W orld / N I raq a t io n attack o ppo sitio n m o un ts P age 3 Student’s rape 1st case of semester By C adonna P e y t o n ^ - ; State P ress - - ' A 19-year-old freshman student was raped in; her resi­ dence hall Sunday morning by an acquaintance she. Saw at a p arty e a rlie r th a t e v e n in g , sa id P o lice C h ie fX a n n y Standridge. The rape occurred ara|tnd 4:30 a.m. at Palo V i^te West after a party near cam pus''-' V. ■ ' a f e f . After the party, the victim and her friends weqiSxaek to her room and watched TV; Standridge said. Her friends left and the suspect remained. “Apparently she fell asleep and when she awoke, she was being assaulted,” Standridge said, addingthat both the victim and the suspect had been drinking. * -7 . After the assault she went to see some friends .Who con­ tacted the police. V ^ I .The victim was taken to Tempe Saint Luk£?s Hospital where she was examined and released. “A female detective interviewed and talked with her at the hospital and another detective is working with her to L e c tu r e s h i g h l i g h t re lig io u s d iv e r s ity Within a decade, Americans will be in frequent contact with non-Christian reli­ Some wear cloth draped over their faces gions, according to current U.S. Census or small caps on the back o f their head. reports. Data from December estimates that Others are gone from class on seemingly th e U n ited S tates is hom e to 8 0 0 .000 insig n ifican t days w hile som e students Hindus, compared to 70,000 in 1977, and as refuse to eat certain foods during the year. many Muslims as PrésbyraTáns. On a camgas as diverse an ASU, religious Research released in a recent issue of the differences are obvious. Different clothes, Chronicle o f Higher Education says students mannerisms and customs can make some on college campuses nationwide are more religions stand out and can interested in learning about lead to m isunderstandings 1 religion and spirituality. and jokes by those who don’t “T h at a rtic le seem s to understand the differences. point to the fact that students B t U g i o a p e e m s to “ R elig io n seem s to be want to know more about b tìp n È o f ) th o s e one o f th o se th in g s that re lig io n and sp iritu a lity . divides people the m ost.” That seem s to be a trend ti/W fes t n S r d i v i d e s said A utu m n N ess, with students,” said Suzanne p e o p l e t h e m o s t. Associated Students o f ASU Steadman, executive director a c tiv itie s vice p resid e n t. of the International Student "There is little tolerance of Office. “Students are inter­ other beliefs or customs. It’s ested in examining their own Associated^pK*nts d f ASU faiths. We wanted to provide better on campu^. because activities M æ presiM it a program that would benefit. most people are more edu­ c a te d , but th ere is still a students in th eir personal division of understanding.” ■— ■———— —— ~ — ■—' development.” . A SA SU , S tu d en t L ife The series of lectures on and the International Student O ffice are religious history, practice and policy grew sponsoring a series of lectures to expose stu­ from a program developed for international dents to the diversity found in the religions students on understanding Native American of the world and on campus. The first talk, spiritualism, Steadman said. “flow the World Worships,” will be present­ “International students were especially ed 3:30 p.tn. T hursday in the M em orial interested in the religious customs o f the Union Pima Room. Law Professor David N ative Am ericans,” Steadman said. ”We K ader w ill d isc u ss “ H ow th e W orld took a look at they way they think and how Worships” with information on religions of they interact with their world. We are not the world and the U.S. Constitution. giving away any of the secrets of their reli­ “It’s more of a series to get people to under­ gious beliefs, just how they view the world stand more about the diversity of religions and around them and their spiritual connection how different people take their spirituality,” to the earth.” Ness said. "There is a lot of misconception and D avid D am rel, le c tu re r in the stereotypes because people seldom understand Department of Religious Studies, will speak different religious beliefs.” Turn to Religion, page 2. identify the suspect,” Standridge said. She did not know the suspect’s last name and police do not know if he is affiliated with the university, Standridge added. Standridge said police are hoping to identify the individ­ ual soon, however no formal complaint has been made. “The victim is still trying to decide whether to aid in prosecution,” he said. This is the first rape reported since the semester official­ ly started on Jan. 20. Two ASU students reported being raped last semester. H a llo w e d h a l l B y T imothy T ait State P ress Jeremy Hein/State Press A student carrying his guitar walks through the shadows of an outside corridor at the Music Building. city’s candidates By M onica J . A guirre State P ress Tempe mayoral and city council candidates will be coming to ASU Wednesday to debate issues concerning students. “It will be good to see students involved in elections,” said Erik Noland, assistant public relations director for the Associated Students of ASU. “They can feel like their vote will make a difference.” M ayor N eil G iu ila n o an d h is c o m p e tito r Jay Mansperger, both former ASU students, will debate at 8 p.m. in the Arizona Room o f the Memorial Union. Current city council members, Linda Spears, Carol Smith and Ben Arredondo will debate challengers Fritz Tuffii, Hugh Hallman, Len Copple, Rich Bank and Richard Erdmann. The debate, which is sponsored by ASASU and the Memorial Union Activities Board, will open with four set questions for the candidates to state their platform. The audience will then be able to ask questions. “Tempe is where we all live right now ,” said Eddie Ableser, city affairs coordinator for ASASU. ‘T here’s a lot of issues we’ve got to raise.” The rental housing code is another issue affecting ASU students. ’Tem pe is the only city in Arizona that charges a tax on your rent,” said Kurt Hesse, MUAB Vice President. “There are a lot of people worked up about that.” The Rio Salado project, another major issue, was intro­ duced by students from the ASU School o f Architécture 26 years ago and has been adopted by the city of Tempe. The city intends to construct hotels and shops along the dry Salt River near Priest Road and the 202 freeway. Students are interested in where the money is coming from and what exactly is going to be there, Hesse said. “Whether you’re a voter or not, everyone that goes to ASU has a large interest about w hat’s going on around Tempe,” Hesse said. «■— State P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 P age 2 : . T oday ' A-,..^ . CO NTIN UED FROM PAGE 1 . D evelop m en t C enter at 10 a.m .; an ihteryiewìnfe sk ills wp&i^ÒpjiJì d ie M U R oom 2 2 4 at Ì0:4Ò p.m . Cam pus clu b s and organ iza tio n s r ta y su b m it w ritten éiitriè& td th e j State P ress in the bàsem en t1o f the M atthew s Center. R eq u ests w ill hot b e taken over the phone or via fax. D ead lin e for requests is n ooh the d ay b efore p u b lica tio n and en tries w i l l n o t b e a c c e p t e d m o r e th a n three w orking days before publica­ tio n , O nly o n e entry per organ iza­ tion per day is perm itted. Entries must contain the lu ll name o f the club or organization, a descrip­ tion o f the event, date, tim e and the fu ll a d d r e ss o f th e lo c a t io n . A ll requests are subject to editing for con­ tent, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries w ill be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calen­ dar o f events printed as a service to the A S U com m u n ity. R eq u ests are accepted on a first-com e, first-served basis and areprinted as space permits. • Alpha M u Gamma —» A gen ­ • C o m in g O u t ;D isc u ssio n G roup —- T h è w e e k ly m e e tin g w i l l b e h e ld in ft b e S t u d e n t S e r v i c e s B u ild in g s, C o n f e r e n c e R o o m B at 5 :3 0 p .n i. • Counselor Training Centeir — F r e e c o u n s e lin g is a v a ila b le fo r A S U stu d e n ts, fa c u lty and s ta ff. T h e c o s t is $ 1 0 fo r part-tim e, $ 3 5 fo r n o n -A S U p e o p le ; s e s s io n are u n lim ited . T h e cen ter is lo c a te d in P ayn e H all R o o m 4 0 2 . • H B SA t— A T arget 4 .0 L u n c h e o n w ill ta k e p la c e in th e M U C o c h ise R o o m at 11 a .m . • A SU P ow W ow C om m ittee — A g en era l m e e t­ in g w i l l b e h e ld in th e S tu d e n t S e r v ic e s B u ild in g , C o n fe r e n c e R o o m A a t 6 p .m . E v e r y o n e is w e lc o m e . ‘ eral m e e tin g w ill take p la c e in the M U H opi R o o m 208C at 4 :4 0 p.m . • A sia n B u sin e ss L ea d ers A s s o c ia tio n — A g e n e r a l • R eligious Studies C lub — B o o k sa le and in form ation b o oth s m e e t in g w i l l b e h e ld in th e M U for those interested in learning about C h r y so c o lla R o o m 2 0 6 at 5 p .m . religion w ill be available outside the • C a r ee r S e r v ic e s :— A M U , on the south sid e o f the fou n ­ C o m p le tin g th e P u z z le w o r k sh o p ■ tain from 10:30 a.m. to 3 pirn. w i l l b e o f f e r e d in th e C a r e e r S tate P ress o n l in e — h ttp : //n e w s .v p s a .a s u .e d u on “Western Religious Traditions” at 3:30 p.m. March 2, .and Anne jFeldhaus. religious studies professor, will présent “Religions of South and East Asia” at 3:30 p.m. March 3. Both lectures are in the MU Pima Room. On March 6, Sërgio Maldonado, a doc­ toral candidate in justice studies, will dis­ cuss “American Indian Spirituality” at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Cochise Room. And a panel of faculty and students will present “Legends and Myths of Women in Religious Histoiy” at 3:30 p.m. March 10 in the ¡MU,Pima: RoomJas part o f W om en’s History Month. “We are responding to students’ interest in the many beliefs represented in, our com­ munity,” Steadman said. “We want to give them a chance to learn about and appreciate different expressions of spirituality, in light of the separation of church and state.” Shooter at wedding kills one, wounds four others PHOENIX (AP) A quiet backyard wedding reception was shattered by a gun­ man who burst through a gate and opened fire, killing a bridesmaid and wounding four other people. Dora Flores, 19, died after being taken off life support Sunday night at Maricopa Medical Center, police said. She was shot in the head by the intruder, who fled the scene in a car after spraying the yard with bullets about 10 p.m. Saturday. Sgt. M ike T o rre s, a sp o k esm an for Phoenix police, said a motive for the shoot­ ings was not immediately clear and authori­ ties had no immediate suspects. B ut fam ily m em bers to ld Tribune Newspapers that they fear the shootings were in retaliation for the 1996 shooting deaths of a man, his wife and his 20-yearold daughter. According to court records, the groom’s brother is in jail awaiting trial on charges in the case. W o u n d e d S a tu rd a y w e re J e s s ie Chavez, 25, and Seferino Castenada, 74, both relatives of the groom, and Dolores M ontoya, 29, and S ofia R odriguez, 14, both relatives o f the bride. All were treated for their injuries and released except for Chavez, who was listed in good condition today at Good Samaritan Medical Center. Flares was a bridesmaid for her 24-yearold cousin, Gregory Rodriguez, who mar­ ried Melissa Flores, 24. The reception was at the south Phoenix home of Rodriguez’s brother, Anthony. Family members said partygoers had spent the past two or three hours drinking lighdy, dancing to Spanish music and hip hop, when they heard close to a dozen shots. • W hen the firing stopped, Dora Flores was lying face-down on the ground. “I rolled over and saw her forehead,” said Melissa Rodriguez, Dora Flores’ sister. “I couldn’t believe i t I gave her CPR. I just want­ ed her to breathe. 1wanted her to get up.” Dora Flores left behind two children —- a 2-year-old boy and an 8-month-old girl. She had ju st taken a test for her high school equivalency diploma and was working at an electronics parts company. tit# .« # » A n yo a j i f c ii M W » « M US E V E N T F O R N BAYW ATCH! SHOW, Y O IIR mm mm WÊMÊMÊÊÊÊ ■ J§i mm 1 H PM ¡■ ■ H SM B F ID gj^pr^lp w in n ers (o n e m a le and " m ale) w ill win aft ati sen fo r the ♦Runners-up''-!® i l IB S * For ■ B r e a ü i sjÈâffÿwood m appear on an e p iso d e o f Bay watch! £ a ^ ap u s C alendar it W orlp /N ation Stato P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 Pa»;e 3 C o n g r e s s , A m e r ic a n r e s is ta n c e r is e s a g a in s t a i r By D avid B riscoe Associated P ress WASHINGTON — Opposition to bombing Iraq is gaining ground as Congress struggles over how far it should go in supporting military action. Catholics and Protestants, former military and intelligence officers, longtime anti-war groups and Arab Americans say air attacks would do little more than kill Iraqis. Opponents are ¡scattered across the political spectrum. Some insist the bombing wouldn’t go far enough, including conservative Republicans on Capitol Hill who believe the ultimate goal should be to remove Saddam Hussein from power. Others fear a U.S. attack would go too far, killing thousands o f innocent Iraqi civilians, destroying Mideast peace efforts, and bypassing Congress in making war on another nation —• all to punish the Iraqi president. Rep. Lee Hamilton. D-ind.. one of the capital's most respected foreign affairs voices, said he backs Clinton’s Iraqi policy but doesn't think force would diminish the threat of Iraq's weapons or its ability to threaten its neighbors. "The administration. 