the elder'Plummer said. " Plummer may not get the chance to write another chapter for a few years. Cardinals head coach Vince Tobin main­ tains Kent Graham is his starting quarterback for next season — a decision that suits “The Snake” just fine. “As a young quarterback coming into the NFL, it’s something that you don’t want to rush into and not be pre­ pared when you get your opportunity,” he said. “So I’m willing to sit and learn and to make sure that when the time comes that I am prepared.” Tobin admits Plummer will initially help the team’s popularity, but insists it was not the reason for the choice. “ I would hate to draft somebody for a short term effect,” Tobinsaid.. “ The long term effect is helping us to win football games so we can consistently bring the fans out no matter who’s playing.” Run off. H o d AY , C ontinued from page 1. ■■Campus dubs J |d o r^aB iizÉ ^^ ftîay submit written entries to the State Press in the base* ment of toe Matthews Center. Requests will not be token over toe phone or Deadline for requests is noon toe day before publication and entries wiH not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. I Entries must contain to o M l ftisriiO o f é B O fe to f organization, a descrean of the event, date, time fp tf toe full address of toe torationJw j requests are subject to ecfiting for content, space and clari­ ty. incomplete or illegible entries wiH be cBscarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of evants printed as a service to Ih e ASlFcotpMuni- ty. Requests « to a o o o p to ii^ served basis and are p rM ^ séjsp ac e permits; • -Aslan Business Leaders — Academic lun* cheon at 11.30 a.m. to toe MU Alumni room 202. • S t a t e P ress Monday, Appi 2 1,1997 P a g;e 2 ü M O jÄ fo u s e /C a m p u s Com m unities —* Association, said Ortiz was the first candidate ever to approach his organization. “He came to us, showed us his program and we said ‘yes’,” Anand said. “After all, we represent the largest international group of students.” There are 463 Indian students presently enrolled at ASU. “They were crucial,” Ortiz said. Maddin said despite his loss, he feels good. “When I go home tonight and rest my head on the pil­ low, I will know I ran the best campaign I possibly could,” he said. He also said Ortiz has his full support. Ortiz said his main focus as president will be on improv­ ing campus safety by developing a model of “communitybased policing,” and starting a program that would treat stu­ dents as customers of AS ASU. Ortiz said his actions will be based on communication with the students. “I want to tell the students today that they will have a voice in the process of implementing my programs,” he said. Rebekha said she never expected her fath er’s interest in art history would lead to this. “I never really thought he was heading toward graduation,” she said. “I thought he was just taking classes to broaden his horizon.” Brow n’s choice to continue his educatiop was a surprise not only to his daughter, but to himself. “I never really had the desire,” he said. General meeting at 5:30 p.rn. in the McCItotodk Study Lounge , ,'r Counselor Training Center Free counsel ing available for full-time students and staff at Payne HaH, room 402. For more information or an appointment call 965-5067. \ tr W ¡ v, »lI • Vr I1 new music show a t t r a i■ fe a tu r in g w m Church, Audrey Activities VP Ness, Autumn Graduate Student Affairs VP Knowles, Anthony Brown, a Korean War veteran, said N othing,” he said, speaking of his he has enjoyed being at ASU with his zoology degree. “I just came here for daughter. They went to lunch twice a the fun of it.” But he said he has not ruled out week, and even had a class in comput­ graduate school, er literacy together. They both strug­ Paul and Rebekha Brown agreed that gled, and both received a C. After graduation, Rebekha hopes to the experience has made them closer, “She’s my baby, the last of four. go on to graduate school, but Brown said he doesn’t know what he will do But she is alw ays nagging me to .„study, aij4 ..d p my h o m ew o rk ,” with his degree. “What did I do with the other one? Brown quipped. T ake notes •... T here w ill be a q u iz . > A Carr, Joshua Campus Affairs VP Continued from page T, • G olden Key N a tio n a l H onor S o ciety — 1 k Emcutin VP Graduates Group discussion on Afrocentridty at 6 p.m. in Ocotilio C-Wing t£ H m d ||||| j-, f • Christian Science Organization — Meeting at 4:30 p.m. in the Danforth Chapel. • Career Services — “Marketing your Liberal Arts Degree VltorÉtoop* at 3 p.m. ttÿ-Mü 222. “Completing toe Puzzle Workshop” at 4 p.m. to the Career Development Canter. • Kundaftot Yoga Club *— Meets a t 7 p jn . in the M U Gold robrtt ■* '■*■* * • M ECtiA — Cultural Affairs meeting at 7 p.m. in the M U h £C ftA room 210. / Prasidant Ortiz, Andy m w Lw !® Two w orld ¡Premieres See them o n y o u r cam pus firs t' FREE A d m iss io n E xciting Giveaways A pril 23 8 :0 0 pm @ U nion C inem a P re sen te d via satellite by N e tw o rk E v e n t T h e a te r 9 in asso ciatio n w ith th e MUAB Film C om m ittee Seating is limitedand not guaranteed Please ani*eeatiy toenure a seat NETWORK EVENT THEATER* _________ W O R LD / N S t a t e P ress ___________________________________________________ a t io n __________ Page 3 Monday, April 2 1,19 9 7 Buildings blaze in inundated North Dakota By Bob M oen A s s o c ia t e d P ress GRAND FORKS, N.D. — Slowed by streets submerged in icy, sewage-fouled floodwater from the rising Red River, firefighters on Sunday wrestled a blaze under control after it ravaged parts of three downtown business blocks. The flames were under control by midday Sunday after helicopters dumped 2.000-gallon buckets of muddy water on the fire. But firefighters were checking for flare-ups. “Six buildings are a total loss,” Deputy Fire Chief Peter O'Neill said. At least three others were damaged, he said. Police said the Red River, bloated by the melting of the winter's record snow accumulation, had flowed into more than 70 percent of the 10 1/2-square-mile city by Sunday. Mayor Pat Owens ordered a 24-hour curfew in the most seriously flooded areas. Most of the 50,000 residents were believed to have left their homes, with about 75 percent of the city under a mandatory evacuation order. She said her own house was among the many that were flooded. “As we speak, my house is going under,” she said. “It may not be totaled. But now I’m in the same bucket with the rest of you. “If we come through this and we can say we have lost no citizens, no people, we can say we won the battle,” she said. Even trucks had trouble navigating the water-filled streets. “We knew we were deep when our pants started getting wet,” Edgar Richard said of the trip he and three friends made by truck Sunday morning to a school being used as a collection point for flood evacuees. “We had to open the door to let water out.” The city’s water treatment plant was flooded Thursday and the last reserves of drinkable water were used up dur­ ing the night. Officials hoped to distribute water to people who stayed in their homes. The city also had problems with electric, gas and telephone service, and sewers were backing up. The Red River stood at 53.7 feet at 7 a m , and the National Weather Service said it would crest Monday at 54 feet and stay at that level for about a week. Flood stage is 28 feet. Inside some downtown stores, stuffed bears and other toys bobbed on water up to 5 feet deep. About a block from the fire, Coast Guardsmen checking downtown streets and alleys by boat spotted a couple awaiting rescue on an apartment building fire escape. The man wore a top hat with his Sunday suit and tie. “Do we need blankets, quilts and pillows?” asked 77-yearold Clarence Eide, carrying the linens in his arms. Eide, a retired Army soldier, was supposed to have left Friday, and had been eating doughnuts and drinking orange soda for the past two days. . “I didn’t hear nothing about it,” he said of the evacua­ tion orders. “I didn’t know we was supposed to have left.” Engineers hastily constructed a ring dike around United Hospital, the city’s only hospital, and a nearby nursing home. National Guard soldiers set up water purification equipment that also was used in the Persian Gulf War. Associated Press A 1994 file photo of a $9 m illion A ir Force A-10 Thunderbolt. Capt. Craig Button and the Thunderbolt, carrying four bomba, went missing April 2 over the Colorado Rockies. Metal objects believed to be airplane wreckage were spotted Sunday in the Colorado mountains where crews are searching for the missing warplane and its pilot, the A ir Force said. Air Force lik ely has found wreckage o f m issing plane B y R o b ert W eller A sso c ia te d P ress EAGLE, Colo. — Searchers found what is likely the wreckage of a missing bomb-laden warplane — but no sign of the pilot -— on a sheer, snow-covered cliff in the central Rocky Mountains, the Air Force said Sunday. Metal protruding from the snow was spotted by a helicopter crew at 11:20 am ., but a ground search team could not be sent in because of treacherous conditions on the steep mountain. “It is our collective judgment that what we have seen is likely to be A-10 airplane pieces,” Maj. Gen. Nels Running said, adding that he is 99.9 percent sure it was Capt. Craig Button’s A-10 Thunderbolt. An Army National Guard helicopter crew spotted the wreckage while hovering “right at the face of the face, and it took that disciplined, close up look to see what he saw,” Running said. A close-up look revealed pieces of metal with gray paint, sections that could have been from the interior of the plane and several smaller pieces of metal, he said. Yellow-green paint used as an anti-corrosion coating inside the airplane was also visible, he said. “Our next step will be to determine with certainty that the sighted wreckage is in fact our missing air­ craft,” he said. “We will need to get some pieces to make that absolutely certain.” Air National Guard Chief Warrant Officers Richard Rugg of Denver and Dale Jensen of Eagle discovered the wreckage. “The first thing we saw was just a couple pieces of paper,” Rugg said. “Then something just caught my eye.” The plane has been missing since April 2, when Button took off from a Tucson, Ariz., base on a routine training mission and veered north, heading to Colorado with four bombs aboard. The wreckage was spotted on the north side of New York Mountain, a 12,500-foot peak about 15 miles southwest of Vail. The area had been examined before, but snow in the area has melted since then, he said. There was no sign of Button. A ground search will get under way when the weath­ er and conditions make it possible, officials said. “The terrain is very steep, snow covered,” Running said. “There is no way to get there easily,” 2nd Lt. Keith Shepherd, a spokesman for DavisMonthan Air Force Base in Arizona who is at the search headquarters in Eagle, said the site was within the pri­ mary search area and was consistent with visual sight­ ings about the time the warplane disappeared. The warplane was not carrying live rounds in its guns because it was on a training exercise. The Air Force said it believed the 500-pound bombs attached to the warplane were not activated and would have remained intact if the plane crashed. Three days after Button, 32, disappeared, the search shifted to Colorado, where faint radar signals were detected in the central Rocky Mountains. Radar data and witness accounts indicate Button consciously broke away from his three-plane training formation and flew to Colorado. Air Force officials previously suggested Button could have become incapacitated and put the $9 million plane on autopilot. People reported hearing booming noises in the Vail area on the day Button disappeared. Other wit­ nesses have said they saw dark clouds that could have been smoke. Prime Minister Netanyahu escapes indictment in scandal prime minister,” Attorney General Elyakim Rubinstein said at a news conference. Rubinstein said evidence provided by JERUSALEM •— Prim e M inister Benjamin Netanyahu escaped indictment in police suggested that Netanyahu m ight an influence-peddling scandal Sunday, with have appointed Roni Bar-On as attorney prosecutors saying they lacked evidence to general to satisfy a coalition ally who is try him on fraud and breach of trust charges facing a corruption trial. Netanyahu’s actions “raised puzzling despite his “puzzling” conduct. Netanyahu, his reputation and credibility questions,” he said. “From the evidence damaged, still faces a political crisis that there is suspicion that there were other reduces the likelihood o f progress in the (than legitim ate) considerations” in the limping peace process with the Palestinians. appointment. “But we don’t think this can Opposition leaders urged him to step down be proved beyond a reasonable doubt” Rubinstein also rejected a police recom­ and call new elections, and coalition partías mendation to indict Justice Minister Tsachi were considering whether to bolt. The prosecution’s 52-page report was Hanegbi. He said prosecutors still were critical, but fell short of the political earth-, weighing charges against Arieh Deri, the quake predicted after police recommended leader of die ultra-Orthodox Shas Party sus­ pected o f trying to engineer B ar-O n’s charges last week. “The decision is to close — for lack of appointment in exchange for a plea bargain sufficient evidence — tíre case against the that would keep Deri out of jail on earlier B y D a n P erry A sso c ia te d P ress corruption charges. Rubinstein said that Netanyahu’s top political aide, Avigdor Lieberman, and a contractor who is close to Netanyahu, David Appel, would face further investigation. Netanyahu admitted Sunday he had made mistakes, but said the affair was “twisted beyond recognition” by journalists and rival politicians who cannot accept his election vic­ tory over peacemaker Shimon Peres last May. “The bottom line is this: I committed no crime, and the attorney general confirmed this,” Netanyahu said in a nationally tele­ vised address. “It’s clear to me today that we must improve the process of choosing senior officials,” he said. “But there is a big differ­ ence between a mistake and a crime.” State Attorney Edna Arbel said some on her staff thought the evidence against Netanyahu was sufficient to charge him. She said prosecutors concluded he “was aware of or turned a blind eye to the possi­ bility that a prohibited collusion existed between Deri and Bar-On.” Opposition Labor Party officials said Netanyahu would find it difficult to govern. Peres, who heads Labor, dem anded Netanyahu call new elections, saying the suspicions and police recommendations against him have destroyed his legitimacy. “The prime minister