INSIDE Classifieds 17 Crosswords 08
Weather Mostly sunny; high 83, low 52
Volume 84 Number 59
Monday, November 16,1998
Horoscopes 19 Opinion 04
Clinton warns Iraq that
warprevention depends
upon compliance
PoliceBeat07
Ducks roast ASU,
destroy Sun Devils
51-19 in Eugene
Indonesian activist
brings fight to A SU
B y H a y le y R ingle
S t a t e P ress
Show me the
in
With three seconds left in regulation and the Cardinals down by a touchdown, Jake Plummer threw
this pass to wide receiver Rob Moore in the end zone. With Dallas cornerback Kevin Smith draped
all over him, Moore dropped the ball and the Cowboys won, 35-28. Despite pleas from Cardinals
players, coaches and fans, there was no pass interference called on the play. See story page 15.
As the Indonesian
m ilitary continues to
clash with thousands of
protesters over their
pro-dem ocracy cam
paign, Yeni Rosa
D am ayanti,
an
Indonesian human rights
activist, came to campus
Thursday to explain why
be concerned.
Damayanti is currently on a speaking
tour in the United States and visited the
ASU campus with fellow activist Fernando
A raujo to speak on hum an rights in
Indonesia and East Timor. These are issues
Damayanti knows well.
She began fighting for environm en
tal rights in Indonesia in 1974. This
w as d iffic u lt, she said , b ecau se the
Indonesian government had banned all
student organizations from university
campuses, and activists like Damayanti
had to m eet o ff cam pus, w hich also
was illegal.
At the time, the students were main
ly protesting because the governm ent
was constantly taking away land from
p e o p le fo r d e v e lo p m e n t, she sa id .
D am ayantkworked with other activists
to give legal aide to those people and
organized demonstrations to raise pub
lic awareness.
Damayanti said while studying biolo
gy at a university in Jakarta, she discov
ered the government’s destruction of the
tropical rain fo rest is directly tied to
hum an rights violations. She said the
Indonesian government has been giving a
license to then President Suharto’s fami
ly and friends to exploit the destruction
of the forest for money.
“They are using the trees for lumber,
plywood, paper and rayon,” Damayanti
said. “They only produce rayon in thirdworld countries because it’s so chemically
baAto produce.”
By exploiting the forest, the people
living in the forests also lost their homes,
she said.
“I did research in ‘89 and found that
by destroying the tropical rain forest,
(the government) also destoryed the lives
of the people who live in the villages,”
she said.
In the 1990s, Damayanti began cam
paigning for workers’ rights, asking for
larger wages. At the time, workers were
only getting 50 cents per day. But after
many protests and labor strikes, the lead
ers of the labor movement were forced
; to. resign, and some were badly beaten,
;5fte>sAid..,One leader was found beaten to death in
the forest, and her vagina had been stabbed,
Damayanti said.
Another incident occurred at a demon
stration in a mosque. :
“The military accused the demonstrators
of being communists or Muslim fundamen
talists, and opened fire in the mosque,”
Damayanti said. “The government took the
bodies away and cleaned up the area with
large w ^ ^ ta n ® WiW'**p
The government also closed down the
new spapers and prohibited them from
printing stories about the killings, she said.
Damayanti said because of these mas
sacres, she began to spend more and more
tim e dem onstrating about Ind o n esia’s
hum an rig h ts abuses to let the w orid
know. She was a rrested in 1993 for
protesting with about 200 students and
was sentenced to a year in prison.
“We were quite lucky because usually
we would get three-and-a-half years for
Remonstrating,” Damayanti said.
Pro p o sal em erges fo r Tem pe A q u atic ce n te r
By K im P r e n d e r g a s t
S t a t e P ress
The Rio Salado Aquatic Center, a non-profit organiza
tion, is proposing the creation of a $2-million, multi-faceted
aquatic center for the Tempe Town Lake.
The building would be about 9,000-square feet and
house classrooms to teach boating, as well as administrative
offices, showers and other accommodations. An additional
one-and-a-half acres would serve as boat storage and dock
ing on the North Bank across from Sun Devil Stadium.
“The main goal is to provide safe, affordable and easy
access to the town lake,” said George Sheller, president
of RSAC Inc. “We want to have programs for at-risk
kids, handicapped individuals and the general public.
“The whole reason we put this thing together is because
a lot of public funds went into building the lake,” he said.
“We thought an aquatic center was the most appropriate
way to use the lake.”
RSAC, which is com prised o f the A rizona Yacht
Club, the U.S. Rowing Club and the U.S. Canoe and
Kayaking Club, has been working with Tempe planners
to design the facility.
The organization wants to lease the land for the minimal
one dollar-a-year agreement, and in return raise the funds
for the center. Sheller said the RSAC will raise the money
through donations, industrial bonds and tax-free bonds.
He also said they have been talking to city officials
and next week, staff will put together a proposal to the
Tempe City Council to look into an aquatic center.
The center has been proposed but has not yet been
approved, said Kevin Olds, an RSAC board member.
Tempe has to put out a request of qualifications and then
RSAC has to meet them.
Once the center is designed, construction of the
building would take about two years to complete.
Tempe city officials are considering die proposal.
C r o n kite t o h o n o r fo r m e r ‘W a s h in g to n P o st’ e d ito r
B y L idia E , K e ll y
S t a t e P ress
Two legendary newsmen will meet in
the Valley Wednesday to share a hand
shake, a smile and some of the biggest sto
ries of the 20th century.
An expected 1,200 people will crowd
Scottsdale’s Phoenician Resort to commem
orate the career of Benjamin Bradlee, for
mer executive editor of The Washington
Post. While Bradlee was the Post’s editor,
he oversaw the newspaper’s coverage of the
Vietnam War, Watergate, Pentagon Papers,
and the assassinations of Robert Kennedy
and Martin Luther King Jr.
W alter C ronkite, form er CBS news
anchor who recently reappeared on CNN to
cover John Glenn’s return to space, will
present B radlee with the 1998 W alter
C ronkite Award for Excellence . in
Journalism and Telecommunication.
Each year the Walter Cronkite Endowment
for Jounialism and Telecommunication Board
of Trustees at ASU awards an individual who
has distinguished himself or herself for a life
time in media work, said Douglas Anderson,
director of the Board.
“Ben Bradlee is one of the ... most influ
ential people in contemporary journalism,”
Anderson said.
Bradlee started his career at The
Washington Post in 1948 as a reporter cover
ing federal courts and worked there until
1951. That year he became the press attaché
for the State Department at the U.S. Embassy
in Paris. In 1953 he left the position to join
Newsweek as an European correspondent.
In 1965 B radlee rejoined The
Washington Post as managing editor and
later became executive editor in 1968. He
retired from the latter position in 1991 anR
currently serves as the newspaper’s vice
president at-large,
A close friend of the late President John
F. Kennedy, Bradlee paid a tribute to the
president with two books: That Special
G race in 1964 and C onversation w ith
Kennedy in 1975. He also wrote his mem
oirs, A Good Life: Newspapers and Other
A dventures, which was published three
years ago,
Bradlee’s schedule won’t allow him to
visit the University and talk to a larger
group o f students, said Nancy Dean, a
development officer at the College of Public
Programs, which is organizing the event.
But Cronkite will stay in the Valley
longer and speak to classes in the Walter
C ronkite School o f Jo urnalism and
Telecommunication Thursday.
A c t iv is t
Campus clubs and organizations may submit written
en tries to the State Press in th e basem ent of the
Matthews Center. Requests will not be taken over the
phone o r via fax.
Deadline for requests is noon the day before publica
tion and entries will not be accepted more than three
working days before publication. Only one entry per
organization per day is permitted.
Entries must contain the full name of the club or
organization, a description of the event, date, time and
the full address of the location. All requests are subject
to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or
illegible entries will be discarded.
The Today Section is a daily calendar of events print
ed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are
accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are
printed as space permits.
• C ircle K International — A meeting will be held in
the MU Gila room at 4:30 p.m.
• C o alitio n of Ju stice and Peace — The weekly
forum will be held in the MU at noon. Check monitors
for room location.
• C o unselo r Training C e n ter — Trained Master’s
and Doctoral students offer free counseling for full
time students, faculty and staff from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Monday through Friday. Call 965-5067 to schedule
an appointment.
*
• Kundalini Yoga Club — A meeting will be held in
the MU room 216 at 7 p.m.
• Learning Resource C en ter — A study skills work
shop will be held in the MU room 208D at 3 p.m.
Three months after her release she was invited to
Germany, where she protested Suharto’s reign. She said
S uharto, who was in G erm any as w ell, h eard her
protests and told her it would be wise not to return to
Indonesia for a while.
Damayanti stayed in exile in the Netherlands for the
next two-and-a-half years.
She was finally given her passport and was allowed to
go back to Indonesia after Suharto resigned in May.
Damayanti said she currently works with Perserikatan
Solidaritas Perempuan, an Indonesian women’s organiza
tion, to make the interests of women a central part of the
political agenda of pro-democracy groups in Indonesia.
. “Suharto is just the tip of the iceberg,” she said.
SPORTS
We cover
good sports,
bad sports,
rich sports
• M a rria g e and F a m ily T h e ra p y C lin ic —
Individual, couple and family therapy is available for
students, faculty and staff in the Cowden Family
Resources Building Room 140. Call 965-9373 for
more information.
