v >i'H Mi'\ W orld / N S ports a tio n N o . 1 3 S u n D e v ils play J o n B en e t Ra m s e y ' s pa r en ts F r e s n o S tate in last BREAK THEIR SILENCE Page 3 THREE-GAME HOMESTAND OF YEAR. Page 19 A n In d e p e n d e n t M o rn in g D a ily V o i. 81 N o . 1 3 7 Ba I In s id e C l m d f i e t t a .... ......... i l l Gowks.. ..IS Crossword.............. ....... t> Horoscope* ................... ..27 Opiatos__. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Police Repon „ 6 Sports............................. F rid a y , M ay 2 ,1 9 9 7 Ness convinces court not to disqualify her for M2-minute’ error B y R o w e E dg ell S tate P ress First she is in, then she is out. Now, Autumn Ness is back in office as the ac tiv itie s vice p resident for the Associated Students of ASU. The ASASU Supreme Court unani­ mously overturned the decision of the Election Commission Wednesday that had disqualified Ness; for turning in a late financial statement. The commission decided April 18 to disqualify Ness after she submitted the statem ent 12 m inutes past the 9 p.m. deadline on April 16. She appealed the decision last week. Ness said she was “very excited” about the court overturning the commission’s sanction. . “T asked them to think about the deci­ sion,” she said, "1 was elected by popular vote. There was no charges of fraud or cheating, so I wanted them to think about should the decision be overturned.” • The ASASU bylaws state that a viola­ tion of this type should warrant a 20-point penalty against the candidate — one point over the 19 points a candidate is allowed to have before being disqualified. The charges’ were filed by Elections Coordinator Chip Ahlswede after Ness won the runoff. The court decided to overturn the deci­ sion due to two existing statutes. The case brought to light a conflict between the bylaws and an executive res­ olution, said Anthony Knowles, chief jus­ tice of the court. “The bylaws say that the financial statement has to be turned in by the clo­ sure of the polls,” he said. “The resolution says that the polls should close at 9 p.m. on the day of the election.” Knowles said in this case, it is the opin­ ion of the court that the bylaws supersede the resolution. Since Ness had the form in by the close of the poll, the justices decid­ ed she would not be disqualified. In the court hearing. Ahlswede said the polls were not closed in the Memorial Union until 9:15 p.m. "If there is 20 people in line to vote at 9:30, then the polls are still open,” he said. “This leaves a buffer zone, kind of a little cushion of time for candidates.” Ness was also charged, along with 13 other candidates, for neglecting to claim items on their financial statements. The charge was dismissed when the committee found the errors were not deliberate and no penalty points were assessed. Had Ness been disqualified, her oppo­ nent, Erik Noland, would have assumed the position. Noland trailed Ness by 335 votes in the election. Ness said she had the statement finished hours before the deadline, but when she went to turn it in she noticed some mistakes. “By the time 1 was done, it was late,” she said. “We are all human and we make m istakes. T hat’s what it was —- a 12 minute mistake.” :V. Ness said she is not siire if her. case will set a precedent for other students to turn in late forms. “It is som ething the court has to decide,” she said. “It should be on an indi­ vidual basis.” Erik Guzowski/State Press A u tu m n N e s s , A S A S U a c tiv itie s v ic e p re s id e n t-e le c t, b lo w s b u b b le s o n to p o f h e r s m ile y fa c e c a m p a ig n s lo g a n a fte r h e a rin g th a t th e A S A S U S u p re m b C o u rt o v e rtu rn e d th e ir b la c k -b a ll d e c is io n , a llo w in g h e r to ta k e o ffic e T h u rs d a y . O fficials dow nplay dorm allegation s B y D ea nna D ark Sta te P ress This is the fin al issue o f the State Press fo r the Spring semester. W e hope it's been as good-for you as # # been fo r e iM s k riB S can start going to class a g a in , and maybe ewwsetudy fo r finals. * . This semester s d V i Rending three o f our best out in to harsh and a lie n w o rld o f p o s t-g ra d u a tio ri& l W e 're ¡¡addened to see such fine journalists leave our cozy nest, but w e're also proud as heck, too. S o jjj it ó our pleasure to see the follow­ ing seniors grab their sheepskins: - Melody McDonald Tim Baxter Diane Kessinger J Conditions in ASU residence halls are not as dire as reported, at least according to some University officials. Fallout from the Thursday State Press article documenting instances of drug use, vandalism and other illegal activities in the residence halls —- as well as lax reactions from hall staff — has officials pointing to the positive qualities of dorm life. “I don’t believe Residential Life has been negligent in their responsibilities in enforcing state law or University policy,” said Jim Rund, associate vice president of Student Affairs. While he said he is aware of problems in the residence halls, he was not aware of die reality of the environment as it was displayed in die article. “The article comes at the right time,” Rund said, “Residential Life can thoroughly review their practices and make any changes.” However, he said he doesn’t know if any changes will be made. Rund said it is the obligation of Residential Life staff to consider the reasons behind viewpoints contrary to their own. “One of two things will happen. Either they will review and reafTurn to Dorms, page 2 Debate continues on free HIV tests B y B e n L ea th er m a n S ta te P ress The issue of free anonymous HIV testing on campus might final­ ly be resolved this summer as ASU administrators decide if it is a budget priority. Tom Jacobsen, associate director of Student Health, said the pro­ gram is a priority on his department’s budget for the 1998 fiscal year, which begins in July and covers the 1997-98 school year. The budget was submitted to the vice-president o f Student Affairs’ office in February. Free anonymous HIV testing was conducted on campus by the M aricopa C ounty H ealth D epartm ent from the spring 1993 semester until last May, when it was discontinued because o f coun- ty budget constraints. Karen Moses, associate director of health education and well­ ness, said Student Health’s plan would have the department hire a certified tester to work at least three days a week screening stu­ dents. Before the plan can go any further, the testing must be consid­ ered a budget priority by Student Affairs officials, Jacobsen said each department within Student Affairs applies for new programs every year with varied results. “Historically, the vice president’s office has been good at listen­ ing to the students' requests and they’ve been very receptive,” he said. “But there is a limited amount of money available and there T urn to HIV, page 2 S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2 ,1 9 9 7 Page 2 Dor] 11 Continued from page 1. written Entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f th e M a tth e w ! C e n te r, R equests w ill not be taken over the phone o r i t e m , | D eadline fo r requests Is noon the day b efo n H publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Onty o re entry per organization per day is permitted. • Entries must contain foe foil nam e of the dub o r organization, a description of the event, date, tim e end fo e full ad d ress o f th e lo catio n . A ll requests are subject to editing far content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. T h e T o d a y S e ctio n is a d a ily c a le n d a r o f events printed as a service to foe ASU communi­ ty. Requests are accepted on a first-com e, firstserved basis and are printed as space permits. • C o lle g e B ib le F e llo w s h ip — General meeting at 7 p.m. in MU Coconino 224. » T u rk is h S tu d e n t A s s o c ia tio n — Piano & Cello concert at 6 p.m. in MU Pima room. • A s ia n S tu d e n t A s s o c ia tio n — Elections at 4:20 p.m . in M U Yum a 211. • G ra d u a te P a in tin g S tu d e n ts — Works by grad­ uate painting students on display at 7 p.m . at the Art Annex, College between 6th and 7th street • T h e F a rc e S id e C o m e d y H o u r •— Best of show, funniest sketches from this sem ester a t 12:40 p.m . in foe M U Programming Lounge. firm their position, or make important and appropriate changes,” Rund said. Sally B ryant, d irecto r o f Residential Life, said some students do push the laws, but they are dealt With through education. “The residence halls reflect the community,” Bryant said. “These are problems that occur anywhere people live. I believe our staff in Student Affairs and Residential Life care about foe safety and care of students. There are many good things going on in foe halls and many responsible students.” Bryant said she believed foe State Press article misrepresented foe resi­ dence hall system, but foe questions it posed will allow staff to review their policies and programs. With foe help of students, she said, changes may take place. “We won’t know about our budget for another couple weeks,” Evans said. “It’s usually around late-Iune and the end of foe fiscal year. Last year, we received $2.75 million and we’re pret­ ty much guaranteed the same amount.” O fficials from Student A ffairs could not be reached for comment. If the testing is approved, It will likely find the support of some campus officials. Josh Carr, Associated Students of ASU executive vice president-elect, said promoting the program will be high on his agenda when he takes office later this month. “I’ll do my best to make sure foe program is advertised so students know that HIV testing is going on and they can use it,” said Carr, who has been a proponent of testing since it was'halted. “It’ll be great to have it take place after students have worked on getting it back for a long time.” HIV _ _ Continued from page 1. might be more important issues.” Sue Evans, business manager for Student Health, said they requested $11,750, which would largely pay for the tester’s salary. She added that Student Affairs usu­ ally approves requests relating to per­ sonnel. Whatever costs are left over Will be absorbed by Student Health's “local fund” — a $1.7 million cash pool that comes from the various ser­ vice fees patients pay : W E L L , - r v w V s it . T H E L A s r S T A T E P R E S S i . S unday: • E y e c y c le a t A S U — Sunday breakfast ride with A SU ’s only tandem bicycle ciub meets at 9 a.m . in foe S R C . C all Doug B anfelder at 9 2 1 -2 8 8 0 for details. M onday: • C o a litio n fo r J u s tic e — “W hy Solar Power is imperative" at noon in M U Mohave. oF T € SEhESTER. , - T une in _nE3T wEEk For ' ■ T H E S P E C W l - - ^ i ‘; ^ ' f i P h o t o I s s u e and t h e S h o p p e r CASH FOR BOOKS SELL Y O U R TEXTBOOKS BACK TO B O T H E R 'S • HIGHEST PRICES PAID • • FAST & FRIENDLY SERVICE • FREE PARKING • • SELL US YOUR BOOKS A N D GET $5 OFF YOUR NEXT TEXTBOOK PURCHASE OF $75 O R MORE • 423.8499 Scottsdale & McDowell _____ W orld/N ation_____ _ STATE P r e ss ______________________ __ _______ Friday, May 2, 1997 _________ ______________ 1 _ ■ JonBenet’s parents say they didn’t kill her B y J en nifer M ears A sso cia te d P ress BOULDER, C olo. — D irectly answ ering for the first time the ques­ tion that has hung over them ever since th eir d au g h ter’s slaying, JonB enet R am sey’s parents R a m se y declared Thursday they did not kill their little girl. “I’m appalled that anyone would think that John or I would be involved in such a hideous, heinous crime. I did not kill JonBenet. I did not have anything to do with it,” said Patsy Ramsey, who with her husband broke four months of public silence. “F loved that child with my — whole of my heart and soul.” John Ramsey said: “I did not kill my daughter JonBenet.” A teary-eyed Mrs. Ramsey sat close to her husband, hands clasped, as the couple spoke to a small group of local reporters at a hotel for more than a half-hour. They asked the public for help in find­ ing the killer and called for thé harshest penalty for anyone convicted. “This is a solvable crime and it will be solved,” Ramsey said. Mrs. Ramsey added: “God knows who you are and we will find you.” S ix-year-old JonB enet was found strangled in the basement of the family’s large, T udor-style hom e after M rs. Ramsey reported finding a ransom note demanding $118,000. An autopsy indi­ cated the former Little Miss Colorado may have been sexually assaulted. D istric t A tto rn ey A lex H unter recently acknowledged that the couple were the focus o f the investigation. They w ere q u estio n ed by p o lice at length on Wednesday — separately, as investigators had dem anded — after months of wrangling over the terms of the interrogation. The couple had not spoken with reporters since a Jan. 1 interview with CNN. Reporters from the Boulder newspa­ per, two Denver newspapers and three Denver TV stations were forbidden to ask about the police interrogation or the night o f the slaying. O ther reporters were excluded entirely. ' Ramsey, who maintained his compo­ sure and appeared to be supporting Mrs. Ramsey at points, acknowledged the sus­ picion that has surrounded the couple because of their reluctance to speak to police and because they hired lawyers shortly after the slaying. “Sadly for our country most tragedies of this nature — the killing of a child — apparently in the majority of cases are family-related,” Ramsey said. “That’s a tragic statem ent for our country but b ecau se we w ere the p aren ts o f JonBenet we were automatically put in the suspect pool.” 1 As for the suggestions that the girl was molested long before the slaying, Ramsey said: “I can tell you those were the most hurtful innuendoes to us as a family. They are totally false. JonBenet and I had a Very close relationship.” The parents also defended their daugh­ ter’s involvement in beauty pageants; Images of the child in glittery dresses and makeup have appeared in magazines and on news programs, prompting some criti­ cism of child beauty pageants. “Those were beautiful pictures. I’m so happy that we have those pictures,” Mrs. Ramsey said, but added, “That was just a few Sunday afternoons.” In v estig ato rs are aw aiting M rs. Ramsey’s response to a request for a fifth handwriting sample. Her husband was ruled out as author of the ransom noté. Richard Leo, a University of Colorado sociology professor who has followed the case closely, said the Ramseys’ decision to talk to the media is unusual. “They must be desperate to prove their innocence and their attorneys must be sufficiently convinced of their innocence to allow them to do this,” he said. L ab o r p a rty h e a d e d tow ard landslide victory B y M au reen J o h n s o n A sso ciated P ress Paul McEriane/Associated Presa A b o y w m t s a m a s k m a d e fro m a n e le c tio n p o s te r fo r th e S in n F e in le a d e r G e rry A d a m s w h ile w a itin g to s e a A d a m s o u ts id e th e H o ly C h ild y o u th c lu b T h u rs d a y , in A n d e rs o n a to w n , w e s t B e lfa s t. A d a m a c a s t h is v o te in th e B ritis h g e n e ra l e le c tio n a t th e y o u th c lu b w h ic h .is b e in g u s e d a e a p o llin g e ta tlo n . LONDON — The Labor Party surged tow ard a landslide electio n victory Thursday night that would restore it to power for the first time in a generation and make 43-year-old Tony Blair the youngest British prime minister in 185 years. Moments after the polls closed, a BBC exit poll projected that Labor would take 47 percent of the vote, compared to just 29 percent for the Conservatives — the poor­ est Conservative showing since 1832. Independent Television News said its exit poll projected a huge Labor victory, with 159 more seats in the 659-seat House of Commons than any other party. That would mean a bigger Labor triumph than the one that swept Winston Churchill out of office in 1945. “It looks like w e’re going to win in very good fashion indeed,” said Labor’s deputy leader, John Prescott, savoring the first exit poll reports. D efense Secretary M ichael P ortillo refused to concede defeat on the basis of the exit polls, although he acknowledged that his party was hurt by internal squab­ bling. “I think what the party needs to reflect upon is that it has done itself no good by showing its divisions,” he said. In power since Margaret Thatcher oust­ ed the last Labor government in 1979, the Conservatives were battered by divisions over Britain’s future role in Europe and a widespread sense they had simply been around too long. Blair and his party fought a disciplined, slick six-week campaign from the political center after dumping a raft of socialist poli­ cies and adopting the Conservatives’ pro­ business and low-tax policies. “W e’ve got to get th ese T o ries (Conservatives) out,” said p u b lish er Ian Walden, who voted in the comfortable mar­ ket town o f Saffron W alden, 35 m iles from London. P olice searched B ritain ’s 45,000 polling stations fo l­ lowing bomb hoaxes and small explosions by the Irish Republican Army during the campaign. Armed officers stood by as Blair voted near his home in Trimdon, 235 miles northeast of London. He smiled broadly, but sounded cau­ tious: “It depends on the people.” In Northern Ireland, which will have 18 seats in the Commons, a series of bomb threats — believed to come from proBritish paramilitaries — closed roads and disrupted traffic in Belfast. Across Britain, voters turned out steadi­ ly in brilliant sunshine, and officials pre; dieted a traditionally heavy turnout. In 1992, the turnout was 78 percent. Nearly 44 million people were eligible to vote, and more than 3,700 candidates ran. A party needs 330 seats for a parliamentary majority to form the next government. W ith most official results due early Friday, Major, 54, could be out of his official Downing Street residence by the end of day. Blair would be the youngest prime min­ ister since the 42-year-old Lord Liverpool in 1812. He and his wife, Cherie, a lawyer, have three children. The new P arliam en t convenes Wednesday, and the government will lay out its program a week later in a speech read by Queen Elizabeth Q. Clinton, lawmakers near 2002 budget-balancing deal B y A l a n F ram A sso c ia te d P ress WASHINGTON — President Clinton and congres­ sional leaders worked into die night Thursday polishing final details o f a pact to balance the budget by 2002 while trimming taxes by about $135 billion. With a con­ clusive hanrinhelre seemingly near, both die White House and Republican leaders on Capitol Hill made plans for announcing a deal Friday. The GOP and White House negotiators were haggling over whether the current bargainers or Republican-domi­ nated congressional committees later on would define the details of tax cuts, and what their 10-year price tag would be. Also in play was whether Clinton would get aD of the extra $70 billion he wants over five years for education and other domestic programs. At one point late in the day, Clinton spoke by tele­ phone to Senate Republican leader Trent Lott — with House Speaker Newt Gingrich in the room with Lott. House Republicans were to meet later. Administration officials were all over Capitol Hill making die case for a deal to Democrats, some of whom were making their displeasure clear. Leading the effort were Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin and White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles. But the deal was nearly done ■— so close that GOP leaders were preparing the Capitol’s Rotunda, a cav­ ernous room beneath the Dome, to be the site o f an announcem en t. And one administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said be expected a deal to b e announced before Clinton flies to Baltimore at noon Friday for a meeting with Senate Democrats, Publicly, both sides were optimistic but guarded. White House spokesm an M ike McGurry said Clinton was “encouraged” by progress, but he cautioned that mote work remained. Lott, R-Miss., said a deal could occur shortly, but he added, ‘W e’re still working out the numbers.” Attention was already turning to the arduous process of lining up support in Congress for the compromise, which if com pleted would mark a watershed in the deficit wars the two parties have waged since the begin­ ning of the Reagan era. Opinion P ag e 4 B S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2,1 9 9 7 STA ^tlteS | J i NURSING ■HOME oos & D rav o s BRAVO — To the anonymous source who had the guts to reveal serious and ongoing problem s in the residence b ills . We can imagine how difficult it alight, be for some students to get work done when drinking parties are going on next door andthe odor o f pot- wafts perennially through the corri­ dors. If it wasn’t for our source, some peo­ ple might mistakenly think the dorms are place where studying goes on. BO O — To the lawmakers who gutted Proposition 200 because they were shak­ ing in their shoes at the thought o f going up against the big, bad federal govern­ ment. A If.S. D istrict judge issu ed an injunction Wednesday barring retaliation against doctors who endorsed marijuana as m edicine. But that ruling w on’t affect A rizona, because our elected o fficia ls (w ho w e were probably duped) already) made Arizona’s pro-medicine law useless. BRAVO — To Ellen Degeneres for com­ ing out as a lesbian on her weekly televi­ sion sit-com. We don't know if this means Ellen simply agrees with Howard Stem ’s credo that lesbians equal higher ratings, but we applaud anything that forces igno­ rant homophobes to confront their irra­ tional fears. STATE PRESS !» TAFF http://www.griiiuiiy.coin L ivin g th rou gh eras gives courage to speak o u t For trad ition al co n v ictio n s Well, we’ve finally reached the end of it all, at least for this eorged semester. ROSE A number of students have C o lu m n is t spoken to me one-on-one about issues raised in the opinion columns. For that, l am grateful. I’ve tried to be thoughtful and occasionally controversial in my colum ns. Som e o f you have responded, although many have not. The views o f my colum ns have not been hammered out in the realm of hypothetical or the­ oretical reasoning, but rather in the world of reality, the world in which all of us live. My insights have been formed in a period of great change in the history of America and the world. This gives me a perspective that many younger students on campus do not have. The era into which 1 was bom saw the sanctity of mar­ riage and the home as important. Families attended church together and attempted to instill some type of moral stan­ dards into their children. That’s not to say that adultery and sexual immorality didn’t exist, but they weren’t as preva­ lent or open as they are now. There generally appeared to be a greater commitment to keeping the family together and training one’s children. I must say much has changed. This is reflected by divorce rates, approaching 50 percent, and the seemingly uncon­ trolled escalation of adolescent crime. My views on personal responsibility and commitment to others have deep roots. I knew of a young boy and his sister loaded into the family car and deposited on the steps of a chil­ dren's shelter. They would not see their father in more than nine years or their mother in six months. When they finally went for a trial visit with their mother and her live-in lover, they heard him say, “Get these #*$-@ kids out of here. Either they go, or I go,” Before morning, the children were gone, The mother later sat in front o f an attorney to relaying her concern about giving up her chil­ dren to a young woman who could not have any and said, H “If this woman doesn’t take my kids ... I’ll kill them!” While it may not have been illegal to say this, it most clear­ ly was immoral. There was a time when coiporate America promoted an unjust war in Vietnam to bolster a struggling economy, and politicians went along with i t Thousands of America’s young men died needlessly while thousands more were seriously wounded and crippled. Public policy made it impossible to win and made possible serious abuses against the citizens of that country. Those who fought at their country’s whim returned home in shame to face rejection. In the decade following the Vietnam'conflict corporate America began abandoning those who had given their lives to making their employers successful. Profits were chased at the expense of average people just trying to make a liv­ ing and raise a family. Errant government policies left America’s farming com­ munity at risk, with many losing farms that had been worked by their families for generations. Excesses by bank­ ing executives robbed people of their savings, homes and futures. None of this was good. We are witnessing die slaughter.of our nation’s unborn in the name of sexual freedom. To date, we have killed more innocent people through abortion than die Nazis did during the Holocaust. The only difference between the unborn and the Holocaust victims is that the Holocaust vic­ tims were allowed to live longer. All of this is for the pur­ pose o f abrogating ourselves o f responsibility for our actions. We are seeing the rise and fall of television evangelists, politicians and cult figures. Our nation is waging an unsuc­ cessful war against drugs, crime, poverty and illiteracy. We are also struggling with racial and class issues. The old are pitted against the young. During this semester, I have tried to be a voice speaking clearly about important issues currently facing our collec­ tive state and will continue to do so in the future. Someone once said, “anarchy reigns where good men remain silent.” I will not be silent George D. Rose Sr. is a junior studying public relations and can be reached at WriteSt907@aol.com. BRIAN ANDERSON, Editor DUSTIN KRÜGEL, Managing Editor CARYLMICALEQÖ....... ............... »........ ....... >Night Editor TIMOTHY TAIT. ...... RAY STERN..... ........... ............ THERESA VALLES.......... CHRISTA CERRENTANO ....... LORI CAIN ........................ .... JIM POULIN RANDY JONES ...... ED ODEVEN...___ ____ TIM BAXTER.......... ............... LE YLA S ALM ASSI AN. . . . Asst. Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Sara Bush, Kevin Cidwell, Deanna parr, Rowe Edgell, Lidia Kelly, Ben Leatherman, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Netheiby, Cadonna Pèyton, Vivi Stenberg. 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 Fuentes, Steve Forsberg, Rachel Gordon, Michelle Hardt, Diane C. Jacobs, George D. Rose, Sr., David Ruffulo, Adam Schiffer, Steven Stein, Karin Wadsack. C A R T O O N IST S: 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: Can Dewald, Dan EUstrom, David Goodwin, Brandon Mudd, Nick Pezzorello, Jess Rankin, Mark Santiago, Todd Shields, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland. CLASSIFIED S: Heidi Heister, Wayne Hoover, Sarah Kimmel, Stacey Thayer, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: BRIAN ANDERSON Editor DUSTIN KRUGEL Managing Editor THERESA VALLES Opinion Editor CHRISTA CERRENTANO News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dufr 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 o f a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper, are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body, S t a t e P ress P h o n e N um bers Inform ation............. .9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 N e w sr o o m ...............9 6 5 -2 2 9 2 M a g a zin 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://news.vpsa asu.edu _________Opinion S t a t e P ress ■■ .• Friday, May 2 ,19 97 ...........P g g e 5 C ash flo w rem ains top m otivator in h ealth care in dustry L ife, as far as we in the United States are concerned, is just another revenue stream, if there is no m ore m oney to ex tract from you, then you should die. After all, you don’t think that people in die health care professions choose their careers simply so that they can help people, did you? It is the ability to extort money from people during their most desper­ ate hours that makes medicine so lucrative and attractive. Once the money is gone, there is little point in continuing care. Of course, we don’t like to ju&fome out and say that. What is the value of a human life? As so often happens, a matter that is still hotly debated in the halls of academia has been settled for all practical purposes in the “real” world. A human life is worth just about as much as it is insured for. ' I am constantly amazed at the number of people who don’t realize that even as they are reading this column, peo­ ple are dying— not because there is ho care available, but because they don’t have money. For example, to get on most lists for an organ transplant, one must put up a large sum of money (often $150,000 or more). If you don’t have good insurance or access to a lot of money, you die. It is that simple. For every time the local media runs pictures of some appropriately cute or deserving “patient Jones,” there are typically dozens of other people who also need life-saving health care but don’t even get the long shot of public dona­ tions. Perfectly viable human beings whose treatments are well within the bounds of current medical knowledge are left to die. A “lack of resources” does not kill them. The resources are there; there are staffs, hospital beds and often organs. It is simply that the patient doesn’t have access to these resources because the patient doesn’t have access to money. The next time one of your professors hits you with one of those “Which person should be saved?” hypothetical questions, go ahead and point out how the question is cur­ rently being decided. “Eliminate all the poor people; they die first. Then w e’ll try and sort out the rich ones.” Pocketbook triage is what medicine does best. Pediatrics for poor infants? Nonsense. Not when there is money to be made on nose jobs and liposuction and various other cos­ metic quackery. A lot of people in the medical profession shed crocodile tears over such policies. They make a lot of noise about how sad it is that patients can’t afford medical care, and they sling arrows at the “administrators” and “corporate types” keeping them from providing quality care to all who need it. All the while, they themselves scream for the pay raises and benefits that help ensure poor people will never be able to afford their services. These people, many of whom have taken oaths to help those in need, have made a lot of noise about fighting greed-based health Care, but when it comes time to cash the dividend checks, they have been more than compliant. In many cases, they have been downright enthusiastic. One recent example has been the U.S. government’s announcement of a plan to pay hospitals to not train doc­ tors. That’s right, the government is paying hospitals to stop them from training doctors. Your tax dollars are being spent to prevent people from getting training to save lives. Qualified applicants who could pay their own ways are being turned away, in an effort to keep the number of doc­ tors in this nation low and their wages high. Perhaps ASU should announce the founding o f a medi­ cal school and get in line for a check. Presumably, one wouldn’t even need to hire a staff or build a facility. Not many people would get their lives saved, but we would be doing our part for the economy! If one of the problems with health care is that doctors are so expensive, then shouldn’t producing more doctors help lower cost? Isn’t that basic supply and demand? And if we really do believe in competition and free markets with regards to health care, the mantra of HMOs, then why in the hell is the government intervening in what should be a marketplace function? The answer: in order to maximize profits. As any eco­ nomics professor will relate, the price for a service resulting in the highest possible profit is often sufficiently high enough to “price out” a portion of the market. In this case, optimization means death, Hippocratic Oath be damned. Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history and can be reached at aufsj@asu.edu. Res. Hall officials need to take C ourts send m ixed m essages harsher stand on illicit activities I don’t doubt that resident assistants a.m., a violation of quiet hours is going to I are instructed to keep quiet about drug use affect much fewer people than pot smoke and other illegal and harmful behavior in wafting through the vents, I don’t need foj die residence halls. I was written up for a smell or breathe in smoke that ts .poten­ I minor offense — being loud 10 minutes tially harmful to my body. In order to ensure a safe, healthy envi-1 after quiet hours, which start at 11:00 p.m. For this, I had to meet with the hall ronment in which to live, the Residential director, who told me he considered a Life needs to take stronger action against! quiet hours violation to be more serious people doing drugs, defacing the buitdmfl than sm oking pot, because being loud and partaking in various other activities affects everyone while pot smoking only (¡¡These people a » committing crimes affects those using it. Needless to say, I getting aw ay w ith it. ju st s ^ t h was absolutely stunned, and said little the University doesn’t look bad. Tbis is extremely unfair and test of the meeting. I was delighted to see HaQ, i I well as all residents here. residence halls at ASU. As a can identify with this. The article is completely representative of what goes on here, and it also represents my entire experience in the hall, as I am sure it does others. I am also glad that the State Press is representing all students on campus by reporting controversial stories that affect our lives. I hope that it will continue un-lrindercd. ■ M e rritt In Memorium April 22,1933 April 29,1997 “M ike Royko w ill be greatly m issed... (his) unique *average guy* perspective on topics such as th e ins-and-outs o f local and national politics, social change and his own personal trials have been a p art o f Chicago culture fo r more than 35 years.” — David D. Williams, president and CEO at Tribune Media Services The old adage “rules are made to be bro­ ken” Was made a precedent Wednesday evening by the ASASU Supreme Court. The court was hearing the appeal case of Autumn Ness, a candidate for Activities Vice,iPresident of ASASU, Ness was dis­ qualified by the Elections Commission because she broke the rules. The Supreme Court decided that the rules are made to be broken. They over­ turned the Elections Commission decision that made Ness accountable for her mistake. For those of you unfamiliar with the case or the ASASU bylaws, the elections codestates that if a candidate doesn’t turn in a financial statement by 9:00 p.m., he or she is disqualified. That’s it. No ifs, ands