W O R L D / N A T I O N . WEsmSMS ■. CUsMfuxis . .17 — JS Craswonfe.-----wt-.-.- ....lé S p o r t s S t r ik in g Fr e n c h truckers WAGE ECONOMIC BATTLE, SET UP BLOCKADES Page 3 T u r n e r T h o r n e u n v e il s w om en's h o o p sq u a d Page 15 O pta» „. Puttee Report Sport*. . ---- « — ,g g |l # © Copyright S ta te P ress. 1997 . Tem pe., A rizo n a ; A n Independent M o rn in g D aily V oi. 82 No. 50 T ue sd ay, N ovem ber 4 ,1997 New class w ill help Teacher’s punt com m unity’s elderly ment was looking for a way to involve theories bom the classroom arid hands-on experiences ASU students hâve a chance to experi­ with the community. Service learning differs ence helping the elderly because of a grant from internships in a number of ways, Arnold proposal that matured on Monday. added. T he A sso ciatio n for G ero n to lo g y in “An internship is more like a capstone H ig h e r E d u c a tio n , to g e th e r w ith the experience that you do at the end of your University o f Pittsburgh, selected A SU’s degree, but this course can be done during Department o f Gerontology as one of the 10 your degree program,” he said. institutions nationally to receive funding for C ristin a G o n zalez, d ire c to r o f the a service learning project offered to students Institute for Co-Curricular Programs and in the spring. Service, said the service learning classes The class CRN 494/GRN 591 will send connect the curriculum to real life applied students out into the senior com m unity. through service. Students will seek to recognize problems or "For example, a service learning class in services the- elderly need, like counseling American Literature would go out and teach and consultation, and then link them up som e classes to an elem entary Class in with the proper agency. American Literature,” she Said. Bill Arnold, director of Gerontology and ; Arnold said the department of gerontoloT urn to G rant, page 2. professor o f communications, said the departB y S haran K. -Gill State P ress C lin ic founder to speak on local health care issues B y G in ger Sc o tt State P ress An upcom ing piresentation in a lecture series sponsored by the School o f Social Work will address the need for, and cultural advantages of community-based health care. Dr. John Molina,, founder o f Las Fuentes Health C linic — a free nonprofit primary health clinic in Guadalupe, will speak to the public on Nov. 7 at the ASU Downtown Center, 502 E. Monroe St. M o lin a s a id in itia tin g a h ealth care facility in â com m unity rather than bring­ ing in a large health care provider such St. Luke’s allows the community to have a sense o f ownership. “(The health care provider) becomes a part o f the com m unity lifestyle,” M olina said. “There are so many resources in the co m m u n ity lik e the D e p a rtm e n t o f Economic Security and social services.” M ike L evy, c o o rd in a to r fo r alum ni, gifts and public information in the School o f Social Work, said Molina’s lecture will also provide the community with informa­ tion about cultural sensitivity needed in medical care. “P eople w ill see som eone talking in detail about how to serve other cultures in the community,” Levy said. “He was cho­ sen to speak because of his diverse experi­ ence and making something happen in such a diverse community.” T urn to H ealth care, page Paul Besing/State Press Exercise science major Tuffy Spears receives instruction on punting a football from sec­ ondary education junior C isco Duarte. The students are taking a c la ss titled, “Teaching Team Sports,” designed to instruct future teachers in the proper method of teaching team sports to younger children. The c la ss focused on sports such a s football, team handball, volleyball, floor hockey, soccer and speedball. 2. ASU F o u n d atio n plays stock m arket to enrich assets B y C hris P assamanO State P ress Earning 26 percent on investments last year, the ASU Foundation has been socking away the University’s money in all the right places. The Foundation controls $130 million in assets, and is also responsible for handling money raised in ASU’s Campaign for Leadership. A t the en d o f S eptem ber, the Foundation had $78 million of the $130 million invested for endowed programs. The Foundation uses eight differ­ ent types of money managers to help d iv ersify funds. T his is a m easure taken by die Foundation to help reduce the risk in playing the stock market game. “We diversify — by using all the different managers so the risk is lessened,” said Chuck Wagner, finance direc­ tor o f the ASU Foundation. “By doing this we can never maximize (the funds) but that is the trade off,” Even though the Foundation diversifies, there is still a chance o f losing money. “ W hile there is always a risk, we have m ultiple orga­ nizations investing,” said ASU President Lattie Coor. “ It is a way o f m axim izing the quality and m inim izing the risk. It’s a very prudent course.” The Foundation lost some money Get. 27 When the mar­ ket dropped, but officials said it won’t have much effect on ASU, which is in the market for long term. “We lost about 6.1 percent in that (drop),” said Lonnie Ostrom, director of the ASU Foundation. “But we were still better than the market as a whole* that lost over 7 percent.” O fficials said they feel the lost m oney will soon be made back. “T he stock m arket has n ev er gone back,” W agner said. “ You can look at October 1929, but since then die stock market has always finished ahead (in the end).” October has historically been the w orst m onth fo r the sto c k m a rk e t, w h ile N ovem ber and D ecem ber have been the b est m onths. Sticking with the market and not panicking is the key to successes. Wagner added. The F oundation’s investm ent consultant is W urts & Associates, Inc. They oversee all of the other money investors. “They are the managers o f the managers,” W agner said. “They are nationally known for the investment consulting for universities and university foundations. They take the ASU ampaign for Leadership place of any internal staff that we would have to hire.” Wurts tracks and monitors the money managers as well as recommends other managers, Wagner said. The company is also strictly used as a consultant— it doesn’t do any advising on investing. The Foundation has five o f its eight money managers specialize in equities or stocks. Some of the stock is invest­ ed in IBM, United Technologies, Deere and Co. and Xerox. Another portion is invested in the Vanguard Index (a Dow Jones index). Basically, the money is invested in the whole Dow Jones, so when the whole index goes up, the invest­ ments make money. There has been consistent growth over the last four years, said Ostrom. The Foundation has about 75 percent of its investments in equities. The other 25 percent is in fixed common funds or bonds. There is also roughly $8 million in cash “held by different managers who wait for the right time to invest,” Ostrom said. The Foundation processes about 600,000 transactions annually. Endowments are invested donations used for certain pur­ poses. They may be used for things such as salaries, faculty positions or scholarships, When an endowment is invested, only the earnings are spent. The principle is never touched, , T urn to I nvest, page 2. Tuesday, ¡November 4, 1997 Page 2 I T oday G r a n t ______ - C ontinued Campos clu N aik| organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basem ent o f the M atthew s C enter. | Requests will not be taken over the phone Of viaiEixDeadline for request* ; before publication and entries will not be accepted m ote than three working days before publication. O nly one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries mast contain the full name o f the club o r organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full address o f &e location. All requests are subset to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-co m e, first-se rv e d b a sis and are primed as space permits. General meeting w iH be heM 6:30p.m . fai| the MU. Check monitors for room assign­ ment. Fighter practice will b e held 7:30 p.m . o n the lawn: ea st o f th e S tu d e n t Services Building. * f ‘ ; ’ ' :j~ ' • • C om ing O ut D iscussion G roup —*; M eeting w ifi be beM 5:30 p.m , in C onference Room B o f the Student Services • C h ild and F am ily S erv ices *7* Rnancial planning for single parents sem­ inar w illb e held noon in tbe Chrysocolla • H iliel je w isb S tu d en t C enter — Tuesday lunch featuring spaghetti and meatballs will be held 11 ;30 a.m. in the H illel C enter, located o n 1012 S , M ill Ave. Prices are $ 2 5 0 for students, $3.50 for non-students,| • Career Services “C om pleting the Puzzle” workshop w ill be held 2 p.m . • C ounselor T raining C enter *— in the C a re e r D eve 1o p m e n t C e n te r; Counseling for ASU students, friends and located in Room C363 o f the Student family is provided by graduate students in Services Building. Payne Hall, room 402. For more information • C areer Services — “Resume Writmg” workshop wilt be held 1:40 p.m. in Room or to set up an appointment, call 965-5067. • Baptist Student Union — Tuesday P.M. 223 o f the MU. praise and worship will be held 8 p m in the • AISES — General meeting will be held 5:30 p.m, in BCG 316. BSU Center, located on 1322 S. Mill Ave. • College Council o f Public Programs— • P r o g r a m f o r S o u th e a s t A s ia n General meeting will be held 4:30 p.m. in Studies— “A Social Exploration o f the Rise o f Vietnamese Gangs in Southern the Navajo Room of the MU. • Anthropology C lub — A guest speaker C alifornia” brown bag lecture by lohn w ill g iv e a p re s e n ta tio n on m e d ic a l Eyres will be held 12:15 in LL A-46. anthropology at 3:45 p.m. in Room B-203 • S o c ie ty f o r H u m a n R e s o u rc e M anagem ent — Guest speaker Richard o f die Anthropology Building. • T au Beta Pi — General meeting will be T rujillo w ill be present at a 4:40 p.m . meeting in BA 357. held 6:30 p.m. in ECG 237. • P h i l i p p i n e - A m e r i c a n S t u d e n t • P h i G a m m a D e lta a n d S ig m a P h i A sso c ia tio n —- G en eral m eeting w ill Epsilon — Cheek awareness presentation be held 5 p.m. in the Graham Room o f fe a tu rin g g u est sp e a k e r Ju d g e M itch Crane will be held 7 p.m. in. Room 113 o f the MU. • Society for C reative A nachronism — Armstrong Hall. No S tate P ress * ' from page 1. gy has about 40 undergraduate miiior stu­ dents and 100 post-graduate, students but isj not looking to incorporate a major program. The departm ent w ould prefer to have students m ajor in their chosen field and minor in gerontology so they will able to apply their knowledge to the needs of the aging, he said. “W e are encouraging the students in sociology and psychology to p ick up a minor so that when they go out they can focus on the gerontology and geriatric pop­ ulation,” Arnold said. Thé class will also host a conference, in the spring, when other1colleges and faculty can see thé value o f a service learning class in their departments. I “I think the hook for gerontology and for this course is that with the baby boomers’ age there is going to be a tremendous need for services and for people who are aware o f w hat the aging process is all about,’4 Arnold said. The only other school on the west coast to receive the grant was San Francisco State University. H e a lt h ca re . C ontinued from page 1. One o f the cultural challenges M olina faced w hen he began the free clin ic in Guadalupe was a deep cultural belief in the evil eye. “T he ev il ey e is a look o f hate and jealousy,” he said. “It is believed that the e v il ey e can cau se a p e rso n to be ill. Cultural beliefs really affect how a com ­ munity reacts to a health care provider. It puts a ch allenge on the p ro v id er to be sensitive to those beliefs.” M olina began the Guadalupe clinic in A ugust o f 1995. It began in one o f the to w n ’s o ld c h u rc h b u ild in g s an d has grow n w ith the help o f priv ate donors and com m u n ity su p p o rt. T he c lin ic is now lo c a te d at 8625 S. A v e n id a D el Y aqui in G u ad alu p e and is sta ffe d by a p p ro x im a te ly 20 v o lu n te e rs v a ry in g from community members to doctors. “We are putting a proposal together for tobacco-tax money,” Molina said. . : The c lin ic needs about $250,000 for expansion and $300,000 to operate full­ time. “I hope to share with people the need to develop a sense o f community empower­ m ent,” M olina said.f “(Com m unity-based health cafe) keeps people healthy and out of the hospitals where the costs are.” I n v e s t _____ C ontinued from page 1. Therefore, if there is an endowment dona­ tion of $1.5 million, that $1.5 million will theoretically be there for all time. The Foundation has most of the endow­ ment money pooled together; donors have the choice as to whether their donation is pooled or not. Last year there was an earning on invest­ ments o f 26 percent. The pay-out on the earning was only 4.5 to 5 percent, so about 20 percent of the earning went straight back into the investments. I f you’re Appointment FLU I SHOTS A S U Stu d e n t H ealth an n o u n ce s its annual FLU SH O T P R O G R A M No Appointment Necessary The *10 fee can be charged to your Faculty/Staff/Stude FLU SHOT VACCINATION LOCATION: Jackie Chart, ignore tk is ad. i f you’re n ot, keep re a d in g and le a rn n o w to defend y o u rse if. Free S e lf - D e f e n se class T oday 5 p m -6 p m w iE s m m m m m IMFÈS&I I ® DiÉSJÎ NOVEMBER4, 6, 1 0 am * 2 pm A S U STU D E N T H EALTH 965-3346 SR C Gréen Gym Instructed by Rick LeForce from LeForce Martial Arts Academy Sponsored ky: A S A S U & tke American Marketing A ssn. W o r l d / N a t io n B y C hristopher B urns A ssociated P ress ; > PARIS —- Taking aim at France’s econom ic jugular, striking French truckers m anned scores o f roadblocks Monday, choking access to ports, fuel depots, industrial hubs and border routes across Europe. The job action, which began late Sunday after negotia­ tions over pay and working conditions broke down, was a repeat of protests that crippled French commerce a year ago. Truckers from neighboring countries, aware that they faced being stuck on French highw ays, stayed away in droves. A prolonged strike in France, Europe’s main highway axis, could slow Christmas shipments and hurt economies . struggling out of recession. Italian truckers were threaten­ ing a strike next week. “1 understand why they want more money for what they do." said British irucker Peter Ellis, stuck in one traffic jam. “(But) to be stopped and taken as prisoner is not really the fair way to do it. is it" M ajor traffic jam s were reported M onday in every French region, including all routes to the English Channel ferries in Normandy and many important bridges. France’s road information service reported about 140 barricades around the country. Most roadblocks were designed to slowly filter private motorists through while halting commercial traffic; Authorities began gas rationing in some parts o f the Country, as truckers surrounded and cut o ff alm ost all French oil refineries. European Transport Commissioner Neil Kinnock, call­ ing the strike “extremely significant in economic and social terms,” estimated that it could cost $ 114 million' and cut French economic growth. The unions, representing the nation’s 300,000 truckers, are demanding pay hikes o f up to 7 percent from compa­ nies, complaining they are squeezed by competition. The governm ent o f Socialist Prim e M inister Lionel Jospin, facing its first major crisis since coming to power in June, sought to get trucking owners back to the bargaining ■table early Tuesday. Je h a n de M arne, head o f the U nion o f T ra n sp o rt Federations, which represents 80 o f the nation’s trucking companies, pronounced the group “favorable to the idea,” but said he had to consult with member companies. “O ur companies are on a razor’s edge; we can’t give anym ore,” a stem -faced Jean-Louis Am ato, head o f the trucking owners’ federation UnosCra, told reporters before A P Photo /Mictwl Splngler A French truck driver