.
• Society for Creative Anachronism
A meeting
will be held in the MU at 6:30 p.m. Check monitors
for room location.
• University Toastm asters ■— A meeting will be held
in the MU Chrysocolla room at 6:45 p.m.
and
poor sports.
Mike Curran of the State Press
Food fo r thought
S e e p a g e 15.
“Rocket Man” star ,Hartand Williams jokes with 93.3 KDKB radio personality
Mark Derringer, KDKB was broadcasting live in front o f Smith’s at Rural Road
and Southern Avenue to promote this week’s “Stuff-a-Bus” food drive. The food
donated will be given to the Association of Arizona Food Banks. For locations, call
93.3 at either 260-9393 or 897-9300.
Your p o t e n t i a l is worth
a lot m o r e .
MEMORIAL UNION ACTIVITIES BOARD
luolmirtiar« going on this week!
TUESDAY:
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WEDNESDAY:
THURSDAY:
FRIDAY:
>'Rick Bird: Master Hypnotist performs in the
MU programming lounge at 7:00pm
1Recreation Committee meeting at 2:30pm on
the 3rd floor of the MU
>Gallery Committee meeting at 3:40pm on the
3rd floor of the MU
»Network event theatre sneak preview screening
of "Very Bad Things" at 7:00pm in the Union
Cinema
1Socials Committee meeting at 12:00pm on the
3rd floor of the MU
College Bcfwl Committee meeting at 3:00pm
on the 3rd floor of the MU
Barren Mind Improv "Barren Mind vs. Barren
Mind" at 12:15pm in the MU Programming
Lounge
Coffeehouse and Poetry Committee meeting
at 2:00pm on the 3rd floor of the MU
Farce Side Sketch Comedy Hour at 12:40 in
the MU Programming Lounge
"ASU School o f A rt MFA A lum ni Ju ried Ex h ib itio n "
Oct 19-Nov 18 in the MU G allery
M t AB IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR TH E POSITIONS OF
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“Iraq has backed down, but that is not enough. Now Iraq must
live up to its obligations.”— President Clinton
m ÊÊm ÊÊÊÊÊÊBÊBÊBm
Clinton: Iraqi compliance only way to avoid w ar
By Susanne M. S chafer
A ssociated P ress
WASHINGTON — Iraq narrowly avoided punishing mili
tary strikes by dropping its defiance of the United Nations, but
it now must cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors, without
conditions, President Clinton said Sunday.
“Iraq has backed down, but that is not enough. Now Iraq
must live up to its obligations,” Clinton said in a Sundaymorning appearance in the White House briefing room.
If Saddam Hussein’s government fails to keep its word,
overwhelming force remains an option, the president warned.
“We remain ready to act,” he said.
The president said Iraq must allow inspectors “unfettered
access” to view any site they wish; it must turn over all rele
vant documents on chemical and biological weapons produc
tion; it must not interfere with the inspectors themselves.
“The return of the inspectors ... is the best outcome,
because they have been and they remain the most effective
tool to uncover, destroy and prevent Iraq from rebuilding its
weapons of mass destruction and the missiles to deliver
them,” Clinton said.
Clinton acknowledged that deep skepticism surrounds
Saddam's promises, but he argued that holding back from a
military strike is the best long-term strategy.
“If we take military action, we can significantly degrade
Saddam Hussein’s ability to develop weapons of mass
destruction and to deliver them,” Clinton said. “But that would
also mark the end of UNSCOM,” the inspection team.
With National Security Adviser Sandy Berger. Defense
Secretary William Cohen and Gen. Hugh Shelton, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at his side. Clinton said U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan shares his understanding of
Iraq’s obligations.
At the United Nations, Annan said Clinton’s “statesman
like response" “will be welcomed by the international commu
nity.”
Iraq’s first offer, which Berger rebuffed Saturday as unac
ceptable, Was “perfectly unclear,” Berger said. But after the
rejection, he said, Saddam’s government sent two additional
letters that were veiy clearly written and dropped all condi
tions to weapons inspections.
Iraq averted attack by mere hours. “It was close. Very
close,” Secretary Cohen said.
He said the U.S. military will “maintain a steady force” in
the region “that is more than adequate to deal with Saddam
Khue Bui of the Associated Press
President Clinton announces Iraq has “backed down” and agreed to unconditional inspections by UN weapons inspectors, during an
appearance in the White House briefing room Sunday. At left is the Chairman on the Joint Chiefs, Gen. Hugh Sheldon, and Secretary Of
Defense William Cohen.
Hussein.”
Before Clinton’s announcement, Iraq’s ambassador to the
United Nations, Nizar Hamdoon, said Iraq will cooperate fully
with U.N. inspectors.
Hamdoon said Saddam had stopped his government’s
cooperation with the inspectors out of frustration over U.N.
economic sanctions against Iraq, but the resulting international
pressure forced a change of strategy.
Butler, the weapons inspector, blamed Iraq for provoking
the confrontation. “Iraq has caused this crisis, and that’s where
it starts — it starts with them,” Butler said, also on NBC.
He called Hamdoon’s claim that Iraq had yet to produce a
stable form of VX nerve gas for use in weapons an example of
“classic Iraqi behavior,” because a series of independent tests
already proved that Iraq had loaded the deadly nerve agent
into warheads.
“Iraq lied,” he said. “It did make VX. It did stabilize it. It
did put it into warheads.”
Declaration of Palestinian state may beget conflict, Arafat says
B y N ic o l a s B. T a t r o
A s s o c ia t e d P ress
Nasser Shiyoukhi of the Associated Press
Palestinian women try to stop an Israeli soldier from shooting rubber bullets at stone-throwing youths as
clashes break out Sunday, in the Palestinian village of al-Khader in the West Bank. Clashes began when
soldiers moved on a group of Palestinians trying to prevent a.bulldozer from beginning to pave a bypass
road for Jewish settlers. Some 40 acres of Arab land were confiscated in order to build the road.
JERUSALEM
Palestinian leader
Y asser A ra fat on S unday h in ted at
arm ed c o n flic t w ith Isra el, w arning
darkly that “our rifle is re ad y ,” and
repeating that he will declare statehood
next year.
A sen io r ad v iser to Isra eli Prim e
M in iste r B enjam in N etan y ah u said
Arafat’s comments were a “declaration
o f war on the peace p ro cess.” David
Bar-lllan told The Associated Press that
Netanyahu “views such statements with
the utmost severity,” and would bring
them up when his Cabinet meets later
this week.
The escalation of rhetoric came as
U.S. envoy Dennis Ross sought to jumpstart the latest Mideast peace accord.
In the W est Bank, a Jewish settler
was slightly injured in a drive-by shoot
ing close to Palestinian-held territory.
Shlomo Dror, a spokesman for Israel’s
liaison unit to the Palestinians, blamed
the shooting on Palestinian m ilitants
bent on derailing the peace process.
“There are some Palestinians there
who want to stop this process,” Dror
told The Associated Press. He said the
Israeli army was searching the area.
Soldiers and protesters also clashed
when a group o f Palestinians tried to
p rev en t a b u lld o zer from b eg inning
work on a bypass road for Jewish set
tlers. The road will require the confisca
tio n o f 40 acres o f A rab land in alKhader, near Bethlehem.
A bout 30 so ld ie rs b eat b ack 20
protesters, who responded with a hail of
stones. Soldiers shot rubber bullets and
tear gas canisters into the crowd. Two
Palestinians were treated for tear gas
inhalation, including Palestinian law
maker Salah Tamari, and one Israeli sol
dier was injured.
Ross met with Israeli officials and
w ith n e g o tia to rs from both sid es.
Palestinian officials, speaking on condi
tion of anonymity, said the three-way
meeting produced a loose timetable for
implementation this week.
Indonesian president tightens palace security, urges end to riots
B y C hristopher T orchia
A sso ciated P ress
JAKARTA, Indonesia — President B.J. Habibie tight
ened security around his palace on Sunday and warned that
violent student protests that have engulfed the capital would
only delay democratic change.
An aide to the president said Habibie would stick by his
military chief, despite outrage over the shooting deaths of at
least five students in clashes with riot officers.
Police, meanwhile, took two opposition figures from
their homes for questioning after the president ordered the
military to get tough on those he has accused of trying to
overthrow his 6-month-old government.
The activists are former political prisoner and politician
Sri Bintang Pamungkas and retired Lt. Gen. Kemal Idris,
who has campaigned to replace Habibie with a transitional
government led by a presidium of community leaders.
Two other pro-democracy activists were questioned
Saturday and later released.
The streets of Jakarta were quiet Sunday after rampaging
mobs burned buildings and cars and attacked police during
riots a day earlier that were triggered by the killings of the
students.
•
Several security personnel, pro-government civilian
guards and others also were killed, bringing the death toll to
at least 16 since Thursday.
The unrest was the worst in the Indonesian capital since
May, when much heavier rioting swept the city and helped
unseat authoritarian leader Suharto after three decades in
power.
Mobs vented their fury at the military, shouting taunts
and hurling stones at police vehicles. At Parliament, thou
sands of student protesters shouted slogans against Gen.