or buts about it. Ness made a simple mistake — she for­ got. She was busy campaigning on the mall and admittedly forgot to turn in her state­ ment by the deadline. She argued that die rule was unfair, that she should not be disqualified for doing something that does not affect the election. Does it? As students, we elect senators to repre­ sent us in the making of rules by which our student government is run. We trust those representatives to make rules that represent our best interests. It would be impossible for each of us to ensure a fair election, where no one cam­ paigns illegally, spends too much money or plays unfairly . So we leave it up to our gov­ ernment to take care o f those important details. . , ' Our representatives decided that it is important to file a financial statement by a specified deadline. Why? Perhaps they felt that this was a test of responsibility, time management and leadership. This is one of the qualities that is absolutely necessary in an executive officer of our student govern­ ment, especially one with a budget of over $80,000. Ness said that her mistake should be over­ looked because the voters picked her/ and to deny their choice would be a slap in the face. She is wrong. Her appeal, and the Supreme Court’s decision to keep her in office, were two slaps in the face for ASU Students. As voters, we trusted our candidates to play by the rules. We also trusted our gov­ ernment to uphold those rules. Now; we’ve been told those rules don’t matter. We kept our part of the bargain. They didn’t. Ryan Krostue Sophomore Journalism D ecision reversed, support from constituents appreciated I would like to extend a tremendous “Thank you” to all of the students and faculty who have given me incredible support through the elections process and beyond. Thank you to all of the voters who took a few minutes out of their day to tell us what they think ft mfians a lot to us to know that someone is listening to our concerns and ideas. Thank you to all of the people who worked so hard on my campaign. I didn’t win this office on my own. Thank you to all of the students who stopped me on campus to ask about what was going on with die campaign, the complaint and the appeal. I can’t tell you how much your interest and support means to me. It made it much easier to keep fighting for my office knowing that other students were behind me. Now it’s time to get to work. I encourage you to stay involved. ASASU thrives on stu­ dents like you who have the enthusiasm to make changes. ASASU doesn’t exist without students who are willing to get their feet wet. Thank you again for your encouragement; it was much appreciated. I look forward to working for and with you in the coming year. Autumn Ness ASASU Activities Vice President-Elect S ta t e P ress Friday, May 2, 1997 P ag e 6 Police Report ASU police reported the follow ing incidents Thursday: • An adult male not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for public consumption of alcohol at 615 Alpha Drive. • An adult male student reported that someone removed his bicycle from the second floor exterior stairwell of Palo Verde Main D-Wing, where it was not secured with a lock. • An adult male employee reported that someone dam­ aged a cement bench at Palm Walk and Tyler Mall. •A n adult male student reported that his vehicle caught on fire while parked in Parking Structure 1. • An adult female employee reported that someone broke into a room in Armstrong Hall and removed equipment. • A female not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for shoplifting at Stablers Market in Tempe Center. • An adult female student reported that an unidentified male unlawfully entered her room at Manzanita Hall. • An ASU employee reported that someone damaged a wall at Physical Science A-Wing. • An adult male employee reported that he lost four keys belonging to ASU. • An adult male not affiliated with ASU was contacted at the salvage yard, where he had become ill. He was transported to a local hospital. • An adult male not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for driving on a canceled license at Rural Road and Lemort Street. • An adult male student was arrested, cited and released for shoplifting at Stablers Market. • An adult female employee repotted that someone was disruptive and ate food without paying for it at the Manzanita cafeteria. • An adult male employee reported that someone removed a soap dispenser from Physical Sciences Room D-103. Tempe police reported the following incident Thursday: • A 24-year-old Hispanic male and a 16-year-old Hispanic male were arrested and charged with theft after they allegedly stole landscape tools from a trailer at 1000 E Veeira Drive. Police chased the suspects to 48th Street and Van Buren Road, dodging tools that were being chucked from the car. The suspects were finally captured after leading police on a short foot chase. The 24-year-old was arrested for felony flight and theft. He also had outstanding warrants and was on probation. Compiled by State Press editor Brian Anderson A 8U COLLEGE OF BUSINESS GRADUATI ON PARTY Governor signs land preserve bill (AP) — The Tortolita Mountains near Tucson and the Superstition Mountains near Phoenix became eligible for conservation as Gov. Fife Symington signed a bill to allow state trust land be leased or bought for conservation purposes. The legislation (HB2303) expands the boundaries for m aking state tru st land available for conservation. Previously, the land had to be within one to three miles o f the city limits of incorporated areas. The measure Symington signed Wednesday expands that to up to 10 miles in some cases. “We’re doing the right thing for the desert and the right thing for the people who live here,” Symington said. “We’re protecting open space.” Not so, said critics o f the measure, including the Arizona Association of Realtors. They claimed the mea­ sure takes too much private land out of the tax base in rural counties, which will hurt schools and other vital services. The legislation will make die Tortolita and Superstition mountains eligible for conservation, and it also creates a Land Conservation Fund to receive both public and private funds for buying state trust land, The new law “enhances our efforts to conserve those ele­ ments that make our desert so attractive,” the governor said. 4 C o n g ra tu la tio n s ! The College o f Extended E ducation is proud to announce th e recipients o f th e 1 9 9 6 -9 7 Faculty A w ards. The fo llo w in g fa cu lty m em bers w ere chosen as exam ples o f educational leaders fd r th e ir co m m itm e n t to educational excellence. O ur thanks to them fo r th e ir effo rts and dedication to advancing th e m ission o f th e College. MAY 3R D M e iK u e i C ruise Instructional Program s R o b ert JecR el Lifelong Learning Program s R ichard Lai Instructional Program s DOW NTOW N TEMPE 4TH & MILL AVE Jam es M cB ride D istance Learning Technology M a rin a M c lsaac D istance Learning Technology D e n n is O liv e r A m erican Language and C ulture Program K evin R ichards Computer Training Program Jo yce W in s to n Professional Programs and Institutes GRADUATES AND STUDENTS ARE ALL W ELCOME TO PARTY AND CELEBRATE ASU ID REQUIRED - MUST BE 21 J&I A r iz o n a St a t e U n iv e r s it y E x te n d e d C am p u s http://www.asu.edu/xed P age 7 Friday, May 2, 1997 S t a t e P ress F in a l E d it io n Page 8 S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2 ,1997 Governor Symington vetoes pesticide spraying bill BjY P au l D a v en po r t A s so c ia t e d P ress TOLLESON — Gov. Fife Symington Thursday vetoed a bill, that would shrink buffer zones required to protect schools, day-care centers and health-care facilities from pesticide spraying. Sym ington traveled to the farm ing com m unity of Tolleson west of Phoenix to announce his veto at an ele­ mentary school bordered by cotton, com and alfalfa fields. The bill he vetoed (SB 1360) would have shrunk buffer zones required to keep crop-duSters away from schools, day-care centers and hospitals. The bill was approved by the Senate 16-4 and the House 35-21. Symington said he is sympathetic to farmers Who face encroachment from urban development, but he said the health and safety of children is a priority. Symington also said he will appoint a task force to come up with better legislation for next year. State law now requires a buffer zone of a quarter-mile around schools and day-care centers, and 400 feet around health-care facilities. The Senate and House versions of the bill both propose to reduce the zone to 300 feet for aerial spraying. Within the buffer zones, pesticides may be applied only with ground applicators or soil injectors. Also under the bill, new schools could not be located within 300 feet of a field subject to spraying. The bill also would prohibit the state Department of Health Services from licensing a day-care center in the Zone though licenses of current centers could be renewed. Current law requires applicants for day-care licenses to include information about agricultural land within a quar­ ter-mile, and DHS had to notify affected farmers when a license was issued. Supporters of the bill included agricultural groups which argued that farms are losing use of their land due to new day care centers and schools being built oh adjacent property. Opponents included environmentalists and education groups who contended that closer spraying poses a safety risk. representing 140 Tucson-area subcontractors who build homes and businesses, announced its support this week for the county’s $36 million open-space bond issue. “Our livelihood depends on building, but many peo­ ple don’t realize that we not only build, but we live here,” said Jim Kuliesh, association executive director. “We use the parks, we use ballfields, our kids go there with our families. “Somewhere along the line, no matter what happens, we have to have planned open lands, and plan things for the generations to come,” Kuliesh said. “If it is good for the community, it is good for business.” The Tucson Chamber o f Commerce apparently dis­ agreed, advising its 3,200 member companies recently to vote against the bond. Hoffman dead. Around Arizona TUCSON — Growing mutual disenchantment has led the executive director o f the Arizona-Sonora Desert' Museum to resign and the museum’s board to accept his move. “The board did not enjoy working with me as much as it used to, and I did not enjoy working with it as much as I used to,” David Hancocks said Wednesday of his seven years in the post. “It’s like getting a divorce — we’ll (part) amicably and without rancor,” he added. “The Board of Trustees is extremely grateful for the inspired service of Mr. Hancocks,” board President Billie Hardy said. “But little things between boards and directors sometimes don’t mix. “ This is one of those kinds of situations, and this proba­ bly will be the best for everyone.” Neither discussed specifics of their differences. Hancocks’ resignation is effective May 30. Associate Director Nancy R. Lancy, a four-year museum employee, will be acting director. TUCSON — Builders, sometimes seem as opponents of environmental or Conservation projects, are backing just such a campaign in Pima County. The American Subcontractors Association of Tucson, CASA GRANDE — A Casa Grande man has been charged with manslaughter in the death of a 7-year-old girl who was shot in the head when a gun discharged inside a mobile home. Kindra McLennon was watching television Monday night when she was shot in the forehead by a .357 revolver, police said. Floyd Cleaver, 33, told police he was walking inside the mobile home and twirling the gun around his finger when it fired and hit Kindra. C leaver, 33, was held at the Pinal County Jail in Florence. He was arrested the night of the shooting. Kindra and her mother were sharing the trailer with Cleaver, his girlfriend and two other children, said Lt. Don Davis of the Casa Grande Police Department. Kindra’s 8-year-old sister told police that Cleaver’s 2year-old son had the gun when it went off. Davis said blood evidence inside the trailer indicated that the girl was shot on the opposite side of the ro6m from where Cleaver said she was standing. A blood-spatter expert from the Arizona Department of Public Safety was investigating, Davis said. Compiled by the Associated Press. SACATON — A woman was killed while riding in a pickup track on the Gila River Indian Reservation. Sadie Hoffman, 19, was shot Wednesday near Casa Blanca, said Warren Youngman, a spokesman for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Evidence suggested the shot came from outside the truck, Youngman said. After the shot, the driver fled at high speed. A BIA offi­ cer stopped the truck later for driving erratically and found Still riding your bike to school? C o lle g e S tu d e n ts A v e r a g e $I 4 ,0 0 0 lo u r m o n th s i n M aybe it’s tim e you applied for an auto loan from D esert Schools Federal C redit Union. W ith a low annual percentage rate and special discount opportunities, you’ll be o u t of training w heels and into a sportin’ car o r truck in no tim e. Pedal over to a branch near you or call us! r>; A n th o n y Taylor C ody Pearce $ 4 7 ,0 0 0 $ 7 5 ,0 0 0 Salesnet is the best thing that could have happened-to m e. I've spent the last three summers mak­ ing more money than I could have This past summer was my second San Diego Santa Maria Visalia anywhere else, and it's allow ed summer of selling pest control for Salesnet M y first summer I worked for four months and made over $25 ,00 0 . Last sum m et I and me to live comfortably as a fu ll­ tim e, non-employed student Because o f the Salesnet opportuni­ ty and four months o f hand w o rk. on my part. I've been able to pay for a il o f my living expenses and the w hole year's tuition, pay off my car and get com pletely out of d e b t I was even able to put a little aw ay fo r a rainy day ~ and that was a fte r getting a few toys, Salesnet has treated me like gold! worked five months and m ade $75,0001 I am confident th at I Albuquerque, NM Atlanta, GA Ft. Lauderdale, FL Jacksonville, FL Boynton, FL Las Vegas, NV Memphis, TN Salt Lake City, LIT Dallas, TX Tucson, AZ couldn't have made this much money working fo r any other com­ pany. If you are looking fo ra summer job th a t w ill allo w you to be financially stable and debt free . then you definitely need to look into Salesnet I f y o u r e s e r io u s a b o u t w o r k in g h a r d , th i s c a n b e th e hi Schools h i g h e s t p a y i n g m o s t f u n s u m m e r y o tC v e e v e r h a d ! C a ll f o r a n a p p o i n t m e n t to d a y ! 1-800-377-5511 433-7000 AU ASU students are eligible to join Y Depending on income and credit history, o co-signer may be required for loon requests. C O N O N U R E C S U T IO M N M E R J O —y e a r B r o u n d Monday, M arch S t a t e P ress Ì 3, 1997 y -.s THURSDAY DNESDAY 254 THE ORIGINAL ALTERNATIVE N IG H T DRAETS DRAFTS NO I COVERS LIVE MUSIC SATURDA m N tw lM m u s ic ONTHE PATIO /Of ncKoraisofinm LIVE MUSIC $2°° 32 OZ. ON THE PATIO { Ä . MONSTERBEERS & $2» 32 OZ MONSTERKERS& L.L TEAS MONSTER BEERS & LL TEAS LL TEAS ON THE PATIO MAY lOiSILVERCHAIRIN CONCERT ■ ■ H HODUCHONS MAY 15: MILLER LITE’SMWSINGLEDOUT PROMO C u T Ì o « ' JSkssS" .’L ""430 N. sfloTlSDALE ROAD, TEMPE, ARIZONA 85281 (602)894-6779 WWW.CLIiBRiO.COM Page 10 S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2, 1997 University gets bargain on high-tech cubicles B y C ad o n ñ a P eyto n S t a t e P r es s 7 _ Workers of the future could be finding pri­ vacy in the office with high-tech cubicles simi­ lar to two p ro to ty p es A SU purchased for SI 2.000. The work stations are called personal harbors and were bought to be used in conjunction with a research project to be conducted by Partners for Research and Stereographic Modeling (PRSM), said Richard Loveless, director of the Institute for Studies in the Arts, which is where the cubi­ cles are being held. The personal harbors áre fully enclosed, selfcontained stations that come equipped with an open desk area, shelves, dimming lights, a sound system and its own air conditioning controls. They are black. D-shaped cubicles with room for a computer and space enough for the occupant to turn around in a swivel chair and grab a book off one of the shelves. / - '7 7 A worker could have privacy by closing the sliding door or be able to work with fellow co­ workers by opening the door. Loveless said. "The harbors were (originally) designed so people could work at a. high level of collabora­ tion." he said. "It is a new form of redesigning the office. No more four walls.".,/ The harbors were a part of an exhibition in the Computing Commons which showed products from a company called Novocom. The company currently uses 30 to 40 of the, harbors at its F IN A L S ■ Y ou'll n e v e r k n o w u n le s s y o u re a d y o u r HOROSCOPE WHE TRAVEL explore S n e lli, world! Pat Shannahan/State P re ss Richard Loveless; director of th e institute for S tudies in the Arts, sta n d s inside one of th e tw o cu b icles the University pu rch ased from Novocom. California facility. ; Upon the end o f the exhibit, instead of dis­ mantling the harbors and shipping them back to California to be sold as used furniture, a deal was negotiated to purchase them at half the original price of $13.000 each. Loveless said the depart­ ment was able to obtain them for $6.000 each. using funds, provided by the dean of College of Fine Arts. Robert Wills. ■ A spokeswoman for the ASU Purchasing and Business Services departm ent said that the University usually spends between $4.000 and $5.300 for a standard cubicle that includes a desk, wall panels and some shelving. forlpsS Counci Ì 3 0 E . U n iv e r s ity D r. S u it e A> T e m p e T e l: 6 0 2 ^ 9 6 6 - 3 5 4 4 O p e n S a t. l l a m - 3 p m b e tw e e n 4 /5 - 6 /2 8 . W e 'r é n ó w o p e n S á t: f r o m ¿ t o 4 FREA K O U T??? T h e E A S E into dead week with a supportive new guide that distills successful techniques used to com bat full-fledged anxiety disorders into simple exercises for the anxious test-taker. Holocaust: A Taking the Anxiety Out o f Taking Tests b y S u san Jo h n so n is a v a ila b le a t y o u r local b o o k sto re o r b y calling th e p u b lis h e r a t 1-800-748-6273 $ 1 2 .9 5 New Harbinger Publications Survivor Story Join us as we obsérve YomHaShoah, Holocaust Memorial Day, by listening to the empowering words of Helen Handler. It is a story o f strength, dedication, and survival. Monday, May S th 6 :0 0 pan in the Memorial Union Pima Room www.newharbinger.com S p o n so re d b y H ille l J e w is h S tu d e n t C e n te r Page 11 Friday, May 2 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P ress Arms dealer says McVeigh wanted to buy detonator Waco, Texas. “Basically that this could be die start of the government coming house to house to retrieve the weapons from the citi­ zens,” he said. Later, David Darlak, a high school friend of McVeigh’s from upstate New York, tes­ tified he hadn’t heard from McVeigh in two years when he called in 1994 asking where he could buy some racing fuel. Darlak said he didn’t know, and asked McVeigh why he needed it. Darlak didn’t elaborate on McVeigh’s response. Prosecutors say nitromethane fuel, often used in drag racing, was mixed with ammo­ nium nitrate fertilizer to make the truck bomb that blew apart the Oklahoma City federal building. , McVeigh, a 29-year-old Gulf War Veter­ an, faces the death penalty if convicted of murder and conspiracy in the April 19, 1995, blast that killed 168 people and injured more than 500, Also testifying today was Kyle Kraus, a Buffalo, N.Y., com puter specialist and B y S t ev en K . P a u lso n A sso c ia te d P ress DENVER — An arms dealer testified today that Timothy McVeigh called him six months before the Oklahoma City bombing and asked to buy a detonator for a bomb, making it clear “he needed it bad.