LAST CHANCE TO GET ASU s Dan McKinley YOUR POT LICENSE DRAFTED BY G lA N T S S v th ïh g v IBIS D is c o v e r t h e o f Page 3 Page 1 0 dang ers JET S K IS vuBsnUlvuS > C om ics............ Crossword...... Horoscopes .... O pinion......... . Police Report.. page 25 page 25 page 18 page 27 page 4 page 16 Page 1 7 A RIZ ON A STATE U N IV E RS I T Y O C ôpyright. S tate Press, 1997 Tem pe, Arizona Vo . 80 N o. 75 A n In d e p e n d e n t S u m m e r W e e k ly T u e s d a y , J u n e 1 0 ,1 9 9 7 Show biz can wait for these ASU stu d en ts PcWe 14 P a g ^ ^ Snippets N ew V ice Provost fo r A dm inistra tive Services selected M ernoy H arrison J t. w ill becom e A S U ' j next vice provost for administrative services for the main campus, effective Oct, 1. § j |j Harrison has served as vice president fo r adm inis­ tra tio n a t C alifo rn ia S ta te U n iv e rsity , S acram ento^ since 1990. “I am very excited about the opportunity to work wife the o u tstan d in g faculty, sta ff and students at A SU ,” Harrison said. “The enthusiasm and positive energy I per* ceived d in in g my visit are especially appealing. I can faardfywaitfegettoworic.*’ .> » ■ H arrison, 49, began his career as a teacher in East Palo Atm, Calif., and in Los Angeles, before becoming a b u d g e t a n a ly s t in th e C o u n ty M a n a g e r's O ffic e in Redwood City, Calif, H e went on to serve as the director o f finance and business affairs, associate vice president for finaiiCf and vice president for finance at California State Umvwnhty. 1 -I “A rizo n a S tate U n iv ersity i s fo rtu an te to a ttra c t someone o f Dr. H arrison’s national stature, as refected . by his Chairing o f the National Association ofG o lleg e and University E asiness O fficers,” said M ilton Glick, ASU’s senior vice president and provost, “lie is valued as someone who is com m itted to building possible academic enterprise, and as a person with a earing reputation.” I M ag S tato P ress mmmm—_ mmmmmJ h a y j J ^ i n e J Ò ^ 997 "I *m fiery hy « ta r e . and I think M a W H W H 8pffir | filter through the team, especially when your core leaders are (those) types o f individual,’* Schoenfeld said o f fee leaders o f his new team. JM j| The Coyotes, who finished third ha the NHL division last year, were eliminated in the first round on fee playoffs by Anaheim season.' This was the fourth coach this franchise has had in four yean. S tim ulating brain m ay ease Parkinson sym ptom s N EW YORK (A P) — E lectrodes fe a t stim ulate a grape-sized structure in the brain can relieve some symp­ tom s o f Parkinson’s disease. A new study suggests it works by easing a brake on movement, jjgjj The structure is called the globus pallidus. Surgery that damages it can ease stiffness and slowness in Paridnson’s. Recent studies show electrical stimulation can do fee same To find o u t why, scientists scanned the brain s o f P ark in so n p a tie n ts as th e stim u la tio n w as ap p lied . R em its suggest fe a t fee globus pallidas acts as a brake on fee brain’s system regulating movement, and feat fee stimulation, oddly enough, makes this brake ease up. The sturfy included nine patients, eigbt o f whom had marked easing o f rigidity and slow movem etttduring the Canadian researchers report the results id fee June lfesue.sf% ejoufesdNa£^M e(ficKie^ Blast a t firew orks phuft lufis 4 m ifcw , Fourth of July fire v v a ^ e ^ o d e d T h iK id fy 'fe ^ fe tliid e ^ K C oyotes nam e new head coach f The Phoenix Coyotes named Jim Schoenfeld new head ItSaach o nM on d lK S S Il . ■ I Schoenfeld coacbed the W arifelgtoa jfaiilaja t o t 'M n son to a 33-40-9 record, which kept the C spitalsout o f the playoffs for the first time in 15 years. Schoenfeld said he was focused cat fee future, with a ' team built around hard-nosed f o r w a ^ l ^ f i h ^ e a A a W ^ Je re m y R o e a ic k h a d vou n g on fire aodreiniog pyrotechnic shells on front y m b . M ^ ^ ^ H f t ^ B p e r a t e d b§j pyro Shows lac., a m ajor su p p lier fo r Independence D ay fe stiv a ls around the Four plant workers getting ready fear a show feis week­ end a t N orfolk, V i ^ B r e k i E e d , said D iane W atson, spokeswoman fb r fee state Department o f Commerce and Ihsuranc^w bich tegsiktes firewori^.c e H R i I h d cause was hot immediately krtbwn. The Bureau of Alcohol« Tobacco and Firearm s and stale fire officials D o w n to w n 'T einpe C o m m u n ity elects new directors The Downtown Community elected seven new directors to its 25-member board last w© ip The DTC w as established in 1995 as a private, non­ profit organization that works with fee City o f ‘Pempe to help promote and manage the The following DTC officers nave been elected to twoyttertentt«'»', J v .. _V H H h H h | . - «President — Ross Robb o f Benton-Robb Development •F irst .y |e e President — Paul Blanc o f Im pression •Second Vice President -7 Tricks & Tricks a ia Carte Restaurants •Treasurer — Ken McKenzie o f Mission Palms Hotel DTC Executive Director Rod Keeling serves as secretary. M ercury to play pre-season gam e a t U A C Saturday Mercury, part o f fee new W omen’s National Basketball Association (WNBA), will be playing a pre-season game against the Los Angles Spark at the University Activities T he d a y w ill b e f a ll o f e v e n ts sp o n so re d b y th e Mercury as well as Nike, Bud Li ■At 9 a-ra. there will be youth clinics conducted by bas­ ketball Hall o f Fanners Nancy L iebcnnan-C lineand head coach Cberyl Miller, as wet! as ASU graduate Monique Ambers and others. vi basketball scrimmages. 11 a m- fee Bud Light ta.lgate party and pep rally wifi begin. The event sponsors will be on hand to give away Jh H h h B | ■/;- ■ I ‘‘A tf in t, i th b nghtit w in |^ ^ f t f e u e crash,” Sheriff have a chance to win a trip for two to LA for the next Ron McClellan, “ h rumbled five or 10 seconds, and then " V J< H ■ jWHBBH Admission for fee game is free with fee donation o f a there was a m assive explosion follow ed by num erous now hfy;foi fee jo y s f at Tots pnjffiam "at Schoenfeld is a contrast to mild mannered Don Hay, smaller a p k r i o i i o H who coached the Coyotes this past season. . :' y t § | | | l l i l | §|ljB |l|td e a r“ A t point zero. there’s just nothing there.” Ahhh college life, goldfish eating, flagpole sitting, parity raids ...coupon dipping LOCATEDINTHELOW» LEVELIF THEM.U. 727-0SED(0733) a m O f f m um I U f i COMPACTOISE ! OFFER EXPIRES JULY 31, 1997 P age 3 Tuesday, June 10,1997 S tate P ress R eferendum to save p o t tax g o in g up in sm oke B y Kara S hire S tate P ress With just one pledge o f $2,500 to aid his marijuana tax referendum, Bill Green isn’t sure he’ll make his self-imposed June 15 deadline. The founder of a newly formed political organization, Let the People Decide, said he is 90 p ercen t sh o rt o f his goal and doubtful h e'll succeed in reinstating state licenses and taxes for marijuana dealers. The organization is seeking a referen­ dum to ask A rizona voters to re je c t or accept the legislature’s recent repeal o f the C annabis L icense an d T ax. L eg islato rs repealed the 14-year-old pot tax law in April as part of a larger drug bill, the bill vas signed by Gov. Fife Symington April 2* A referendum would put the bill repeal­ ing the m arijuana tax on hold until the issue was put to a vote. The $25,000 G reen is trying to raise would pay for petition circulators to collect the 56,481 signatures needed by July 20'to place the issue on the ballot. At issue is a 1983 law enacted by the Arizona Legislature that made it illegal to sell or possess for sale marijuana without first purchasing a cannabis dealer’s license and tax stam p s fro m the A rizo n a Department of Revenue. Marijuana activists began to urge deal­ ers to purchase the $100 license and the 38cents-a-gram tax stamps after cannabis pos­ sessio n ch arg es ag a in st P eter W ilson, chairm an o f the A rizona chapter o f the National Organization for the Reformation o f M a riju a n a L aw s, w ere d ro p p ed in November 1995. P h oenix Ju s tic e o f the P eace John I B ill G reen, the founder ó f AZ4NORM L, holds the tax stam ps used by licensed d istrib utors o f m arijuana. Barclay dismissed the charges, ruling that, because Wilson had already paid a tax on his pot, further prosecution would be dou­ ble jeopardy. “The tax didn’t make any sense,” said Rep. M ike G ardner, R -Tem pe. “It was somebody’s ingenious idea about 10 years ago — another way to go after drug deal­ ers. It was an unclear drug policy in this state.” There are 202 licensed pot dealers in A riz o n a , a c c o rd in g to the A riz o n a Department o f Revenue. Ninety-five per­ cent o f those licenses have been issued in the last two years. Tax liens placed on unli­ censed dealers total more than $37 million. Dan Zemke, a Department of Revenue spokesman, said the repeal of licensing for the marijuana won’t take affect until some tim e in Ju ly , and sa le s o f stam ps and licenses have continued unabated. “It’s no great land rush, but people are buying them,” Zemke said. Green said he is having trouble finding support for his cause to retain the pot tax because licensed dealers don’t like the tax. “They think it is too high,” he said. “The police are still taking pot away — they’re just not charging them.” Gardner said anyone caught possessing marijuana will be put in jail, regardless of a tax stamp. “Our legal beagles looked at it and they say there’s no credible way a tax stam p allows you to distribute maijuana legally,” he said. Green said if he doesn’t get the funding by June 15. the committee will close shop before June 30. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11 The LO LLIES * \\ t \ t ------------------------ The Best Pizza & Beer Specials In Town! 'W here A S U goes fo r p iz z a ' WE D E L I V E R TANK UP TUESDAY WEDNESDAY * 2 . 8 0 P I T C H E R S s o oz 70* D RA FTS * 2 .8 0 P IT C H E R S Bud Light • Coors Light J.W. Dundee's Honey Brown $3.27 98c Pitchers of Soda FRIDAY,JUNE13 • BITO’JANE SATURDAY,JUNE14 • FLUX 5th &Ash 966-5600 Coors Light » Bud Light THURSDAY FR ID A Y M IC R O B R E W * 2 . 8 0 P I T C H E R S eo oz N IG H T Coors Light • Bud Light J.W. Dundee's Honey Brown $3.27 3-6pm C R ED IT CARDS GOOD O N DELIVERY 1301 E. University University B etw een R u ral & M cC lin to ck Broadway _________ Opinion _________ P age 4 ___________________ _________ ____________________ Tuesday, June 10,1997 ________ STATE PRESS Besipfbotit wdiMs: P a r ty a n im a ls a n d n e r d s c o e x is t o n d iv e r s e c a m p u s ■ T h e A S U ’s “p a rty AY sch o o l” re p u tatio n has] ST E R N t a k e s a n o th e r h it A ||;Tjrifrnne article revealed! Editor-in-Chief l a s t w e e k th a t th e gS U aiversity ran k s rig h t u p th e m an d Y ale f o r th e n u m b e r o f N a tio n a l M e rit j scholars UlAttendance students who represent th e top o n e-h alf o f one percent o f g raduating high sch o o l seniors nationw ide. ASU is appar­ en tly b ein g flo o d e d w ith needy little stnartypantses who avoid parties like the plague.. These are freshmen who get to o th e r with one or two o f their platM ac M Shds ofl t f H t h y and. I Saturday night, eat Cheetos, solve calculus equa­ tions, an d w atch N ick a t N ile until m idnight, laughing a ll d ie tim e about how m u ch m oney they’re going to b e m aking when they graduate in th re e -a a d -a -h a if y ears. T h ey alw ay s leav e b e fo re 12:30 a.m , to av o id th e d ru n k s on the rend, and, o f course, because Mom doesn’t tike them obm ing and going at all b o ars o f th e ni^bt. N ot that these brainy freshm en are a t« h p p ^ j their scholarly solitude. T he party school im age o f A SU h a s been d isap p earin g f o r y ears, a n d ' w ith it m any o f the party-goers. It’s n o t strange ^these d ay s t o : and studying in the A brades until well after any reaso n ab le d rin k in g tim e, F o r so m e stu d en ts, c a f f e in e is th e o n ly a c c e p ta b le d r a g , t o be slam m ed back in the form o f m uddy liquid tree after another at IHOP or C offee Plantation, and . ' the only H a ^ ^ ’H rw r'ftn' A'ihi: one hour they get to sleep e a c h a ig h t Academ ics a t ASU, a R esearch O ne facility, h a v e alw ay s b een ad m irab le. T h e schcJoTR'af"’ m any excellen t program s, one o f w hich is the journalism program I am proud to say I’m part of. . But A SU ia a school o f 42,000 people, m any o f whom have fake IDs or n e over drinking age. D espite rum ors to sh e contrary, A SU studesils.-; are still partying. .Jft Bars and nightclubs that surround the sC h ad||; are full o f people m ost nights except Sundays, a n ig h t o f m ild studying fo r non-N ational M nfjN I scholars. C o ex istin g w ith th e t t h o l i p are the thousands of students w ho d rin k s sm oke, snort, d rop acid o r E, sin g , yeti, ru n , spin, ju m p, partybop, g et naked, dance, m osh, carouse, flirt, boff and do n ’t reg ret it in the morning. A SU stu d e n ts o fte n d o n ’t ev en know why they are here, if not to find mates and generally live the m ost ex cellen t life possible. Studying takes a b ack seat to hav in g a good tim e, and th a t's evidenced in the classroom s as m uch as the police reports. H om ework, reading and other projects are d one at th e la st m in u te, if at all. E ven good students procrastinate to be sure o f getting in as much partying as possible, and end up tu rn in g in m e d io c re w o rk , k n o w in g th ey could do better. S o w h y a r e A S U s tu d e n ts lo s in g th e ir b irth rig h t to p a rty ? It seem s like a few good ap p le s a re sim p ly o u ts h in in g a ll th e sp o iled ones. R STATE PRESS TAFF K-9 cams could collar campus miscreants Joe Arpaio, the meanest sher­ iff in a county geriatric enough to Tk ARK E. elect him, has unleashed his latest I\ / 1 POLLACK tool to protect the public from Columnist people already incarcerated. Arpaio has announced that the perim eter o f his tent jails will be protected by a pooch patrol outfitted with mini-cams attached to their collars. The doggy squad is supposed to deter over-the-fence, in­ bound flights o f Marlboros, drugs and other jail contraband such as edible food. Presumably, the canine cams won’t suffer the effects of the dust raised from dog paws or the jerky pictures associat­ ed with the movement of a camera lens. After all, it’s hard enough to get a dog to sit still for a picture. How Joe plans to Train these lil’ doggies to get shots of things other than their food dishes, other dogs’ rumps, or the sheriff s dog­ house is a question that will remain inside the brain of a man who believes press coverage and police work are the same. But let’s give credit where credit is due. The doggy-cam idea is not completely loony, it just needs to be implement­ ed under situations and conditions that are more conducive to canine behavior. Namely, ASU, There are several ways in which such a pooch patrol could benefit our campus: At the risk of upsetting rabid teaching assistants, one possibility is to save ASU cash by replacing the entire TA program with a few