1 think, has a very heavy responsibility now to articulate with very great precision what our purposes arc in Iraq." Hamilton told Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who trooped to Capitol Hill nearly every day last week to talk about Iraq. To bolster support, President Clinton plans a Kate Hood of Eastham, Mass., holds a sign during an anti-war rally of about 70 people on the Village Green Monday, In the Cape Cod town of speech Tuesday at the Pentagon to make the case Hyannis, Mass. Opposition to bombing Iraq is gaining ground as Congress struggles over how far It should go in supporting m ilitary action. for why the United States may launch air strikes the Churches of Christ, meeting in New York, approved a letter on suspected chemical, biological and nuclear Gulf. weapons making sites in Iraq, which Saddam has ruled off lim­ “There is absolutely no moral or constitutional reason to go to Clinton urging the president to seèk a diplomatic solution. its to U.N. inspectors. His foreign policy team, including to war with Iraq at this time,” said Paul, a former Air Force The board includes more than 40 representatives of 32 main­ stream Protestant and Orthodox Christian denominations. Albright, Defense Secretary William Cohen and National flight surgeon. Two former CIA directors who served under Clinton joined Security Adviser Sandy Berger, will hold town hall meetings A liberal, Rep. Cynthia McKinney, D-Ga., also balked, say­ this week in Ohio and Tennessee. ing, “How many people are we going to kill this time just a different sort of opposition chorus, advocating more than The one thing bombing opponents and proponents have in because we don’t want to set a precedent for having a country airstrikes. “The problem with Iraq will not be solved by an air cam­ common with Clinton is abhorrence of Saddam, who had dictate... who can do an inspection?” agreed after the 1991 Persian Gulf War to allow U.N. inspec­ And Sen. Bob Smith, R-N.H., who is frying to build support paign,” former CIA Director John Deutch said. His predecessor, tions to ensure he didn’t rebuild his nonconventional war for a 2000 presidential campaign, said Monday in Iowa that James Woolsey, criticized Clinton’s “flaccid responses” and machine. Clinton has lost “moral authority” to order military action. advocated a combination of bombs, support for Iraqi opposition Those feelings initially translated into strong congressional Citing the president’s strong denials of an alleged affair with a groups and imposition of a countrywide no-fly zone over Iraq. Sam Husseini o f the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination support for Clinton. But support wavered last week, with White House intern, Smith said: “If he can’t tell me the truth Committee criticized the news media for holding Clinton up to Republicans and Democrats raising questions about what an about this, is he telling the truth about Iraq?’ intense scrutiny on the allegations of a sexual relationship with airstrike could accomplish and at what cost. A supportive reso­ Beyond the capital, opposition also is growing. lution was put off until Congress returns from a break next All seven active U.S. Roman Catholic cardinals cautioned in former White House intern Monica Lewinsky while “rationales week. ■ a letter to Clinton that bombings could be impossible to justify. for the Iraq policy go unchallenged.” He said Arab Americans are baffled by the kind of diploma­ A few members of Congress strongly oppose Clinton’s Iraq About one-fifth of the National Catholic Conference of Bishops policy. already had signed on to a campaign to end U.S.-led sanctions cy Clinton is conducting and the disregard for Iraqi casualties. “Comply or die — that’s not diplomacy,” Husseini said. Conservative Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, last week introduced against Iraq. emergency legislation to stop Clinton from using force in the On Monday, the executive board of the National Council of “This isn’t Wag the Dog. The blood will be real,” he added. Plane plow s T aipei neighborhood; 20 5 reported dead B y C hristopher Bodeen A ssociated P ress TAIPEI, Taiwan — A China Airlines jet trying to land in fog crashed in a country neighborhood Monday, knocking the roofs off houses before skidding into a rice paddy and exploding in flames. Authorities said all 196 aboard and nine people on the ground were killed. Firefighters went house to house in the blackened neighborhood, putting out the flam es lick in g doors and w indow s and searching for survivors. Searchlights illumi­ nated a life raft from the A irbus A-300, wrapped around a broken tree stump. Seats from the plane were scattered in the dirt, one Firefighters clim b up a ladder, left, to search for people after extinguishing fires in buildings that were destroyed by the crash of a China Airdrie A-300 Airbus Monday near Taipei's Chiang Kai-shêk Airport. The jetliner was returning from Bali in Indonesia with 197 people on board and crashed while approaching to land at the Taipei’s airport. with a body trapped beneath it. China Airlines said the dead among the 182 p assen g ers and 14 crew m em bers included the governor of Taiwan’s Central Bank and other key financial officials; many Taiwanese families returning from vacations in Bali; and four Americans. Victims on the ground included a 2-month-old baby. Witnesses said the airliner hit hundreds of yards short o f the runway at Chiang Kaishek airport, 25 miles west o f Taipei. It tore through the second floors of homes strung along a highway before sliding to a stop in flames. “I heard a blast, and was scared to death. Parts of the house started to fall down,” said Chen Ah-mei, who had to crawl out of the ruins o f her home on her hands and knees. She and her husband were being treated at a hospital. “It happened so fast -— noise and fire,” said an elderly farmer who ran to the scene as soon as he saw the flames. He identified himself only as Chen. The fiery impact scattered charred bodies and body parts along the road and through­ out the sparsely populated area, home to fish farms, small factories and warehouses. The smell of jet fuel and burning rubber lingered hours after the crash. Only the tail of the bro­ ken, burned jet was recognizable. Authorities sealed off the neighborhood, leaving families of passengers to congregate at hospitals and the airport. Relatives broke into tears and fell into one another’s arms as the ex ten t o f the d isaster hit them ; one woman collapsed to the floor. “They all went to Bali on a trip — and they are all dead,” said a woman whose four children were on the flight. T sai T u ei, d ire c to r o f the C iv il Aeronautics Administration, resigned to take moral responsibility for the crash, which was the worst in the airport’s history. It came after Taiwan’s flagship carrier embarked on an extensive safety campaign in the wake of a 1994 crash in Japan that claimed 264 lives. A irport officials said tw o flight data recorders were recovered and were being analyzed to help determine the cause of the accident. The twin-engine Airbus went down as it attempted to land on a second approach at 8:09 p.m. local time at the airport’s northern runway, Taipei-based China Airlines said. Heavy fog was reported around the air­ port throughout the afternoon and evening, and a light rain was falling at the time of the crash. The plane had been asked to make the second approach due to poor visibility, said Hamilton Liu, a China Airlines spokesman. Earlier. the Civil Aeronautics Administration had said the visibility was reported to be ade­ quate. Vice Transportation Minister Chen Shihchi said the pilot’s overall line of descent was too low, but it was not clear why. ____ ______O p in io n __________ P age 4 Tuesday, February 17, 1998 STATE PRESS Safety derived from numbers, not whistles A S A S U , A S U P olice and student safety advo­ cates iu e working together to reform the as-yet u n s u c c e s s f u l C o m m u n ity . B a s e d P o lic in g , Program. The goal o f the program is to create a*| com m u n ity-w id e initiative to im prove cam pus security issues. A noble cause — sounds good s o far. A fter their ¡first m eeting Thursday, the group came up with an ew program idea, their first effort in reviving campus accountability and aiding apathy. And the program is ... drum roll, please ... The W histle Program. '4 Yes, die A SÜ com m unity can heave a sigh o f relief and sleep easier at night know ing that our student government and p olice force are hard at work, com in g up w ith innovative and original w ays to fight campus crim e and increase safety. The clue phone is ringing — please answer it. The W hisde Program would weak like this: as many people as possible would be given à whistle, which is only to be used in the event o f witnessing, or being victim to, a crime. Understanding the cor­ relation between hearing a whisde and knowing a a im e is being committed, A S U community mero-r bers w ill therefore contact DPS, and community accountability w ill be created. Y eah, right. The potential for this program to backfire is infinite. How likely is it that people w ill never blow the w histles given to them unless they are in danger? H ow lik ely is it that p eop le, upon hearing a w hisde, will seek ou t and help? It’s lik e ly th is program w ill crea te apatby equal to the apathy felt upon hearing a blaring car alarm — som eon e co u ld be com m itting a crime, but it’s more than likely a false alarm, so it’s more o f a nuisance than a warning sign. Furthermore, in order to im plem ent this pro­ gram, $ 1 ,0 0 0 w ould be need ed from both die R esidence Hall A ssociation and A S A S U . That money could see much better uses than purchas­ ing whistles. For the record, w e do appreciate the efforts o f the com m ittee in trying to improve security and com m unity on cam pus. H owever, it does seem that this W hisde Program is a red herring, a way o f appearing to do som ething, w hile still avoid­ ing the problem. In order to increase campus awareness and secu­ rity, there needs to be a sense o f community. To build community, people need to feel they have com m onalities that bind them together. On this campus, there is such an emphasis made on diversi­ ty and pride within individual groups, be it ethnic, religious, gender, and so on, dial the big picture suf­ fers. Maybe what w e need is a renewed focus oh the A S U commuqity as a whole. It is great to appreciate our differences, but w e need to remember the one thing w e have in com ­ m on: w e aré Sun D e v ils . R eb u ild Sun D e v il Pride, and maybe the A S U com m unity will take care o fo u r o w n . Affirmative-action program s still needed In my realm o f very lim it­ K EGHAN i 1 e d e x p e r ie n c e s as a w h ite , j y j G A Y N O R m id d le-class w om an, I d o n 't th in k I h a v e e v e r b een d is ­ Guest Columnist c r i m i n a t e d a g a i n s t o n th e b a sis o f sex . B ec a u se o f th e se e x p e rie n c e s , it has alw ays, until very recently, been d ifficu lt fo r m e to understand the need fo r affirm ative-action program s. It had never occurred to me that my experiences may not be universal or even, perhaps, short-lived. A ffirm a tiv e -a c tio n p ro g ra m s h a v e b e e n aro u n d since the m id -1960s, and although they have helped w om en and m inorities break into the w ork force, it is im p e ra tiv e to u n d e rs ta n d th a t d is c rim in a tio n still o ccu rs. F rom th e tim e w e (w o m en and m in o ritie s) graduate college and en ter the jo b m arket, som ething very d istu rb in g w ill h ap p en . W e w ill be p aid less m oney fo r equal w ork and be u n d e r-re p rese n te d in positions o f pow er and authority. R ecently, the A ffirm ative A ction Bill (w hich, iro n ­ ically , pro p o ses to ban a ffirm ativ e-actio n program s from state institutions) has passed into the fu ll senate. It is upsetting the bill has m ade it this far. If affirm a­ tive-action program s are no longer necessary, if d is­ crim ination is a problem o f the past, w hy do w om en and m inorities continue to m ake less m oney and work under the authority o f w hite m en? O n A SU ‘s c am p u s alone th e p erc e n t o f fem ale em ployees is 49.3 percent, and yet only 30.7 percent o f th e fa c u lty are w o m en . T h e p e rc e n t o f fe m a le m inorities is extrem ely low , representing only 9 p er­ cent o f the total cam pus w ork force. A t the full pro­ f e s s o r le v e l, o n ly 1 0.3 p e r c e n t o f w o m e n h a v e salaries above $75,000, w hereas 23.4 p erc e n t o f the men do. At the asso ciate-professor level, 21.3 percent o f th e w o m e n h a v e s a l a r i e s a b o v e $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 , as opposed to 40.6 percent o f the m en. A t the assistantp ro f e s s o r le v e l, 5 8 .9 p e rc e n t o f th e w o m e n h av e salaries below the $ 4 0 ,0 0 0 lev el, w h ereas i t 's only 38.3 percent for m en. The affects o f discrim ination are not lim ited to this campus alone; the firm rip o f inequality is felt through­ out the country. W hile women and minorities make up 57 percent o f the Fortune 2,000 work force, they hold only 5 percent o f the senior-management jobs. W omen are only 8.6 percent o f engineers and 23 percent o f prac­ ticing attorneys. W omen and minorities com prise 66 per­ cent o f the U.S. population, and yet are only 35 percent o f physicians, 20 percent o f tenured professors, and 6 percent o f school superintendents. W om en are now m ore than h alf o f the population, and the num ber o f m inorities continue to grow . It is c ru c ia l th a t w e be re p re s e n te d in th e w o rk fo rce; hom ogeny is d etrim ental to everyone. F or exam ple, m any w om en feel u n c o m fo rta b le b ein g p h y sic a lly exam ined by m ale d octors. P eo p le d eserv e o ptions. W ithout affirm ative-action program s, there could e a s­ ily be none. ■ A ffirm ative action is often co nfused w ith quotas. Q uotas are illeg al. A ffirm ative action is giving q u ali­ fied people, w ho otherw ise m ight be discouraged, an o p p o rtu n ity to su c c e e d . It a c k n o w le d g e s th a t n o t ev ery o n e has been g iv en the sam e o p p o rtu n itie s in life, th at not everyone has been able to atten d good sch o o ls and be a c k n o w le d g e d in th e ir c la ssro o m s. A ffirm ative action isn ’t w aiting around to see if d is­ crim ination w ill o ccu r —1 it's taking action to m ake sure it d o esn ’t. For the m any w ho have never felt the sting o f d is­ crim ination, it is difficult to understand w hy affirm a­ tive-action program s are necessary. B ut if you are a w om an o r a m in o rity o r b o th , c h an ces a re, by the tim e you graduate from college, you will begin to feel the affects o f inequality. U ntil w om en and m inorities are rep resented properly in the w ork fo rce and earn e q u a l p ay fo r e q u a l w o rk , a ffirm a tiv e -a c tio n p ro ­ gram s continue to be indispensable. Meghan Gaynor is a freshm an studying journalism . r ----------------- ---------------kJTAFF STATE PRESS PERCY EDNALINO, Editor JODI BAFUNDO, Managing Editor CARYL-SÜEMICALIZIO,,.;...............¡........Night Editor KARA SHIRE......... .................................. City Editor ROWE EDGEI.1............................... ........Asst. City Editor GINGER SCOTT ........ Opinion Editor CHRISTI FOIST............................................... News Editor BRAD LANG................. Photo Editor JERËMY HEIN.......... ..................... ...Asst Photo Editor MATT PAULSON................ ............Sports Editor RANDY JONES ..... ................... .......Asst Sports Editor VIVISTONBERG .. . .... ......Magazine Editor REPORTERS: Ally Asher (Cultural Diversify), Monica Aguirre (ASASU), Becky Bevins (General Assignment), Aisiinn Pahy (City of Tempe). Kristen Hatcher (Administration). Chris Kahn (Science & Tech), Cadonna Peyton (Police), Tim Tail (General Assignment). Dave Woodftll (General Assignment), Karen Yamada (ABOR). SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Flanagan (Track & Field), Lori Haro (Baseball), Jason Joseph (Swimming & Diving), Carlo Mercaldo (Men’s Golf), Scott Lewis (Wrestling) COPY EDITORS: Lorie Roberts. Susan Schimmel. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Scott Samplin', Jeremy Weiss. COLUMNISTS: Brian Ary. Scott Bennett, Scott Bracken, Michelle Craig. Ross Eide, J.E, Hardee, Amber Knuth, Gregor A. McGavin, Rosie McSweeney, A.D. Niver, Brian Policoff, George D. Rose Sr , Frank Sackton. Adatn Sçhiffer, Steve Stein, Angela Yeager. CARTOONISTS: Carrie L. Behrens, Brian Faiiringtpn, David Gould. Jonathan Inge. Gentry Smith, Charles Lundsberg. PRODUCTION: L. Adrianna Garcia. Steven Garza, Alyson Hurt, Wayne Nelson, Eric Paulson, Sara Pike, Jennifer Swinford. Hubert Atari Zemkc. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Toby Brooks, Christy Camp, Sharan GilL David Goodwin, Mike Knievel, Monika Konat Jessica Madult Jonathan Negretti, Shane Siren, Kaihy W e i# ) ', CLASSIFIEDS: Kate Desjo, Jeanette Ploium, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: PERCY EDNALINO Editor JODI BAFUNDO Managing Editor GINGER SCOTT Opinion Editor CHRISTI FOIST News Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the 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 P hone N umbers Information............... 965-7572 Newsroom ............... .965-2292 M agazine........... ...... 965-1695 Advertising......... . ..965-6555 C lassifieds................. 965-6735 h ttp ://n e w s . v p s a .a s u .e d u __________O p in io n ________ _ STATE P ress Tuesday, February 17, 1998 L etters to the E ditor E -M A IL T H E E D IT O R : S IlS 5 lN @ IM A P 2 .A S U .E D tJ Imagination thrives In reply to W ednesday’s letter, “Festival celebrates dark period.” it is a shame some people are so closed-m inded and seem to have lost that magic spark called “imagina­ tio n .” B eing in te re ste d in th e A rizo n a Renaissance Festival fo r many years and finally working there this year, I have seen smiles o f wonder from two-year-olds to 80year-olds. When yon observe the joy these patrons feel, it is one of the most satisfying fe e lin g s o f a c c o m p lish m e n t p o s s ib le . P a rtic ip a n ts d o n ’t ju s t w o rk th e re fo r money, or free food or even the gatherings of campers after die gates close. Many of us work there because we enjoy letting people See another world that otherwise is lost to them. Haven’t you ever wondered, even if it was years ago, if any o f those fairy tales just m ight have been true? Do you remember' what imagination feels like? Every single person on this earth needs some way to escape opce in a while — be it reading a book, taking a vacation, drawing, what have you. The Arizona Renaissance Festival pro­ vides a temporary relief from our world of skyscrapers, business suits, and Smog for patrons and participants alike. So, if you decide to go. feel free to point out this or that which you think is fake o r think is missing. But do everyone else a favor and do it quietly. There is no need to disturb those around you who still wonder about King Arthur and dragons — those who still have a spark o f im agination to brighten their lives. Phyllis “Aiuiie” Cowan Senior Anthropology/Theatre AIMS test prepares A fter reading the o p posing view s o f co lu m n ists M ich elle C raig an d A m ber K n u th , o n th e A riz o n a S tu d en t Achievement Program’s exit test (AIMS) to measure high school student’s mathematic, reading and writing skills, I am in strong agreem ent w ith M s. K nuth. It is truly a shame that high school seniors are thrust out into the harsh realities o f college, and then the competitive and often unfair job market in the United States. Why on earth w ould we give these children one m ore hardship? Ms. Craig’s column would have you believe that these children are “prawns in the g am e” th a t are fo rc e d to take a “racist” test that “violates a person’s civil rights” with the point o f forcing “persons of Hispanic descent out o f our state.” Wow! That’s quite a claim. The truth is, however, the test is only adm inistered in English. Similarly, when most o f these same stu­ dents interview for a job, ask for directions or try to read a menu in a restaurant, they will be forced to know English. The test only assures that these children are educated early on. The test assures that if there is a problem with the English language, then the educators have caught the problem before it’s too late. Hopefully, the states that fall behind Arizona in their foresight won’t send too many children into the world unpre­ pared before they realize how. im portant English is. Ashley Bigbie Senior Journalism Fan support key This is in response to Scott Lewis’s arti­ cle concerning Coach Don Newman and Athletic Director Kevin White. I went to the ASU - UofA game this past Saturday, and 1 saw what I think Kevin White wants to see. 1 saw thousands of screaming Sun Devil basketball fans. There is no doubt that Don Newman is doing a great job coaching this year’s bas­ ketball team, and I think if he gets the head coaching job after this year, he will contin­ ue to do an outstanding job. He is doing everything he can, and this team is doing everything within their power to show their support for Coach Newman. However, as fans we’ve got a long way to go — except for those ten guys I see in the front row with the players’ names on their shirts every game. I think what Kevin White wants to see is fan support every game. Calling your­ se lf ASU fans w hen you ju s t go to the Arizona game — that’s like going to church on Christmas and Easter and calling your­ self Christian. Fan su p p o rt goes m uch farth er than just that, too. It helps recruiting, it helps television exposure and it brings money into our athletic and academic programs. S o m eth in g I th in k w ould m ake K evin W hite very happy. Now there are two hom e gam es left this year. This team deserves an NCI bid, and one o f the criteria the selection com ­ m itte e lo o k s at is fan su p p o rt. I f you d o n ’t have a ticket, buy one, o r if you have a ticket and do not plan on attend­ ing, g iv e y o u r tic k e t to som eo n e w ho w ill. T he p lay ers and C oach N ew m an deserve your support. M ikePum o junior Exercise Science .......... ..............Pggg_5 War n o t for p olitical agenda war, but it’s a bit better than fighting over D ep ressin g opinion polls. domestic poli­ D on’t forget, we were buddy-buddy tics got you with Hussein back when he was at war down? Tired of; with Iran, when that country topped our thinking abouf list of enemies. Former President George internal crises, Bush could tell you about Saddam -r- he’s real and imag­ the one who cultivated him as a friend o f ined? W ell, the United States. And what was the main you’re in luck. reason for our hatred o f Iran? Why, the Coming soon to Ayatollah Khomeini’s popularly support­ a theater o f ed ousting o f the Shah. But never mind the engagement not fact that the Shah had his people on the too near you, brink of starvation; he was our little CIA it’s distraction — fee military variety — courtesy o f your puppet, so his enemies became ours. Now, things have changed. Hussein is federal government. WSmÉ Everyone’s got their part to play. Saddam once again goin g to experience the Hussein gets to.be fee evil villain, plotting American penchant for “rockets’ red glare global destruction. The United States gets to and bombs bursting in air.” Here we come be fee world’s protector, bravely standing up to another reason many say we should to fee Middle-Eastern bully. * invade Iraq: to oust Hussein and install a You’ve been cast, too. There are a couple more reasonable government, one more of parts you can play, but they’ve already agreeable to U.S. foreign policy. Maybe been assigned. Most of us will play flag-wav- one with a leader like the Shah. We could ing good guys. It’s an easy part, really. All make this policy for all our dealings with that’s called for is unquestioning acceptance Third-World and emerging nations worldof die justification for this war. wide. Oh, sorry — we already tried that. The other part is a choice one, though — Remember Iran, Cuba, Nicaragua? that of the soldier or sailor who gets to actuThe point is, people die in wars, just as ally take part in the conflict These lucky few they die in “police actions” and “covert get a chance to do their duty, maybe even operations” and every other euphemism become a hero, if they’re lucky enough to get ’ the military, CIA and other agencies use killed. Both are speaking parts, just as long as for needless conflict. People die on both the dialogue doesn’t involve too many ques- sides — some in fighting, some in accitions. Like, exactly why do we need to revisit dents — mosi regrettably. If we have to go the Gulf? to war, we should gti and do what we have • See, the story gets a little vague here. to. That does not include setting up pet Evidently, Hussein is thought to have a governments, and it does not negate the stockpile o f “weapons o f mass destruc- need for a bonafidc reason, tion.” His refusal to let U.N. weapons According to retired CIA-man John inspectors check wherever they want is Stockw ell, the United States, has been seen as proof. involved in countless military actions in Granted, the prospect of Hussein being the past 20 years that the American public armed to the teeth with this weaponry is dis- knows nothing about. All took place in turbing. But only a few of our allies support emerging nations, and in almost all, the another U.S. invasion. Why? And why is it United States was the aggressor. That’s okay for the United States to blow off the right, we started it. combined objections of the rest of the U.N. I’m not saying that the military is full member nations when we blast others for o f nothing but ne’er-do-wells. Not even going against the grain similarly? • close. I’m saying that the governmental You know, the United States has fee same and military powers-that-be have a long sort of weapons. So do others — some are tradition o f not telling the American pubour allies, some aren’t But it’s been decided lie or even the members o f the armed that Iraq shouldn’t have them. Fair enough, forces r— the ones who get to go kill and but why are we isolated in our zeal to pick up be k illed — why the United States is whete we left off in 1991? engaged in con flict A long tradition of And more importantly, why now? The omitting, denying and lying. / timing seem s a bit funny. Why has the Americans should support the troops, United States only now become outraged- wherever they are. They should also supat Saddam’s stalling? Could this urgency port withdrawing the troops whenever be anything to do with the scandals sur- there’s no reason for them, or better yet, rounding fee commander-in-chief? I drink not sending them on unjustifiable misso. After all, what better way to divert sions. We should demand concrete reasons public attention away from your doorstep for going to war. Delivering the world than to start bombing somepne else’«? At from a serious threat is one. Distracting least in the Gulf War, we knew what oUr our attention from scandals at home is not. troops were fighting over oil prices. Gregor McGavin is a junior studying That mightn’t be fee best reason to go to journalism. j AIDS Awareness Week merits more enthusiasm than was received L a s t w e e k w as A ID S NGELA A w a re n e s s W e e k . I f th is YEAGER c o m e s as a s u rp ris e to y o u , do n ’t w orry. It seem s to have passed by th o u san d s o f oth er Columnist students at ASU as well. While there were numerous activities that were supposed to be held last week in an effort to get the word out on the deadly disease currently plaguing millions of people around the world, the support and publicity for these events was less than earth shattering. I attended the opening ceremonies for AIDS week where Dr. Austin Jones spoke, and students shared their poetry and thoughts on the epidemic. Fifteen to 20 people showed up out o f a university the size o f a small city. A friend went to see the special presentation o f the movie And the Band Played On. The film chronicles the beginnings of HIV and AIDS. She was the only one in her row. I saw th e fly e r th a t an n o u n c e d .th e ev en ts fo r the week. V alentine condom greetings were supposed to be ■ given out outside the M emorial Union from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. every day. I walked past the MU several times last week and didn’t see anyone handing out the valentines. There was also supposed to be an AIDS maze that stu­ dents could walk through on Hayden lawn. It might have been there, but I never saw it. The point is, why even have these activities if the large p o rtio n o f the student body c a n ’t find them ? I actively looked for the V alentine condom packages, but what about those students who didn’t? Some may argue that it is students’ responsibility to educate themselves and find their own damn condom s, and this is true to a point. H ow ever, the entire p o in t o f AIDS A w areness Week is to get the word out and make people aware o f the dangers. They may already know it, but many need constant reminders. You would think that the students o f a university as large as ASU w ould be enthusiastically behind AIDS Awareness W eek. A fter all, younger people and women are th e fa s te s t-g ro w in g group- of- p e o p le b eco m in g infected (according to the Center for Disease Control). You would think the University would be doing every­ thing in its pow er to not only educate its students, but get them tested so the disease doesn’t spread. Yet, as Jones pointed out, there is no specific testing site on campus, and there are no statistics on the num ber infect­ ed at A S U . So w e h av e m o v ie an d sp e a k e r e v e n ts attended by very few and invisible condoms to make up for this. A ccording to Jo n es, m ost u n iv ersities the size o f ASU have 200-400 HIV infected students. This means that there are likely about 200 students right now who do not know they are infected and are possibly engaging in risky activity. Or there are those who know but refuse to acknow ledge it because o f the lack o f any kind o f support group among their peers. Either way, it makes for a deadly com bination. M aybe next year, if enough people have d ied, m ore su p p o rt w ill be show n fo r a cause that will eventually affect us all. Angela Yeager is a junior studying journalism. State P ress Tuesday, February 17, 1998 P age 6 ‘Baywatch’ episode to feature 2 A SU students B y B ecky B evins S tate P ress Dust off that bathing suit, bust out the oil; Baywatch is coming to ASU, There will be contests and giveaways today with the main event being the Baywatch Search Runway Competition. A panel o f judges will aw ard one m ale and one fem ale th e g rand said P aul F alzo n e, p ro d u cer o f the sh o w ’s search. “W e wanted to-be in a top 25 m arket” he said. ASU has a high student population and it is a lot of fun.” T he ex tra v a g a n za b eg in s a t noon a t the S tu d e n t R e c re a tio n C o m p lex in th e W e st Field Area. prize, which is an appearance on Baywatch. The ju dges w ill be looking for “m en and women who embody a healthy mind and body with a love o f the environment, the discipline to stay in good physical condition and a sheer determ ination to succeed in all things,” Greg Bonann, Baywatch executive producer, Said. Bayw atch chose ASU for several reasons, This coupon is g o o d fo r one free co p y o f P olice R eport The A S U p o lic e r e p o rte d th e follow ing incidents Monday: » A student reported th at she was sexually assaulted at Palo Verde W est, • An e m p lo y e e r e p o r te d th a t som eone broke the w indow in a d o o r, a t P h y s ic a l S c ie n c e D wing. , » A student reported that she was the victim o f an attem p ted ' ro b ­ bery at Area 51 west. S tate P ress • A w om an not asso ciated w ith A S U w a s a r r e s te d , c ite d an d re le a s e d fo r d riv in g o n a s u s ­ p e n d e d lic e n s e a t 