*’ “He asked me if I could get him a detona­ tion cord ... a high explosive used to set off the main explosive,” said Greg Pfaff, who met McVeigh at gun shows through his ammuni­ tions outlet, Lock and Load Distributors. Pfaff said he told McVeigh that a “det cord” is not normally sold at gun Shows and Could not legally be shipped in the United States. But McVeigh, who was calling from Arizona, said he would personally pick it up. “He said it didn’t matter, he needed it bad,” said Pfaff, who was never able to come up with the detonation cord." P faff, who now runs a deli in H arrisonburg, Va., said M cVeigh was strongly opposed to the government siege on the Branch Davidian compound near CROSSWORD byTHOMASJOSEPH ACROSS A N T 1 M O W N O fl E S “Homemade C-4, A Recipe For Survival” -— that details how to mix ammonium nitrate and nitromethane. In a p ersistent cross-exam ination Wednesday, Lori Fortier was portrayed by the defense as a lying drug user, but didn’t budge from her story that McVeigh told her six months before the bombing of his plans to blow up the federal building. The 24-yearold wife of one of McVeigh’s Army buddies also maintained that McVeigh told her he wanted to the avenge the deaths at Waco. M cVeigh attorney Stephen Jones attacked Mrs. Fortier’s admitted use of pot and methamphetamines, and criticized her and husband Michael Fortier for declaring McVeigh innocent in the days after the bombing, but implicating him When they feared they would be arrested. She received immunity from prosecution for testifying against McVeigh. Michael Fortier, who is to testify later, has pleaded guilty to lesser charges in the bombing and faces up to 23 years in prison. B A C A L L A D A G 1 O R O N E L Y Al N T A A N A T E N 1 O E A S E G Y P T S A 1 N T DOWN à 1 Gives 1 Truck part 2 Historic G N U L O O time 6 Army doc M O N T H A S H E N 3 Thomas 11 Perfume O P E R A C A T Mann 12 Met A M E T H Y S T work offering M A N 1 L A A S 1 A 4 Polishing 13 Patisserie O R A T E S R 1 N G material worker P 1 G S T Y A X E S 5 Indian 14 Heat Yesterday’s Answer gown home player 6 Pop’s item 1 5 Prune partner 17 Okie's 19S cold SdGeibiTs Kai w a 7 le tte r^ cohort 3 5 *Woe is I I IU-J -«*»Mann mef* peaks 20 Vow 37 Keats work 23 Dollar 22 Com creations division 9*— La serving 39 Critic 2 4 Catch Douce' 2 3 Gin drink 1 0 First killer 2 6 Blind part Reed 26 Biathlon 16 Bossy’s 27 Ancestry 41 Blushing need 42 Common comment 30 PuU 2 8 JaManswer 18 Maryland 33 Gallery related 29 Laments 7 a 9 10 1 2 3 4 31 By way of 5 11 12 32 Golden Rule 14 13 preposi­ „ 15 tion 4 " 33 Fedora 20 21 18 19 material _ ■ 34 Attachd 22 24 25 over ■ 27 26 36 Frayed 3 8 Sacrifice site 4 0 Milk plant 43 Measure 4 4 Game host 4 5 Newark's county 4 6 Garden starters M cVeigh’s second cousin. When Kraus entered the courtroom , he nodded to McVeigh. McVeigh smiled and nodded back. Kraus testified that in 1991 he received a package from McVeigh containing “The Turner Diaries,” a racist novel that details a plot to blow up the FBI headquarters. Prosecutors have called it a blueprint for the Oklahoma City bombing. Kraus said he discussed the book with McVeigh, telling him “It would be very frightening if it really did come to this.” He said McVeigh replied: “It could possibly come to this.” Kraus said when he heard about the Oklahoma bombing and realized it was “right in line with ‘The Turner Diaries,”’ he immediately called the FBI and turned the book over. “The Turner Diaries” was admitted in court today as the government’s Exhibit 1. A publisher of military how-to books also testified that McVeigh ordered three books in 1992 and 1993, including one — ■ * 39 38 2 for 1 DRINKS ‘TIL 10:30 PM l 50 FOSTER’S • *2 SHOTS 10:30 - CLOSE ■ “ 30 £ ■ " ■ ” 29 34 I35 BEST CHEST 43 ” 41 42 “ 46 i 1 5-2 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW O ne letter stands for another. In th is sam ple A is used for th e th ree L's, X for th e tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, th e len g th a n d form ation o f th e words are all h in ts. Each day th e code letters are different. 5-2 X W B CRYPTOQUOTE W G V M V M W R V FOR L A D I E S ALL NI GHT ' Q ;]K V X B Q K W Q P Q P J B EXT w B SW B W G V MW R V V H P V U Q I w NO COVER FOR LADI ES ‘ TI L SA EV C I PJ BEX T V M X 99c LONGNECKS FOR EVERYONE ‘ TI L 1 0 : 3 0 PM S A E V C I SW B • TV SJ B Q W X R B V Yesterday's Cryptoquote: BABIES ARE SUCH A NICE WAY TO START PEOPLE.—DON HEROLD s ;X f* K V C 0 1987 by Kino F aatu iaa Syndicate, Inc. 966-2020 S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2,1 9 9 7 Page 12 Bump, set, spike! E rik a N u s z lo c h , a s o p h o m o re s tu d y in g g ra p h ic d e s ig n , s e ts th e b a ll fo r F re d D e th (fa r le ft) T h u rs d a y a fte rn o o n d u r in g a p r a c t ic e v o lle y b a ll g a m e o n t h e S t u d e n t R e c re a tio n C o m p le x fie ld s . J a s o n F e rra ra (r ig h t), a s o p h o m o re g ra p h ic d e s ig n m a jo r, a tte m p ts to s p ik e th e b a ll d o w n o n J o n a th a n H e h d ry s (m id d le ) d u rin g a p ra c tic e g a m e o n th é S R C fie ld . T h e tw o te a m s a re p r a c tic in g to c o m p e te in a v o lle y b a ll to u rn a m e n t h o s te d b y th e A m e ric a n In s titu te o f G ra p h ic A rts in S c o tts d a le . State P ress O pinions ” ' *------ > a a r n a t f i c k i n g d o m , i n c l u d i n g A d v e n tu re L a n d , T o m o rro w L a n d a n d F a n ta s y L a n d . M ake your own hours. Having trouble getting your stuff home from college? Let your local Mail Boxes Etc? Center pack and ship it for you. From computers and stereos to boxes of books and furniture, Mail Boxes Etc. can solve your packing and shipping problems. MBE Colters can pack and ship just about any­ thing. If you need packing materials like boxes, tape or bubble wrap, remember Mail Boxes Etc. We 1739 E Broadway Rd Tempe AZ 85282 829-3900 ABCO CENTER M cC lintock & Broadway have a large assortment of packing supplies to fill your needs. Mail Boxes Etc can help solve your special home to n college packing and shipping problems, No matter how large, how fragile, Iww valuable, how heavy or how difficult, one call can take it off your hands and puts it into ours. Call or visit us today. MAUBCHBEIC 903 S Rural Rd Tempe AZ 85281 967-1414 Cinnam on Tree C ntr Rural-South o f U niversity f r t N a r W iBirW i i D a f r t HnwrW tD D h :" 1 UPSAu9xxaBd8hW3«fl(>jlN n>«>nc»w m% apply Mat ftow ia f ftwctMadCaidsr» awwdapsndefByownedandopw lw lCW Mai Boas Be. T h e S ta te P re s s is n o w h ir in g A S U s tu d e n ts f o r th e p o s itio n o f a d v e r ­ tis in g s a le s r e p r e s e n ta tiv e . T h e re a r e f o u r p o s itio n s a v a ila b le w ith tw o tr a in in g o p tio n s : th e f ir s t tr a in in g s e s s io n b e g in s i n M ay , th e sec­ o n d b e g in s th e f ir s t w e e k i n July. E m p lo y m e n t b e g in s w ith tr a in in g . S u c c e s s fu l c a n d id a te s w ill b e th o s e w h o p o s s e s s p r o m is in g c o m m u ­ n ic a tio n a n d p r o b le m s o lv in g sk ills. R e q u ire m e n ts : a car, n o m o re th a n 13 c r e d it h o u r s p e r s e m e s te r a n d a p o s itiv e a ttitu d e . If y o u a r e in te r e s te d i n d is c o v e r in g th e b u s in e s s o f a d v e r tis in g , m a r ­ k e tin g a n d p u b lis h in g , y o u s h o u ld a p p ly fo r th is p o s itio n . HOW TO APPLY (it's easy): Write a short paragraph or two about why you'd like this job and why we should consider hiring you by May 12, noon. Drop it off at the State Press advertising office in room 47 of Matthews Center basement or fax it to 965-4706, attention Jackie Eldridge. Questions? Call Jackie at 965-6741. Feel free to visit the ad dept, and talk with the students presently selling advertis­ ing for the State Press. We won't bite you. Promise. P ress Make a difference in your career P age 13 Friday, May 2 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P ress EXTRAORDINARY PIZZA AT AN ORDINARY PRICE' /- .U l / c * Republicans trying again to proh ibit flag burning B y C a r o l y n Sk o r n e c k A s s o c ia t e d P r es s O PEN FOR LUNCH 4 0 5 W. U N IV E R S IT Y W EST OF M IL L A V E . O P E N LATE NEXT TO TOPS LIQUOR FA S T, FREE D E L I V E R Y 894-8424 T- ~_ i?J?í-F L lÀ r c F i? X'Uvrgj p iz z i f 1 -IT E M & 5 0 W IN G S $1595 L A R C Î Î 6 ' * P Î 2 2 Â " Î " I a R C e I i C I lT a Ñ I i 1 -IT C A A I ,,t# v v I THICK CRUST, PEEP DISH PIZZA I 1 -IT E M S i $ó " 1 DELIVERY j $9 " PICK-UP OR DELIVERY A Sale For All of You W ho Have No Class. W ASHINGTON (AP) — To New Jersey fifth-grader L aura Soehl, the American flag induces thoughts of “our ancestors who died for America. “The stars and stripes aren’t just our states and colonies, they’re symbols of life. Each star is a patriot’s heart, each star is his soul.” Those words,'read by her SandystonWalpack School teacher, Maribeth Seely, to members of Congress on Wednesday, encapsulated the views of both sides at the hearing on a proposed co nstitutional amendment to ban flag desecration. Yet the two sides were sharply divided on what to do, if anything, to prevent its burning, tearing and other desecration, such as acts of defecation on the flag. “In a society as pluralistic and diverse as our own ... it is all the more important to protect the most important symbol of unity in our country.” said Rep, Gerald Solomori, R-N.Y., the amendment’s chief sponsor. “And w hat’s m ore im portant than Old Glory? Our flag and all it represents make us Americans.” Democrats — who make up one-quarter of the 174 House co-sponsors — also sup­ ported the amendm ent, including Rep. M artin F rost of T exas, who runs the D em ocratic C ongressional Cam paign Committee, Opponents contended the amendment — which would let Congress ban flag desecra­ tion and set penalties -— would be ari unwarranted limit of free-speech rights, especially given that such desecrations TAKE YOUR BIKE HOME G e t re a d y fo r s u m m e r! C o m e in to d a y to f in d g r e a t d e a ls o n b ig g r o u p s o f s e le c te d n e w m e n ’s a n d la d ie s ' c lo th in g lik e th e s e e x a m p le s: L a d ie s ' S a v in g s Short Skirts........ Up to 40% OFF! Selected yarhdyes, prints # solids! Values ta $88! Blazers................ Up to 40% OFF! Seasonal layoritey! Values to 198! Shorts................ Up to 40% OFF! Popular styles in a variety of colors! Values to $68! Dresses...............Up to 40% OFF! Select so/t solids, prints, knits & denim! Originally $ 168! Knits................. ..Up to 40% OFF! Spring and summer novelty topi1 Values to $ 781 fonts................. Up to 40% OFF! ~Çfcpok from: a vanity of stiles & colors! Values to $1)5! Vests................. Up to 40% OFF! Popular yamdyei prints and solids. Values to $148! Blouses.............. Up to 50% OFF! Select cottons, silks and linens. Values to $98! Seasonal Sweaters ....up to 40% OFF! •Special, savings on great styles! Values to $168! M e n 's S a v i n g s Short Sleeve Knits............. $29.90! Select group of knits! Values to $59-50! ■ Old School Shorts.........20% OFF! Popular summer styles/colors! Values to $59.50! Old School Swimsuits....20% OFF! Classic solid/printed styles! Originally $49.50! Shoes, Handbags & Belts ..Up to 40% OIF! Short Sleeve Sport Shirts.....$29.90! Sat« nou on select spring and summer styles! Select short sleeve styles! Values to $59.50? Long Skirts.......... Up to 40% OFF! OSGC Trousers............ 20% OFF. Popular styles including yamdyes! Values to $110! Values to $49.50 on Wellington, Rover, Mariner & Tu-ills? m ( O f-S c O S a v in g s u p t o 1 / 2 O f f o n S e le c te d S p r i n g a n d S u m m e r F av o rites! occur so rarely, “ A few zealots misguidcdly believe that flag desecration will further their cause,” said Rep. David Skaggs, DColo. “Their idiocy provides no excuse for us to weaken the First Amendment.” And Lawrence Korb, a former Reagan Defense Department official and 23-year Navy veteran o f V ietnam , said if the amendment were ratified, “This way of life will be less free and more like the former Soviet Union and present-day China.” Supporters cited polls saying 80 percent of Americans support the amendment, while Korb cited a poll showing Americans reject it 52 percent to 38 percent when told it Would be “the first amendment in our history to restrict our First Amendment freedoms.” The Supreme. Court in 1989 ruled that burning the U.S. flag is protected free speech, invalidating statutes in 48 states. Congress then passed a law protecting the flag, but the Supreme Court found that unconstitutional in 1990. Then Congress tried but failed to get two-thirds majority votes for a constitutional amendment. In 1995, the House passed, 312-120, an amendment to let Congress and the states establish laws protecting the flag, but the Senate fell short, 63-36. As for prospects in this C ongress, Solomon said in an interview: “We know we’re over thè hump as far as the House is concerned.” The 274 co-sponsors don’t even include 15 people who voted for last year’s amendment. The House will vote the week of June 9, he said, and the Senate will take it up after that. Let us professionally pack your bike for shipping so you can take it home and ride all summer. Avoid dam age from packing it yourself ’ Avoid the hassle 1 Don't leave your bike behind to get stolen! " Y o u r c o lle g ia te C y c lin g H e a d q u a rte rs ” Apache Complete Sales & Service 968-8011 OPEN DAILY Layaway A v a ila b le E x c lu s iv e ly a t B i l t m o r e F a s h i o n P a rk , P h o e n ix ^ To reame a fret Harold's men’s and iadia’ apparti analog ani admnccd notice of sales, call 1-800Ó76J373 STUDENT DISCOUNTS 201 O S. Rural Rd., Tempe SW Corner o f Broadway & Rural PSEOrt " = - ca Broadway P age 14 » Friday, May 2 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P ress One fo r me, one for you, one for me, one for... T h e M e m o ria l U n io n C lu b p re p a re d a p p ro x im a te ly S>00 s te a k s fo r s tu d e n ts a t its S te a k N ig h t. L e ft, L e w re n c e C a s tig lio n e , a lin e c o o k a t th e M e m o ria l U n io n , p u ts s te a k s o n a b a rb e c u e o u ts id e o f th e M U T h u rs d a y a fte rn o o n . State P ress S p o r t s We're there when you can't be. JiSU A lum ni W h a t w o rd is n 't u se d e n o u g h a t g ra d u a tio n tim e ? The ASU Alumni Association announces complimentary first year membership for 1997 graduates. Soon-to-be alumni will receive official member information w ith th eir diplomas. Membership automatically begins Upon graduation. Continue a tradition o f pride and support in ASU by becoming involved in the ASU Alumhi Association, your lifelong ASU connection. For inform ation, call 965-ALUM or 1-800-ALUMNUS. 