Wiranto, head of an armed forces tainted by human rights
abuses.
But presidential aide Dewi Fortuna said Sunday that “it
is unlikely that the president will fire Gen. Wiranto because
it is not his style.”
j
jj
In a meeting with local journalists Sunday, Wiranto
expressed regret for the shootings of the students and
promised to take action against officers involved-
inion
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j Persian Gulf W ar II?
w
| U.S. playing the game,
Iraq singing the tune
It's nothing but a game of cat and mouse.
F o r the past eight years, follow ing th e Persian
I G u l f a g r e e m e n t, S a d d a m H u s s e in h a s b e e n
| p ro m isin g to allow U n ited N a tio n s in sp ecto rs
I into Iraq.
And for the past eight years Hussein has been
putting them off.
D uring the past two w eeks, the U nited States
has been preparing its m ilitary for an attack on
Iraq. On S aturday, P re sid e n t C lin to n re je c te d
Iraq’s proposal to resume inspections. Following
the announcem ent, B-52 bom bers were deployed,
to the M iddle East, according to an unidentified
senior defense official at the Pentagon as reported
in The A rizona Republic.
Then the jets were put on hold,
Hussein has now agreed to “unfettered access to
all sites’’ by U;N. inspectors:
Hi. ho the dairy-o. the cat takes the mouse ...
W hen will this gam e ever end? W hen will the
U nited States realize that Hussein has plenty to
h id e? If he d id n ’t, we n ev e r w o u ld ’ve h ad to
talk about “possible m ilitary action.” He know s
it, w e know it — i t ’s tim e we did so m eth in g I
about it.
Too many tim es we have threatened H ussein,
only to have him give in at the last m inute. B ut j
; ev e ry tim e th is h ap p en s, h e allow s in sp ecto rs
only so far before deciding to shut inspections
dow n.
Sounds like someone who has something to hide, j
Clinton said he accepts Iraqi assurances.
“ I r a q h a s b a c k e d dow n* b u t t h a t ’s n o t
en o u g h . N ow Iraq m ust liv e up to its o b lig a
tio n s,” C linton said Sunday during his televised
conference.
So how long are we going to have to wait this I
tim e? We have thousands o f troops already in the j
Persian G ulf and thousands m ore waiting to head j
over there.
N ot only is this costing our country a fortune —
h u n d red s o f m illio n s o f d o llars, in fact — it is j
pulling thousands o f military personnel away from |
their families during the holiday season.
A re we getting a sense o f déjà vu, yet?
N o one likes the idea o f war. No one likes the !
idea o f hundreds o f people dying. But if something j
is n ’t done about H ussein and his regim e, there I
m ay be thousands, even m illions o f people who j
lose their lives.
It’s time we stop playing die game Iraq has us j
playing. It’s time we take action to show him we
mean business. It’s time we risk a few lives to save
thousands o f others. And it’s time we stop letting
the cat take the mouse.
Before the cheese stands alone.
StatePressStatt
Caryt-Sue Micalizio
w
Beating U o fA w ill m ake things b e tte r
The SusfDevils took another beat
ia n t
ing Satujfuay, just the latest in a long
string of unbearably awful defeats in
the most disappointing season I’ve experienced as a stu
dent. In Septem ber, 1 was grandly riding the hype
wagon, with visions of a home game at the Fiesta Bowl
to play for all the marbles in January. I envisioned an
unstoppable offense paired with an unheralded defense
that would step up just like their 1996 Rose Bowl prede
cessors. It is putting it mildly to say that my expecta
tions were too high. It pains me to say so, but for the
first time in at least a decade, my beloved Sun Devils
were indeed overrated.
The runaway train that is the 1998 Sun Devils season
certainly derailed right from Week 1 with that unbelievable
heartbreaker at the hands of the Washington Huskies.
When I looked at the schedule, contemplating another
undefeated regular season, I mentally circled that contest as
the most dangerous one on the docket and though we’ve
suffered worse beatings since that fateful September night,
I still think I’m right.
The season-opening shocker took the wind out of the
team’s sails. People can deny this and attempt to refute
the fact as much as they like, but it’s true. The Devils
played uninspired football in the loss at BYU and, for
all intents and purposes, their grandiose hopes were
shattered.
We can certainly look back at the past 10 games and,
in hindsight, understand that this was clearly not a top
10 football team. Injuries, a lack of experience and an
unprecedented string of bad breaks certainly all con
trib u te d h e a v ily to the d em ise o f th is clu b .
Uncharacteristic turnovers and a rash of stupid penal
ties didn’t help either. And despite the team’s mantra
of “One at a Time,” I honestly believe the Devils suf
fered irreparable harm in the long run because of that
initial loss.
‘
As a diehard Devils fan and wide-eyed optimist, I
would love to make a case for how I feel that ASU
could be looking at a record of 8-2 or 9-1, instead o f 5-5
C h ris Kahn
Scott O. Gillette, Stephanie D . Johnson, Am ber Knuth, Nancy Kuo, C .C
-A ssistant Sports Editor
--------- Magazine Editor
-Assistant C ity Editor
David W oodfill
— ,---- ------------- ------ A sst Magazine Editor
Reporters ---------------- ------------ ■■■■— ■■•------ -------
M idw ile Craig
— — Opinion Editor
C h risti Foist
—-------- N ew s Editor
ASca CaidwiN, Lidia E Kelly, Stephanie faerik. Jayson Peters, Kjm
PrendogBt, Hayiey Ringle, Ganp Subramanian,Jessica W ot Angela Yeager.
Sports Reporters — ---- ---------------- — ---- ----------Soon Braden, Clint Currie, Sam Ganoaruk, David Myers, Nick Piecoro.
Brad Lang
-Photo Editor
Jerem y Hein
-Assistant Photo Editor
Ed O d even
------------ Sports Editor
Copy Ed ito rs------ —— ---- — —— --— — — ■■■....... .....
Mario topaz. Susan Schimmaf.
Photographers— ------------ ----- ------ -— ---------- —
Mika Curran, Soley Hartal, Ofella Madrid, Jeremy W eiss.
Colum nists — ......... ............ ......................... _ _ _ _ _ _ _
M a i Ary, Andrea Jennifer Bakky, Scott k m t Addae Dadd, Aon Bda,
1502. W e do not answer questions of a general nature.
M cCandless, G ra fo r McGavin, R od e McSweeney, B rim Policoff.
C arto o n ists—
Becky Bevins
— C ity Editor
Jonathan Inte
C .C . M cCandless is a senior studying broadcasting
and can be reached at ccm cc33@ aol.com .
Percy Ednalino Jr; Editor
Jodi BafUndo, Managing Editor
Doug Flanagan
-Night Editor
had we only held on to win the opener, but it hurts too
much to do so. Instead, I will address the current situa
tion with one game to go.
Yup, we’re 5-5. A .500 football team. Middle of the
pack and middle of the Pac. But we all know the season’s
not over yet. Despite our recent new-found status as a
prestigious national program — a school that has been to
back-to-back bowl games — we are now relegated to
assuming a stance prevalent back in the darker days o f
this program, When fans would be ecstatic at the prospect
of merely finishing with a winning record. It was a rally
ing cry in those bleak days and we’re forced to embrace it
once again. Say it with me:
If we beat U of A, the season is a success.
Now, more than ever, this age-old motto rings undoubt
edly true. A win in Tucson gives us several benefits. First,
it means we end up with a winning record at 6-5. Secondly,
it makes us bowl-eligible. Sure, it will be a bid to the Las
Vegas bowl or some other jank offering, but at this point, a
bowl is a bowl.
And finally, and possibly most importantly, we have a
chance to wreck UofA’s season. The new BCS format this
year has thrown the bowl picture into an inexplicable fren
zy, but the bottom line is that Arizona currently has a
chance to secure their first Rose Bowl bid. I take great joy
in reminding Wildcats fans that they’re the only team in the
Pac-10 never to make the New Year’s Day trip to Pasadena
and I’d like to keep it that way. A UofA loss at the hands of
ASU would most likely remove Arizona from considera
tion entirely.
So there we have it. The season didn’t start like I had
hoped and it didn’t get any better from there. A record of
6-5 comes as a huge letdown for a team with the highest
of hopes, but we can still finish up in style. With two
weeks to rest up and prepare, the season truly does come
down to this.
Go Devils! Beat UofA!
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long week of school, I was ready to 7™ "^* columnist
spend the night out with two of my
closest friends. We dressed up in cute outfits, put on our
makeup and discussed what to do. We finally decided to go
to a bar or two on Mill, so we could relax and enjoy our
Saturday night. It was Homecoming weekend and we
thought a lot of fun things would be happening on Mill.
We walked down to Mill, laughing and talking. We
chose a bar, presented our IDs to the bouncer and entered
the bar. We had barely taken two steps inside when sudden
ly the police showed up and asked us to please step outside.
They thought we were using fake IDs and wanted to exam
ine them. I saw my plans for a fun Saturday night quickly
evaporating, being replaced by anger. Anger because my
two friends and I were all 21 -years-old.
“What is this all about,” I demanded of the police officer
as he scrutinized my ID.