stands under heavy shadow of loss of confidence,” Peres said. Yossi Sarid, head of the liberal Meretz Party, said he would ask the Supreme Court to overturn the prosecutors’ decision and force Netanyahu’s indictment. But the most immediate threat to Netanyahu may come from the religious Shas Party — whose leaders had suggested they would bolt the coalition if they felt Deri was being made the scapegoat. O pin io n Page 4__________________ ______________________ __ ___________________ _______ M onday, April 2 1,1997 ' . ~ _____________________ STATE PRESS Environmental concern vita lto everyday life res week, a Earth Day events will be held around Next week, some event attendees will climb into their gas guzzling 4-by~4s and tool around the desert, wreaking havoc on the land and polluting foe aa: ' ,_J That Barth Day really opened eyes, didn’t it? O ne day set aside to remind people about the | decaying environm ent isn ’t going to g et the jo b d o n e . P eo p le a re to o fu ll o f ig n o ra n c e ¿eat hypocrisy for one day to make a significant differ­ ence. Also, Arizonans aren’t giventhetoalsneeifed to heip fhe earfo; nor are there politicians who care enough to lead the way. V-V / ■ ' '• Earth Day event attendees who go hom e and throw their recydables on the crab for sanitary work­ ers to collect don’t quite get the picture. T he W M I ing state o f the earth must not be enough o f a threat to keep them interested for more than a few hours. Two very obvious examples o f the decay o f o u r environment, which m an y people tffltst ^ | t ^y£5 much' thought to, ate the conditions trf the water aad the air. The popularity o f bottled water supports the fear Americans have o f the water pumped into their own t o m s . There are already bars where people can sit dow n and b a y a container o fo x y g e n for around 10 bucks so they can breath clean air. An oxygen bar used to be something out cff an atitiutopian novel, not a part of real life. W e b e lie v e th e se tw o e x a m p le s sh o u ld b e enough o f a wake u p call to get Anaericanscottcem ed about the condition o f the environm ent. Then again, when the governm ent leaders don’t seem concerned, why should the constituents b e concerned? Arizona politicians have m ade their positions perfectly clear by allowing contaminated soil to be sent to Arizona for storage. Yes, many Arizona ms»dents recycle, but that cannot counteract the effect o f DO T being dtmqied rafo theA rizona earth. The state Legislators are foe ones with the power ; to enforce laws and provide citizens with the means o f cleaning the earth. Stricter air pollution laws, » shier m foreem em o f fotecfog laws tmd rat efficient, needed to decrease pollution, j j A nother way to help stop the pollution fame in foe Valley is by spending significant tim e toward educating children, as' w ell as adults, about the effects one’s daily life has on the planetWe commend the groups that unite for Earth Day w ith the intention o f educating people, but they need more than one day. Continual Earth Day-type fairs in grade schools for kids and their parents stressing environmental conservation would be a way to inform a significant amount o f people. Also, state Legislators interested in leading Arizona in cleaning up and m aintaining the state’s natural beauty are tremendously needed. Wouldn’t it be nice to drive down the street and not see garbage and shards o f glass on tile side of the road and to look at the sky over Phoenix and find it blue rather than blown? STATE PRESS 8 TAFF ‘A genda settin g’ better w ay for A SA SU W ell, *another A ssociated Students of ASU election has come and gone. Voters turned out |n record num bers this year (3,518) to pick their favorite can­ didate. It seems the elections pro­ cess could be restructured for efficiency, to see voter turnout proportionate to the number of students on campus and to save the university money. The increase in this year’s turnout could be attributed to a variety of factors, such as more awareness of candidates and issues, an abundance of effec­ tive posters and fliers on campus and “bribing” the voting public with free pizza and soda. I don’t believe that ASASU was trying to be unethical by giving away free food and pop. It was just a harmless way to get people involved. Every year, after the general election, if a majority of votes (50 percent plus one) aren’t reached for an executive office, a runoff is needed between the two candidates receiv­ ing the most votes to determine the winner, according to the bylaws of ASASU. It’s an annoying repeat of the general election •— candidates putting up posters and passing out fliers and stickers. Voter turnout almost always decreases for the runoff (2,476 votes compared to 3,518). Of the total money allocated for ASASU elections, onethird of the budget goes toward the runoff, while two-thirds go to the general, according to Chip Ahlswede, ASASU elections coordinator. That means extra money is spent on supplies, polling security, advertising and other campaignrelated events that may have been more wisely used for the general race. I spoke with Adrian Fontes, who ran against Joshua Can* for executive vice president, about the need for runoffs. He stated that it gives the voting public a chance to choose a clear-cut winner in a hotly contested race between a multi­ ple number of candidates. It’s democracy in its truest form. For example, if you have a presidential race with five candidates and the winner claims victory with 33 percent of the total votes cast, is he or she the one the majority of vot­ ers picked? After all, in this scenario, nearly 7 out of 10 vot­ ers picked someone else for president. So a runoff is needed between the top two vote getters. Fontes brings up a valid point about the importance of a runoff. But instead of having a runoff, why don’t they raise the applications standards of running for ASASU execu­ tive offices? The number of signatures needed to run for an executive position has decreased from 1,000 to 750. Gathering signa­ tures is a pretty demanding task, whether you need 750, 1000 or 1,500. Maybe the signature amount should be increased so we don’t have 12 candidates running for ASASU president in the general election. Becoming an elected official on the ASASU student gov­ ernment should be a privilege, not a right. Admissions stan­ dards should be raised. Not anyone is allowed to become a student at ASU. Scholastic competency must be proven in order to he accepted. Getting more people involved in the voting process is a goal for ASASU elections. Having a primary before the gen­ eral election eliminates the less viable candidates and high­ lights the top two or three winners. This way, the general election will have much more importance to the voter. Another aspect of getting people involved is the media. Yes, that’s right, the State Press. Now, I know relations between the ASASU student government and the State Press haven’t been the best, but the two organizations need to work together. Hopefully, for next year’s election, the State Press will do some “agenda setting.” The media can select a topic •— let’s say tuition increases — and set the tone for the elec­ tions. The candidates can then give their opinions about the issue. The State Press will then run articles about the candi­ dates and their positions, and possible solutions to the issues. Then, the ¡students can make clear, informed deci­ sions about the candidates and vote for the best person for the job. But unfortunately, things don’t usually go that well, and voters tend not to be that informed. If the State Press and the ASASU student government could have a better working rela­ tionship during elections, everyone would come out a winner. David Ruffulo is a senior studying journalism. BRIAN ANDERSON, Editor DUSTIN KRUGEL, Managing Editor CARYL M1CALIZIO...... TIMOTHY TAIT ........... .... RAY STERN. ................ THERESA VALLES...... . ..... ........... ..News Editor CHRISTA CERRENTANO..... LORI CAIN ........................ ..... JIM POULIN.... RANDY JONES.......... ..... ED ODEVEN........... ........ TIM BAXTER... . ... ..... ........ LEYLA SALMASS1AN................. .Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS : Sara Bush, Kevin Cui well, Deanna Darr, Rowe Edgell, Lidia Kelly, Ben Leatherman, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Cadonna Peyton, Vivi Straberg. SPORTS REPORTERS: Josh DeFamio, Percy Ednalino Jr., Lori Haro, Matt Paulson. COPY EDITORS: Jodi Bafundo, Lorie Roberts. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Erik Guzowski, Pat Shannahan. COLUMNISTS: Kevin J. Berlat, Michelle Carson, Olga Puentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Gordon, Michelle Hardt, Diane C, Jacobs, George D. Rose, Sr., David Ruffulo, Adam SchifFer, Steven Stein, Karin Wadsack. CA R TO O N ISTS: 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. David Goodwin, Brandon Mudd, Nick Pezzorello, Jess Rankin, Mark Santiago, Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Jesse Sktteland. 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 dp. not refleet the opinión of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: BRIAN ANDEK&ON Editor DUSTIN KRUGEL v Managing Editor THERESA VALLES Opinion Editor CHRISTA CERRENTANO News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. 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 hone N umbers Inform ation.................9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N ew sro o m .................. 9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M agazin e......... ..... ..9 6 5 -1 6 9 5 A d vertisin g.................9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 C la ssified s....;........... 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 http;Z/news. vpsa. asu. edu _________ O pin io n _________ S t a t e P r e ss Page 5 Monday, April 2 1,1997 N ew sroom s charade paranorm al beliefs as science Junk science. It is a term that one hears over and over again. The American people, accord­ ing to many influential types, are interestingly ignorant of the fundam entals o f science. Among the “influential types” who do the most complaining are the ones who run major tele­ vision and new spaper news­ room s. How ironic that they should com plain so loudly, because they are increasingly responsible for the problem. It is bad enough that many news gatekeepers (as many texts refer tcthem ) don’t seem to allot much time to stories concerning science. It is even worse that when they do choose to run stories, they are usually of a very sensational nature and often aren’t very important. The real kicker, however, is the misreporting and slant­ ing (usually intentional) of science and issues. Editors and publishers will feign shock at the very idea that they would tolerate, let alone condone, the intentional misre­ porting of factual items. But evidence that they do is available in virtually every newspaper you pick up and on every newscast you watch- This is not a few rogues, this is an industry standard, Take a recent story in one prominent local paper, for example. A large photo dominated the page, and a long story explained how the reader could utilize one of the greatest scientific breakthroughs of all time: Pet psychics. Yes^ paragraph after paragraph fawned admiration for those with “the gift.” I am not talking about people who claim to analyze the behavior of a dog by any observational means, no matter how tenuous. Rather, I am talking about the people who claim to use “spirits” to “channel” to your animal. Not a single discouraging word was written in the story. No mention of the mere possibility, no matter how slim, that this pet psychic stuff is utter garbage. Or, to use a more neutral phrase, “unsupported by evidence.” A more recent story dealt with a new fad. Feng-shui, or the mystical Oriental art of design and decoration, got more space in the paper than any recent scientific breakthroughs I can think of. The reporter never bothered to ask why having your toilet face south will ensure a kindly mother-in-law, or if anyone had really studied the impact of bed orientation on gross salary. It was all just chalked up, rather naively, to “thousands of years of Oriental wisdom.” The story even related how the consultant in (question considered himself “like a doctor.” Well, at $150 an hour, I kid you not, I sup­ pose he has every right. One of the latest reporting fads is to do a story about young doctors learning to help patients “spiritually” and how the “power of prayer” helps heal people. During the last moments of the segment, the reporter almost invariably intones “though modem science can’t explain it, studies indicate that prayer does help, no matter what one might think about it.” This is very misleading. Yes, studies do indicate that prayer can be very helpful to an ill person. But science, contrary to what is most often reported, does have an explanation, whether or not you accept it. It is called the Placebo Effect. How does one explain A thena S targazer, “N oted Psychic,” being invited on CNN’s Reliable Sources and placed alongside real journalists? I had a good laugh watch­ ing a journalist from a major newspaper have her sourced explanation contradicted by a statement along the lines of “W hat you fail to understand is that O .J.’s moon is Capricorn rising ... ” I had a good chill realizing that the moderator kept a straight face, and that there were people in the audience who were probably buying into this. Kenny King’s accountants were probably doing backflips. Rather than challenge the beliefs of the viewer, no mat­ ter how silly or unscientific, the news media will simply avoid, usually intentionally, any scientific explanation for something people like to attribute to “the unknown.” The prayer story is just the latest example. Another classic is fire walking. According to nearly every media story you will ever see, it is a mysterious thing, indeed. According to reality, it is simply a case of the difference between temperature and heat content being exploited with the aid of a good insulator. Hard science is bad for ratings; junik science is good. Logic and evidence áre dull, While mystery and enigma áre sexy. This might explain why there is so little science on during regular viewing hours or on the front page — but it does hot justify the people who call their product “news,” ignoring science for the sake of ratings. Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history and can be reached at aufsj@asu.edu. R ights o f convicted crim inals C ircum cision tradition holds do n ot supersede public safety so cia l and m ed ical b en efits Two recent articles in the State Press have brought the issue of criminal rights to the forefront On April 10, an opinion article was published, dealing with the rights of pri­ vacy for pedophiles. On April 11, a front­ page article dealt with the controversy sur­ rounding a new bill prohibiting those con­ victed of domestic violence crimes from legally obtaining guns. During the years I worked for the New York State Division of Parole. I learned a thing or two about the criminal justice sys­ tem. In New York state, tire mission state­ ment of the Division of Parole deals with the delicate balance between reforming offend­ ers and offering them the opportunity to become law-abiding citizens and the neces­ sity of protecting the public. When felons are released from prison, recidivism rates vary widely, depending upon several factors, which may include individual history and attitude, type of offense and circumstances o f life after release. In the state of New York, the gov­ ernment tries to provide the best conditions for success. Parolees must have adequate and appropriate living arrangements, employ­ ment. and often, counseling is mandated. In addition, persons convicted of certain crimes have limits imposed upon them. Those convicted of fraudulent activities may not serve in any fiduciary capacity. Pedophiles are arrested if they are found in the vicinity of a place who® children con­ gregate — such as schools, playgrounds, etc. While we, like the commissioners who sit on the New York Board of Parole, must weigh the rights of criminals with the need for public safety, it is not correct to place die value of certain privileges for dangerous felons above the safety of our communities. Equal consideration for the rehabilitation of criminals and public safety is not a subscrip­ tion to the “Joe Arpaio” point of view. Should we be more concerned with the rights of convicted felons who would vic­ timize society» than for our innocent chil­ dren, families and neighbors? If you have been convicted of a violent crime, why should we, as a society, place a firearm in your hands? “Reformed” or not. this does not seem a reasonable risk to take when bal­ ancing the rights of die criminal with the safety of the public. We can spout rhetoric about the rights of pedophiles, but parents also have a right and obligation to protect their children to the best of their ability. We, as a society , also have an obligation to those children. Let’s not con­ fuse reasonable and wise limitations of known offenders with the stripping of civil rights. A hie is worth more than the right of a convicted criminal to obtain a firearm. Amy Whig Freshman Communication Pursuit o f happiness applies to all Keith Jones’s letter on April 11 con­ tains factual and moral flaws. First of all, is a h u rst o f concession, he says, “I understand dial criminals are still people and. like all people, they mess up and need a second chance.” By the end of his screed, he is denouncing the very life of a sex offender. Such equivocation is almost enough for one letter, but the dirt doesn’t end there. While it is true that there is no such thing as “the right to privacy” in the Constitution, it is a more, egregious error to attach the rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness to the Constitution, as Jones does, in fact, they are stated in the Declaration o f Independence. It is a worse error still to suggest depriving people of these rights, as Jones also does. Also, in the Declaration, they were listed as some of the natural rights of man — rights that people can claim no matter what, provided that said people are not harming others. So, when Jones asks: “Why should we ... care anything about the life, let alone the freedom, of a person who commits such a horrible and per­ verse crime?” 1 reply that it is as much our moral responsibility to protect that person’s life and liberties as it is to pro­ tect those o f law-abiding citizens. Austin W. Spencer Freshman College o f Liberal Art . I wanted to correct a few fallacies in syn­ dicate columnist Kathleen Parker’s article on April 14. First off, currently, four out of five boys bom in the United States are cir­ cumcised, and this number has been declin­ ing during the last, two decades, due mostly to ignorance. Far from being a senseless, outdated act, circumcision has been shown to hold seri­ ous m edical value. Thom as Jefferson, University Hospital in Philadelphia found that at least 26 out of 33 studies performed on circumcision in the last decade showed that the procedure had a demonstrated effect on preventing the spread of sexually trans­ mitted diseases. It is unfortunate that only 25 percent of babies currently receive anesthesia during the operation, despite the fact that research during the last 10 years has disproven the myth that babies don’t feel the pain. Even so, the fact that it hurts shouldn’t discourage parents from electing to have their baby cir­ cumcised; what parent wouldn’t have their child vaccinated, despite the needles and pain involved? The medical benefits aside, circumcision has also been shown to have striking socio­ logical effects. A recent study in the Journal o f the A m erican M edical A sso cia tio n showed that circumcised males are more sexually explorative and show a higher fre­ quency of engagement in oral sex, anal sex and masturbation. Older uncircum cised males were found to experience a higher rate of sexual problems. At every turn, circumci­ sion shows high benefits with low risk. Don’t try to tern down old traditions just because they’re old, using heresy and myth; get some hard medical evidence to back up your claims first. Michael Weiss-Malik Senior Computer Systems Engineering Parental ingenuity allows successful coordination o f school and child care In response to the child care article and editorial on April 8, I’m a single parent, student and staff member. O f course there will be a wait for the high-quality low-ratio care available at ASU. Being a parent means being responsible, planning as far ahead as possible andsacrificing — even to the extent of postponing going back to school. I do have advice on how to shortcut the waiting lists. Keep checking back, espe­ cially in the summer months. Many of the children are not enrolled in the summer and unless the parents pay to keep the child’s slot open, it will be filled by whoever is next on the list. I was able to shave off a year by doing this. Attending school year-round isn’t a bad strategy for parents, anyway. Since you are sacrificing time with your child with the additional school demands on your time, it’s pften better to get it out of the way as quickly as possible. The bitter fact of the matter is that being a patent and getting through school is dif­ ficult. It can get so challenging that many parents and hopeful graduates fold under the pressure. Not everyone can work out the logistics required to finish a degree pro­ gram. As sad as this point is, the state can’t be held accountable to ensure that each of us get this privilege. Instead, it’s up to friends, family, financial aid, scholarships and most of all — the determination, creativity and patience of the parent. Name held on request Page 6 Monday, April 2 1 ,1997 St a t e P ress Chinese martial arts expand horizons o f physical education program B y S ara B ush State P ress Long Nguyen made a fist, wound up and launched a punch at his good friend Raphael See. Before Nguyen could say “martial arts,” the slightly built, bespectacled See deflected the punch with a carefully angled flash of his wrist. “Wow! That was a close one,” See said. “Sometimes we like to throw punches at each other to see who’s most alert.” Nguyen and See are enrolled in an ASU physical educa­ tion course studying Wing Chun-style kung fu. The onecredit course is held weekly at the ASU-owned Mitchell School campus, 900 S. Mitchell Drive. This Chinese martial art is among the department’s increasing number of not-so-mainstream exercise course offerings. Perhaps the only thing more unique than die course con­ tent is the instructor, Joy Chaudhuri, a 63-year-old political science professor. “I’ve always been interested in the m artial arts,” Chaudhuri said. Originally from India, Chaudhuri has been teaching kung fu since his arrival at ASU as the assistant dean to College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in 1985. Chaudhuri said he has studied many other martial arts, including Western-style boxing, but he enjoys Wing Chun kung fu the most. “Wing Chun requires a sharp mind,” he said. “It’s not a matter o f strength. It’s a knowledge o f angles, cir­ cles, straight lines. It’s knowledge of how to bypass big muscles.” Wing Chun is different from other forms of kung fu because it is more practical and less flashy, Chaudhuri said. Wing Chun is made to apply to all people and situations. Chaudhuri has studied Wing Chun for about 20 years. He said the martial arts are a unique form of exercise which take a combination of practice and time to learn well. “The basic thing most people forget about the martial arts is that it’s really not about fighting,” he said. “It’s about uniting body, mind and spirit. It’s integrative.” Chaudhuri said he always tries to emphasize the integra­ tion in his classes. “Part of the problem is that most students of ideas are contemptuous of physical activity and, on the other hand, many athletes are contemptuous of the intellectual,” he said. “People need to integrate them all.” The idea of integrating mind, body and spirit draws stu­ dents to Chaudhuri’s course. Nguyen, a sophomore chemistry major, and See, a sophomore chemical engineering major, said kung fu appeals to them because it downplays physical strength. ^ “You don’t really have to be a big, strong person to be good at kung fu,” See said. “It’s a lot of physics and learn­ ing how to focus your energy.” At the start of each class, Chaudhuri says to his students, “We begin with the form.” The students then form neat lines and begin to go through the elaborate series of motions known as “the form.” Though it looks simple to the unfamiliar observer, the form is made up of about rive minutes of mostly upper body positions demanding technical precision. “A simple roll of the arm can make a big difference in w h ere th e p o w e r and e n e rg y are lo c a te d ,” Chaudhuri told the class. He often interrupted as stu­ dents proceeded through the m otions in unison to dem onstrate practical applications to the techniques. The rem ainder of each class is devoted to drills and sparring. Chaudhuri’s students said they enjoy the class, although it requires a great amount of patience and dedication. “It takes real practice and takes real sparring to learn how to use kung fu in real fighting,” said Ryan Clarke, a junior electrical engineering major, “We can’t really be doing a lot of that in here. You need to learn the basics, first, and then spar.” Some students do not expect to use the tactics for selfdefense. They just find it relaxing. * “I like it, because I get to learn how to focus my qi," said freshman Pete Johnson, an undecided major who cited the Chinese term for energy and spirit. Chaudhuri said he plans to offer the course as long as he is able. “Wing Chun is an art for all seasons,” he said. “As you get older, you get better.” Paradise Pizza A .C .S . KARATE Southeast Corner o4, Broadway &MoQir^ck Leant practica!, street-smart te lf defense. 1 KENPO KICK BOXING TAI C H I Mention Ais ad for 50% ò li the Introductory Training Package II (2 privala training «imioni and 1 group d o * - Î 33 Value) 9 6 8 -2 0 5 8 birtliOTitiol Planned Parenthood is seeking women 18 - 49 to partic­ ipate in a research study comparing a new monthly injectable birth control method with birth control pills. 'it\gve J_ M f l I D A BBC IA R R O T S T A K E O T ■ M E L C H E A Pi H 7 P P O H O U S E A D E P T ■ S IP I £ I D | 1 O R E S by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS 42 Bee 1 Babies’ group beds 43 Like neon 8 Winter 44 Remain glider 45 Homes for 10 Increased hawks by bidding DOWN 11 Old 1 Fissure Testa­ 2 Densest ment gas book Yesterday’s Ansare? 3 Foolish 13 Wise saying 14 Surpass 15 Swindle 18 San Francisco's — HHI 18 Gorilla 18 Great joke 22 Actor Beatty 23 Budget amount 24 Yelk)w color 27 Clarinet parts 28 Precious 28 Doc's charge 30 Habitual drinker, slangily 35 Tissue layer 36 OPEC concern 3 7 Chopping tool 3 8 “— With Love’ 40 Tender spots 4 Insect SThe Faerie Queene" poet 6 Ancient Yemen 7 Bagel topper 8 Manhunt quarry 9 Pool 1 2 10 4 3 28 G-man's org. part 12 Warnings 17 Archaic 20 First month, in Mexico 21 Primp 24 Experts 25 Matures 28 Tended the kids 27 Lands 31 Like bad apples 32 Chal­ lenges 33 Wield 34 Takes it easy 39 Writer Levin 41 Low bin 7. S B 8 ’ ■ 12 ” 13 15 ■ 1« 20 19 17 ■ 21 ■ 2. ■ 32 36 V ■ ■ 36 42 36 1 33 34 37 40 d o s e ■ # ^ p z n e to u s p 46 I44 h # F rie n d ly 28** - Ä u g u s* - T (m d v u A .es *\2C u K ltty m M ow m ce) CRYPTOQUOTE T U ?H 0 Pu # Youv owh Roovh ■ 4-21 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two 0 's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation o f die words are ail hints. Each day the code letters are different. 