712 S. C ollege (C o lle g e & U n iv e rs ity ) 967-4049 i : Cam pus C o rner Any À SU i— SWEATSHIRT i » Regular $ 29.99 or m ore Expires 5 /1 8 /9 7 B a t e n r S h O flS unir ■s :! BUY * 10 “ O F F i ! ¡ » j Beer & Soda Photo Developing Health 8, Beauty Aids d m u t or i I «mm* FREE ofequal lesservalue Limit2.ExpiresS /1 8/97 609 S. Mill (A c ro s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ) 858-0567 ASU SOOVENIRSl ! B0Y2, 6ET1 j FREE i J i of equal or lesser value Coffee mugs, shot glasses, key chains, golf balls, sports bottles & more! i j | P age 15 Friday, May 2 ,1 9 9 7 S t a t e P ress The State Press is seeking reporters for its Summer weekly paper and for the Fall 1997 semester. This is a great experience for anyone interested in pursuing a career in journalism. Applicants should be competent writers familiar with AP style, and able to find good story ideas without a lot of prodding. Experience and a high level of motivation is preferred. Please pick up an application and return it with clips of any stories you've written to Student Publications, in the Matthew's Center basement. The deadline is May 16. Island-hopping lizards evolve right before scien tists’ eyes NEW YORK (AP) — A recent study shows that evolution, commonly thought of as operating over eons, can happen over just a few years. That’s nothing new to biologists, who have witnessed remarkably rapid evolution in bacteria, snails, moths and a host of other creatures since Charles Darwin first docu­ mented the process in finches. But nobody had ever demonstrated rapid evolution in an actual experiment before researchers took lizards from the Bahamian island of Staniel Cay and introduced them to 14 even-smaller islands nearby. The smaller islands had sparser, shorter vegetation than Staniel Cay. And since these particular lizards, of the species A nolis sagrei, spend a lot of time sitting on branch­ es, the biologists predicted that the smaller vegetation would lead to correspondingly shorter hind limbs in the lizard. W hich is exactly what happened. Generally, the smaller the island, the smaller the vegetation, the smaller the hind limbs on the lizards, Jonathan Losos of Washington University in St. Louis, Kenneth Warheit of the University of Washington in Seattle and Thomas Schoenert of the University of California at Davis report in today’s issue of the British journal Nature. After introducing lizards to 11 islands in 1977 and to three others in 1981, the researchers returned in 1991 to find exactly what they expected. S m a r tg e e p L IM IT E D B EEP ER S fo r F R E E B r in g in y o u r o ld , w o r k in g an d g e t a n ew M P r o n t o b eep er o t o r o l a F I X * * *Reconditioned beepers, activation fee and service subscription required. While supplies last. s m a r t B e e P , *Activation and service subscription required. Heck, if youhurry, well eventhrowini freemonthsof voicemail. What arewe, mitsMtopbyoneof ourstorestoday. 38th St. & Thomas Phoenix 43rd Ave. & Indian Sthool 957-8718 Phoenix 269-7287 131 C. Southern Ave. Tempe S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2 ,1 9 9 7 P age 16 Decal Time! (A b o v e ) G ra d s tu d e n t in p s y c h o lo g y R a e J e a n P ro e s c h o ld b e ll, re a d s h e r p a p e r w h ile s h e w a its fo r h e r n u m b e r to b e c a lle d . (R ig h t) F re s h m a n b ro a d c a s t m a jo r M o n iq u e L a p u y a d e w a its fo r a d e c a l in th e P a rk in g a n d T r a n s it o ffic e o f th e T o w e rs . D e c a ls w e re b e in g s o ld fo r fa ll s e m e s te r. e c y c l e St a t e P ress P o l ic e R e p o r t s T o o b iz a r r e a n y t h in g t o b u t ir o u r S t a t e | P r e s s ! Jo tn U s H appy v - « v H o u r b e During Happy Hour 4-8 r e a l. PERFORMANCE FOOTWEAR Held c e rtifie d . C ourt ap proved. S tr e e t legal. a t th e Bar A p p e tiz e r s — rr v M o ti'F ri 4 '8 p m • S u n 6-10pm *?*«»» ¿;»?é A N C H O R A G E SE L F ST O R A G E 2 1 5U EfSO U T H E R N ( S .\j^ C O R N E R O F & S < km < JE R N A VE. C O LLEG E N EX T T O IffQ k P O S T O F F IC E ) WX RAGER ACTIVATION UNLIM ITED PAGES |n BROADWAY SOUTHERN 1 i p 0 is . 393T10D R -- 1 Y ear A irtim eV (» ► $ 6 9 9 9 4 tß PAGER ACTIVATION UNLIMITED RAGES FÄGER ACTIVATION UNLIMITED PAGES 2 Y ears Airtime! 3 Y ears A irtim e! $9 9 9 9 $ 1 1 9 9 9 1-800-760-PAGE 1 OFCALIFORNIA U N L IM IT E D A R IZ O N A PAGING! P H O E N IX (6 0 2 )4 6 8 -3 5 3 3 P H O E N IX 'ANCE) (6 0 2 ) 8 7 0 -8 6 0 0 P E O R IA (6 0 2 )4 8 7 -8 1 0 0 BRING IN THiaVVMf RECEIVE AN ADDITIONAL $5.00 OFF THIS FIRST MONTH! Out the door! NO Hidden Costs! NO Catch! Unlimited Pages! ™ Look For " 6 New Locations ¡jComingSoon!^ I SCOTTSDALE (602) 9 0 5 -8 8 3 3 TEM PE (6 0 2 ) 8 3 1 -8 9 0 0 Friday, May 2,1997 S t a t e P r e ss Page 17 Police reportedly have more witnesses in Ennis Cosby case B y C o n sta n c e S o m m er A sso c ia te d P ress p e o p l e w a n t e d . N o w h ir i n g f o r t h e f o llo w in g p o s it io n s f o r b o th s u m m e r a n d f a ll s e m e s t e r s : Slimmrer editor— -— — R e p o rte rs S p o rts re p o rte rs P h o to g ra p h e rs O p in io n c o lu m n is t s E n t e r t a in m e n t w r it e r s C o p y e d it o r s M a c /Q u a r k g r a p h ic a r t is t s A d v e r t is in g s a le s r e p r e s e n t a t iv e s D e liv e r y d r iv e r s O f f ic e a s s is t a n t A p p ly n o w Q U E S T 1 0 N S ? CALL US! advertising Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 newsroom Brian Anderson 965-2292 production Joe Gorrao at 965-2097 P ress M e e t n e w p e o p le . E a rn d e c e n t c a s h . Applications available at the State Press info desk In the north basement of Matthews Center. LOS ANGELES — Two frien d s of M ikail M arkhasev say he sh o t Ennis Cosby when they were high on drugs, and two other people told police they helped Markhasev look for a gun he threw away that night, USA Today reported Thursday; The newspaper said the friends, who said they were driving with Markhasev the night Cosby was killed, were ques­ tioned and released and th at officials would not say whether they are suspects. The only previously known witness at the scene was a female friend of Cosby, son o f com edian B ill Cosby. She was unable to pick Markhasev out of a line-up. The report came as the arraignment for M arkhasev, an 18-year-old U krainian immigrant, was delayed so public defend­ ers could take over the case from private lawyers he can no longer afford. Lawyers’ comments on the report were limited because of a gag order. “The USA Today story came as a sur­ prise to me,” Markhasev’s former attorney, C harles Lindner, said outside court Thursday. “I’m curious as to hoW they obtained the documents they claim to have.” The gag order was imposed last month after Lindner said no fingerprints of value were found on a gun found in brush five miles from the killing scene. USA T oday,.•■citing court docum ents and a relative of one witness, said: Eli Zakaria, 23, and Sara Ann Peters, 21, both of Huntington Beach, told police they Were driving with Markhasev shortly after midnight on Jan 16. Zakaria’s uncle, Carlos Rodriguez, said Zakaria told him the three were high on drugs and looking for a dealer to find more. “He told me he Was out of it and that they pulled o v er to use the phone,” Rodriguez said. A ccording to statem en ts g iven to police by Zakaria and Ms. Peters, they stopped with Markhasev at a telephone in a parking lot about 450 feet from the iso­ lated spot where Cosby was killed on a road just off Interstate 405 as he fixed a flat tire on his father’s Mercedes-Benz. W hile Z akaria spoke on the phone, Markhasev headed up the street toward Cosby, the witness statements say. Zakaria told Rodriguez that Markhasev was going to rob Cosby, but “just lost it,” shot him and then came running back to the car and said, “Let’s get out of here.” The witnesses told police the same story. Court papers show Christopher So and Michael Chang of Los Angeles told police that Markhasev called Chang days after the killing and asked for help in finding a pistol he had thrown away the night of the shooting. The three searched for the gun without success. So subsequently reported the in c id e n t to p o lice and led them to Markhasev. Markhasev lived in Orange County and atten d e d Los A lam ito s High S chool before moving to Los Angeles in 1993. Zakaria and Ms. Peters went to Los Alamitos High before being sent to Laurel Continuation High School, an alternative school for students who need to make up credits. Laurel Principal David Bishop told The Associated Press. Markhasev’s arraignment was delayed, until May 13 by Superior Court Judge John Reid. One o f h is new p ublic d efen d ers, Henry H all, said that m edia coverage could influence the case but he had not decided whether to ask to have the trial moved. Markhasev was arrested March 12 and pleaded innocent to initial charges of mur­ der with special circumstances of attempt­ ed ro h b ery .and. .uge o f a firearm . Prosecutors later obtained a grand jury indictment that remains sealed, requiring a new arraignment. Explosive cache found in Calif, home may be linked to Freemen YUBA CITY, Calif. (AP) — Days after a Freemen militia sympathizer was serious­ ly injured in an explosion at his home, a powerful cache of explosives was seized at the motor home of two of his associates. If it had been detonated, the material taken W ednesday — 500 pounds o f an explosive called petrogel — would have been felt for three miles, Yuba County Sheriff Gary Tindel said. Taken into custody for questioning were Kevin Quinn, 37, and Vernon Weckner, 66, who lived at the motor home in this city 100 m iles northeast o f San Francisco, Tindel said. Authorities said Quinn and Weckner are friends or associates of William Goehler, 34, Who was seriously injured in an explo­ sion Sunday that ripped through his home in nearby Olivehurst and broke windows two blocks away . Goehler underwent surgery for a severe neck injury after Sunday’s explosion. His 2-year-old daughter suffered a head cut. Goehler was arrested for investigation of Using a destructive device and child cruelty. Last year, Goehler supported the antigovemment Freemen during their threem onth standoff w ith federal agents in Jordon, Mont. Comics Page 18 T Friday, May 2,1 9 9 7 rials St WELL, well , T ribulations another B y J o na th a n I n g e I SHIRKED MY CLASSES. I FELL IN AND OUT OF lo v e , i Ex p e r im e n t e d WITH FACIAL HAIR. I STREAKED THE M V . AND I (NAS ARRESTED- SEMESTER GONE 6Y. let- s reflect. ( t w ic e S t a t e P ress hep ! B y K ik E W ELL, T H E R E ’S ALWAYS N E X T sem ester. I(WHAT AßOUT YOU, MOST MY B IK E ’ GOT STOLEN. •_ t T H f \ IME J ocular Parable B y D a v id C o u l d vO SiNet THIS IS ^3E S aS ^A S 't)W B 0" P e l v is T H E ILAST A C T STRIP C r P lP - V IA M * P fI'M r Vs oT cLo o. l , gBA a Pfc, »THE B y, i-r ■pON’ T M E L T IN A 0 Z Ó M A . M A M i I'M S T IL L A OF THE SEMESTER "TH A N tyauv/EcyM ucHV IA 6 1 N . . . SMEESH. A . 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State P ress The ASU baseball team has faced some of the nation’s best pitchers fills season. During the course o f this season, ASU has fáced pitching from the likes o f U C LA ’s Jim Parqué and T om Jacquez, Stanford hurlers Kyle Peterson and Chad Hutchinson, USC’s Seth Etherton and Randy Flores, and Florida State’s Randy Choate. All are expected to be high (baft picks. They're also foe hottest pitchers in the. nation. But when Fresno State righthander Jeff Weaver takes the No. 13 ASU (32-19,16-14 Six-Pac) m o u n d ! S un D e v il U p d a t e : / A S U is com ing o ff a / 7-6 10 -inning w in over G ra n d C anyon on # W e d n e s d a y . T h e Sun ? D e v ils are c u r r e n tly in fourth place in the Six-Pac s ta n d in g s a n d are fo u r gam es b e h in d co n fe re n ce le a d e r S ta n fo rd ... A S U h o ld s a 9 -2 a ll- tim e edge o ve r Fresno State. The last tim e the tw o teams met was in 1983 when A S U hosted th e W e s t R e g io n a l at Packard Satdium. The Sun D e v ils w o n . 7 -2 ... L e ft fie ld e r D a n M c K in le y leads the six -P a e in- h its w ith 8 9 (1 .8 p e r g a m e ). M c K in le y a ls o is h it tin g .4 1 2 w it h 14 h o m e / ru n s and 5 5 R B I ... / M cK in le y , however, isn’ t the ' Sun D e vil w ith the best h itting average. That h on o r belongs to ■ G reg D ikos. w ho is h ittin g 1.000 w ith one R B I and one run scored in one at-bat. ASU’s R yan M ills (5-3,2.90 ERA) A g e : 19 tonight, the Sun Devils flwill be faclin g arguably lithe hottest pitcher in the. | country. “We’ve faced the best of the best,” ASU left fielder Dan McKinley said. “We’re not intimidated by any means. We know can hit anybody if we come out and have the right plan against a certain pitcher. We’ll be ready.” And how. The Sun Devils host foe Bulldogs at 7 tonight for foe first meeting of a three-game homestand at Packard Stadium. ASU head coach Pat Murphy said he’s happy to have the Bulldogs back On the Sim Devils’ schedule. “Fresno’s one of the best programs in foe country,” he said. “(Head coach) Bob Bennett is one of the best coaches. He’s done a tremendous job. We’re looking forward to the future of this series, too, 1 respect Bob Bennett a great deal.” A S \f( 3 T l9 ,16-14 SiX-Pac) is com. ing off a. 10-inmn^ 7 ^ w ip oyerJgrand .Canyon while Fresno State f fs¿ 10 Western Athletic Confetence) is coming off a 7-5 win over Pepperdine. The last time the two teams met was during the 1983 W est Regionals at Packard Stadium. ASU won, 7-2. ' “It should be a good series,” Bennett said. “W e"« ing ovar there because we haven’t been there ip a long time. Believe it or not, we’ve always enjoyed foe hot weather. I understand it’s going to be hot and I sophomore, was a bronze medal-win­ ning m em ber o f the A tlanta U.S. Olympic team and has notched a stag­ gering 131 strikeouts this season. In com parison, ASU lefthander R yan Mills, tonight's starter, has 99 whiffs. Weaver (9-4, 3.48) has eight com­ p lete gam es and two sav e*. in 17 appearances. M ills (5-3, 2.96) has tossed two complete games and one shutout in 14 appearances,* “Everybody knows about him now,” Bennett said of Weaver. “He’s pitched extremely well and has a good fastball. And he’s got a good slider/and a curveball. Hekeeps the ball down. Itshould be a good matchup because I ’ve heard a lot about Mills and the fact that he’s also a great pitcher.” M ills, how ever, is tentative for tonight's game, Murphy said a nagging injury to Mills’ back could force Mills to sit out tonight’s game, meaning that Phill Lowery, Saturday’s starter, could take Mills' place. Still, the similarities between the ; two hurlers are uncanny. Both are simi­ lar in size and height, and both are dominating. Yet Mills downplays the matchup between him and Weaver. “I've pitched against the top pitch­ ers in the Pac,” Mills said. “The guy pitching against me d oesn ’t really bother me as much. I worry about the hitters. Our hitters are going to have to worry about Weaver.” B ennett said the outcom e o f Friday’s game may well hinge upon which pitcher performs better. “I think those guys are dom inating p itch ers,” Bennett said. “But I’ve made predictions before about games and they. .never tru e It . Fresno S tate (32-21, 4-20 WAC) F resno S tate ’s J eff W eaver (9-4,3.48) A g e : 20 . H e ig h t: 6 ’ 5” W e ig h t: 185 lbs. . B a ts/th ro w s: R /R H o m e to w n (h ig h sch oo l): S im i V a lle y , C a lif. (S im i V a lle y ) Y e a r in school: sophom ore S trike ou ts: 131 F astball speed: 9 4 m ph “They say h e ’s the best. H e’s got unbelieveable numbers. H e’s one o f the top pitchers in the country. ” gam e based on the Tip records o f - th o se fwfc/lu : gays and 'the fact that they’re b o th dominating .It*s pretty tfngjb t o N t w those guys ” L A * * " — A S U coach Pat M u rp h y o n J e ff W eaver B ulldog U pda te: Fresno State is c o m in g o f f a 7-5 v j w in N eiffes" ■i p h e Sua Devils w ill host the U niversity o f over P e p p e r d in e on Tu e sd ay. T h e B u lld o g s are tie d f o r f i r s t p la c e w it h S a n J o s e , S ta te in th e W AC W e s t... R ig h t f i e l d e r D a r r e n D y t is 10 for the F iesta t e s tro k in g h is b at a t a .317 pace. D y t , a j u n i o r tr a n s f e r f r o m Scottsdale (H o riz o n ) F a s tb a ll speed: 9 4 m p h “H e’s a good, solid pitcher. He throws the ball pretty hard and has a good curve ball. It looks like h e’s going to be tough.” — Fresno State coach j | W eather no t W ithstanding, when ' bofo teams meet, there will be plenty Sjp béat to be lted. ' ^ As a team, Fresno State is hitting .295 while successfully holding their opponents to .262 . •• **. And abig part of Fresno State’s suc­ cess belongs to Weaver. The 6-foot-5 admission tickets ace $2 \ white advance tickets are available thrdngjb th e 1 ASU tic k e t office.'