1000 E. U niversity D rive. __ • A student reported th a t som e­ one rem oved his w alle t and its contents from 714 A lpha Drive. • A n a b a n d o n e d 1987 C h e v y C av alier w as tow ed by A rizona Tow ing at Sixth Street and-Rural Road. c o n s e n te d to a s e a rc h . A bag With a w hite rock-like, substance believed to be crack cocaine was found under the fro n t passenger seat. The subject adm itted that it w as c ra c k and said th a t it w as his. He also had a glass pipe in his back pocket. He was booked in Tem pe City Jail. The charges are pending scientific analysis: C o m p ile d b y S ta te P ress rep orter C adonna P ey to n , T he T em pe p o lic e rep o rted the follow ing incidents Monday: • A 30-year-old man was arrest­ e d p e n d in g d ru g c h a rg e s: T he s u b je c t w as c o n ta c te d in th e front passenger, seat o f a vehicle after he was seen leaving a sus­ pected drug house. W hen he was a p p ro a c h e d , he m a d e a m o v e ­ m ent reaching under his seat, All t h e o c c u p a n ts W ere re m o v e d from the vehicle and the driver rCAMPUSn LC orner J 7 1 2 S. College 967-4049 n e x t to C ollege S tr e e t Deli A SA SU ’Report • The weekly executive committee meeting will be 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. T uesday in the M em orial U nion Apache room. • The b i-w eekly A SA SU senate meeting will be 5:30 p.m. Tuesday in the MU Alumni Lounge. « The governm ent relations Office is g o in g to th e s ta te cap ital- in Phoenix Tuesday and W ednesday to lobby on behalf o f the students for the University budget. • The ASASU Supreme Court will hear the Carr vs. Golden case 6:00 p.m. Wednesday in the Great Hall •of the College o f Law. • Mayoral and City Council candi­ dates will gather to debate Tempe issues 8:00 p.m. Wednesday in the MU A rizona room. • A meeting for students interested in volunteering for the Mardi Gras events, Which will include the Real Big Fish concert, a chili cook-off and an electric light parade, will be 5:30 p.m. Thursday in the M U Friday in the MU Pima room. • R ep resen tativ es from g o v ern ­ m ent re la tio n s w ill be going to NAU late in the week to interview Candidates for the Student Regent position on the Arizona Board of Regents, • A SA SU P re sid e n t A ndy O rtiz w as n am ed one o f A m erican Biographical Institute’s Men o f the Year. R eport com piled by State Press reporter M onica A guirte Turquoise Room. • A series of lectures about differ­ e n t re lig io n s aro u n d the w o rld begins 3:30 p.m . T hursday with “ How the W orld W orships,” in the MU Pima room. • T he E n v iro n m e n ta l Issu e s Com m ittee will be composting at 11:30 a.m . F rid a y b e h in d T he University Archives. • Students interested in running for ASASU offices should attend an initial candidate meeting 5:00 p.m. TO EFL • A C T • GRE C o m p u t e r A ’lo t more than ju st textbooks! ook? vTFl EARN UP TO $ 9 0 0 & ASSIST MEDICAL RESEARCH If you are age 1© to 80, you can be part of a medical researcr\ study at MDS Harris and earn up to $ 9 0 0 . If you are in good medical condition and meet the criteria below, call us at 254-PAYS (7297) to find out more. ■ women ■ 18 to 80 years old ■ nonsmokers ■ availability: weekend and weekday stays Harris testing pays. Call 254-PAYS today! S 3 M D S H a rris 4639 S. 36th St.. Phoenix 2 4 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS s e e s to re fo r d e ta ils C o lo r C -4 1 P ro ce ss B e s t P ric e in T ow n S e r v ic e C e n t e r oeu ; war M. Microsoft O F THE CURE *3.99 Formally the Tech Shop ■University BE P A R T a c ro s s from C offee P lantation Everyday Low Price Introducing the i Great selection of study guides to help you score better. 9 6 6 -6 2 2 6 7 0 4 S. C o lleg e 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 858-0567 AUTHORIZED TO WORK ON: WHAT DO WE DO? Install Software Clean Viruses and install protection programs Installation of FAX/Modems, mother boards, memory, hard drives, etc. Repairs and upgrades of most computers Parts available for your purchase in the Computing Commons room 111 CONVENIENT SERVICES: • Authorized Warranty repair center for APPLE • Department pick up and delivery is available •Authorized warranty repair center for DELL • Faculty, Staff and Student carry in service is welcome • Microsoft certified professionals • A+ Certified for work on major computer brands • On site training • Set up and installation of your new pc • Monthly full service contracts and extended warranties for Dell labor are available C onvenient H ours and Location: M onday-Friday 8am-5pm PEB W 101 (across from the loading dock o f the MU) O ffice 9 6 5 -9 3 6 4 Service R equest 9 6 5 -6 5 0 0 Fax 9 0 5 -8 5 4 7 Parts 9 6 5 -9 1 2 8 (Located on the first floor o f the C om puting C om m ons room 1 1 1) http://tc2.inre.asu.edu/techshop/ State P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 Judge endorses use o f neutral experts in scientific cases B y D aniel Q . H aney A ssociated P ress PH IL A D E L PH IA — Suprem e C o u rt J u s tic e S te p h e n B re y e r c a u tio u s ly endorsed a m ovem ent am ong judges on Monday to appoint neutral experts to help them sort through contentious scientific evidence. Breyer spoke before a m eeting o f the A m erican A s s o c ia tio n fo r th e Advancement of Science and said he wel­ comed the organization’s offer to help fed' eral judges find experts. A few judges, daunted by cases hinging on highly technical scientific issues and sometimes Clouded by dubious expert tes­ timony, have named independent experts to help separate solid evidence from junk. Breyer cited several recent instances in which judges have nam ed experts to be s c ie n tific a d v iso rs in c a se s in v o lv in g emerging areas of medicine and technolo­ gyHe applauded an A A AS pilot project that will encourage more o f this by helping judges find neutral experts. However, in a news conference after his speech, he cau­ tioned against m aking too m uch o f his comments; : He said his point “has to be viewed as a nudge tow ard a few m ore on occasions that might call for it. That isn’t a cure-all, and it can't be used widely.” The AAAS program will begin as soon as the organ izatio n fin ish es secu rin g a foundation grant to pay for it. It will run for five years. D eborah R u n k le. a s e n io r p ro g ra m associate who will run the project, said she expects it will be used in between 12 and 20 cases. “Judges will probably use this in cases that are out o f the ordinary, where they don’t think the normal m eans o f getting scientific expertise is helpful,” she said, iè R u n k le sa id th e p ro g ra m w ill fin d experts by contacting scientific organiza­ Planningto streak the MU? Call the S tate P r ess photographers at 965-6826. Remember to plan ahead! tions and universities, searching computer databases and tapping into “the old-boy network.” "T his has not been attem pted in any systematic, sustained way,” Runkle said. “We will be flexible.” Ju d g es have stru g g le d w ith how to decide what information to let into cases involving scientific disputes — and what to throw out — since the Supreme Court’s so-called Daubert decision in 1993. That ruling gave judges wider latitude in sorting th ro ugh evid en ce o f varying scien tific validity. , As Breyer put it Monday, judges have a legal responsibility to act as gatekeepers, “not to resolve the scientific matter but to keep unsound, unhelpful, unreliable infor­ mation away from the jury.” Breyer noted that the Suprem e Court has long relied on “amicus curiae” briefs, w hich allow professional organizations and others to offer written opinions and facts about scientific controversies before the court. He said the court received 60 o f these briefs last year from organizations of doc­ tors, psychologists, nurses, hospice work­ ers and handicapped people before decid­ ing that the Constitution does not give ter­ m inally ill patients the right to doctors’ help in committing suicide. He said that appointing m ore-neutral experts to advise judges is just one more possible way to help judges decide what scientific evidence is worth listening to. H e n o te d th a t a fe d e ra l ju d g e in M assachusetts named a Harvard Medical School professor to be the court’s “techni­ cal advisor” in a highly com plex patent c a se in v o lv in g g e n e tic e n g in e e rin g . Another judge in Michigan named a medi­ cal-school doctor to testify as an expert witness for the court in a case involving partial-birth abortions. . “There might be more cases that call for this, but not necessarily a lot,” Breyer said. I AP Photo/G uang Niu A vendor peers out from below a rack of shoes on a Beijing street A ll of the shoes were on sale at a discount price of 38 yuan (US $4.57) per pair. Specializing In: • Variant Covers • Limited Editions* Star Wars Memorabilia • New Weekly Titles • Collectibles Bring in this ad to receive 20% OFF anything in the Store AND ’ to enter yourself in our Ask about our Weekly Subscription Special 4 2 2 8 N . S c o tt s d a le R d ., S c o tt s d a le , A Z 8 5 2 5 1 pet*”« pay oSeT a?eivi'r 0 - ticket* $251 T a n i t i $302 M a d r i d $311 S i n g a p o r e $326 Peek-a-shoe! Comic and Collectible Store spring break fever 'arîÿ Hartf) ravel Safe; Page 7 ",v“l Lo n d o n 1900 . . r f FU W bet*‘en P F a res a re 1 / 2 round t r ip based o n rt » PURCHASE, DO NOT INCLUDC TAXES. RESTRICTIONS 1 APPLY. 1(3mi n d I GEE: Csascil oe la itriu ito a a l fducaixMui Exchasgt ■ ' 130 E. University Dr., t Tempe If (602) 966-354 Agent Service £ E O E . . D r u g -F r e e W o rkp lace w w w . k r o n lc c o m lc s . c o m P age 8 Statt P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 Husband, w ife m ay have faked ancestry as part o f alleged elaborate fraud scam By D ominic P erella Associated P ress RICHMOND, Va. — Richmond seemed the perfect place for a man w ith the im posing title o f Baron O tto Von Bresscnsdorf. The old Confederate capital fancies itself a center of culture and class, where pomp and pedigree count for something. The city’s elite quickly took to von Bressensdorf and his wife, Elena, when they arrived from Los Angeles in 1993 and brought along Lyons Capital Inc., the investment house he start­ ed in Los Angeles in the early 1980s. The couple bought an old mansion and stuffed it with $500,000 worth of antiques, and joined the local symphony, ballet and arts scene. Visitors raved about their European man­ ners, their 14-year-old son Michael’s fluency in Spanish and Mandarin Chinese, their museum-quality paintings. It was all supported by fraud on a grand scale, the FBI con­ tends. On Jan. 21, federal and state authorities showed up at the von Bressensdorfs’ door with a 209-count indictment. The couple are accused of faking just about everything about Lyons Capital in order to scam millions of dollars from small­ time entrepreneurs. If convicted of the charges of wire fraud and money laundering, they could spend the rest of their lives in prison — he is 70 and she’s 50. “The allegations ... are essentially that much of his life has been a fraud,” Andrew McBride, assistant U S. attorney, wrote in court documents. A ccording to investigators, Lyons C apital attracted entrepreneurs seeking capital to start or expand business ven­ tures. All the applicants had to do was pay Lyons a finder’s fee, usually $ 10,000 to $30,000, bringing Lyons about $1 million annually, according to court documents. “During this time, hot a single client received any financing through Lyons Capital despite the fact that Lyons Capital repre­ sented that it had a 70-percent success rate in obtaining financ­ ing for its clients," FBI agent Erwin Jack wrote in an affidavit. Some ventures, like the Amherst Va., golf course planned by Nancy Ann Schmitt, went bankrupt after giving the baron most of their capital and seeing no return. She and her partners S tate P ress o n lin e — http://new s.vpsa.asu.edu A Practice D edicated to Com plete Women's Healthcare WOMEN'S HEALTHCARE I MIGUEL'S MUSIC CENTER } } > ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS >AM PS » ELECTRIC EFFECTS *SHÈET MUSIC > LESSONS (Rock •C on te m p o rary F o lk • Classic Guitar) > REPAIRS *- On A ll Instrum ents! ...an d much MORE! \ • Dr. Christine M. McChisky, D.Ö. • Df. Craig L. Mechelke, D.O. : •: Dr. Sidney, E. Semrad, Q .Q.. •- 8 2 9 4*6331 lO U E I f l V C f 9 1 1 / tDr. / f . 130 E.- . UUniversity 968-2310 GOOD TIMES. A re y o u su fferin g w ith a rth ritis p a in ? BAD ONES.) if so, would REMEMBER THE (AND DELETE THE you be interested in participating in a free medical research program? To qualify, you must be: ■ Age 18 to 80 ■ Currently takinga nonsteroidal, anti-inflam matory drug Participants w ill receive free study-related care, including study m edication, and may receive up. to $250 for participation. PERFORMANCE FOOTWEAR IN THE CORNERSTONE N.E. Corner - Rural & University 829-7473 NEW Mon-Wed-Sat: 10-6 STORE Tue-Thur-Fri: 10-8 HOURS! Sun: 11-5 For mart m/brmation, please call: m siSCIinicol i g .......... m 6 0 2 -8 7 & 8 0 8 4 7 1 2 S. College 967-4049 Planning to streak the n ex t to C ollege S tre e t Deli 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. 858-0567 a c ro s s from C offee Plantation Everyday Low Price 2 4 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS MU? Call the S tate P r ess photographers at 965-6826. Remember to plan ahead! s e e s to re fo r d e ta ils C o lo r C -4 1 P ro ce ss B e s t P ric e in T o w n FREE BLUE BOOK only at R o th e r ’ s B o o ksto re Must present coupon. Limit 1 per customer BOTHER'S BOOKSTORE “YO UR C O LLEG E B O O K STO R E* Open 7 days a week 625 E. Apache 967-5445 I \ > METRONOMES • ACCESSORIES • ETC. In The Arches Shopping Center O B S T E T R IC S A N D G Y N fC Ö LO G Y Dr* James D. Offiéen, M.D.Dr. Alison K-icooper, M>D. Dr. Daniel jyfëoWswell, D.O. D n Einesk M. Gomez, M.D. lost $15,000. “You trust people to do what they say they’ll do, and when they don’t, it’s a real kick in the teeth,” Schmitt said. The von Bressensdorfs pleaded innocent, then spent three weeks in jail before friends posted their $50,000 bail. Trial is set for May 18. “We’re going tobe able to show that the government’s case is anything but an open-and-shut case,” their lawyer, Jay J. Levit, said Sunday. Advanced-fee scams aren’t unusual, state regulators say. What makes the Lyons case stand out, they say, is the alleged scam’s brazen flair. The von Bressensdorf home was furnished with medieval artifacts, museum-quality furniture and a Portuguese ceramic fountain in the shower. Their cars included a 1964 Rolls-Royce and an '86 Jaguar. Company literature says the von Bressensdorf title was awarded by the king of Bavaria It also describes a family bank­ ing history dating back 200 years and says a cousin was award­ ed France’s highest honor for blocking Nazi plans to bum Paris. However, prosecutors say they can’t confirm that von Bressensdorf is a baron or even that he is who he says he is. They also can’t figure out his wife’s rightful citizenship: She has a U.S. passport, but the Immigration and Naturalization Service lists her as a Russian citizen named Lena Cherniak. And then there’s their legal history. “I’ve been running this business 49 years, and we’ve never had a complaint. Never a suit,” the baron told the Richmond Times-Dispatch in 1994. In fact, Lyons was sued several times before coming to •Richmond, and private investigator James Armistead found dozeas of complaints against the company dating to the early 1980s* “We were totally convinced,” said Damien Carboneau, an Indiana plane mechanic who paid von Bressensdorf $20,000 in 1994 to find financing for his aviation company. “They would call and tell me they had an investor who was interested, and then they would call back and say he backed o u t” Carboneau said. “Fm just hoping I’ll get some of my money back. Maybe I’ll get a piece of that Rolls-Royce.” rCAMPUSn LC orner ' J E xp an d your h o r iz o n s . G et a job that teach es you about b u sin ess, advertising sales and who you really are. Sell advertising for the State Press and pave the road to an excellent future! (Talk about a resume builder!) Hours are flexible. Pay is excellent. Work is intense. Must have a car. Interested? Pick up an application at the State Press info desk in the north basement of Matthews Center. Do it today! Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge 965-6555. Studies A R 1 Z O N A . ' sssaSgSa ^ S H i JÖiZgO Nortlj J)Srd Ayspue #203 *9BS ArtzGpÈfiKfcSt.- E ST A T E P r ess State P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 P age 9 By Robert W eller Associated P ress DENVER — A media watchdog group will ask the Federal Communications Commission to force four TV stations in the Denver market to curb sex and violence in their news as a con­ dition o f license renewal. Since thé FCC no longer requires TV stations to meet any criteria in how to handles news, such as the previous fairness and equal-time doctrines, the group is attacking the stations as threats to the public safety. “We’re asking die FCC to protect us. What these stations are broadcasting is harmful,” said Paul Klite, executive direc­ tor of the Rocky Mountain Media Watch. The four commercial VHF stations are KUSA, the NBC affiliate; KCNC, CBS; KMGH, ABC; and KWGN, an inde­ pendent. Klite’s group monitored news broadcasts on the four stations from 1994 through 1997 and came up with a “may­ hem index,” the percentage of news about crime, disasters, war and terrorism in each news show. On KWGN, 45 percent of the news monitored concerned violence, according to the report. RUSA had 47 percent, KCNC had 54 percent and KMGH had 55 percent The report also criticized the stations for providing limited coverage on important local issues, including elections, the environment, education, arts, poverty, children and AIDS. The group said it will file a challenge with the FCC on Tuesday, asking it to deny new licenses for the stations unless they limit violence and sex in their news programs. Klite and other media critics regard the license Challenges as a national test case. “It’s a very historic thing- Nobody has ever done this before: go after all the major stations in a town. It could give the FCC a chance to send a message to the broadcasters,” said Danny Schechter, who wrote The More You Watch, The Less You Know. ' Jack MacKenzie, news director of KCNC, questioned how Klite’s group classified stories. For example, he said, would the Monica Lewinsky investigation be a sex story even though it involves allegations of perjury by President Clinton? “We have a lot of people who give us advice on how to cover die news, And we take a lot of it seriously. We do have a public license, and we do have to take it seriously,” MacKenzie said. The other stations had no immediate comment when con­ tacted by The Associated Press. A study of eight major markets by the University of Miami, including New York City, found twice as much crime news as political news on local TV and 15 times more crime news than education news. Schechter and Klite dispute claims that playing down crime and other sensational stories Would be virtual suicide. They cite KVUE, an ABC affiliate, in Austin, Texas, which held onto to its No. 1 ranking after abandoning the tabloid format. MacKenzie said his station has its own process of deter­ mining how much coverage to give crime stories that includes “whether the story is representative of the community or just another event that kind of just happens. We absolutely run all our stories through a filter.” He said the success his station has makes it possible to give up valuable advertising to run non-stop coverage of dis­ asters like Denver’s October 1997 blizzard. BS/M S/Ph.D GRADUATES B rin g c o p ie s o f y o u r resum e. 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Group calls TV news coverage ‘harmful’ S ta te P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 P a g e 10 l inguist;tries:to save endangered languages Becauseyoulookgoodinaturtleneck! •1stPERSONPAYSADMISSION • 2NDPERSONSKATESFREE„ • SKATERENTALEXTRA O C E A N S I D E T 5 2 0 N .M c C u n to c k , T empe 941-0944 IC E A R E N A E xpires 5/31/98 PIZZA & WING SPECIALS Medium 12” 2-items w /12 wings Large 16” 1-item w / 25 wings *8.99 *13.99 A S te y Large 16” 1-item ^ je ^ e''ve w / 50 wings *15.9 9 405 W. University Dr. West at Mill Ave. next to TOPS Liquor 8 9 4 -8 4 2 4 E x p i r a s 3 -1 5 -9 8 HAPPY HOUR MONDAY th ru FRIDAY! 4-7pm & 9pm til C l o s e A LU DAY TU ESD A Y S 99C M a rg a rita s 9 9 c D ra ft B e e r {SelectedBrands} B y B rigitte G reenberg A ssociated P ress Sw ahili, a process aided by modem communications tech­ nology and easy transportation. NEW HAVEN, C o n n .— Deep in interior Alaska, there are only three households where Kuskokwim is still spoken. Just two people in their 70s keep the Klamath language alive in Oregon. In northern Australia, about 10 native speakers keep Jingulu alive. Thèse are among the world’s most endangered languages, tongues that have fallen victim to social and economic pres­ sures that demand people learn more common languages such as English. Linguists predict half of the approximately 6,000 lan­ guages spoken today will be extinct within the next century, and say at least 100 are down to one native speaker. At Yale University, a modest effort is being made to counter the trend with a fund that helps researchers study and resurrect dying languages, often by compiling dictionaries. The Endangered Language Fund, set up four years ago by linguist Douglas H. Whalen, is financing its first projects this year, Ten projects, including effort^ to preserve Kuskokwim, Klamath and Jingulu, will each get S I,000. “A lot of communities have been forced in various ways to start abandoning their language. I think people often don’t realize that there’s cultural value in their language until it’s too late,” Whalen said. In some cases, languages can be threatened by govern­ mental force, said Whalen. “In the United States, for example, the native American languages are die ones that were here first, and for centuries there were deliberate attempts to get those languages to stop being used,” he said. More often, languages die because of the influence of m ore com m on languages such as C hinese, E nglish or Even with relatively few speakers, a language may sur­ vive if it is spoken as the m ain form of communication with­ in an isolated community. C onversely, how ever, a language with thousands of speakers may be endangered if all of its speakers are more than 50 years old and it isn’t used by the younger generation. That is what has happened to the Tohono O’odham lan­ guage, an Indian tongue spoken by roughly 12,000 people in southern Arizona and northern Mexico, While the eldest generation still speaks Tohono O ’odham, many o f their children refused to teach it to the next genera­ tion, deferring to English because they faced discrimination when they spoke th eir native language in governm ent schools, Ofelia Zepeda, a grant recipient, Said. “Across the country, you have a generation o f native speakers who were not allowed- to speak their languages or who were punished for speaking them,” said Zepeda, an associate pro fesso r o f linguistics at the U niversity o f Arizona. Zepeda will use the grant money to help produce a com­ prehensive dictionary of Tohono O ’odham. The value o f a community’s language can only be deter­ mined by the people themselves, said Kenneth Hale, profes­ sor o f lin g u istic s at the M assach u setts In stitu te o f Technology. “If members of the community recognize or have come to see the beauty and strength and complexity and value of their linguistic heritage, then they have a perfect fight and in fact, a very strong moral right to maintain it,” Hale said. “When you lose a language, it’s like dropping a bomb on a museum.” Corner of University & Mill ONE FREE MONTH! -When You Buy One • NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY L O C K -IT ^ H U Ä LOCKERSi Self S to ra g e Close to Campus! SI 9 6 6 - 2 6 2 2 1 1 3 5 W. B roadw ay PR IEST ¡ C re e n o r R ed R e g u la r! “ f U J“ M I T O (Ton Good "Anytime JÇÔL *T o J t ë ê c i (Walk from ASU) 21$ E. UNIVERSITY • 829-6026 _ _ ire55{TS^98_j ' 2 0 % o ff UPS Shipping ( -F R E E (3 M o n t h s w / 6 M o n t h s R en t a l ) ' ®*2 0 C o pies iNnMlMwliWd^MfcieaMtlfciiot*y S aia? entry S m it h By Jim W odark rtn- mwv. 'DeuvtR.ANce/ Coxwtkv, l'tA 5uRt. VIwlO X V\ATt nv UFfc. tx c y s t n e . Fo r #\ T n t V jvt H. M ontvfr? V - ■,.rVVV\- B ad Haiku By C harles W rT HAS CCCOPEb TO OS THAT S o ^ e ^ cabers Have &ee>/ Eo/mplaiwimc. ABoi/r 7HE ovtiz.ûoir ‘« atiow of C eem «u Com>e characters w)ith /w th /s P(Aie R lper. esley UiHVPo soM t CARTOONS REEL. THÇ" A /£ ê "D TZ> â O ÓuT~ /4/J'ns e x ■pn/ii'D B e y o N T>: THE' LVWUTS» o p T lF C O M IC i, PAerPP.' iwg~ HALE-pi€NT/ o p XSDOl'A tAJ -TH E S P PU M >4NT>^»}£/OU3 /XJO M g g D T Z ) fcf“T ,t*W— - ^I éÉrO r O OO tA O -iT Ä fU -¿Msmaea ♦ Parental nightmares of the common Housefly Today Only! HAPPY HOUR PRICES ON BEER ALL DAY Ë 3 r ^ ^ M a s te rC a rd C om ics Page 12 State P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 T rials & T ribulations B y Jo n a t h a n I n g e THIS RIGHT- LET ME G E T YIV KICKED YOUR HUSBAND, M0£ OOT Of THEHOUSE tBOMsem told you his 80SS TRIEDTOGET His GOODIES; BASICALLY,TELUNG YOU THE TRUTH. \ Scientists have been w orking on trying to create som e form o f holographic television for a few years now. Ü Jocular Parable x By C arrie L. B ehrens SNACKS By D a v id G ould entry S m it h OH„.L-lVce ÏÏÔW AßouT FfcepeTRUtiic. \H-PC£ HIsTOtzy (âARy Cût£M/»W DO UÓ LA^S ce MALCOLM X MONTH tSM' ABOUTTHE o t t o n i m ö r r i s o n <**. r o s a BLACK, IT'S THE STgUao£E5 AND R » S ^MARTIN LUTWLR ACCOMPU SHM6NTS Kim, JR- WASHINGTON C A R \1 0 Z JI H m A cross the Hall By G C h ic k e n - s t ic k B u g Fa c e b y Jim w odark •rot VHfeRfc ARC Y«V TR.OM, rtwv- VltarA. 'DEUWtKIVNCt' Country, xVv WmlO $00ot*y 4aia? E v cu st V«. Fo r Tv\t W t H . / $ > f w s is T « e ujow -D „(AwaEVT? ty ll ßPOÜ^Hf M& IN tbflbDN H « E S rr HAS S o A ie C C C U P E b TO K e /u s e e s Ha v e B y C harles W OS that b eem ASauri^. TÌi£ ovaii- ISoiwi « M A T iöM O F ¿EETWÌAJ ÛWMlC C.HAt-Ac.TEfz.% f?»peR. n r W U T H IA J t h /s p ,/o e Afee.e y J e s e e A C e e taiàj . O e e t ö Oa j i ST /N v /A b IN û i C C E S S lF fE Û SÆOT7O/0 uv. HiS W A ? ic e o f &&&\ y esley THE C A ST O P ^OCUAE P iRA&CEFI MAHV TX) SOAAP CARTTOOrtS pen THFA/eED 7Z> <äO ¿* t - AMD r A»A Jim W odark© 1997 AH Rights Reserved Bad H aiku Mt O U T / T a JT e~TH6 ÜWITS OF T U T C O M IC I PA-öe? .1we^ HAUE"PL6 Nt) O F Tacöftfl IN -THe s f T=U/vJ TO jetMÉSSiÛÙSSSÎ Mo 6 * 0 OUT 4 * 0 7fef(/«rt. Parental nightmares of the common Housefly S po r t s State P ress P age 13 Tuesday, February 17,1998 Sun Devils chip way to 9th in Waikola, Hawaii B y C arlo M ercaldo State P ress Brad Lang/State Press ASU golfers Darren Angel, Greg Padilla and Brad Cannon (I to r) led the Sun Devils to a ninth-place finish at the Taylor Made/Waikoloa Intercollegiate golf tournament in Hawaii this past weekend. The ASU men’s golf team placed ninth this past weekend at the Taylor Made/Waikoloa Intercollegiate at Kings Beach Golf Course in Waikoloa, Hawaii . ' The Sun Devils overall score of (294-290-291) 875 was 19-strokes off the pace of top finisher UNLV. Also placing ahead of ASU were Pac-10 foes Oregon State and Oregon, both tied for sixth with scores of 874. UofA, which was ranked No. 1 in the nation entering the tournament, and who had placed second in a tournament they hosted two weeks ago, placed 18th with a stroke total of 895, ASU’s top individual performer was junior Greg Padilla, who finished tied for 11th place with a 1-under-par 215 (7270-73). “I was pretty happy with the way I played overall,” Padilla said. “I did have a couple mishaps coming home on my last round though, getting a couple of bogey’s, and as a team I know we can do a lot better.” Junior Darren Angel shot a 2-over-par 218 (72-73-73) to finish in a tie for 23rd in the event. Sun Devil freshman Jeff Quinney, who entered the Hawaii tournament ranked 41st nationally, shot a 4-over-par 220 (75-72-73). Sophomore Tim Mickelson (75-76-72) and junior Brad Cannon (75-75-77) had stroke totals of 223 and 227, respec­ tively, to round out the Sun Devil showing. , While the Sun Devils were not disappointed with their efforts in Hawaii, it is evident that they are aware they did not play to their potential. * “We are not too worried about getting the wins right now,” Padilla said. “We want to be playing our best golf when it counts at the end of the season, during the Pac-10 Championships (in April) and the NCAA Championships (in May).” „ " The inability to make key putts when it counted may have been a factor in the higher scores for ASU, who placed third in the UofA hosted-Ping/Arizona Invitational in Tucson two weeks ago. “In Hawaii, the greens are made o f Bermuda grass,” Padilla said.” That is a completely different type of grass than almost everybody on our team is use to playing, so that may have played a factor in a lot of our missed putts.” ASU does not return to action until the G olf D igest Invitational in Las Vegas on March 12-15. Lee is early arrival at cam p TU C SO N , A riz. (A P) — R ookie first league team s last season, b ase m a n T ra v is L ee w as su ch a su r“It is not his jo b to lo se ,” m anager p r is e a rriv a l at th e A r iz o n a Buck Show alter said. “W e do n ’t have a D ia m o n d b a c k s ’ sp rin g tra in in g co m - first basem an. W e’ve never had a first p le x M o n d a y th a t a s e c u r ity g u a r d basem an. W ith his work habits, 1 know w ouldn’t let him in. ■ T ravis is going to be as good as he is L ee cam e to his. firs t m ajo r leag u e capable o f being. I t’s very com forting, tra in in g cam p th re e d a y s b e fo re th e W e’ll find out how good he is capable position p la y e rs’ first scheduled w ork- o f being. O ur jo b is to help m ake the out. transition easier.” H e w as a d m itte d o n ly a f te r a fan M e a n w h ile ,, o u t f i e l d e r s K a rim o u ts id e th e p a rk in g lo t a sk e d fo r an G arcia and D avid H ulse threw fo r the autograph. firs t tim e in cam p, te stin g su rg ic a lly “I ’m a little nervous. I d id n ’t think 1 repaired left shoulders, was going to get this way. But looking G arcia, w ho u n d erw en t arth ro scp ic at the nam es above the lockers — M att su rg e ry w h ile w ith L os A n g e le s la st W illiam s, Jay B ell, Andy B e n e s —• ju s t sum m er, said he w as at ab o u t 80 perlo o k in g at th o se nam es, my gosh, it’s cen t and said he should be 100 percent c ra z y ,” L ee said. “I t ’s h ard to re a liz e in about tw o w eeks. „ I ’m h ere.” H u lse, w ho p la y e d w ith T exas and L ee, 22, is considered the favorite to M ilw a u k e e , m is s e d th e 1997 se a so n win the expansion D iam ondbacks’ first after sustaining an injury during a colb ase jo b a fte r h ittin g 32 h o m e rs an d lisio n on a play at the p late in the last d riv in g in 109 ru n s w ith tw o m in o r m onth o f the 1996 season. ¡■¡Banch a i an AB-Amèftcan, cap­ tured first p la c e in th e 100 meter freestyle ana 100 butter­ fly and was third in the was third in the 200 freestyle Saturday in a ¿ ja i with UofA. t h e jtiftior from Valencia, Venezuela was also part of the Sun DA/ils’ 200 freestyle relay team that took first place to lëad Ä8U pastthe Wildcats 153-147. .. Bloomquist, a left fielder, went 6-10 w ith two d o u b fea. o fte .s to le n .b a s # , th re e RBI an d f o u r r u n s s c o re d o v ar th e w eekend in the S u n Devils’ th re e -g a m e s e r ie s w ith Washington State. Thè sopho­ m ore from P o rt O rch ard , Wash, helped lead ASU to two wins in homestahd. Willie Bloomquist Baseball Diamondbacks coach Tommy Jones feeds balls Into a pitching machinge fo r batting practice. Raja W oods S oftball jJ Francisco S anchez M en ' s Swimming C asey Strand W restling P a g e l4 Tuesday, February 17,1998 State P ress Rodman misses second practice CHICAGO (AP) — Dennis Rodman was a no-show for a second straight practice Monday, the third time in less than a month the renegade rebounder has missed a workout with theChicago Bulls. 