4-21 T l\ e corporate-sponsored shams created to help clean up company images. '..S; John Sanford, president of Earth Day Arizona, said this was the major reason why his organization helped sponsor their own event Sunday on Gammage Lawn. Over 20 local pro-environment groups par­ ticipated. The Associated Students of ASU, Gentle Strength: Co-Operative and Concerned Arizonans for Animal Rights and Education also helped put on the event. The groups are also helping sponsor-the ASU Student Earth Day, held today on Hayden Lawn. "There is a serious conflict between those versions o f Earth Day and our events,” he said. “They’re trying to market themselves as being environmentally con­ cerned.” One such celebration is EarthFcst, held today in downtown Phoenix, said Sanford. Some o f the V alley’s w orst polluters, including Motorola, are sponsoring the event in order to “greenwash” their image and help convince the public they are envi­ ronment-friendly, he said. ' “BFI (one of the nation’s largest waste companies) is even getting an award for environmental excellence,” he said. “At the same time, these companies hire lobbyists to fight environmental laws.” Jeni Hyder, educational outreach coordi­ nator for Gentle Strength, said groups such as the Cattlem an’s Association and the National Rifle Association have also partic­ ipated at the EarthFest in previous years. “Our organization has the double chal­ lenge of environmental activists and defeat­ ing front groups who are funneling money into environmental PR,” she said. “They have a lot of paid employees working on that. This event is completely run by volun­ teers.” Cassie Rauser, ASASU environmental issues director, said approximately $15,(XX) was budgeted by student government for the Earth Day events. Hyder said Gentle Strength —- which is selling vegetarian food to about 2,000 peo­ ple — spent approxim ately $2,000 and expects it will barely break even on the event. However, the goal of Arizona Earth Day was not to make a profit, but to edu­ cate the public, she said. . Hallie Gilman, CAARE member and undeclared freshman, said they are provid­ ing information on how companies such as Proctor & Gamble use animal testing. “We just want to inform people — or at least give them the opportunity to be informed — about these issues,” she said. THE M EM O RIA L U N IO N @ «Aamttt LO CATION TAX NOT N C IU D ED I T u e s d a y I See? We told you it was better. M U ONE G IT ONE H « . EXCLUDING LASAGNA ' W e d n e s d a y The all-new-better-than-ever State Press magazine every Thursday and it’s free. any ■ Ca w « * S u m m Ju m b o C o o k ie s TAXNdNCUJOED TAX NOT INCLUDED Cani— H— «jWmott LOCATION S t a t e P ress P age 9 Monday, April 21 ,1 9 9 7 A SU staffer, Phoenix Sister Cities sponsor European city tour B y K e v in C ul w e ll S ta te P ress * An ASU faculty member is helping to sponsor a tour to two European sister cities this fall. Vladimir Borovansky, science librarian at ASU, will join the Phoenix Sister Cities Commission in facilitating the visit to the cities of Prague and Bohemia in the Czech Republic. The tour is open to anyone. “The focus of this tour will be to visit and appreciate the museums, galleries, legendary castles and music of these culturally diverse cities,” said Borovansky, a Prague native. “This will be a real education for all who attend.” Borovansky, with the help of local experts, will escort the group around the cities to give an insider’s look, he said. Prague is one of the many “sister cities” of Phoenix. Sister cities are chosen by Phoenix by their economic development, interest in government and tourism attrac­ tions, said Dominique Dancause, operations manager of the Phoenix Sister Cities Commission. Other sister cities of Phoenix are Taipei, Taiwan; Calgary, Canada and Chung Do, China. Plans to visit all of those cities are currently being devised for later this year. “Prague is a. very intriguing city that has a lot of cultural diversity,” Dancause said. “I’m looking forward to seeing i t ” The highlight of the trip will be the attendance of four concerts, including a Mozart opera at the house where it made its premier in 1791, Borovansky said. “That will be something that everyone involved will remember,” he said. The ten-day tour is to be held October 8-18; the deadline for registration is June 30. Costs run from $2,200 to $3,000. For more information, or to signup, contact the office o f the Phoenix Sister Cities Commission at 534-3751. Memo: Health-care program director opposed tobacco lawsuit (A P) — The director o f A rizona’s health-care program for the poor opposed suing tobacco companies because he said it might cause a drop in state tobacco-tax rev­ enues, a newly released memo shows, John Kelly, head of the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, wrote the co n fid en tial memo to Gov, Fife Symington’s policy adviser on Sept. 9 — the same day Symington met with tobacco attorneys. ’’Does suing the tobacco companies send any. greater message to people who have been ignoring the w arnings on the (cigarette) packages the entire time they have been smoking?” Kelly Wrote. “If it does, and smoking actually does go down, then Arizona’s revenue under the tobacco tax will decrease.” Kelly listed that argument in a page-anda-half of “cons,” which he said “clearly out­ weigh the pros” of the $500 million lawsuit, filed in August by state Attorney General Grant Woods. Symington in October ordered Woods to drop the lawsuit based on the possibility that taxpayer money could be lost. Woods defied Symington, but agreed to drop AHCCCS as a plaintiff. Kelly initially agreed to cooperate in the lawsuit, but changed his mind after Woods filed the action. In the memo released by AHCCCS, Kelly said the lawsuit Would send a signal “that smoking is deadly and that the state is doing something about the tobacco industry.” “If the public takes the signal seriously, smoking goes down and general health improves,” he wrote. Other “cons” listed by Kelly included an assertion by Symington and other crit­ ics that private attorneys hired to repre­ sent the state w ould reap the big g est financial benefits. > “Arizona is risking millions of dollars Horoscope's guaranteed or your money back! take K aplan and get into the right school. ¿VICAT G M A T C O L D for costs in this risky proposition,” Kelly Wrote. “Ironically, there is absolutely no reason for Arizona to be in this case at this time! Arizona can just sit back and let the other states proceed. If they lose, the issue goes away, and it did not cost Arizona any­ thing. If they Win, Arizona just files an identical lawsuit.” Kelly couldn’t be reached for comment. AHCCCS spokesman Frank Lopez said Kelly hasn’t changed his mind about the lawsuit, despite news last week about a pos­ sible settlement between two major U.S, tobacco companies and Arizona and seven other states, > Kaplan has expert teachers and the most complete arsenal of test prep and admissions consulting tools available. Classes starting soon • Call: 1-800-KAP-TEST to reserve a space. S O R E S ? EARN EXTRAMONEY & ASSIST MEDICALRESEARCH If you have had two or more cold sores within the past twelve months, you can earn up to $ 2 0 0 by participating in a medical research study at Harris Laboratories. If you are in good medical condition and meet the criteria below, call us at 1 -8 0 0 -5 9 8 -1 3 6 0 to find out more. Memorial UnionActMta Board ■ men and postmenopausal women ■ 18 to 70 years old ■ nonsmokers ■ availability: one short Saturday to Sunday stay plus returns Harris testing pays. Call 1 -8 0 0 -5 9 8 1 3 6 0 today! BE PART OF THE CURE S a l H A R R IS TUESDAY • APRIL 29 • 12:15PM In the MU Programming Lounge • Lower Level MU Want to be in the competition? Deadline for application is 5pm April 25. Applications available at MUAB, 3rd floor MU. $$$ CASH PRIZES!!! $$$ Page 10 St a t e P ress M onday, April 21, 1997 Coor endorses tuition hike, students voice opposition B y V ivi S ten ber g S ta te P ress A zero percent tuition increase is favored by student advocates, but the idea is getting a cool reception by some mem­ bers of the Arizona Board of Regents. Regents will set tuition at their meeting at ASU East on Thursday. Last week, ASU President Lattie Coor recommended a 3 percent increase to com­ pensate for inflation. Current inflation rates hover around 2.5 percent. The current cost for the 1996-1997 aca­ demic year for in-state students is $2009, and $8377 for out-of-state students . This includes tuition and other fees students pay each semester. Regent Eddie Basha said he has not yet decided whether he will vote on a tuition increase. However, if ABOR doesn’t raise tuition for 1997-1998, it could mean an even larger increase the following year, he said; “It’s a question of balancing the needs of students and the universities,” Basha said. “Affordability, accessibility and quali­ ty is critical, but at the same time, (Coor) has a responsibility to make this a worldclass university.” Regent Kurt Davis said students should take a look at the universities' priorities that will go unfunded if tuition is not increased. “We condensed the universities priori­ ties within a $40 million box (when the budget was set), and we received roughly $27 million,” Davis said. “The priorities will go partially or fully unfunded, so the question is how much more we want to be realized.” lit a televised, tri-university tuition hear­ ing Thursday, students did not seem con­ cerned about unfunded needs. Students from all three universities and the branch campuses unanimously request­ ed a zero percent increase. Associated Students of ASU President Marc Baumgartner said that with the “gen­ ero u s” appropriation from the state Legislature, he did not think ASU needed the 3 percent increase Coor requested. Several students who testified to the regents and university presidents reminded them to keep tuition as nearly free as possi­ ble, as stated in Arizona' s constitution. Akua Robertson, .who spoke against NAU’s proposed 3 percent increase, said although,an increase of nearly $60 per semester did not seem much, it represented two weeks of groceries for him. “That is a lot of Top Ramen noodles,” Robertson said. Todd Lawson, a first-year ASU law stu­ dent. opposed the higher cost of a law degree. Lawson said that because of the work load the school imposes on its students, they cannot work the same hours as other students and must, therefore, take up large loans. Police officer killed in collision while driving home from work (AP) — A Phoenix police officer driv­ ing home from work was killed Sunday when a car crossed a highway median and struck his vehicle head-on. Officer Timothy D. Landers, 28, was dead at the scene, said Officer Jim Hamack of the state Department of Public Safety. Authorities believe alcohol was involved in the accident, which happened about 1:30 a.m. on state Highway 51 near Glendale. Landers was headed north in his person­ al car when a vehicle traveling in the oppo­ site direction crossed the m edian and smashed into him. said Hamack. ^ The car driven by 22-year-old Selena S t a t e P r e ss Gusler ran over the top of Landers’ car, which then spun on the roadway and struck a Jeep, Hamack said. The occupants of the Jeep were treated and released, authorities said. Gusler, whose hometown was unavail­ able, was taken to a hospital for unknown injuries, Hamack said. She faces charges of manslaughter, endangerment and aggravate ed assault, he said. A passenger in Gusler’s car was taken to a local hospital for a head wound, Hamack said. Landers, who was with the Phoenix Police Department for four years, is sur­ vived by a wife" and two children. C ro s s w o rd s T h e y a r e n 't h a r s h w o r d s . T h e y 'r e j u s t a c r o s s - w o r d s . rC A M P U S -| l C o r n e r J 7 1 2 S. College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to C o lle g e S tre e t D e li 6 0 9 S . Mill Ave. 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 li Check out th e D ow ntow n Tem pe a d s in Thursday's S tate P r e ss College Mill Ave • Myrtle Y O U R B E S T ANDSEETHISMOVIEONUS! HERE'S H O W YOU CAN TELL US YOUR BEST LIE A N D RECEIVE A C O M PLI­ MENTARY A D M IT 2 PASS TO AN ADVANCE SCREENING OF Th ese b est frien d s a re a b o u t to e m b a rk u p o n th e ir 1 0 y e a r h ig h school re u n io n . 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Center 543-5626 LARGECHEESE .PIZZA E&Sft F $5.00 Minimum for Delivery Offer May Expire W/0 Notice A + Tax or m i l S LARG E$5.99.tax 13278) T Open for Lunch Every Day at 11:00 am ‘TIL 2:30 am Sunday thru Thursday ‘TIL 3:30 am Friday and Saturday __________ S po rts S t a t e P ress Page 13 _______________________ __________________ Monday, April 2 1,19 9 7 A S U w o m en s gym astics takes secon d at N C A A s B y R a n dy J on es _• s t a t e P ress GAINESVILLE, Fla. — No one would blame members of the ASU women’s gymnasties team for being a bit down after coming within three-tenths of a point from winning the national championship, but they aren’t “We couldn't have asked for a better meet as a team." junior Lisa Vincijanovic said. “We hit 23 of 24 (routines). Being No. 2 in the nation is a great feeling.” The SunDevils had their second-best meet of the season at the Super Six competition on Friday, scoring a 196.85. but came up short to preseason No. 1 UCLA by that small margin. Behind the Bruins and. Sun Devils in order of finish were G eorgia (196.6), Michigan (196.5), Florida (196:425) and Nebraska (195.25). The second-place finish was the fourth time the Sun Devils have garnered the ruhnerup spot. Head coach John Spirii also led the team to second in 1983,1985 and 1986. ASU finished up after the fifth rotation knowing that both the Bruins and Wolverines needed a 49.325 to tie. As the Sun Devils watched from behind the uneven bars compe­ tition. Michigan stumbled its way through floor exercise in the last rotation, scoring a 48.875. While UCLA hit all six sets on its way to a school-record score of 49.525 on bars. “It was hard to watch diem because they are so good at bars,” Vincijanovic said. "They hit bars like there was no tomorrow.” ASU head coach John Spini said he knew ‘the Sun Devils could be in trouble with the Bruins on their favorite event. When asked if he was confident their score would hold up Spini said “not if you know how UCLA works bars. We hit everything you could hit. Win, lose or draw I was happy, it doesn’t get any better than this,’’ . Spini also said he couldn’t be prouder of his team. “What a great competition it was,” he said- “From the moment we started until the end, we competed with heart. There wasn’t a bad team out there. I don’t feel like we lost first place, it felt like we won second place. We had an outstanding year with this team.” Junior Meagan Wright said she was disap­ pointed in the second-place finish at first, but the fact they placed ahead of such teams as No. 1 seed Michigan and the always amazing Georgia gives the team confidence that next year could be their chance. “Yeah, we did get second,” Wright said. “But we will be hungry for more (in 1998). Our chances are great. I don’t think we are going to worry about qualifying next year:” The Sun Devils only loss will be senior uneven bars specialist Bridget Sandman. , : Otherwise the team will come back intact,“4* plus any additional recruits. “This gives us confidence and motivation for next year,” Vincijanovic said. “With so many great teams, and to come so close to UCLA, especially since we’ve already beaten them. Everyone’s going to be motivated to kick some butt.” Among those returning will be freshman Elizabeth Reid. Reid captured. All-America honors on the floor exercise, uneven bi&s and balance beam. In Saturday’s individual event finals she tied for first, with Utah’s Summer Reid, on the beam and tied for second on bars and floor. “I was taken slightly aback (by placing so high) “ she said, “I’m happy with the results. I was surprised a little by it. Not that it was not expected, I knew I could do so well. Just that there was so others.” Wright said Reid’s performances were amazing. “She is phenomenal, she’s incredible,” she said. “She probably should have gotten first in the other events. She is a beautiful gymnast, she really shows the eloquence of the sport.” ASU’s other individual event qualifiers Vincijanovic and junior Carie Courtney T urn to G ymnastics, page 