World/Nation A f t e r s h o c k s in C h ile fo r c e T H O U S A N D S IN T O T H E STR EETS Pag e 3 A R I Z O N A S TATE U N I V E R S I T Y ©Copyright, State Press, 1997 Tempe, Arizona ' An Independent M orning Daily Voi. 82 No. 37 Thursday, O ctober 16,1997 400 attend m em orial fo r a ccid en t v ic tim Since then, the Chinese Student and Scholar Friendship Association has raised N early 400 p eople tu rn ed out more than $18,000 from hundreds o f Monday afternoon in the MU to honor donors for Aiqing’s mother and brother, their fellow student, peer and fallen who accumulated $9,000 in debt to send him to Arizona. friend Jiang Aiqing. “The most tragic event that could hap­ Speaker after speaker told teary-eyed mourners of his short life and even shorter pen to a woman is to lose her husband at time as an electrical engineering .doctoral middle age and her son during her elder ages,” Zhang said, pointing out that student at ASU. “There is no greater blow to the heart A iqing’s father died when he was 8 and the spirit than the loss of a loved one,” years old. “I simply cannot believe such ASU President Lattie Coor said, standing a genius student is gone. Although uni­ versity life had a lo t of On a stage crammed with brilliantly colored flower stresses, he never help people.” arrangements and a pic­ ¿T He was a Z hang said A iqing ture of Aiqing. “He was newcomer, but organized a program to aid a newcomer, but thanks 0Ê0CS to you, not a fellow students and often to you, not a stranger.” d o n ated blood w ith o u t Yong-Hang Zhang, an stranger. expecting com pensation associate p ro fessor in He also used to work electrical engineering, President jobs to help pay said he not only remem­ bers Aiqing’s scholastic jyta expenses. -Ihli"!' “He was an outstand­ ab ilitie s, but also his smile. ing student who offered “I simply cannot forget the smile he the best promise o f a future,” said Coor, carried with him everyday,” said Zhang, who stood in front of three flags repre­ who personally recruited Aiqing while’ senting the lands Aiqing had just begun Aiqing was pursuing a masters degree to discover. “Let us draw strength from at Tsing Hua University in China. “He this tragic moment.” ♦• had such great dreams o f becoming a scientist. Oct. 6, 1997 was one o f the Further donations can be made by check payable to “CSSFA at ASU", darkest days of my life.” Aiqing was killed OcL 6 when the bike MEMO/FOR “Aiqing”, and mail to : he was riding collided with a FLASH bus Jiang Memorial Fund, ASU Foundation, P.O. Box 875005, Tempe, AZ 85287-5005 along Orange Street. By Brian A nderson S tate P ress R.U. McGovwn/8tat*Pm s A t a m em orial se rv ice held W ednesday in th e M em orial U nion, Y ating La i, a graduate student In b u sin e ss, m ourns the lo s s o f Jia n g A iq in g , an A S U stud ent killed O ct. 6 In an a ccid e n t in volvin g a F L A S H b u s . W hite rib b o n s w ere w orn b y th p èë Who attended. O ffic ia ls m u ll over n e w B oard o f R eg en ts a p p o in te e s B y T ara T eichgraeber State P ress As Gov. Jane Hull prepares to appoint two new members to the Arizona Board of Regents, ASU officials have high hopes the University will be better represented on the board. The 8-year terms of Regents Art Chapa and Eddie Basha will end in December. Gov. Hull is expected to fill the resulting vacancies by mid-November, said Jaime Molera, executive assistant to the governor on education issues. The state Senate must approve all appointees. ABOR, the governing body for Arizona’s three universi­ ties, advises and audits collegiate procedures while plan­ ning for the future. “The way the system is set up (by law), it is a statewide governing body,” said Tony S eese-B ieda, ABOR spokesman. There has been an attempt to strike a geographical bal­ ance of representation on the board, he said. “How that translates into regent selection is another mat­ ter,” Seese-Bieda said. He added that officials in each region look out for their own interest by seeking representation on the board from their comer of the state. There are currently two full-time regents who will remain on the nine-member board that represent Maricopa C o u n ty —: form er Tempe M ayor Rudy Campbell and Valley businessman Don Ulrich. “Key for a lot o f ASU alumni is that the appointee has to be an alum,” said Susan Bitter-Smith, former chair of the T urn to Appointees, page 2. O ne year later, promised outdoor cafes no closer to construction B y C hris P assamano State P ress Last October, officials annouced that new outdoor cafes would be completed by this October. One year later, not a single unit has been constructed. A new plan calls some of the cafes to be built by next October. “This is about a 4-year project that right now is no further than it was a year ago,” said Floyd Land, director o f the Memorial Union. The original goal was to have three or four different structures on campus this semester, Land told the State Press in an interview last October. Now the hope is to build two new struc­ tures and renovate an existing one to be operational next October. The plan is to eventually have eight total, but there’s a lot of work left to do. “We were supposed to have the designs for this project on Oct. IS,” Land said. “But the designs still haven’t come in yet.” The original designs came in last May, but die projected co6t was $1.2 million — well above the $750,000 allocated for the project Land said he expects the designs for the new structures and renovations to be made sometime next week. Michael Underhill, the project’s archi­ tect, said he would have the designs ready to present to the provosts next Wednesday within the allotted price range. One of the reasons for the project’s cost is the great care going into the cafes’ plan­ ning, Underhill said. “The structures will be relatively small, only about 300 to 350 square feet,” Land said. “But in order to add to the campus community (feeling), they will have outdoor seating, covered seating, lighting and possi­ bly misting.” The w ay the structures will be built won’t be typical, Underhill said. “These will be part of the campus infras­ tructure,” he said. “This is why such great care is being taken with this. We are build­ ing small, beautiful buildings with shade structures that are about 100 feet long and 20 feet wide, with seating underneath it. “We will also replace the trees that are removed and will be adding new ones — this way students can sit in the sun or the shade. We are trying to make this like a European sidewalk cafe. We looked for locations that were convenient, familiar places, too.” w Land said officials are hoping that ven- •• ® T urn to C afes, pace 2. Page 2 S tate P ress Thursday, October 16,1997 A p p oin tees r a1'1«................... T oday C ontinued p.m. Grand prize is a trip to Las Vegas. • C areer S erv ice s — "B ehavioral Interviewing” workshop will be held 3 p.m. in Room 203 o f the MU. ■ ■Financial Management Association — General meeting will be held 5 p.m. m the C ocnino room of the MU. Frank Kshter from Advantage Trading Group before publication Only one entry per will be the guest speaker. ® I National Organization for W anm — organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the Monthly meeting featuringguest speaker club or organization, a description of the teresa Grates of My Sister’s Place domes* event, date, time and tte nddrecs of the rice violence shelter will be held 7 p.m. in location. AS requests are sut^ect to editing the Nohave Room of thle MU. far content, space and clarity. Incomplete or • C am pus C rusade fo r C h rist — illegible entries will be discarded. W eekly m eeting w ill b ^ ? :3 0 p.m» in I^R ^IP oday S e c & ^ w p ib iiy calendar PSH150. Guest speaker is Rick Efird. 1 P h oen ix U nion D ev ils — G eneral community. Requests are accepted on a meeting will be held 4 p jn in the Pima first-com e, first-served basis and are Room o f the MU. • TJBLE.M. — General meeting will be - printed as space g ^ itB llS held 5:40 p.m. in the Havasupai Room of • C o u n s e lo r T r a in in g C e n te r Counseling for ASU students, friends the MU. and family is provided by graduate sta- • Justice Studies Academic Student Union dents in Payne Hal 1, room 402. For (JSASU) — Nominations and elections o r to se t up an meeting will be held 4:40 p.m. in SS 215. appointment, call 965-5067. Igjsociety o f H isp an ic P ro fessio n a l • Baptist Student Union — Free lunch, Engineers (SHPE) — Genera! meeting followed hy Short devotion will be held will be held 4:30 p.m. in COB 251. West uooa at the BSU center on 1322 $ Mill, C cn m C y ^ iftap o will be discussed. :• ResidenreHaU Association — General new 13th and MiiL 1B • C h ris tia n S tu d e n ts Fellow ship — eoimcilimeeting will be held ¡j:30p.m in die Bible study on God’s unconditional love jl MU. Check monitors for room assignment > : will be' held 12:40 p.m. in the Pima Room l I * ASU men’s soccer — ASU vs N a| | P 7 p.m. Friday; ASU vs. Embry Riddle, 2 of die MU. '^¡i; • Phi Beta Lam bda — General meeting p.m. Saturday. Both m ah^tekate at the will beheld 6:30 p.m. in BAC 213. ASU Bandfields, Collegiate National Association o f the • Snowdevils —ASU ski qpd snowboard Deaf— Panel discussion will be held 6 p m cM> weekly meeting will be held 6 p i M t SB (he.MIXCheck monkors for room number. | Cluck-U on Eighth Street and Rural Road. • D elta stjpttiii P i — The' piety® Class' • ASASU Clothesline Project — Help .will be holding a raffle on the corner.of battle domestic vioPalm Walk and Tyler Mall. 8 ajn . to 2 lence 5 p.m.-7p.m.mMahzanj!ta-I|all. • r Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement o f the Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be from page !.• ASU Alumni Association. She added that the association has forwarded to the gover­ nor’s office a list of recommended names for appointees, including her own. ASU President Coor said he also would like to see appointees with ties to Maricopa County admitted to die board. “Every regent should be supportive of all three universities, but familiarity with this region and the institution is helpful (to ASU),” Coor said. He added that he has made it a point not to recom m end any appointees. ABOR P resident Rudy C am pbell expressed his concerns for a regent willing to work long hours. “We want people dedicated to the time it takes to be ar regent,” Campbell said. “It would also help if they attended an Arizona university.” | Molera said an ideal candidate would be willing to commit to long hours and lack “political baggage.” “The governor is looking for someone to add to the stature of the regents,” Molera said. “ She is taking a very hands-on approach (to the selection process).” • Gov. Hull will meet with Campbell and ABOR president-elect Judy Gignac next week to discuss appointees. Cafes C ontinued from page 1. dors who first bid on the structures will be back to bid next year. T hose vendors included Schlotzky’s, Jazz Zen, an Asian food chain as well as Coffee Plantation, Land said. T here are also plans to eventually replace the Coffee Plantation kiosks new permanent ones, Underhill said. The cafes will be located at the Farmer Education building and Cady and Tyler malls, between Language and Literature and Social Sciences. The building being reno­ vated is located just south of A-Wing of Physical sciences. If plans go through this week, Land and Underhill said they expect students to be enjoying the cafes this time next year. 4I4B4ZINC E V I RV T H U R S D A Y % Ask this student about P u b lic D is p la y s TUX® TAILS o f A ffe c tio n * ASU’S GREEK HEADQUARTERS Arizona’s Largest Selection of Designer Formalwear & Accessories IN HOUSE FITTINGS AVAILABLE We Can Accommodate Last Minute Orders 17 ARIZONA LOCATIONS TUX & TAILS WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD We Accept All Competitors’ Coupons & Specials TEM PE 1074 E. BASELINE ROAD 838-3193 s H ere’s your chance to see a public display that cries out against relationship violence. Come create a T-Shirt and help break the silence. The Clothesline Project of ASU sponsored