1 The indiscretions have led to a spot on the bench for the start of Sunday's game and a fine. “We’re not going to wrestle and tussle with this because it’s not something major. It's not anything that’s causing us to lose,” Bulls coach Phil Jackson said Monday at the team’s suburban Deerfield practice complex. “It’s not something that is going to cause disruption. What we want is a team that goes into the playoffs in full health, and we can still accomplish that.” Jackson said Rodman was healthy, but the coach wouldn't reveal his latest excuse for missing practice. When Rodman didn't show Monday, the Bulls called and found him at home. Rodman’s reasoning for being AWOL was not sufficient and he will be fined an undisclosed amount, Jackson said. •. The coach said he had not decided whether Rodman would play Tuesday night against the Indiana Pacers, a showdown for the best record in the East. 'That depends on how Dennis responds," Jackson said. Redman, recently sporting a leopard-spot hairdo to go with his various body piercings and tattoos, missed a Sunday morn­ ing shootaround and then didn't start as the Bulls beat the Detroit Pistons 99-90 later that afternoon. Rodman told Jackson he lost the keys to his pickup track and didn’t have a way tp get to Sunday’s practice. Jackson sent Rodman home before a game in New Jersey on Jan. 23 when thé six-time rebounding champion missed the morning shootaround after being out late the night before. Jackson said he didn’t know if Rodman’s absence Monday was related to Sunday’s incident. Rodman played just 21 min­ utes against the Pistons, going scoreless with eight rebounds. He had been averaging 15.2 rebounds a game in 35 minutes. “I always say if you’re not going to play, no sense me com­ ing to the game,” Rodman said as left the United Centeron Sunday. Rodman, has been mostly on his best behavior this season with an incentive-laden contract heavy on number of games played. Last season he was suspended 14 games, 11 for kicking a courtside cameraman. Jackson said Rodman’s latest troubles would not disrupt the Bulls, who have had a turmoil-filled season that may be their last together. , Earlier, Scottie Pippen said he wanted to be .traded and would never play for the Bulls again. He’s since softened his stance, but last week said he didn’t expect to be back in Chicago. There has also been a clamor over whether Jackson and Michael Jordan will be back next season. During Rodman’s more than two years with the Bulls, Jackson has often treated him like a wayward son. Associated Press Bulls forw ard Dennis Rodman m issed his second straight practice Monday and has been filled an undisclosed amount. Sprewell hearing ends with 7 1/2 hours o f closing arguments NEW YORK (AP) — Latrell Sprewell’s arbitration hearing concluded Monday with 7 172 hours of closing arguments, most of which focused on the player’s grievance against the NBA for suspending him for one year. Arbitrator John Feerick can issue his deci­ sion at any time within the next 30 days. Sprewell is hoping to be readmitted to the NBA immediately. “On behalf on the players association and our 400 players, I think everyone is pleased that the hearing is behind us and that Latrell has finally had an opportunity to a fair hearing before a neutral arbitrator,” union director Billy Hunter said. “We look forward to receiv­ ing a decision and to Latrell resuming his career as soon as possible.” Union attorney Jeffrey K essler spent almost three hours making his closing argu­ ment at the Manhattan law firm of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Rom. Attorney Frank Rothman, representing the NBA, took about two hours to state his case. Attorney Robert Shieblehut o f the Golden State Warriors finished in about 20 minutes. The union and the league then gave rebuttal arguments for about 45 minutes apiece before the hearing adjourned. Sprewell was in attendance, as he has been for all nine days of the hearing, and more than a dozen attorneys were there. “We remain hopeful,” said his agent, Am Tellem. Feerick has given no indication of how long he will take to issue a ruling. Before the hearing began, he turned down a motion for an expedited decision. A total of 21 witnesses testified over four days in Portland. Ore., during the final week of January and four more days in New York dur­ ing the first week of February. The transcript from the hearing runs almost 3,000 pages. Given the time Feerick will need to review the it, no decision is expected for at least a few days. Sprewell has already missed 35 games, making his suspension the longest in NBA his­ tory. He has filed two grievances, one against the Warriors for terminating the remaining three years of his four-year, $32 million con­ tract, the other against the league for imposing a one-year suspension after Sprewell attacked coach P.J. Carlesimo at practice Dec. 1. A ccording to a person fam iliar w ith Sprewell’s argument, his attorneys made a case that he was the first player to be penal­ ized by both the league and the team for a serious transgression. His side also argued that the collective bargaining agreement clear­ ly states that a penalty in a case like this may by issued by either a team or the league, but not both. Sprewell’s side also argued that the oneyear suspension was too harsh compared with previous penalties issued by the league. They also brought up cases of player-coach clashes in other sports in which penalties were issued by either the team or the league, but not both. The NBA argued that the penalty was not excessive, given the nature of the attack. The league’s security department interviewed 23 Witnesses in two days and determined that Sprewell got into a fight with Carlesimo at practice and choked the coach, then returned some 20 minutes later and punched him. 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College 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 n e x t to College S tre e t Deli Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days a Week ATTENTION SPR tti GRAD 6 0 9 S. Mill Ave. Bringing Fin e Food and Friends Together Since 1963 M ania Rosa's Traditional Sonoran M exican Food Recipes A re Sim ply the Best! 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 Featuring Selections to Enhance Your Healthy Lifestyle The deadline to apply for S pring Fabulous Fajitas -B eef • Shrimp • Chicken graduation is Friday, April 3,1998. a c ro s s from Coffee P lantation Everyday Low Price ■ Camaron Ranchera and Diablo (Shrimp) I Steaming Sides of Fresh Vegetables ■ Savory Slack Beans ■ Incredible Fish Tacos Graduates*!? Undergraduates *12 ^ Late Fee *5 (after deadline) H ere’s how to com plete your application process: FAMOUS GIANT GOLDEN MARGARITAS FREE A P P E T IZ E R 2 4 exposure DOUBLE PRINTS s e e s to re fo r d e ta ils 2023 W. Guadalupe C o lo r C -4 1 P ro c e s s B e s t P ric e in T o w n 897-9411 (Southwest Corner Dobson & Guadalupe) B u ffet 4-7 p.m Moncfcty-Friday fipè food Monean Enjoy A Corriplimentaiy Grande Espinaca Con Queso {Spinach Dip) With Fresh Hot Corn Chips When You Purchase Any Entree. (OnePerCoupon) Not GoodWithAnyOffer • Expires2-24-98 Mesa H appy H our Present receipt to the (Studen fora p Tempe 9 6 0 W. University (N ortheast C om er U niversity & Hardy) 966-0852 All graduating students must complete steps early to ensure that your name appears in the Spring Commencement Programand to avoid the last minute rush. tionfee survey ction t floor) eview. DO IT TODAY! P a g tu T S Tuesday, February 17,1998 S t a t e P ress Jazz, Magic trade centers Xavier upends N o. 2 4 C olonials CINCINNATI (AP) — Gary Lumpkin scored a career-high 31 points as Xavier rallied from a 10-point deficit Monday night. Xavier (17-6, 9-4 Atlantic 10) steadied its wobbly season by hitting 45-of-63 from the foul line and pulling it out in the second half with four players limited by fouls. The 45 free throws tied the school record. Lumpkin hit 16 o f X avier’s final 25 points to give George Washington (20-6,94) its first three-game losing streak of the But at 6:55 p.m. MST, Foster returned to the locker room, dressed and rushed angrily from the building. “Yeah, it’s me, me and Chris,” Foster snapped at reporters. Morris left the court a few moments later. Rookie W illiam Cunningham, a rookie from Temple playing on a 10-day contract, started at center for Utah against Charlotte. Seikaly had been the subject o f trade rumors recently. Philadelphia, New Jersey, Boston and New York were among die teams to express interest SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Greg Foster and Chris Morris left the court montents before the Utah Jazz tipped off Monday night, and Foster said they had been traded to Orlando for Rony Seikaly. In Atlanta, Seikaly was held out of die line­ up as the Magic played the Hawks. , Jazz officials said no deal could be con­ firmed until after the game. Seikaly’s agent said fie had not yet heard of a finalized deal. Foster and Morris dressed and warmed up for the game, and Foster was listed in Utah’s starting lineup. season. The Colonials 'fell' iiltB' fPsecondplace tie with Xavier in die Atlantic 10 West, a half-game behindJJayton. ■The Jop two teams in each division get first-round tournament byes. No. 20 W est Virginia 71, M arshall 58 CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Greg Jones scored 24 points and No. 20 West V irg in ia w on w ithout leading scorer Damian Owens. West Virginia (21-5) finished its non­ conference season 11-0 . S un Devil Basketball S tatistics Men’s Individual Stats........................................... . Name ■ G FG-A Pet FT-A Pts-Avg Name , G FG-A Pet FT-A Pet Rb-Avg Pts-Avg 20 21 15 21 21 21 20 16 21 • 19 85-221 87-171 39-89 58-129 53-147 55-143 43-123 25-69 7-25 9-34 38.5 50.9 43.8 45.0 36.1 38.5 35.0 36.2 28.0 26.5 69-96 54-83 37-52 34-49 37-51 30-45 38-51 26-34 12-12 5-7 71.9 65.1 71.2 69.4 72.5 66.7 74.5 76.5 1.00.0 71.4 87-4.4 103-4.9 41-2.7 86-4.1 72-3.4 74-3.5 72-3.6 40-2.5 22-1.0 15-0.8 269-13.5 228-10.9 127-8.5 152-7.2 157-7.5 157-7.5 132-6.6 79-4.9 26-1.2 26-1.4 513-20.5 433-17.3 400-16.0 288-11.5 185-7.4 . 118-5.4 132-5.5 18-1.6 3-0.4 7-0.8 75.1 93 2-3 7.3 2150-86.0 Team 21 384-946 41 .6 271-383 71.8 58 0-3 6.3 1 1 0 7 -6 9 .Í 66 .3 10 43-41.7 2053-82.1 O pponents 21 425-930 45 .7 24 4-3 59 68 .0 625-39.1 1139-71.5 25 25 25 25 25 22 24 11 8 9 188-423 162-286 164-287 113-260 59-138 48-103 54-102 ' 5-10 1-7 2-8 44.4 56.6 57.1 43.5 42.8 466 52.9 50.0 14.3 25.0 Team 25 819-1674 48 .9 386-514 25 779-1739 44 .8 338-510 O pponents ; Rb-Avg Women’s Individaul Stats 105-4.2 95-123 • 77.2 200-8.0 ; 99-125 i 79.2 198-7.9 64-97 : 66.0 82.6 71-2.8 19-23 84.1 95-3.8 53-63 53-2.4 19-27 70.4 24-37 64:9 "83-3.5 4-4 100.0 4-0.4 -3-0.4 00.0 0-2 75.0 8,0.9 3-4 Jeremy Veal Bobby Lazor Mike Batiste Eddie House Ahlon Lewis Jason Patton Urit Kelly Ron Dubois D'Angelo Jones Derek Smith A Pet ______ Stephanie Freeman Rachel Holt Michelle Tom . Kisha White Leaf Newman Kristine Sand Rameeka Lowe Rechelle Lang : Kellie McDanal Spring Steed S tate P r ess Sports W e're there when you can't be. Oakland Athletics p r e s e n t: ASU N M arch 3 ,1 9 9 8 A 's v s . G i a n t s Game Time 7:05pm at Phoenix Municipal Stadium O u tfie ld R e se rv e T ic k e ts O n l y $ 3 .0 0 ( R e g u l a r l y $ 7 .0 0 ) S to p a t o u r b o o th b y th e M U to g e t y o u r tic k e ts ! M s. 8c W ed. [until 12 pm ) State P ress Tuesday, February 17, 1998 P a g e 16 New Movies this Month on Channel 2 187 Nothing to Lose Double Team My Best Friend’s Wedding George of the Jungle Dusk Till Dawn How to be a Player Boys on the Side Addicted to Love Escape From LA And much, much more! v AP Photo/John Zich Hall of Fame baseball announcer Harry Caray, right, laughs with his grandson Chip, in Chicago in this May 13,1991 file photo. Caray, 78, was in stable but critical condition Sunday, Feb. 15, 1998, after collapsing during a Valentine’s Day dinner w ith his wife. Chip is scheduled to join Harry in the Chicago Cubs WGN-TV broadcast booth for the 1999 season. Caray still in critical condition Sweetheart Dance FOR STUDENTS in the HALLS Residence Hall Association Saturday, February 21 7:00 pm in PV W est Dress is sem i-form al Cost is $3 o r one can o f foo d D o n 't w o rry about a date...we'11 hook you up! Q uestions? C all 9 6 5 -5 8 0 9 If Get the experience you need to tehd a great job when you graduate. Become an Advertising Sales Representative for tne State Press. If.you can m otivate yourself, if you like people, if you are committed to a job well done, this position fs for you. Great experience. Great money. Big commi&nent. Pick up an application at the info desk of the State Press in Matthews Center basement. And do it today! fe W 'P K f RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (AP) — A sudden change in heart rhythm was blamed for the collapse of Chicago Cubs announcer Harry Caray. C aray was stricken at during a Valentine’s Day dinner with his wife. The 78-year-old announcer remained in critical but stable condition Monday at Eisenhower Medicdl Center. His con­ dition has remained unchanged since he was admitted on Saturday night after falling at the local Basin Street West nightclub. Nursing supervisor Jane Taylor con­ firm ed that C aray ’s co n d itio n but declined further comment. Family spokesman Bill Wills said “a sudden change in heart rhythm which seriously affected h is circ u la tio n ” caused tiie Hall of Fame broadcaster to collapse. “His heart output is normal now,” Wills was quoted as saying in Monday’s The Desert Sun of Palm Springs. Doctors were unsure what caused the problemi, Caray had a stroke in 1987 but doctors have ruled but another stroke, Wills said. “No one has even suggested that,” he said. , : Wills did not immediately return a phone call from The Associated Press on Monday. Caray’s son-in-law, Coley Newell, said over the weekend that Caray was unconscious but was breathing on his own. Mrs, Caray told Chicago radio station WGN on Sunday that tier husband fell when he leaned on a table that gave way. Well-wishers included Cubs officials, fellow broadcasters -and Chicago Bulls star Michael Jordan, who wished Caray a speedy recovery. “I love to hear his voice on the radio and the TV as well. Hopefully he can recover w ell,” Jordan said after the C hicago Bulls; defeated the D etroit Pistons 99-90 Sunday. Basin Street West general manager Peter Marin said Sunday that two of his employees, bartender Chris Boni and waiter Bobby Wherle, performed car­ diopulmonary resuscitation on Caray before paramedics arrived, “Both have been trained in CPR and did a fabulous job,” Marin said. “The paramedics were incredible and efficient in taking care of the unfortunate situa­ tion and they were wonderful in assist­ ing Mrs. Caray, calming her, keeping her informed on what they were doing.” Caray, a broadcaster for 53 years, has also worked for the St. Louis Cardinals, Oakland Athletics and Chicago White Sox. 1 C aray c u tb a c k his broadcasting duties last year. His first scheduled Cubs telecast on WGN this season is an exhi­ bitio n gam e M arch 8 ag ainst the Oakland Athletics. U.S. wrestlers arrive in hostile Iran TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — From a distance, an American flag painted on the wall of a tall government building in Tehran looks like it could be welcoming a U.S. wrestling team, the most prominent group of Americans to visit Iran since its 1979 revolution. But a closer look reveals skulls in place of stars, and the red streaks o f falling bombs in place of stripes. “We will never make up with the United States even for a moment,” says an inscription underneath, summarizing nearly two decades of hostility between Iran and a country still known to many here as the “Great Satan.” That resolve is one face of Iran’s Islamic Republic, set up after the revolution ousted the-U.S.