14. Elizabeth Reid helped the ASU gymnastics team take second-place at the NCAA Championships, Draft day scatters Sun Devils all over NFL landscape B y J o s h D e F a m io S ta te P ress The 1996 Sun Devil Pac-10 Championship team was often praised for the unity and closeness it displayed. Now, that Close-knit group is about to be scattered all over the country. A total of eight ex-Sun Devils were chosen by seven different NFL teams during the 1997 NFL D raft, And although much o f the hoopla su r­ rounded the Arizona Cardinals’ selec- R oque tion of quarterback Jake Plummer, the other players are ready to make quite an impact over the rest of the country . M ost were su rprised when the Detroit Lions made offensive tackle Juan Roque the 35th, and first ASU, player taken overall. Most, that is, ex c ep t fo r R oque and his ag e n t Leigh Steinberg. “Leigh told me I would go in the second round between 35th and 45th,“ the 6-8 Roque said. “The so-called gurus had me going lower, but apparently they don’t know Crap.” Roque, who is projected to take die right tackle spot of recently departed Zefross Moss, is excited at the prospect of being a part of the Lions’ high-octane offense. “Detroit’s gonna be a great team,” he said. “They got a great quarterback (Scott Mitchell), (hey got (running back) Barry Sanders, they got (wide receiver) Herman Moore.” Roque was not the only Sun Devil selected by Detroit. Running back Terry Battle, who left ASU following his junior season, entered the Lions’ den when he was grabbed in the seventh round with the 206th overall selection. Battle B attle T urn to D rafted, page 15. A ngel-less g o lf squad w in s Invitation al B y M a t t P a u lso n S ta te P ress Pat Shannahan/Stata Press ASU sophomore Brad Cannon takes an approach shot on the 18th h o le S a tu rd a y a t th e ASU T h u n d e rb lrd /S a v a n e Invitational. The Sun Devils won this tournament for the sec­ ond consecutive year. Despite losing its second-seeded golfer in the first round, the No. 9 ASU m en’s golf team successfully defended its championship at the ASU T hunderbird/S avane Invitational C ham pionship, held Saturday and Sunday at the Karsten Golf Course. It was the seventh tim e in«the past nine years ASU pitched a victo­ ry at home. The Sun Devils (285-283-286) shot under the 288 par on eachfound, and finished with a 10-under par 854. No. 8 UofA (285-289-285) was second with an 859. No. 2 Oklahoma State (286-289-293—866) took third. Die Sun Devil squad was reduced to four players when sophomore Darren Angel withdrew on the front nine of the first round Saturday due to illness. Teams are composed of five play­ ers, and the highest score o f each round is dropped. W ith Angel out, though, die Sun Devils lost this luxury. Senior Chris Haqell, the No. 1ranked player in the country, said there was extra pressure knowing that every score counted, but the team pulled through. It was ASU’s first team title of the season. “Everyone is just out there to do 7-under 209. O klahom a’s State their best,” Hanell said. “You can’t Edward Loar (71-66-73— 210) was be thinking about don’t do this or the first runner-up. Hanell (70-71don’t do that. (W inning) is a good 70—211) finished tied for; third. Sun Devil junior Pat Perez (72-70feeling, a great feeling. This is the time of year where (we) want to start 70—212), playing in his second tour­ playing well We’re doing it. We got nament of thé season, took fifth while senior Scott Johnson tied the m om entum for ninth (71-69-75— going ju s t like 215). Sophom ore Brad we did last year. Cannon (72-73-71—216) I ’m real happy rgfhapi^nhat we rounded out the Sun Devil about ev e ry ­ won, but I'm much, squad at 11th. body’s play this Johnson, who Won the weekend. It was Dave Williams Award last real consistent.” the wtyJM W0,!Mk Wednesday, said the team ASU head cham pionship Was an coach Randy Lein “awesome” addition to his said it was a daz­ week. However, he could zling victory. M e n ’s goflrfaeadjawfch have gone without shoot­ “I ’m happy ing a 5 -over 40 on the that we w on,” front nine Sunday. L ein said. “ But “I was disappointed individually I’m much, much happier with the way we Won it. All four of them played With my round today,” Johnson said. solid golf, Winning is nice and it cer­ “So that kind of takes a little bit of that tainly helps your confidence. For off. (But) I’m glad to see the team’s these guys, the way they won it, going in the right direction.” The Dave Williams Award is given against a field this strong, it Will do us a lot of good. I’m really proud of all to thé top senior male golfer in the nation and is based on golfing the guys.” Oklahoma’s Jeff Mixon (70-68-71) achievements, academics, leadership captured top individual honors with a qualities and character. Mondav. Anri! 21. 1997 S t a t e P ress No. 12 ASU completes 3-game sweep o f Golden Bears B y P ercy E d n a l in o J r . Sta te P ress The ASU baseball team showed California that it could beat the Bears three different ways this weekend. Friday’s game was a 26-9 hitters rout. Saturday’s game, a 3-1 win, was pure finesse. But Sunday’s win belonged to pitcher Jeff Cermak. Cermak tossed a complete-game six-hitter and helped lead the No. 12 ASU baseball team (30-17, 15-12 Six-Pac) to an 84 win over California (17-30, 3-21) in front of 2,729 fans at Packard Stadium. “He did a great Job,” catcher Greg Halverson said o f Cermak. “He just worked the plate, threw strikes. They hit the ball early in the count a lot. They got a lot of first-pitch, sec­ ond-pitch ground balls and fly balls. He did a nice job of mak­ ing thegame run smoothly.” Cermak, who improved his record to 5-2, said he didn’t think he could go the entire game. “1 knew I could at least go a good six innings,” he said. “They got a couple of chicken hits and things didn’t go my way right at the start, but I knew tilings would sometime turn around and luckily it did.” The win meant the Sun Devils swept the Bears 3-0 during this weekend’s homestand. It was the team’s second consecu­ tive Six-Pac series sweep, ASU swept then-No. 2 Stanford on the road last weekend. The Sun Devils are looking to make their first appear­ ance in the NCAA regionals since 1994, Cermak's perfor­ mance helped keep ASU alive in the race for an invitation to the regionals. Cermak threw just 100 pitches, gave up one earned run, walked two and struck out eight. But the senior righthander had some help in picking up the win. Dan McKinley went 3-for-4 with two RBI and three runs scored. Andrew Beinbrink chipped in by going 2-for-4 with and RBI. Halvorson. who also went 2-for-4. swatted two solo home runs, one in the second and the other in the sixth. “He’s been an unsung hero for us," ASU head coach Pat Murphy said of Halvorson. “I couple him with Richy (Leon). They’ve been really quietly doing it while Beinbrink and McKinley have been getting a lot of the play.” Murphy also said he was pleased with the way the Sun Devils held their composure when Cal led early in the game, ”We battled relentlessly early on, when they scored (some) E rik G u zo w ski? S tate P ress Beto Gutierrez, 11, of Phoenix gives a standing ovation to ASU pitcher, Jeff Cermak, who struck out the side in the ninth inning. early runs,” Murphy said. McKinley agreed. “There’s just a sense — its like an aura — around the team,” McKinley said. “We know that we re going to do good things.” ASU used a big fourth inning to break a 3-3 tie. Dustin Delucchi doubled in leadoff hitter Rudy Arguelles to give ASU a 4-3 lead: Dan McKinley then stroked a two-run home run to right ¿enter field. Beinbrink reached on a double to right, then scored off a single to center by designated hitter Willie Bloomquist. With his fourth inning homer, McKinley, who saw an 11- Sun Devils lose to UofA, 5-4 B y L ori H aro S ta te P ress The UofA sav e d up the ASU women’s tennis te a m 's sixth and final loss Saturday as they beat the Sun Devils 5-4 to split tire season’s series. ASU finished the regular season at 146 overall, 5-5 Pac-Six. “It (the loss) was really hard for us, especially because it w as the UofA and our last m atch at hom e,” S tephanie Lansdorp said. Like the last time these two teams m et the singles matches proved to be a battle as they split, with three wins a piece. A lso like last tim e, three o f the six matches were taken to three sets. Lansdorp and Anna Moll were able to pull out their three-setters for wins, as L ansdorp cam e back to beat K aren Goldstein 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, and Moll defeat­ ed Monique Allegre 6-4, 2-6, 6-4. After winning the first set. Katy Propstra was unable to hold on to her three-set match as she fell to UofA’s Khristen Pietmcha 4-6,6-1,6-2. Kerry Giardino sent Betsy Miringoff down in straight sets 6-2,6-2. At the No. 1 seed, Reka Cseresnyes was swept this season in singles by her rival, Vicky Maes. Maes, the No. 7 playTuw to Towns, pace 15. game hitting streak end on Saturday, came close to hitting for the cycle, The 6-foot junior singled in the first and dou­ bled in the third, meaning that he needed just a triple to complete the same feat he accomplished earlier, this season against Grand Canyon. Two of Cal’s four runs were scored in the first when Brian Oliver singled in leadoff hitter Ivan Lewis. Lewis then scored off a double by Jim Schmidt. Lewis ended going 2-for-3' with one run scored. Bears starter Brad Steele (2-4) gave up five runs on seven hits in the loss. Gymnastics Continued from page 13. both fell from the balance beam during their routines. Wright gained All-America honors in the all-around during Thursday’s competition by placing sixth with a score of 39.4. The Sun Devils appeared in great position to win it all, especially after highly-favored Georgia fell twice on balance beam and scored a measly 48.125 for the event. It marked the second time this year the beam victimized the Bulldogs, but they made a valiant comeback, with giant scores of 49.65 on vault and 49.675 on bars. “I don’t think that beam is our nemesis, it just wasn’t our day,” said Bulldogs’ AllAmerica Leah Brown. “We dug ourselves a great big oF hole, but we fought and climbed our way back. I’m proud to be a Georgia gymnast and I always will be.” One thing that did not go unnoticed after the competition was the apparent shift in geography of the best in collegiate gym­ nastics. “I’m thrilled that the Pac-10 teams are coming up in the ranks,” said UCLA coach Valorie Kondos. “I’m thrilled for them. Look at us at No. 1. ASU at two. Washington almost made it.” Vincijanovic said the result should tell the Georgias, Utahs and Alabamas that the Pac10 is coming. “This meet made a huge statement,” she said. “People say — ‘Oh, the Pac-10. It’s an easy conference. ’ But this shows it is one of the toughest. It was a chance to show them that the Pac-10 is a great conference.” D on’t h a u l y o u r s tu ff home! 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TEMPE B aseline Road 7101 E Thunderbird Rd. #102 ri 602) 905-88331 « ì 1 E lite Q S to ra g e *^ p| S 1403 W. Baseline Rd. (AT BECK) 2n X 8 2 0 -8 9 9 2 i a M ondav. Anril 21. 1997 S t a t e P ress Sanchez dominates once again at world championships W o m en ’s g o lf heads to T acoma The Sun Devil women’s golf team will be in swinging Sun Devil Francisco Sanchez has achieved international for its fifth consecutive Pac-10 championship this week success before. when it heads to Tacoma, Wash. He became a well-known athlete in South America after The competition runs today through Wednesday at the being named the 1995 Venezuelan Athlete of the Year. Tacoma County and Golf Club. And he was a finalist in both the 50 and 100-meter freestyle The field will be one of the strongest ASU has seen all races in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. .season with five of the Pac-10 schools ranked in the top-12 But the 1997 World Short Course Championships may in the latest Rolex Collegiate Rankings. UofA is No. 2, have been the shining moment in Sanchez’s young, but ASU is No. 3, Stanford is No. 7, UCLA is No. 11, and glorious career. He won both the 50 and 100-meter Oregon is No. 12. freestyle races at the world championships in Göteborg, Junior All-Americans Kellee Booth and Jeanne-Marie Sweden last weekend. Busuttil and sophomores Keri Cornelius, Jody Niemann, What was impressive about Sanchez’s golden feats was andTui Selvaratnam will anchor the Sun Devil squad. how he won. — Matt Paulson “I couldn’t believe what I did this morning (47.85 sec­ M en ’s ten Nis beats W ildcats onds), that I could go that fa st,” said the Valencia, The ASU men’s tennis team finished off its regular sea­ Venezuela native. “When I realized I could go that fast, I son by defeating UofA 4-3 on Saturday. just went for the gold and got it.” ' UofA captured the doubles point with victories at the His time of 47.86 was well ahead of Gustayo Borges’ No.’s 2 and 3 spots. Wildcats Jerome Olivari and Jean-Noel 48.16. This made the sophomore All-American ecstatic. LaCoste defeated Alex Osterrieth and Casey Was 8-6 at “Thank God!” he said. “It feel pretty terrific to beat No. 2, and at No. 3, UofA’s Roland Kupka and Jose Olympic (bronze) medalist ©ustavo Borges.” Devercelli beat Gustavo Marcaccio and Tim Hammond 8Sanchez placed first in the 50 freestyle (21.80) Sunday 4. At the No. 1 seed, ASU’s Sergio Elias and Ed Carter in dominating fashion. He beat Great Britain runner-up beat Tom Haugland and Henrik Wagner 8-4. Mark Foster by .23 seconds, considered a relatively high In singles action, ASU and UofA split the victories. At margin. In doing so, Sanchez tied his own world champi­ No. 1, Elias took down Wagner in straight sets 7-6, 6-1. onships record, which he set in 1995 at the world champi­ Osterrieth defeated Kupka 3-6, 6-3, 6-0 at No. 2, and No. 6 onships in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Was beat Devercelli 7-6, 5-7,6-4. At No. 3, Marcaccio bat­ ASU senior Felipe Delgado, a four-time All-American, tled against Haugland, but lost 6-3, 6-3. No. 4 Carter fell to finished fifth in the 50 freestyle consolation final (22.52). Olivari 6-4, 4-6, 4-6, and at No. 5, Hammond lost to He was competing for Ecuador. ASU freshman Pablo Abal, LaCoste 7-6,6-3. a native of Argentina, placed 28th in the preliminaries of This match was senior Elias’ last regular season match. the 100 backstroke (56.64). — Luanne Muller B y E d O d ev en S tate P ress P a t S h an n ah an /S tate P ress ASU sophomore Francisco Sanchez won two events over the weekend at the World Short Course Swimming Championships. D ra fte d C ontinued from page 13. < was the last Sun Devil selected. during the draft. “It’s With two games every season against the definitely a good envi­ Chicago Bears, Roque and Battle may be ronment...