good pup cams. TAs could rem ain employed, but only for chores that dogs wouldn’t enjoy (like grading papers). With budget cuts continually on thè minds of campus administrators, replacing TÀs with pooch cams makes good cents! To start with, it cost about a dollar a day to feed and water a dog. Compare that to the wages o f TAs, and we’re talking big-buck semester savings. And when it comes to the classroom, the effectiveness o f a pooch patrol would be unmatched in the monitoring of tests. Since dogs can sense fear, most folks wouldn’t even think about glancing at their neighbor’s test. Sure, there will be the clever biology student who out­ smarts the hounds by packing a Chihuahua inside his or her backpack as a distraction, but that would work only once, maybe twice. Most professors would catch on after observ­ ing one or two students leaving class with an excited attack dog attached to their leg. As w e’re showing the TAs out the doggie door, we should also pack out the parking patrol. They would be eas­ ier to replace than Liz Taylor’s husbands. Sporting a set of doggie moccasins and shades to protect against the sun, the pooch cams cotild patrol and record more violators than an entire Pepsi-slurping bike squad. And consider this: If you can put traffic-violation cameras on top o f street signals, why not strap a photo-radar camera onto a dog? The dogs might even be trained to chase down speed demons to the next stop sign and collect fines by ‘‘taking a bite out o f crime.” In defense o f the parking patrol, it is theoretically possi­ ble that they are more useful since they have hands where dogs have paws. But then again, when was the last time you saw one of them push-starting a stranded motorist? Lest we forget man’s second best friend, the feral cats that overpopulate our campus could be outfitted with spe­ cial “kitty cam s.” These felines could be useful in the removal o f “students” in the Computing Commons who fall under the delusion that once in front of a terminal they own it. Kitty paws are perfect for pressing die delete keys on computers occupied by chat-room junkies, and the growing line o f students waiting to use a terminal would appreciate the reprieve. O f course, the ultimate goal of participants in the beast brigade would be to get assigned to the sports platoon. Once there, both pooches and kitties could chalk up bone marks for every illegal or embarrassing act engaged in by our campus athletes. Heck, maybe Sheriff Joe is right. If doggy cams work out, on-campus crime could become as old as yesterday’s kitty litter. M ark E. Pollock is a ju n io r studying journalism and can be reachedatm arke@ asu.edu RAY STERN, Editor SCOTT WALTERS... . . . . . . ......Opinion Editor DEANNA DARR ................I;........ Entertainment Editor LORI CAIN.... Editor REPORTERS: Christiana Moore, Matthew Morgan, Chris PBssamano, Cadonna Peyton, Kara Shire, David WoodfilL CONTRIBUTORS: Sara Bush, Jonathan Inge, Niclas Lindh, Ofelia Madrid, Jeff MorrisDavid Ruffulo, Alissa Zapattea COLUMNISTS: Kevin Bcriat, Steve Forsberg, Jeff Hardee, Mark Pollack, Marlene Tiede, Matthias Walterscheuft. CARTOONISTS: Michael Curran, Brian Fairrington, Jonathan Inge. PRODUCTION: Amber Carr, Jeff Çhua, Joe Çorrào, Adrianna Garcia. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Cari Dewald, David Goodwin, Jess Rankin^ Mark Santiago, Todd Shields, Shane Siren. CLASSIFIEDS: Vicki Carroll, Joy Thompson. The State Press is published Tuesdays during the summer sessions, except, holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287“1502. We do not answer questions of à general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information............. .965-7572 Newsroom............... 965-2292 Magazine............... ..965-1695 Advertising....... ...... 965-6555 Classifieds................965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu Opinion Page 5 Tuesday, June 10,1997 S tate P ress D e a t h p e n a lt y fo r M c V e ig h n o t t h e a n s w e r D oes T im o th y M cV eig h EFF E . deserve the death penalty? McVeigh was convicted last HARDEE week on all 11 counts arrayed Columnist against him: conspiracy, use of a weapon o f mass destruction, destruction o f federal prop­ erty and eight counts of murdering federal law-enforcement agents. Conviction implies that the jury was convinced that M cVeigh planned and carried out the A pril 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, killing 168 people, including 19 children, injuring more than 500 others. All this enacted by McVeigh in retaliation for gov­ ernment raids at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas. Even so, does McVeigh deserve death? “I want the death penalty,” said Aren Alm on, whose daughter died in the blast, the image of her body being car­ ried out by a firefighter burned onto thousands o f television screens and newspapers . “An eye for an eye,” Almon said. “You don’t take lives and get to keep your own.” Another survivor of the blast said she: hoped McVeigh would not get the death penalty, instead preferring to see him locked in solitary confinement for the rest of his life. The victims want McVeigh to suffer. The general public desires the death penalty. McVeigh needs to pay for his crime, and some crimes war­ rant more punishment than others. But McVeigh is not a serial killer; he is not someone who is so far gone that rehabilitation would almost be a waste of time. Almost, but not entirely. The death penalty is too extreme. Killing someone does not erase past tragedies. J If you want closure for the Oklahoma City bombing, you should want to see McVeigh admit what he did was wrong, and see him try to repay society for his acts. In killing him, we not only run the risk o f digressing our justice system back to about 1100 B.C., but we also risk turning McVeigh into a martyr for the patriot movement. W e live in a country where 71 percent of men without a college education agreed that “the U.S. government inter­ feres too much in people’s lives,” according to a U.S. News poll. There are at least 250 anti-government Web sites, chat room s and m ailing lists — including Skinheads USA, W hite N ationalist Page, the Ku Klux Klan Home Page, Library o f a White Tribalist and Aryan nations — where militias and “Preparedness Expos” have increased in atten­ dance figures after the bombing. It is clear that education is the key, not death to McVeigh. Instead, McVeigh has the rest o f his life to beg the for­ giveness o f the hundreds o f families he’s affected, to work on community-service projects related to the bombing and perhaps even pay for the damages (though h e'd never earn enough money). At the very least, he has time to ponder the magnitude of his decision to retaliate against his own government. Though he will never be released from prison, he still can be rehabilitated. His example may cause even the most hardened militia member to hesitate before initiat­ ing a similar violent attack. The ancient mentality of reciprocal damages is precisely what U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch is hoping to pre­ vent. In an effort to keep the element o f emotional lynching out of the penalty phase of the trial, Matsch excluded testi­ mony about the deaths of die children, the condition of dis­ covered bodies and holiday photographs of victims. M atsch also denied M cVeigh’s lawyers the chance to explore in detail the government standoffs at W aco and Ruby Ridge. Matsch made the proper call. Waco and Ruby Ridge have nothing in common with Oklahoma City and cannot be Used as countervailing points. Our culture must move beyond the time o f the Israelite judges (remember Samson?) — we are no longer an “eye-for-an-eye” culture. What has happened to our ethics? What has happened to our understanding o f the justice system? Do we still accept the illusion that the death penalty will actually solve any­ thing? Is this supposed to scare McVeigh into remorse? Hardly, given his deadpan expression throughout his trial. Crim e rates aren’t affected by the threat o f the death penalty. The purpose o f justice is: 1) to implement social policies which prevent crimes from being committed; 2 ) when crimes occur, to have the perpetrators repay society. What can we gain from McVeigh’s death? When deciding guilt or innocence, when weighing mat­ ters o f justice and truth, we cannot allow our human desires for revenge to blind us. Nor can we take justice into our own hands when it suits our purposes. The brief moment of “closure” we may experience upon McVeigh’s death will be negated by our inevitable need to re-experience the moment Over and over, The death penalty is not the norm in our courts because our justice system is geared towards rehabilitation. J e ff E. H ardee is a graduate student studying religion and can be reached at J.E.Hardee@ asu.edu. Pushing athletes to attend class the right policy for ASU WAS V\\C£X *Kw\t vt / GRAND CANYON? I’M l TRWG TO FIND KlNDMAMl to be more selective in their recruiting. K E V IN J . B ER LA T basketball d ^ S B B tnressed (he point o f pleases (bis sefeedvitypreieetly when, she- stated seefM fv tM M Columnist to the S ta te P ress, “W e need to bring dent athletes | ' may finally receive treatm ent equal to people here who want to be here." Although I recognize the benefits that that o f other students on campus. I am referring to a proposed policy that would a cham pionship football on basketball force athletes to attend class Of risk Jos- team would bring to ASU, we should not s a c rific e o u r aca d e refc .e te n d to g s. f e ing their scholarship checks. T h e - p O l i c y t o r e o f m any.su g g es-' j achieve those goals. There are basically tions b y K ev in W hite, A S U ath letics tw o types o f student athletes; the Tire director — would peax& st athletes -who Duncans and the A llen Iversons o f the stop attending class. Hopefully, the poli­ world. ASU would be better off recruit­ cy will bring the ASU athlete-graduation j ing athletes like Duncan, who d ty e d out H ftj fate up from 53 percent i s 1996 to 70 o f trouble h is sen io r year, taking "th e road less percent. Fifty-three percent is not a bad gradu­ Itraveled^* by other athletes o f M s cSM ^gl ation rate considering only 45 percent o f who opt to tura p to eariy. l l e vriB iKobatile general student body graduates. But biy b e tire first {nek in this year’s NBA as tile policy suggests, it is time to turn draft.. Alien Iverson was last year’s top pick, u p tile pressure on athletes to encourage there to improve their scholastic perfor- 1 tret h is story is very d ifferen t He w as | manhe. I recruited to Georgetown University after W h y th e hand lin e ? A th le te s g e t being convicted f p i tuition god assented fees paid for tibtoa, spending tim e in prison. H e then left j y et 4 7 percent o f them do not f e d it’s Georgetown after his sophomore year to worth the cost to graduate. The time has play in the NBA. Both players w ifi m ake m illions o f come to emphasize the student in stodent dollars, and both will succeed at basket­ athlete. f c m empathize with the student ath­ ball. B ut w hich p lay er enriched th eir lete. I com pete on the forensics team , com m unity? W ho would better reflect and our schedule requires me to be out of the high-quality im age ASU hopes to class for two weeks while we compete at attain where athletics are concerned? Our national tournaments. Similarly, the bas­ coaches need to balance the sc h o o l’s k etb all team trav eled o u t o f tow n for needs as a community with the team ’s needs when recruiting athletes. Hwiedity gam es last season. ASU’s new policy, if adopted, will It is hard to get up and return to class a lo n g w ay to w ard m ak in g A SU i a tong plane ride, hut I know if J did !U stronger. It w ould be nice to be while I w as in town, I say that A SU has the total our student athletes are I is a ju in io r studying theatian a nd can be aoi.com . Native Americans upset over highway christened after Indian “fighter”, Wayne W h a t’ s "in a n am e? P len ty , ARLENE P eople p u t lots T IE D E o f tim e a n d Columnist e n e rg y in to choosing ju st the right word or string of Words. These words form the identity of the d e sig n a te d p e rso n o r p lace f o r all time. Or until someone decides they don’t like the designation for some reason. Parents-to-be spend m any long hours d is c u s s in g ju s t th e rig h t m o n ik e r fo r junior. They buy books, consult relatives a n d h a v e fig h ts a b o u t it. I h av e d e a r friends w ho-gave th eir son four names: one for the place they met, one for each o f their surnames and one for good m ea­ sure, in that order. N am ing lo catio n s is an o th er touchy su b ject Every now and then, some politi­ cally correct do-gooder wants to go back and change things. M aybe th ey ’ve had sensitivity training, a change o f heart or a ch a n g e o f lo y a lty . N o m a tte r. W h a t’s done is done and should rem ain so once the name has stuck, m aps are printed and people have their address memorized. M G o in g fo rw a rd is a d iffe re n t sto ry . Take, for exam ple, the re c e n t brouhaha over naming a new byway traversing the A k -C h in a n d G ila R iv e r In d ia n C o m m u n itie s as th e “ Jo h n W a y n e Parkway.” Now that is downright insen­ sitive! W hat were they thinking? I suppose they could have found som e­ thing more offensive i f they had put their thinking caps on, but they did ju st fine with heads inserted in nether parts. T h e ir p ro p o sed a lte rn a tiv e ? On the G ila River reservation, give the section o f h ig h w a y a n am e so lo n g (A m e ric a n Indian Veterans M emorial Parkway) that the Arizona Department o f Transportation can’t afford to produce the signage. Call it John Wayne Parkway everyw here else. T h eir reaso n in g ? T he th o ro u g h fare only borders Ak-Chin as opposed to cut­ ting through G ila River, making i t som e­ how le s s o f f e n s iv e . P in a l C o u n ty Supervisors, now there’s a group o f peo­ ple in dire need o f heavy duty sensitivity training. M arlene Tiede is a ju n io r studying com ­ m unications. Page 6 S tate P ress Tuesday, June 10,1997 D .C . trip to focus on role o f governm ent in science WithBagfrom . . S IN G L E C L U B - Woods from*5.00 each - Irons from*3.00 each 1035 E. LEMON 966-6070 G raduate student Joe M artinez prepares to board a plane to W ashington D.C. M artinez is taking p art in a w eek long trip to exam ine the affects governm ent policies have on science program s. B v D avid W oodfill State P ress F ifte e n ASU stu d e n ts to o k o ff fo r W ashington D.C. Saturday as part o f a week-long field trip to explore the role gov­ ernment plays in science. The students in philosophy professor Jane Maienschein's summer class ‘‘Science Literacy and Washington D.C.” will spend eight days looking at how governm ent shapes scientific literacy, science education, medical research, scientific research, envi­ ronmental research and related areas that policy-making touches on. “There’s something very powerful