ste p s down from h is cab next to the cu sto m s hut a s he blockades the entrance to the port of C a la is in northern France, Su n day evening. Truckers blockaded provincial g a s statio n s and tried to choke off routes on Sunday after n egotiation s to avert a nationw ide trucking strike failed. French m otorists, re callin g a crip p lin g 12-day transport strike a year ago, continued a run on g a s station s, and police intervened to keep drivers from blockin g routes. meeting with Transport Minister Jean-Luc Gayssot. Gayssot stayed cloistered in his ministry Monday and declined to comment to reporters, r * i . Police intervened at least tw ice overnight Sunday to keep highway crossings into Spain open, but .the unions vowed to keep up efforts to half all cross-border commer­ cial traffic. The French toy industry worried the strike could deal Shy Prince Harry, Prince Charles visit village school in South Africa DUKUDUKU, South Africa (AP) — Britain’s 13-yearold prince watched shyly Monday as adolescent girls per­ formed a Zulu dance chiring a visit with his father to a rural high school in South Africa. Prince Harry’s trip to Africa marked his first public activity since the funeral of his mother, Princess Diana, who died in a c a r crash in Paris on Aug. 31. The journey also fulfilled one of Diana’s wishes, for her sons to see Africa. Diana’s brother, Earl Spencer, lives in Cape Town, but officials did not say if Harry visited his uncle. At Ubuhlebemvelo High School in KwaZulu-Natal province, Charles and Harry watched the bare-breasted girls, wearing black and white string skirts, perform the traditional dance. Harry talked quietly to his father during the performance. When a teacher spx>ke to Harry, he only smiled. He walked shyly with his left thumb in his pocket, scratching the soil with his foot. Charles arrived in southerii Africa on Wednesday to begin a three-nation tour. While Charles visited Swaziland and Lesotho, Harry went on safari in Botswana with a school friend and his former nanny, Tiggy Legge-Bourke. Prince William, Hany’s older (Mother, remained behind in Britain because of school. Most of Harry’s six-day visit Was without media cover­ age, a controversial issue after his mother died in a high speed car chase trying to avoid photographers. On Saturday, the two princes reunited for a public meet­ ing with Britain’s top female music group, the Spice Girls, at a concert in Johannesburg. Harry left South Africa later Monday to return to school in England, while Charles attended a banquet in Durban. In a dinner speech, Charles referred to an often violent struggle for political supremacy between South Africa’s rul­ ing African National Congress and the local Zulu nationalist Inkatha Freedom Party that has rocked the province in recent years. “The rich ethnic and political mix in KwaZulu-Natal should surely be a cause of strengthened pride, not division and death,” Charles said. Adii Bradlow/AP Photo Britain’s Prince’s Harry, left, and his father. Prince Charles, right, m ake im pression s of their h ands in concrete after w atching a display of Zulu dancing in Dukuduku in northern KwaZulu Natal Province of South Africa, Monday. them a serious blow. “Our sector m akes 70 percent of its revenue in the last two months o f the year,” said the French Federation o f Toy Industries. It dem anded truckers and owners “find a solution as soon as possible.” Jospin has not taken sides in the trucker struggle, and offered Saturday night to lower trucking taxes by $133 per truck to relieve pressure on the two sides. But the offer was not enough to bring the owners back to the table Sunday. Typhoon Linda batters Vietnam’s southern coast B y I an S tew art A sso cia ted P ress HO CH I M INH CITY, V ietnam — Typhoon Linda pum m eled V ietnam ’s southern coast M onday, sinking hundreds o f fishing boats and flattening thousands o f homes in the m ost devastating storm to hit the country in decades. The storm cam e on the heels o f an earlier typhoon th at slam m ed the N orthern M ariana Islands over the weekend and a cyclone that shredded a northern swath o f the Cook Islands. Pounding the Vietnamese coast with gusts of more 80 mph, Linda left a trail of destruction in Ca Mau province. At least 500 small fishing boats and their crews were unaccounted for in Ca Mau province alone, a local offi­ cial said, speaking on condition o f anonymity. Another 200 boats from a fleet o f 300 were m issing M onday afternoon in neighboring Ben Tre province. The exact death toll was unclear, but authorities said dozens were confirm ed dead. Thousands o f fam ilies were left hom eless as Linda, w h ich beg an as a tro p ic a l sto rm , sw ep t acro ss the . province o f Ca Mau. As many as 13,000 clapboard and m ud hom es w ere d em olished or heavily dam aged, a federal official told The Associated Press. “This is the biggest storm to hit this area in nearly 100 years,” said Nguyen Tat Hoan, a senior official from the Flood and Storm Control Department in Hanoi. Deputy Prem ier Trinh M inh Thanh left the northern c a p ita l and w as h e a d e d so u th la te M on d ay to the Mekhong Delta area to assess the damage. T he typhoon th en headed fo r so u th ern T h ailan d , where the governm ent warned o f flash floods. E arlier M onday, the typhoon skirted offshore gas fields in the G ulf o f Thailand operated by Unocal but did not cause any dam age, the El Segundo, Calif.-based oil company announced. O p in io n Tuesday, November 4, 1997 P age 4 State P ress Effitorial L o tte r y p r o fit p r o p o s a l w if l b e n e f it s ta te s c h o o ls H om e Speaker Jeff G roscost, R*M esa. has asked that Arizona look into the possibility o f | giving a portion o f Arizona Lottery revenue to | the state's public schools, ¡M S G ood for him . M U gg The idea was sparked by G eorgia’s successful f p rogram , w here p ro fits from its lo ttery g o toward the state's educational system . Lottery m oney pays for technological improvements in pre-kindergarten classroom s across the state In addition, high school graduates who can mamtain a B average at an in-state public university d o so fo r free, G eorgia has over 128,000 stu­ dents under this program. \ \ • Georgia gives all its profits to education, bat other states, lik e N ew M exico, are also aiding ih stitu tio n s o f lea rn in g through th eir ^ ^ ^ iril, it doesn’t sound like a bad idea. It’s certainly worth serious consideration. B ut G eorgia is not A rizona. T he A rizona Lottery has to com pete w ith other v ices lik e Indian gam ing, horse tracks and dog tracks. t i g success lies, Q m t t t said, in the ability to appeal to I We all know the chances o f gible — anyone who has passed a statisticsclass can verify that. But if people knew that buying alottfX ytipket could help UBprave the public education system is Arizona, they might be more inclined to play. Coincidentally, gatin g more people to play is exactly what Arizona needs to help its struftgftng lottery system . ' A ctually, profits were so bad last year that many programs that expected money didn’t get any. Among these programs were the Clean Air Fuad and mass transit funds, Considering the Valley’s rem it downgrade in air quality, it would behoove us to -do what w e can to get those types o f programs som e money — sooner rather than later, If the proposed educational benefit program works like it should, w e can fin ally dp som e­ thing about a serious Arizona problem. But alas, it’s only a proposed educational ben­ efit program. R ight now, only co lleg e scholar­ ships are being considered, gad G roscost any finalized plan would have to be approved by j Arizona's voters. ;s Still, w e can’t help tn tito be impressed with ‘ liM d e w P o lttic ia n s -in -c h a rg e , G overnor H all 1 I and Speaker G roscost bave both sent a m essagl j f educational system , and G roscost has begun to back his words with actions: Now the ball is in the legislators’ court, along , w ith toe burden to develop a plan that w ill pump money back into A rizona public education. Ultim ately, though, the final test w ill be up to us —- the Arizona voters. ' ‘ r ',V STAFF STATE PRESS S p a ia i frien d s to u ch our lives more than 10 seconds to realize what kind o f a person I w ould lik e to in tro d u c e HAD he was. From that m om ent; my entire perception and you to R ichard C happie. The i - T W IT T Y definition o f “friend” has changed. name might not ring a bell, but One year, I had an opportunity to spend the evening everyone knows him. He is not Columnist with him on his birthday. He had two tickets to an opera a celebrity or anyone particu­ larly fam ous, yet we all know o f a Richard Chappie and in M oscow . 