(Johnson seeing a lot of ex-teammate Shawn Swayda. a great coach. He Swayda, a defensive tackle who attended respected among his high school in Arizona, was selected in the peers. He sixth round by the Bears. Chicago used a things happen.” compensatory pick, the 196th overall, to Rodgers will grab “the Rock” towards the end of the get an opportunity to sixth round. play against one of his Swayda wasn’t the only member of the form er team m ates. Pac-10 champions selected with a compen­ M iddle linebacker satory pick. Derrick Rodgers became a S cott Von der Ahe member of the Miami Dolphins with the was chosen 182nd overall, in the sixth 92nd overall pick, one of three extra picks round, by the Indianapolis Colts. Von der Dolphins’ coach Jimmy Johnson was grant­ Ahe will join a Colts team that already fea­ ed at the end of the third round. tures one ex-Sun Devil, backup quarter­ “I’m definitely (excited) to go down back Paul Justin. there to prove myself and possibly play as Although Von der Ahe led the team in a linebacker this season,” said Rodgers, tackles in 1996, he was chosen far behind one of 14 players selected by the Dolphins the other senior Sun Devil linebacker, Derek Smith. Smith was taken 80th overall, in the third round, to the W ashington Redskins. “I’m relieved,” Smith told reporters after he was selected. “I’m glad to know where I’m going.” As a Redskin, Smith, who had been called one of the “sleepers” of the draft, will also get a chance to play in his old home stadium at least once every season. Another draft sleeper, wide receiver K eith Poole, was grabbed by another NFC team , the New O rlean s S ain ts. S aints head coach M ike D itka snared Poole with New O rleans’ second 4thround pick, the 116th overall. “Sure he was shut out in the Rose Bowl,” Ditka told ESPN reporters. “But other than that if you look at his production and what he’s done and what him and Jake Plummer meant to that Arizona State team. W ithout those two players, 1 really don’t see them playing for the N ational C ham pionship like they were. We liked Poole all along.” ASU head coach Bruce Snyder praised h is fo rm e r p la y e rs , b u t also added th at they still have a long POOLE way to go. ■ “I’m happy for my players,” Snyder said. “I don’t really care much about what happens in the NFL. I care about my play­ ers and I want them to get to some place where they’ll treat ‘em right. I know they are going to compete hard.” Most of the NFL training camps begin in mid-July. Tennis C ontinued from page 14. er in the country, beat Cseresnyes 6-1, 6-4. At the No. 4 seed Alison Nash lost to Stephanie Sammaritano 6-2,6-2. “1 thought we played pretty well (in singles),” head coach Sheila Mclnemey said. “Steph came back and really played well. Katy kept coming in and she hit some really good passing shots, but Pietrucha played very well. And Anna competes, she’ll do what it takes to win.” When the Sun Devils played the Wildcats in Tucson ear­ lier this month they swept all three doubles matches. This was not the case Saturday. Only the doubles team of Lansdorp and Propstra won their match, knocking off Maes and Pietrucha 8-1. At the No. 2 doubles seed, Goldstein and Sammaritano beat Nash and Moll 8-6, and Miringoff and Allegre handed Cseresnyes and Giardino an 8-2 loss at the No. 3 doubles seed. “Of course we wanted to win badly, and we competed really well,” Moll said. “But they were just a little better in the end.” The Sun D evils now will prepare for the Pac-10 Championships, beginning Thursday and lasting through Sunday in Ojai, California. After that tournament, the team heads to S tanford, C alifo rn ia fo r the NCAA Championships May 17-24. “We should just forget about it (the loss) now, and go with a fresh mind into nationals,” Moll said. e-mail the sports editor at ponyboy@asu.edu c o n g ra tu la te h im o n th e b u lle ts m a kin g th e p la y -o ffs ... fin a lly ! — — ■ ■ .....■I ■ B A S Ü Ä lt V I L S r O ffer good at Broadway & R ural store on ly. mmmÊÊsÊÊmmmmiâÊÊÊt c o m e r B r o a d w a y Sc K u ra l ■ M o n - S a t 8 a m -1 0 p m S u n d a y 1 0 a m -8 p m W E S U P P O R T T H E Ÿ ■ ■ SU B S & SALADS P age 16 State P ress M onday, April 2 1 ,1 9 9 7 Two form er Sun D evils get court tim e w ith M agic B y E d O d e v en S tate P ress Magic Johnson has always been able to thrill the masses with his electrifying brand of “Showtime” basketball. He proved that again Saturday afternoon at America West Arena. The legendary 6-foot-9 point guard brought his trademark smile and incredible athletic ability onto the Phoenix Suns’ home court. Playing in his first game as a Harlem Globetrotter, Johnson seemed to thrive in the festive atmosphere. He had 29 points, 15 assists and 12 rebounds as the Globetrotters beat a team of College AllStars 126-114. The 11-time NBA All-Star was fulfilling one of his childhood wishes by playing with the Globetrotters. “As a kid, I probably sneaked into more Harlem Globetrotters games than I care to mention, because I couldn’t afford to buy a ticket,” Johnson said, “This is a dream come true.” While Magic shined in the spotlight, for­ mer Sun Devils James “Jumbo” Bacon and Wun “The Shot” Versher were also fulfill­ ing ’their 'childhood fantasies by playing with Magic Johnson. V e rsh e r, w ho fin is h e d w ith 10 points, was thrilled to be on the same team as Johnson. “M agic is one of those guys who is always looking at things differently,” said Versher, who last played at ASU in 1994. “He’s on a different level, He's always think­ ing five minutes ahead, while other players are still thinking about the next play”’ Fortunately for Versher, Johnson’s dev­ astating deceptive dishes gave Versher a chance to score some ¡easy buckets. One of Johnson’s many no-look pass­ es reach ed V ersher, who bu rn ed the College All-Stars for a thunder dunk with 9:56 remaining in the fourth quarter. The partisan crowd responded with resound­ ing approval. “Once I got connected with him, things started happening,” Versher said. “(This game) is definitely the icing on the cake.” The bulky 6-9 Bacon, who had seven points and four rebounds, said the game was a great learning experience. “Yeah it was a great opportunity to play with Magic Johnson,” said Bacon, who last starred at ASU in 1995.'“He brings so much leadership, so much commitment, so, much enthusiasm. I mean He gave it all. He gave like 1,000 percent. He made every­ body else want to come out and play hard.” Johnson’s motivational pre-game speech also inspired Bacon. “He told us before the game his butt was on the line,” Bacon said. “He didn’t want to lose and we all understood that. I learned a lot. I learned that you got to stay heads up. You got to keep on working to do whatever you want to do.” The G lobetrotters’ quick, aggressive style of play was too much for the under­ manned College All-Stars. Led by Johnson’s game-high 29 points, Harlem dominated the offensive interior. Thé Globetrotters scored 90 points in the paint, while limiting the College All-Stars to 32 points from the paint. The College All-Stars leading scorer was Bobby Jackson, who nailed five of 11 threepoint attempts and finished with 22 points. For the Globetrotters, other double-digit scores were Ronnie Fields (19), Larry Spriggs (17), Mike St. Julien (17) and Cameron Dollar (12). P ost -gam e n otes : •This was the first match-up between the Globetrotters and a College All-Star team since 1963, Globetrotters owner Manny Jackson and Johnson collaborated to bring the project together. The College All-Stars lineup was com­ posed of players who participated in the Nike D esert C lassic la st week at the U ni versity Activity Center. Thé players were selected by a committee of NBA per­ sonnel and the Harlem Globetrotters staff. •Although Magic said he does not plan to return to the grueling 82-game per- sea­ son NBÀ schedule, he said he may play for the Globetrotters again in the future. “I’m looking to do it again,” he said, “I play anyway every day.” Johnson said his future plans depend on what his wife Cookie wants. “We’ll have to see what she says about me traveling more,” he said. Ex-Sun Devil and current Harlem Globetrotter W un “The Shot” Versher battles for the loose ball ag a in s t C o lle g e A ll-S ta rs c e n te r D erek G rim m S atu rd ay a t A m erica W est A rena- The Globetrotters won 126-114. Spring fo o tb a ll en d s w ith 3 5 0 d ru b b in g o f alu m n i team B y E d O deven S tate P ress The NFL draft was the big news in the football world over die weekend. But the current Sun Devils made their performance against the alumni team Saturday newsworthy as well. Mission complete. ASU dominated all aspects of the annual varsity-alumni spring game, 35-0 afSun Devil Stadium before 2,500 fans. Leading the Sun Devil offensive attack were running backs J.R. Redmond and Larry Montgomery. Redmond, a sophomore, had nine carries for 96 yards. He also had touchdown runs of 30 yards and one yard. Montgomery, a freshman, had four rushes for 17 yards and two touchdowns. The running game pleased ASU head coach Bruce Snyder. “We’ve known that J.R. is going to be a really good player,” he said. “He’s going to be very good player in this league and he showed that again today. Larry Montgomery, Darrin Ransom, Jeff Paulk and the other guys in the backfield . . . I think it’s good for the future, I like the looks of our young players.” Snyder also liked the look of quarterbacks Steve Campbell and Ryan Kealy. “Steve and Ryan both played pretty well,” Snyder said “I saw things by both of them that I really liked. I think we are going to be in good shape at quarterback (next season),” Kealy, playing in his first game as a Sun Devil, completed six of eight passes for 102 yards and a TD. He played all but one series in the second half. He hooked up with wideout Ricky Boyér for a 45-yard score. “It wasn’t a great ball (thrown), but he caught it,” said Kealy, who redshirted last season. “We had fun out there. I felt good out there. This team had a chance to get dut there and finally hit somebody on another team.” Despite the 35-point win, Kealy admitted there is still lots of work to be done. “I think we are progressing well but we obviously need to progress more to be a great team.” Senior QB Steve Campbell started the game and played the entire first half. He completed six of seven passes for 53 yards and one interception. The Sun Devils led 22-0 at halftime. ASU junior linebacker Paul Reynolds and junior defensive tackle Albrey Battle were standouts on defense. Reynolds recovered a fumble and also collected a QB sack for minus nine yards. Battle made two sacks. Ex-ASU quarterback Jeff Van Raaphorst, a starter on ASU’s 1987 Rose Bowl team, was picked off by Sun Devil freshman defensive back Christian Ranee, who scampered 39 yards for the TD. N o tes : •The alumni players included Aaron Cox, Kit Lathrop, Jeff Joseph, Pat Taylor, Greg Rice and Steve Matlock. Other alum­ ni who did not play included Darren Woodson, Kevin Miniefield, Floyd Reids, Shante Carver and Mark Tingstad. •Overall, Snyder felt spring football was a success. “I think we accomplished a great deal,” he said. “We had a lot of scrimmage snaps in, a lot of team work. Nobody has to be operated on, so there were no serious injuries. I think we’ve made some real good progress.” •During spring football media day, senior defensive lineman Vince Amey said if the alumni could score against them it would “be pretty sorry.” He had no apologies to make. ASU falls one strike short in loss B y J o s h D e F a m io S ta te P ress L o ri C a in /S ta te P ress ASU toft fielder Jayme Jenkins attempts to beat out a ground ball against the UCLA Bruins. Jenkins and the Sun Devils dropped two games to UCLA on Sunday afternoon. The ASU softball team was one strike away from gaining a split with No. 3 UCLA. They would never get that strike. Junior pitcher Roxanne Tsosie walked UCLA’s Karen Hoshizaki on a 3-2 pitch with a runner at first and die Sub Devils nursing a 4-3 lead with two outs in the top of the seventh. The Sun Devils then watched as Tsosie’s second pitch to Christie Ambrosi struck the bat­ ter in the helmet, loading the bases, UCLA’s Courtney Dale then unloaded them on a single to center that ASU’s Stacey Slick booted. By the time the inning ended, the Bruins had built an 8-4 lead. ‘I t was brutal,” senior co-captain Tina Ruff said. “We just didn’t do the parts that we need­ ed to do. We played five great innings then we sat back and said ‘Oh, we can get this win’. Then they attacked. They attacked us and we should have won i t ” The Sun Devils attempted a comeback in the bottom of the frame, loading the bases with nobody out, but only managed to score two runs and the Bruins took the game 8-6. The game had started out well for ASU, as it put a pair of runs on the board in each of the first two innings. “We just didn’t put them away,” ASU head coach Linda Wells said. “We had die chance to, but we just didn’t do it.” UCLA began to chip away at the lead by scoring single runs in the fifth and sixth inning. UCLA’s Julie Adams die led off the seventh with a home tun to bring the scene to 4-3. Earlier, in the first game, the Bruins won a pitcher’s duel 2-0. The difference was provid­ ed on a homer by UCLA’s Julie Marshall. The Sun Devils are back in action on Wednesday night, when they travel to Tucson to take on in-state rival UofA. C l a s s if ie d s Page 17 M onday, April 2 1,1997 S t a t e P ress 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 Suite Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section^ For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. ANNOUNCEMENTS NEEDED BADLY, transporta­ tion vehicle. Some work OK,. Have cash. Please call 265-0551. More Trivia... APARTMENTS 3BR/2BA, 1.5 mi. E. of ASU vaulted ceiling, fp, appl., pool, jacuzzi, remdl, seel, ldc., stor., $850/mo. Call Jim at 905-8121 ASU VILLAGE/ Cortez Ponds: Studio- $395, 2bd- $525, 3bd$625. ReMax 100, Rose 8200500. WALK TO ASU 3bd 2ba $875, 5bd 2ba $1250, 4bd 2ba w/ pool $1400. Call Tim 894-0288 DON"T HAUL it home...Store it. Student specials. Best Little W arehouse in Tempfe. 