about realizing that the issues that you talk about in class and study in your course work are really going on in the real world, and it’s very exciting to witness that,” Marie Glitz, an interdisciplinary studies major and stu­ dent in the class, said. “What I hope is that students will think about what science is and the importance of science in society and what it means to be scientifically literate,” M aienschein said, “It’s a really exciting opportunity. It’s ter­ rific to find out how things in Washington work.” The students will visit the U.S. House and Senate science committees, as well as staffers ai the National Science Foundation, the National Academy of Science and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The students will also get the chance to chat with Sen. John McCain-R, at his Washington office. Students have already had the opportuni­ ty to speak with U.S. House science com­ m ittee m em ber Rep. M att Salm on-R, to whom Maienschein acts as senior science advisor. Besides her work with Salm on, Maienschein is also a full professor at ASU »and an assistant to ASU President Lattie Coor. She said that when she was hired by Salmon earlier this year, she realized it was a great opp o rtu n ity to get her students a c tiv e ly in v o lv e d in scie n c e m a tte rs, Instilling in them the concern on scientific issues in government will encourage them to help shape public policy later in their careers, she said. “I think right now is a time when science education is really a hot topic,” she said; “All these federal agencies really care about trying to do a better job with science educa­ tion and so it’s really an exciting time to have the opportunity to talk to them.” A cornerstone concept in the class, said physics m ajor R eza Enshaie, is that the government has a tremendous influence on education and scientific literacy in society and that it is very im portant to take an active role. “I’m very excited that the public is pay­ ing attention to these issues. It’s really neat to know Congress is concerned about sci­ ence education,” he said. The trip is being funded with the help of Robert Barnhill, ASU’s vice president of research, who arranged for payment of the student’s airfare, boarding and food. A S U 1 L. V 7 Lem on A pachè Free Concerts in the MU! EVERY TUESDAY AT 12 NOON During Summer Sessions This Week, Tuesday, June 10: The C ountry & Variety Band, Sedona Crossing fe a tu rin g Pam ela N elson MEMORIAL UNION LOWER LEVEL PROGRAMMING LOUNGE Tuesday, June 10 » 12 Noon • Bring Your Lunch! ASU Public Events Presented by ASU Public Events and Sponsored by Summer Sessions Page 7 Tuesday, June 10,1997 State P ress N ew spaper says 4 ,0 0 0 died, som e cannabalized, in riots LONDON (AP) — Some 4,000 people died in riots earlier this year in a remote Indonesian province and m any were decapitated or had their hearts tom out — T he In d e p e n d e n t n e w sp a p e r re p o rte d Monday. The report, based on the estimates from local C atholic priests, is sharply at odds with official estimates, which put the death toll at about 300. In d ep en d en t re p o rte r R ich ard L loyd Parry said he had seen head less hum an remains and obtained photographs that pro­ vide evidence of “ an ethnic war of scarcely imaginable savagery, fought according to ancient principles of black magic” in West Kalimantan province on Borneo Island in January and February. M uslim se ttle rs fro m the islan d o f Madura have repeatedly clashed over land and jo b s with the local tribespeople. the Dayaks, who once were headhunters but have now converted to Christianity. Local Catholic priests estimate that 200 Dayaks and 4,000 M adurese died, Lloyd Parry said. Reports at the time of the clashes carried e stim a te d d eath to lls o f 2 0 0 -3 0 0 . On Monday, national police spokesman Col. Bambang Harioko stood by the official esti­ mate o f about 300 victims killed. But Lloyd Parry said the road between the West Kalimantan capital o f Pontianak and the town o f Pahauman “ is still lined in a trance state, shooting M adurese with hom em ade sh o tg u n s, c u ttin g o ff th e ir heads, drinking their blood and removing and eating their hearts,” Lloyd Parry said. H e q u o ted , an u n id e n tifie d S a la tig a teacher as saying: “ On Feb. 1 a gang of Madurese burned five Dayak houses in the m orning. 1 was w atching from my bath­ room window when about 1,000 Dayaks arrived in town.” “ A lot of the Madurese had already run away, but about 50 stayed.... Three of them got shot ... The Dayaks took their bodies and they cut off their heads with swords. Then they cut open their backs and pulled out the hearts and they ate the hearts and drank the blood.” with hundreds of burned-out houses former­ ly occupied by Madurese,” who make up the bulk of the victims. “ In th ick ju n g le n e a r the tow n o f Salatiga last week, The Independent was shown a few of the victims of these attacks: six skeletons, five of them in a single spot, all of them lacking skulls.’’ He said the photographs, taken by a local man on Feb. 7, “ show severed heads lying in ditches, and a headless, mutilated body by the side of the road in Pahauman.” The independent published pictures of what it said was a severed Madurese skull, and a Madurese skeleton in a torched house. Witnesses “ describe seeing thousands of Dayaks, wearing war paint, and apparently G et O ut Of The HEAT And O n To The • 1st PERSON pays admission • 2nd person skates free • S kate rental extra O ceanside Ice A rena • 941 -0944 1 5 2 0 N. Mc C lintock , T empe • E xpires 8 /1 5 /9 7 L. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __________ J La d ie s Night NO COVED FOQ LADIE& ALL NIGHT $1 A n y t h in g Fo r Everyo n e A l l - N ig h t I N! mV I d™ a7- yi 2 for 1 D rinks ‘Til 10:30pm $2 (Shots lOOO-CLO&E SAT /- U Ri - ™D ! J /- L a d ie s Night No Coved Foq Ladies ‘Til 10pm $1 W, W 0 D for Ladies all night Longnecks for everyone ‘til 10:30pm Tuesday, june 10, 19,97 Page 8 S tate P ress G ive y o u r p are n ts a g ift th e y 'll love Send them the State Press . L et th e m know w h a t's h a p p e n in g on you r cam pus Sign up n o w for your subscription to ASU's n ew sp ap er (talk about brownie points) C DO IT NOW AND SAVE! ÌÉ Fill out this form and mail it w ith payment to: IT'S YOUR NEWSPAPER State P ress State Press Subscriptions, Box 871502, Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 or stop by the State Press subscription office in Matthews Center basement ASU's morning daily newspaper SUBSCRIPTION ASU'S M orning D aily Newspaper Serving ASU since 1890 a FALL SEMESTER o n ly $39 (6 9 issues) □ SPRING SEMESTER o n ly $ 3 9 (7 0 issues) □ FALL, SPRING & SUMMER $ 7 4 (1 4 9 issues) O For firs t class m ail, add $35 per semester to above prices, (put an X on the box denoting which subscription you'd like) PARENT N A M E Address_____ City Phone C ) State__ Zip. YOUI B E S T BE SPR ^NDsu/vij ONLY Talk abou br°w nie poi, □ CHECK ENCLOSED Charge my □ Visa □ MasterCard □ American Express Card Number Name on card _____ ________ Expiration Date _ _ _____ _ Signature. N EED M O R E IN F O ? C A LL O U R S U B S C R IP T IO N DEPT. A T (6 0 2 ) 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 P a ge 9 Tuesday, June 10,1997 S tate P ress Proposed tax cut o f $85 billion is largest since 1981 By R ob W ells A ssociated P ress WASHINGTON — House Ways and Means Chairman Bill Archer today proposed the largest tax cut since 1981, offering relief for fam ilies with college-bound children, investors and businesses. “ The tax relief package we will consider represents a solid first step toward a smaller government for bureaucrats in W ashington and a larger paycheck for workers in the heartland,’ ’ Archer, R-Texas, told reporters. T he $85 b illio n ta x -c u t p a c k a g e is a m b itio u s. It includes a $500-per-child tax credit for children under age 17 and about $35 billion in tax relief to help families send children to college. Democrats criticized the proposal as providing nothing for the working poor, setting the stage for a heated partisan battle that’s likely to extend to the 1998 elections. “ Republicans have siphoned off many of the gains from our current fertile economic climate and delivered them directly to the rich,” Democrats on the Ways and Means committee said in a statement. The GOP bill proposes reducing the 28 percent capital gains tax rate to 10 percent for couples making less than $41,200 a year, which Archer said will benefit 5 million Americans. For those making more than that, the rate goes to 20 percent. A rcher said his package has the sam e objectives as President Clinton’s plan but takes a different approach. Archer proposed a tax credit o f up to $1,500 to help par­ ents pay for college as well as a $ 10,000 deduction paid through educational investment accounts. The Clinton plan negotiated with GOP congressional leaders contains no investment accounts. Archer also proposed relief on estate taxes, raising the credit to $1 million, up from the current $600,000 that is exempt from such taxes paid on estates after death. He a lso c a lle d fo r “ A m erican D ream In d iv id u a l Retirement Accounts” to encourage savings, but the details were not immediately available. His plan also would shelter the first $500,000 from the gain on the sale of a home, a proposal similar to Clinton’s. To pay fdr the tax relief, Archer calls for extending and modifying airline ticket taxes to generate about $30 billion over five years. A nd he w ould raise $19.2 b illio n by repealing the corporate alternative minimum tax — origi­ nally designed to ensure businesses pay at least some mini­ mal tax — as well as increasing the individual exemption for the tax. And the plan calls for a new federal income tax on Indian gaming, which would raise $1.9 billion through 2002. Archer also called for raising a 24-cent-per-gallon tax on kerosene; eliminating tax subsidies on ethanol; and ending a benefit that permits corporations to sell subsidiaries with­ out paying taxes. Also on the list is a proposal to allow stock investors to lock in gains while postponing taxes on capital gains profits from the sale of the investments. There also would be $321 million in tax breaks for the District of Columbia aimed at shoring up the capital’s sag­ ging economy. *‘When this bill is signed into law — and I expect it will be — we will have completed virtually all the items in our Contract with America,” Archer said. Astronauts plugging leak S U M M E R S P E C IA L S B y V ladimir Isachenkov A ssociated P ress SERVING THE BEST HOT WINGS IN TOWN* 12Winas™_$3.99 36 Wines___$10.99 50 Wines ™ „$l 2.99 APPETIZERS Jalapeno Peppers Mozzarella Sticks Mushrooms Zucchinis FAST, FR EE DELIVERY 829-0064 O n ly $4.25 A L L N E W 24 Wing Minimum for Delivery Hot - Med. - Mild - BBQ Accepted Upon Delivery & «.«• M O SC O W — A fte r se a rc h in g fo r months, the Russian-American crew on the M ir space station has found a leak in the cooling system, one of the reasons the sta­ tion has been overheating. Russians cosmonauts Vasily Tsibliyev and A lexander Lazutkin discovered the leak from a coolant loop over the weekend and w ere w o rk in g to fix it, V era M ed v ed k o v a, a sp o k esw o m an fo r the Mission Control Center near Moscow, said Monday. The leak was located on the Kvant-1, one of six modules that make up the Mir. The cooling system began leaking in April, causing the average temperature on the Mir to rise to 86 degrees. The tempera­ ture has gradually come down as the crew fixed some of the leaks. After patching the leak on the Kvant-l, the crew will try to determine if there are any remaining holes in the cooling system. Earlier, the crew shut down the coolant loop on th e K vant-1 to p re v e n t m ore antifreeze fumes from escaping. They also rotated the Mir to keep the Kvant-1 out of direct sunlight. Without an atmosphere to filter it, direct sunlight can heat the M ir’s metal capsule to intense levels. , Russian space officials have said the quantity of antifreeze, or ethylene glycol, that leaked was not harmful to the crew. The M ir, cu rrently the w o rld ’s only manned space station, has been plagued by malfunctions this year. In addition to the leaking coolant, there was a small fire in February and main oxygen-generating sys­ tem failed in March. O ne o f its tw o g e n e ra to rs has been repaired and a backup one was brought last month by the NASA space shuttle Atlantis, along with repair equipment. U.S. astronaut Michael Foale arrived on the M ir on M ay 17, re p la c in g Jerry Linenger, who battled flam es, antifreeze fum es and heat during his 132-day M ir mission. Foale’s visit is expected to last 135 days. The breakdowns on the 11-year-old Mir, which was designed to last only five years, raised questions about its safety and height­ ened tensions between Russian and U.S. space officials. The Russian Space Agency has insisted that all problems were minor and that the station remains safe. Ca m p u s Co r n e r SUMMER SPECIAL! •Photo Developing •Health &Beauty Aids 609 S. Mill 712 S. College (College & University) 2 L O C A T IO N S 967-4049 Join Arizona Athletic Club for only $149 for the entire summer (Across from Coffee Plantation) 858-0567 (beer only at College St. store) f F O U N T A IN D R IN K F O R T Y -F ÌU R OZ, • Friendly, Professional Staff • State of the Art Sports and Fitness Facilities a O coupon today only | «nùitr ;- | * Basketball, tennis, racquetball, swimming * $ 1.3 M illio n R e n o v a tio n I The NEW tritìi ooupon today only ' •m m A S U ARI ZONA ATHLETIC with coupon today only CLUB 1425 West 14th Street, Tempe (Just west of Priest) 894-2281 http://www.webmc.com/AAC I A N Y I S IZ E F O U N T A IN WÊÊ Mgmimmm ’l D R IN K with coupon today only | ! S tate P ress TiiÁsdav. lune 10. 