1 believe M s w ife w as ill and unable to whep we think o f them , we sm ile. H e is that special attend, so he took ijie. He never once c o m p la in ^ that he someohe who com es along, maybe only once in a life­ had to spend his birthday with me, but instead treated time, who makes the world a better place by his pres­ me like it was my birthday. His glass was always half­ full, not half-empty. , ence. He is a friend. Early last month, after a long and brave battle with T he w ord — frie n d — is an in te re stin g title . To some, it m eans som eone whom we can trust. To Others, cancer, the world lost one o f its finest people, and most it is so m e o n e w h o a c c e p ts us fo r w h o w e a re . didn’t even realize it. He was too young and too special W hatever the definition, “friend” is a title earned, not to lose, but he did more in his short time here than many bestow ed. For me, a friend is Richard Chappie. He is a Could accom plish in centuries. Cancer may have taken person who lifted me to a higher level and made me a his body, but it will never take his legacy. We a ll k n o w a better person. Richard Chappie, whether R ic h a r d h a s b e e n a it is a professor, a parent, p ro fe sso r o f R u ssian at a spouse o r anyone. W e Florida State U niversity. TMe wor £ — friend — is an interesting are to u ch ed by them far He hasn’t lived a “glam ­ titt& To some, it means someone who we deeper than perhaps they o ro u s ” life , b u t h e h as w ill ev er know . A nd we d o n e s o m e th in g th a t can bust, ib others, it is someone w ife a ll h a v e a l i t t l e b it o f m any others cannot boast accepts us fo r who we are. R ic h a rd C h a p p ie in us. of; he has truly lived life I t’s a side th at we show and lived it well. He is a all too infrequently. b r i l l i a n t m an . H e is a I ’m gratefu l fo r p eo ­ father and a husband. He is a teacher, and an excellent one at that. He possesses ple lik e R ichard C happie w ho m ake this w orld a little a ll the c h a ra c te ristic s th a t draw us, as c h ild re n , to b it brighter. I appreciate people like him fo r bringing S a n ta C laus: love, com passion, un d erstan d in g , hope b e a u ty to a s o c ie ty s u r r o u n d e d by th e u g ly . H e and a great big sm ile! As adults, we are still drawn to defines and em ulates this w ord —- “frien d ;” A nd he is m y friend. such people. Richard didn’t have to say a word to make you feel Chad Twitty is a ju n io r studying journalism and Russian good. I first m et him in 1993, and it didn’t take much and can be reached a t chadtw@ imap3.asu.edu. RAY STERN, Editor PERCY EDNALINO JR., Managing Editor CARYL SUE M I C A L I Z I O . . . N i g h t Editor JENNIFER NETHERB Y Editor CADONNA PEYTON .^ .A s s t a t y Editor MATTMORGAN. . . . . . . . . . .OpinionEditor JBdäor. PAT SHANNAHAN...... .„ J .; RANDY JCH&S _____ ................... .Sport* Editor ED ODEVEN...... ........ .....Asst. Sports Editor DEANNA DARR. . Ma g â z ^ Editor REPORTERS: Brian Anderson, Tim Baxter, Sharan K. Gill, Stacy Mann, Chris Passantano, Ginger Scott, Kara Shire, Genoa SibokFCohn, 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.B. McGovern. COLUMNISTS: Brian Aiy, Scott Bennett, Ross Eide, Aislinn Fahy, SJE. Hardee, Brian Policoff, Mark Pollock, Geoige D. Rose. Sr., Frank Sackton, Adam Schiffer, Joshua Solovskoy, Steve Sirin, 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 Negrctti, Jess Rankin, Shane Siren, KafhyWelsh. C L A S S IF IE D S : Kate D esio , Jeanette Ploiuni, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views o f the editorial board. decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole; Board members include: RAY STERN PERCY EDNALINO JR MATT MORGAN JODI B AFUNDO Editor Managing Editor Opinion Editor News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during die aca­ demic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, facul­ ty, staff or student body. State P ress Pho ne N umbers Information.... ..... .965-7572 Newsroom........... ,...965-2292 Magazine................ .965-1695 Advertising..............965-6555 Classifieds,...............965-6735 http://new s.vpsa.asu. edu S tate P ress L ______ . - ■ ■. etters to t h e ,, E . ________ d it o r , Tuesday,.November4, 1997 1 . . H -M Á 1 I. ., , , ., ,,, .. ,, Page 5 THE EDITOR: JUZlMO^’lMAPl .ASU.EDU Columbus Day panelist disputes inaccurate claims As a professor o f C hicana/o Studies, p u b lis h e d s c h o la r and p a n e lis t on the Columbus Day Opinion Forum, I want to respond to the m isrepresentation o f actual event and to the spurious claims made by T hom as M cD erm o tt a b o u t the p a n e l’s lack o f scholarly integrity . M cD erm ott claim s that, according to th e “p a n e l's ow n a d m issio n , th ey had absolutely no p ro o f o r d o cum entation.” H o w ev er at th e e v e n t, I g av e o v e r 30 handouts w hich included excerpts from C h risto p h er C o lu m b u s’s jo u rn a l o f his tra v e ls to th e A m e ric a s, 1 6 th -cen tu ry ch ro n iclers o f the C o nquest o f M exico (D iaz del C a s tillo . M o to lin ia and Las Casas) and sections by the award-winning study, The Conquest o f Am erica (1984) by Tzvetan Todorov. These excerpts con­ firm the denigrating views held about the inhabitants o f the A m ericas as “heathen and savage:” the sexualization o f native women; the widespread brutality inflicted on the native peoples (children as well); and the incredible w onder and awe that th e A z te c c a p ita l c ity in s p ire d in the chroniclers o f the Conquest (with respect to architecture, m edicine, aqueduct sys­ tem s, sanitation and artistry). First, I m ust Specifically address mis- leading and inaccurate statem ents made by Sharan K. Gill in the Oct. 16 article: “Aldama said Columbus has been herald­ ed as a h e ro ic fig u re , w hen re a lly he wiped out populations o f the human race. ‘W ith in 100 y e a rs a f te r th e S p a n ish arrived, there were 70 million indigenous liv es lo st to d iseases like the com m on cold,’ he said.” As supported by the Todorov analysis, I s ta te d th a t m o st h is to r ia n s o f th e C onquest either underplay the genocide or attribute the population decline to the “microbe shock” o f diseases. However, I was careful to point out that the decima­ tion o f the population was due to direct warfare and violence, the extrem e condi­ tio n s o f lab o r in th e m ines and in the building o f cities and cathedrals and the “m ic ro b e s h o c k ” o f su ch d is e a s e s as sm all-pox, ch o lera and sy p h ilis. T hese claim s are available in Church, m ilitary and Spanish government records, as well as in the histories o f officially appointed chroniclers o f the “New W orld” and the A ztec and M aya codices. Furtherm ore I never stated that C hristopher C olum bus h im se lf com m itted this genocide, even though his journal dem onstrates that he never sees native peoples o f the Américas Christopher Columbus & no hero T K is i i i a r e s p o n s e to T h o m a s M cD erm o tt’s o p in io n in th e O ct. 29 issue o f the State Press. I regretfully d id n o t a tte n d th e O c t. 19 fo ru m : “C o lu m b u s D ay: W h a t I t M e a n s to Everyone.” H ow ever, 1 w ould like to com m ent on Mr. M cD erm ott’s views. 