-backed shah The other, of relative tolerance,-comes from Iran’s moderate president and those who, invited the team. As they arrived at Tehran’s airport early Tuesday, the A m erican w restlers w ere greeted by M ohammed Reza Taleqani, deputy chairman of the Iranian wrestling federa­ tion. “The only thing I care about is wrestling,” Taleqani said. “We are very happy to be here. It’s an opportunity we’ve been waiting for a long time,” said coach Joe Seay of Perry, Okla. “W e’re not politicians. We’re sportsmen.” About 50 mostly foreign journalists were on hand for the team’s arrival, ignored by most local media. But the muted Iran ian reception did not cool the enthusiasm o f the Americans. “Iranian wrestling fans are the greatest in the world,” said team member Zeke Jones, 31, of Chandler, Ariz. “If there is any political fallout from this, it is not our concern.” Iran’s top judge, Ayatollah Mohammad Yazdi, earlier Monday echoed sentiments of a hard-line faction in the gov­ ernment that wants no strengthening of ties with the United States. “If some sportsmen come here, it has nothing to do with (closer) government relations,” he said. • B ut the invitation attracted attention after President M ohammad Khatami, in rem arks broadcast last month, encouraged sports and cultural exchanges as a means of improving understanding between people of the two nations. The remarks, telecast in Iran and the United States, were widely viewed as a diplomatic opening by Khatami, a mod­ erate cleric elected in May 1997 on a platform of pragmatic changes in Iran. „ Despite comparisons with the ping-pong diplomacy that led to improved relations between the United States and communist China in the 1970s after decades of estrange­ ment, no one expects a quick refastening of ties between Tehran aid Washington. The U nited States severed relations w ith Iran after Muslim militants stormed the American Embassy in Tehran months after the 1979 revolution and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days. More than half of Iran’s 60 million people are too young to remember the revolution, and many are ready to put the past behind them. An opinion poll by Khatami’s office, pub­ lished in newspapers Monday, showed that 74 percent of Iranians believed K hatam i’s call for better ties with the United States was “very necessary.” Some 64 percent said it “could lead to better or much better ties.” No margin of error or sampling size were provided. D ie American wrestling team’s visit highlights the new attitude. “This event should be seen for what it is: a wrestling match with some very interesting possibilities,” said John M arks, head o f W ashington-based Search for Common Ground, a private group that promotes international under­ standing With the United States. ' C l a s s if ie d s Tuesday, February 17, 1998 State P ress Notice to our readers: Before responding-to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invented, you may Wish to investigate the company and offer. The Store Press cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. 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HBLu g m w Bomi ^ OPPORTUNITIES Temporary, Permanent, Full­ tim e, Part-time, Day Shifts, Night Shifts. We have clients in all parts of the Valley, and we are. actively seeking candi­ dates, entry, level as well as skilled, for various positions. Clerical, Data Entry, . Assemble, Filing, Receptionist, Customer , Service, Warehouse, etc. Please call today for appoint­ m ent. Good salary. Never a Fee. C a ll F ra n c e s o r l i l t . 9-5. M-F. @ 678-1900. To schedule an interview, call or write Mark, Kris, o r Kevin at: 933 Friendly Pines Rd.; Prescott 86303 Call (520) 445-2128 or email: fp c @ a m u g .o rg RO O M S FOR RENT ROOMMATE WANTED WANTED: immed. Luxury Scottsdale apt: J ROMMÀTE $350/mo. + utils. 10 min, from fully furnished, overlooking ASU Call 456-1434’ pool. $410, h/s, contact 4239110 Bambi 1 MILE FROM ASU: rooms in 4bd/2ba house w/ pool, jacuzFind it F A S T in ¡ziy w/d, a/c, pets ok, $360 util, incl. 966-6693 JOB 1998 Season: May 31-Aug. 2 We will be interviewing on cam pus Tuesday, Feb. 24. FURNITURE BLUE SOFA & beige/earth tones hide-a-bed. good cond. $50/ea. 947-6174 February 28 March 14 March 26 Bqt. Set-up Supervisor • Servers ($3.50/hr+ dps) • Bussers (S5/hr + tips) • • Sqt. Servers • Reservation Clerks FT & PT work available Please apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale Embassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace. [ jn n e t f ] S e a n K e rs h n e r G a rr e tt N o a k e s Business S9.00 per hour to start Students These two lucky students w ont have to w orry about tuition fees this semester. If you think you have what ¡M akes, sign up and be the next in line fo r an internship at Insight! Attn: Sales and Sales Management Applicants We're Having on On-Site Job Fair at the Insight Headquarters and Everyone Interested is Invited 6820 South Harl Avenue, Tempe, Arizona 85283 Insight offers a competitive salary, bonus plans, 401K and stock purchase plan. Apply in person M-F from 8am-5pm, FAX (602) 902-1157 (Attn: Nicol Henning), or mail resume. Please specify you are applying fbr internship position. N o phone calls will be accepted. Smoke-free workplace. Drug testing. EOE m /f/h /v . Visit our Web Site at www.insight.com A U T O M O W yS ^ LIKE NEW 1989 Acurra Integra 5dr aüto trans. ac pwd, pww, tinted 117K mi. $4325 obo. Day 4932920, Evje. 839-7993 SEIZED CARS From $175. Porsches, Cadil­ lac Sj Chevys, BMW's, Cor­ vettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll free, 1-800-2189000 Ext. A -1676 for current listings. HELP WANTEDGENERAL 20 YEAR OLD Barter organi­ zation is currently looking for a P/T trade broker. MuRi^tasked. Basic computer & good com­ munication skills n must. Flexi­ ble hrs. Potential for full-time career opportunity. Salary ne-, gotiable. Call Lori at 443-0322. LOOKING FOR a fun but chal­ lenging job? Tux &. Tails needs enefgetic people for Tempe; We reward exceptional performance, CaUTodd 838-3193 r : V',;;ÀRE YOU m otivated? Dyna­ mic? Aggressive? Driven? We .need sales people like you. Ex­ panding nation-wide. Real job, real base, real commission, real opportunity ! Please, call 602991 -0484, ask for Kate dr fax your resume to 602t99 1 4870. ATTEN PANTS NEEDED for dntwn: Tempe events including ASU &• Cardinal gamés. Must have flex, sçljed. Starting rate is $5:50 w/ increase potential, de. pending on performance. Cortr. tact Santiago, 921’9920. FUN JOB! Exc. pay! $8/hr. p/t. Gymnastics instructor needed for mobile preschool program. Call Tami at 821-4640 for info. GREAT JOBS for students. Ed­ ucational mail order company. PT or FT, 6 mins, from ASU, Gust, service $8/hr., Mac photo shop work $8/hr>, AM, after­ noon, PM, shifts available. . CaH Courtney 438-4400 OFFICE CLERK some comp, work, phones, & mail. 4hrs./day M-F. Start immed. Send resume to: Kids Voting USA 398 S. Mill Ave. Suite 304 Tempe, 85281 or fax 921 4QQ8 PATROL OFFICER trainee, any m ajor/ tuition aid/ flex hrs. Premier Patrol, 968-0311 PERSON NEEDED for filing & other duties. Starting at $6/hr. Flex hrs: Call 243-1880. GYMNASTICS GREAT opp. for PÉ or EpU majors who are PUBLIC RELATIONS support fun, energetic, & positive. All including research, data base âgés & levels. Call Paul 992entry, some writing. Flex, hrs, 5790 ■ p/t, Prof., fun-loving* busy at­ mosphere. Fax res. to 481 IMAX THEATRES, Tempe & 2001 or call 481-2002 start Scottsdale are currently hiring immed. . theatre floor, staff. AÜ avails, needed. Apply in person at SCHOOL AGE program Stotts, 4343 N; Scottsdale Rd. pr call needs afterschool assistance.. 9 4 9 - 310 Ô X 201: for info. Assist w/art, gaities, & activities Come join our team! (K-2) $6-6.75/hr. Call Pals 314IMMEDIATE OPENINGS at Federal Express Tempe Ware­ house. M-F, 5pm-7 p.m only. lOhrs./wk. $7.80/hr. Start im­ mediately • Apply 9am to 11 am M-F* Goldstar Staffing, ,5150 N. L26th St./ #B I3;0 Phx. (N. of Cahielback) P/T FEM. aide, 3:00-9:0dpm, T/Tft, ;$ 10/hr. physically disa­ bled girl. Must have own car. 423-5903 ’•••. STA TRAVEL World's largest student travel agency seeks well-traveled en­ ergetic; individ w/ strong sales & customer service skills. Op­ portunity to work in an excit­ ing field in a casual & profes­ sional environment. $7.508/hr. FT & seasonal positions. : Will train. Start your travel ca­ reer today. Fax resume to ST A travel 602-922-6793 Attn.: Jill or call 602-922-0696, ext 1155. 1; VALET PARKING attendants pt/ft. M ust be courteous & clean cut. $7-$12/hr. American Valet 235-2636 SECRETARY FOR a busy auction gallery òli Nantucket Island, Mass. May-Dec. Rm. & salary (602)‘ 991-4271. ; -, SEE THE WORLD International co: seeking ad­ venturous positive individuals to help w /fapid; expansion. Flex, hrs., travel, no èxp. nee. Call 955-3475 4 Call Today to Schedule an Appointment Mesa: 890-1112 Phoenix: 254-8367 Scottsdale: 483-8321 We also offer full-time placement, long-term and short-term opportunities. You Decide! ■ 1X 4 FH 102*6 Earn $6.50 - $8.00 per Hour Working With A dolescents Incentives: Tuition Reim bursem ent, Paid Time Off, A dvancem ent Potential, 6 Month R aises, Paid Training, Full Benefits P ackage K E Z 9 9 .9 , : su bm it A pplications • Excellent ehtry level broadcasting opportunity • Perfect for Broadcasting, Marketing and Communication majors • Superb résumé addition • Advancement Opportunities ; •professional environment • Flexible scheduling • Less than a mile from ASU i l Jl HELP WANTEDGENERAL I1 Customer Service Associates W o rk w ith one o f th e b e st n am es in the a p p lia n ce in d u stry! As an affiliate of General Electric, Advanced Services, Inc. (ASI) is a national service center providing telephone assistance to customers regarding GE appliances. As a member of our inbound Customer Service Department team, you m ust have a dynamic telephone personality, type at 20 wpm and be ready to work with a great team* Previous customer service experience and Windows com­ puter skills are/preferred. • $7.20/hour starting wage (increases 30f after successful completion of training) • Paid training » Fun, motivated, professional work environment • Afternoon and early evening shifts available •. Advancement opportunities . • Excellent benefits for FT and PT employees (health, dental, vision, tuition reimbursement, profit sharing and more) Apply now - classes are beginning soon! Applications are accepted MondayFriday/ 7am-4pm at: 3137 E. Elwood Street, Suite 100, Phoenix, AZ 85034 (University, east of 1-10). For more information/ directions) please call: 414-2592. Equal Opportunity Employer Advanced Services. Inc. W ANTED ATTENDANTS Students to w ork part-tim e as a Personal Care A ttendant to assist a person w ith disabilities in th e ir daily routine. Hours are flexib le - pay varies. No Experience Necessary. Stop by DRS at M atthew s Center or Call Debbie Johnston 965-9237 756-1223 CREATE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE w e , r e f L e X 1 Join Heart to Heart, Scottsdale’s leading dating service located in Old Town Scottsdale. Have fun calling singles to invite them for a free tour of our center b l ih r W - i Have the sum m er of your life a t a prestigious coed sleepaw ay cam p in th e beautiful Pocono M tns of [ Pennsylvania. 2 1 /2 hours j from NYC. W e're seeking counselors w ho can teach ! all Team 8r Individual Sports; Tennis Gym nastics, Horseback j Riding, M t Biking, Theatre, ] Tedh Theatre, Circus, Magic, A rts & Crafts, Pioneering Climbing Tower, W ater Sports, Music. Dance, Science, or C om puters We also seek [ th eatre directors. On-Campus interview s on 2 /2 6 . C ontact Career Services for an appointm ent and application. HELP WANTEDGENERAL Create Your Own Schedule To: DBC Residential Services 2405 E. Southern Ave. #9 Tempe, AZ 85282 I f i n t e r e s t e d , c a ll: JLi 4 . I m M N ow ___ 4 SI B I MAP Mobile Communications is cur­ rently hiring for both Full-time and Parttime shifts. No selling or telemarketing is involved. W e are looking for tele­ phone agents who can type 30 wpm, have good spelling skills, and a friendly, articulate voice. $7/hr to start with an increase after 90 days. Benefits include: medical, dental, 401k, 2 weeks paid vacation, credit union membership, and paid training. If you want to be part of a great team, call Lois or Jennifer for an interview @431-0054. O w e n s B iro a c flc m s tliig C o r p . R e se a rc h D e p t. , (North af HELP WANTEDGENERAL DBC n ee d s people to work with children, ad o les­ cents, an d young adults who are Developmentally, Emotionally, an d Behaviorally challenged. « e w ifry « Find it FAST in the Classifieds Fsycji & Social Work Majors Gain valuable Experience *»ey10W m u APPT. SETTER, up to $30 hourly + bonus. A.M. or P.M. shifts. 