1997 Dan M cKinley realizes dream w ith Giants draft pick By C hris P assamano State P ress Lori Cain/State Press The M cKinley fam ily is a ll sm iles follow ing the news that ASU baseball player Dan M cKinley was a firs t round d ra ft pick o f the San Fransico Giants. From le ft to rig ht: Rob Chipperfield, Cathy McKinley, Ryan M cKinley and Dan McKinley. The State Press is now hiring qualified students to work days and nights in the State Press production department. QuarkXPress experience is required and must be familiar with Macintosh software. Stop by the State Press offices in the basement of Matthews Center to pick up an application today or call the production department at 965 2097 for more information. S i a 11 I ’ k i -.s s The fulfillment of a childhood dream can be the accom­ plishm ent o f a lifetim e. For ASU baseball player Dan McKinley, die first step towards fulfilling his dream came true when he becam e the first round pick o f the San Francisco Giants. “I was waiting by the phone,” said McKinley, a 23-year-old biology major. “I knew the draft started at about 10 in the morning Our time.” McKinley waited to hear the news with family, friends and girlfriend, and he didn’t have to wait very long. The word came for the junior outfielder at about 10:45 a m. on June 3, the first day of the draft. McKinley, who still has one year of eligibility left at ASU, said he would leave ASU with no regrets if he does sign to go pro. “ The opportunity might be too good not to,” he said. “I would have loved to end my career at ASU going to Omaha (site of the college World Series), but it’s time to move on.” Though a longtime Boston Red Sox fan, McKinley said he had no complaints about the San Francisco Giants. “It’s a great organization and a great team,” he said. “I wanted to stay west— I’m not an east coast person.” Those aren’t the only things that he likes about his new team. “They have there spring training right here in Phoenix,” said McKinley, a Mesa native and graduate of Dobson High School. McKinley’s mother, Cathy McKinley, said she was proud of Dan for all his hard work. “It’s just wonderful. It’s just been a wonderful three years at ASU. It was a dream for Dan to go to ASU. It’s been tough for him to be a biology major, maintain a 3.0 GPAand play base­ ball so well.” Having a son get drafted by a major league baseball associ­ ation is nothing new for Cathy McKinley. Three o f the McKinley boys have been drafted into the professional ranks. Dan’s older brother Mike was drafted last year into the Boston Red Sox organization, and Dan’s younger brother Ryan who attends Scottsdale Community College, was drafted the day after he was to the Chicago Cubs Organization. The oldest brother, Rob Chipperfield, who also played baseball, is now a doctor. “I’m so proud o f all my boys,” said Cathy o f her four sons. “They are all such good kids. They’ve never got in trouble, they had to work for everything. They are each other’s biggest fan.” - ¡mommacamemm., Dignity/lntegrity Phoenix is a group of gay and lesbian Roman Catholics and Episcopalians that meet for weekly liturgies, social and educational events, Call the InfoLine at (602) 222-8664 for information on events happening this month or visit our web site: www, netzone.com/~diginphx B u s in e s s A ffa irs Course D ir e c to r Arizona S tudents’ Association advocated for 101,000 public university stu d en ts statewide, seeks individual to m anage b u d ­ get and financial affairs, all office clerical needs and assist Executive Director moni­ toring state/fed e ra l legislation. MUST HAVE BS preferably in poi. sci., acctng, or related. Exlnt. comm, skills, Excel, MS Word, Publisher, self-starter, team-player desired. 21,000 +beneflts. P le a se c a ll (602) 9 6 6 -6 3 5 8 M U RF> m rs A r i z o n a ’s m o s t a u t h e n t i c D I A For more information 517-8923 To register for classes 517-8901 httpV/www.rio.maricopa.edu/ ;'ÏSfe re a t M u rp lffîsÊ , 7 days a week til 8pm WiM Beers on Tap. Valley's l a t e s t selection o f Scotch & Irish Whiskey Credits Transfers to ASU ASB 102 [SB,6] Elective CSC 180 [N3] CSC 180 [N3] Bectlve COM 110 [SB] Elective Elective MCE 446 [C] Elective ENG 101 ENG 102 ENG 217(111 Elective Elective [11] DEC (HUM) [HU] Bectlve [L1] Bectlve MAT 114 [Nt] Bective Elective PH1101[HU] PGS 10f [SB] S0C101 SPA 101 Elective Bectlve (ENG/THE) [HU] "For classes starting after July 1,1997 tuition is $37 fo r State and County Residents and $62 for Out of State Residents, If you have access to a computer and an Internet provider, you have options. Take a transferable course from Rio Salado College via the Internet and set your own class time. You can select either an accelerated or a full 14 week course. With Rio Salado's "Flex" schedule, courses can start every two weeks throughout the summer. » BA R H O U R S Mon - Thurs 4pm - lam; Fri - Sat - Sun 1pm - lam 1810 E . A pache • Tem pe • 894-0103 3 ,3 3 3 3 3 t 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 $5 Registration Fee Per Semester $34 Tuition Per Credit Hour - State & County Residents $59 Per Credit Hour - Out of State Additional Lab Fees May Apply W h e r e c a n Vf>Ù b p y t m p a r t e d p i n t s o f th e b e e r fo r 0050 E veryday? Title ASB102 Introductionto Cultural & Social Anthropology BPC133DA The Internet BPC110 Computer Usage and Applications CIS 105 Survey of Computer Information Services CIS 225 Business Systems Analysis COM 110 Interpersonal Communication CPD102AS Conflict Resolution CRE101 Critical Evaluative Reading I EDU 230 Cultural Values In Education EDU 250 Overviewofthe Community Colieges ENG 101 first YearComposition Rrst Year Composition ENG 102 ENG 217 Personal and Exploratory Writing ENG 235 Magazine Article Writing GBS233 Business Communication HUM 210 Contemporary Cinema IGS290 IntegratedStudies MGT229 Management and Leadership I MAT 142 College Mathematics Medical Office: Vocabulary 0AS18T 0AS250 OfficeAutomation Systems I PH1101 Introductionto Philosophy PSY101 Introduction to Psychology SOC101 Introduction to Sociology SPA 101' Elementary Spanish I SPH 245 Hispanic Heritage in the Southwest Contemporary Cinema THE210 Note: DEC = Departmental Elective Credit, ‘Additional Fees Rio Salado College is one of the Maricopa Community Colleges.The MCCCO is an EEQ/AAInstitution. RIO SALADO Sta te P ress Tuesday, June 10,1997 P a g e 11 S ta te P ress Tuesday, June 10, 1997 P age 12 Former business adviser heats up career with Merc By Chris P a s s a m a n o State P ress From the business college to the bas­ ketball courts. Erica Calhoun has been on the rise for the last 3 years. Calhoun, the former academic adviser for the business college, has become the public relations director for the new pro­ fessional w om en’s basketball team , the Phoenix Mercury. C alhoun started at ASU in M arch o f 1994 as an Academic Advisor Senior for the Business College, also working with m inority students in that college. From th a n she went on to work as the program coordinator senior in the student organiza­ tion resource center, before becoming the Greek l i f e coordinator. In March, she became the P.R. director for the Mercury J n “1 w ent to diem and told them that t was the person for the job,” said Calboun. “It’s something that I wanted to do, so l pursued it.” Calhoun, who is currently working on a second masters degree at ASU in sociolo­ gy said she is thrilled to be a part of this new organization. “G oing th ro u g h m y u n d e rg ra d u a te work in P.R., I always knew I wartted to work for a professional sports team,” said Calhoun. “It’s a dream come true to be working for a pro sport. It’s a bonus to be w ith th e W N B A { W o m e n 's N a tio n a l Basketball Association).” Her job has been made easier with the s u p p o rt She a n d th e M e rc u ry h a v e received, she said. “Being affiliated with theP heehix Suns has been a godsend, and having Cheryl M iller as coach and general m an ag eris fantastic,” saidCalhoun, M esa helicopters in air again M E SA . A riz. (A P ) — M cD o n n ell Douglas’ MD Explorer civilian helicopters are flying again after being grounded last month because of a problem with the rotor system. The St. Louis-based com pany, whose commercial helicopter operations are based in Arizona, reactivated the helicopters on S a tu rd a y a fte r th e F e d e ra l A v ia tio n A d m in istra tio n ap p ro v ed a re d e sig n e d replacement part. McDonnell Douglas had delivered 31 of h elicopters betw een the tim e they w ere introduced in D ecem ber 1994 until they were grounded May 29. There have been no crashes involving the helicopters. The problem was with a component o f the helicopter’s rotator head system. The piece is called an adjustable collective drive link, part of the drive link assembly. An o p e ra to r c o n ta c te d M cD o n n ell D ouglas after the piece was found to be broken in a post-flight inspection. The part is supported by a backup link. Erv Hunter, vice president o f McDonnell Douglas’ light helicopter division, said in a news release Monday that after completing an analysis o f the replacem ent part, the manufacturing of the part was given the goahead. S po r t s staff n e e d s w r ite r s FOR THE FALL SEMESTER. If interested call Ra n d y a t 9 6 5 - 2 2 9 2 OR e- mail at edfan @a su . edu N IK 'S P IZ Z A 894-0007 C arryout • D elivery • D ine-ln 1 2 5 0 E ast A p a c h e (C o rn e r D o rs e y ) H )% O F F O r d e r o f $ 1 0 .0 0 o r m o r e DINE-tN. DELIVERY, CARRYOUT any ONE COUPON PER PERSON EXP. 7/30/97 . B u y O ne L a r g e P iz z a RECEIVE A FREE 2 LITER SODA , DINE-IN, DELIVERY, CARRYOUT ONE COUPON PER PERSON ■ EXP. 7/30/97 _ ___ • AND GET A S M A L L F R E E C H E E S E P IZ Z A ONE COUPON PER PERSON DELIVERY ONLY EXP, 7/30/97 2 12" SUBS & 2 W IT H L A R G E S A L A D $ 1 1 .5 0 DINE-IN, DELIVERY, CARRYOUT ONE COUPON PER PERSON EXP. 7/30/97 ONE COUPON PER PERSON EXP. 7/30/97 ONE COUPON PER PERSON EXP. 7/30/97 s ♦ Low down-payment ♦ 24-hour claim service ♦ Monthly payment plan ♦ immediate coverage ♦ Money-saving discounts ♦ Free rate quote Call or visit your local GE1C0 representative fo r car insurance: SODAS $ 6 .0 0 • CARRY-OUT ONLY 1l< ) i M S S i B u y a n y L a r g e p iz z a SPAGHETTI DINNER INCLUDES SALAD; GARLIC BREAD, AND A SODA $ 4 .5 0 DINE-IN, DELIVERY, CARRYOUT L a r g e 1 -t o p p in g p iz z a The car might cost toomuch. The insurance doesn’t haue to. (6 0 2 ) 9 3 1 -0 7 6 6 G o ve n tm e itf E m p lo y m Insurance G >. • G Q G O G eneral Insurance G o. • G E IC O In d e m n ity C o. • G B C O C asualty C o. WnMnpon. DC20076 P age 1 3 Tuesday, June 10,1997 S tate P ress Political parties seeking to entice more Indian donations via lob byin g pow er IMMER ON CAMPUS North Forest Mall Parking Structure 3 Forest Mall/Stauffer Hall State Press North Cady Mall Tyler/Cady Mall Tyler Mall/Palm Walk Eng. Research Center Nobel Library Tyler Mall/McAllister Ave. Terrace & McAllister ASU Bookstore Orange Mall Murdock Hall MU Cady Mall Admin. Building South Cady Mall SRC inside in rack MU info desk Business Building Student Services Building Gammage South Forest Mall Hayden Library Social Sciences Building OFF CAMPUS Mesa Community College Downtown Tempe: Spaghetti Company Mill Avenue Shops Coffee Plantation News Stand at 6th & I Long Wongs Balboa Cafe Charlie’s Espresso Stan’s Metro Rinaldi’s on Third TempoCenter: Tower Records Schlotzsk/s West of Campus: Mama’s Pizzeria Grooming Humans Great Bagel Co. Campus Comer Sub Stop La Tolteca (Baja Gril) College Street Deli Express Yogurt Eastof Campus: PHOENIX (AP) — Lured by tribal casino m oney, political parties are m aking more contribution requests than ever to American-Indian nations with promises of better access to law­ makers in return. Thé trend is drawing criticism from som e w ho say the trib e s need the money to climb out of poverty. “ Tribes should not have to pay to play. They already have paid with their history,” said Loretta T. A vent, a Phoenix-based political and publicre la tio n s c o n su ltan t w hose clients in c lu d e the G ila R iv e r In d ia n Community and other tribes. In d ian g am in g re v e n u e s have clim bed to more than $4 billion per year, compared with $121 million in 1987. States and tribes have negotiat­ ed more than 140 gaming agreements since 1988. T ribes are finding th at ‘'‘ev ery ­ body is g o in g a fte r th e m o n e y ,” A vent said. The D em o cratic N a tio n a l Committee recently appointed for the first time an official to oversee Indian outreach and fund raising. Tribes also received a May 5 letter asking them to pay up to $ 20,000 to a tte n d the R e p u b lic a n N atio n al C om m ittee’s annual black-tie gala. The May 13 event featured Bob Dole, Jack Kemp and dozens of members of Congress. “ If tribes are going to make highlevel contributions, I would suggest participating as a Republican Eagle ($20,000) which Will give the tribe greater opportunities to meet with sen­ a to rs and m em b ers o f C o n g re ss throughout the year,” said the fund­ raising pitch. S c o tt H o g en so n , a R ep u b lican Party Spokesman, said Such fund rais­ ing Was not im proper and American Indians weren’t being targeted more than anyone else. Among the tribes receiving an invi­ tation to the GOP gala waS the Gila River tribe, which declined. The tribe also refused an April 14 offer to dis­ cu ss In d ian issu e s w ith H ouse Democratic Leader Dick Gephardt — if they attended a weekend retreat in June with boat rides and clambakes on Cape Cod, Mass. The offer was extended by Rep. P atrick K ennedy, D -M ass., w ho is supporting Gephardt’s expected presi­ dential bid. “ W ho’s going to com e a fte r us next -— the Libertarians?” asked Cecil Antone, the Gila River Tribe’s lieu­ tenant governor. “ They’re not getting our money.” Not all tribes are refusing to donate money. The M asantucket Pequot Tribe of C o n n e c tic u t, w h ich o p e ra te s th e highly successful Foxwoods casino, h a s b e c o m e o n e o f th e n a tio n ’ s largest contributors to political par­ ties. Some Indian leaders say they w e l­ come thC opportunity to become larger p o litical players, opening d o o rs in W a sh in g to n th a t h av e lo n g been closed to their people. “ W e have to play the p o litic a l game or we lose,” said Ron Allen, president o f the National Congress of American Indians, the largest Indian lobbying organization: However, there also is concern that casinos are being exploited for their newfound profits and that non-gaming trib es w ill lo se w h atev er p o litical influence they might have had. “ I agree with the critique that it’s not fair that tribes have to participate in the political contribution forum in o rd er to gain a c c e ss,’ ’ A llen said, ‘‘Mayors and governors do not have to pay that price.’’ Tour-bus accident kills one, injures 37 in N.M . ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A bus bringing gam­ blers back from a casino weaved out o f control, crashed into a drainage ditch and came to rest teetering over the edge o f a steep embankment. One woman was killed and 37 other people were injured. David Guinn was sitting in the front passenger seat, , h a lf asleep, w h en a com m otion woke him. He pushed seat mate Irish Lasiter to the aisle, using his body to pro­ tect her. Guinn told the Albuquerque Journal he heard the cod riv er ask the d riv er w hat w as happening before the Saturday evening crash. The driver at first said, “ I’ve got it,” then said, “ No, I’ve lost my steering,” said Guinn, 58, of Alamogordo, N.M. The crash sent the couple and three other people through the windshield, killing Lasiter, 53, o f Alamogordo. Guinn suffered a broken leg. Police would not speculate on the cause of the crash on Interstate 25 just north Of Albuquerque. Rescuers found the bus on its right side, teetering on the edge o f a steep embankment, trapping the remaining pas­ sengers inside. Mary Jape Staples, a nurse, saw the bus go out of con­ trol as she and her family were driving down the highway. “ We looked over the bridge, and we saw a pile of bod­ ies, and it looked horrible,” she said. Most o f the passengers on the bus, owned by Red Rock Limousine o f El Paso, Texas, were from El Paso or various New Mexico cities. H ie driver, Ezra Zarfaty, 44, o f El Paso, was given a mandatory alcohol test, but state police said results were not yet ready. No charges had been filed. Sunny’s Pizza Perkins Cornerstone Minder Binder Circle K (Univ. &McClintock) Cinnamon Tree Plaza Kinko’s Circle K (Rural &Lemon) Southof Campus: Wendy’s Circle K(Apache &Price) Vine ASU Visitor Center Commons on Apache Circle K (Apache&Terrace) Higher Ground Cholla Apartments Walgreens Rothers Wherehouse Mariposa Hall Distribution questions or comments? Cali Jackie Eldridge a t 965-6555. ^StäTEPresT State Press Advertising 965-6555 DOÖGIE KNIGHTS P age 14 Tuesday, June 10,1997 S ta te P ress L o ri C ain/S tate P ress M argo M ahon (le ft), a secondary-education m ajor gnd dance m inor, practices b allet in sum m er cla ss M onday through Friday. kinesiology and other theory courses,” she College is a place where you can develop another way to earn their living.” Lessard said she knows o f former stu­ said. “It really teaches you information you intellectually and socially as well as physi­ Basking in the applause for a first perfor­ dents who have become attorneys, chiro­ w ould not necessarily learn perform ing. cally. mance or admiring a fluffy pink tutu has practors, holistic healers, videographers and The studio environment breeds dancers who “The dance major educates in a way that inspired many an eight-year-old dance stu­ media organization executives. Many other perform very well but often do not think.” you understand the scientific aspects o f dent to proclaim she w ill be a ballerina graduates teach in high schools or private Claudia Murphy, ASU dance department your field as well as the artistic. You learn when she grows up. chair who just-finished her first year, said, what are injury producing exercises, what studios. Som ewhere between' youth and adult­ D esp ite the m ore d iv e rse o p tio n s, “I think a degree helps you get a certain tools are available to you. In a university hood, most o f these prospective dancers set L essard said m any o f the A SU d an ce amount o f background that you w ouldn’t setting you get those tools. You take the aside such sophomoric dreams and move on departm ent’s 86 undergraduates and 23 have ju s t co m in g o u t o f h ig h sch o o l. tim e to get to know yourself and realize to other things. But dance will snare a few graduate students intend to pursue what your selling feature is.” o f them and th e co n flic t betw een th eir hard-to-get jobs in performance and Although university dance depart­ attraction to creative motion and the chal­ choreography. ments can offer students thorough lenge of making'a living will surround them extended training, some are lured To non-dancers, the thought of a for life. away from college by professional dancer taking time for college out As funding for the arts dwindles, a grow­ of a developing performance career dance positions. ing number of these young people are tak­ may not make sense. However, the Kristin Wood, 24, left the dance ing refu g e in A m erican u n iv e rsitie s to dancers at ASU seem to feel like department at the University of Utah attempt to carve careers out of their passion their college experience is vital to to take a job at Ballet Arizona. Two for the enduring art of dance. With a dance future success. years ago, W ood in ju red her leg department ranked in the top five national­ while dancing with the company and Becca Levin, 26, is pursuing a ly , A SU is a tte m p tin g to o ffe r young m aster’s degree in dance with an quit dancing. Now she has enrolled dancers an advantage as they enter one of em p h a sis in c h o re o g ra p h y and in ASU and will finish a degree in the world’s most competitive job markets. b ro a d c a st jo u rn a lism n ex t y ear. technology. Levin holds a degree in F or m any dancers, con tin u in g in the d an ce fro m G eo rg e M ason W ood said h er o p p o rtu n ity w ith study of the art is not an option but a neces­ University in Virginia and has per­ Ballet Arizona was too good to pass sity, said Beth Lessard, ASU dance profes­ form ed pro fessio n ally . She said up. sor and former department chair. Lessard, studying dance at the college level “I knew that it was what I really 54, has worked at ASU for 28 years do a n d l went for it,” she is im p o rtan t to em b ark in g on a “If you are called to dance, you don’t career in dance. said. feel like you can live without it,” Lessard W ood said she never expected to “W ith a dance degree you are sto p dancing so soon because o f said. “It doesn’t mean they won’t earn a liv­ not only a skilled perform er, but ing in another way. But if they don’t do it, can articulate what it is that you injury. “I never thought my injuries were they are crippled artistically crippled. doing,” she said. “You can convey “When I look at my own life, if I hadn’t the importance o f art and be your that serious,” she said. “I had some stre ss fra c tu re s an d I th o u g h t I been able to express myself through physi­ own advocate. W e live in an cal movement, I would have been a differ­ where art has to fight for its place would have to sit out for six to eight ent person.” weeks.” . in society. L essard said she has seen num erous Eventually, W ood said she began “Art is a necessity blit it still has finding other interests and decided changes in the dance world during her time to fight for its place. Being able to to retire from her dancing career to at A SU . In the p ast, she said, stud en ts articulate is equally important with would head for dance company auditions being able to perform.” pursue journalism. rig h t a fte r h ig h sch o o l g ra d u a tio n and Lessard said students like W ood Levin also cited coursework as are not rare and many of the students sometimes even earlier. Now Lessard said an advantage college dancers have at A SU are fo rm e r p ro fe ssio n a l many dancers attend college, earn dance over other performers. Tim McCrgy/Mt mortw Photography degrees and end up in all sorts o f careers. “Being a dance m ajor im plies Bath Lessard, ASU dancé instru cto r, and p artn er com pete In a dancers who are returning to finish degrees in dance and obtain teach“Students find ways to work,” she said. not only dancing but also taking ballroom dancing c o n te s t “Some teach a few dance classes o r find B y Sara B ush State P ress P age 15 Tuesday, June 10,1997 S tate P ress Mi (L e ft) K risten Kow al takes ' III - iW M thnM A SU InlN rip^tlM R i (B elo w ) ASU b io lo g y m ajo r H eather S co tt end h e r p artn e r, Stephen Antony, learn th e a rt of ballroom dancing at an East M esa dance studio. « sa IBB m. Along with fostering intellectual origi­ ing certification. nality in dancers, dance professors said they Students and professors agree that the ASU dance dep artm en t is unique in its encourage dancers o f many different body focus on individuals and developing artistic types — not just die svelte shapes typically . ab ility in ea c h dancer. T his fa c to r con­ associated with the field. “O ur dancers com e from every back­ tributes greatly to the department’s success ground,” Lessard said. “We have all heights in drawing students to a university setting. “It’s a very unique program ,” Murphy and weights and strengths. We have all dif­ said. “It’s very em bracing o f people who ferent sizes. “If there is talent, it can be nurtured. are not only good at ch o reo g rap h y and Some absolutely gorgeous dancers are tall dancing but who are very intelligent. We or muscular. We really value the individual. like to be able to find the thinkers.” Angella Bettridge, a 19-year-old fresh­ O ur dancers are not cookie-cutter. T hat m an, said the A SU dance d ep artm en t’s would be very boring.” One type o f dancer that ASU and the uniqueness is its main strength. She came to Tem pe after graduating from a fine arts dance world in general lack is men. Lessard said the ASU dance depart­ b o a rd in g school in ment has well below 10 per­ Idyllwild, Calif., where she cent m ale enrollm ent each s tu d ie d m o d ern d an c e . “B eing a dance m ajorS y ear. M any m en are not B e ttrid g e sa id sh e w as im p lies n o t o n ly d a n cin g attracted to the field or get u n certain w hat to ex p ect picked up quickly by perfor­ from the ASU dance p ro ­ b u t also ta k in g mance companies. g ram , b u t is im p re sse d . kin esio lo g y a n d o th er A lthough professors say B ettridge’s family lives in th eo ry courses. they like the diversity, many T ucson, AZ and she said dance students said they still T he stu d io en viro n m en t she was surprised to find a feel pressure to conform to a good dance school so close breeds dancers who p a rtic u la r b o d y im age to home. perform very w ell b u t throughout the dance field. “ I cam e to c o lle g e “I don’t like the amount o ften do n o t th in k .” because it was the only way o f focus there is on body I co u ld afford to d an ce,” sa id K ristin Bettridge said. “I could not Becca Levin, im a g e ,” Naccari, a 27-year-old grad­ afford to take a 1chance on graduate stu d en t uate student in dance. “If g e ttin g in to a c o m p an y you ask som eone in dance that’s any good at age 1 8 .1 about their body, they will didn’t want to be a little girl th at runs o ff to New Y ork and w ake up either say ‘I am too big’ or ‘I am not strong enough.’ Whenever you think your body is when I’m 26 wondering what happened. “I looked around for the best school,” not good enough, there is a problem.” Bettridge agreed that many dancers have she said. “ASU turned out to be really good. I like that it is not really competitive. It gets problematic body images. “I think most dancers have some kind of pretty vicious in studios sometimes.” Bettridge said she is impressed with the earing disorders,” Bettridge said. “I think a lot o f dancers have really distorted body rigor o f the ASU program. “T h e w h o le te c h n ic a l le v e l is v ery images. Body image has so much to do with im p r e s s iv e ,” sh e sa id . “I th in k I ’ve dance.” Bettridge said students are aware o f eat­ improved more in this one year than in the ing disorders and, although ASU offers it, rest o f my time dancing.” they do not want more information. “Each of us has our own issue and we don’t want anyone else to tell U s unless we really need help,” Bettridge said. “I know my own problems and ! don’t want anyone else to try to tell me about them.” M ost dance m ajors agree that ASU is better than many other schools at making students feel comfortable with their bodies. H o w ev er, w ith th e rig o ro u s p h y sic a l demands o f dancing, distorted body image comes with the territory, Bettridge said. Dancing in college is sometimes a bal­ ancing act between weight training and get­ ting enough calories to m ake it through h o u rs o f d an ce c la sse s, sa id Sun M iet Minnick, a 21-year-old sophomore. Minnick said she simply has a hard rime trying to keep up with the physical demands o f majoring in dance. “W e h av e som e c razy s c h e d u le s ,” Minnick said. “You have to make sure you a re eating right and have enough sleep. I have had a hard time with eating. I think t am actually burning off more calories than I am eating sometimes. I have to concentrate on getting enough to eat.” Dance m ajors at ASU spend 15 to 20 hours per week rehearsing. Dancers often devote additional time to preparing perfor­ mance sets and costumes or rehearsing for non-A SU show s. M any required classes entail hours o f w ork per w eek fo r little credit. M ost dancers also have courses to meet general studies requirements as well. “Being a dance major is hard,” Minnick said. “I took eight classes last semester and it was only 13 credit hours. We have labs we have to do that aren’t worth any credit.” Despite all o f the work they do, many dance majors at ASU said they feel stigma­ tized by social stereotypes and misconcep­ tions in the university setting. “As soon as you say you are a dancer in Arizona, the first assum ption is that you strip,” Levirt said. “But dance isn’t as nar­ row a field as many seem to think.” Other dancers said people thought they were stupid, snobbish, and spoiled. “The stigma is mainly due to ignorance,” said Mary Fitzgerald, a graduate dance stu­ dent in perform ance and choreography. F itz g e ra ld , 34, b eg an d a n c in g at the University o f M aine. She spent 10 years performing professionally and has returned to become a choreographer. “Human beings have always danced,” Fitzgerald said. “There is just less respect for it in America than the rest of the world-” DaUcdrs hot only have to fight stereo­ types from the public, but also feel stigma­ tized by other artists. “In the o th e r arts, th ey d o n ’t really b eliev e you w hen you call y o u rse lf an artist,” Bettridge said. “People think it’s entertainment not art. Movement can be just as expressive as drawing or painting, it’s just a different medium. “Our canvas is our body and the move­ ment we p u t into it is die colors. It is some­ thing people aren’t used to thinking about. Movement can be so pedestrian that people don’t think it has any meaning.” For dancers at ASU, dance is not just a form o f entertainm ent, but an expressive form of communication. Levin said dancing helped her adapt to high school after she found out she has a learning disability. She said dance is one of the most powerful forms o f communication available. “Dance gives me an opportunity to reach people that I wouldn’t ordinarily have the means to communicate with verbally,” she said. “It’s an extra level o f communication. It provides a way to explore ideas through the whole person-a way that my mind is as engaged as my body. “I loVe when I perform for a group of people and there are people in my audience w ho p e rc e iv e w h at I am try in g to g et across. They come up to me and say they w ere c ry in g o r say m y m o v em en t h as meaning for them. I am a person that defi­ nitely survives via creative expression. I know no other way.” Sta te P ress Tuesday, June 10,1997 ee 1 6 Memorial Ünioii businesses doing the sMdffl^ ^ ^ W g tneM B y C hris P assamano State P ress Freshens will be coming to tire low er level o f die MU. There will some construction there as some o f the seat­ Johnson . ¿ j , “T he space left behind by Pizza H ut and th e MU M cDonalds is Mchistory as the Big Mac gives way to the Whopper. This is ju st one o f the changes going on currently at the Memorial Union. The contract with M cDonalds and ASU runs out on June 30. Then M arriott and Burger King will take over. The exact last date for McDonalds in not known, but a date is being discussed. The conversion from M cD onalds to B urger King w ill lik ely be d one som e tim e p rio r to the June 30 deadline, said MU Associate Director Randy Johnson. In addition to B urger King, SChlotzski’s Deli and ing will have to be removed to accommodate the new M arket is huge and will make fo r a great new market,” restaurants. ' r\ J Currently, Pizza Hut. Woks Chinese food and the MU Market are closed. Pizza'H ut will be moving into he said. Pretzel Mania will be housed inside the new market, and a candy shop will be put in its