1 d o not n e c e ssa rily w ant to chan g e them , but I would like him to see the issues in a different light. I would first like to look at Cristobal C olon’s (C hristopher C olum bus) “dis­ covery o f A m erica.” To imply that he “discovered” these lands infers that the people here were: 1) inferior to those in Europe and 2) that the people here were less “c iv iliz e d ” than E uropeans. His “discovery o f America”^laid the founda­ tio n o f the E u rocentric ideology that plagues our cultures today. To consider C olon as a hero is to legitim ize all that cam e after him . H is courage w as fueled by his am bition. He sought a trade route to the E ast in o r d e r to b e c o m e w e a lth y a n d to b e c o m e f a m o u s . 1 f in d it h a rd to believe that people in the 15th cen tu ­ ry w ere so ignorant as to believe that the w orld was flat. It is also hard to believe that they had n o idea o f the lands to the w est. T here w ere stories in that era about new lands w ith peo­ p le o f a d if f e r e n t c u ltu r e . T h is is know n, sin c e th e re is proof o f V ik in g exploration in the eastern part o f the U n ite d S ta te s a n d C a n a d a , w e ll b e fo re Colon. Explain to me, sir, how anyone can honor a man where, after his arrival, mil­ lions o f people died. The Spanish who a rriv e d w ith C olon the seco n d tim e planned for a massive conquest. Colon h im s e lf w as to be g o v e rn o r o f Hispaniola, which is today Cuba. The total Indigenous (Tahinos) population of Hispaniola pre-Colon was approximately 900,000; a little more than 50 years after C o lo n , 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 T a h in o s re m a in e d . Today there are no such people. T o say that sen sitiv ity is elevated over truth is to imply that such occur­ rences in Colonial America never hap­ pened. W hy c a n ’t the a tro cities th at occurred be discussed ami presented? Is it a lie that millions o f people’s way of life was forever changed? It is well doc­ umented that all o f it occurred. I f you, M r. M cD erm ott, o r anyone who feels this way, need documentation, please register for a Chicana/o studies class or a history class which explores the events o f “post-discOvery America.” Xavier M . Flores Senior Secondary Education Mathematics as other than “savages” and is com plicit with the raping o f native girls. Also, Gill reported Vernon Foster stat­ in g , “ In L o s A n g e le s C o u n ty , N ativ e A m erican wom en w ere being sterilized w ithout their consent or know ledge.” In fact, Vernon discussed the forced steril­ iz a tio n o f L a k o ta w om en on th e P ine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, and how he was allow ed access to congres­ sional reco rd s in W ash in g to n , D .C . to corroborate those, findings. I said that a parallel is draw n to M exican wom en in Los Angeles county in the 1970s, as well as to Puerto Rican women who were ster­ ilized without their consent. Following journalistic ethics and proto­ col, the reporter should have made herself known to the panelists, confirmed the quo­ tations, read the handouts provided and offered a more balanced view of the event. Despite my criticism o f G ill’s inaccu­ racy, it is M r. M cD erm o tt’s le tte r th at causes m e the greatest concern. I w on­ dered if he even attended the event. He did not mention the handouts. He did not recognize the fact that Foster has congres­ sional records which testify to the steril­ ization o f Lakota wom en. Alarmingly, he continues to use the term “discover,” which was discussed at length by the panelists as offensive to native and Chicana/o peoples because the term denies the presence and the vitality o f the indige­ nous peoples of the Americas. Regarding Mr. M cDerm ott’s character­ ization o f our claim s on the sterilization o f N ative and Mexican women as “laugh­ able,” “absurd” and “profoundly idiotic,” 1 direct the readers to the following: “Se me acabo la cancion: An Ethnography of N o n -C o n sen tin g S te riliz a tio n s A m ong M exican W om en in Los A ngeles” con­ ducted by Carlos Velez-Ibanez, now dean o f S o c ia l S c ie n c e s a t U n iv e rs ity o f California at Riverside, and the landmark book, Women, Race and Class by distin­ guished professor Angela Davis. Finally, I question Mr. M cD erm ott’s disciplinary myopia and claims to owner­ ship o f absolute truth. Mr. M cD erm ott seems to have no interest in contemplat­ ing the hum an genocide and slavery o f the C onquest, as w ell as contem porary forms o f colonialism; at least he can con­ sid e r K irk p a tric k S a y le s’ C onquest o f Paradise. D r. A rtu ro J. A ldam a P rofessor C tiicana/o Studies Panel seeks historical correction T h o m as M c D e rm o tt’s re p ly to the Columbus Day opinions f(Oct. 29) only con­ vinces me that we should admit more stu­ dents to our graduate programs with broad disciplinary training. He demonstrates that he has virtually no knowledge of world history or the motiva­ tion to go to a decent library to substantiate his views. For example, Columbus’s role as a murderer and enslaver o f the Indians of the Caribbean is well documented. First­ hand d o cum entation was su pplied by a m em ber o f his own expeditionary force, Bartholome de las Casas. He describes the firs t-h a n d a c c o u n t o f th e se ev e n ts in “History o f the Indies.” As for the sterilization program s car­ ried out by various agencies o f our gov­ ernm ent, the case o f Carrie Buck is well known. In 1927, Suprem e C ourt Justice 0 1iv e r W en d e l 1 H o lm e s u p h e ld th e V irg in ia ste riliz a tio n law a g a in st M s. Buck, claim ing that “three generations of im beciles are enough.” More than half of the states had eugenical sterilization laws and more than 65,000 Americans were sterilized against their will betw een the early 1920s and 1964. The American sterilization laws were modeled after the work o f the American eugenicist C.B. D avenport and his second-in-com - m and Harry H am iliton L aughlin. These same individuals were consultants for the Nazi eugenics courts. In my work in progress titled “Genes. R ace, and S o ciety ,” I d em o n strate that Davenport had ample theoretical knowledge, even in the 1920s, to know that eugenical breeding schemes could not work and that his theories on the hierarchies o f human races were incorrect. Yet he purposefully chose to ignore this theory and data. As for the issue of Hiroshima, there is an excellent body o f scholarship that supports the view that this was precisely a show of force for the post-war world. Whether one agrees with this proposition, the opinion is not a frivolous one. No, Mr. McDermott, not historical revi­ sionism, but historical correction is on the agenda. The history o f many sections of our population has been minimized and distort­ ed. I hope that any students who wish to learn more about this process will consider enrolling in the many excellent courses that we offer at ASU to broaden your knowl­ edge and repair the damage of narrow disci­ plinary study. D r, Joseph L. G raves Jr. Associate Professor, Evolutionary Biology via e-mail Discovery o f America produced the best o f both worlds Recently the MUAB Forum on Columbus Day had only discussants critical of the observance. In an Oct. 29 State Press letter, graduate student Thomas McDermott briefly gave some facts favoring Columbus Day. Having taught at ASU for 33 years, 1 feel obligated to tell students about (he long-range good coming from blending European technolo­ gy and native artisan skills. Early on, the worst o f European culture mixed with the worst of indigenous cultures. Gradually, the New World out produced the Old World industrially, and North and South A m erica d em an d ed u n iv e rsa l rig h ts long b efore Old Worlders did or could do so. O f course C olum bus d id n ’t have 1990s sensitivity. Neither did the Aztecs, who cut the hearts out of 10,000 live virgins each year as a “tribute” to their gods. Europe in 1492 was awash in its own superstition, but its cruelties could not match New W orld savagery. Mayas played a form of basketball. The annual champion team got teenage girl slaves as lovers. The losing