by A S A S U , Student A dvocacy and A ssistance, and the C enter A gainst Sexual A buse M, W, F 10am-2pm, Hayden Lawn T 5 pm-7pm, SRC Lobby Th 5pm-7pm, Manzanita Hall fo r more info calf Patricia Pozo 9 6 5 - 3 161 _____ W orld/N ation______ STATE Press _____________ _______________ ________________ _______ Page 3 Thursday, October 16,1997 Aftershocks keep thousands o n Chile streets B y E d u a r p o G allardo A sso cia ted P ress Las Ultimas Noticias/AP Photo R e sid e n ts o f L a C h im b s , C h ile , s it o n th e ir b e d s in th e stre e t o n W ed n esd a y a fte r th e ir hom e w as d e s tro y e d th e R igh t before b y an ea rth q u ak e th at k ille d at le a st e ig h t p e o p le a n d le ft m ore th a n 100 Injured. SANTIAGO, Chile — Thousands of people in north­ ern Chile sought temporary shelter Wednesday, afraid to return to their homes after a 6.8-magnitude earth­ quake killed eight people and injured about 100. The quake on Tuesday night destroyed or damaged about 1,000 houses, most of them made of adobe. But even residents whose homes werfc spared were unwill­ ing to return to them with aftershocks still rippling through the region. Worst hit was Punitaqui, a town 250 miles north of Santiago, where Jaime Munoz, his wife Eliana and their three boys, ages 2, 16 and 17, died when the walls of their adobe home collapsed. A neighbor, Jaime Ayala, told Radio Cooperativa of Santiago that he reached that family’s home in the dark shortly after the quake. “But it was too late,” he said. “All I found was the bodies, including the lady holding the baby in her arms.” Many other houses in Punitaqui, almost all of which are made of clay and straw, were so badly damaged they will have to be demolished. The quake, which struck about 10 p.m., was felt along a 750-mile north-south stretch of Chile’s narrow territory, including this capital city of 5 million people. In addition to the family that was killed, one woman died in Ovalle, another died in Coquimbo and a man died in Punitaqui. Reports said the quake also was felt in a large area in Argentina, across the Andes mountains from Chile, but no casualties or damage were reported. The quake was centered near Illapel, 190 miles north of Santiago, and had its ep icenter 20 m iles under­ ground, the Seismological Office of the University of Chile said. Farrakhan to m arry 10,000 couples in W ashington in year 2000 firmly at the center of our marriages and our family,” Farrakhan said. WASHINGTON — N&tion of Islam “1 hope to marry 10,000 new couples on leader Louis Farrakhan inteflds to pfeSidfe iaf- that day sd that we may go into the new the weddings of 10,000 couples in a mass century and new millennium not black multiracial ceremony on the National Mall male, black female but as a wholesome in the year 2000 to create “a Wholesome family with God. at the center.” Farrakhan said he expected most of the family with God at the center.” F arrakhan said in an interview men who attended the Million Man March Wednesday that he also plans to renew the to return “with their wives or their girl­ wedding vows of thousands of other cou­ friends” for the ceremony. ples at the ceremony. His announcement This event, however, will be open to all comes a day before the second anniversary ethnic groups. “It won’t just be our call to blacks but it of the Million Man March in Washington. ' “God willing, 1 intend to remarry every will be our call to Hispanics, to the Arabs, brother and sister that is married to put God to the Asians and to the white community to By P aul S hepard A ssociated P ress join those millions of black men that we go into/jhe millennium as a wholesome fami­ ly,” he said. .The Million Man March drew hundreds of thousands of black men to the Mail on Oct. 16, 1995, for a day of reconciliation and speeches. Farrakhan said the Million Man March was much m ore than “a one-day feel good” for many in the audience. He cited a national reduction in crime and growth of black male participation in the 1996 presidential election. Farrakhan said he didn’t want those par­ ticipating in the year 2000 ceremony to believe they would be married or remarried Dust, food shortages hamper hurricane recovery have no refrigeration. “Wè can’t even clean up here because we don’t have ACAPULCO, Mexico — Drying mud turned Acapulco enough water,” said Sergio Alonso, 28, before whipping up into a choking dustbowl Wednesday, forcing thousands of a few hundred pounds of tortillas— down from the usual residents to wear face masks or bandannas as they scram­ 2.000 — in his dirty shop. t bled to find food and clean water amid shortages of tor­ Seeking to ease shortages, the government food subsidy tillas, milk and other basic foods. program Conasupo said Wednesday it had sent 46,800 gât­ The stench of sewage and rotting garbage wafted above ions of drinking water and enough powdered milk to make , Acapulco’s mud-caked street market, where merchants 80.000 gallons. rushed to reopen soiled shops even before sanitation crews Despite those efforts, desperate residents dipped buckets could haul tons of storm debris away. into a manhole Wednesday to capture water leaking from “I’m worried about this. It’s not the usual dust. It’s from ruptured water pipes. “It’s safe. They say the health depart­ the mountains, with the dead animals in it,” said taxi driver ment put chlorine in there today,” said Fulgencio Varela, 29. Jose Solis , Shoving matches have erupted, in some shelters between Hurricane Pauline triggered floods and mudslides that people jostling few handouts; of food and water. In others, roared into downtown Acapulco last week, killing at least lines have formed almost spontaneously, with some resi­ 150 people here. As the mud dried Wednesday under a dents not even sure what they were waiting for. blazing sun, a stifling haze rose over western Acapulco “I ran up the hill yesterday because someone said they Bay. The hurricane swept through Guerrero and Oaxaca were giving out water,” said Josefina Bautista, a maid tem­ states Oct. 8-9, claiming more than 230 lives in all and porarily jobless because she cannot clean her employer’s leaving at least 50,000 homeless. In Acapulco, the flood-damaged market, merchants home without water. “There was nothing.” Elsew here on M exico’s hurricane-stricken coast, offered piles of limp fish, fruit, vegetables and peppers, set beside mounds of garbage and leaking sewers. Flores Daniel, President Ernesto Zedillo went out for his second straight 17, piled dozens of mud-soaked sneakers and shoes atop a day of disaster inspection amid pledges to rebuild housing and fight any disease outbreaks. He traveled to Huatulco, flimsy table for sale. “Five pesos! Five pesos!” he yelled. Pauline crippled Acapulco’s city water and power sys­ another stricken Pacific resort, to see damage there and tem, forcing dozens of businesses to close. State officials elsewhere in the surrounding state of Oaxaca. In Acapulco, epidemiologists were watching for cases of say tortilla factories, which provide an essential staple for the poor, have shut down for lack of clean water to mix cholera, salmonella, dengue and diarrhea, hoping that out­ with corn meal. Milk supplies are down because stores breaks would not hit shelters housing thousands of homeless. as members of the Nation of Islam. “No one can say they are being remar­ ried u n d er Islam or u n d er Ju d aism ,” Farrakhan said. “Marriage is a universal act, and they just will be retaking their solemn vows.” Farrakhan said more than 100 cities will have local events surrounding the Day of Atonement. Farrakhan is also helping black female activists organize the M illion Woman March in Philadelphia on Oct. 25. South A frican ac tiv ist W innie M andela and R ep. M ax in e W aters, lead e r o f the Congressional Black Caucus, are among those expected to attend. ^ r- e”*.- '.- SMBP*- ■? SHM * B y J ames A nderson A ssociated P ress Marco Ugarta/AP Photo P eop le lin e u p to receive w ater In hurricane ravaged A cap u lco , M exico, T u esd a y. T h o u sa n d s o f p eop le affected b y the M oods o f H u rricane P au lin e w ere fo rce d to w ait in lon g lin e s fo r d rin k­ ing w ater, a s w ell a s food a d d clo th in g . O pinion State P ress Thursday, October 16,1997 P agi; e 4 ß O f i ç C t i o 4— _ _ e 19Q7Wortiiinr Pomi mi—«nCo.. U-C. EdBMtWf »>»■>■■ ■ ■ . « it o n a l E at >• E Politics aside, regents should be team players B ecause the Arizona Board o f R egents are supposed to rise above die com plexities and cor­ ruptions o f local party politics, members serve for 8 years — longer than U .S. Senators. N ew members had better be good picks. N ext month, new governor lane D ec Hull w ill select tw o appointees to replace regents Eddie Basha and Art Chapa, w hose terms expire in 1998. With pundits already hailing Hull as a true education governor (though she’s not had tim e to demonstrate that) odds seem gp b d tije two new ¡ regents w ill be selected wis&y. We’re hopeful they are chosen for their experience in the field and not because o f any political ties. Politics can’t help but play som e part in the appointments. H ull’s approved by the state tick o ff her conservative because she’ll Deed she doesn't need right ommendotion for the Id i n s t a l l h e r A lso , th e new gov friends and lackeys ^ ^ ^ fo r d ecision -m ak in g instead o f to their ow n h ea rts. W ith ou t n am ing n a m es, w e fea r Symington may left such a legacy in his numer­ ous appointm ents. T hese puppet-regents, now without a leader, could end up being lame ducks i f ^ l p l m ’ttak e their responsibilities seriously. A n o ther political mid possibly controversial tactic would he to appoint tiew;regents-who represented distinct geographic regions, those being ASU, UofA o r NAU turf. ABOR controls things like tuition-setting, dis­ ciplinary action fa r tenured professors and audit­ ing p ro cedures, ft m akes p o lic y arid charts a course fo r the future. f t is supposed to be a non-partisan, statewide governing board for the stale’s three universities. In reality, because its members are only human, th e board is both partisan and regional. Those who represent the turfs o f ASU or U ofA invari­ ably lean toward benefiting those institutions. “ E v ery re g e n t sh o u ld b e su p p o rtiv e o f all three universities, but fam iliarity with this region an d th e in stitu tio n is helpful (to A SU ),” said ASU President Lattie C oot. In the past, ABOR has been heavy with m em­ bers who m ay lean m ore toward UofA. It w ould b e n ice if one o r tw o o f the new picks had ties to ASU. U ltim a te ly , th o u g h , it w ould b e u n fa ir to select the new regents based on where they live. Hull should m ake use o f her educational back­ ground and appoint people who are dedicated to addressing the m any problem s o f the university system — to wit, people w ho .will p u t in long hours and b e w illing to read i earns o f boring d o cu m en ts, p e o p le w ho re ally w an t to m ake things better. Even if A SU doesn’t get exactly who it wants on tire board, officials should be satisfied i f the new appointees are committed to the job. s TAFF STATE PRESS z r a ' s £ -2 . e t è r e i $ è 3. EY A rcU îê ± £ y .t '( C \ ï l 5. 