current place. Once the new. Union M arket is complete, a cookie the area that was form erly W oks. Taco Bell w ill be moving into the Sub City site, and a new addition, the shop will also be added. “T here w ill also be, a beverage shop ten tativ ely Bakery Cafe, will be added into Taco Bells old slot. ; : , The MU M arket w ill be m oving in to the O n The called Beverage O asis replacing Cafe Brazillia at the G o 's form er space. W ith the r o o » left behind by the north end o f the MU,” said Johnson. “H u s will allow Pizza H ut and MU M arket move, a new and improved student that ju st w ant to get a drink to do so without mini m arket, the “Union M arket” w ill be added, said having to go through the crowds.” P olice R eport ASU Police reported thefollowing incidents last week • Police reported that unknown person or persons vandalized an ASU police car while it was parked in the police department parking lot • Equipment was reported stolen firm the Old Architecture building. • A burglary was reported by an employee at the Education East building. • A non-affiliated male Was arrested at Stabler’s Market for posses­ sion of drug paraphernalia after police responded to a complaint that he was shoplifting. • An employee at the architecture building repotted a burglary. • A man was arrested for criminal speed.on 1000 E. Rio Salado Parkway after reaching speeds up to 80-plus mph. • Two non-affiliated females were arrested at 300 E. University Drive for driving undo’the influence of alcohol. • An ASU employee reported 10 boxes of paper towels stolen firm the Life Sciences C-wing building. • A non-affiliated man was arrested for criminal trespass at 606 Alpha Drive. *■A man was arrested for criminal speed on Forest Avenue. Tempe Police reported thefollowing incidents last week: • A man was arrested near University and McQintock Drives for driving under the influence and possession of narcotics when, after crashing his motorcycle into a police car while the officer was offer­ ing roadside assistance, a small bag of cocaine was found in his wal­ let • A man was arrested at 910 E Lemon S t for public sexual indecen­ cy after a approaching two people outside their home and masturbat­ ing in front of them. The suspect then proceeded to the neighbors house who were also outside and repeated the alleged violation. Both parties positively identified the suspect • A man was arrested at 2100 S. Driest Road after reportedly stealing a tractor valued at $20,000. • A man was arrested at Money Savers Grocery store at 909 E Lemon S t for urinating in public. Officers, who were responding to . a complaint that the apparently intoxicated man was harassing cus­ tomers for money, saw him commit the violation. According to reports, the officers approached the man while he was “passed out next to a bottle of malt liquor” and issued him a warning for tres­ passing. The suspect then proceeded to urinate in the parking lot in front of customers. • A woman was sexually assaulted at knife point for two hours after bring forced into a dumpster behind a business at 930 W Broadway Road. Suspect was arrested lata-at his home. • Several unknown suspects driving in a 92 Gold Honda Accord fire 4 rounds into the XingJi-xingh restaurant at 3318 S McClintock Road. The act was apparently done in retaliation when the suspects were ejected from the restaurant by the manager. No suspects have been arrested One man was hit and is in stable condition. ■ p i l l Scottsdale & McDowell ^-2¿,»k^Mi3«B&Í^fe —Fluffy with Zach Phillips will be at Gibson’s starting at 8 p.m. Tickets are $6 on the day o f die show, or FREE with an ASU ID. This is an all ages show. —Caroline’s Spine will be opening for Fluffy at Gibson’s. Show starts at 8 p.m. with tickets available on the day of the show for $6 or FREE with an ASU ID. —David Wilcox Band will be performing at the Red River Opry with a special guest starting at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 in advance and $21.50 on the day of the show, available at Dillard’s and the Red River Opry Box Office. This is an all ages show. —JGB (formerly the Jerry Garcia Band) will be per­ forming at the Electric Ballroom starting at 8 p.m. Tickets are available at Ticketmaster for $ 18 in advance or $20 day of show. <§at»urda^ Jvftg l*t —Guitar Shorty will be performing at the Rhythm Room starting at 9 p.m. Doors open at 8 p.m. with a $5 cover. p.m. No cover. "Pi<§Vi:$8 S t a r t in g F rid a y ' Jvft# 13 —Female Perversions — The story of two sisters and their personal gains from the women’s movement —In and Out — Kevin Kline plays a teacher who is “outed” as a gay, even though he’s straight. —Rough Magic — Bridget Fonda plays a magician’s assistant who witnesses a murder and heads south o f the boarder — Speed 2: Cruise Control —•Sandra Bullock and Jason Patrick star in the sequel to Speed, but this time it’s on a boat. CROSSW ORD by THOMAS JOSEPH ACROSS i Oaf 5 Make cookies 9 Ibis’s cousin 11 Females 12 Acknowl­ edge a mistake 13 Plain silly 14 Novelist Radcliffe 15 Thesau­ rus find 17 Constella­ tion 19 Calendar box 20 Thing of thepast 21 Prohibit 22 Head out 24 Map legend 26 Pageant symbol 29 Patch up 30 Pdkes, eg- 32 John Lennon song 34 Curator’s concern 35 Outspo­ ken 36 Western competi­ tion 38 Dictionary word 39 More cunning 40 Optimistic 41 Editor’s base DOWN 1 Available for a song 2 “Camelot* lyricist 3 Florida product 4 Uno doubled 5 Lead singer of U2 6 Actress Plummer 7 Nairobi native 8 Opposi­ tion 10 Scottish monster 11 Takes the 1 2 3 trophy 16 Belize’s setting 18 Friend in war 21 Rosary item 23 Treacher­ ous ones 24 Asian gown 25 Demands 9 » 12 - 14 J ■ 18 17 ■ I 1 29 32 25 c ity 37 Archaic 5 6 7 B ” 13 16 P J ■■ 2 4 27 Tour worker 28 Concurs 29 Half a sawbuck 30 Easter bloom 31 Baby deliverer 33 Indiana Ü 23 ” ■ 1 ■ I " • 27■ " 31 j ■ 35 j ■ 38 36 37 1 ■ 40 28 1 “ t DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two 0's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTE QUZ GSCZ BZIQ CSLMQ YSEZ CWLQD JM QUSLQD QUZ DZKLM QZIQ; MJOOGD WC QUZ QUZ R W P P Z B Q K L D . — M R U W O Z B U KJZL Y esterday's C ry p to q u o te : THERE’S NO USE CRYING OVER SPILT MILK; IT ONLY MAKES IT SALTY FOR THE CAT.—ORIGIN UNKNOWN P age 1 9 Tuesday, June 10, 1997 S t a t e P ress O scar Jacquez looks to his rear to check fo r oncom ing w atercraft. J e t s k i _________ . C ontinued f r o m page 17. '■ . pie on the water.” Although Flood said he has seen a fair share of bumps and bangs thanks to illegal maneuvers, renters have never had any serious injuries on his jet skis. But he added that other companies have had fatalities.“I think our renters avoid a lot of accidents because of the contract they sign,” Flood said. “On top of the deposit, they have to agree to pay for any damage done and that makes peopie more responsible.” Most other companies use the same strict contracts to ensure safety. ■ . r “We have in-house mechanics that fix some problems,” Flood said. “But what we can’t fix issent to a local body shop at the rentees expense.” The sheriff’s department doesn’t have contracts, but does patrol the lake on water craft as well as all-terrain vehicles to ensure safety. No-wake zones near shore arc enforced to keep people from going too fast, dragging their boat or jet ski on the ground, making waves or hitting swimmers. “You’ll sec no-wake zones around boat launching areas, coves, and marinas,” Bradley said. “If you’re Hying to launch “ MIDWEEK M AD N ESS” Monday - Thursday Only M LARGECHEESE QBLÏ PIZZA $3.99, 132781 921-FAST P iz z a or X-TRALARGE$5.99+ Tax www.äumbvspizza.com 'Ænam DOBSON A UNIVERSITY 644-1201 i8 K K 'ECOAST-IOmCOASTM^ k m m n D a m n e m w ju m A M TY ^ • • • O N L Y 3 M IL E S F R O M A S U • • • • 8 8 W ITH COUPON Lubricate your vehicle & chassis Drain old oil A dd up to 5 qts. o f new oil Install a new oil filter Includes a 17 pt. Inspection D iesel extra M ost cars and light trucks Call for appointm ent. C hanging od fo r over 125 years. » Our Tire & Service Warranties Are Honored At Over 8,000 Affiliated Dealers Nationwide 9 0 DAYS NO PAYMENT*** 9 0 DAYS NO INTEREST *** NO ANNUAL FEE LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS C O M P U T E R IZ E D W H E E L B ALAN CE & 4 T IR E R O T A T IO N $1 9 8 8 W ITH COUPON • C heck Inflation On All Tires » Com puterized Balance On 4 Tires • Four Tire Rotation • M ost Cars & Light Trucks • Call for appointm ent EXPRESS r RENT 2 | GET 3rd RENTAL V ID EO I IT O GO IIFREE! a m *9 2 0 3 3 W. UNIVERSITY, MESA O pen fo r Lunch E v e ry D ay a t 1 1 :0 0 am ‘ T IL 2 :3 0 am S unday th ru T h u rs d a y ‘ T IL 3 :3 0 am F rid a y and S a tu rd a y $5.00 Minimum for Delivery Offer May Expire W /0 Notice L U B E • O IL • F IL T E R lIRt a . AUTOMOTIVE n - your boat and somebody makes waves and knocks it back onto die trailer, you would not be happy.” ( This year, the sheriffs department has a zero tolerance for boating safety infractions. Most infractions qualify as a misdemeanor with strict fines. Operating a boat or jet ski under the influence of alcohol is a class one misdemeanor, “Although the OUI doesn’t go against your license like a DU1 does, the fines could cost more money,” Bradley said, “Just be familiar with the laws and the craft,” he recommended. “The key is to have fun and be safe— and remember that hydration does not mean alcohol.” m ! i t 4 0 5 W. University Drive ■ N ext to T .C . Luigi’s an d Top's Liquor t O N f ih j D , N r * ’ iS P In c lu d e s N e w R e le a s e s & G a m e s Not Valid on Mondays F Expires 8-15-97. I One Coupon Per Visit. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! •FR EE Memberships Available •Large New Release Selections •Reservations Taken Daily •Convenient Night Drop MONDAY MOVIE M A D N E S S All New Releases $1.49 General Titles 2 for $1.49 ^ H O F F la x ; ANY RENTAL Not Valid on Mondays Expires 8-15-97. One Coupon Per Visit. p a lm a v e n u e State P ress Tuesday, June 10,1997 P a g e 20 U1TCiU£T wait for him like subservient idiots. N ot th a t a m o v ie g o e r w o u ld be tricked into dunking Poe won’t stay on the plane for the whole gratuitous ride. T hat's a no-brainer And it almost goes without saying that there will be a large explosion anytime two o r more massive objects meet with any force, whether or not the objects are explosive or not —diat’s just pure Hollywood physics. The one scene that cam e close to a s u rp ris e w as w hen it se e m e d lik e H a n n ib a l L ee te r-lik e s e ria l k ille r Garland Greene — (Steve Buscemij — murders a little girt. When the little brat pops her head out $ toe plane carrying Greene ftys away, thus revealing her as alive and well, the movie immediately Con A ir A ik out o f five I t w as s u p p o se d to b e a r o u tin e flightIt *00606110(1 After ail; it would be unthinkable to gather some o f the country’s most bar­ barous criminals together on one plane, guard them by m orons w ithout guns, and N O T have som ething o u t o f the o rd in a ry h a p p e n . T h e o n ly th in g rem otely su rp risin g in th is pathetic* unoriginal, mindless waste o f celluloid is the shallowness of the script. I t h e first 3ft anna tes to n o t e H r a movie review b f t t n m e . Use ^ K o b v t o u s l y f f t i d e d they w ouldn’t h av e tim e to ex p lain a n y plot-points halfw ay in j j adie m ayhem and explo- descends buck into mundane nettan* ttwe. Jf be bad offed her, Gteene proba- with quick, expository narration-type dialogue, ¡¡tig | ! T h e p re lu d e slo w s d o w n o n ly to 'show how dum b farm boy-turned-U.S . Ranger Cameron Poe (Nicholas Cage) «mis up in prison, which h e could'haveavoided and really isn’t anything you ctm feel awry for. j - But Poe is obsessed with strange and dangerous ideas about honor. N ot only does he s tin ip ith d n ^ p m in a ls on their adventure 'flH ^piestion^diftpascm ^^U be doesn't h-rip * “ .sal masteraagK* C$HR $ £ Malfeovich) in the grandiose and ridicu­ lous end-scene w hile his w ife and kid I applause blantantlv C on A ir w o u ld n ’t b e a co m p lete waste o f a Satw day matinee, ft’s fastpaced, filled with passable humor and and thinking *Tcould write met” . ented, uneducated, feckless, soulless or boring these moviegoers may be, they’d G o o d o n ly a fte r 10 p m O n e L a rge T w o T o p p in g Pizza & Tw o C ans o f Coke I i N ot valid w ith any other offer. Customer pays all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra 1O I Î IW CORNER OF McCLINTOCK 6 SOUTHERN n e L a rg e w ith T h e W o rk s O R G a r d e n S p e c ia l | O R A ll t h e M e a t s l 8 3 1 -8 5 0 0 O P E N IN G IN JULY! 524 W. BR O A D W A Y R 0 . 820-3434 I FREE DELIVERY DD50 HOURS: Expires 30 days. Not valid with any other offer. Available at participating locations. Customer pays applicable sales tax; . Additional toppings extra. Mnn-Thura; 11:00am-12:30am Fri. St Sot.; 1 1 :0 0 am -1:30 am Sunday- lfaon-n.30p*n L. - la d d e r . (NEXT TO BASKIN BOBBIN SI I I = This will complete your path to nirvana :;y ■'wm&fa A A A A = Your social class will be improved in your next life A A A = You will gain enlightenment from this ☆ A * You will be reborn into the same class of suffering as in this life A = You will be reborn as a slug after this one DD80 I I T h is ffm'Hjs ra.hin:g stfsbgm f© r arid C/Bs> ■ : , C lim b t h e f I B ra ssed O ff, a B ritish film a b o u t a marching band that is made up of coal min­ ers during the M argaret Thatcher era o f politics, is a heartwarming story. D isillusioned at the possibility o f the m ine’s closure, band members decide to dissolve the band until die question o f the mine’s future is decided. Enter beautiful newcomer Gloria (Tara Fitzgerald) who initially re-energizes the band with her talented fluegelhom playing. T he b a n d ’s d ire c to r, D an n y (P e te Postlethwaite) is naive to the reality of the uncertainties the m iners are facing. His only co n cern is th a t the b a n d w in the n a tio n a l b ra ss ban d ch a m p io n sh ip in London. D irecto r/screen w riter M ark H erm an effectively explores the intricate relation­ ships of several band members. The evolv­ ing d y n am ics betw een G lo ria and her ch ild h o o d sw e e th e a rt, A ndy (E w an McGregor) are complicated by the discov­ ery o f her professional alignm ent w ith those who want to close the mine. Loyalties are questioned by both Andy and the rest o f the band. To com plicate matters a beloved band mem ber is over­ come by a mine-related illness. H erm an is a lso ab le to c a p tu re the hum or o f the human spirit. This is m ost evident in the relationships surrounding Danny’s son, Phil (Stephen Tompkinson) and his wife Sandra (M elanie Hill). The quirky but subtle sense o f humor that the British are famous for is apparent in the characters’ personalities. Herman’s ability to accurately portray the lives o f coal m iners faced w ith the increasing prospect o f a dying industry is done with sensitivity and gentle humor. 