team was put to death. Sportsmanship, Maya style. Some 30 years after the Conquest, many Spanish priests were protesting their countrymen’s abuse of native labor. Casa de Las Indian in Spain has copies of the protests, but no Indian holy men thundered against the widespread practice o f child sacrifice. Columbus is the target of propagandists for victimiza­ tion, w hose political goal is to throw European-origin p o w er b ro k ers o ff b alan ce. T hey a lso b esm irch our Founding Fathers, despite the thrilling concept: “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal.” We added “women” to that sentence and “black" to the implied reference to “white.” In what native culture did universal social justice get proclaimed before Columbus linked the New and Old Worlds? M arvin Alisky, Ph.D. Professor Em eritus . •* Political Science Tuesday, November 4, 1997 P olice Report The A S U police reported the follow ing in c i­ dents on Monday: '* A 1996 Toyota pickup truck, Arizona license plate number MZA740. was towed from Lot 50 where it was parked in a planter and a fire lane. • Two students were arrested for theft and crimi­ nal damage at Sonora Center. ;. • Someone removed a woman’s Rolex watch from Manzanita Hall. • A student told policé that someone removed eight custom-made bras from Ocotillo Hall. No clue how much they are worth, but it had to be quite a b it • Someone made harassing phone calls to a stu­ dent in Best Hall. • A man not associated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for improper use of a vehicle, drunk driving, driving with a blood-alcohol level over ,10 and preventing the operation of a vehi­ cle at 401 E. Stadium Drive. Another man and a youth not associated with ASU were arrested for improper use of a vehicle. • A man not associated wjth ASU was arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia and an out­ standing warrant from the M aricopa County Sheriffs Office. He could not post bond and was booked. them rem oving som e item s from U nited Stationers, 1013 W. Alameda Drive. The men were apparently at the business to clean the car­ pet. Police found property from the business inside the men’s van and determined it WaS val­ ued at more than $2,000. All property was recovered and the suspects were booked. • Police responding to a fight call in a parking lot at 1525 W. Elliot Road found an unidentified man lying on the ground with a head wound. Cops also noticed the man was apparently drunk as a skunk. A witness at the scene said they saw the John Doc sprawled out on the hood of a vehicle that was apparently attempting to shake him off. They apparently succeeded and the man was transported to the M aricopa County Hospital’s intensive care unit where he was list­ ed in critical condition.. Today’s photo radar locations are: • McClintock Drive, between Broadway Road and Southern Avenue. • University Drive, betweeh Hardy and Priest drives. • Rural Road, between Broadway Road and Southern Avenue. • • Mill Avenue, between Broadway Road arid Southern Avenue. The Tempe p o lice reported the fo llo w in g incidents on Monday: Com piled by State P re ss reporter B rian Anderson. Rolling Stones Tickets Giveaway! • Four men were arrested after someone saw States awarded $19.6 m illion for low-income AIDS housing WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal grants totaling $19.6 million will provide support to {uw-income people in Arizona and 19 other states who are infected with the AIDS virus. H ousing Secretary Andrew Cuom o said Monday. The grants will help 11,000 people who have tested positive for HIV, including those with t all-blown AIDS, remain in their homes or be provided with housing if they are homeless. The grants, which were awarded to commu­ nity organizations on a competitive basis, repre­ sent 10 percent of a $196 million program. The larger share o f the money earlier was awarded to states and cities according to a formula based on the number of AIDS cases reported. ‘Tragically, HIV/AIDS too often throws hard-working Americans into poverty, hitting them with huge medical bills and sometimes leaving them unable to work,” Cuomo said. ‘This administration realizes that providing affordable housing is a key part of our response to AIDS," he said. “Our assistance will strength­ en our partnerships with communities which arc hardest hit by this epidemic.” The $19.6 million in grant aid is being made available to communities in Alabama, Alaska. A rizona, C alifornia, C onnecticut, H aw aii, F lo rid a, K entucky, M aine, M aryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey. New York, New M exico, North Carolina, Rhode Island. Texas, Washington and Wyoming. HJKEROSSOU Luke’s name was randomly drawn from hundreds of entries and has won two tickets to the November 7 Rolling Stones concert! Wonder if he needs a date? Ea c h S t a t e P r e s s P R O V ID E S Y O U R DAILY R EQ U IR EM EN TS O F 1 1 Contest sponsored by ir a n [ d e a l s I ESSENTIAL V IT A M IN S A N D M IN E R A L S. CLIP THESE COUPONS FOR GREAT SAVINGS!! Use 'em or lose 'em! more coupons on pages 10,11 and 20 -1--■--■-- ■--■-- ■-- ■-- ■-- V--■-- ■-- ■-- ---------- ■--■ L ik en o1 p la c eo n j E a rth .Æ F R E E one: h o u r OF 1301 ■ ■-- F OOL ■.. V ■ ■" ■ -W—W ■' ■ "l"''! i l l * ■ F R E E ONE HOUR OF F OOL with p u rc h a se of one hour with purchase of one hour from 11 a.m. - 8 p.m.* Monday - Friday from 11 a.m. - 8 p.m.* Monday - Friday E. 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U N L IM IT E D M ILE A G E A V A IL A B L E R E N T A LS T O M EX IC O $3 o f f YOUR NEXT VISIT 9-5 Wash, Cut & Style 518-521 W C o u p o n o n ly . E x p ire s 11, 2 5 / 9 7 • 7 ,9 ,1 2 ,1 5 Passenger • C om pact • L uxury SB ■ « M idsize m V S M v - » C o nvertibles m m BH _ 3625_wi INDIAN_SCHOOL RD. 293^E^McDO_WELL RDj P age 11 Tuesday, November 4,1997 S tate P ress USE ’EM1 O R L O S E ’ EM if lB t iW E RENT TO EVERYONE! 1 | " 1 .w OPEN 7 DAYS [ | U N D E R 21? N O C RED IT CARD? | UNLIMITED MILEAGE AVAILABLE ^ 9 p C V J | P flB v M 1 ■RENTALS TO MEXICO | |\ ¡ •7,9,12,15 P assenger « M idsize ^ ^ % o9!f • « C ompact • C onvertibles j » luxi* y 2 o 9 b 9 o 1 0 ¡H H 3 6 2 5 W . INDIAN SC H O O L R D . 2 9 3 4 E . M cDOW ELL R D . | L o w F at F a st F o o d £■ . 5 0 “ OFF ANYTHING J M SURF CITY SQUEEZE . a s ü ijm pfj Located in the fro n t lobby o f the SRC Expires 11/30/97. 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Drop entries at the State Press in room 47 of Matthews Center. Please submit on disk or typed. Include your name and phone number. W inning entries will be published in the special State Press issue, ASU CHOICE on Nov. 19. S ports S ta te P ress ' Page 15 Tuesday, November 4, 1997 Fresh faces dominate ASU w om ens hoops B y R andy J ones State P ress E xpect a new show at the U niversity Activity Center this season from the ASU women’s basketball team. Head coach Charli Turner Thorne wel­ co m e s n in e n ew co m ers to h e r sq u ad , replacing the w hopping eight seniors in M aroon and G old last season, including A H -Pac-10 h o n o rab le m ention forw ard Molly Tuter. , The Sun Devils return only five players from a squad which posted a dismal 9-19 overall. 