He said the three of us had been asked to step outside the
bar because we looked like we were under 21. That was the
whole rationalization behind it. Our IDs weren’t suspicious,
the bouncers hadn’t had a problem with them —- we just
looked too dam young.
The police officer, after realizing my ID Was real, told
me that's how they catch a lot of underage drinkers — by
questioning people who look too young to be in bare and
demanding to see their IDs, Maybe this system does stop
some underage drinkers, but unfortunately, it must also
miss a lot.
There are so many people who are 18-years-old and look
25 and vice-versa. There were probably many underage
drinkers in thè bar that same night, Who looked older than
their age and were never questioned or even noticed by
police. Meanwhile, the police wasted their time in guesswork and assuming I was underage just because I happen to
look younger, than 1 actually am. This system of trying to
determine who is underage is way too simplistic. Not
everyone loóks their age. In addition, if someone is younger
than 21 but looks older and has a good fake ID, they are
going to find their way into the bars without any trouble.
A better system needs to be developed to prevent under
age drinkers from entering bars and being able to purchase
alcoholic beverages. At ASU, like every other college town
in the country, underage chinking is prevalent. During my
freshman year, I knew many other freshman who had so
much alcohol in their dorm rooms that they could open
their own bars. In addition, fake IDs are widely available,
which just adds to the problem.
Instead of the police confronting people going into bars,
why aren’t they monitoring the doors of the bars to begin
with? They could check thè IDs of people entering the bars
and ensure that no one underage gets in." When I questioned
one of the police officers about this, he said it couldn’t be
done 5“* the bars wouldn’t allow it, it wouldn’t work and so
on and so forth. But I don’t see why this couldn’t happen.
If there is really the desire to stop underage drinking
around here, Why isn’t stronger action taken? If underage stu
dents saw police manning die doors of local bare and check-
ing IDs, I think they would be a lot more reluctant about try
ing to enter the bar to begin with. Students need to see
stronger actions taken by police before they will be deterred
from trying to get into bars or buy alcohol. It irritates me how
backward things are here — the police claim they want to
stop the problem of underage drinking, yet they don’t take
effective measures to really make a difference.
Although the policeman said they couldn’t monitor the
doors of the bars, I find myself thinking that maybe they
could if they really wanted to prevent this problem. I think
there needs to be more than feeble, half-hearted attempts by
the police to ever do anything to help solve this problem.
Why do students try to sneak into bars when they are
younger than 21? The answer is simple: Because they know
they can without much trouble. Chances are they probably
won’t be caught if they have a realistic-looking ID and they
can manage to look the age they are pretending to be.
It’s very sad that more is not being done to prevent
underage students from getting into bars. It’s even sadder
that an effective solution, like putting police in the door
ways of bars to check IDs, cannot be implemented —
because that would be too much trouble.
If you are under 21 and want to get into a bar in Tethpe,
you are in luck. Just grab that realistic-looking fake ID, make
yourself look older and in a blink of an eye, you’ll be standing
in that bar, downing whatever drink your little heart desires.
Andrea Jennifer Balsky is a senior studying journal
ism and can be reached at andrea.balsky@ asu.edu.
What DoYou Thmïïf
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to the
Another look at Jefferson
Mario Lopez’s editorial of Nov.. 3 at last
raises some important questions about history
and how Americans view their past. In dis
cussing revisionist history. Jefferson’s canon
ization and the need to assess, accurately,
Jefferson’s place in history. Lopez aptly intro
duces pointed and provocative issue?. But after
asserting this basis for historical understand
ing, he takes what I think is the wrong path.
Yes, Jefferson was a man of paradox,
but the Jefferson-Hem ings relationship
sheds m ore light on the nature o f the
Southern plantation system — an integral
part of American society — than on society
as a whole. Interracial sex was accepted by
the planter class or gentry, as Jefferson’s
relationship with his slave was well known
among his colleagues, who might have
been doing the same thing.
The fact that Hemings was a slave in the
first place is important. To even call the
interaction a relationship is dubious, pre
cisely because she was a slave —• a woman
in a coerced position. Jefferson never made
any attem pt to free his supposed lover.
Hemings’ race is interesting as well.
Three o f her four grandparents were
white and she appeared Caucasian, yet she
was still a slave because of the taint of
black parentage. Re-examining the canon
ized third president in light of thè DNA
findings provides insight into the American
institution of slavery as much as it does into
Jefferson the man or the Jeffersonian era.
Bringing the column modéni relevance:
Lopez ties Jefferson’s “situation” with
President Clinton’s and wonders “what the
intrusive force of today’s media, not to
mention today’s Kenneth Starr, would have
done with Jefferson had it had the chance ”
In a sense, it did have the chance.
James T. Callender, a Scottish immi
grant, broke the Jefferson-Hemings story in
his paper in 1802. A muckraking journalist
and one-time Jeffersonian political hack,
Callender was the first to publicize the
Hemings scandal as well as other reports of
alleged sexual misconduct or inappropriate
relations: Jefferson had with two other
women. Callender was a relentless, often
vituperative critic of many of the Founding
Fathers. He exposed Alexander Hamilton’s
illicit relationship with a woman in addi
tion to his vengeful work against Jefferson.
Some would call Starr the Callender of
our day. Regardless, the cliché “history
repeats itself’ has some significance for the
current administration and society. What
we have learned from Jefferson, Hemings
and Callender remains to be seen.
Doug Paul
Senior
H istory
Questions race relations
This letter is in response to the article
entitled, “New Class to Focus on Kids’
Books that aren’t Anglo-Centric,” printed
in the Nov. 4 edition of the State Press and
Brian Ary’s column in the Nov. 5 State
Press entitled “Affirmative Action: Really
Not So Bad.” Both articles deal with the
same topic, race relations.
A new course w ill be added to the
African-American Studies Department.
The course name is “African American
Children’s Literature,” under the prefix
ENG 394, This course will be taught by
Professor Neal A. Lester, who feels this
course is needed because “you can’t just
undo what has happened in the past.”
The purpose of this course is to study the
portrayal of African-Americans in books
such as Little Black Sambo and Disney songs
such as “Jim Crack C orn” and “Oh
Susanna.” Professor Lester feels racist depictions have bèen portrayed in these examples.
Ary has stated that affirmative action is
needed because, “It’s one of the only ways
corporate white employers can realize the
talents of others not like themselves.”
To Mr. Ary, I would ask the following
questions: 1) Is it possible for myself, an
Anglo American, to become an anchorman
on the Black Entertainment Channel? 2)
Could I become Editor-m-Chief of Ebony
magazine? 3) Could. I become a judge in
the “Black Miss America Pàgeant?” Maybe
we are still segregated.
In addition, I would ask why we need
another course in the African-American
Studies Department whose aim is to prepare
the next 200 years by studying the past 200
years? Is it impossible for this institution to
create a course that actually helps to unite
people instead of divide them?
In the hope that we can progress as a
nation, as a society, together, we should
concentrate on uniting with one another.
Desire, determination and ability should do
this, nqt the color of our skin.
Doug Solomon
Sènior
Business
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Valley school children to collaborate with A S U researchers
B y G an ga S ubram anian
S ta t e P ress
This fall, Valley school yards will become research sites
with kids acting as the researchers.
Children as young as 8 will be working for die ASUbased Central Arizona-Phoenix Long Term Ecological
Research (CAPLTER) project, which began last year as the
first long-term, scientifically rigorous ecological study of
an urban environment.
As part of the Ecology Explorers program, school stu
dents will conduct studies in their school yards parallel to
those being conducted by CAPLTER scientists. The data
they collect will be used by ASU scientists to analyze how
urbanization is affecting the environment.
The children are participating in diverse projects:
• An arthropod study that will examine how urbanization
has affected the number and diversity of arthropod species
like spiders and scorpions. CAPLTER scientists are study
ing four landscapes and the school yard adds a fifth land
scape to the study.
• A beetle study that will examine whether interactions
between urban Palo Verde trees and the bruchid beetles
they support are similar to or different from their interac
tions in the undisturbed Sonoran Desert environment.
• A bird,study that will examine the impact of urbanization
on bird communities. School students will conduct surveys
within their own school yards and send the information to
ASU scientists.
• A vegetation study that will compare present Valley vege
tation data with data collected 20 years ago. Children col
lect and study school-yard data and sharing this informa
tion with CAPLTER scientists.
The project involves students from schools across the
Valley including Mendoza Elementary School in Mesa,
Meyer Elementary School in Tempe, Discovery Learning
School in Glendale and Eisenhower Elementary School in
Mesa, said Monica Elser, environmental educator with the
ASU Center for Environmental studies (CESj.
Education staff at the CES and the Southwest Center for
Education and the Natural Environment (SCENE) have
brought together K-12 teachers and CAPLTER scientists,
Elser said.
Judge orders Tucson woman to curb summertime fireplace use
Elliott uses her fireplace all year long and
the resulting thick gray smoke seeps into her
house and makes it impossible to go outside.
She is suing Elliott for an unspecified
amount for loss of quality of life and enjoy
ment of property.
Elliott said she is shocked the judge
granted Lee’s preliminary injunction request
to restrict her fireplace use.
TUCSON (AP) — A Pima County judge
has ordered a woman to stop using her fire
place in the summertime, at least until a
lawsuit by her neighbor is resolved.