1 recommend Brassed O ff as a refresh­ ing alternative to the action-packed, pre­ d ic ta b le p lo ts o f ty p ic a l su m m ertim e movies. — Ofelia Madrid Late Niaht Munch I I Brassed O ff A A A out o f five f l t f H S E S • ~ ASU. A prestigious ASU degree can advance your career. Now, take classes off-campus, evenings, M C AT • LSA T weekends or through our virtual campus—TV, □ MAT • GRE CD-ROM, Internet and correspondence study. T*HE P r in c e t o n R e v ie w T a k e t h e f ir s t s t e p ! #1 Call 9 6 5 - 3 9 8 6 fo r a fre e catalog!. A rizo na State U niversity E xtended Cam pus ■http://w w w .asu.sdu/xed P age 21 Tuesday, June 10, 1997 S tate P ress T u r to s Brazil 2001 Fist Full o f Sand ■vtHtUt out of 5 1 wasn't sure what to expect when t saw dw name Brazil 2001, but! figured it would be some­ thing weird. That is pretty much what lg o t When 1 read that IA Weekly called them an unholy collaboration between Frank Zappa and Mike Love [Beach Boys), j decided they were something really strange. While they aren’t as weird as Zappa, diey certainly do ptay a different style of music. The ben thing about K adi 2001is tiieir iraterest in being different, which they reaily are. Categorizing their music is difficult — they’re a surf band with vocals and touches of punk, pop, rock and even country on one track. ' They also have a sense of humor, which always makes a band fun to listen to. Unfortunately, they over do it at times. The totes 1 don’t want «o wear my clothes/ i just want to wear your pantyhose” in Dressing Like a Girl lit­ erally made me laugh out loud, bta then I tfiseovered that the lines appear in every verse, which Crosby Tyler Black Canary & & & out of five It has taken a long while for blues to resurface. Not even established blues players like John Lee Hooker and B. B, King have put an album that takes you to the point of depression. It seemed that no one would take on that mantle. But Crosby Tyler’s Black Canary heads for it as fOr the Holy Grail. ‘‘Blues isn’t about making others feel better, it about making them feel worse,” said Bleeding Gums Murphy, a character on The Simpsons,. Tyler achieves that with this, album. With his, sweet melodies and depressing lyrics, you will suffer art emotional conflict. How can a man who plays so well have so many problems? Since he didn't print the lyrics. You won’t be sure what he’s saying, but every so often you pick up something about Lucifer or getting a gun to kill disappointed me because I was looking forward to more funny, line's and they! just repeated the same thing over and over. For a band influenced by surf music, they FIST FULL OF SAND don’t do tetó many instrumentals, and of the four on the album, two of them are ctwery Th& jiBSf goés to show that they really don’t want to fit into any one cate­ gory of music. Fist Full of Sand is not a bad first album. Brazil m i wants to create offbeat, original music, which they have done, but there is definite room for improvement The CD is available only at record stares in southern California, tisough Subterranean Distribution, or online at BRAZIL2001 — Alissa Zapattea someone. This man must be suffering from dementia, various phobias and night­ mares, because he, “c a n ’t get no sleep.” If you’ve been blues deficient for so m etim e and craving Something fresh., B la ck Canary will wet your palate. That is if you can get past whether the woman on the cover is truly a woman. If Tyler was 20 years younger, his music would be considered alternative. But, as it is, he remains a blues man. — Jonathan Inge A Bar and Grill in Tempe with Balls Kenny Rankin Here In M y H eart out o f five If you are in te re ste d in a q u ie t rom antic evening, candlelight dinner, you might think about adding to the list Kenny Rankin’s, Were In M y Heart, the newest release from the Windhill Group. Kenny R ankin’s latest CD features a soft, melodic acoustic guitar, percussion, slow piano and a smooth sax. Rankin’s voice and melodies are definite mood setters. The jazz is so relaxing it feels like a massage. Recorded in Rio De Janeiro, H ere In M y H eart captures the essence of a career spanning over thir­ ty years. Rankin suffered nerve damage in a chiro­ practic mishap in 1994 limiting his ability to play guitar, but the incident gave him the opportunity to focus on his voice. He creates, an album like qp other. Rankin’s songs effortlessly lead you into the m ind o f a rom antic, expressing w hat love is through the eyes of an everyday person who has failed, hoped and been victorious in love. His songs reach out to find that special someone, yet with an element of unconfidence. With a touch of subtle Brazilian rhythms, tunes such as “A day in the Life o f a Fool" and “L o vers T o u ch " have b eau tifu l sax o ­ phone em phasis and p ercu ssio n th a t create pure highs. R a n k in 's voice soars unin­ hibited alm ost as the male version of Sade. “Life in the M odem W orld" and “Come Rain or Come Shine ’’ area bit faster. The sax speeds up and sounds like music from cocktail hour at a hotel. However, the occasional whistles make for the most intriguing additions creating a distinct noise. Overcoming a long period of writer’s block, Rankin conceives thoughtful lyrics and excellent jazz combined with Brazilian rhythm to make a renowned sense of romanticism. Hear In M y Heart could prove useful for that important evening or just a chance to unwind. W hat ever it may be. Kenny Rankin scores. — Jeff Morris about. The lyrics to "C inderella” go: “C louds, h e rb s and art/mtating love Hooveiphotnc “a new stereophonic sound spectacular" iiS n k ik out o f five A s the next century, and millennium, fis t approaches the music today is searching for that new sound to take them into the future Older bands are regrouping and resurrecting themselves from toe grave (The Beatles, The BeeGees), contemporary musicians mix different genres (Beck), and others are rehashing old beats (Fuff Daddy) Bid it seems that the new kid on the block will break the tune barrier — elcctroni- t h r o u g h litne/tears after ovcrkill/re vers­ ing all my love." T h a t's it. But you w on’t care as you listened to the m elody. H The short lyrics fits it perfectly. Also, this group does not have tunnel vision when it comes to music. They integrate classical, jazz, and 1960s R&B (“2Wicky" contains the mclodv from Isaac Hayes’ version o f “Walk on E specially so, w ith H ooverphonic's new album. Unlike other contemporary techno-musicians, they do not allow their songs to run much longer than five minutes. This keeps the broken-record repetitiveness down. Despite being comparable to Sneaker Pimps in texture, Hooverplionie has generated its oWn However, throughout each song there is a period of spoken word in English. Spanish and French. On the first track, “Inhaler", this style works as an introduction to the CD. On the others, it becomes annoying. But it can be easily ignored. Even though established bands like U2 and Smashing Pumpkins are migrating towards the electronic era, techno groups that are continually refining the sound will be on top of the game. Expect to see Hooverphonic there. Indeed, Hooverphonic lives up to its album tide. It is a sound spectacular. Ambiguous lyrics, thumping bass lines, program lopping, smooth vocals and sounds that come out o f nowhere. Each song is completely its own. Most artists do not print the lyrics in d e liner notes, saying it would destroy what the listener thinks are the w ords. T his group takes that chance to let people know w hat their talking — Jonathan Inge » ■ N M E#* i 'fek Ammm Äse MfÆm,--- TOMORROW NIGHT JUNE 111 'GIBSON’S * 7 PM Chris • Whitley * » EARLY SHO W VINE 9 3 3 K P KB Upckf Arim* $5 All Day Pool Special H am - 6p m M -F H a p p y H o u r lla m - 6 p m L ít e m e ballroom 1216 E. A pache TEM PE ALL SHOWS ALL AGES TOMORROW NIGHT M -F O v e r 5 0 D if f e r e n t B e e r s • F u l l G r i l l & M e n u P lu s W ith j 21 P o o l T a b le s J U M F TEEN H ER O ES & ^ ___ - l C A RA’S FLO W ERS 2 S a t e llit e D i s h e s • 11 T e le v is io n s P E R F O R M IN G 2 S E T S O F M U S IC to w atch y o u r fav o rite sports wMh JERRY GARCIA BAND members: MELVIN SEALS JA C KIE LABRANCH S a tu rd a v & S u n d a v T o u rn a m e n ts GLORIA JONES DONNIE BALDWIN 933K P K B terete A«—i ■yjcftt&f//i/ssrrt£i=i H 3 B iffiard. 602/784-4444 & A R M M WINTER ELGIN SEALS PETER H ARRIS http://www.eveningstar.com State Press Tuesday, June 10,1997 Page 22 Show airs oddballs Henry Rollins brings poetry, music, philosophy and attitude to w iltf career By Larry M c Shane A ssociated P ress W riter NEW YORK (AP) — It’s part Ed Sullivan Show, part Coney Island sideshow, hosted by a man trapped inside the body of uber-geek B ill Gates and the wardrobe o f Ward Cleaver. Welcome to the aptly named “ Oddville, MTV.” W here the music channel once presented “ The Real World,” this new 30-minute “ variety show” brings on the surreal world. Real-life guests mingle and mix with host Frank Hope, strange (and strangely mute) sidekick David Greene and perky announcer Melissa Gabriel. The trio lays out the Oddville welcome mat for an assort­ ment of strange guests — folks with a penchant for contor­ tions, fruit levitation, motorcycle stunts, nose whistling. The show’s basic concept: Everyone is entitled to 15 min­ utes of fame — as long as they can squeeze it into 2 minutes, 30 seconds. A recent taping of this half-hour celebration of the strange featured seven guests, brought on in rapid-fire fashion by pretematurally earnest host Hope, who’s also the show’s creator. --;T. -, Hope — whose real name is Rich Brown — is an indefati­ gable sort given to the obsessive use of courtesy titles. He wears oversized glasses, a dark blue turtleneck, a light blue shirt with w-i-i-i-de lapels, a dark blue cardigan with light blue piping, and a pair of blue suede shoes. His set exudes a “ Wayne’s World” basement vibe, with a background collection of kitsch that -includes rotating wig stands, bowling trophies and fuzzy dice. Guests assemble on an orange bench straight out of a vintage diner. “ Oddsville, MTV” is taped in the expansive KaufmanAstoria Studios in Queens, with a half-dozen cameras (two hand-held), a buffet for the staff and an actual publicist. The network signed on for 65 episodes, which will air five nights a week. The first show airs June 16, although there’s a sneak preview following the MTV Music Award four days earlier. aSmms to dnt&j _ ■ . While rausieffc Rollins first outlet, H is bis extra cur­ ricular activities that gain credibility in challenging new audiences. T his isn’ t to say'R ollins by any m eans is mainstream, far from it, he has just diversified his ideas hi other forms as an alternative to a mediocre contempo­ rary culture. Rollins, an urban poet, a bit on the rough side, has written eight books, his latest being Eye Scream . Rollins is noted fo r his underground w riting, b u t has b een accused of setfiag o n t He owns a record and publishing company which he named 2.13.61. (Rollins’ birthday) that specifically deals with artist unfamiliar to most. In addition to his writing he has done spoken word audio CD’s and tours that fur­ ther his ideology. R o llin s su b tly p e n e tra te s A m e ric a n life via Hollywood’s big screen too. He has played small roles in Lost Highway, H eat, Johnny M nemonic and Chase. A lthough the m usic rarely receives air-p lay , the extensive travel brings added notoriety and attention to the Rollins Band. Rollins has been seen on several talk shows as a guest speaker and musician including, Late Night, with D avid Letterm an and the Tonight Show with Jay Leno. The group was also highlighted as a feature act during Woodstock ‘94. Currently the band is in die middle o f a 36 city tour that kicked off in May and will span die globe. If you are at all interested in seeing the underground above ground, go see the intensity and brilliance o f Henry Rollins tonight at Club Rio. It might be educa­ tional. By J ew M orris State Press Trying to fathom who Henry Rollins is — difficult. U nderstanding his philosophy — incom prehensible. Seeing him play live could be — dangerous. So why such interest for a band whose songs are rarely played on the m h o ? The answer, because Henry Rollins is one o f the most intense and brilliant artist to hit the music scene within die last several decades. Rollins plays his heavy sound tonight at Clpb Rio with guest Skunk Anansie and Sugar Ray in support of his new album Come m and Bum . Although die Rollins Band has a hard core sound that definitely provides an atmosphere for moshing, the band members are not die typical punk rockers. Most have jazz backgrounds including Melvin Gibbs, bass, who played with some o f the lum inaries o f the New York City jazz scene. Sim Cain, drums, comes from instrumental outfits like Progressive Eighth and Gone, which is straight-up jazz. Don’t let the attire fool you, these are real musicians. R ollins’ music career traces back to 1980, then a huge fan o f a social punk rock band, Black Flag. He drove to New York to see the band perform at a small club, a situation that would provide Rollins with his big break. During the set, Rollins jumped on stage and took the microphone for a song. A few days later he was called back to New York for an audition. H ie next six years Rollins spent riding in vans, sleep­ ing in the back of tracks and getting mauled on stage. Fronting Black Flag ended in 1986. He form ed the Rollins Band a year later. The band has m ade eight S k i S i i R E S I D E N C Y St a t e P r ess IN F O R M A T IO N S E S S IO N Crosswords Every Wed. & Thurs. 2-2:30 p.m. Student Services Amphitheater They a re n't harsh . w ords. They're just across-words. The S tate Press is n o w h irin g q u a lifie d stu d e nts to w o rk days and n ig h ts in th e State Press p ro d u c tio n d e p a rtm e n t. Q uarkXpress experience is re q u ire d and m u st be fa m ilia r w ith M acin to sh s o ftw a re . L A R G E 1 6 " P IZ Z A T I < -y o o l- IT E M ■ M E D IU M 1 2 ' P IZ Z A i 1 2 - r r iM / |PICK-UP QRj>ELIVERY YO U ’R E a P H IL O SO P H E R . M E , WRONG? I'M ALWAYS RIGHT. TH E ONLV 71M F l WAS WRONG WAS W H E N 1 THOUGHT ( WAS W RONG, B U T EVEN T H E N t W AS R IG H T // G EFFEKL ...Q I t H T H E ix C t'P tlo M S A N A V E R A G E UNCONTROLLED , of FINALLY X HAVE THE ■ H f ì ì ì c t T O jH P o s F M Y 8 o o u _V FUWCt io N £ WHEN WVStCflLLM TOUCHED, TH E RANDOM SATflWtC RITU A L?, AlJD who T could fo r g et S A O ß T lC jv iß HuSo. PE«VEfi H U rto R ONTO T H E REST o p '^ S O C » E T y . . t h e WA? HELPING T H E LAM J e t| Tonight 8 pm N O V A : IN S E A R C H ’O F HUMANIORIGINS a , , m , :'v ASU a n th ro p o lo g is t Dr. D onald C. J o h a n so n d e m o n s t r a t e s h o w o u r a n c e s t o r s m a y h a v e liv e d t w o m illio n y e a r s a g o ! m m KAET A rizo n a S r v ìe U niv ersity C l a s s if ie d s j Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The Stale Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation erfan advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. Mara Trivia... If you could cut out the United States, its center of gravity would be at Friend, Nebraska. A ^ R T M g g S _ 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd A studios. $50 off move-in w/ad. 966-8597. H O M ESFO R RENT HO M ESFO R RENT HO M ESFOR RENT H O M ESFO R RENT 15TH & COLLEGE studio $400/mo ; lbd lba 1434 S. College $395/mo.; 3bd 2ba home at Point S. Mtn. $l,200/mo. Cali 894-0288 SMALL DETACHED guest stu­ dio for rent. Use of pool, yard, A laundry room. 15 min. from ASU $310/mp. Call 2249870 fix' appointment. UNFURN. 