1/ : t S 4 tc ; Sim ple joys offset ugliness in w orld A t the bottom o f it all, the COTT w orld is beautiful. We do our BENNETT best to conceal Columnist th a t b e a u ty b y k illin g an d c h e a tin g ea ch o th e r, y e t it will not die. In spite o f our species’ stupidity, the sub­ lime nature o f life still slaps us upside the head. These moments o f insight convince us to continue getting up in the morning. East Friday, a flower reminded me that life could be profound. Amazing m om ents like that are rare in this life, and I do not like parting with them. So I give you*this column, this literary flow er to rem ind us all that life is holy. There are two symbols in this tale — the first is Ed Ranger, a senatorial hopeful for 1998. His role in this story begins last Friday : 2:20 p.m ., and the ASU Young D em ocrats aw ait E d R anger. T w enty p o litica l ju n k ie s in a co n fer­ ence room , salivating at the thought o f talking w ith a real politician. Mr. Ranger saunters into the room, teeth glistening and motorcycle helm et in hand. An impressive image, but then he makes a.tragic mistake. He opens his mouth. Mr. R anger speaks for 15 minutes and says abso­ lutely nothing. He does not define his campaign plat­ form or discuss the issues, but sets what could be a world record for consecutive sound bites. W hen asked a b o u t h is sp e c ific p la n s, h e b a b b le s ab o u t Jo h n M cCain’s (his opponent) age. I ask what he considers the m ost im portant cam ­ paign issue; he states that fax machines did not exist when John M cCain was first elected. (That is proba­ bly relevant w hen you have an extraordinarily small brain.) W hen som eone voices an opinion, any opin­ ion, he nods vacantly and says, “You are absolutely right.” It is disgusting. A hum an being turns into a political whore before o u r eyes, saying anything he P c a n to please us. E d R a n g e r sy m b o liz es e v e ry th in g w ro n g w ith America. His beliefs belong to the highest bidder. His only use for other hum an beings is to exploit them. W e are n o th in g m ore th an p o ten tial votes to him . There is som ething frighteningly wrong with a system that quantifies its citizens like that. The. perform ance disgusts me. I leave the meeting thinking that fetid human vermin like Ed Ranger con­ trol this country, I wonder if life is some metaphysical being’s idea o f a horribly funny joke, and I missed the punch line. Then I find a flower. In -lin e skating along O range M all, I d iscover a small pile o f bouquets — a memorial to Jiang Aiqing, who died in a bus accident last Monday. It touches me deeply. It is a m onum ent to Mr. Aiqing, and a tribute to the human spirit. The flowers symbolize love and com passion. They reveal that there truly are human connections in this lonely w orld. L ife can still be beautiful among hum an ugliness. Truth, you see, is not m ortal. T ruth perpetually blooms, like a flower, reminding us that life is am az­ ing. Truth appears when we least expect it and need it the m ost. The flow ers gave me a new perspective. There is something more im portant than E d Ranger or the system that spawned him. Truth is not found on Capitol Hill, b u t in human relationships. Love is the only thing that makes life bearable. This column, as I mentioned, is my flower to you. R e m e m b e r th a t lif e is b e a u tif u l a n d fle e tin g . A ppreciate the m om ents you are given, and always rem em ber that human stupidity cannot destroy beauty. O u r liv es are h o ly, and no w orm o f a p o liticia n , including Ed Ranger, can ever change that. Flowers grow best from fertilizer, after all. Scott B ennett is a sophom ore studying journalism and can be reached a t sbennett@ asu.edu. RAY STERN, Editor PERCY EDNALINO JR., Managing Editor srrP M frAf .i7.in JENNIFER NETHERBY............ CADONNA PEYTON . ......... MATT MORGAN..:.. ...... ... JODI BAFUNDO...... ............... PATSHANNAHAN...... ...... RANDY JONES................. ...... feDODEVEN.... .............. ...... .............Magazine Editor DEANNA DARR......... pa ry i REPORTERS: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Sharan K. Gill, Stacy Mann, Chris Passamano, Ginger Scott, Kara Shire, Genoa Slbold-Cohn, Tara Teichgraeber. SPORTS REPORTERS: Josh DeFamio, Lori Haro, Scott Lewis, Matt Paulson. COPY EDITORS: Christi Foist, Lorie Roberts. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Paul Besing, Jeremy Hein, Brad Lang, E ,# McGovern. COLUMNISTS: Brian Aiy, Scott Bennett, Ross Eide, Aislinn Fahy, J.E. Hardee, Brian Policoff, Mark Pollock, George D. Rose Sr., Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Joshua Solovskoy, Steve Stein, Matthias Walterscheidt, Angela Yeager. CARTOONISTS: Carrie L. Behrens, Todd Brenneman, Brian Fairrington, David Gould, Jonathan Inge PRODUCTION: Jeff Chua, Adrianna Garcia, Kai HaischRisley, Alyson Hurt, John Kestner, Eric Paulson, Wendy Luney, Sara Pike, Hub Zemke. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, David Goodwin, Jonathan Negretti, Jess Rankin, Shane Siren, Kathy Welsh, Robyn Wilson. CLA SSIFIED S: Kate Desio, Jeanette Ploium , Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: RAY STERN PERCY EDNALINO JR. MATT MORGAN JODI BAFUNDO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room IS, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions o f a general nature. The State P ress is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those o f the ASU administration, facul­ ty, staff or student body. St a t e P ress P h o n e N u m ber s Information........ ...... 965-7572 N ew sroom ................965-2292 M agazine..................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 C lassifieds................. 965-6735 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu, Opinion S tate P ress __________________________ ___ _________ _______ Thursday, October 16,1997 P age 5 B elief in self, changing standards are key to kicking diet craze I am n o t a HAD woman. I have TWITTY n e v e r trie d to be a w om an. I Columnist d o n ’t even w ant to. I do not claim to understand women, but I am trying to make sense o f one aspect o f wom anhood that makes absolutely no sense — the diet craze! Trends will com e and go, but eating diso rd ers are m ore than ju s t a trend; they plague our society to the point that they have become our society. Women are destro y in g th eir bodies and th eir emotional health for the sake o f a few po u n d s. W hat h av e w e b eco m e as a society, when we place so m uch em pha­ sis on physical appearance? Times have changed little from those days when Martin Luther King Jr. said, “...I have a dream that one day my chil­ dren will be judged, not by the color of their skin, but by the content o f their character.” We are still far from those d a y s . T o d ay , w e a re ju d g e d b y th e weight o f our bodies, not the weight o f our character! but no one has any. choice what genes I liv e in A riz o n a , n o t w ith in th e I don’t think I ’ve seen anything morethey receive at birth. It’s a done deal. I p ag es o f S e v e n te e n m ag az in e o r on sad than a person who glowed with per­ was supposed to be 6 feet 4 inches, 190 M elrose P lace. I have to eat to survive sonality and goodness, but hated to look pounds, and have a full head o f blond — w e a ll d o . E a tin g s h o u ld n ’t b e in the mirror. It is nauseating to realize hair forever. It d id n ’t happen. It will e m b a rra s s in g o r sh a m e fu l. W om en how cruel we can be to each other — never happen. Everyone is different and n eed to p u t m o re fa ith in th e ir ow n men and women. I write this for both. I we should stop pretending that what we opinions o f them selves and worry less think m ost would agree that eating dis­ see on TV and read in m agazines is the about im pressing others. M en need to orders affect m ore w om en than m en, m old. T here is no m old. T h ere is no s to p c o m p a rin g w o m en in th e re a l b u t th e re is to o m u ch p re s s u r e on sham e in being who we are. w orld to those who have been liposucwomen from men. Eating disorders are serious. It’s not tioned, tucked and stuffed, air-brushed O u r te le v is io n , m a g a z in e s a n d ju st a m atter o f food; it’s a m atter o f a n d b a s ic a lly b e e n s e r v ic e d m o re m o v ies are c lu tte re d w ith fa ces and hqw a person looks at him self or her­ tim es than my car! People need to stop bodies that have become “the standard.” self. This so-called standard will never ju d g in g by th e o u tw a rd a p p e a ra n c e W hy? W hat makes these people so wor­ change unless we change first. It’s good and finally start listening to the words thy o f an iconic stature in our society? to be healthy and take pride in appear­ o f M artin L uther K ing Jr., w hich are T h e y h a v e b e c o m e “ th e s ta n d a r d ” ance, but not to the point where it caus­ ju s t as appropriate today as they were because we have defined them that way. es physical harm to yourself. when he said them . T hen, m aybe the Ask y o u rself these questions: How Out o f hundreds or m aybe thousands tid e w ill s ta rt tu rn in g , th e sta n d a rd m any tim es to d ay h av e you th o u g h t o f compliments I’ve received in m y life, w ill s h ift a n d o u r c h ild re n w ill b e about your w eight? H ow m any tim es I only recall one or two. But I clearly ju d g e d , “ n o t by th e w e ig h t o f th e ir today have you felt guilty for something rem em ber every insult ever throw n at bodies, but by the w eight and content you ate, or sadness because you wanted me in regards to my appearance. And o f their character.” to eat but didn’t? W here is your stan­ for every insult, I actually believed it to C had Twitty is a ju n io r studying dard and who sets it? journalism and R ussian and can be some extent. That’s where the standard I don’t want to point out the obvious, needs to shift. reached a t chadtw @ im ap3.asu.edu. C L etters to the E ditor E-MAIL THE EDITOR: JU ZlM O @ IM APl.ASU .ED U v\ C lub sp orts colu m n w as ‘in sig h tfu l’ Great letter by Jeff Purcell! W hat insight he showed that m ost people aren’t aware of. Unfortunately, it just scratch ed the surface o f the reaT com m itm ent that som e o f these athletes have. And yes — all for the right reason — the love o f the sport itself. They really do it for the passion and peripheral rewards. A day in die life o f one of these athletes w ould b e an interesting D ear Editor, exposé into w hat they are really all about. A nd for som e sports like m en’s gym nastics, it’s not ju st sea­ sonal, but all year ‘round. Thanks for your continuing coverage o f an impor­ tant facet o f University life here at ASU. Scott B arclay ' M en’s Gym nastic Co&ch W atching out for emergency vehicles only way to prevent accidents To begin, I would like to thank Mr. Millette for his Oct. 8 perspective on EMS traffic dangers specific to ASU, and I am in agreement. However, Mr. Palmiotto is in a state of shock and disappointment in his Oct. 10 article about Millette’s opinion without having any involvement with emeigency services. “But..”, he says, “I know.” Interesting foundation. I will qualify my opinion with the declaration that I have been work­ ing in EMS for seven years now. The last four years of work have been as a public-safety dispatcher including police, fire and ambulance. I have been on countless ride-a-longs both on the police and fire side. Palmiotto stated that Mr. Millette was ignorant when in fact I believe Mr. Palmiotto is the card deck short a few suits. • At the agency in which I work,.neither the police officers nor the fire fighters have any high-speed driving training beside their own experience on the job. I know (and you can call the schools yourselves) that very few police academies, except for highway patrol, have extensive driving training in their curriculums. This is not to say that the emeigency ser­ vices personnel are devoid of driving skills or have eight points on their driving record. In most instances, it is the' exact opposite. But to say that we can rest assured that opera­ tors of the emeigency equipment can handle the vehicles in any type of situation is overlooking a possible safety prob­ lem and toying with disaster. I am sure Mr. Millette was not just objecting to the use of the median. If you got anything out of die article, it should Column labels all Division«! athletes | j ^iSlaTMvision I student athlete.” ' .;.