M arjorie Elliott can only light a fire
between Oct. 15 and March 15 until a law
su it by her neighbor, C hristine von
Obenauer, is decided.
Von Obenauer says in her lawsuit that
“I m not doing anything wrong,” the 63year-old bookkeeper said. “Pm not doing
anything illegal. I feel my personal liberties
are being affected.”
She said she uses her fireplace only when
it is cold and has never started a fire during
the summer.
Von Obenauer said Friday she was grate
ful for the ruling. Pima County Superior
Court Judge Kenneth Lee made the injunc
tion ruling based on properties’ deed restric
tions.' .
At a Sept. 14 injunction hearing, von
Obenauer testified she had health problems
that made her sensitive to smoke and odors
coming from Elliott’s home.
Elliott has not yet decided whether to
appeal the preliminary injunction.
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ASU police reported the follow ing inci Tempe police reported the follow ing inci
dents Friday:
dents Friday::
» A man not affiliated with ASU reported • A 30-year-old man was arrested for driv
that someone entered various vending ing on a suspended license and booked into
machines and removed cash.
Tempe City Jail.
• Two students were arrested for driving • Tempe police arrested a 22-year-old
under thè influence of alcohol.
woman for disorderly conduct in the park
• A student reported that someone entered ing lot at 505 W. Baseline Road. The sus
her room at Palo Verde West and removed pect was involved in a heated verbal argu
a laptop computer and printer.
ment with her m other. She swung her
• Two license plates were impounded for mother’s car door with a great force caus
destruction by ASU police.
ing the car to shake. The suspect’s 6• Someone broke some windows at 714 month-old baby was in the Car. The child
Alpha Drive and 601 Alpha Drive.
was fine, the police reported. The woman
• ASU police recovered a stolen vehicle in
was booked into Tempe City Jail.
Area 63. The owner was notified.
• A 24-year-old man was arrested for sexu
• Six students reported th eir bicycles
al conduct with a minor. The police learned
removed from ASU; all bikes were secured
about the incident after a 13-year-old girl
with locks.
received . counseling from Planned
• ASU police arrested, cited and released a
Parenthood. The girl was 20 weeks preg
man for shoplifting at Tower Records.
nant and said the suspect was the father.
• A student reported that someone entered
• A 41-year-old man was arrested for driv
his vehicle and removed various items.
• A woman not affiliated with ASU was ing on a suspended license. He was booked
arrested, cited and released for shoplifting into Tempe City Jail and released pending
traffic charges.
at Tower Records.
• A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest • A witness identified a 28-year-old man as
ed. cited and released for trespassing at the a suspect in shoplifting that occurred at
Wal-Mart, 1380 W. Elliot Road. A search
Music Building.
• A student reported that someone damaged of the suspect revealed he was in posses
his computer, computer discs and clothing sion of marijuana. Further investigation
revealed the suspect had committed a theft
at Manzanita Hall.
• A student reported that someone removed in a Chandler Wal-Mart. The man was
arrested, booked into Tempe City Jail and
money from Palo Verde Bast.
• The fence at Sun Devil Stadium was dam released pending charges.
• A 33-year-old woman was arrested for
aged.
• A man not affiliated with ASU was arrest driving on suspended license after she was
ed on an outstanding warrant and transport involved in a traffic accident. She was
booked into Tempe City Jail.
ed to Madison Street Jail.
• A student reported that someone removed
a cell phone from the parking lot at Tower Reports compiled by State Press reporter
Records. I 4 ■: -P
•■{¿‘Ufrir.
Lidia E. Kelly
Recycle
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T h e w o rld le a d e r in te s t p re p
C ritic s assail G ov, Hull o ver
■gfPA N TS N E E l
Bible W e e k proclam ation
PHOENIX (AP) — Some Arizona reli
gious lea4ers say Gov. Jane Hull’s deci
sion to proclaim a Bible Week is an affront
to their faiths.
The A rizona C ivil L iberties U nion
called on the governor to rescind the
proclamation and said it would decide soon
whether to sue'the state.
“It’s totally inappropriate,’’ said Rabbi
Robert Kravitz o f the American Jewish
Committee. “In the synagogue, we study
the Torah all the time. In churches, they
celebrate the New Testament frequently ...
We don’t need the government to suggest a
Certain week to do so,”
Kravitz was joined by the Rev. Lee
Rosenthal, senior priest at the Arizona
Buddhist Church, in demanding that Gov.
Hull take back the proclamation recogniz
ing Nov. 22-29 as Bible Week.
“Speaking against it, it almost makes
you anti-Christian Bible, which is a shame
because it is a beautiful text and a wonder
ful foundation," Rosenthal said. “But dis
covering that should be the result of some
one’s own spiritual seeking) not by procla
mation of the state.”
Clinton Pattea, president of the Fort
M cDow ell M ohave-A pache Indian
C om m unity, said he also opposes the
proclamation because American settlers
supposedly follow ing Judeo-C hristian
principles massacred scores of his ances
tors.
“They came and disrupted our way of
life. As traditional people, we don’t rely on
(the Bible) at all,” Pattea said.
•Gov. Hull signed the proclam ation
before the controversy erupted last week in
Gilbert, which has passed a Bible Week
decree for the past four years.
Eleanor Eisenberg, ACLU director, said
she is disappointed the governor issued the
proclamation and will ask for a meeting
with her to discuss the constitutional
issues.
1
, /
“In our view, simply declaring Bible
Week ... offends the Constitution. The
government is simply not supposed to
entangle itself with religion,” she said.
Gov. Hull was in Mexico on Saturday.
and not immediately available for com
ment but her spokeswoman Francie Noyes
said the proclamation was routine and was
not intended to be controversial. It was
done at the request of the National Bible
Association, a New York-based group that
has celebrated the week since 1941.
The Rev. Bill Mellinger of Friendship
Community Church in Scottsdale said it’s
important to note that the Bible is an influ
ential book in U.S. history.
“Let’s put aside a week for that. I don’t
think there’s anything wrong with that,” he
said. “I would not want to push to say that
anybody has. to be Christian, or any reli
gion, (but) let’s recognize the value of
this.” i...
■man Sabahudin Ceman of the Islamic
Center of North Phoenix, said he supports
Bible Week“I don’t think anybody who reads that
book can get any harm. It’s recommendable to any person to read one of those
books that are recognized as religious
books,” he said.
Ceman said he understands why Bible
Week is a political issue but doesn’t see it
as a religious one.
“You have a reason why you belong to
that religion,” he said. “Nobody else can
put their religion above that one.”
M EpO KY S T M
« X In c., a world-wide p$ychologi(Xit'm |
jiization, is now conducting a study of a d ietary id
e previously shown to im prove learning and miemory
I age and ^ p |^ d dults. The purpose o f the h e w !
determine if the supplem ent can improve learning;
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to ta k ^ ith e r a d ietary supplement o r placebo B n
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dietary supplement being tested has no reported s ic k ^ B H
irid is currently sold in health food stores and pharm acies.
Com pensation for the three-week s tu d y ji|ll be $ 2 5 0 , M
the end of the initial three-week, a second study w ill be per^
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If y o u a r e interested in p a rticip atin g , p le a se p h o n e
P S Y C H O L O G IX a t (6 0 2 ) 4 4 3 - 1 5 4 » !
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iow hiring qualified students to woik dags inthe
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synagogue?
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Coach Parseghian
Word before lion or
horse
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Ad — committee
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Buck of “Hee Haw"
Oil alternative
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Jungle fever
Last train stop
String quartet
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9 Passover feast
10 Home of a brave
11 . October birthstone
12 Get up
13 Frigid
21 Fingermark
22 Swab
25 “— Man"; Village
People hit
26 One way sign
27 Rolls’ partner
29 Linguihi
30 Meteor’s path
32 Cosmetician
Lauder
33 Study well
34 Tortilla dip
36 Smidgen
38 Type of wrestling
41 Pants part
42 Baker’s supply
43 Kind of flush
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B y G regory E . P aul 6 1998 Los Angeles Times Syndicate
1
I
1 1 /1 6 /9 8
Book tells how a big canyon became Grand
Stateless
B y T in Mo l l o y
A s s o c ia t e d P ress
Crosswords
For the cruciverbalist
in you.
Page 08.
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PHOENIX — The Spanish explorers gazed
out across the great opening in the earth for
the first time and were disappointed;
The earth plunged through the cold mist
with no warning, opening a crevice a mile
deep and, in places, 18 miles across. The red
rocks shooting skyward from the base were
taller than Europe’s greatest buildings. The
men who tried climbing down to the river had
to give up because the walls were too steep.
The canyon was m issing m ost o f w hat
these earliest European explorers had come
across the world for When they saw it in 1540.
There were no apparent cities of gold, large
native settlements to convert or conquer, or
lands to farm. The big gorge was, for their
purposes, useless.
It would be m ore than 300 years before
anyone called the Canyon grand.
‘‘The canyon was not a glorious natural
spectacle simply waiting to be found, like
picking up a nugget of gold,” said Stephen J.