! ' Proceeds far the event will b e n e fit ASU b a se b a ll’ G uadalupe P rojectsand t h e * '1 i Arizona Hispanic Sports Authority. B o b Bennett o n R yan M ills Ryan M ills' photo courtesy Scott Troyanos/ASU Madia Rotations B a k e r s f ie ld C o lle g e in B a k e r s f ie ld . C a l i f . , h a s f o u r h o m e r u n s a n d 17 R B I t o h is c r e d it ... C a tc h e r G iu s e p p e C h ia ra m o n tc lea d s th e te a m in h ittin g w ith a te a m -hig h 21 hom e runs and 5 5 KB1. H e is second on th e B u lld o g s ’ career lis t fo r hom e runs w ith 38 ... T h e B u lld o g s are a lre a d y a ssure d a b e rth in th e W A C B a s e b a ll T o u r n a m e n t, w h ic h w il l be h e ld M a y 14-17 in San D ie g o ... Fresno State is led b y H ead C oach B o b Bennett. A t Packard S tadium Probablestartersfortherestofthisweekend’sseries Sat. 7 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m. Phill Lowery (4-2,4.40) JeffCermak (5-3,6.48) vs. vs. Adam Pettyjohn (6-5,3.16) Kirk Griffin (5-2,3.55) Note: Tonight’s game w ill be broadcast live by K M V P 860 A M — Murphy makes sure team plays the best B y P ercy E d n a l in o J r . S ta te P ress A tti» When the ASU baseball team faces Fresno State tonight, ' they’ll be facing a foe that they haven’t seen in mote than a decade. ASU has not faced die Bulldogs since 1983, when the two faced off in the West Regionals at Packard Stadium. The Sun Devils won that matchup 7-2 and advanced to die College WoridSeries. Fresno State’s return to the Sun Devils’ schedule is some­ thing ASU head coach Pat Murphy has been looking forward to. This season’s schedule is the first one he has put together cm his own. “We’re really pleased with our schedule,” Murphy said. “We’re definitely the No. 1 schedule in the nation. Everybody knows that I’m really proud of it” Murphy said he felt his first schedule Was his best schedule. Next year’s schedule should be just as tough. In addition to the regular Six-Pac slate, an away series against the Bulldogs at Fresno State’s Beiden Field abo is on deck for next season. As is a homestand at Packard Stadium against Florida State. ASU faced the Seminóles earlier this season at Dick Howser Stadium in Tallahassee, Fla. It’s definitely not a shabby schedule. ‘When you’re playing in the Six-Pac, you’ve already got a tough schedule,” Murphy said. “(Next season), we’re going to play Florida State, and Fresno State, UNLV and BYU.” But looking at the rest of this season, ASU still has a mid­ week game against Grand Canyon at the Antelopes’ home field. The Sun Devils then turn around and host their last game of the season against the University of Denver. Page 2 0 S t a t e P ress . Friday, May 2,1997 Sun Devil golfers’ college careers nearing end o f road That’s probably the best moment that I can By M att Paulson look back at and hopefully we can do it State P ress The lives and careers of seniors golfers again.” Lein also said that last year’s NCAA Chris Hanell and Scott Johnson were worlds apart prior to their arrival at ASU. Since the National Championship is the one thing he’ll two stepped onto campus in the fall of 1992, remember most about his time with the two however, they have grown into mirror images golfers. “We’ve had a lot of memorable moments,” of each other. -■ Hanell, a native of Vestervik. Sweden, Lein said! “But winning the National came to ASU following a prestigious junior Championship was probably the highlight for career in Europe that included being a four- all three of us. They’ve had a very positive, very strong showing for the golf program. year member of the Swedish National Team. Johnson, who is from Kennewick, They’ve been great players, great Sun Devils, W ash., was one of the top-three junior T 11miss them both.” Johnson, however, had quite a different golfers in the nation and a Washington Junior Golf Association MVP before he memory. “One day he (Hanell) comes out to the became a Sun Devil. During their time in Tempe. the two have course and he's got on canary yellow a shirt each been All-Americans, AU-Pac-10 selec­ and pants,” Johnson said. “Til remember that tions and Pae-1() All-Academic Honorees. forever. He was like Tweety Bird. It was pret­ Each has recorded over 14 top-10 finishes, and ty comical.” Johnson went on to add that in addition to each averages rounds of 73. Head coach Randy Lein said the similari­ being a comic. Hanell has been a constant motivation. ties don't stop there. “He works so hard on his game,” Johnson “Chris and Scott are probably two of the most driven individuals I’ve ever coached.” said. “The first year he was here, he was strug­ Lein said. "They know they want to play pro­ gling. but he went out and beat the course up fessionally. They're winners, and they do (during practice). Chris Hanell made himself a everything a coach asks for and a lot more. good golfer. He hasn' t gotten anything for They're what 1 consider low maintenance free. He's really focused and detennined. "It (our time as teammates) has been very players because they’re good students. They get the job done. They're the first to arrive and competitive and I’m really glad that I've been: the last to leave. They’re great role models for his teammate. He’s a perfect teammate because I always know that Chris Hanell will the younger players on the team." ' When the Pac-10 Championships begin be out there fighting. Hanell, the No. 2 golfer in the Rolex Monday in Eugene. Ore., their time together as Collegiate Rankings, had equally as positive teammates will be down to its final month. Hanell said that there has been several words for Johnson. "He's got a'lot of fire within him,” Hanell memo rub 1e mo ments in their ill ustrio us careers, but there is one that stands out more said. "He tends to be really emotional about the things he does. I'm just happy to have than any other. “1 think something that I'll always remem­ played with him,” ber (about Scott) is winning nationals,” Hanell N o t e • Freshman Jonas Runnquist will replace said. “That's just something that is just really special. It's nice to win individually, but I sophomore Darren Angel, who is out with a think when you win as a team, you have some­ low grade sinus infection, at the P ac-10 one to share it with. It's so much more fun. Championships. A S U s e n io r s S c o tt J o h n s o n ( le f t ) a n d C h r is H a n e ll d is p la y la s t y e a r ’ s N C A A N a tio n a l C h a m p io n s h ip tr o p h y . T h e d u o w ill le a d th e S u n D e v ils q u e s t fo r a t h ir d -s tr a ig h t P a c -1 0 C h a m p io n s h ip b e g in n in g M o n d a y . Jeffrey, Booth honored O ’N eal aw aits his O ly m p ic m o m e n t From Staff Reforts The fouth annual Wings o f Gold banguet was held Wednesday night at the Arizona Biltmore hotel. The booster club is specifically designed to suport women’s athletics at ASU, Approximately 900 people attended the event which honored Sun Devil student-athletes. Ex- Sun Devil wimmer Chris Jeffrey was given the Heather Fair Award. This award is given anftoaiy to the ASU female atb* lete who displays courage, hard work and dedication throughout her career in the pursuit of academics and athletic exceHeace, Jeffrey, a four-time All-American, now works as an arhitectural designer and planner at a firm in the Valley of the Sun. “She’s an extremely focused person,” ASU Writhes^ swim­ ming coach Tim Hill said. “She knows how to work as well as any swimmer I’ve coached (at ASU)C Golfer Kellee Booth, a two-tiiae first-team All-America selec­ tion and tire 1996 NCAA runner-up was chawii Female Stixleat-AtiiJgte of tire Yea|iB.feJ “It’s quite an honor with the caliber of athletes fiHf HU H iftjlfti* fl She was also surprised to be awarded. • / “It was a complete shock,” she said. ‘1 started crying because 1 couldn’t believe they called my name and ai$o because my parents f i t fiiiini TwlMTiii “ OthM f c j student-athletes honored were Priscilla Boldt (cross ), Katrina Pfeuffer (diving), Meagan Wi Johnson (softball), Reka C-seresnyes (t ¿track and Biage (soccer). But O’Neal is not your ordinary teenager. He is extraordinary. He will be honored at 7 p.m. on May 9 at Tempe McCIintock High School during th e O pening Ceremonies of the 1997 Arizona Special Olympics Summer Games When gym nast Keri Strug, Arizona’s inspirational Olympic gold medalist, will pass the “Flame of Hope” torch to O’Neal. “Yes!,” O’Neal screamed after learning about this special honor. “I’m very happy and excited:” Ryan’s mother, Linda Peltier, said this is just another achieve­ ment for him. L et m e win B u t i f I c a n ’t w in “Every year th e re ’s another L et m e be b rave in m y attem pt. challenge for him,” she said, while O ’Neal certainly has been reflecting on him being “really into courageous over the years. Born the S pecial O lym pics” for six with cerebral palsy, he has endured years, “Running is a real challenge for physical lim itatio n s that have caused severe leg cramps and mus­ him,” she said. “But he has a great cle pain. And he is he.aring time.” Besides running (50-and 100impaired. “H e’s a very brave m an,” meter dashes), O’Neal participates in baseball, basketball, floor hock­ Consolian said. By Ed O deven State P ress Ryan O’Neal exemplifies every­ thing that is right with athletics. “He brings sunshine to every­ body around him,” O’Neal’s coach Tracy Consolian said. O’Neal is an 18-year-old senior at Scottsdale Horizon High School. He was voted Arizona’s most inspi­ rational athlete last year by Special Olympics. According to Consolian, O’Neal is more than just an athlete. “He is the (Special Olympics) oath,” she said, before saying it: ey and bow ling for Special Olympics teams. “H e’s a tremendous defensive player,” Consolian said, referring to his general overall athletic style of play. P eltier said this has been an exciting year for her son. He will gaduate from high school this month and he will attend Paradise Valley Community College in the fall. “This (ceremony) ju st tops it off,” she said. A r i z o n a ’s a t h l e t e s An estim ated 1,750 athletes, 2,500 volunteers and coaches will take part in the four-day event, said C heryl Cox, A rizona Special Olympics marketing coordinator. The competition will take place May 8-11 on the ASU campus. Track and field, gymnastics, power lifting, softball, team handball and tennis events are scheduled. Anyone interested in volunteer­ ing for the Special Olympics can call the V olunteer Line at 4078558. See? We told you it was better, S t a t e P ress P age 21 Friday, May 2, 1997 M ens and w om ens tennis teams begin postseason B y L o r i H aro S ta te P ress With a great regular season behind them, and the Pac-lO Championships done with, there is only one goal the ASU women’s tennis team is hoping to achieve. The national tennis title. The Sun Devils heads to Stanford in two weeks to com­ pete in the NCAA Championships. The championships run from May. 17-24. “We’ll be prepared to play the toughest matches of the year,” head coach Sheila Mclnemey said. “We have to compete well and work hard.” The team is no stranger to hard work. This season the Sun Devils finished 14-6 overall, 5-5 Pac-10 South, and they áre No. 7 in the nation. Last year die team ended with a record of 12-11, 1-9 Pac-10 South. “We had a great season, and making the to p -10 is always good,” Reka Cseresnyes said. Finishing the year in the top-10 has allowed the team to bypass a regional and head straight to the championships. Last season die team made it to the semifinals at the NCAA Regional Tournament before falling to USC. “It was frustrating last year to have to go to a regional,” Katy Propstra said. “We’re really excited (to go straight to . Stanford).” U nlike the Pac-10 C ham pionships, the NCAA Championships are a team tournament comprised of the top-16 teams in the nation. The top-10 teamfiutomatically head to Stanford. The top-10 teams are currently Florida, Stanford, UCLA, Duke, Texas, Georgia, ASU, Wake Forest, Mississippi and William&Mary. Six regionals with eight teams per region will be held at various sites around the country. The winner of each of the regional joins the 10 at Stanford, The team tournament is single elimination. The champi­ onships also hold an individual tournament that begins after the team tournament finishes. The Sun Devils will find out who they will play first either May 11 or 12. “It is exciting to get there, but it’s certainly nicer to win once you get there',” Mclnemey said. “It’s only one and you’re gone.” However, the team knows what it is up against and plans to do well. “The competition will be tough,” Alison Nash said. “It’ll have to be one match at a time.” M e n s team at regionals B y L ua n n e M uller S pec ia l t o t h e Sta te P ress F r e s h m a n A le x O s te r r ie th a n d th e r e s t o f th e m e n ’s te n n is te a m h e a d to re g io n a ls in M a lib u , C a lif., lo o k in g to q u a lify fo r N C A A *. T h e to u rn a m e n t w ill ta k e p la c e M a y 9 -1 1 . ° The ASU men’s tennis team will head to Malibu, Calif., • May 7 to compete in the NCAA Regional Championships. The tournament will take place May 9-11. First-round action begins Friday, May 9, with die No. 3 seed Washington (15-7) playing No. 6 University of Cal at Irvine (11-8). ASU (12-9), at No. 4, will face No. 5 Cal (10-12) in other first-round action. “We think we have a good chance to win,” Sun Devil Tim Hammond said. “We have beaten California before.” In the second round, the winner of the UW/UC Irvine match will play the No. 2 seeded UC Santa Barbara (15-5). No. 1 Pepperdine (20-6) will face the winner o f the ASU/Cal match. The winners of the second-round matches will face each other on Sunday, May 11, for the Championship match. The winner o f this match will advance to the N C A A Cham pionships w hich w ill take place May 17-25 at UCLA. “Our goal at the beginning of the season was to win regionals and make it to nationals,” Hammond said. “We think we have a good enough team to win. Everyone is starting to come together, and our doubles is getting really good.” ASU head coach Lou Belken agreed. “At the beginning of the season, we knew we had a young, inexperienced team. We expected to mature and start playing better tennis by the end of the season. We have proven that.” ASU will to into the tournament ranked 39th in the nation. In its first ranking of the season, ASU’s No. 1 dou­ bles team, Ed Carter and Sergio Elias, is ranked 21st. No Sun Devil singles players are ranked. Lori Cain/State Press J u n io r S te p h a n ie L a n s d o rp a n d th e r e s t o f th é A S U w o m e n ’s te n n is te a m h a v e tw o w e e k s to p re p a re fo r N C A A s to b e h e ld a t S ta n fo rd . T h e S u n D e v ils , b y w a y o f th e ir to p -1 0 ra n k in g , g e t to s k ip re g io n a l q u a lify in g . The top eight teams in the nation do not have to play in regionals. ASU hopes to be 1 of the 8 additional teams that will make it to nationals. “We are. excited about regionals,” Carter said. “We have a chance to make the NCAAs.” Last year, the Sun Devils won the first and second rounds of'regionals against UW and UC Santa Barbara. ASU lost to Pépperdine in the finals. This year, the team does not plan on finishing second. “We weren’t healthy,” Belken said. “We had lost one of our best players. This year’s team is healthy. This team has improved in every way. The players have gotten better physically, intellectually and emotionally.” The lineup for the tournam ent will be Elias, Alex Osterrieth, Gustavo Marcaccio, Hammond, Carter and Casey Was. ASU will have 5 of its 6 starters back next year. The only starter who will not be returning is senior Elias. “Sergio has done a great job as a leader and captain of this team,” Belken said. “These kids are smart, great ath­ letes with the right attitude. We expect to have a great year in 1997-98.” Page 22 S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2,1 9 9 7 S ports w r iter s n e e d e d ! S oftb alls seniors ready Cover sports for the State Press, call 965-6837, come down to the Matthews Center basement for an application or e-mail the sports editor at les.boulez@asu.edu G et Y ours At BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO, MAY 2 0 th WAYS TO SAVE you MONEY for late run for regionals squad. “It would have been nice for us to go Since she is tied for third in the nation to regionals the last four years,” R uff with five saves, it’s obvious that ASU Said. “But for us seniors, since we have softball pitcher Carrie James knows how such a lot of them now, it’s perfect tim­ to finish a game. ing for us.” B ut fo r Jam es and th e six o th er Besides Ruff, Lohmann and Jam es, seniors on the softball team, this week­ the Sun Devils who will be playing their end w ill teach them how to fin ish a last games at Sun Devil Club Stadium career. are outfielders Tanya Hermosillo, Lisa “ O bviously, i t ’s sad ,” Jam es said. D acquisto, Jaym e Jenkins and Stacey “Because I spent four years here, and Slick. Senior Erin Hull, who sat out all I’m so sad that it’s ending, but on the o f this season due to an in ju ry , was other hand it’s exciting to me that for the granted an extra year of eligibility. first time since I’ve been here that we “(I have) mixed feelings,” Slick said. have the possibility to go on and play in “I ’m ju st trying not to concentrate too the regionals.” m uch on them b eing the la st gam es, To get to regionals, the 14th-ranked because th at’s kind o f sad. We really Sun D evils (30-18, 8-14 Pac-10) will need to take them one at a time, because have to play well against two unranked we need to win the games and sometimes conference foes, Oregon State (24-25-1, its overwhelming to think about them all 1-12 Pac-10) and Oregon (18-27-1, 3-11 at once.” Pac-10). The Sun Devils host both teams “It’s always hard (to lose players),” in doubleheaders, playing Oregon State Wells said. “Probably particularly with tobight at 6, and Oregon tomorrow at 6. this class, because i t ’s a big class o f “W e split with (Oregon and Oregon seniors, and they really have done so State) up there,” head cOach Linda Wells much for the program. I think every year sa id . “ T hen we cam e hom e and we it’s hard because every player is special, played a series o f teams where we are I think, and they each are spécial, in a ranked significantly below them. (No. 1 different way.” A riz o n a , No. 4 U C LA , No. 6 The Sun D evils w ill com plete their Washington). We were not able to win a season in Los Angeles against UCLA oil gam e. N ow , w e ’re b ack a g a in st the May 10. unranked teams where I feel we’re capa­ “Right now we’re not thinking about ble o f playing our best.” UCLA,” James said. “Right now w e’re If the Sun Devils were to make the thinking about the Oregon schools. Right regionals, it would mark the first time now we’re trying to position ourselves in a Since 1993 that th e team has advanced place where we can make it to regionals.” th a t ~faf. O nly 'se m b rs’T ih a R u ff and Brackets for die championship will be j Tammy Lohm ann, both o f whom used announced on May 11, with regionals redshirt years, were part o f that ASU beginning on the 15th. B y J o s h D e F a m io S ta te P ress If You Have Receiveda 2-Year or 4-Year Degree in the Last 2 Years * You WilI Receive a 2 or 4-Year Degree in the Next 6 Months... YOU’RE APPROVED! COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAM Call For Details... 