3-15 P a c -10 record. It was the fourth straight year ASU posted less than 10 wins. H ighlighting the class o f 1997, which Turner Thome called “the most accelerated incoming class in the country,” is Ebony E dw ards, who was a tw o-tim e A rizona P la y e r o f th e Y ear at C h a n d le r H igh S ch o o l. She led C h a n d le r to tw o sta te championships and averaged 22 points, five steals and four rebounds a game. She ranks in the top five in Arizona history in points ( 1,926) and steals (328). , Edwards believes ASU will come out with a whole new attitude than teams in the past. “T his could be the year that we start picking things up,” she said. “And hopeful­ ly it continues for years to come.” Other new players who should make an impact for the Sun Devils are guards junior Rechelle Lang, freshman Leaf Newman and junior Michelle Tom. The coach believe^ her young team is capable of playing with just about anybody in the country. “W e h av e s ix -a n d -a -h a lf y ears o f Division I experience on this entire team,” she said at ASU media day on M onday. “But I think we will be successful because we really are h av in g fu n . E v eryone is enjoying what we are doing, and enjoying the process.” Turner Thome knows however, having fun doesn’t necessarily mean winning tons of games. “W e know we have a group that are going to take their lumps she said. “They haven’t done this before. There is no substi­ tute for experience... “I have no idea how many games we are going to win. No idea. I just know we have a great group that is going to come together and play some very good basketball. How that equates in the long run to. wins and losses I have no idea.” The new blood has made for great team chem istry already, even though the team has yet to play a single game, senior guard Stephanie Freeman said. “(The chem istry is good) because we have a lot of competitors. People with the desire to win, people who w on’f settle. I think that is something different from the other teams I’ve been on. On some of those other teams if someone got hit it was like all the air was gone. “This team goes after each other in prac­ tice every day. We don’t have a bad prac­ tice. ... I don’t think we’ve had that kind of chemistry and hard work the last three years I’ye played.” T urn t o Y o u n g sters, pag e 16. basketball team. The Su it D evils welcome nine newcom ers to the fold. Only five letter winners return from last years’ 9-19 squad. QB, punter honor«! Odd rule marrs swimmers debut vs. UNLV B y E d O deven State P ress A SU quarterback Ryan Kealy and punter M arcus Williams wane named Pac-10 Players o f the Week, the acfflfiaenpeanaotmced Monday. Kealy, a redshirt freshman product o f Sc Mary’s High School, nabbed the Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Week honors for the second time this season after completing of 36 passes (64 percent) for 245 yards and no intercep­ tions. JfekQ^sed four touchdowns to lead A S U to a 44-31 Williams, a senior from Tempe’s McClintock High School, set an ASU single-game record by averaging 53.6 yards cm seven punts to earn I ^ - 1 0 Special Teams Player of the Week. His shining moment of the game came on a sensational 66-yard boot in the first half. Williams also handled the kickoff dunes and drilled six of his eight kick­ offs into Ihe Washington State end zone. . ASU head coach Bruce Snyder was-pleased with the extraordinary performances of these two players. “Ryan Kealy’s performance I thought was outstanding,” said Snyder, in his sixth season at ASU. ‘‘Marcus Williams had the best job o f punting 1 think I’ve ever seen in a col­ lege foofoaB gam e” Tickets available . As o f Monday afternoon, 1L000 tickets were available for A SU ’s N ov. 15 hom ecom ing contest against die Oregon Ducks. . ¡Um Mee. a senior anu jM ta m n W Saturday over -»—• vvQSfongKH? «Knifh no sacKSKj Cougar q u a rte r«* Byan Leaf th e n times, recovered a tur B m t rumbled 68 ye«* for 1 m om entum -sw inging touch­ down late in the fourth quarter. H amilton M ee- Football The infamous “Pine Tar” incident it was not, but an unusual technicality marred the Sun Devils’ season-opening swim meet. While memories of George Brett’s controversial home run against the New York Yankees in July 1983 — which became notorious due to Yankee skipper Billy Martin’s successful protest of Brett’s'round-tripper because there was too much tar on his bat — were rekindled by a handful of baseball fanatics at the Mona Plummer Aquatic Center, Friday’s true highlights were of ASU’s overall dominance in the swimming pool. The ASU women’s team breezed past UNLV 183-110. On the men’s side, the Rebels edged the Sun Devils 155-140. The ASU m en’s team lost 26 points to the technicality, the women’s team lost 22. A fte the foutth event of the meet, UNLV swimming coach Jim Reitz pinpointed a minute detail that forced ASU to be dis­ qualified in three events it won: men’s 400-yard medley relay, w om en’s 400 m edley relay and m en’s 100 backstroke According to NCAA rules, a visible marker of some sort must indicate where 15 yards is On each side of the pool from each end. This is required for backstroke events so the pool judge can keep make sure the swimmers do not streamline under water for more than 15 yards. The pool was not marked, so ASU was penalized. “It’s in the rule book. It’s legitimate,” ASU assistant men’s coach Sean Farrell said. But he has “never seen (hat called before.” Reitz offered this explanation behind his strange request Hm Despite the setback, the numerous ASU swimmers excelled. “They handled that little bit of adversity real well,” ASU women’s swim coach Tim Hill said. “The way we swam is what I’m pleased with.” * Leading the way was sophomore Carolyn Adel (winner in the 200 freestyle at 1-minute, and 50.16 seconds and 400 yard individual medley at 4.19.91), and she felt this was the perfect way to start foe seafon. “Personally, I’m happy,” she said “I think as a team we did really well. There were a lot of people from what I saw, that either went there personal-bests or really close to their person­ al-bests. For a first m eet... That’s a really good sign.” Sophomore Sarah Adams (50 and 100 freestyle), junior Carrie Anderson (100 and 200 breaststroke), junior Tiffany Houser (100 butterfly) and freshman Lauren Morelli (200 backstroke) also posted victories. On the m ot’s side, Sun Devil junior All-American Francisco Sanchez was first in the 50 freestyle in a blazing fashion, 19.97 seconds (third fastest in school history). He also won the 100 freestyle (44.91). Other winners for ASU included Craig Hutchison (200 freestyle), Otto Hinks (100 breaststroke) and Christian Jacobson (200 backstroke). Although they lost, the Sun Devils men’s team did not dis­ appoint '■ “I couldn’t be more pleased with the performances,” ASU men’s coach Ernie Maglischo said. “There are some loses more glorious than victory. This is one of them.” Sun D evil ju n io r K atrina Pfeuffer placed first in the women’s 1 and 3-meter diving competitions. ASU rophomore AlanSonkin was first in the 1-meter men’s competition. SumD wmls A n d e r so n b e g a n the d ua l meet season in phenomenal fashion Friday afternoon. Thu junior placed first in the 100 a n d 200 -ya rd breaststroke everts, with times of 1:06.34 and 2.20.86. respectively to help A S U rout welting U N LV 1 fS| Sun D e vils' heart-thumping 44-31 victory By E d O deven State P ress Sarah BlaskaSoccer C arrie A nderson - m W om en ' s S w im m ing (umiliasi that M itchell Freedman Football UK the returned 89 yards tor State P ress Tuesday, November 4, 1997 Page 16 Y o u n g ste r s__ :__ & ^ma C o n t in u e d from p m ; e 15. ' Point guard will be a much improved facet of this team, with Liang and Tom taking over the duties, Turner Thorne said. “Rechelle is doing extremely well,” she said. “She has international experience and she is extremely smart and savvy. She has good handles and great court vision (and) she can score when we need her to. That’s a huge step for­ ward for us.” Tom is not eligible to open the season, as she transferred mid-year, but should be available come mid-December. For leadership ASU will turn to senior guards Freeman and Rameeka Lowe. Freeman is the teams’ leading return­ ing scorer, rebounder and defender, averaging 7.8 points an d 4.3 rebounds per game along with 51 steals. Lowe returns 7.5 ppg, 3 rpg and 70 assists. “Certainly (they) are going to be the cornerstones offen­ sively and defensively,” Turner Thom e said o f her team captains. “They are good team leaders. They’ve workedhard (and) both take a lot of pride in their defense, which is nice when they are also probably your two best offensive players.” Freeman said the team knows that the team’s defensive Mate Great Money! Have Fun! Put Your Education to Work Working with Companies Äke._ Get A Real Job ^ H ill’s Sprint. Sprint PC S' Im m ediate part-time opportunities: • • • • $8 - $10 per hour 20-24 hours per week Evenings and weekends NO TELEMARKETING!! We're looking for: Dynamic, outgoing individuate • Who are customer service oriented • Have retail or sales experience Gome visit our recruiting booth Tuesday & Wednesday. 