Pyne, an ASU h isto ry professor. “ It was
something that was created by cultural atti
tudes. Its meaning, its significance,'was very
much an intellectual enterprise.” ,
Pyne sets out in the new book, How the
Canyon Became Grand, (Viking, $24.95) to
explain how the canyon eventually became
revered across the world. It tells the story of a
few 19th-century intellectuals who helped
change attitudes about the canyon to make it a
cultural as well as natural landmark that now
draws 5 million visitors a year.
Pyne, 49, developed the idea for the book
difficult to navigate and too thick to drink. Lt.
Joseph Christmas Ives, leading an expedition
of the river in 1857-58 for the Army Corps of
Topographic Engineers, deemed the Canyon
‘‘altogether valueless.”
“It can be approached only from the south,
and after entering it there is nothing to do but
leave,” he wrote. “Ours has been the first, and
will doubtless be the last, party of whites to
visit this profitless locality.”
It took 19th century preoccupations like
geology and W estern rom anticism to turn
things around, Pyne writes. Charles Darwin’s
On the Origin o f the Species, published in
1859, popularized the idea among intellectu
als that the earth was millions of years old,
and scientists came to see the canyon as a
spectacular geological record.
At th e sam e tim e, lan d sca p e p ain tin g
gained popularity and artists came to see the
canyon as perhaps the greatest landscape of
all. Poets celebrated it as distinctly American.
“We didn’t have cathedrals and coliseums
as Europe did, but we had something better.
We had pure nature,” Pyne said.
The book also describes how the canyon
gained popularity with the general public, not
just intellectuals, to become a tourist Mecca
'— what Pyne calls a “celebrity landscape.” It
ends with conservationists in recent decades
coming to value it for its wilderness.
The nam e “G rand C anyon” cam e from
Maj. John Wesley Powell, a member of the
Ives expedition, who used it in 1869 to write
about his Colorado River travels. Prior to that,
it was most commonly known as Big Canyon,
Pyne said.
while working 15 summers as a firefighter
along the canyon’s North Rim during college
and graduate school. He spent another winter
doing odd jobs on the South Rim — collect
ing fees, gathering wood, giving geology lec
tures.
. “I knew why I thought it was important,”
said Pyne. “It’s where I grew up, it’s where I
Worked, it was my favorite place. ... There’s
something about being with that as a back
drop as opposed to being in Newark, N.J. Lots
of places don’t have the same sense of beauty
and scale.
“But part of the question was why other
people thought it was great.”
Critics have been generally positive about
the book, but some have criticized Pyne for
beginning w ith w esterners instead o f the
American Indians who lived in the area for
10,000 years before w hites arrived. Pyne
touches on the history of tribes in the area but
says his focus was European impressions of
the canyon. ,
“It’s not an*Indian story,” he says.
P y n e ’s h isto ry sta rts w ith th e early
European exploration of the Southwest. The
Spanish who found it were interested only in
conquest, colonization and com m erce, he
writes. They found no opportunities for any of
the three in the canyon.
“As far as Spain and the rest o f Europe
were concerned,” he writes, “the discovered
Canyon quickly became a lost canyon.” The
attitude persisted for years.
When whites finally made it down to the
277 m iles o f C o lo rad o R iver s tre tc h in g
through the canyon, they found the water too
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‘Black Power’ activist Kwame Ture dies at 57
B y D ebra H a l e S h e lt o n
A s s o c ia t ed P ress
Kwame Ture, who as Stokely Carmichael made the
phrase “black power” a rallying cry of the civil rights
upheavals of the 1960s, died Sunday in Guinea, a mem
ber of Ture’s All-African People’s Revolutionary Party
said. He was 57.
Sharon Sobukwe, a member of the organization in
Philadelphia, said Ture died of prostate cancer. She
learned of his death from Amadou Ly, an AAPRP mem
ber and one of Ture’s closest friends, who was with him
when he died.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson said he visited with Ture
three times at his home in Guinea during a trip to Africa
last week.
“In m any w ays he was at peace w ith h im se lf,”
Jackson said in a telephone interview from Washington.
“He wanted for his last days to be in Guinea and in
West Africa. ... He wanted to be amongst the people of
Africa:
“He was one of our generation who was determined
to give his life to transforming America and Africa,”
Jackson added. “He was committed to ending racial
apartheid in our country. He helped to bring those walls
down.”
Ture was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1996. A
self-described socialist, he Was treated in Cuba and
received financial help for his treatment from Nation of
Islam leader Louis Farrakhan.
As the young Carmichael, he was among the most
fiery and visible leaders o f black m ilitancy in the
United States in the 1960s, first as head of the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and then ns prime
minister of the Black Panther Party.
He cut his ties with the American groups over the
issue o f allying w ith w hite radicals and m oved to
Guinea in West Africa in 1969. There, with a neW name
taken from the African leaders Kwame Nkrumah and
Ahmed Sekou Toure, he organized the A ll-A frican
People’s Revolutionary Party.
For the rest of his life, both overseas and in appear
ances before largely black audiences at U S. colleges,
he continued preaching black power and championing
socialism while condemning America, capitalism and
Zionism.
Bom in Trinidad on June 29, 1941, and raised there
and in New York, Ture described him self as a pliant
acceptor of white dominion while growing up.
He recalled in a 1967 interview in the London
Observer that as a boy in the Trinidad capital of Portof-Spain, he and his black schoolmates “went to the
movies and yelled for Tarzan to beat the hell out of
Africa.”
“I’m angry because I didn’t rebel,” he said.
At age 11, his parents brought him to New York,
where the bright youngster attended the academically
elite Bronx High School of Science and moved in a lib
eral, middle-class white circle that he later reviled as
phony.
In 1960, he enrolled at Howard, the predominantly
black u n iv e rsity in W ash in g to n , D .C ., w h ere he
received a degree in philosophy and plunged into the
Civil rights revolution.
In a time when black college students were being
beaten and arrested for daring to sit at w hites-only
Southern lunch counters, Carmichael joined the first
freedom rides — bus trips aimed at desegregating pub
lic transportation — and suffered the first of what was
to be about three dozen ja ilin g s when he reached
Mississippi.
As an SNCC field organizer there later, he led a per
ilous voter registration effort that raised black enroll
ment from 70 to 2,600 in Lowndes County, 300 more
than the white registration.
In June 1966, three weeks before his 25th birthday,
he was elected national chairm an o f the SNCC and
shortly afterward raised the cry of “black power” as he
led a freedom march in Mississippi.
Responding to those who called the slogan racist and
inflammatory, he wrote that by black power he meant
political and economic empowerment. “We want con-,
trol of the institutions of the communities where we live
and we want to stop the exploitation of nonwhite people
around the world,” he said in the New York Review of
Books.
He also took an anti-America message to Cuba and
North Vietnam and critics said his speeches at home,
and those of his successor, H. Rap Brown, had effec
tively removed the word “nonviolent” from the SNCC’s
name.
In 1968, he left the SNCC for the Black Panthers, but
broke with that urban-guerrilla movement the following
year because it favored working with radical whites. He
said history showed such alliances had “led to complete
subversion of the blacks by the whites.”
From Guinea, where he had moved with his thenwife, South African-born singer and political activist
Miriam Makeba, he declared him self a Pan Africanist
with a goal of forming “one cohesive force to wage an
unrelenting armed struggle against the white Western
empire for the liberation of our people.”
He long hoped to see a single, socialist state for all
of Africa, which would give Africans there and abroad
— he rejected the term “African-American” — pride
and power.
Although he denied being anti-Semitic, his condem
nations of Israel and Zionism, particularly before U.S.
cam pus audiences in the early 1990s, led the AntiDefamation League to say, “He remains a disturbing,
polarizing figure.”
A sked at one cam pus lectu re to com m ent about
black-on-black violence, he said: “All we got to do is
show (blacks) who the enemy is. At least they’re ready
to shoot.”
Ture is survived by his wife, his mother, three sisters
and two sons.
Services in the United States, Africa, Britain and the
Caribbean will be organized by the AAPRP, the group
said. ",
P lanning to STREAK th e MU'? Call th e S ta te P re ss p h o to g ra p h e rs a t
9 6 S -6 S 2 6 .
R em em ber to p lan ahead!
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On Thursday,
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movie prizes!
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State Press Offices • Matthews Center Basem ent Room 35.
C u s t o m
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Jockeying starts over massive tobacco settlement
B y S kip W o l le n b e r g
A s s o c ia t e d P ress
NEW YORK — Public health advocates said Sunday
the proposed $206 billion tobacco settlem ent being
reviewed by the states falls short of delivering a com
prehensive approach to discourage smoking.
But they declined to recommend whether the states
should embrace the settlement. In anticipation that the
deal will be endorsed, they were mobilizing to make
sure states use the money to discourage tobacco use.
“We think it’s a positive step forward in the war on
tobacco, but it’s not the answer and doesn’t itself pro
vide a national tobacco control policy,” said Diane
Canova, speaking for the American Heart Association.
She said federal legislation is still needed to give the
Food and Drug Administration authority over tobacco
products.
Anti-smoking activist Bill Novelli of the Campaign
for Tobacco-Free Kids said local public health officials
were being alerted to make sure the money that would
go to the states “isn ’t diverted to non-public health
areas.”
“There is going to a huge food fight over these dol
lars,” he said.
N egotiators for eight states and the nation’s four
biggest tobacco makers reached agreement Saturday on
settling remaining state claims for government health
costs from treating smoking-related illnesses.