9673900. WALK TO ASU: 1bit Iba $475 3bd 2ba $900 4bd 2ba $1050 avail now Tim 894-0288 TEMPE/ASU NICE lbdrm small quiet complex, laundry $350 or 360/mo. 921-2561 The tw o longest one-syllable w ords in the English language are "screeched" and "strengths." H O M ES FOR RENT torte/ lie fe yeb http://news. vpsa.asu.edu/ TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BD 2BA Duplex 1312 N. Har­ old St. N Tempe; A/c, yd, covd pricing $600 ref. 966-0987 HELP WANTEDGENERAL TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 3BD 2BA, 1 mi. from ASU, Papago Park, fireplace, pool, 1 covered parking space, avail. May 15. $1 r200/mo. 9473917 or 945-5845 LARGE 3 bdrm, 2 ba, 510 W. Unvsty. $900/mo. Shah 8203333. WUSA ow/agt. PAP AGO PARK- 2bd/ 2ba, w/d, 2 pools, 2 Jacuzzis, 1 mi to ASU. $795/mo. Harris Prop­ erties 829-0902 Find it FAST in the Classifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL RENTAL SH ARIN G RENTAL SH ARIN G R O O M S FOR RENT FEM PREF 3bd/2ba, fum’d. Eiliot&Kyrene. $450/mo, util incl. $100 nr dep. 820-6501. RMTE WTD. 2bdr/2ba apt, w/d, full furn. 3/4 mi from ASU. $ 3 15/mo + 1/2 utils. Avail. June 966-9025. ROOM FOR rent, $400/mo + util, close to campus. Plenty o f room. Call Bob 894-6621. FOR AUGUST: Female n/s to to share 2bd/2ba apt $325 + util. Very close to campus, wkend security, pool, parking. Call Erica asap @ 804-1913 Iv msg ONE ROOM in condo by Fiesr ta Mall. Prvt bth, $400 + dep. cbl and util incl. Pager 6692190 OWN ROOM w/d, dishwasher, close to campus, clean, pool, spa, $250 Lve msg 966-4580. ROOMMATE WANTED to share 4bd ' house w/pool $310/mo. Call Jesse 752-7808. ROOMMATE WTD nice house w/ pool & spa, w/d 275 + 1/3 util close to campus 470-8467 TEMPE/ SOUTH ScottsdaleRoom in gated community, 2 car garage, pool, own bath, near ASU on greenbelt, F pref. $450 + util. 990-8788. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL APARTMENTS Live at The Commons ' on Lem on 2 B e d ro o m 2 B ath 2 S to ry A p a r tm e n t f o r R e n t DONOR EBES NEEDED H ealthy w om en (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ m ously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. M ust have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits a n d injections involved. Accepted donors com pensated $2000. < X \M A. s p a n 602-860-4792 i M o u n ta in S h a d o w s — — 1------ ASSORT AND GOLF CLUB L o o k fo r th e se an d m any o th e r p o sitio n s to be Excellent Benefits Package Available E O E /M inority/F /V /D Call G ina @ H t - M N __Leave_ajnessaje__ When Does Part-Time m Hours = Full-Time Pay? ^ Boring?? T ir e d o f n o is y , io u d I n e ig h b o r s ? W e o f f e r q u ie t l iv in g . 1 /2 b lo c k fro m cam pus, b e a u tifu lly fu r n is h e d . H u g e f b e d ­ ro om . 1 ba th ap a rtm e n ts. A ll b ills pa id . C able T.V. re a d y , h e a te d p o o l, an d s p a c io u s la u n d ry f a c ili­ tie s . F rie n d ly c o u rte o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p b y to d a y !!! Meridian Corners Apartments Beat the Rush! Make you reservation for FALL now. •Spacious Studios • i & 2 bedrooms • Beautiful park-like setting • Close to campus •Lim ited availability C all us or stop by today. T e rra c e R oad A p a rtm e n ts 9 5 0 S. T e rra c e R d . 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 9 6 6 -5 8 1 9 1440 E. Broadway SHLRGAR0 STORAGE CENTERS S t u d e n t S t im m e r S p e c ia l , ? 4 W hen y o u vyork fo r th e n a tio n 's largest te le m a rke tin g firm . Call our job hotline for current positions • 596-7034 55 • R o o m D i s c o u n t s • F o o d / B e v e r a g e D i s c o u n t s C ity of Tem pe T EN N IS & RACQUETBALL INSTRUCTOR We offer: • Guar, pay vs. comm. • Avg. $8-$13/hr. ? Paid training - $7/hr. • Weekly checks • Create a shift around your schedule (1&-30 hrs.) • Reputable clientele $10.00 per hour Positions available immediately. 10-20 hrs per week. Requires experience in adult and junior group tennis/ racquetball instruction and league and/ or toypiament administration. Apply at: For more inform ation or to schedule a fflp e rv ie w , call City o f Tempe lOwanis Recrcatioit Center 345-9509 Attn: Tim Barnes 6111 S. All America Way Tempe, Arizona (602)350-5721 (602) 350-5Ù50 TDD ^ Located at M ilf& Baseline in T e m p e ^ ^ WHY BUY? Lse/schl yr. Refurb'd IBM's under $39/mo, free delv to,ASU. WorxSmart Leas­ ing, Greg <§►614-9492 a v ialable n o w and in th e n e ar future: Marriottproudly supports a Drug Free Work Environment G e t y o u r fr ie n d s PORTABLE CD-ROM player for your laptop plugs in pemcia slot $320 Cali 994-5420. --------------— ■ U LA R O tO T T S _ — Food & Beverage * Golf Rooms & Related it Spa it Plus Other Opportunities o g e th e r a n d liv e it u p ! > A d m in , f e e rT f iiii1 1 1 gol f and GOV'T FORECLOSED homes from pennies on $ 1, Delinquent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll free (1 )8 0 0 -2 1 8 9000 Ext. H -1676 for current listings. COMPUTERS- - ★ ★ F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n call Furnished for 4 people Only: ■$500/m o. - Summer $700/m o. - School year +* ?— REAL ESTATE FOR SALE: Sofa/lounger $125, twin mattress & box spring $50. Call for infor 970-5463. Comelbochlnn O PAPAGO PARK, Questa Vida, & others! 2 & 3 bdrms. Own for less fhan rent. Greg, Realty Executives. 966-0016. FURNITURE 1E m p lo y m e n t O p p o r tu n itie s • B e n e f its • M e d ic a l A ttention Sum m er Students Short term rentals Available. Studio. 1 & 2 bedrooms Gorgeous community Call now! Meridian Comers 966-5818 TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE Equal Opportunity/ Reasonable Accommodation employer. TICKETS U2 7TH ROW from stage$175 bbo & sec 18 $75 obo 813-8726. AUTOMOBILES '87 SUZUKI Samurai 4x4* teal, a/c, new clutch, am/fm cass, 2 . tops, runs great, very clean, 105K mi $2250 991-7181 ’93 MAZDA MX3-AT, PDL* Alarm, CD, tinted win, looks good & runs great. 461-1977 eve. 1991 CHEVY CAVALIER, auto, a/c, cruise, very sharp, many other clean cars in this price range, $3995.949-7600 1991 TOYOTA CAMRY $sp., full power, tilt cruise, Only 50,00 miles* beautiful Scot­ tsdale trade $7495.949-7600' HELP WANTEDGENERAL SHORT ON CASH? Plasm a Makes a Lot of Cents! / / New Donors Earn For Yourr F irs t tio n s / T hree Donations $95 \ y •$ssoCash Dravdng in April • Haven't been here in 90 days? Return and receive an extra 110! 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102 Tempe 894-2250 C G N TEO N As We Grow, So Do You! 40» I M etU n l ock 8615 E. M cDowell Interested in getting in on a fast-track for promotion, advancement and success? Stuck in a dead­ end job that's taking you nowhere fast? Then FACS, the Phoenix area's hottest new employer, w ants to talk to you! The FACS Group, Inc. provides financial, credit and administrative services for Federated Department 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 SE 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 ST O R E O P E R A T O R S • EXPRESS C R E D IT HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL G YM N A S TIC S TE N N IS W A T E R S » C O U N S E LO R S P restigious coed cam p in beautiful t^ s s . seeks caring and m o tivated sophs, jrs , srs, and grds w ho love w orking w ith children. O ther positions in A thletics, A rts, Theatre and W aterfront also available. C om petitive S alaries + Room + Board ♦ T ravel. C all Cam p Taconic: 8 0 0 -7 6 2 -2 8 2 0 ^ ■ j&Join the dynamic team at our offices in Tempe and enjoy: • $7.50/hour to start for m ost p osition s • Com plete benefits for full-tim e • G enerous discounts on m ost ' Macy's purchases •S e rv ic e d perform ance aw ards • Variety o f full-tim e and part-tim e shifts • Fully paid training on phone and CRT online applications * Recreation and social activities A ll o f this plus w ith our casual dress code you cart even wear shorts to work! A typing test is required for all positions. Mon.-Fri. S a.m. - 5 p.m. at 1345 S. 52nd Street (northeast comer of 52nd Street and West 14th Street between Broadway Road and University Drive). For more information call: ^ O O O '- » O / . 'H ^ (toll free, 24 hours) 1 - 0 0 0 - FACS FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT SERVICES Equal opportunity fo r all P age 18 M onday, April 2 1,1997 AUTOMOBILES 68 RED Mustang. 289, a/t, a/c. $5,000 obo. Please call Russ at 894-6942 86 FIREBIRD 1 owner, ac, v8 at ec, ps, Xlnt cond, must sell ? $3500 obó 370-4727 4373883 86 PORCHE 944 turbo, mint cond. Have all service records, Pioneer CD. $13,000. NoNOT$1300!! *922-1879 4 SALE: 86 Honda CRX 5sp, well maint, a/c, new brakes, am/fm cass, white w/ blue int, 137K mi, 2nd owner nonsmoker, $2000, tags good thru 10/98 706-0102 or 941-4669 SEIZED CARS from $ 175. Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW's. Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4W DV Your area. Toll free i800 218-9000 Ext. A-l 676 for current listings. BICYCLES 18" TREK 8000 w/manitou 4, LX/XT c o m p .änza brksf, tech Ute lew, $650 obo 784-9869 95 DIAMONDSACK (Sorrento) 21 f mtn bike, quick release wheels & seat, under 100 hrs. $200 obo 839-3005 TRAVEL ***ASU SUMMER school to Holland for 6 credits. Call 9659047 for info packet. ADC HAS free cars avail, for most areas. Gas allowance. Auto Driveway Co. 952-0339. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. Quick departrs. Buy cpupons/awards. Most places woridwide. 968-7283 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTED- HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDG g jg £ L _ _ _ _ $$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 worksfor you & if you have the determination to succeed then cal us at Orca Intemtn'l 438-8095. COURIER FOR local document delivery. Use your vehicle. $7.50/hr. 78^-4889 INTERN/SUMMER WORK or a Personal asst., to president of million dollar ad agency. Flexi­ ble hrs. 25-50hrs/wk. Depend-, able car, common sense & paid training. Jim 460-1704 OUTSIDE JOBS - Now hiring! National Parks, Beach Resorts Ranches, Rafting Co.’s. Na­ tionwide openings. Benefits! Bonuses! Call (919) 918-7767, ext R105 SECURITY-IMM. OPENINGS for 25 officers. Tempe ’area full/part time shifts, $6.50/hr + benefits-Proguard-404i E. Tho­ mas #104 VALET PARKERS needed. Good attitude. Must ahve reli­ able car, be clean cut, polite. Só­ lo hr p/t. 548-0599 MARINE AQUARIUM Shop Exp. necessary. Apply w/resume Scottsdale 922-7229 P/T CASHIER positions avail eve & w/e shifts. Work 8 + hrs/wk. $5-$6/hr DOE. Pete @ Central Parking System 9219920. SUMMER SPORTS Camp- We need energetic staff who work well w/ children for Scotts. day camp. No exp nee. 941-3496 Don’t call another ad until you hear What we have to offer! Re­ sort Reservations Dept, has 20 pos. avail. 9am -lpm or 5pm9pm. $9-$12/hr avg, no sell­ ing!! Start immed. Call Beth 491-4921. AUTOMOBILES CSR FOREIGN Currency f/t MF 9am-5pm Scott, loc. Full ben. C aib handling & cust. serv. exp. prefd Call Jane 947-8720 or fax resume to 947-8656 ANSWERING SERVICE-P/T, typing & tel. exp req. Scot­ tsdale 941-4890. DELIVERY PERSON light cler­ ical duties. Sage Engineering 966-9971 APPOINTMENT SETTERS $8/hr-t-bonuses, full med pack­ age, tuition reimbursement. Apply @ 1000 E. Apache Ste 115, between 4-6pm M-Th, 9-3 Sa. Apply in person. DRIYER/MESSENGER NEED­ ED M-F 20+ hrs. Need car + ins, 253-1155 FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits: $7-l2/hr. Call Carrie at 777-1054 ASU STUDENTS wanted now. $ 7 -$ ll/h r. If you can say "free,'- call me. Also have cleri­ cal position. Start now- 7842270. Ask for Bill. GET A head start on your fu­ ture! ! Everything you need to know to take control & build your career. Call 212-6785 for FREE info. . ASU STUDENTS who are seri­ ous about making $. Don't miss this oppotunity. Call 5306844 and leave message, CNA NEEDED for 10-bed adult care home in Ahwatukee - all shifts avail. 893-1370. GREAT SCHOOL job. Care­ giver for active quadriplegic..34 eyes/ wks; Healthy, smoke/ drug free ass’t w/positive attitude. Good pay. Will train. Tom 949-7241. Lv. mes. COUNSELOR POSITIONS: po­ sition-openings in all team & individual sports + waterfront + art + drama + RN's + coaching. Competitive salary, Located Berkshire Mts of Massachusetts - 2 1/2 hrs from NYC/Boston. Call Greylock 1-800-8425214. Camp Romaca for girls 1-888-2-ROMACA. IN HOME providers. Ft/pt workers heeded to provide care to developm entally disabled persons living in natural family , settings. Salary $6-$9/hr. Col­ lege tuition reimbursement pro­ gram, health, dental, and opti­ cal'coverage for f/t. B.R.I.T.E. Inc. Call James 254-2785 ext. 6 TRAVEL th e nation's leading test preparation company is looking for a few good instructors. Great scores and a soM> science background can land you an awesome part-time job! If you are dynamic; enjoy teaching, and know your sciences, give us a call FLY CHEAP!! EUROPE $269 Within USA $79 $ 129. Caribbean $249 r/t - Mexico $209. f/t Cheap fares worldwide!!!!!! http://www.airhitch.org 1-888AIRHITCH S t a t e P ress ¿Courier Air FarasiY London $ 9 9 , M exico $ 1 5 0 . R io $ 2 5 0 . T okyo $ 3 5 0 . S yd n ey $ 4 2 0 ( a l RT) 60-90°o OFF ALL FARES I Air Cotírier International 800-298-1230 U hr HELP WANTEDGENERAL MODELS & ACTORS: Inter­ national scouts want you for summer Caribbean cruise. All ages/types. 941-6922. NEEDED: APPRENTICEThurs & Fri for Cafe Vintage, Courtyard location, America West Corp. offices. Must have trans, pref. truck or station wag­ on. Call Dan 968-4884 OPEN MINDED person needed to translate Dutch. Must be flu­ ent. SlO/hr. 360-6917 P/T DAT A entry/cust. service for fast paced office. Resp. includ., sale order entry, answ. phones & responding to cust. requests. Attn. Laura 784-4889 P/T’ER NEEDED 20-30 hrs/wk. Flex sched. Cust serv­ ice. Detail orient. Comp knowl­ edge a +. ’‘Call- 894-0055. 2 miles from ASU. DBC needs people to w ork w ith children, adoles­ cents, arid young adults w ho are Developmen­ ta l^ , Emotionally, and Behaviorally challenged. Earn $6.50 - $8.00 per Hour W orking W ith Adolescents A U T O M O T IV E T E S T D R IV E R S Test driver for major autom otive manufacturer at proving grounds located 20 m i. South of Chandler near the town of Maricopa, AZ. M ust have clean dri­ ving record, 4 yrs. op. lic.,H.S. diplom a or CED, Pass DOT physical & drug screen. After training $7/h r. Must be able to work full-tim e. For further inform ation call: Kbit • Casual dress in Professional Environment • $7/hr pjus Bonus* I'm Advancement opportunities - Enhance your skills & buHd your resume! Searching for m otivated, dependable, friendly people to join our successful team calling for our Fortune 500 clientsChildren's Books & Toys, National Bank Programs, and Gourmet Coffee mm QSM HELP WANTEDGENERAL 8 9 4 -9 8 1 6 C u s to m e r S e ru ice B e p re s e n la liiie s Automotive Test Services 2628 W . Birchwood Cr. Mesa, AZ 85202 1-602-967-6799 ext. 100 Create Your Own Schedule $900 Hiring Beaus Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale's leading dating service located in O ld Town Scottsdale. Tired of working weekends? hareaseyoir Customer Service skis whie makrig m ^rg mon^y & havhgfin. Participate in our award-winning -no experience necessary 4 iM fK M fM /fŒ B W Temporary Hofiday positions e * ta j7 .a ff/h r : nocafeptease * Choose froma large selection of F/T& P/Tshifts with starting as early as 5am or ending as late as Tam. Green Gables >Fun&fi1erK#yworkerMornment > Use of computéis & headphones > Incentive programs > Employee discounts >CerÉáy located, easy access via freeway & bus Work aft a place where we focus on fun! Office C o r r a 2345t Thomas Rd„ grand floor Mon thru Fri 10am*7pm NE Scottsdale 391-2728 NE Phoenix 493-1167 42nd/Chandler Blvd 759-4063 Arrowhead Lakes 561-7757 play! Have fun call M etro Phoenix singles to invite them for a free tour o f our center. Openings available in: • FT or PT work available between 6:30am - 6:30pm • Relaxed dress code NO SELLING Day/Night/Wknd Shifts Flexible Scheduling Exp. not req’d b ut helpful Women Excel Casual Dress Automated Dialing System Fun Atmosphere EOE • All teacher supplies provided! Chandler 460-2040 Prior experience working with children preferred. Students mooring in education, pqfd^PE& child development encouraged fo apply. For more information, call one of the above craters, or check the white pages for a center near you! - ■ Horn's Throughout theWorlJ will Smile with Your Help!! Incentives: Tuition Reimbursement, Paid Tim e Off, Advancem ent Potential, 6 M onth Raises, Paid Training, Pull Benefits Package ENGINEERING CORP. Looking for a job to fit with your school schedule? • W alking d istan ce from ASU HELP WANTEDGENERAL P/T WORK. Hours can be ar­ ranged, custom finishing & cab­ inet shop 994-1221 Do you enjoy working with Children? • First 20 people hired receive $200 hiring bonus • Flexible FuH-time & Part-time day and evening shifts THE PICNIC Company Gour­ met Cafe is now hiring counter/sandwich maker, & delivery drivers. Flexible summer hours. 