461-4330 1D Ü i 1D E A L S On Broadway between Dobson i Alma School 461-4300 SUPERSTITION FREEWAY - 360 hhtp://mm. brownandbrown.com Page 23 Friday, May 2,1997 S t a t e P ress Track squad wraps up season B y L o r i H aro S ta te P ress The season of sanctions ends Saturday as the ASU track and field team hosts thé ASU Invitational at Sun Angel Stadium. Barred from competing in any post-season competitions due to rules violations occurring in 1995, the team is looking forward to next season and starting anew. “I think (the season) was positive from where we stand,” Sun Devil head coach Greg Kraft said, “It wasn’t about how fast we ran, but how we prepared to run. I’m very optimistic about our future.” At the invitational, teams from UofA, NAU, Central Arizona and Glendalé Community College will compete, along with partial teams from MCC, Phoenix College and Grand Canyon University will participate. The meet kicks off with the hammer throw event at 2 p.m. The running events begin at 6 p.m. Many of the athletes hope to use this event to accomplish some season-ending goals. “I would like to get close to or over 230 feet (in the hammer throw),” Mika Laiho said. “If I throw 230, I’ll be pretty happy.” Laiho is not the only one who has a specific season best to attain. High jumper Fiona Daly is looking to clear 6 feet for the first time this season. “My performances were just so up and down (this season), it was frustrating,” Daly said. “I would like to clear 6 feet just once.” The sanctions the team are under was only a few of the obsta­ cles the team faced this season. For die entire indoor season the team had very limited training facilities. Most of the team had to head out to Tempe High School and train on their track, but a lot of the field event athletes were not able to train at all. “For us you have to evaluate a lot of different factors other than just performance,” Kraft said. But for now Kraft and the team are just focusing on performing well in their final meet. “I would like to end on a positive note,” Adra Hysong said. “It’s been a tough seaSon so l just want to go out and have fun.” Cardinals host Party F r o m S taff R eports Former ASU Quarterback Jake “ The Snake” Plummer will make his return to Sun Devil Stadium when his new team, the Arizona Cardinals, hosts its annual Select-ASeat Block Party at 10 am. Also featured will be former Iowa comerback Tom Knight, whom the Cardinals used the ninth-overall pick to obtain, as well as veteran Cardinals, new free agent signees and the six other draft picks picked up by Arizona during die offseason. The event will feature NFL Experience-type interactive football games for children, NFL videos, appearances by Cardinal cheerleaders, along with a three hour practice session. Before the practice, members of the Valley media will participate in a flag foot­ ball game. After the practice, the Cardinals will hold an autograph signing session for 45 minutes. Classifieds N otice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity o f die offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding die investigation of an advertisement, please contact die Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. Marc Trivia... The oldest know n bathtub w as m ade in Crete in 1700 BC APARTMENTS ASU, NICE 1bdrm across the street, laundry, pool, quiet. $350 or $360,921-2561. PONT HAUL It home. .Store it: See our coupon ad. Best Little W arehouse in Tempe. 9673900. PRELEASING BEAUTIFUL Lg. 2bd/Iba Walk to A SU. Pool, laund. rm. 1/blk South o f U niv. Dr. on 8th St. Gape Code Apts 968-5238 WALK TO campus! Small quiet com plex. Only 3 blocks from ASU1 3 bd $625/m o + dep 2bd $475/mo + dep. Studip apt. $350/roo. + dep. J eff 967-3037 APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR HOMES FOR RENT HOMES FOR RENT HOMES FOR RENT 3BD 2BA 1191 S. Maple $900/1110. ; 3bd lb a 619 W. 12th St. w/floors $900/mo. Tim 894-0288 LG 5 BD house: pool, jacuzzi. w/d, dishwasher, ac, etc. Hardy & 13th St, $1400 437-1048 WALK TO ASU: lb d lba $475 3bd 2ba $900 4bd 2ba $1050 avail now Tim 894-0288 3BR/2BA PATIO home, L5 mi. E; o f ASU vaulted ceiling, fp, appl., pool, Jacuzzi, remdl, $850/mo. Call Jim at 905-8121 LESS THAN l/2mi from ASU 3 or 4bd 2ba house avail immed. Huge yard; lawn & irrigation maint. included. Fridge, w/d. Completely remodeled inside & out. $ 1 150/mo. 731-3969 pg 360-1626 C /a tfs /f/a d s 9 6 5 -6 Z 3 5 OLD TOWN Tempe- 2bd, 1 ba, 6 blks from A SU. $700/m o. A vail May-Aug.. Mark 9683358 2 BDR HOUSE walk to ASU, large kitchen, carport, fenced yard (m aint, in cl.) $850/m o. avail 6/1.968-5658 Jon. WALK TO ASU lbd lba condo w / w/d $475 3bd 2ba $875 4bd 2 l/2b a $1100 Tim 894-0288 APARTMENTS APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR R § N T _ _ _ _ 1 & 2 BD CONDOS c lo se to campus. Pool/spa, very nice. $475-7 /« (toll free, 24 hours) i " O o O " * i O T " 5 “ “ / Ficstnmn Bellperson - FT Guest Service oriented. Must have excellent driving record. Self motivat­ ed, able to work with others and willing to perform a variety of tasks. Evening Hrs. vary. Fiesta In n FACS Personnel Office Apply in person: Mon-Fri 9am-4pm 2100 S. Priest Tempe EOE Equal opportunityfor all 2 miles from ASU campus FINANCIAL a n d CREDIT SERVICES S t a t e P ress HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL GAIN EXP. in your field pro­ viding support to 2 women with developmental disabilities livin g in their own apt. ft/pt hrs, shifts include Sun-Th af­ ternoon hrs, Fri-Sun overnights GREAT SCHOOL job. Care­ giver for active quadriplegic. 34 eyes/w k s. Healthy, smoke/drug free ass’t w/positive attitude. Good pay. Will train. Tom 949-7241. Lv. mes, IN HOME providers. Ft/pt workers needed to provide care to developm entally disabled peisons living in natural family settings. Salary $6-$9/hr. Col­ lege tuition reimbursement pro- LIONS'"CAMP Tatiyee is seek­ ing to hire counselors & WSI to work w/ handicapped child­ ren & adults in Lakeside, AZ June 1 - Aug. 3. Room, board, salary & credit avail. If inter- NEED 3-5 STUDENTS to mar- , ket 800 phone numbers to students/parents. Earn money now. Lots more this fall! Call Phone Home 847-888-8890 h/w4pm-7pm. PT/FT SUMMER work up to $9.75. F lexib le entry level openings. Scholarships avail, conditions exist. Apply now!!! Start now or after finals Tem pe/ M esa 968-8162 IMAX THEATRE cal coverage for f/t. BJLI.T.E. Inc. Call James 254-2785 ext. 6 275-2604 at ARISE 497 1889 ext. 25 State Press Australian tor newspaper in Scottsdale is hiring floor staff. All avail needed, premium paid for weekday m atinee. Apply in person @ 4343 N. Scottsdale Rd or call 949-3100 x204. Just minutes from cam­ pus. Coiné join our team! F in d t h e TODAY | s e c ti o n o n p a g o 2; o r o n ttie I n te r n e t a t http://news.vpsa. a8U.edti/ INTERN/SUMMER WORK or ft. Personal asst, to president o f million dollar ad agency. Flexi­ ble hrs. 25-SOhrs/wk. Depend­ able car, common sense & paid training. Jim 460-1704 INTERNET RESEARCH ASST Posting & R eview ing, Job opening/R esum es for Scot­ tsdale Staffing Firm. PT-No Fee. SpectraStalf 481-Ò411. SUMMER INTERNSHIP in fi­ nancial district @ Paine Webber in Phx. M otivation required. 957-5129 DONOR EBBS NEEDED H e a lth y w o m e n (ages 21-32, all ethnic g ro u p s) n e e d e d to d o n a te eggs a n o n y ­ m o u sly to h e lp infertile co u p les achieve p reg n an cy . M u st h av e h e a lth insu ran ce, 7-10 clinic visits a n d injections invo lv ed . Find it F A S T in th e C la ssifie d s SUMMER JOBS A ccepted donors com pensated $2000. Come to New Hampshire F o r m o r e in f o r m a tio n c a ll 602-860-4792 *y^taurant • N o w h irin g n il P o s itio n s H o s t/H o s te s s Bus * e e S ta rt 3 7 /h r G re a t T ip s 4 .2 5 ♦ T ip s e • H o E x p a r i s s e t n e c e s s a r y - W e T ra in y o e l * • Page 25 Friday, May 2, 1997 S e rv e rs « U N I N Tannai e cactu* m s Tatum e 953-2121 P e o p le 7000 N Scottartela Wrt e Indian Baa* S Scattatala • 443-1300 e FO REIGN CU RREN CY TRADER Exp/wdiNq ¡niernationaI Hrm seeks a liiqlily M o iiv A itd , a m b ilio u s , A w d s e lf'S iA R iiN C j iis d iv id u A i No experience necessary. Hiqlt ¡ncome potentIaI. P aM T R M M N q . O u tstand ing B ro th er/S is ter C am ps on largest New E ng land lake seek skilled co u n selo rs for land & w ater sports, arts. E xcellen t salaries plus room , board. & tran sp o rtatio n paid. Ju n e 2 2 -A u g u s t 22 R ob ind el (G irls) 800-32 5-3 396 W in a u ke e (B o ys) 80 0-48 7-9 157 S pecial N eeds: B oys- Tenn is, sailing , soccer, ropes, o v ern ig h t tripp ing . Eng. riding, roller hockey. G irls- Te n n is, w ater skiing , sailing, d a rkro om . In terview s availab le: T u esd ay. May 6 C all for appt. NEED DRIVER to. drive car to. M innesota. Betw een May 9 &12. $.150945-5759 > V LOOKING FOR a summer job? . Gain experience in your field working with adults & children with developmental disabilities? Positions avail, throughout the East Valley. Great pay, training & flex hrs. Call N icola at ARISE 497-1889 ext. 25 y P/T JOB: 10 min from ASU work with disabled 14 yr. old girl in the community. Kat Parenti 423-5903 PARK RANGERS! Game war­ dens, park police. $6-$20/hr. Year round positions for men & women. Call 8am-9pm cst. (504) 429-9231 ext. 5057 P17 LOVE SPORTS? Need four team players to help expand, int. bus. 954-8279 PROGRAM COORDINATOR for ensmr/envir org focused on campaign finance rfrrn- R e­ search, media contact, public mtngs, organizing- no canvas. Car, Win95 exp req. Afrm Actn priority. +30hr/wk. + $7.50. Email resume/ letter: jdriscoll@ igc.apc.org MAINT. PERSON for tg office space. Eves or early AM. Must be good at upkeep & repair. FT with bene. Apply at 735 N. Gil­ bert Rd., Gilbert or call Becky @892-8900. v MODELS & ACTORS: Inter­ national scouts want you for summer Caribbean cruise. All ages/types. 941-6922. PT DRIVER needed, courteous responsible, neat appearance. Flex, hours, pays $7/hr. 9669929. 4TH FLOOR BAR fit GRILLE This should be your ad ~ Call 965-6735 Year-around w ork fo r the career-oriented individual. Food Handler's card req'd fo r the follow ing posi­ tions in our BUSY bar & grille. GYM NASTICS TENNISW ATERSKI COUNSELORS Prestigious coed cam p in beautiful M ass, seeks caring and m otivated sophs, jrs , srs, and grds who love w orking w ith children. O ther positions in A thletics, A rts, Theatre and W aterfront also available. C om petitive Salaries + Room + Board -t- T ravel. C all Camp la c o n ic : 600-762-2820 SERVERS BUSSERS HOST/HOSTESS Come join our staff where we offer com­ petitive wages, uni­ forms, free employee meal and much more. Please apply in person at Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd., M, T, W orF, 8:30-10:30am or 2-4pm'. Scottsdale Embassy Suite supports a Drug-Free Workplace. EOE r R e s id e n t ia l C o unselo rs Social Service Agency has ET/PT positions available working w ith adults w ho are developmentally and mentally challenged in group homes & apartm ent settings located in Phx., Mesa 6c Tempe. TO beC O M E A fo R E H fN CURRENCY TRAdER. Fon w utd RESUME IO : FOREXINVESTMENT SERVICES COUP. 2700 N. CeniraI Avenue #110, PiioeNix AZ 85004 PhoNE: 240-6668 Fax; 240-6667 We're he all-new Sears is popu­ lar, successful and drawing more shoppers every day. Accounting for this success is our job. Sears National Bank works day and night to serve SS million Sears Credit Card account holders. Join ns on any shift! T Credit Authorization FAIRYTALE BROWNIES, INC. Fast-growing Scottsdale business (at 68th St. & Thomas Rd.) is looking for a FULL TIM E shipping manager. Responsibilities will include all aspects of shipping our mail order products (ordering ship­ ping supplies, dealing with FedEx and UPS, cus­ tomer service related to shipments, supervision of shipping dept, personnel, handling phone orders & counter help for walk-in customers.) • Prior retail experience, excellent communication skills & a high energy level are required. • Work experience at a flower shop or gift basket company a plus. • W age dependent on prior experience. O pportunity fo r advancem ent Call Kim or David $ 6 .00-$ 6 .5 0 /h r. DO E. Pd training. Call 431-9511. r i i • Medical/ Dental/ Life Insurance • Short & Long-Term Disability • Profit Sharing & Pension Plans • Shift Differential For Evenings & Weekends • Paid Holidays & Vacation Tune • Casual Dress Code • Store Merchandise Discount J o in th e te a m a t A m erica's favorite store. C all th e n u m ­ ber below M onday-T hursday 8 am -8 p m . O r a p p ly in p e r ­ so n at: Sears N ational Bank, 2 6 2 6 S o u th H a r d y D riv e , Tem pe, A rizona. A drug-free workplace. Sears N ational Bank 804-6320 E tjual O pportunity Employer RETAIL SALES for pool store, . FT with benefits, pool exp a plus. A pply in person at 735 N. Gilbert Rd., Gilbert or call Mike at 507-5000. SCQ TTS/Py YMCA now hir­ ing dependable & cert, lif e ­ guards & swim instr. flex, avail.' For info. caH 922-5474 SECURITY-IMM. OPENINGS for 25 o fficers. Tem pe area full/part time shifts, $6.50/hr + benefits-Proguard-lW41 E. Tho­ mas #104 B ellperson - FT Benefits; • M edical/ D ental/ Life • Vacation/ Personal/ Holiday • Travel Industry Benefits • Employee Centered Company • Free Uniforms • Incentive Programs/Contests Fax resume or request for application - 944-1418 Apply in person at 4114 E. Washington, Phoenix, 7am-11pm or Call for appointment - 9 4 4 43 1 1 THÈ PICNIC Company‘Gour­ met C afe is now hiring conn ter/sandwich maker. Flexible hours. 1415 E. U niversity 2 blocks E. o f Rural 968-7740. WAREHOUSE ASST. Tempe interior design firm needs p/t person 10-15 hrs./wk. Light to med. receiving & packing. Call Helen 345-2116 e x t 105 C lassified s 965-6735 Guest Service oriented. Must have excellent driving record. Self motivat­ ed, able to work with others and willing to perform a variety o f tasks. Evening Hrs. vary. HELP WANTEDGENERAL S H O R T O N CASH? Plasma Hakes a Lot of Cantsl New Donors Earn \ $ 9 5 F 0r Your First Three Donations 8 Fiesta In n Personnel Office Apply in person: Mon-Fri 9am-4pm 2100 S. Priest Tempe EOE / 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102 Tempe 894-2250 'C e iM T C O fM 2 miles from ASU campus 1 I I I 4 I I I I 1 I 700 E. Baseline, Suite 0-2 Tempe, AZ 85283 J An Equal Opportunity Employer L RESORT I J PHLEBOTOMISTS FUN A N D E X C I T IN G TRAVEL IN D U S T R Y NOW H IR IN G Harris Laboratories seeks skilled Phlebotpm lsts to draw blood samples from study participants w ith in tim e constraints o f study ( I m inute inter­ vals) and process samples. We currently have d ay, e ve n in g and o v e rn ig h t sh ifts available. N um ber o f hours w ill va ry based on sta ffin g n e e d s. E x c e lle n t w ages fo r s k ille d Phlebotom ists. Please apply in person at; Oh HARRIS 4 6 3 9 S o u t h 3 6 th S t r ee t PHOENIX» A Z 8 5 0 4 0 A A /E O E > • $ 6 5 0 Cash Drawing in April * Haven't been here in 90 day»? Return and receive an extra S10! BXKRWNCB OUR TRUE BLUE PRIDE Station Manager Customer Service Representative Reservation A gent Service A gent/ Lo t A ttendant Drivers G reeters SURVEY CREW Chainperson Sage Engineering 966-9971 • Call to apply! PART-TIM E. YOU make the hours. Need an outgoing high­ ly motivated, self-starter. Indoor air purification, sellin g on a commission basis. Call Dave at 279-1542. m s tn in n • FULL AND PART-TIME OFFICE POSmONS IN THE TEM PE AREA • EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR STUDENTS >IMMEDIATE OPENINGS • COMPETITIVE PAY I • • • • • • SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guar, to start at 15-30 flex, hrs/wk. Call Jon for intv. between 3-5,921,-8282 TELEMARKETER, CAUL busi­ n esses looking for roofing work. AM hrs,salary + bonus­ es, leads provided, flex sched­ ule, exp req. Call Patrick 829661 f. I F/T and P/T Positions Available: Guaranteed $10/hr. + com. Equals $203- per hr. C all Tom at 921-7755 S A U E |_ Ca# 96S4731 CALL 838-7507 MON-FRI 8-5PM CarRental SHOW ME the money! Are you going to earn $500/w k. this summer? Local marketing com­ pany is hiring 6 people to fill . direct sales position s. Work even ing hrs. promoting local HELP WANTED■HH IntATM o rW tfe » R ftlfith « ■ OlMeHledNi» T- APPLICATIONS TAKEN BY APPOINTMENT Days, Evenings or Weekend! If you have strong communi­ cation skills, (Spanish/EngUsh bilingual a plus), a commit­ ment to customer service and computer keyboarding abili­ ties, you can enjoy good pay and great benefits working 30 (or more) hours a week! REC. ASSIST: Seeking caring, fun & active person to work w /m ildly handicapped adults. Lots erf- fun, near ASU, p/t. Call Pete 966-8536. • DAY AND EVENING HOURS AVAILABLE 276-9643 Part-Time QUAD. NEEDS attend. Sat-Sun PM $7/hr, W ill train. Near ASU. Dennis 968-5295. MANPOWER* i HELP WANTEDGENERAL SKY HARBORAIRPORT 'all today for interviev 220 0122 or drop-in at 3700 E. Washington Page 2 6 S t a t e P ress Friday, May 2,1997' HELP WANTEDCLERiCAL cs& s Secretary/receptionist: Imme­ diate f/t position available for a dependable, well organized in­ dividual. Experience with com­ puters a plus. .