The proposal was then shipped to the 46 states that
have suits pending against the tobacco industry or have
not yet filed suits, and they were given until Friday to
decide whether to sign it.
A fo rm al an n o u n cem en t o f the ag reem en t was
Your passport
Ü
expected today in Washington.
Several state attorneys general said they would not
know until reviewing the details whether they would
sign.
W isconsin A ttorney G eneral Jam es D oyle said
Sunday that while the agreement is much better than the
failed $368.5 b illio n settlem en t attorneys general
reached in 1997, he hadn’t decided whether to sign on.
“The question is whether the public health advances
and the money involved is enough for Wisconsin to say
that it’s time now to move past litigation and focus on
cessation,” Doyle Said.
Either way, he said, the state’s case is strong enough
that there’s no need to settle too much.
“W e’re dealing from strength. If we don’t take the
deal, we’ll go to trial,” he said.
Some public health advocates are unhappy that they
did not get a chance to comment as the settlement was
crafted in private meetings between the states and the
industry over the past five months.
Mohammad N. A khter, executive director o f the
55,000-member American Public Health Association,
said the states should be given another two to three
weeks to decide so they can consult with public health
experts.
He Said the five-day deadline is “absolutely inappro
priate. It is enticing people into taking action they
haven’t thought through.”
The industry has not indicated how many states
would be needed for it to proceed with the settlement. It
is likely the amount of the industry payments would be
reduced if states decided against signing.
F our states — M ississip p i, F lo rid a , T exas and
Minnesota — have already settled with the industry for
a total of $40 billion.
The $206 billion settlem ent would be the biggest
U.S. civil settlement ever, but would remove an enormoiis financial and legal threat to the industry should it
lose a court case to one or more of the states.
One o f the c h ie f a rc h ite c ts o f th e settle m e n t,
Washington state Attorney General Christine Grégoire,
conceded that the deal fell short of what Big Tobacco’s
most vocal critics would like.
“There is more to be done legislatively, but we think
this represents more than they can expect to receive in
the courts," she said.
In addition making payments to the states, the indus
try would commit $1.7 billion to research and programs
aimed at discouraging smoking, especially by young
sters.
It also w oùld accep t lim its on how it m ark ets
cigarettes, although companies could still use human
figures like the Marlboro Man and maintain at least one
sports sponsorship a year.
The four com panies are P hilip M orris C os., R.J.
Reynolds Tobacco, Brown & Williamson Tobacco and
Lorillard Tobacco. The negotiating states in addition to
W a sh in g to n w ere C a lifo rn ia , New Y ork, N orth
C aro lin a, C olorado, O klahom a, N orth D akota and
Pennsylvania.
A sep arate d eal was stru ck S aturday w ith U.S.
Tobacco Co., the leading maker o f chewing tobacco,
Grégoire said. It would pay about $100 million over 10
y ears fo r ed u c atio n on the d an g ers o f to b acco in
exchange for state claims settlements.
■
m agic kingdom , including Adventure
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"He's athletic and big and confident, and it’s clearly his
football team . He was in co n tro l” — ASU head coach
Bruce Snyder on Oregon quarterback Akili Smith
A S U becom es D uck soup in Eugene
B y D o u g F la n a g a n
S t a t e P ress
EUGENE, Ore. —- So just how good
was Oregon quarterback Akili Smith in
Saturday’s contest against ASU?
The emerging Heisman Trophy candi
date completed 14 of 21 passes for 249
yards and four to u c h d o w n s — -in the
fir st h a lf
But the senior, making the last start
of his career at Autzen Stadium, didn’t
stop there, finishing with 21 com ple
tions in 30 attempts for 397 yards and
the four touchdowns in the Ducks’ 5119 annihilation of the Sun Devils.
“I cannot say enough about A kili
Smith and how he played — not only
today, which was spectacular — but all
y e a r lo n g ,” ASU head co ach B ruce
Snyder said. "I really adm ire how he
played.
“H e’s the kind of quarterback that
really Works well in college, and h e ’s
really going to be a terrific pro, too.
He’s athletic and big and confident, and
it’s clearly his football team. He was in
control.”
S m ith was in d eed c o n tro l, as he
spread the wealth by completing passes
to 10 different receivers.
“It was a total defensive thing,” ASU
cornerback Courtney Jackson said about
the Sun Devils' inability to stop Smith.
“They threw the ball where the lineback
er had a running back, (a) safety had a
tight end. or a linebacker had a tight
end. They threw the ball at our whole
defense.
“It wasn’t a corner thing. It wasn’t a
safety th in g . It w a sn ’t a lin eb ac k er
thing. Everyone was utilised on their
offense. It was a total defensive deba
cle.'
According to Jackson, a major reason
for O regon's :offensive dominance was
Sm ith's ability to run the ball. He finT u r n t o D u c k s o u p page 14
Jack Smith of the Associated Press
Oregon wide receiver Tony Hartley pulls away from ASU cornerback Courtney Jackson on bis way to a 58-yard first half touchdown Saturday at Autzen
Stadium. Hartley’s score was one of four touchdown passes by Oregon quarterback Akili Smith in the Ducks’ 51-19 rout.
Com bs responds to challenge, leads Sun
Devils to exhibition Win over Riverland
B y D o u g F lanagan
S t a t e P ress
Brad Lang of the State Press
Freshman Leah Combs dazzled and dominated in her first colle
giate start on Saturday, posting 18 points and 17 rebounds as the
Sun Devils easily defeated the Riverland Raiders 97-43.
For ASU freshman Leah Combs, the challenge of
replacing her roommate, Theresa Jantzen, in the starting
lineup for Saturday's final exhibition contest against the
Riverland Raiders didn’t prove to be a daunting task at all.
In fact, as Jantzen had done in the team’s first presea
son game before injuring her left foot, Combs showed vet
eran composure, and, at times, dominant play.
The 6-foot-2 power forward from Yorba Linda, Calif.,
led the Sun Devils with 18 points and 17 rebounds as ASU
demolished the traveling team from Australia, 97-43,
“I think that with Theresa being out, 1 felt I need to
play for both of us,” Combs said, “We’re fired up (for sea
son play). Practice is tough. We don’t struggle through
them — we push through them. But it’s nice to have our
practice be applied in a game situation. We’re all excited
and have our confidence built up.”
ASU head coach Charli Turner Thome lauded Combs’
performance, crediting her scoring to ASU’s transition
offense and her dominating inside game.
“I don’t think we could’ve asked for a better perfor
mance from her,” Turner Thome said, “ The way shé runs
die floor and the way she’s rebounding right now, she def
initely is going to make an impact. She’s a tremendous
player.”
Four other Sun D evils scored in double figures:
Kristine Sand, who Combs beat out for the power forward
spot, had 16; Leaf Newman, 12; Rachel Holt, 10; and
Michelle Tom, 10.
ASU got out to a 50-23 first half lead, thanks to poor
shooting by the Raiders (8-23 from the field).
“The bottom line is that we knew they weren’t a very
strong team ,” Turner Thorne said. “We did what we
should have done — come out and jump on them (and)
put diem away early.
“What I’m most proud of is that we kept our focus
(and) discipline. We kept getting better throughout the
game. I think it would have been very easy to lose our
focus and just throw up shots and not play any defense. I
definitely think we’ve improved from our last game.”
Marion Lo lecLthe Raiders, posting a double-double of
her own with 15 points and 10 rebounds.
Turner Thome said the game served as an excellent
tune-up for the team’s regular season opener on Friday
against Sam Houston State and is an indicator of things to
come.
“We did a lot of things better offensively and defen
siv ely , and h o p efully this w ill bode w ell for this
Saturday,” she said. “I think we’re ready (for season-play).
I’m glad we have another week of practice to get sharp,
especially with the injuries we have. I think this was a
great game to get everybody in and to get our confidence
up.”
t4
5,
D u ck soup
vo
RasytfMXgO 13
A S U Sun D evils
ished with just seven yards of rushing, but his ability to Lenzie Jackson fum bled away the ensuing kickoff,
elude defenders in the pocket led to mass confusion on Smith found Damon Griffin on a 35-yard touchdown
the part of ASU's defense,
pass that made the score 21-7.
“They had simple things they were doing with the
With the exception of Redmond’s long run, ASU was
ball, passing-wise, but when you cut that off. it's the continually frustrated on offense, putting up just two
w orst thing that can happen,” Jackson said. “Then Stephen Baker field goals to go into half down 31-13.
(Smith) can scramble and people improvise, and a lot
“Bottom line is we just (have to) put more points on
of guys aren’t used to be a quarterback being a scram the board when we are out there,” ASU quarterback
bler like that. They don’t know what to do when their Steve C am pbell, who made his second career start,
receiver or running back scrambles.
said, “(At halftime), I think myself, personally, and the
“It was like a ,little bit o f chaos (betw een) the offense in general were beating our heads against the
linebackers and the corners sometimes when he was wall because we moved the ball pretty decently, but we
scrambling, because they can go (anywhere) — there's end up with two field goals instead of touch downs.”
no designed route anymore.”