3BD, lba. evap + re­ frig. 1200 sq ft. $800. 3239 N. 7QthSt., Scons. 945-3211. WALK TO ASU. 4bd, 2ba. $ 1000/mo. Sbd, 2ba. $925/mo. 3bd, 2ba, $900/mo. lbd, lba, $375/mo. lbd, lb a condò with w/d, $425/mo. 3bd, lba, $650/mo. 2bd, lba, $380/mo. Call 894-0288. 3 BD; $995; 4 bd, $1050; 4bd, $1200; all ha ve: pool, w/d, diswasher, ac, etc. 4371048. Near ASU APARTMENTS C la ss M ods W O RK1 APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 2BR, 2BA weight room, pool, spa, v-ball, close to ASU. Avail, now! $590/mo. 8601274 HAYDEN @ THOMAS- Scot­ tsdale, 2bd, 2ba, + den + dine rm + balcony. Cvd pkg; pool, tennis, spa. $715.991-5565. • CONDO - 2bd/2ba, w/d, pool, etc. Papago 11 $750 - Commons ^on Lemon $650 - 464-2756 or 1-800-977-0803 HAYDEN SQUARE condo2bdr, 2ba, great location, $1100/mo + dep, 966-8729, on MORE APARTMENTS fizduMj fpedoU LUXURY APARTMENT FEATURES: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Free hot water Mini blinds Vertical blinds with valances ♦ Large exercise room Brass ceiling fans ♦ 3 pools, 2 spas ♦ Barbecue areas European cabinetry ♦ Covered parking Walk-in closets available Private balcony/patio ♦ Laundry facilities ♦ Security alarm systems available QUAD RANGLES VILLAGE APARTMENTS 1255 E. University Drive Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-8118 LARGE 2 bedroom apartment. TV, cable, pool, laundry. Walk to ASU. Very quiet. 966-4797. RURAL A Apache. Cortez Palms. Studios, furn. $395. Call Remax 100. Rose 8200500. APARTMENTS TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT S.E. Comer of University & Rural If you, earn less th a n $ 20,000* per s ta r , voti m ay tjualilv in ¿»et a mo n t Ills rental disc mini ! ( all Now ! State Press Classifieds On the Webdaily - in html! http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ Classified%20Advertising/ Classifieds.html RENTAL SHARING TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HERMOSA PL 2bd, 2ba, close to ASU, pool, all appi., a/c, w/d, summer lease poss, $649. Also duplex $575.966-0987 LARGE 3 bdrm, 2 ba. townhouse. University & Roosevelt area. $875/mo. Shah 820333Ì WUSA ow/agt. PAP AGO PARK II- 2bd/ 2ba, lux condo, w/d, fans, 2 pools, 2 jacuzzis, 1 mi to ASU. $750/mo. Harris Properties 8290902 SPACIOUS 3BR, 3ba, pvt pa­ tio, comm. pool, appl & w/d incL Near ASU, $l,095/m o. Avail. 6/20. 451-4609. SPRINGTREE CONDO- Lg. 2 master bdr, 2ba, w/d, refrig & all appl. Great location - 2035 S. Elm, #144 (McCIintock/ Broadway), Tempe. Exlnt con­ dition. Avail July 1. $650/mo. 1-year lease. 929-0883. TEMPE/ASU BUY for $0 down! Take over payments, FHA assum., 2bd/2ba at 151 E. Broadway (near Mill). Nice unit w/ lots of closet space, cov'd parking, pool, lg pyCpatiQ. Must qualify @ $583/mo. & be owner occupied. '96 Mtg. Int. deduction was $5,385. Call Sam for more info at 714-9741010 or 714-729-5601 RENTAL SHARING OWN ROOM- w/d, dishwasher, close to campus, clean, pool, spa. $250 Lve msg 966-4580. WANTED TWO fem ale stud­ ents to share 3 br house, bik­ ing distance to campus, $300 + 1/3 util. Must have references, no pets 784-2915 FURNITURE TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE 2BD, 2B A condo at Papago II. Vaulted ceilings, w/d, $325 +util.+dep. 894-6977. ASU/TEMPE $0 down! Take over payments, FHA dssum., 2bd/2ba at 151 E. Broadway (near Mill). Nice unit w/ lots of closet space, cov’d parking, pool, lg pvt patio. Must quali­ fy @ $583/mo. & be owner oc­ cupied. '96 Mtg. Int. deduction was $5,385. Call Sam for more info at 714-974-1010 or 714729-5601 COLLEGE & Southern-1 bd in 3bd house, $235/mo 4; 1/3 util. W/d, 2 car garage, fire­ place. 894-9623». Lve mssge. PAPAGO PARK, Questa Vida, & others! 2 & 3 bdrms. Own for less than rent. Greg, Realty Executives. 966-0016. RO O M S FOR RENT LARGE PRIVATE bd & ba. n/s, n/d, Call Sandra 969-9244 or Ron 899-8800 SHARE DUPLEX, own room/ bath, fm. faculty/staff pref, JuneOct. $300/mo. 961-0580. OWN ROOM in spacious con­ temporary home, quiet, clean, student's house, all amen., w/d, turn, or unfurn., near Scotts. Greenbelt, 10 min from ASU, $235 + 1/4 util. Jay 990-1941 HOMES FOR SALE _______ WELL-MAINTAINED HOME in Bradley Estates. Great neigh­ borhood near ASU. 3bd. Pool. Fireplace. Lots of citrus. $161,000. Cali Hohokam Re­ alty 585-4735. REAL ESTATE GOV T FORECLOSED homes from pennies on $1... Delin­ quent tax, repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll free (1) 800-2189000 Ext. H -1676. for current listings. MUST SELL furniture!! Washed wood bedroom set- qiieensize bed w/ matching end tables & dresser. Kitchen set-black table w/ m atching chairs. Almond leather couches. P ictu re s,: lamps, ceiling fan. Prices are ne­ gotiable!! Call Tina 491-1761 TRANSPORTATION DRIVER NEEDED to share ride to Oregon ASAP with 79-yrold man. 926-9617 AUTOMOBILES SEIZED CARS from $175. Pdrsches, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD’s. Your area. Toll free 1800-218-9000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. ACTIVE QUAD seeks personal aid for eve/wknd shifts. No exp. nec./will Train! If you seek rewarding work w/ good pay, call Tom 949-7241 lv msg ART & Framing shop in N. Scotts. is now accepting appli- HELP WANTEDGENERAL ASST WEBMASTER, 20hr/wk. Good comm & phone skills. Solaris 2,5.1, W95/NT4, Mac, HTML, prgrming exp in Perl, tech, writing expertise. Fax re­ sume & cover to 965-9423. MERRILL LYNCH Assist. Fi­ nancial Consultant. Avail immed. Scotts. Seeking salesoriented person, extremely selfmotivated; Call Jason 6078740. BE IN A MOVIE OFFICE ASSIST, for artist w/children. Errands, light housecleaning, cooking, p / t 838-5829. Ask for Niki. Dance & gym bckgrnd pref. Ages 13.-30. Call Mid-Town Inc. Ask for Alan. 277-6962 DJ ASSISTANT. Know 50s90s music, own car, Saturday nights. 854-0433 FULL TIME counter help, 9 to 5. Apply in person at 903 S. Rund Rd. Mail Boxes Etc. HOUSEHOLD PACKERS, sum­ mer work, packing co. looking for FT & PT, exp pref, will train. Good pay. 254-2150. MATTRESS, QUEEN size, dou­ ble pillow top/ box spring, 2 wks old - pd $1100, sacrifice $275.254-0189. You can VIEW and SEARCH the State Press Classifieds on the Internet! http://news. Make yo u r advertising $$$$ w ork harder! Put it in the HELP WANTEDGENERAL Classifieds! HELP WANTEDGENERAL S H Q R T O N D vpsa.asu. edu/ C A S H ? ORDER ENTRY Ft no out di­ aling. Need immediately for Scottsdale publisher. Call Joe at 991-9080 ext 517 P/T CS REPS United Blood Services, a non­ profit organization, is hiring for all shifts including wknd. $6.87/hr plus shift differential for, evening hours. Good cu s­ tomer service skills & pleasant phone voice preferred. Call 4319500; Tempe location. Em­ ployee drug testing required. EOE/M/F/D/V. INTERNSHIP A ssistan t to Network Administrator. D uties include troubleshoot­ ing W indows 95, print servers and m aintain­ ing a Novell network. G reat experience a t a w ell recognised com­ pany. Unpaid position. 10 to 15 hours per week. Fax resum es to Todd Dekkinga a t 4 6 8 -8 5 8 8 . Í Sons/ sur First Three Donations A t e y o t í l á ^ k i n g f q * a c a re e r t f t a t w i l l fin a ritia lly T e w a rd fn g a n d lir r r fte d $1000 Cash Drawing in |une i 40Testaiaants | | M m tomj# ff \ \ Y Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 • Haven't been here in 90 days? Return and receive 110 on vour next donation. o n frè y w th a d M a can a c h ie e f? à f o n a r e , er« h a v e RMTE WANTED to share 3bd/2ba house 44th St./ Ind, Sch. 10 min to ASU; $325/mo, + utl + dep. M ature, h/s 8404284, tfce. • $5 Bonus for all second donations of the week " I 1334 E. Broadway, Suite 102 • Tempe 894-2250 iimJÊÊÊm § § mÈSm C G N T E O N Starting Salaries: ✓ HELP WANTEDGENERAL • Merit Aw«fint V|Tip» Insurance • Flexible|a ii|# ro g ia m |^ &Dentai •Vacation^lìfleave i l f iirdSt,Smw2 \ (602)252-582 Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic Îneeded to donate eggs anony­ mously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. We are now hiring friendly ener Demonstration People Great hours for the college student Friday, Saturday and Sunday Starting wage $7.00 For m ore inform ation call 602-860-4792 2 day your ad im p p e M S In p rin t fai # lR g ^ W ifc ¡ I a b o p u t o n to th e D ig ita l S tate fte s s . CUMWHO I { M «i>j fik I I ]F o rv a r« i Nim» | ft % £ .Ä » ■ ■***■■: « I Help W tuated-Gmrral $ U P E K H O im 2 0 -2 S l» « B i» rv M k S £ A R g s_ m VOICE & PIANO Lessons given by classically trained graduate student. Tempe 8291393 JO B~ OPPORTUNITIES WAIT STAFF: immediate open­ ings for lunch & dinner shifts. Cashier also needed. $6/hr. Sakana Sushi Bar & Teppan 5061 E. Elliot 598-0506 TUTORS TUTORS ^ SUMMER INTERNSHIP in fi­ nancial district @ PaineWebber in Phx. M otivation required. 957-5173. SERVER. GOOD tips. Host/ess, $8/hr, Flex xched. Apply 9301 E. Shea #126. 860-2960 NANNY FOR 2-yr-old & 2-moold, 18-24 hrs/wk. Must love children & have lots of energy. Call 224-9383, Now hiring p/t delivery drivers & cooks. Apply in person: 855 S. Rural Rd. INTERNSHIPS XSlAs u te ra ry M agazine C all 965-1243 fo r m ore In fo TUTORS TUTORS ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE. Over 200 Brews Phattest subs in Tem pe N E C o rn e rA p a c h e T e rra c e 968-7880! HELP WANTEDGENERAL W e offer tutorial for t h e follow ing su m m e r classes: SCUBA Instruction learn To SCUfM ive M .t.l. lirtfKtif ALL EQ laelaMl Matt I w FrUatt! Wn Iih I dittai! Call Now!! Faa triytl 898-8873 Successfully helping students since 1980. A lg e b r a IVI A T 106, F in it e IV«A T 119 IVI a t h IVI A T 2 1 0 , S t a t is t ic s QBA 2 2 1 , PSY 2 3 0 Physics PHY PHY B usiness FIN • Flexible Hours • $7+ per hour • Call 24 hrs. 9 2 7-0 6 78 Voice Mail for Details ricstnmn NIGHT AUDIT- FT Reliable, exc. customer service, needing little supervision, front desk, phones, light accounting. Hrs 11p-7a, days vary BELLPERSO N-FT Guest Service oriented. Must have exc. driving skills and record. PM Hrs vary. Fiesta Inn Jobiine: 804-5285 Apply in person M-F»9a-4p 2100 S. Priest, Tempe, EOE 2 miles from ASU campus 111, IVI A T 2 7 0 112 300 Summer school moves fast — don’t hesitate in getting our help! • CALL: I EASY JOB 117 C a lc u lu s M A T R IX E D U C A T IO N C E N T E R Students Wanted For An IVI A T C o r n e r s to n e M a ll " S IM O N " 9 6 8 -4 6 6 8 ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST State Press Classifieds by Frances Drake Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 Tuesday, June 10, 1997 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) A friend who has problems could interfere with your time. Talks related to work go well. Adopt a level-headed approach when you deal with a family concern in the evening. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) If you’re uneasy about some­ thing between you and a close tie, then talk about it. Others are cooperative and responsive to what you have to say. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Hard work remains your best route to financial gain. An ethi­ cal question arises in connec­ tion with work. Take tim e to think through a financial mat­ ter. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Be practical and down to earth w here business interests are concerned Be thorough; don’t o v erlo o k im p o rtan t d etails. You enjoy d ia lo g u e w ith a close tie. LEO (July-23 to Aug. 22) You take steps to bolster your long-range financial security. T he evening fin d s you in a pleasu re-seek in g m ood. Go easy on the use of credit VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) D ealin g s w ith a g e n ts and advisers are favored. You find enjoym ent through a cultural interest. Some fam ily matters weigh on you, but good advice is available. LIBRA (Sept 23 to O ct 22) You’re on top o f your game, al though you could find a busi­ ness m eeting a bit awkward. Y ou’re undecided about a mat­ ter concerning a child. SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nw. 21) Work output could be erratic. A get-together with friends lifts your spirits. Be more careful with your m oney; don’t buy items you don’t need. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) O thers don’t agree with you about money matters. A private talk, how ever, bodes well for your financial inter­ ests. Avoid personal extrava­ gance. C A PR IC O R N (D ec, 22 to Jan. 19) You have a knack for expressing yourself, but a busi­ ness negotiation could break down. Be attentive to a family m em ber who is n ot feelin g Well. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) C om pany from o u t o f tow n would be a strain. Your judg­ ment about domestic interests and family concerns is sound. Avoid spending too much on pleasurable pursuits. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Your mind is better suited for creative pursuits than business. W here w ork is c o n c e rn e d , there could be a tendency to let things slide. Be sensitive -to a co-worker’s feelings. YOU BO R N TO D A Y are good at creating illusions and hiding behind masks. You are not maliciously dishonest, but you do have a hard time facing facts. You spend a good deal of time in a state o f denial. You find life easier once you learn how to face your fears. Your charm and charisma would be allies to you should you decide for a career in show business, w hich appeals to you. Y our personal relationships stabilize later in life. 6 1 9 9 7 King Features Syndicate Inc. ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 SlHTMTIGr C lassified A d O rder Form Please be sure to check your ad. M&ke sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility o f the State Press shall not exceed the cost o f the ad and credit may be given fo r the firs t insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify fo r make­ goods. No refunds w ill be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credft wiH be hefo on account fo r future advertising. The $tate Press publishes weekly during the summer. R A T Private Party 1-4 issues - $L52 per line, per day 5-9 issues - $1.40 per line, per day E CommetOfll 1-4 issues - $1.82 per line, per day 5-9 issues - $1.70 per Hne, per day 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines, per day. S WIMÎÊKIÊÈMKtÈtBËÊÊUÈÊHÊHÊlÉiÊÉÉi, □ QB J V ÛB* 1 1 Bank Cam Humo» 096 066 010 020 061 064 061 077 064 066 prlcepwOay Name on Coni 1! 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RETRO 7 5 $ W .W .D . - 7 0 s Sc 8 0 s M U S I C - $ 2 — A N Y D R IN K Midnight 'TIL M ID N IG H T TH E W EEKEND PLACE T O D A N C E ! O VER 5 ,0 0 0 P U LS A TIN G L IG H T S , IL L U M IN A T E D D A N C E F L O O R & "TH U ND ER " S O U N D SYSTEM ... P U M P IN G O U T TH E BEST D A N C E M U S IC IN TEMPE! U N IV E R S IT Y