1415 E. University , Dr. 2 blocks E. of Rural 968-7740. Gain Valuable Experience 967-1480 Looking fo r a w ay to escape th e i Check us out! Summer jobs I SWIM INSTRUCTORS at client homes valley-wide. WSI + strong exp. $12-14/hr + bo­ nuses, flex sched. Christi 5695504 CALL TODAY!!! C O N TIN EN TA L C IRCU ITS CORK • Entry-level G r e a t O p p o r t u n it ie s F o r Co lleg e S tudents Continental Circuits Corp, a leading manufacturer of complex, m ultilayer circuit boards, is currently hiring for entry-level production positions. Part-tim e and Full-time openings. AÙ shifts available - 1st, 2nd, 3rd, including 12 hr. rotating shifts and weekend shifts. H & Diploma or GED required. Apply a t Human Resources Dept. 3510 E. A tlanta * Phoenix (S. of Broadway/ W. of 36th St.) Motu-FrL, 7am-4pm For more information or to discuss your qualifications, call 232-0190, ext. 1135 or 1259. For a complete listing of job openings call our job hotline at 232-0135. F lexib le hours after training! We’re Deluxe TeleService Center, part o f Deluxe Corporation, a premier provider o f checks to financial institutions. We’re increasing our staff again and are seeking PART-TIME Customer Service professionals who enjoy talking to people and have excellent communication and computer skills. You must be a minimum o f 18 years o f age with a high school diploma or equivalent to qualify. Our training sessions start on April 28,1997. • Part-time training - 8-12 am for 3 weeks, M-F, shifts varying Benefits include medical insurance, tuition assistance, and paid vacation. For ¡immediate con­ sideration apply in person at Deluxe TeleService Center, 3050 S. 35th St., Suite C (Just off 1-10 and University). Call (602) 431-2500 for more information.— /A ll applicants are subject fo a bach ground check and drug test. Equal Opportunity Employer. DELUXE P age 19 M onday, April 21, 1997 S t a t e P ress HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE RECEPTIONIST/SECRETARY PT, Valley, computer exp, M-Th 3-8pm, F 3-6pm. Starts $5/hr. + some commission pay. Call 951-2716 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE CORK'NCLEAVER MAJERLE'S Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. Currently hiring day waitstaff & host/ess. Apply in person, 24 N 2nd St., Phx. FOOD SERVERS wanted Will work around your schedule. $4.25/hr. Ahwatukee area. Call Gwen or Jody 496-0066 BRUEGGER'S BAGELS in Tempe now hiring. Hrs avail MF Call 829-1000 NICK’S PIZZA. Help wtd: drivers, cooks, counter help. Eves. only. Pay D.O.E. Please call $94-0007 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE $ 5 0 -$ 1 0 0 /d a y HEtP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE NANNY WANTED Flex. W eekday Afternoons One ten-m onth-old 64th S t. & Greenway $7/h r RoUn - 992-2690 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Instructors Needed F/T, P/T, tem p, substitute workers needed at agency fo r adults w/developmental disabilities. C all 994-5704 or apply 7507 E. Osborn Road, Scottsdale, EOE RED ROBIN Tempe has immediate openings , for experienced w aitstaff & cooks. Have fun & make good money. Apply today 1375 W. Elliot ROXSAND RESTAURANT hir­ ing exp'd servers, host/ess, & server assts. Apply at 2594 E. Camelback M-F 2-5pm WEEKDAY BARTENDER & day .servers. Apply at the Vine on Campus 894-2662 HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE SUMMER NANNY for 8 & 3 yr old. Fun loving & energetic. Safe car & references req'd 32nd St. & Camelback area $7/hr. Linda (H )468-1973 (W)9578366 JOB OPPORTUNITIES B ecom e A B a r ie n c I e k E/un S it 10S fO p M Ikhir (Y 7 95 I American Bartending School j Tempe Phoenix L a ra e 1 item 968-7657 957-3770 PERSONALS SERVICES 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, 11th. floor, NY,NY 10010. / HAIR MODELS Wtd for stage presentation. Height, gender, race unimportant. Need to be into edgy fashion. Work done by world-renowned designer. T & G Concepts 649-0789. CHANEY: WE were in COM 110 last semester & studied for the final together, remember? You -borrowed my Sublime CD and I want it .back!!! 784-8360 Sarah DRIVER WTD to drive Saab Sedan to Mas­ sachusetts. Call now 607-0487 TRI ■DELTA congratulates Kathy for being Lavaliered by her special Lambda Chi man Scott. We wish you all the best. SERVICES Parrish The Stress. 430 N. Dobson Rd. Suite 108; Locat­ ed on the N/W Corner of Dob­ son & University. 461-0513. $10 off any session w/ASU ID for the month of April. GRADUATING SENIORS put your resume on an on-line re­ sume database just for college seniors. Call 404-481 -8545 or see www.gr-online.com PERSONALS ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST 4 a m -1 la m 5 am -N o o n by Frances Drake ; LOOKING FOR an egg d o n o r 19-26 years old. Involves @40 h o u rs over 2-3 m onths, in jections & o u t-p atien t p ro ce­ dure. Can pay $1,500. W ould like sim ilar m atch: Irish d escen t, good GPA, m edium build. Your help is ap p reciated . P lease leave m essage ASAP T em p e area. Base -i- !% C o m m . on la rg e tick e t item s. A v g . $ I0 + /H r. N o cold calls. T P M Staffing Services 1 2 3 2 E. Broadw ay, T em pe 9 2 9 -0 3 6 5 RESIDENTIAL C ounselors Social Service Agency has FT/PT positions available working with adults who are developmental^ and mentally challenged in group homes & apartment settings located in Phx., Mesa & Tempe. $6.00-$6.50/hr. DOE. Pd. training. Call 431-9511. P lg T I B ,'S ® £ E S H Coupon Book M ode fo r ASU students, b y ASU students to save you m oney oil o ve r to w n ! MED. 12" P ® pizza B a n n o l P ia g a O n M o n d a y , April 2 1 , 1 9 9 7 * & 11 HOT WINGS $ 8 .9 9 PIC K-U P O R DELIVERY EXPIRES 4-30-97 ARIES (Mar. 21 to April 19) Domestic matters are favored. Be willing to m eet a partner halfway. Make decisions affect­ ing jo in t fin&ncial interests. Bank dealings are fortunate, particularly later in the day . TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Business mixes with plea­ sure, but not until late in the day,Don’t let a child down. Be there at a ¿school function. Your support is needed. GEMINI (May 21 Ju n e 20) Originality is favored in your career, but don’t reach beyond your grasp. Family talks prove beneficial. The air is cleared, and tensions are reduced. GANGER (June 21 to July 22) Try not to let others interfere with work that needs to be done in the morning. A friend con­ fides in you about a touchy situ­ ation. The evening is best for accomplishment. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) The search for new horizons needn’t lead to foolish expenditures. Money has a way of disappear­ ing unless you make a point to be prudent. A good suggestion is likely to come your way in the evening. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You’Ve heard what others have to s4y; it’s your turn to speak up- P rospects for happy romance and leisure activities are wonderful during evening hours. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Be careful not to reveal anoth­ er’s confidences. A social situa­ tion could be somewhat aw k­ ward. Accent domestic interests in theevening. SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Once again, you should put the lid on spending. Domestic interests are highlighted. Real estáte m oves and hom e improvements are favored. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Your social life is very much to your liking, hut à fami­ ly member could feel left out in the cold. Take advantage of your creativity. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Going out for good times is favored* b ut try not. to let dom estic obligations slide. Enjoy sports, exercise, romance or recreation. Get in touch with friends in the evening. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Try to see your adversary’s point of view. Direct your atten­ tion to domestic interests. After dark, a happy surprise comes from an unusual source. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Visits with young children bring both joy and responsibility. Singles enjoy the dating scene.' Affection reigns in close rela­ tionships. YOU BORN TODAY have m ore universal interests than many who surround you. You have a genuine concern for your fellow man and could be drawn to some humanitarian pursuit that involves travel to other countries^ You’re cautious and tactful. Accent your individuali­ ty for your greatest success. Y ou're versatile and can suc­ ceed in many varied careers, both in business and thé arts. Ó1997 King Features Syndicate Inc. 405W. UNIVERSITY *101 WEST OF MILL AVE. NEXT TO TOPS LIQUOR CASH PRIZES! OPEN MIC COMPETITION Music ■ Dance Comedy ■ Poetry Dramatic M onologue You can enter! Get your Where ASU Goes for Pizza $900 lOâff fan I info OFF ANY PIZZA REVERSE HAPPŸ HOUR Balboa Cafe 404 S MWAve. ^ 968-1300 J 12 " o r 16" TYPING/W ORD PRO CESSIN G APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/wp. Call Jessie, 945-5744. Editing available. TUTORS Review for lois, 117, 119 & ¡210 for $20. Ph. 967-3774 or www.miracletutoring.com WANTED $$NEED CASH? We buy used musical instrum ents. Top $$ paid. 548-1114. M-Sat 1 MISCELLANEOUS SPERM & egg donors needed! Earn $2,000 in your spare time! Call our 24hr private informa­ tion line: (602) 280-9266. INTERNET URLS INSIDE SA LES/C SR O pen ing s on 3 shifts: la rh -7 a m WEIGHTLIFTING EQUIP­ MENT, gym quality. Own your own gym for the price of most memberships. Lowest prices, heavy duty lifetime guarantee, new! 877-1412 or 242-6695, MATH TEST $10OFFMASSAGE 678-1361. Id en tities are confidential. H e D éb in er! HEALTH & FITNESS $1.99/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed. APA/MLA. Same day. -DTP. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 10010. T*MowTtamtemeBeeil 1 2 5 0 E. H tch E Bivd. Te m p e I s BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BARS 921J?925 "V , JOB OPPORTUNITIES HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE CHECK OUT your student g o v e r n m e n t . h ttp ://w w w .asu .ed u /stu d en tüfé/ÁSASÜ I A d vertís* y o u r I In tern et b u s ln e e s o r W eb s ite in tf C lassified s. ■ CaH 966-673! Uh m o re in fo rm atio n SERVICES \,0\N LOW A LOW COST HEALTH INSURANCE *• I |• ■ *• I |* | Lowest Cost Plans p e r semester or m o nth Most pre-existing con ditons OK International H e a lth Plans Dependent H ealth Plans • C all now for your FREE .Enrollment Kill liS iil application a t the MUAB SERVING ARIZONA SINCE 1983 offices on the 3rd flo o r W estern H ealth Services o f the MU-HURRY! Application deadline Is Friday, April 25 at Spai. If you d o n 't w ant to TYPING/ W ORD PRO CESSIN G compete, then do n't forget to Come to the com petition on Tuesday, A pril 29 at T H E W R IT E S T U F F PrefessloiralWoni Processing t Dvsktop Publishing Services 12:15pm in the MU Program m ing Lounge. 1 C oupon Per Pizza D ine-In o r P ick-U p 963-3537 T in Pipers * Theses 'D is s i riotions A PA/M LA/Grad u te Collige Form ts Risonili * Graphics o r S1 O ff D e live ry I 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 L ■■■ mm ■■■ «J 1 3 0 1 E . U n iv e rs ity Bladder Buster E v e ry ly io n d a y N ig h t lc D ra fts Starts at 9pm SI00 D rinks A"Night A liy Q u e s t io n s ! mum 9^-9544 TUTORS TUTORS The Nam e You K now :.. The Reputation You Trust.. We offer tutorial for the following classes: A lgeb ra/FInlte M a th M A T 106, M A T 114, M A T 117, M A T 119 Calculus/Precalculus M A T 210, M A T 270, M A T 271, M A T 170 Statistics Q B A 221, P S Y 2 30 Physics P H Y 111, P H Y 112, PH Y 121 C hem istry C H M 113, C H M 115, C H M 1 1 6 B u siness FIN 300, 0 P M 301 We still have space in some classes; currently taking names for both Summer Sessions and Fall Successfully Helping students since 1980. MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • SIMON" Cornerstone Mall • 968 4668 Page 20 S tate P ress Monday, April 21, 1997 -A r ~ -■ '- a - .. 7”-‘ 1j .t ™ - ^ - 7 - Recycle Ke ! am aos Killer Resumes We’re looking Great selection of books on resume s, interviewing, and job hunting l A lo t m ore than ju st textbooks! University AMERICAN EXPRESS 966-622 6 704 S. College \j ft S E S motivated people GMAT TÏÆÊ P r in c e t o n who want experience . Turkey B ET M elt ^Chicken Cheeses teak™ f i j f B a co n H am ’ n Cheese M elt M M eat L o a f M onster™ Careful...loaded! E x trem e C arver™ C o m b o O N LY *3” Includes your choice o f one Extreme Carver™ Sandwich, an individual side item and a regular drink. G ood at all participating Boston M arket locations. Present coupon when ordering* O n ly one coupon per visit per customer. C oupon is not redeemable for cash, for gift certificates, or with any other coupon dr special offer. N o reproductions allowed. Applicable taxes paid by bearer. N o cash rdFuhd; O ffer expires 4/27/97- Now hiring for the following positions for both summer and fall semesters. Summer editor Reporters Sports reporters Photographers Opinion columnists Entertainment writers Copyeditors Mac/Quark graphic artists Advertising sales representatives Delivery drivers Office assistant Meet new people. STÂTÈ •¡Earn ; decent cash. Applications available at the State Press info desk in the north basement of Matthews Center.