**■ Apply in per­ son** or send resume to 1505 W. University Suite 103 Tempe or fax to 968-9544. OFFICE POSITIONS. Summers almost here! Get out.of the beat & into a cool new job! Call Us! $8-9/hr. No F ee. S pectraStaff 481-0411 PART-TIME DATA entry/word processing clerk sought by non-profit organization in Tem­ pe. Flexible hours; experience in WordPerfect: 5.1 and/or Word for Windows mandatory. Fax resume and cover letter to 3 45-2747 Or mail P.O Box 27634, Tempe, AZ 85285^7634 HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE BAVARIAN ALPS Old World Ice Cream and Juice House Opening soon! 5th A ve. & Scotts. Rd. Applications being accepted May 1 & 2 3:306:30pm , May 3 10-4pm or to schedule an appt. 905-3820 COOKS NEEDED full time Tommy's Billiard 7700 S, Priest or 598-8611 Call Steve pm BOJO'S N ow hiring delivery drivers. 829 S. Rural 966-5543. Apply after 2pm. BUSY DELI counter help. Off University. P/t M-Th 4pm-8pm Also 7am -1pm. Call 967-1411 CARRABBAS Italian Grill. Now hiring full & part-time savers. Carrabbas is a dinner-only concept brought to you by Outback Steakhouse. A pply in person l-4pm M-F. 1740 S. Clearview Drive* Mesa. 654-9099. HELP WANTEDGENERAL You can VIEW and S E A R C H the State Press Classifieds on the Internet] CORK'NCLEAVER A ccepting apps. for lunch hdst(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. HELP W ANTED D eli person 20-30 hrs/wk flex. hrs. Experi­ ence preferred but not neces­ sary. A pply in person Capi­ strano's Italian D eli 655 W. Warner Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene & Warner) 496-9044. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDFO OD SERVICE PARADISE paying good money for good people! Paradise Bakery &’ CafeSky Harbor now hiring for: summer jobs* evens & wkends, maintenance shifts. 'Call with your availability. We put school & fam ily fiist! Flex schedule for finals & summer vacation plans. Call 681-0909 for an interview. RED ROBIN Tempe has immediate openings for experienced w aitstaff & cooks. Have fun & make good money. Apply today 1375 W . Elliot. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDCH ILD CARE RÓXSAND RESTAURANT hir­ ing exp'd servers, host/ess, & server assts. Apply at 2594 E. Camelback M-F 2-5pm CHILDCARE CNTR needs teachers & assts. f/t p/t hrs Sum­ mer emplymnt avail 839-5953 HELP WANTEDC H iy > C / r t | | _ s NANNY NEEDED; 3-5 eve/wk in our home. N eed car. Great pay. Call 530-5095 (day) 7064033 (eve) CAREGIVER, P/T, caring, reli­ able for 3-yr old boy, 10-15 hrs/wk, 12-6pm W-Th. $5.50/hr DL check. Arcadia area. 954-7699 Robin WE NEED you! If you're crea­ tive, energetic & love children còm e check us out! Competi­ tive wages, fun fam ily atmos, FT/PT. Avail immed. 839-3306 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL •First 20 people hired receive $200 hiring bonus Call Judy w/Loan Depot for more info 9 5 2 -9 5 2 7 ed u / HELP WANTEDGENERAL Looking fo r a way to escape th e heat? C heck us o u t! Summer lobs Now Get started in the Financial Industry vpsa.asu. RECEIVE $$ To refer models to Perfect 10 Magazine. $1,000 if the model is photographed, $10,000 if she is the top coed for the year, or if she fin ish es in the fop three bn Perfect Ten's unique 43 5 ,0 0 0 m odeling pageant. Winner o f pageant receives $200,000: C all (310) 550. 0062 for more info or visit our w ebsite at: w w w .perfect10.com Thlm should bo your ad C all 965-6735 * T elem arketers- $ 2 0 + /h r * Sales- E arn $ 7 ,0 0 0 + /m o * L oan Processors N eed ed ://new s. JO B OPPORTUNITIES or fax resume to 952-9538 HELP WANTEDGENERAL A U T O M O T IV E T E ST D R IV E R S Test driver for major automotive manufacturer at proving grounds located 20 mi. South of Chandler near the town of Maricopa, AZ. Must have Clean dri­ ving record, 4 yrs. op. lic.,H.S. diploma or GED, Pass DOT physical & drug screen. After training $7/hr. Must be able to work full-time. For further information call: K e t t E N G IN E E R IN G »»•Science. N u rsin g and P reM ed M a jo rs ..» C L IN IC A L C O N D U C T A S SO C IATES CORP. A u to m o tiv e T est Services 2 6 2 8 W . B irc h w o o d C r. M esa, A Z 8 5 2 0 2 1 -6 0 2 -9 6 7 -6 7 9 9 e x t. 1 0 0 H arris L a b o ra to rie s, a le a d e r in th e pharm a­ c e u tica l te s tin g in d u s try , has o p p o rtu n itie s a va ila b le fo r persons to m o n ito r a c tiv itie s •Flexible Full-time & Part-time day and evening shifts •Walking distance from ASU •Casual dress In professional Environment •$7/ITr plus Bonus •Advancement opportunities - Enhance your skills & build your resume! Searching for motivated, dependable, friendly people to join our successful team calling for our Fortune 500 clients - Children's Books &Toys, National Bank Programs, and Gourmyt Coffee QSM 894-9816 o f S tu d y P a rticip a nts and c o lle c t and d o c u ­ m e n t d a ta : G reat e xp e rie n ce fo r science, n u rsin g o r p re m e d m ajors. A b ility to w o rk a fle x ib le schedule re q u ire d . Please a p p ly M ^ rriott in person at: HARRIS HUMAN RESOURCES, J -S P R 4 6 3 9 S o u t h 3 6 th S tr eet PHOENIX, A Z 8 5 0 4 0 A A /Ë O E 1Employment Opportunities < Benefits • Medicài .Ú A tg v n rra ' ComdbocklRn —RESOHT. OOLf CLUB&SPA A t t e is i d C o rv tr^ l / u m ts NEEDED for students w ith disabilities F a ir W ork Hourly or live-in and m iw v iT n i ______ _ -------------- RESORT AND QOLF CLUB Look for these and many other positions to be aviafable now and in the near future: * Food & Beverage A G olf * Rooms & Related ★ Spa * Pitre O ther O pportunities Flexible Saturday, May 3rd • 10am-4pm Call Dee 965-9237 Leave m essage ASU MAIN CAMPUS Memorial Union •201 Maricopa Excellent Benefits Package Available M arriott proudly tupports a Drug Free Work Environment. EO&Mmority/F/V/D m Call our job hotline for current positions • 596-7034 1Room Discounts • Food/Beverage Discounts Telefund NowHiring For Summer Position D B C needs p a g lia io w a lk w ith ch ild ren , adoles­ cen ts and yot f t red M Ii w ho a re D evetopm entaBy, Emotionaéj(,ai»d Be havfpw d y challeng ed. E a rn $6.50 - $ 8 .0 0 p e r H our W orking W ith A dolescents Incentives: T ild ó n R eim bum ornont, P a id T im e O ff, A dvan cem ent P o ten tial, 6 M onth R am es, P aid T rain in g , full B en efits P ackag e 10-30 hrs/week Flexible $6 - $7-45/hr •»•Bonus Please call fo r interview 965-6754 Meet with a Marriott representative about the exciting career opportunities available at the following Marriott locations: v ‘ Courtyard by Marriott, Residence Inn by Marriott * Marriott Management Services • Camelback Inn Resort, Golf Club and Spa •Host Marriott Services »Mountain Shadows Resortand Golf Club ‘ Brighton Gardens Senior Living Centers Positions are available in tiie areas of: food & Beverage «Nursing Housekeeping ‘ Front Desk/Bellstand* Spa ‘ Office A Clerical Engineering/Maintenance Tedts and much more... We will be accepting applications and cwducting screening imerviiws. For more information please call 905-7989. jja m o tt Marriott proudlysponsors* drug-free workenvironment EqualOpportunity EmployerM/F/V/D. State P ress Page 27 JjridayliM a ^ ^ l9 9 ^ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES SIOOO’S POSSIBLE Reading books. Part Tim e. At home. Toll free 1-800-218-9000 Ext. R-1676 for listings. A BUSINESS o f your own. Hie hottest invention since the com­ puter. The Oil Business o f the 21st Century. 842-2822. $ 1000 S POSSIBLE Reading books. Part Tim e. A t tjome. Toll free 1-800-218-9000 Ext. R-1676 for listings. LOST/FOUND LOST WOMEN S Gold colored pin. April 7th. Cady Mall. Reward 965-5896 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL PERSONALS $19.99 FOR a full set o f nails is an awesome deal at Wizzards Hair Studio. 967-2360 $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. A void the 'chop shops'. W iz­ zards Hair Studio. 967-2360 Find it F A S T in th e C lassifieds HELP WANTEDGENERAL TYPING /W O R D SERVICES PERSONALS XQ CONGRATS X Q The Chi Omega fraternity congratulates its new est members! D ebey B all, Jessica Pentland, Sarah Wage, Sarah Wright and Laura Younglove! REN & STIMPY 34 you know the location. Look in MiriamNorma-75P9. Hope you enjoy! CM Make your advertising $$$$ work harder! Put It In the Classifieds! CHEAP MASSAGE As low as $23 per l/2h r w/A SU ID Parrish The Stress 461-0513. Weds ladies receive 1/2 off any session. NW corner Dob & U niv. $10 o ff w /A SU ID TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING 11.99/PG, S15/RES. Proofed. APA/M LA. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian 967-5987 RESTAURANTS/ BARS • > a • adventure. Call: 215-087-9700 o r «HMD: pinetreeQpond com • Reservations • Lobby Cocktail Server • Singing Food Server • Singing Boat Driver OFF ANY PIZZA HYATT REGENCY SCOTTSDALE M e d ic a l/D e n ta l Insurance L ife In su ra n ce 401 (k ) Plan V a c a tio n /S ic k Pay . T u itio n R e im b u rse m e n t Free U n ifo rm s Complimentary Room Rates Every State Press classified ad is not only printed in the paper, but also uploaded daily to the Digital State Press in.html! http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ Classlfied%20Advertising/ Classifieds.html . ■ Interviews available M on. 9am-Noon; Tues. 3pm^6pm; ■._■■■ At the Personnel office (w. side of b jdg next to loading dock). :750Q'fe. Doubletree Ranch. Rd. Form 6reinfO : MEMORY TRAINING Have more time for yourself, increase your grades or spend less time studying. C all the b o c 7553000 TUTORS NEEDED: MAT 119, SPA, PHY 1 11, ENG, FRE, CSE180, i f A, ACC Help c ol­ le g e students w hile making money. LRC is hiring for fall 1997. Apply: Student Services Bldg, rm A 361,965-5264 IF ITS in the human body Doc­ tor A. knows. Taught coll, anat­ omy, osteology, m yology, etc. C all if you want to succeed. (602)755-3000 C la ssifie d s WANTED 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 $$NEED CASH? We buy used m usical in stru m e n ts. Top $$ paid. 548-1114. M-Sat 10-6 RESTAURANTS/ BARS 99T-^670, . Hyatt supports a dru g free workplace. Certain positions may require testing. Affirm ative Action Employer, EOE M /F /D /V C H EC K OUT yo u r student gov.: h ttp ://w w w .asu .ed u / studentlife/ASASU ]/. | • CASH Pool Tourney - Sat Nile 9:00- Cheap bear & Pool Leagues • Pool & Darts >Home di the $1.25 Shot • Satellite TV (NBA) & (MLB) | • Greeks Welcome <• Ladies Nite Thurs. $2 Teas • UZ Your Wing Order FREE $200 EXPERIENCE THE BENEFITS AT THE , A SU AREA. APA/M LA exp. IBM/laser, WP5/6, transcription Charts/graphs 9 6 6-2186 any­ time. ■ W O O D S H E D 11 JO IN TH E HYATT TEAM • • • • • • • R eview for 106, 117, 119 & 2 10 for $20. Ph. 967-3774 or www.miracletuttMing.com INTERNET URLS » Barback 'F ro n t Desk A M Server Bartender Pool Server Spá Attendant MATH TEST APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/wp. Call Jessie, 945-5744. Editing available. TUTORS 52/PG. W ALKABLE/ASU. 24hr. turnaround Fax Same day service avail. Diane 829-1602 : RESTAURANTS/ BARS TUTORS P ^ C |» I N G _ _ _ PE R SO N A L /R ESU M E WEB page hosting, ly r Ipg $149 to­ tal. Resellers welcome 973-8378 If" ■W uM i frU rá b a ré c DRIVERS WANTED litem 12" o r 16" 1 C oupon Per Pizza Dine-In o r Pick-Up o r S1 O ff Delivery H e D e b itie r ! 3 * 0 -9 1 2 2 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 l! ™ INTERNET-RELATED SERVICES Lemon & . Terrace e a n n o l l piata Q r CONGO ^ v SHOCK ^ A HOST of Job Opportunities! www.vw.com SERVICES TY P IN G /W O R D PROCESSING V.ONN Saturday Night LOW A L O W C O ST THE WRITE STUFF HEALTH INSURANCE Host Marriott Services, Corp. is the nation’s leading operator of : Food, Beverage and Retail concessions servicing the traveling public at over 170 airports, travel plazas and tourist attractions worldwide. i Currently a t Phoenix: Sky Harbor Airport we have positions for; T Polliwoq U , S unday N ig h t Food & Beverage Assistant Manager 'F o o d & Beverage Store Manager > Food Servers/Cashier Sales Associate 'M aintenance Technicians •U tility ASTROLOGICAL F0PECAST b y F ra n ce s D ra ke : Host otters excellent benefits including: • Medical/dental/life • 40t(k) ♦Tuition raimbursienrant ' Free meals ♦ Paid parking or partial bus pass reimbursement Appiy in person at: Host Marbott, Sky Harbor Airport, Term inalwest end level,3, Monday.-Friday; 8am - 4om. Apply Oy phone a! 1-800-555-5718 ext 4003 , H SH ost M arriott ervices Drug-Free Workplace M/FA//D An EQual Opportunity Employer. C O IN tT ïn iE N T A l. CIRCU ITS C O W f* E ntry-level Great O pportunities F or College S tudents Continental Circuits Corp, a leading manufacturer of complex^ multilayer circuit boards, is currently hiring for entry-level production positions. Part-time and Full-time openings. All shifts available - 1st, 2nd, 3rd, including 12 hr. rotating shifts and weekend shifts. U S . Diploma or GED required. Apply a t Human Resources Dept. 3510 E. Atlanta • Phoenix (Sv of Broadway/ W. of 36th St.) Mom-Fri, 7am-4pm For more information or to discuss your qualifications, call 232-9190, ext. 1135 or 1258. F o r a co m p lete listin g o f job o p en in g s c a ll our job h o tlià e a t 2 32-8135. Lowest Cost Plans per semester or m onth Most pre-existing conditons OK . International Health Plans Dependent Health Plans 963-3537 term Papers • Theses * Dissertations APA/MLA/Graduate Collage Formats Rasamos * Graphics ■ Call now for your FREE Enrollm entKit! Balboa Cafe Friday, M ay 2, 1 9 9 7 ARIES (Mar .^1 to April >9) Y ou m ig h t h av e a se cre t . admirer] Rea) estate and bank d e a lin g s áre • f a v o re d . Shipping for the home would be a. plus. Expected .córhpáfly. Could be delayed; TAURUS £.¿22) The days behind-the-scenes financial developments are in your favor. You énjoy study­ ing, reading or catching up on correspondence. : * ••• ^ Isabella 1 Starfudge,, I |• ■ "• I |. ■ Profëssienal Ward Processing & Desktop Publishing Services 404 S. M ill Ave. 966-1300 SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) O p p o rtu n itie s com e to .you in b u sin e ss. C o n c en tratio n and com m on sense com bine to bring y o u g a in s . A frie n d h as u se fu l advice after dark. , SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to D ec. 2 ! ) Y ou a ttr a c t new frie n d s inti) y o u r life . • Participating in group activities is highlighted. A partner has a plan that will appeal to you eventually. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) A lthou gh i t ’s a promising day for improving income, it’s not a good time for collecting money due you, Concentrate on your career. A loved one is feeling neglected. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) O p p ortu n ities com e through frien d s, and jo y through travel. You could feel that a close tie is not paying enough attention to you. A heart-to-heart chat clears the air. PISCES (Feb. 19 to Mar. 20) Talks with children and recre­ ational interests are happily emphasized. A romantic flir­ tation is possible-for sin g les,/. Business and pleasure do not mix favorably. ■ : YOU BORN TODAY gravi­ tate toward challenges and ar? % resilie n t w hen faced w ith crises. You are visiortaTy yet practical. You have natural leadership abilities and dislike being in a subordinate posi­ tion. The arts and the sciences to.JfaiffA stdBHI Kotfce.jifp is important to yourhareKn^s: / > O 1997 K in g 'fe a tu re s S ynd ica te In c , , M ade for ASU students, by ASUetuderits .to save you money all oyer town? W e s te rn H e a lth S e rv ic e s SERVICES SERVICES THE CHOICE IS YOURS COMPLETE BlRTH CONTROL CARE. Depo-Provera, Birth Control Pills; IUD, Morning After Pill PREG NANCY TESTING No appointment necessary Abortion with Twilight Sleep Evening & Saturday Appt. Available F A M IL Y P L A N N I N G PHOENIX 7806 N. 27th Ave. 997-7493 m m m Save yourself a little tim e! f . 1 . • •• • . ’’ v . .. ' . Place your Classified Ad from the World Wide Web http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ classad/classadfm.html I N S T I T U T E SCOTTSDALE 2334 N. Scottsdale Rd. 945-4999 P age 28 Friday, May 2, 1997 FUSAIS F R E E D E L IV E R Y ! Offer good for ASU students only Offer good from 5/2/97-5/16/97 * State P ress