11/4 & Tl/6 9:00 am - 3:00 pm On campus at the Colege of Business Courtyard or ca l (800) 826-SAMG extension 2170 for more information. intensity will directly lead to better results. “Defense first,” she said. “W e are not going to be a score-more team. We are not going to try and outscore any team. We are going to try and hold teams and make them earn every basket they get.” Will ASU be the pushover it has been in the past, includ­ ing not winning a road game in conference since a 81-77 victory at Washington in 1996, and owning a Pac-10 road record of 2-34 the last four seasons? No, said Freedman. Teams shouldn’t expect an easy game against the Sun Devils, she said. “(Teams) are going to think this is an easy win,” she said. “Thinking they can just walk in and not be tired when they leave (the court). We are going to make them exhaust­ ed... Make them look like they’ve been in a battle.” N ote: “M idmoming M adness” is set to invade the UAC on Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a m, prior to ASU’s exihition opener against Kilsyth (Australia). Before the Sun Devils’ 2 p.m. tip-off, Valley youths can watch ASU’s shoot around and pick up a free T-Shirt (first 400). An autograph session is also included. J JOB / Ssv At Wells Fargo, we’ve always set oiir sights on providing excellent customer support to meet oiir customer s evolying needs. Vital to our commitment ate dedicated ,employees w ho work behind the scenes in our Tempe Operations Center* This. 24 hour a day, seven day a week operation provides flexible 20 hour per week evening schedules, ideal for students. P R O O F M A C H IN E O P E R A T O R S 10-key data entry skills are a must to encode and balance transactions. Salary incentivesaveraging $11-$14 per hour available. .* - , Tuition Reimbursem ent Our outstanding program will impress anyone looking to further their education! Wells Fargp offers comprehensive benefits for employees working more than 17.5 hours weekly and one o f the top benefits packages in the business. Tempe Operations Center opportunities alb open-ended and regularly exceed scheduled times. Candidates must be able to worit overtime as needed. Employment applications are available at your local Wells Fargp branch. O nce you’ve completed an application, please send to: W d b Fargo, Em ploym ent, 100 W W uhington-M A C 4101*007, Attn: M G , Phoenix, A Z 8 5 003. For more information, please call (602) 3 78-1529. For details on other available opportunities, please call (602) 378-1185. EEO/m/0d/v. OPENING W ELLS FARGO Flexible Schedule • Part-time or Full-time • No Selling • Competitive Salary * • Outstanding Benefits • Fun Atmosphere • $100 Sign-up Bonus • CROSSWORD by THOMAS JOSEPH L ocatio n s clo se to A SU C all o u r 2 4 -h o u r Jo b H otline: s N 3 d» a 3 1 V 3 ■ a 1a V 3 X 1a 1 s 3 N n a ■ N 0 -S Í V a T 3. 7 i 3 a d V a 3 S 1 V a N V S N 3 ft 3 1d O N OM s 13 N V O M S 1 s OH d vp 41 Corrals DOWN 1 Garden 1 Cuts building 5 CD-player 2 Attacked 3 Each part S |T 1 A l l i s 4 Deserted 10 Church 1 OHVd 5 Hot area S 3 d I fashion 11 Actor’s {SEIKO 11 E l E2 ÜE3K3Í3 comments "6 S o far 13 March time 7 Try a drink ■ E D H S E U i d i a i H i s i 14 Keyboard 8 Issue 30 Sky color 9 Sediment 23 Run user 24 ‘My Way* 31 Red 12 Purloins 15 Ex-con, Square singer 16 Gloss perhaps name 25 Scoop target 17 Bind 32 Winter holder 18 Designer 21 Place to gliders 27 Coach Pop use a 19 Actress 36 Use a 29 Wheel wedge Lupino chair part 20 Likely 7 8 6 21 ‘Heart 5 1 3 4 and — ’ 12 11 10 22 Emcees 25 Walking 13 14 aids 1 26 Mayberry 15 16 17 boy 19 16 27Tookthe ; prize 20 28 Stag-party j attendees 22 23 24 29 Beach 9 26 ’ wear 33 Historic 30 31 32 28 time I 34 Twisted 34 33 snack 36 35 35 Fingers 37 Old f l1 .:/e> character 38 38 Labor ploy 40 y 39 Dry 1 1 ■ 40 Glutton DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to w ork it: AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW A C R O SS The CRmb to the Top Begins Here™ ■ s li in o n a c a r e e r w it h W e ll« F a r g o ! ■ 1 >«IES 1 MAIItTItt (lo u r EO E I RETRO • DISCO • ALTERNATIVE m i ■ ■ m I DAY 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 W ELL • W IN E • D O M E S T IC DRAFTS 11-10 Y 966-8200 5 t h & A sh L o c a t e d a t M c D u ffy ' s PLUS SHOT SPECIALS EVERY HOUR CRYPTOQUOTE W GJ I U H p j O V V , D oors O pen 6 9 pm *2 Cover J 1U O P Y W G J I U H LG V O U P J JI O S É YVON U .— PYWFUV A G V UHO T EU S a t u r d a y 's C r y p t o q u o t e : TH E C O V ET O U S M A N NEVER HAS M O N E Y ; TH E PR O D IG A L WILL HAVE N O N E SHORTLY.— BEN JO N SO N 0 1997 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Classifieds Tuesday, November 4, 1997 Sta te P ress N otice to oilr readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested you may wish to investigate the ESSAY CONTEST company and offer. The State Press . "Why M o v e ASU", Write an cannot assume responsibility for the essay & tell us why. If our validity of the offers advertised in judges like your essay, you our classified section. For more could win a $200 gift certificate information and assistance regarding to the ASU Bookstore! Grab the investigation of an advertisement, your keyboard and enterf En­ please contact the Better Business tries are due by noon on Wed., Bureau at 264-1721. N ov. 12. Submit entry to:ILoveASU@asu.edu or drop disk or typwritten entry at the State Press in room 47 o f Mat­ thew s Center. : Include your name & phone number. W in­ ning entries will be published T h e re a re in the special State Press issue, 21 p ages o f ASU C hoice on N ov, 19, Good Luck! ANNOUNCEMENTS rmrrrrm Mara Trial«..# A ndersons in th e M inneapolis phone book. APARTMENTS íj^ ANNOUNCEMENTS 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts, lbd & studios. $50 o ff move-in w/ad. 966-8597. EL DIABLO APTS. NE corner Apache & McClintock, Tempe. Quiet luxury living, lbd $500, 2bd $59Q-$630. 921-0699 MCCLINTOCK/ UNIVERSITY N ew ly rem odeled 2bd/ Iba, $500/mo. 858-0444 TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT A SU -2 & 3BR, Papago II/ Quests V-ida, all appls, $800+. Joel, 967-6205 or Greg, 7550299 ’ -=■; • . ; ; BIKE TO ASU from Papago Pk. condo. 2bd/I+ ba, new interior $675,488-5755/ 910-2783 CLOSE TO ASU 3bd 2ba, w/d, frig, Papago Pk condos, 2 story, $1000/m o. Mary Drake 961-5800 RENTAL SH A R IN G NS RMTE to share 3M/2ba TH, w/d, pool, $330/mo. + 1/3 util. Price/Univ. Jess @ 902-0771 PAPAGO PARK Village I, ta n , TH, avail. D ec. 15th. Private room & bath $400/m o. Fem. ptef. 759-6216. Claaslflods 065-6735 HELP W ANTEDG ENERAL 2 Bed RENTAL SH A R IN G ROOMMATE CLEAN, quiet n/s, to share one room condo w / male. 44th S t./ Thomas. $ 150/m o. includes util. 9125672 ; . • - ;.' SHARE LUXURY 2bd in Scot­ tsdale. Mature fem. prefd. Must like cats. $300 + 1/2 util. Call 423-9717 R O O M S FOR R E N 1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1BD/ 1BA APT. at the Com ­ mons on Apache. M ove in ASA P, share apt. w /2 room­ mates, Please call Hillary for m ore in fo & prices at 7740436, Iv msg. CLOSE TO A SU , share 3BR home w / pool, w /d, a/c. $390/mo. includes utils, except phone. 2nd room avail, in Jail, for $410.714-643-0615 TOW NHOM ES/ C O N D O S FOR $44,000 2BR/1BA townhome. Great location. Includes frig. & dishw asher. Clean & vacant. Call Leela 507-6269 Page 17 FURNITURE A U T O M O B ILES_ TRAVEL M a t t r e s s , b r a n d nl S HAPPY HOUR ANY 16" Pizza Om Buck Eastor Mu An onUmvbsot Mmu Knows tori N S f U D IÓ 966-5462 s300 OFF $10 Mimmum Delivery si A Wash, Cut & Style S18-S21 Located in The A rches Plaza M am a 's P izzeria 894-M AM A . Hornof (Selected Brands) Corner of University & M ill Alima’s P izzeria 894-MAMA 7 5 < SLICES l? 8 P J | H In H o u s e O nly . O n e C o u p o n P er O rder ; V o id w it h o th er o ffers . 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