|§j§ou know, we’re the ortes you abvays read about in the paper and see on the news. We’re the ones that love to drink, fight, steak.. (I guess I don’t need to continue since you already know everything about us.) Why, if it weren’t far all the money we mate being athletes, we probably wouldn't compete at alL The funny tiling is, if these are the char­ acteristics that define a Division-I student athlete. I can’t say I’ve met too many. It seems to me that we have a lot more in common With club-sport athletes than you think. We move hundreds, even thousands of ntiìes to compete for ASU because we love this University, this city and the uppcxtegBty to better ourselves both inteltectnaBy and athletically. : don’t choose a it is the only school to Iand fringe benefits. At fact, to turndown a scholarship : university of our choice, Ik tojust any school K I believe the true difference between club-sport athletes and Division-I athletes is not simply athletic ability (I’ve seen some very talented club athletes), but a burning desire to challenge ourselves at the highest level of our sport. I hope Jeff Purcell was mistaken when he claimed that club athletes play “because they have an unconquerable desire to compete and win and that is all.” There are many more reasons to participate in athletics than just winning, just as there are many more reasons one would choose to become a Division-I student athlete than money or fame. On behalf of the hundreds o f Sun Devil student athlete» who are fed up with being told who we are, and what we think, 1 have one last thing to say. The next time you decide to discriminantly stereotype student athletes into the fram ework o f your paradigm... think again! Chair, Student Athlete Ad\fsory Council have been that a who-knows-how-many-ton fire engine can­ not tap the breaks at 45 mph and stop within 10 feet I have, spoken with several fire captains and drivers who admit that taking the extra 30 seconds of response time to be more cau­ tious while en route to the scene far exceeds the benefits of arriving 30 seconds earlier with less caution. The point is to be careful in front of ASU or anywhere, for that matter! No one is perfect and if you want to know how much drivers training these EMS personnel really get, contact the academies or departments. Aaron F. Slater Junior Accounting Division-I student athletes play for love o f game chance to shine This letter is in response to your Oct. 13 article on club-sport athletes. While I, too, admire the sacrifices that these men andwomen make for their respective teams, I must remind you that even in the nationally televised world o f Division I-A athletics, there are athletes that play for the love of the game, pure and simple. I am one of the many student athletes that walk onto ASU’s teams every year. We walkons often are not the blue-chip recruits that schools around the country beg to come to play for them. We are not recruited. We are the nameless, the faceless. We practice along­ side the athletes you see on NBC or ESPN. I am not trying to take anything away from these full-ride athletes in our University. They have earned everything they have received. But we want to play just as bad as they do. We do not receive scholarships. We come here on our own dollar. If we work hard, we may be rewarded with a scholar­ ship, but that is far from guaranteed. But like many, I would gladly play few free. No schob arship, no fame, just a helmet and a chance. It may not happen next year, the year after, or at all. I may never see a down of playing time. I walked on the football team for a chance to fulfill a dream. Just the chance to come out of the tunnel in Sun Devil Stadium on a brisk, fall afternoon, running onto the field under a blue sky, surrounded by maroon and gold, letting the crowd’s screams rush over me, without anyone knowing my name. Playing hard and loving it — that’s what it’s all about, brother. Not the scholarship, not the interviews, not the cameras, not the quotes. Just the love of the game and the chance to play it We know what club athletes go through; we live it too. No fame, no glory, no money, no autographs. Just a jerse y th at says A rizona S tate and the chance to play. Nothing else matters. Rick Burkm ier Sun Devil Football Redsfairt ju n io r Exercise Science State P ress Thursday, October 16,1997 Page 6 Community calendar centralizes campus communication B y Kara S hire State P ress A community calendar is being developed by the Student Organization Resource Center and the Associated Students of ASU to provide a one-stbp guide to campus events. Safali Evans, program coordinator for SORC, said the goal of the calendar is to put all major activities on one board, “(The goal) is to provide an opportunity by Which all the groups could know what the other groups are doing,” Evans said. “So we don't have a cultural week scheduled during Mardi Gras. So we have even and well-rounded scheduling through the year. “It’s also an easy (way, for organizations) to promote thei’r event and more people will know what’s going on. W e’re trying to provide stuff for students so they know what’s going on.” Autumn Ness, AS ASU. activities vice president, said the. community calendar will help students get involved in cam­ pus activities and, once on the Internet, will also serve as a nationwide informational tool. “It’s kind of an image builder for ASU,” Ness said. “People look up on the Internet all the time, and this way, when a student from high school looks at ASU, it’ll really show what’s going on. It just looks really good for the University . We have so many campus events going on.” A temporary calendar is currently located in Ness’ office and will soon be oh a bulletin board near the AS ASU offices in the Memorial Union. Eventually, the calendar will be put on the Internet with a link from both the ASASU and SORC web pages. “Hopefully, it’ll be something very accessible to every­ one on campus,” Ness said. “I’m really excited about it,” Although there are only about 20 events on the calendar now, Evans said the new calendar will catch on. “ I think the. word will spread pretty quickly,” Evans said. “What this is for the clubs is another free form of advertising.” Organizations interested in getting on the community calendar can submit a form with event information to SORC or ASASU. Police Report The ASU police reported the follow ing incidents on Wednesday: • A student reported that someone broke into his vehicle and removed a JVC cassette deck while it Was parked in Lot 17. • A University employee reported that she lost a key belonging to ASU. • Another University employee reported that she lost a key belonging to ASU. • A man called in a bomb threat. No bomb was found. • A student reported that someone removed her Trek 820 m ountain b ike from the Student Services building. * • A student reported that someone removed her bike from the north, side of the MU where it was locked up. ;> • A bike that was not locked up was impounded for safe keeping. • A student reported th a t his vehicle, Arizona license plate number 437APT, was stolen from Lot 59. The Tempe police reported the follow ­ ing incidents on Wednesday: • A 33-year-old Mesa woman was arrested af 1912 E. Del Rio Drivé after she allegedly scratched the left arm of her ex-husband and threatened to kill him while she held a 6-inch butcher knife. She was booked info Tempe City Jail for assault, disorderly con­ duct and making threats. She posted bond and was released. • A 77-year-old man was arrested at 2401 FRO M L e a r n in g TO College was your training ground. This is your proving ground. A t Wells Fargo, you can build on your student success, and put all your hard earned skills to work With­ out a lot of additional ramp-up time. Because we work as a results-driven team, we use the talent we hire to grow the business. , So join a trailblazer as successful and dynamic as yourself. Explore the vast frontier of career opportunities at Wells Fargo. The next stage in banking. We will be on campus for the following: B A /M B A INTERVIEWS M onday, O ctob er 20th 8:30am -4:30pm S tu d en t S ervices B uilding T hird Floor PERSO N A L. B A N K IN G O F F IC E R S S E N IO R F IN A N C IA L C O N SU LTA N TS B A N K IN G C E N T E R M A N A G E R S Stoj^jy the Career Placement Center today’ ito schedule an appointment with our Representatives- W E L L S FA RG O EEO, M/F/D/V E x p l o r e t h e n e w f r o n t ie r W E L L S F A R G O .C O M / W. Southern Ave. after he allegedly, fon­ dled his 19-year-old granddaughter-in­ law’s breast and put her hand on his gen­ itals. He reportedly admitted to the quasiincestuous event and was booked into Tempe City Jail’s Cell number 11 for two counts of Class-5 sexual abuse. He was later; released pending a complaint. Compiled by State Press reporter Brian Anderson. Page 7 Thursday, October 16,1997 S tate P ress History, oppression focal point o f Columbus Day forum Terri Gene, a senior studying political sci­ ence and director of the forum committee, said she chose to produce it because she is Native American and wanted to leave the notion that her traditions and cultures still exist “Even though the Native American stu­ dents only make up one percent of the stu­ dent population and we seem quiet, we aren’t ” she said. “ There are other students like me fighting for our rights.” Those rights, Foster explained, are the right to wear traditional clothing to gradua­ tions, sing tribal songs, to retain their lan­ guage and learn the truth about Columbus. “How can you discover a country that already has 80 million people inhabiting it? ” he said. “ C olum bus co n fu sin g America for India is another government cover-up. Research a little and find out that in 1492, India did not even exist, it By S haran K. G il l S tate P ress History hasn’t been honest, and Native American leaders want ASU students to know about it, Vernon Foster, regional director of the American Indian Movement, told approximately 40 students Wednesday during the M em orial Union A ctivities Board opinion fo^um on the celebration of Columbus Day. “Education in this country is so relaxed that people have started educating them­ selves on theories. Columbus is not a hero, he was an oppressor,” Foster said. The forum focused on the N ative American viewpoint of Columbus Day. Panelists included Fred Lomawestcva, an attorney working with the Tucson Indian Center, and Arturo Aldama, professor of Chicano Studies. was called Hindusta.” Aldama said Columbus has been herald­ ed as a heroic figure when really he wiped out populations of the human race. “W ithin 100 years after the Spanish arrived, there were 70 million indigenous lives lö s t to diseases lik e the common cold,” he said. “Before the Spanish, there were no sexually transmitted diseases.” Adrian Fontes, host of the forum, asked Lom aw esteva what he thought about attending and receiving a degree from an institution that he thought was teaching lies. “Studying law was an eye-opening expe­ rience, it taught me that a lot of what we think is stable is actually not stable,!’ Lomawesteva said. Foster said that by celebrating Columbus Day, it is the continuous celebration of the genocide of a race, still happening today! “Why are we celebrating Columbus Day, or G eorge W ashington’s birthday or Abraham Lincoln’s birthday?” he asked. “We helped create this country, but we have never had control of it.” Foster said that the termination of Native Americans is still happening in different form s. In Los Angeles County, Native American women were being sterilized without their consent or knowledge. “ There are still 567 recipients of that steril­ ization on pur reservations today,” he said, Foster called for a march on the capital in Washington DC. on Columbus Day in 1998. “AIM as a movement are radical; we want to make allies and not enemies, but if we need to tip over statues, we will and will take the consequences.” • D U I/D W I • DRUGS •A L L C RIM IN A L •T R A F F IC • PERSONAL INJURY "AN AGGRESSIVE ATTORNEY YOU CAN AFFORD" L aw O ffice of J ay L C iulla Free Initial Consultation » Payment Plans 4 9 5 -0 0 5 3 24hrs C R O SSW O R D by THOM AS JO SEPH ACROSS 36 W ipe out 1 Rolling in dough 5 Magnet end 9 Blundered 11 “West Side Story" heroine 12 Celtics legend Bob IS M e o ca men 14 Picnic pest 15 H aber­ dashery buy 17 Digging tool 1 9 “— bodkins!" 