655-8500 i m Data Entry, Customer Service, Clerical £L|ü£âk= HELP WANTEDSALES A NEW JOB FOR THE NEW YEAR? I§ Ronady w»W 5 1 5 9 N .1 « m S t YOUNG GUNS $36,000 New co. expanding locally seeks career minded in­ divid. who loves fun & $. Training provided. Call 6676330 9669 nr&onn country W m m P/T GAINEY Ranch office. Prof, in Windows 95, Powerpoint, Excel, Word. Good comm, skills. Business major, pref. Fax res. to 368-0967 or 515-1214 SELL ADVERTISING for the State. Press & pave the road to an excellent future! (Talk about a resume builder!) Hours are flexible. Pay is excellent. Work is intense. Must have a car. In­ terested? Pick up an application at the State Press info desk in the north basement of Matthews Center. Do it today ! Questions? Call Jackie Eldridge 965-6555 ■ mum WANTED,. F/T-P/T waitress for busy Tempe sportsbar. Woodshed II. Apply M-F 26p.m. 430 N. Dobson. OFFICE ASSISTANT needed in Scottsdale Law Finn. Computer & office éxp. prefd. 15-20 hrs a week. Fax resume to 944-5141 We have immediate opportunities with Top Companies near ASU, offering flexible schedules around your class schedule. All offer excellent pay and bonuses! 'm PT Cr.ERICAL 20-30 hrs. T & Th until 7pm, Sat. 7-3pm. $6/hr. Apply 963 W. 23rd St., Tempe'968-3553 x 101 FUN & FRIENDLY Sales Rep. needed for jewelry & gift cards , at Scottsdale Fashion Square Mall. FT/PT, $6/hr. + comm. Call Wendi at 860-5788. CRAZY !! DRIVER/ HANDYMAN needed part-time, M-F, no nights, flexi­ ble hrs. Must have clean driv­ ing record. 15 hr/wk. $7/hr. Apply at Inside/Out Show­ rooms 2716 N. 68 St. Ste. 1000* Scottsdale, 994-1060. DATA ENTRY I-10/Baseline f/t, M-Th, 12:30-9 p.m. & Sun. 2-9 p.m. Word Perfect a must. Dana 443-8883* ' HELP WANTEDGENERAL m 1DRIVER FOR wheelchair ac­ cessible/Van rental co. Very p/t. $8/hr. 967-6863 VIDEO STORE. Part time hours available. $5.50/hr. Corner of Scotts. St' McKelps. 1 mi. JN. of ASU 989-5361 HELP WANTEDGENERAL INTELUGEKfWF^ DELIVERY- S20/HR. avg, De­ liver applications.locally. No èxp. 1-806-373-3696 ext 6732 HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Any Shift, Any Time - You Decide! Fun, freedom, & finance! Na­ tional CO; seeking players for local expansion. Call now 9553460 /;.;: . ■ / • / ' • v / y . HELP WANTEP- HELP WANTEDGENERAL BECOME À mobile DJ. Work weekends. We train. Depend­ able vehicle/Call 82Q-8220 t State P ress Tuesday, February 17,1998 Page 18 EEO W e H ire S tu d e n ts • Create a shift between the hours of 6:00am and 9:30pm (We're totally flexible) The Perfect Part Time Position If you love h e lp in g o th e rs a nd w a n t so m e th in g m ore th a n ju s t a jo b , w e w an t you! We are seeking students to w ork w ith children w ith developm ental disabilities, helping p rom ote com m unity p a rticip a tio n , recreational activities and ind ep en d en t living skills. We o ffe r a vari­ e ty o f p a rt-tim e p o s itio n s in th e late a fte rn o o n and early evenings, w orking w ith ch ild re n in th e ir ow n hom es. We o ffe r p aid tra in in g and fle x ib le sched­ u le s w ith a p ay ra n g e fr o m $ 7 .0 0 $7.50 DOE/EOE. For m ore in fo rm a tio n co n ta ct Krista a t 431 -9511. Am A vg. $ 9 —$16/hr. >Weekly paychecks >No experience necessary >Helpful, friendly trainers «Non-stressful, fun, friendly environment Call Today! • NO SELLING • Permanent Part time Day/evening shifts • Flexible scheduling • Exp not req’d • Women Excell • Casual Dress • Autom ated Dialing System • Fun Atmosphere 345-9509 Apply Today 209 E. Baseline, Bldg E-103 (Mill & Baseline) C a l l 9 4 7 -8 1 OO Page 19 Tuesday, February 17,1998 State P ress HELP W ANTEDCLERtCAL HELP WANTEDCLERICAL HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE PART TIME data entry/cust. svc- 15-20 hrs./wk. flex. Incl. 10-3 Sat. Type min. 45 wpm. Exp. preferred. Close to ASU, call or deliver resume: Solatube, 1414 E l University Dr. suite 107 T*mpe, AZ «5281. Fax.968-0991 ph.968-1777. PART TIME receptionist-Tempe Firm looking for an outgoing person to answer 5 incoming lines, light typing, filing & gen office help. Please contact Glenn Craig @ 929-0282. ASTUTE OBSERVATION Good $, fun. working environ., great job. Goldie's Sports Cafe, Scottsdale, now hiring servers^ & cooks. Call for appt. & direc­ tions. 451-6269 Find the State Press on the Internet: http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ HELP W ANTED' GENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL REASSURANCE AIDE College Students and Teachers! Perfect for students! Seeking caring, compassionate person for FT (Mon-Fri, 4pm-midnight) position at an elderly housing complex. Responsible for responding to emergencies arid answering 2-lirie phone. Must bç abfc tp w ork without supervision' and enjoy Working with the elderly. Call Randa on Children's Summer Camp in Oracle, AZ is looking for Counselors w ith expertise in Horseback Riding, R iflery, M ode & Songs, Nature, Ropes Course, Lifeguards, Camp N urse, and Cooks to w ork May v t Aug 8. Good salary, fob experience, plus Room/Board. E-mail us at cam pm auSazstaraet^om or call 1-S1O484-09S7. #056-0150 or APPLY NOW, IflVELCAMPO^OF CAgfe Goldsmith Building 3020 N. 36th Sbfeet CAMP TOWANDA P ocono M The A ri­ zona Center @ Players between2-5, or The Original Sports Bar between 3-8. HELP WANTEDGENERAL PT/FT Must Type 50 wpm. Conference Center Food & Beverage For more information Call (602) 860-4792 HELP WANTEDGENERAL SERVERS WANTED (Scot­ tsdale) "Famous Sam's”, an ex­ citing, fun sports bar & restaraunt seeks pleasant customer oriented waitresses for day &/or night shifts. Apply in person 7134 E. Thomas Rd. (1 blk. w. of Scotts. Rd). Tuesday, February 17, 1998 ones lend a needed hand. * ARIES (March 21 to April 19) SCORPIO (Oct 23 to N6v. 21) You neatly sidestep a. tricky sit­ Although a bigwig is singing uation. However, you will still your p raises, you’re m ildly have to deal with this at a later uncomfortable about this. Don’t d ate. An ev ening d iversion be! You’ve earned the kudos, proves pleasurable. effusive though they may be. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to U n fo rtu n ately , you becom e Dec. 21) A shopping expedition involved in a bit of an imbroglio has you. tem pted to spend on the work front. Once you’ve taken a stance, it’s difficult to m oney you d o n ’t have. W indow-shopping is a better back down. Peace is restored by idea. Evening hours should be day’s end; GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) de voted to the needs of chil­ The idea you think is so brilliant dren. really i s n ’t w orkable. Thus, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) A senior member of your family you’ll have to go back to the proverbial drawing board. Later needs som e extra attention. in the day, an outdoor activity Instead of phpning, make it a point to visit. A work assign­ clears your head. GANGER (June 21 to July 22) ment temporarily baffles you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Stop trying to make excuses for Singles are easily charmed by a friend’s behavior. This person is both immature and manipula­ someone’s physical appearance. tive. Oikte you realize this, you ' However, look below the sur­ can m ake a d ecisio n about face for the true nature ofthis whether to continue the rela­ person. Avoid an evening enter­ tainment that’s a bit risky. tionship. LEO (July 23 to A ug. 22) PISCES (Feb. 19to March 20) Y our leo n in e attractiv en ess Don’t give in to the suspicious shines through and you’re the side of you. Instead* learn to life o f the party. Do be sure, tru st m ore. A loved one is however, to tend to an impor­ reaching blit to you; tant project at work before get­ YOU BORN TODAY are pos­ ting out and about. sessed o f an alm ost frenetic energy. You have to constantly VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) You’re carrying a feud a bit too be in motion and keep busy. far, Is your pride really all that Faced with a decision, you Take important? Go ahead and make the most hands-on approach that heal ing phone call right possible. A natural athlete, you away! seek a career that indulges this LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) A p h y sicality . T hose in your surprise is in store for you comim m ediate sphere are under­ munications-wise. It1s <* good standing and supportive of your day for getting some household special needs and talents chores, out oftfie way. Loved , ©1.998 King Features Syndicate Inc. ANNOUNCING! CRUISE Ships now hiring!! $2600/mo potential. Seasonal/ FT. Call now! (614)26M 853. Free gift! CLUB MED & Cruise ships now hiring. Free details. 800436-3242 EAST SIDE Mario's in Tempe is looking for food servers. Day & night shifts available. Apply in person at 1125 W. Elliot Rd , 1lam-10pm, 961-8555 RESTAURANTS/ BARS 9 8 C Pitchers o f Soda 2 1 0 0 S. Priest T em p e HELP WANTEDGENERAL FUN CHRISTIAN couple wish-, es to adopt newborn/infant, . counceling/lawyer available. Call anytime, 892-7373. : SERVICES Power study seminar is the an­ swer. Money back guarantee. 1 seminar left. Call now 632-0398 HAS LIFE thrown you for an unwanted curve? Consider Li- . posuction, Breast Augmenta­ tion, or a Rhinoplasty. It is inore affordable than you think. Call AZ Centre for Plastic. Sur­ gery. 250^8779 TYPING /W O RD PROCESSING $2.50/PG, $15/RES. Proofed Laser. APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. Near ASU. Brian, 967-5987. * Raise S500 in one week. Fundraising opportunities available. No financial obligation. Great for clubs. For more information call (888) 51-A PLUS ext. 51 $2“*Pitchers 60 oz. Fiesta Inn ADOPTION PERSONALS -7&flk-tip Bud Light • Coots Light WANT TO have fun? Join the Ládies of wé are. having pizza and more on Feb. 17. For more info, call Nikki 784-6300. BETTER GRADES RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES FREE EMERGENCY CONTRACEPTION • “MORNING AFTER” PILL SHORT, ON CASH? Taken w ithin 48 hours of unprotected intercourse. Medical screening necessary. Plasm a, M akes a Lot o f C en ts! i New Donors Earn $80 For Your First Two Donations • FREE PREGNANCY TESTING » No appointment necessary. , • ABORTION WITH TW ILIGHT SLEEP • Haven't been here-in 90 days? : Saturday appointments available. • GYNECOLOGICAL EXAM S Low cost complete birth control. Affordable PAP smears • Exciting in-house prom otion by Frances Drake JOB OPPORTUNITIES HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE Return and receive a 110 BONUS!! ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST BARKLEY ALPHA GAMMA Delta Spring Rush COB party, Tues. 2/17 at 8:00pm on the ATA floor. For more info contact Chfysty at 784-0749. $ 4 “ - Four Peaks Pole Ale 2 m ile s frp m ASU Accepted donors compensated $2,000. !Feliz Cumpleaños! What has a luminosity o f 55,000; is 900 light years away ánd referred to as the left leg of the giant Ori­ on? Here you are, your bright blue star. Rigel (Rye/Jel) Love, Betelgeuse BABYSITTER, P/T near Para­ HELP WANTED Deli person dise Valley Mall, $7/hr, own F/P time, flex. hrs. Experience transp. needed. 788-6333 preferred but n ot necessary. Apply in person Capistrano’s ’ CHILD CARE needed in my home. M-F 3-6pm. 2 kids, ages Italian Deli 655 W. Warner 7, 10. Must have own car. Deb Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene & 966:2263 t Warner)496-9044. FT More info: 8 0 4 - 5 2 8 5 Healthy women (ages 21-32, all ethnic groups) needed to donate eggs anonymously to help infertile couples achieve pregnancy. Must have health insurance, 7-10 clinic visits and injections involved. NANNY MOTHER’S help thru May. .Free room & $100/wk. Mostly eves, after 5, some wknds. Approx. 35hrs/wk. Lovely, playful 7 yr. old. Easygoing,, peaceful household. Need own car & exec. refs. Biltmore Area 553-8049 Concierge P e r so n n e l DONOR EGGS NEEDED DON & CHARLIE’S, One of the valley's busiest restaurants is hiring for host/ess. Apply in person at 7501 E,‘ Camel back . Rd. Scottsdale HOSTESS POSITIONS (lunch or dinner) for fine dining res­ taurant. Apply at 3101 East Camelback between 2-5pm lo in the Fiesta Fun! Reservations 9 2 2 -4 6 6 9 DELI HELP wanted, FT or PT, Mon.-Fri. 7am-3pm. Near ASU. Please call, 968-2927. PERSONALS FiEstnmn NEEDS FAX resume Attn: Viki Accepting apps. for lunch host (ess) & lunch food server. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are important. Apply in person M-F 2-5p.ni; or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. HELP WANTEDr C H ILDCA RE PERSONALS DA TA EN TR Y Flex hours. $10+ per hour CORK'NCLEAVER HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE 1 PT Relaxed W ork Environment. HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE • Ask us about career opportunities • P/T positions available eo&mfvd 1334 E. Broadway/ Suite 102 • Tempe CENTEON • FEMALE NURSE PRACTITIONER 968-6139 FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE S cottsdale /T empe 2334 N. S cottsdale 945-4999 G lendale STUDENT ID Rd . 7806 N. 27m Ave. 997-7493 Required A S U Box 8 7 1 5 0 2 Tem pe, A Z 8 5 2 8 7 -1 5 0 2 Fax: 9 6 5 -4 7 0 6 S ta te P re s s Classifieds M atthews Center, Basem ent Office: 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 Classified Ad Order Form Name' Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. P lease be sure to check your ad- M ake sure it reads exactly as you wish it to appear in the S tate Press, including punctuation. P lease Check your ad th e first day it appears-the liability of the. State Press shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit m ay be given for the first insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qualify for m akegoods. N o refunds will be given, but if you need to canc e l your ad a credit will be held on account for futurej advertising. HAYDEN'S FERRY, R E V I E W . ASUs L ite ra ry M agazine Coll 9651243 Tor m ore Info Ft a T _ S Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per. line,, pier day 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.49 per line, per day Commercial 1 day, $ 2.60 per line 2-4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5r9 days, $1.76 per line, per day 10+ days, $ 1 .60 per line, per day 3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. State P ress Tuesday, February 17, 1998 P age 20 Dear Mom and Dad, Don’t send money. Don't call home for cash* Call us for The Associates Visa* card. You can get: • 3% cash b a c k o n purchases* • D iscounts on brand nam e m erchandise • N o annual fe e • C re d it lin e up to $ 2 ,5 0 0 T o apply, call 1 -8 8 8 -S E N D -O N E •See Rebate Terms and Conditions accom panyins the cre d it card. Associates National Bank (Delaware) » TT TT IN MANY COMPANIES u Ta k e s y e a r s t o M anagem ent W e ll G ive p r o v e y o u ' re m a t e r ia l ... you 10 w e e k s . Ten weeks m ay n o t seem like m uch tim e to prove yo u 're capable o f being a leader. B ut if yo u 're tough, sm art and determ ined, ten weeks and a lo t o f hard w ork could m ake you an O fficer o f M arines. A n d O fficer Candidates School (OCS) is w here y o u 'll g e t the chance to prove you 've g o t w h a t it takes to lead a life fu ll o f excitem ent, fu ll o f challenge, fu ll o f honor. Anyone can say they've g o t w h at i t takes to be a leader, w e ’ll give you ten weeks to prove it. 1 0 6 3 9 N. 3 2 N D ST ■ 4 8 2 - 3 1 1 9 (N.E. CORNER OF SHEA & 32ND ST) 2510 W. THUNDERBIRO - 866-7867 807 W INDIAN SCHOOL - 241-0313 (MEMORIAL UNION) - 727-USED 105 W UNIVERSITY, TEMPE - 829-1967 Marines TheFew. The Pwod. TheM arines. If you’ve got what it takes to earn the title Marine Officer see Captain Williams at the fountain, Feb. 17th or call (602) 257-0310