20 Ring leader 21 Debate side 22 “A Con­ federacy of Dunces* author 24 Enem y 26 Letter stroke 29 G olf goal 10 Hippie’s predeces­ sor 12 Hom e of the Rebels 14 R ep.’s counter­ part 15 W as furious 38 Duplicate 39 ‘ Inferno’ author 40 Four inches 41 Ring DOW N 1 News summary 2 Like O . Henry tales 3 Prop 4*— S o Fine’ 5 Picnic setting 6 Speaker 7 Eros 8 Moves carefully 10 Energetic one 11 Spiked club 16 Bares 18 Shake­ speare's shrew 21 S assy 23 Rented 24 Refrain bit 25 Salem 's state 27 Loony 28 Carnival 29 Rocker setting 30 W ait 31 Prepare forprayer 3 3 Fix 37 Salt-NPepa’s m usic DAILY CRYPTOQUOITS — Here's how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 10-22 CRYPTOQUOTE IZQFN NVM FW TOP P FJ FQ KRJ QTIRJUFMK TM N T QJQ BRTBOR PFJUTZJ, J TT IZNU, VM A JURH pFOO.-QFG JU T I VQ X RRNU V I Y esterd a y 's C ry p to q u o te: OF ALL THE WAYS OF CONCEALING THE TRUTH, FLATTERY IS THE MOST POPULAR.—JAMES FEIBLEMAN m f' ## Ä 8 M Z........ / p 0 1997 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. i f e c? * M 1 m w m r n 411 S. Mill 966-2020 Sta te P ress Thursday, October 16,1997 Page 8 F ratern ity g iv es fa c e lift to daycare a t w o m e n s sh elter B y Stacy M ann State P ress Children of the Streets of Joy women’s shelter will spend their days in a cleaner, brighter, remodeled daycare center, courtesy of an ASU business fraternity. Delta Sigma Pi began renovating the daycare at 2051 E. Apache Blvd. last weekend. Renovations should be com­ pleted this Friday. Local companies donated materials to help the fraternity fix tip the daycare. “Sherwin Williams donated quite a bit of paint,” Kelly Mueller, assistant activities coordinator, said. “Ace hard­ ware also donated some tools for painting and flooring.” The Streets of Joy moved into the former Tip Top Kitchenette Motel almost two years ago. Mueller said the renovation was much needed. “Glass panes in the window were cracked and jagged,” she said. “The walls needed repainting. Ten or so children were playing on a dirty, old floor.” . The shelter is a non-profit C hristian D iscipleship Ministry funded by local churches. Seventy women and children live there, according to the shelter pastor’s assis­ tant, Dan Yount. “We request that our people stay with us for 24 hours to check out the program,” Yount said. “Then they can stay and sign a six-month contract with God.” Residents of the shelter attend regular Bible studies. Yount said the daycare, where the children are given Bible lessons, needed a face lift. “We wanted to re-do our daycare,” Yount said. “I think it helps kids if it looks more like a daycare inside.” Along with the Christian daycare theme, Mueller hopes Attacks from other canines a problem foUguide dogs ’B y T im B arter S tate P ress When the blind rely on guide dogs, they’re also relying no Tempe residents to keep a short leash on their own dogs. According to Scott Heywood, a local guide-dog miner, dogs are attacking guide dogs often. Heywood said be was training people with new dogs Wednesday and was attacked three different times. "th e local populace is being irrespon­ sible with their dogs,'’ said ifeywood, director of training for the Eye Dog Foundation. “When it’s a blind student out there — and part of the process involves me letting them go out on their own — they can’t see your dog coming.” Heywood said in the worst <4 die three attacks, a stray dog by the Chuck Box restaurant attacked the guide dog, almost chasing the dog into busy University Drive traffic. The dog was chased away. Inti came back and attacked again. No one was In January, Downtown Tempe Community, Inc. was pushing for a city I ordinance that would ban or restrict dogs in the downtown area. The regulation failed. “It was shot down," DTC director Rod Keeling said. “It was an idea that just wasn't pursued” Keeling said that it is “just a rare- case that it’s a problem.” “I don’t dunk there’s been a problem with stray dogs -- as an organization; we have no position.” he said Tempe Vice-Mjyor Joe Lewis said the city does have a leash law and if a stray is being a nuisance, residents can contact police. “The council didn’t feel it had become a serious-enough situation to ban dogs com­ pletely," he said. “We just wanted to encourage people to keep a dog on a leash and make sure their dogs weren’t bothering other people.” Heywood said he does not support a ban on dogs downtown, he just hopes to raise awareness. “What I’m hoping is that we can improve the community consciousness here and say ‘keep your dogs under con­ trol/” he said C ake-eating contest falls flat; stu d en ts decline p articip atio n B y G anga S ubramanian S pecial to th e State P ress Lack of student participation turned the Associated Students of ASU Cake Eating contest into a non-event. The cakes, intended to be devoured in a 30-second contest, were instead distributed to passing students near the M emorial Union fountain. The event was scheduled to be the first in a series of Wednesday activities. Ironically, the contest was aimed at increasing student involvement in ASASU, said D avid R uffalo, a spokesm an for ASASU. H o w NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Four Orthodox Jewish students sued Yale University on W ednesday after negotiations failed to resolve their claim that loose sexual atti­ tudes in coed dormitories violate their reli­ gious beliefs. The two freshmen and two sophomores, who are among about 60 Orthodox students at Yale, have demanded the right to live off campus, saying dormitory lifestyle at the Ivy League university violates their faith’s tenets of chastity and modesty. “Sexual activity involving an unmarried male or female under the age of 18 is com­ mon in Yale’s residential college dormito­ ries,” the federal lawsuit states. “If the plaintiffs are required to live in the Yale dormitories, they are likely to witness such activity, or to have firsthand evidence of such activity.” Yale requires all freshmen and sopho­ mores to live on campus in coed dorms, allowing exceptions only in cases where a student is married or already over 21. The four students claim that policy vio­ lates their right to exercise their religion, right of free speech and right of equal pro­ tection under the law. The pre-co n test p u b licity included memos, fliers, word of mouth and a half­ page advertisem ent in the S ta te Press, ASASU President Andy Ortiz said. The service held in memory of Jiang Aiqing, an ASU student killed in an accident Oct. 6, and the Clothesline Project held at Hayden Lawn at the same time drew attention away from the contest, he said. . The cakes were donated by Smith’s, and a raffle was held for all students who stopped by with prizes donated by Zia Records and College Street Deli. “It didn’t cost students anything,” Ortiz said. W o u ld M CAT 4 O rth o d o x Jew ish stu d e n ts slap lawsuit on Yale University B y B rigitte G reenberg A ssociated P ress to have a Noah’s Ark mural painted on the wall. She said the face lift is only one phase of the renovation process, “We had all of our members bring in a bag of clothes for the shelter,” Mueller said. “We have someone collecting light bulbs and toothbrushes. We hope to get plants donated. The little things make a big difference.” Mueller said big furniture is the most difficult to Collect. The fraternity is looking for dressers, cabinets and cribs. The children take naps on old mattresses on the floor of the daycare center. Yount said his shelter is the first step in the right direc­ tion. Women are encouraged to get back into the work force and move into their own homes. “Some people just come in to get cleaned up and get food in their bellies and then go right back out there,” Yount said. “We pray for them.” Take a Free Test Drive and find out! Ihke a 3-hour INCAT, proctoredIlk* the real tost. Recalve individual feedback. Get strategies that will help you ace the real exam. Saturday, October 18 8:30am ■ MCAT Practice Test Monday, October 20 6 pm «M edical School Saminar at Arizona State University Win an M CAT course!! \ A ll M CATTest Drive Registrants are eligible for our M CAT Course drawing. , Must be present v to win. -yr r Call today to reserve your seat! 1-800-KAP-TEST •MCAT» a registered trademark of the G o d 's (U nconditional £g pe Thursday Noon Bible Study Christian Students Fellowship is sponsoring a noon Bible study every Thursday during the Fall Semester on God'$ Unconditional Love. Come join us for this biblical summary of all the dimensions of God's love. This week we win talk about: Q TH E BEST PR IC ES IN T O W N ! The Source and Supply to Love Thursday, Oct 16,12:40 - 130 Best Selection o f imported and nestle Beers, Wines and Lkfuors 1217 S. Rural Rd, Tempe lust North o f Agache N ew Managem ent The B ett Prices good a il semester! 9 6 6 -8 6 5 5 tON.-SAT. til 1 AM • SUN. V111 PM Memorial Union/Gold North All a r e W elco m e Bring your lunch Beveragesend desserte provided C h ristian S tu d en ts F ellow sh ip For more information call 921-7270 Page 9 .Thursday, October 16,1997 Statt P ress Traum atic perform ance A co lle ctio n o f stu d en ts from the theater departm ent per­ form a p la y entitled "A b se n ce o f C o n sen t is Not C o n sen t” o n H ayden Law n W ednesday. T h e p la y w as d e sig n e d to p ro m o te a w a re n e s s o f th e p ro b le m s w ith d a te ra p e . Stu d e n t heath an d w om en’s stu d ie s a ls o co n trib u ted to the program . T h e grou p p la n s to perform the p la y In re si­ d en ce h a lls and even tu ally o ff cam pus. —•«I ■ È li iv m A COLLEGE JEOPARDY! ONLINE™ STUDY TIP FROM YOUR FRIENDS AT THE STATION@SONY.COM ■■ I i| i + UNFORTUNATELY, “ BEERS OF THE WORLD” IS N T A CATEGORY * I I I I I ft• I I i i I I I I I I I I I I I I I i 1 I I JOMIK CO LLEG EJEO PAR O TlO N LIN E"1TO U R N AM EN TAN DSW EffSTAKES I From Early American Literature to Hungarian Composers of the 1800s, the College JEOPARDY! Online Tournament and Sweepstakes has a category for every well-rounded college mind. Just answer the questions, we'll calculate the scores. Play the Tournament or enter the Sweepstakes each week to win great Sony prizes. Best three overall scores conpete for a 1998 Pontiac Sunfire, Grand Am or Grand Prix! So put down that mug and start studying, genius. The College JEOPARDY! Online Tournament and Sweepstakes. Only at The Station9sony.com. Score Tonight! Presented by isPf J P O N T IA C Also in part by Sprint. The Station < 9sony.com coma on and play” www.sony.com No purchase necessary. The College JEOPARDY! Online Tournament and Sw eepstakes are open to legal U.S. residents 18 years of age or older who are fulltim e college students. Afl entries for the Tournament m ust be received by 7:00 AM (E l) on 1 1 /1 0 /9 7 . The Sw eepstakes w ill be conducted weekly from 9 /1 /9 7 to 1 1 /1 0 /9 7 . Void where prohibited. See O fficial Rules posted at www.stadon.soQy.corh for d etails on,eligibility. College JEOPARDY! Online is a tradem ark o f Colum bia TriStar Interactive. The Station9sony.com is a badem ark o f Sony O nline Vantures Inc. © 1997 Sony O nline Ventures Inc. . 4, ;';-7 I I « I i I I I I t I i I I I I i 1 u Arizona, 6 others sue to end sales o f herbal alternative to Ecstacy B y T im M olloy A ssociated P ress PHOENIX — Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods and colleagues from six o th er states filed law suits Wednesday to stop sales of pills billed as a designer alter­ native to the illegal drug called Ecstasy. The lawsuits allege that the “Herbal Ecstacy” tablets sold by the Global World Media Corporation in Venice Beach, Calif., are illegal because the product has not been approved as a drug by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. “We are alleging that the company, attempting to profit from the sale of this product, made statements about Herbal Ecstacy -— some of which could have had deadly conse­ quences,” Illinois Attorney General Jim Ryan said in a statement. Sean Shayan, president and founder of Global, said his product is a dietary supplement, not a drug. He said no injuries or deaths have been linked to the tablets. The states suing are Arizona, California, Texas, Illinois, Minnesota, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The lawsuits seek not only to stop sales of die product but also civil penalties, court costs and refunds for consumers who purchased it. Herbal Ecstacy and similar brands were was banned in Florida after the 1996 death of a 20-year-old New York student on spring break who took a sim ilar product, Ultimate Xphoria. Both contain ephedrine, found in the Asian ephedra, or Ma Huang, plant. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration classifies it as a dietary supplement. Makers of products sold as alternatives to street drugs say ephedrine produces euphoria and increased sexual awareness. But the FDA has linked ephedrine-laced dietary supplements tp at least 17 deaths and 800 illnesses, includ­ ing nerve damage, strokes and heart attacks. Besides calling Herbal Ecstacy an illegal drug, the suits allege that Global used false advertising, deceptive trade practices and consumer fraud in marketing the product, such as testimonials from a made-up doctor and organiza­ tion. Shayan said all of the testimonials were real but that too many people had spoken for Herbal Ecstacy for him to find them all now. Shayan said the suits are part of a government conspira­ cy to shut down alternative medicines, and that he doesn’t have the resources to fight them all successfully. Comics Pagë IO S tate P ress Thursday, October 16,1997 By Jonathan Ince Snacks ARE ŸOU V' 0h, ■fiW. T rials & T ribulations SUT sue i s g o ç v r s ! münîT just Misseo mer ma i thinking? i I WONDER IF SHE KMWJS mustn't give in to • I HAD A CRUSH ONHER -mese primal urns! HCK IN HIGHSCHOOL. must r e s is t / ANOTHER CLASS SITTIH& HERE, TAÜClMftTÖ KANDl. B y C arrie L. B eh r en s Ç? r T J1 \ fA ! .Ê \ \l A c r o ss V \EtP? the fet) By G entry S mith H all V>WVfeb«C7 CAUt AU f OFF 66T V *Y R.ooWWvftT65 \\ JC fe/potó P&1W>y A ÇANOAtC»? H&U.O? y e>\T O FF Yo« ÌWT OFF *AY PlNtW-.a, M y 1/ F IN Œ R ./ ^ TAKE j THAT o u T O F y o « R rvbùth/ weoyAn w o iy ^ ÉHi V ' ) *y layiiw.ra.ww «H-w. whmavu By David Gould Jocular P arable ÜU- . 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Hot ■Mild ■BBO O pen Late i i . i S • CHECKCA5HINC(1%) OPEN LATE: MON. SAT. TIL 1:00 AM /SUN . TIL 10PM "Today marijuana claimed Its f ir s t overdose victim, an unidentified man who apparently laughed t o death..." i l i S ' 967-21 211 81 8 W. Broadw ay Rd . < S * * 5 % OFF Shorts, shirts, jeans, cords, I |k T% sweats and I ; tons more cool H stuff. The top V brands. New E for fall. Present ■ this coupon Hb and save ■ 25% on all f - ^ ^ o f ft. pacific Cyea &Ts | tm, Cornerstone Center • 726 Rural Road • 966-5560 HURRY! OFFER ENDS 10/19/97 •Amette Sunglasses excluded. Discounts off M.S.R.P ’ Only and original prices. Not valid with other coupons. Sports State P ress P a»e l l Thursday, October 16,1997 S u n D e v il m e n s h o o p s h o p e to ch a n g e critics’ m in d s B v M att P aulson State P ress Change was an ever-present fact of life for the ASU men’s basketball program dur­ ing thè off-season. Senior guard Jeremy Veal said he hopes it will also be the theme of the 1997-98 campaign for the Sun Devils on the court. ASU will try to change its performance on the court and how it’s perceived in the public eye. “I’d like to go out as a winner,” the ASU co-captain said, referring to last season’s 10-20 record, 2-16 in the Pac-10. “That’s my big thing. You spend all the time prac­ ticing and talking about it. It’s time to do some things about (winning).” “We’re going to have to prove that we can play this game and that we’re a good team,” forward Bobby Lazor said. “People have written us off so far this season, and I look at that as a challenge. Kind of fun real­ ly. (Try) to do things nobody expects.” Since they last stepped off the court in March, the Sun Devils lost an entire coach­ ing staff and several important players. Gone are head coach Bill Frieder and all his assistants, George McQuam, Doc Sadler and Jim Phillips. They have been replaced by head man Don Newman, Lanny Van Eman and Eli Lopez. Also departed are Gee Gervin, transfers Maurice McCree and Brad Strieker and for­ ward Okeme Oziwo, who is still a Sun Devil, but will not play due to injury. Gervin, a sophomore guard, transferred to a San Jacinto Community College in Texas over the summer for personal rea­ sons. Oziwo, a 6-foot-8 forward who was expected to play a big role this year, was involved in a one-car collision in July and might never play college basketball again. ■ -AfcCree, a 6-foot-6 junior forward •from Northland Pioneer College in Holbrook, quit the team and withdrew from school Tuesday to deal with personal problems. Strieker, who came to ASU from Texas A&M, also left the program earlier in the month. He said it was a direct result of the coaching change. » All that movement leaves Newman with a depleted 11-man squad, three of which are walk-ons. Newman, though, said he’s not intimidated by the seemingly tough road ahead! “I have experienced some very challeng­ ing times as a coach,” he said. ’’Both in Paul Besing/State Press A S U m en's head basketb all co a ch Oon New m an sp e a k s w ith reporters at the U n iversity A ctivity C enter d u rin g the team ’s annual m edia day. W ednesday marked the beginning of fall practices fo i the team. helping to build the Washington State pro­ gram and in taking the California State Sacramento program into the Division I level.” .. .Newman added will be counting most heavily on Veal to lead the team. “Jeremy Veal has provided a lot of lead­ ership oh the floor and off the floor in the program over the last three years,” Newman said about the first team All-Pac-10 selec­ tion last season. “Arguably one of the top guards in the Pac-10. Jeremy is certainly going to be leaned on a lot by coach Newman and he’s ready and up for the challenge.” Veal is an All-American candidate who was the only player last season to be among the top five in the league in scoring (18.7 points per game) and assists (4.7). He will be joined most frequently in the backcourt by fellow co-captain Ahlort Lewis and sophomore sensation Eddie House. House had just 39 turnovers in 886 min­ utes and was named to the Pac: 10 AllFreshmen team. Newman said Lewis has made a big impression on him. “The guy I’m really impressed with is Ahlon Lewis,” Newman said. “He’s going to be my quarterback this year. I’m looking for him to coordinate this team and provide a lot of toughness and leadership.” In the paint, most of the Sun Devils’ pro­ duction should come from junior forward Michael Batiste. Batiste, 6-foot-8, was out of shape and a little overweight when he joined ASU in the middle of last season. He dropped 20 pounds and is now a solid 225. He is also completely healthy having lost the leg brace he wore last year as a result of knee surgery. He is the top returning rebounder (6.7) and third-leading scorer Batiste said defense and player versatili­ ty will be key in the Sun Devils’ game plan this season. “That’s what I’ve been working on a lot this summer is playing defense,” Batiste said. “I see myself around the paint and I also see myself outside. I guess we have the new five motion offense where everybody go down low and come back out. That will feel more comfortable for me.” M ulti-dim ensional 6-foot-9 forward Lazor will also see ample playing time. Lazor transferred last year from Syracuse. Newman said he has big expectations for T urn to 8 men out , page 12. A S U m ust deal w ith strong D raft w hen it faces Stanford B y L ori H aro State P ress Stanford Media Relations Stanford in sid e lin eb a ck er C h ris Draft is a fo rcefu l fig u re fo r the C a rd in a l d efen se, a s form er A S U ru nning b ack Terry Battte <8) ca n attest to. The ASU football team will not only have to contend with breezes off the bay this Saturday at Stanford, but with a full-blown draft Chris Draft that is. Chris Draft — the 6-foot-1, 220-pound, Second-Team All-Pac-10 inside linebacker. Chris Draft —- the recorder of 200 tackles the past two seasons. “He’s obviously a very good football play­ er,” ASU tight ends and special teams coach Dick Arbuckle said. “It’s incumbent upon us to make sure that by assignment, that we have people to block properly and what we call a hat-on-a-hat. If we do that then everything will take care of itself.” Arbuckle is right in that ASU will have to be on top of everything in order to contain this Draft Draft started in the first two games of the season before suffering a strained hamstring against North Carolina on Sept 13. He came back strong last week, starting in the Cardinal’s 28-22 loss to.UofA. So strong that he led the team in tackles with nine, including two tackles-for-loss. “We’re disappointed because we just didn’t play well,” Draft said of the game. “I think we’11be ready for Saturday though.” And ASU better be ready for him. In limited action this year, Draft has a total of 20 tackles, three tackles-for-loss and he said he plans to live up to the great expectations some have of him. Lindy’s rated him as the eighlh-best inside linebacker in the nation. In his junior campaign, Draft was named Second-Team All-Pac-10, recording 97 tack­ les, two quarterback sacks, three tackles-forloss, two forced fumbles, one fumble recovery and three pass break-ups. He was 10th in the conference with an 8.8 tacldes-per-game average. However, great statistics are not what it’s all about with Draft. He is just happy being able to get back in the game and play. “I’m not so much happy that I led the team in tackles, but I’m more pleased that I could go at almost lull strength (now),” Draft said. With the linebacker playing at full strength, the ASU offensive line knows they must con­ tain Draft. “He’s a real quick, athletic linebacker, he’s really talented,” ASU center Grey Ruegamcr said. “In the schemes of run and pass, we’ve got to include him in, and keep our eyes on, T urn to 8 men out , pace 12. 1 State P ress 1 ÛÛ7 S u n D e v ils lo o k to se n d c h ill u p sp in e s o f C a rd in a l pen. So we are going to have to beat them knowing that they will have a much better game.” B y E d O d even St a t e P r ess It’s time for junior free safety Mitchell Freedman’s nickname to serve as the Sun Stanford’s strength A year after taking a 41-9 beating to Devils’ pre-game motto. ASU, the Cardinal have one noticeable trait Well, sort of. “Fright Night” or in this case “Fright — experience. “They have eight or nine defensive afternoon” is what ASU head coach Bruce Snyder is looking for at Stanford Saturday. • seniors on that club,” Snyder said. “That “I think you need a healthy dose of fear makes you a better team. It just does.” to play well,” Snyder said Wednesday after B umps and B ruises practice at the Bill K ajikaw a Football •ASU sophomore tailback J.R. Redmond Practice Field. “You can’t be fearful, but did not participate in drills for the Second you have to have something inside of you straight day. He is sidelined with a right hip that says ‘Man, I’ve got to give it every­ strain. T ailbacks M arlon Farlow and thing I’ve got or we are going to lose.’ I Michael Martin have picked up more play­ think they will have th at...” ing time in practice with Redmond out. They need to. Farlow , releg ated to third-string duties Stanford (4-2) is a much-improved team, for m uch Of the season, w as w inded after a desperately trying to prove that last week’s grueling practice. loss to UofA was a fluke. “I’ m exhausted,” he said. “I can feel it “I think they have all the advantages,” now. Usually after practice you’d be tired.” Snyder said. “They are a very strong run­ However, Farlow is happy to be tired. ning team. They are really a good defensive “Right now it’s a good feeling,” he said, front. 1 think it’ll be a very hard game for us “running hard every play whether it’s a pass to win. I think we can win it, but it’s going or run.” to be very hard to win it.” •Punter Marcus Williams has a sprained right ankle. He has seen limited practice time, C oach ’s guarantee Stanford’s miscue-happy performance but is expected to be ready to play Saturday. last w eek— eight fum bles versus the R isky B usiness W ildcats in a 28-22 loss — will not be USC head coach John Robinson’s repeated, Snyder said. announcement on Tuesday that he would “They will not lose five fumbles against resign at the end of the season if the team does us, I don’t think,” he said, “That won’t hap­ not improve, triggered Snyder’s thoughts on A S U se n io r o u tsid e lin eb a ck er P a t Tillm an d iv e s to halt the Fo x T ro t (U S C q uarterback Jo h n Fo x ’s scram ble) d uring la st Saturd ay’s gam e at Su n D evil Stadium . the nature of the beast— coaching. “It’s a tough business. You’re not in it to run somebody out of business,” he said. “But you’re in it to beat ’em. I think the media and the fans’ patience is much shorter today than when I first got into coaching about see­ ing a winning product, a good product and a product you can be proud of. Because of that as soon as you get a couple losses in a row you get back on the hot seat” Draft__________ C ontinued from page 11. him. And watch where he goes and be sure to pick him up.” Draft’s overall athleticism can be traced back to his playing a variety of positions on the field. Originally, Draft came to Stanford expecting to play offense. During his senior year in high school he rushed for 1,338 yards with 24 touchdowns as a fullback. However, as a freshman Cardinal he played defensive end^ strong safety and outside linebacker. He thought he had found a home at die outside linebacker spot his sophom ore season, but was switched to die inside for the second game o f the season arid has stayed there ever since. Draft also was a top baseball prospect out of high school and played on Stanford’s team until last year when he decided to focus on football. “In high school I played basketball also, so I wanted to be a three-sport athlete,” Draft said. “1 stopped because it was too much for my body. Playing the position I do, I just couldn’t play both.” 8 m en out _ _ Draft’s concentration on football has led to greatness, and many are predicting he’ll finish the season a strong All-Amenca candidate and be named to the First-Team All-Pac-10 team. Yet, for now, Draft is thinking only about this season and especially about Saturday’s game. “They’re (ÀSU) going to run it a lot and stuff it to you,” Draft said. ‘They’re a good team with a tot of solid players. 1 think well bounce back well after the loss to Arizona. Everyone felt really bad and we don’t want,to have that feeling again.” H ^eyec, ASlidopsn’C*iant Jo be swept by this Draft. ‘‘Sanford is a weIl-coache$ talented senior team. They have a lot of leadership, they have experience, they know what it takes to win,” Ruegamer said. “It’s just gonna take a lot of hard work and concentration on our part to do our assignments well. “We’re going to focus on everyone of the team. We know who be is, we know what kind of player he is and we definitely have to pick him up in the scheme of things.” Kh a n u Rih v ls .! P \r i PERFORMANCE FOOTWEAR C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 1 . these two. “Another guy that I think had a phenomenal summer is Mike Batiste, He’s back. Healthy as he’s ever been. It’s going to be real, real nice to have him from the start of the year to the end. There’s no doubt in my mind that Bobby’s going to have a good year. We’re looking for a lot of con­ tribution from him ” The Sun Devils begin their season with exhibition action against the California All-Stars at home on Nov. 5. The reg­ ular season tips off Nov. 19 at the University Activity Center against Wagner in the Chase Preseason NIT- *»krt Sint /ows tiaMMq FROM THE ANKLE UR IT STILL A FEELS LIKE M u s t s e e e- m a il FOOTBALL The newest attorney at the world's most powerful law firm has never lost a case. But he's about to lose his soul. to the sportsfeld staff "Jerry" Jones . . . . , . . .leS.boulez@asu.edu "Kramer" Odeven . .starks4three@asu.edu "Babu" Paulson . . . , . . , . .beavis@asu.edu "George" DeFamio . . xostanza2@asu.edu Evil has its winning wavs. "Elaine" H a r o .......... ...... .lorimh@asu.edu "Newm an" Lewis . . . . . . . xubie@asu.edu We're masters of our electronic domain. IN THE CO R N E R ST O N E N.E. CORNER Rural & University 829-7473 STARTS FRIDAY \ ï î Classifieds Sta to P Notice to our readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press; cannot assume responsibility for the validity of die offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an.adveitisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-1721. More Trivia... The average ANNOUNCEMENTS COSTUME RENTAL $20-$50, 12-8pm. 858-0805, Fielder Stu­ dio, 824 S. Mill GILBERT HIGH School Home­ coming! Thurs, Oct 16, 6-8:30 pm, live music, dancing, games, food, fun for all ages! Ä F Ä g jM g N T S ^ MILL/BROADWAY 1-2 bd apts. $500-600/mo. util, paid, pool, cov’d pking. 641-7557 STUDIO APT for rent avail, immed. Very close to campus. Call 829-8614 score in 19 9 4 was 9 0 2 . 1 BLOCK to ASÜ, 2br/2ba, w/d, refrig, fenced, no pets, S800/mo. *31-9024 OW/AGT C la ss ifie d s W O RK I Find the State Press on the Internet: http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL STUDENT WORK u u Jb s j i b j j f b 3 BiJ Ì li ÌJ J : $ 28,000 HOMES FOR RENT LUXURY 4BD/2BA, pool, ga­ rage. w/d, d/w, etc. 2416 sq. ft. $1395; 2BD house, $550, ASU area. Call 437-1048. SCOTTSDALE & Hayden/ Tho­ mas, monthly $240, pay $60/wk. + 1/4 util; $260, pay $65/wk. + 1/4 util; Call 6759611 Iv.msg. SMALL DETACHED guest stu­ dio for rent. Use of pooi, yard, & laundry room. 15 min. from ASU. $310/mo. Call 2249870 after 6pm for appointment. WALK TO ASU, 2bd/ lba $600; 3bd/ 2ba $850; 4bd/ 2ba $950. Tim 894-0288. HOMES FOR RENT combined S A T WALK TO ASU. 3bd/ 2ba avail immed. Huge yard, w/d, d/w, refrig incl, cvd patio, cvd pking, MS, newly redone, se­ curity syst. $l-200/mo, 73 t3969. pg 360-1626. TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT 1 BD near campus includ. frig, w/d, fully furn. $550 Bob Bul­ lock, Realty Exec. 998-2992. HELP WANTEDGENERAL DIRECTORY ASSISTANCE OPERATORS NEEDED!! 1“ year • Flexible Schedule • Starting pay *6” • Must have excellent; customer service ( • Must be able to type 35 wpm • Computer skills qUARANTEE wifti A • Up to $ 9 . 50 • F le x ib le S c h e d u le s • R e su m e B u ild e r • Page 13 Thursday, October 16,1997 r ess pOTENTÎAt Tor $ 65 , 0 0 0 . W e looldNq are foR 5 QUAliti id CANdidATES. A ll m ajors w e lc o m e posiiioN im ril • S c h o la rs h ip s availab le qRAduATÌON. Fo r •Great spelling skills a must more ìn Formatìon ç a II C raîq P rentìce Call # 2 1 2 -0 5 5 1 or Ed S ieìn ASU-2 & 3BR, Papago 11/ Questa Vida, all appls, $800+. Joel, 967-6205 of Greg, 755- 0299 ■..: BIKE TP ASU from Papago Pk. condo, new int., 2BD/ 1+ BA, $675,488-5755/910-2783. ROO M S FOR RENT ASAP! 1 lg. room. Yard w/ pool, w/d. $300 + util. South em/ Price. Lv. msg. 456-0717 CLOSE TO ASU, home w/pool, share w/2 students, $390/mo, 1st A last 714-643-0615 ROOM AVAIL, nice 2bd/ 2 story house, new carpet,, fireplace.r$365 + split utils. Call Glenn @ 432-0097. MESA/TEMPE AREA <2 bd/ 2 ba, w/d, pool, spa, $675/mo + dep., elec. only. 777-1925. F U R N jT U R ^ ^ Z RENTAL SHARING BRAND NEW queen size bed w/ frame. $800 or obo. Call Lisa, 223-0196. 2BR/2BA, DOBSON & Broad­ way apt. $300 + 1/2 util. Male 19-23 pref. lv msg @ %9-2748 FEM RMMTE p re fd to share 4bd 3ba home, lg yard,-w/d. M inutes from ASU o r MCC. Southern & McClintock. $375 + 1/4 util. Mitch 755-8376 MSTR BR in Tempe home. Close to ASU, fened bekyrd, w/d, d/w, prvt. bath. $300+1/3 util. Sec. dep. Call 675-9719 NS FEM'S to share 3bd/1.5ba TH. $430 & $330+ 1/3 utils. 1.5 mi. from ASU. Teresa 736' 8387 . : '• MATTRESS, QUEEN size, dou­ ble pillow top/ box spring, 2 wks old - pd $1100, sacrifice $275,495-1974. COMPUTERS EPSON 486 computer w/ VGA m onitor keyboard speakers & CD-rom. Office 97'CD-rom & windows 95 incliid. $950 obo Call 8am-5pm 812-1390 . a H raK ï? 93 CHEVY S -I0 pickup, 5 spd, 4 cyl, a/c, power steering/ brakes. $3,995. Call 657-8700 94 TOYOTA Tercel a/c, am/fm cass., 34k mi, man. tranS., xlnt cond. $9250. Call 955-2059 95 ISUZU Rodeo, nice looker, auto trans, 2wd, p/wind, p/locks, alarm, tilt wheel, cruise control,' lugg. rack, towing package, nerf bars, extnded war­ ranty avail. New tires on sharp Mags. $15,500.473-8436 m o t o r c y c l is t 1990 SUZUKI GS 500» good condition:. $1300 obo. New helmet. Unlock, & cover for free. CaU Max, 784-8084. TRAVEL DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. Quick departts. ■Buy coupons/awards. Most places worldwide. 968-7283 AUTOM OBIL|S__ ADMISSIONS CASHIER, p/t, cash register exp helpful but will train* Good cust service skills a must, apply in person at: Desert Botanical Garden, 1201 N Galvin Pkwy, Phx. No phone calls please. EOE PAPAGO PARK. 3bd condo. Very clean. Prefi f, mature stud­ ent/ professional. W/D. & all amen. $350.662-0123 Nov. 1 79 VW camper, 1 owner, runs great, rebuilt engine, movingMust sell! $2850 968-1285 ROOMMATE WANTED 3 br/ 2ba w/pool, w/d, dish, micro, nice rpom, near ASU, great housemates, Kin 438-8980 82 HONDA ACCORD LX, 2dr htchbck, 5 spd, tags thru Nov 98, good gas milage $2000 Call 249-9250 SCOTTSDALE FACULTY or grad student fem. prefd-to share lovely 2bd. Must like cats. $315+1/2 util. Call 423-9717 89 TOYOTA TERCEL, 79k, 2dr coupe, 5spd, a/c, tilt, p/b, p/s, very clean, new tires, 6/98 tags, $3500, Call 254-8810 BOO KS BOOKS Has School Torn You Away From The One You Love? Read Loving Your Long-Distance Relationship by Stephen Blake and find out how to stay in love w hile being a part Only $6.99! Ask for it at Bookseller, o r on the Internet at www.sblake.com # 960-8798 HELP WANTEDGENERAL APPOINTMENT SETTERS nr 92 GEO Storm blue 63K mi. a/c, good cond. $5000 must sell. Call Jen 838-8727 HELP WANTED- HELP WANTEDGENERAL I e k s E x t k a Ca s h AUTOMOBILES MACINTOSH II CX, 8/80, 14" color monitor, modem, $375. Great Web surfer!! 303-0101 your campus bookstore, Barnes & Noble, W aldenbooks, B.Dalton, CONTACT YOLANDA 274^5800.^8» C o n d s. e x is t TOW NHOMES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT Set appts for oor sales reps. No selling. Security G u ard P o sitio n s F/T $7/hr $ 1 0 per hour A small office in Tempe at Apache ft Rural Several Shifts Available 5 0 7 -2 0 8 ? 232-9190 ext. 1135 ST A R T NOW CALL BRENDA @ ARE YOU looking for experi­ ence in your field? Human serv­ ices, etc.*.? We have ft/pt posi­ tions available. Call our job line 995-4862 ext; 1 ASSISTANT FOR Financial Planner at American Express Fi­ nancial Advisors. PT, 15 hrs/wk, very flex., $8/hr. to start. Must be able to work in spring. Call Sue Tory at 8331809 ext. 149 for more info. AUTOMOBILES C A S H T O D A Y !!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/Trucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. m 874-3268 Ä HELP WANTEDGENERAL CALLER WANTED forbroker in large valley firm. 20hrs. a week at $7-$10 per hour. Great resume builder, will train! Please call 219-6585 for inter­ view. CAMPUS CORNER Experienced cashier needed. Must be available between 8amlpm MWF 6r TTH. Apply at 712 S. College. DATA CENTER operators need­ ed. All shifts avail, no exp nec, flex, hrs 5pm-8am & weekends, close to ASU. Apply to Darcomm 3710 E. University Dr. Suite 1, Phx. 829-8838 DRIVER NEEDED Deliveries for Tempe manufac­ turer. Co. truck.rCleah DMV + reliable trans. Good pay. 510 S 52 St #101 Tempe M-F 8-5 ENGRAVE & ASSEMBLE vari­ ous awards. Computer exp. req. P/T position. Apply at Trophy Den. 707 S* Myrtle Ave. GYMNASTICS: SEEKING posi­ tive & energetic teachers 4 pre­ school, & boys & girls classes, a m., aft, Sc/or eve hrs. FT/PT avail, exp. a + Call 992-5790 HELP! WE need wknd telephone/computer operators (no sales) @ 3620 E. Thomas Rd. in , Phx. Open 24 hrs/day. Good study job. Good verbal shills & dependability a must! Call Dan @ 224-0200 ext. 210 for an interview. EOE INSTALLERS NEEDED for ad­ vertising balloons for radio sta­ tions. Flexible P/T hours. Call ' 946~4136LOOKING FOR energetic peo­ ple to work in home program, with 13 yr. old boy with au­ tism. Training provided, flexible horns. Call 943-8749. MODELS/ ACTORS, all types, males/fetnaies. needed immed. for music videos, nat’l commer­ cials, and print* 941-6922. MODULAR FURNITURE: in­ stallers & lead men needed for fast growing Tempe cp. Will - traih, pay range $8-12 per hr. DOE Call M-Sun 8-5pm 966r 9392 lv msg if no answer This should bo your ad - C a ll 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP WANTEDGENERAL MODEL SEARCH Enter the M iss Arizona Model ó! the Year Pageant Call today for details about our new employee referral pro­ gram & performance bonus (within the first 90 days of employment)! W e're Host M arriott Services, the leading operator of food, beverage and m erchandise concessions in airports, travel plazas and tourist attractions w orldw ide W e o ffer a better place to w ork — and a faster, easier w ay to speed up your job search. Ju st can 7hroç, C’ó 1-888-H0ST JOB (1-888-467-8562). B A R IS T A S /C A S H IE R S Ms. Shelly Dainty W inners ASU Student bvJ-L TO Nov: 22 & 23 Ages 13-17 »18-23 - No Qualifications Agencies Invited to Scout For Info Call Full& Part-Time Casual, Comfortable, Company. Front Office clerk 994-0886 Outstanding benefits. Fourconvenient State Press office. M-F, 12-Spin, $5.S0/hr. locations. A variety of work times O ur exceptional benefits package indudes: • M edical/D ental/Life Tuition reim bursem ent 401(k) • Free m eals hard parking or partial bus available, including early morningat our Tempe location. Oh-and don’t forget, no sales! What more can we sayabout ram bursem ent Excell Agent Services, except that we are For additional inform ation or questions, ca ll (602) 275-1721, e x t 205. The m ost innovative em ployer in the hospitality industry has dynam ic openings fo r the frien dliest people-pleasers. Cad today...and tom orrow you could be enjoying com petitive w ages, training and great growth potential. EOE, M/F/D/V. a major provider of nationwide directory assistance and a really great piace to L & ll work! You need to pick up the phone ff Host Marriott Services and call our Job Squad today for an immediate interview! A Drugfre e Environment, «UhPreEmpkiwnent Screening. 24-hour fob hotline: r v r n ¥ L /W .L L l. Ia g e n t s e r v ic e s ^ 8 0 8 -0 0 0 8 M esa • ¡teoria • Phoenix • Tempe Come join the next generation P/T Internships 20 hrs/wk $5.50-$8.75/hr Very flexible hours Work on ASU campus as Pepsi Rep. Contact L. Parr 437-7061 Apply Matthews Center, Rm. IS. Must be good with people and heavy phones. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDS A L E S ^ _ ==_ C.R. JEWELERS is opening in Arizona Mills Outlet Mall! We are looking for qualified Man­ agers, Assistants, & Sales As­ sociates for this high volume P/T CUST serv reps. United store. We offer excl sal + comm Blood Services, à non-profit or­ + benefits; profit sharing plan + ganization, is hiring for morn­ 401k. Please contact us: 31 J1 ing, eves & wknd Shifts. N. University Dr. #604 Coral $6.87/hr + shift differential for • Springs, FL 33065 800-455eve hrs ! Good cust; service 5660 ext. 119 Fax 954-796skills & pleasant phone voice 2066 . . v :: ' pref. Call 431-9500. tem pe lo­ cation. Employée drug testing SALES PERSON req. EOE/M/F/D/V. Foif retail SW furniture store 30- NEW CANDY Store opening in AZ Mills Mall. Looking for FT & PT sales assoc, Flex. hrs. Call 642-5758 for details P/T HELP wanted filling, load­ ing, packaging & capping bot­ tled water. Near ASÜ. $6/hr. Call Jeaiinine, 453^0305. SEEKING ENTHUSIASTIC & energetic crew members. Flex, hrs! & good pay. Trader Joe’s Market, 6460 S. McClintock, Tempe. 838-4142. TREATMENT NOT PUNISHMENT. Wanted; Advocates of change w/ the desire and ability to make a difference in someone's life for a new pro­ gram for adjudicated juveniles. Requirements: Must be caring and ethical w/ strong bounda­ ries. Must possess Bachelor’s degree in a social service field or equivalent exp. Over 21 w/ valid AZ driver's license only need apply. If interested in eves., overnight or weekend shifts call 861 ^0625 or fax resume to 331-0990. VALET PARKING, p/t, f/tv $6$12/hr.y days & eves,, must be clearicut, have trans. + good at­ titude. 548-0599. WORK AT home, 5K-Î0K/ mo. No.;selling & no MLM. Free 2 minute message. 1-800-3226169 ext. 9842 HELP WANTEDSALES APPOINTMENT SETTING, up to $20/hr, bonuses Afl shifts, pt/ft. 707-8900. IDC, 49 S. Sy­ camore, Mesa; Main/Dobson HELP WANTEDGENERAL 40hrs./wk, must incld wknds. Casual dress, some lifting req'd, must be detail oriented* ener­ getic, punctual & articulate. Good attitude is everything! Training pay .$7/hr. Jan 2757703 ' ; SPEND YOUR weekends at the Desert Botanical Garden. Sales­ person needed for gift shop. Saturdays & Sundays 9-5pm. Please send resumes to: Jolene Pierson, Desert Botanical Gar­ den, 1201 N Galvin Pkwy, Phx. 85008 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL BOOKKEEPING ASST, p/t, 4hrs daily, flex, S9/hr. need some exp. in A/R, A/P, payroll, data entry, filing & 10 key. Apply at 2621 S. 37th S u Phx. or fax resume to 437-9232 FO ASST Girl/Boy Fri. Filing, errands, resupply: 20hr/wk, $8.50/hr. NE Scotts. Resume to 8997 E. Desert Cove, 2nd fl. 860-4792, Jane. LAW OFFICE litigation prac­ tice needs organized person for filing, copying, light typing/ mail, telephone backup, occas out-of-office errands. Comp familarity a +. M-F l-5pm, flexr. Call Rebecca 264-0085 PART TIME receptionist-Tempe Firm looking for an outgoing person to aiiswer 5 incoming, lines, light typing, filing & gen office help. Please contact Glenn Craig @ 929-0282. PERFECT POSITIONS for stud­ en ts, PT or FT, 6 min. from ASU. Data entry $8/hr;,shipr ping $7/hr; Mac computer work $8/hr; Purchasing agent $8/ijr. 607-1100. RECEPTIONIST, FT/PT, am or pm hours. Benefits after 90 days! 707^8900, IDC, 49 S. Sycamore, Meisa. Main/Dobson STATE FARM Ins. Easy pt cler­ ical work $6-7/hr. doe Must be avail, (w, th, f) to work 15 hrs/wk. Southern/College 8298866 Call 965-6735 to p la c e y o u r c la s s ifie d a d RETAIL I trt M Hafl -gya 833-9207 $ HOPS ! $ Get o ff campus & out of the Tempe scene. Get motivated & join our winning team. Hops Bistro & Brewery serves fresh brewed beer & American re­ gional cuisine. Now accepting applications for food expedit­ ers, servers, hosts & pizza cooks. Apply in person T & Th 3-4pm 8668 È. Sheà, NW com­ er of Pima & Shea. 998-7777. HELPWANTEDFO O D S g ?V ]C £ _ HELP WANTEDC H IL D C A R |s_ HELP WANTEDC H ILD C A R E = _ _ MAJERLE'S SPORTS Grill is currently hiring all pos. Apply in person, 24 N. 2nd St., Phx. AFTERSCHOOL ASSISTANT N. Scotts near Pima/Shea. Sports, games, art, 2-5 grades, M-F, 2-5:30, $5 75-$6.50/hr. CaU314-9669 NEED RESPONSIBLE, female ASU student to care for 3 child­ r e n ^ 1 mo., 8 & 11) 1 or 2 nights/wk. & occasional geta­ ways. Needs, to love kids, enjoy playing & helping w/ homework. Must be firm, but. fun. Will be asked to drive on occasion. $6/hr./-Central Ave./ Bethany Hm. Katljy 265-5757. WAIT STAFF: immed. open­ ings, lunch & dinner shfts. $2.13 + tips. Cashier also need­ ed. $6/hr. Sakana Sushi Bar & Teppan. 5061 E. Elliot. 5980506 HELP WANTEDC H IL D C A R E _ _ AFTER SCHOOL help needed,, 12-15 hrs/wk. 4 Ige family, must have own car 704-0091 COUNTER HELP needed. Fun atmosphere. Apply in person at Dilly's Deli comer of Southern & Pnce. Ask for Jeff 491-1196 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 RESTAURANTS/ BARS HOSTS/HOSTESSES, F/T, p/t, $7.50/hr. Roxsand Restaurant, Apply M-F 2-5pm @ 2594 E. Camelback (Biltmore Fash. Pk.) $1.50 Any Drink (G a ln tH , N w CtaSm, Stara Htumiai Boio’s 9 6 6 -5 5 4 3 Players, C oaches & O fficials WANTED: Exciting new Basketball League running Saturdays through May In Central Phoenix. Play up to 20 games for as little as $25. For more info call Dave @ 404-3929 or visit our web site http://www.primenef.com/ -dmarli/sbLhtml • 1/2 Your Wing Order FR E E Sun & Mon. 8 4 4 -S H E D U n iv e r s ity & D o b s o n ** X-Large C h eese P izza Tem H ot N OTMOM pers ew BANd Cousins o f The Wise H um an R e so u rce s Fast, Free Delivery 829-0064 P le a s e app ly M , T u , o r F betw een 602-860-4792 . until College A PPV gam es BANQUET SERVERS 5001 N . S co ttsd a le Rd. For m ore in form ation call Mi Clmloi V X t un v • !>2I-7.T43 Over 100 Menu Items - UpeoalsAtmosphar* S u ites Healthy wom en (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anony­ m ously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. M ust have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. Accepted donors com pensated $2000. JO * BOSTON'S WOODSHED II S co ttsd a le E m b a ssy DONOR EGGS N EED ED v. Every Thursday!' . AH Appsitean. on Happy Hr • 4 Satellites - 21 Screens • We show A L L NFL. Now hiring Delivery Driverslll 8:30am -10:30am o r 2pm -4pm S co ttsdale E m b a s sy S u ite s su pp orts a drug­ 's. SPORTS & RECREATION M SKETU U LL SE C ortw of University & Rural HELP WANTEDGENERAL ^ P/T SITTER for 11 y/o. Must have flex hrs,-car & ref. 15 hrs/wk. Tempe area. 756-0549 RESTAURANTS/ BARS HAPPY HOUR HOUSTON'S RESTAURANT is seeking motivated individuals for the following, positions; servers, host, & service b a r­ tenders. All, interested please apply @ 2425 E, Camelback Rd. Suite 110 F le x hou rs. E x p . req’d. 10-30 h rs/w ee k --F lexible $6-$7.4 5 /h r + Bonus Fiease call fo r in terview 9 6 5 -6 7 5 4 Find it FAST in the C lassified s Fc,vturit\|i l)oi\ Vovmg - M ake ex tra m oney, A S U S u n D ia l F u n d NANNY NEEDED f d r ’after school care, M-F, 2-6pm I d ^ E Scotts, must drive, 614-2969 (ilUTKITL IUI VI) MUHT with EX TD A T IC K ET join ou r b u sy bqt se a so n . HELP WANTEDGENERAL AHWATUKEE KINDERCARE is looking for full & part time teachers to work w/ toddlers-& twos* Please call 759-4Q63. Classifieds HOSTESS/BUSPERSON FRI. & Sat. nights a must, 25 hrs/wk. Apply at 850 S. Àsh Ave. Casey Moore's Oyster House ** FRONT OFFICE clerk, State Press office. M-F 12-5 pm, $5:50/hr. Apply Matthews Cen­ ter rm 15* Must be good w/people & heavy phones. mminrsttSBr & F/T emp l oy ee s ' for our new s t ore in A r i z o n a M i l l s . We of f er E x c e l l e n t t rai ni ng and promo t a bi li ty . We will wor k around c o l le ge s c h e d u l e s . Call J acki I mmedi at el y for an i nt ervi ew! HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDGENERAL I S l o w M irin g cud St a t e P r e s s Thursday, October 16, 1997 Page 14 HELP WANTEDGENERAL fre e w ork force. p ro U Live M usic Every Thursday $1.50 Dom/Bottles Bojo’s ht^://oews.vpsa.asu.edu/ f9 6 6 -5 5 4 3 S E C om et of University.A Rural HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE H A'V4 Every S ta te Press classified ad is rfot (xily printed in the paper, but also uploaded daily to the Digital S ta te Press in hfcml! Classified%20Advechsing/ Classifieds.html -• HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE RA S S IG N F or S a l e s ? Alamo Rent-A-Car, a leader in the car rental industry, has openings for full & part time RENTAL AGENTS • Hourly pay plus bonus • We'll work around your classes • Marketing students a plus! • Highest paid bonus in the business • Career options worldwide after graduation An American Diner IS MOW HIRING Interviews are now being held for the following positions: 675-8804 Call Brian Mon-Fri 7am-6pm to schedule interview Alam o • Servers (must be 19) • Cooks • Hosts Apply in person, Mon - Sat from 9am to 6pm a t th e new W in g e r's 1815 E. Elliot Rd. Tempe, Arizona HELP WANTEDGENERAL E M B A SSY S U IT E S RESORT SCOTTSDALE A C C E PT IN G W ALK-IN IN TER VIEW S M , Tu, and F 8:30-10:30am o r 2-4pm For the follow ing positions: P BX O perator B ussers H o u seperso ns B anquet S et -U p STE WARDING S et -up Nt . S upervisor S ervers N eed P T o r F T w ork. W e have the jo b fo r you. Com e join th is busy resort w here w e offer a com petitive w age a n d m any b enefits in clu d ing health/ dental/ life insurance, vacation/ sic k tim e, free em ployee m eal, fre e parking, uniform s provided, p lu s m uch m ore. P le a se apply w itti Hum an R eso u rce s, 5001 N. Scp ttsdale R d. Sco ttsd a le E m bassy S u ite s supports a , D ru g -F ra W orkplace! • Front Desk • Reservations • Reg. Club Busser >Restaurant Reservations ' Telephone Operator • S toreroom C lerk >Host/Hostess '