Things didn’t get much better
O regon (8-2) sco red all the
for A SÙ ’s offense in the second
points it would need in the first
half. Snyder resorted to a slight
4 4 JR- is not (100 per
quarter, sprinting out to a 24-7
variation of U ofA ’s quarterback
cent). Even (on) the
lead. The Ducks took the opening
rotation by juggling Campbell and
kickoff and marched 46 yards in
long run... I know I
Chad Elliott, depending on the sit
eight plays, with fullback Chris
uation, but it failed to generate a
could, and I would
Young initiating the scoring with a
comeback.
think most people
2-yard touchdown catch.
H o w e v er, th e S un D e v ils ’
who watch (knew)
But ASU (5-5), led by tailback
defense showed significant signs
J.R. Redmond, had an immediate
o f im provem ent — O regon was
that that's not the
answer. On the third play of the
held to 173 yards, as opposed to
guy who ran earlier
Sun Devils' first offensive drive,
the 320 it got in the first half.
in the season.
i
the junior burst through a hole on
D uck lin e b a c k e r D ie tric h
the right side of the line for a 57Moore punctuated: th e victory by
Bruce Snyder,
y ard to u ch d o w n , k n o ttin g the
picking o ff an E llio tt pass w ith
A SU head football coach
game at 7.
five-and-a-half minutes to go and
However. Redmond, who had not played the last two returned it 78 yards, making the score 51-13. .
games due to an injured right ankle, picked up just 13
ASU then added a garbage-time touchdown, coming
more yards to finish with 70.
Off a Tariq M cDonald 9-yard touchdow n réception
"J.R. is not ( 100 percent),” Snyder said. “ Even (on) from Elliott.
the long run... I know I could, and I would think most
The Sun Devils Weren’t shocked that the Ducks, the
people who watch (knew) that that’s not the guy who Pac-10’s most prolific offensive team, got their points.
ran earlier in the season.”
But they did worry about their inability to punch the
From there, it was all Oregon.
ball in the end zone when they needed to.
“I think the first long play by Redmond was actually
“It’s surprising,” said Campbell, who completed 11
a great wakeup call for us,” Oregon head coach Mike of 24 passes for 217 yards. “Anytime you get your butt
Belotti said. “I think it got our kids mad and got them handed to you, it’s surprising. You never go into a
to focus.”
game thinking you’re going to get your butt kicked.
Smith connected with LaCorey Collins on a 22-yard
“We thought coming in we could play fairly well
scoring strike on the Ducks’ next possession, and after against these guys, and we didn’t. We didn’t execute.”
State Press O nline
E
24
7
6
-
M
Team ■Qtr
Oregon
ASU
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon
ASU
ASU
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon
Oregon
ASU
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
1
3
3
4
4
4
ASU Ora
Young 2 pass from Smith (Villegas kick)
; 0-.
Redmond 57 run (Baker kick)
7
Collins 22 pass from Smith (Villegas kick)
7
Griffin 35 pass from Smith (Villegas kick)
7
FG Villegas 38
7
FG Baker 22
10
FG Baker 46
13
Hartley 58 pass from Smith (Villegas kick)
13
FG Villegas 36
13
FG Villegas 28
13
Ho-Chmg 2 run (Villegas kick)
13
Moore 78 interception return (Villegas kick)
13
McDonald 9 pass from Campbell (pass faded) 19
I T 'S I N T E R A C T I V E !
Y o u c a n s u b m it . . .
To T h í Editor ♦ Stq **/$ q« c Ideas T o T he N ewsdesk
Associated Press Poll
Tennessee (37)
Kansas St (29)
UCLA (4)
Florida
Florida St
Texas A&M
Ohio St
UofA
Arkansas
Notre Dame
Michigan
Tulane
Wisconsin
Georgia
Oregon
Penn St
Nebraska
Virginia
Missouri
Air Force
Georgia Tech
Miami Fla
VirginiaTech
Syracuse
Texas
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
II.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22,
23,
24.
25.
Record
PtS.
9-0
10-0
9-0
9-1
10-1
10-1
9-1
1,709
1,699
1,618
1,526
1,489
1,361
1,350
1,262
1.127
1,081
1,054
869
849
788
754
705
616
528
456
434
398
365
206
140
117
10-1
8-1
8-1
8-2
9-0
9-1
7-2
8-2
7-2
8-3
8-2
7-3
9-1
7-2
6-2
7-2
6-3
7-3
Pvs.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
12
15
14
8
17
20
19
II
21
13
23
22
24
16
NR
18
Others Receiving Votes: Kentucky 66, Texas Tech 65, USC 56, W est
Virgina, 23 Wyoming 10, Mississippi St 8, Purdue 8, Marshall 6,
Colorado 3, No Carolina St 3, BYU I
Editor
starks4three@asu.edu
:
Assistant Editor
Sonds4MVP@asu.edu
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Sun Devils spank Spartans in opener, 68-49
P r e s s u r e d e fe n s e
e a r n s E v a n s 1 s t w in
B y N ic k P iec o r o
S t a t e P ress
Jeremy Weiss of the State Press
ASH men's basketball coach Rob Evans pointed his team in the right direction Friday night against San
Jose Stale. The Sun Devils beat the Spartans 68-49, and earned Evans his first regular-season win for ASU.
So what if it was San Jose State? Who
cares if the Spartans were 3-23 overall
and 1-13 in the WAC last season?
ASU head coach Rob E vans still
showed just how immediate his impact
was on F riday nigh t du rin g the Sun
D evils’ 68-49 domination o f thè lowly
Spartans, which gave him his first victory
at ASU.
Not since ASU,beat Oregon State 8244 in 1995 had the Sun Devils allowed
few er points than on Friday. C learly,
Evans’ “defense-first” coaching philoso
phy has already been hammered into thè
players’ minds.
“We made them take some tough shots
and made them rush some things,” said
junior guard Eddie House, who finished
with a team-high 22 points. “We started
playing defense for 25 seconds, making
them get down to 10 seconds on die shot
clock and then it’s helter skelter basketball
for them. That’s what we wanted to do.
“The emphasis is on defense; that’s the
key. D efense w ins ch am p io n sh ip s,
defense wins ballgam es, defense gives
the offense easy opportunities for bas
kets.”
Evans said, “I think the defense is get
ting a lot better — they did a fabulous job
of getting out and after these guys on the
defensive end.”
Defense did win the ballgame for the
Sun Devils Friday. The Spartans shot only
34.5 percent in the game, 29 percent in
the second half, and were outrebounded
44-27.
Evans said that the poor field goal per
centage was because the Sun Devils “wore
down” the Spartans in the second half.
“T hat’s what we try to do with our
pressure defense,” Evans said. “Shots
a t A S U
weren’t coming easy for them.”
After the game, ASU President Lattie
Coor presented the game ball to Evans.
“I’m very appreciative of that,” Evans
said. “H e’s been very supportive of me
from day one.”
House said, “It’s something that we
wanted to do as a team. It was just nice to
get that win for (the coaching staff).”
ASU took control o f the game early.
After San Jose State’s Michael Quinney
hit a three-pointer to tie it up at 7 nearly
fiv e m inutes into the gam e, the Sun
D evils w ent on a 16-0 run and d id n ’t
allow a field goal for six minutes. The
lone highlight of the first half came when
Bobby Lazor, who had 14 points and 7
rebounds, took a pass from House and
threw it down.
That was only his second field goal of
the game; he didn’t score until 4:48 was
left in the first half, which is very unlike
Lazor.
“It’s frustrating a little bit,” he said.
“But we had the lead.”
Others who impressed for ASU includ
ed point guard Alton Mason and freshman
Chad Prewitt. Mason turned the ball over
only once, had four assists and scored
seven points.
“I w as re ally p leased w ith A lton
Mason,” Evans said. “I thought he played
well. (He) did a real good job of running
our basketball team.”
O f Prew itt, Evans said, “H e’s got a
chance to really be a nice player for us for
four years. But he d oesn’t play like a
freshman. He’s been well coached in high
school and he’s got really good skills.”
“Big Red,” as he’s been nicknamed,
finished with 6 points and 6 rebounds.
“One down,” Evans said, “and I guess
that’s 400-something more to go before I
can catch coach (Ned) Wulk.”
C ross country teams place 4th at W est Regionals
2. C ooper is currently ranked No. 8 in the country. A uburn on Nov. 23 at the M ona Plum m er A quatic
From Staff Reports
Weekend Recap»
The women’s and m en’s cross country teams took G iardino was later defeated in the quarterfinals by Center.
sixth place and eighth place, respectively, in the NCAA Jacqui Boyd of USC, 6-3, 6-1.
W omen’s golf
A lliso n B radshaw d e feated N ico la K aiw ai o f
West Regionals in Fresno, Calif.
ASU sophomore Grace Park finished tied for 34th
After being in the basement of the Pac-10 for years, Pepperdine 6-7, 6-4, 6-4. She was ousted by Dirra Huber place, with a total o f 303 shots (15-over par) at the
the Sun Devil women and men both took fourth place in of USC in two sets, 6-3, 6-1.
Women’s World Amateur Championships in Santiago,
the Pac-10 finals and the w6men were ranked for the
O ther ASU team members made it to the second Chile.
first time in school history at No. 20.
Park played for her home country, Korea, which fin
round, but were defeated. Faye DeVera was defeated by
Senior Priscilla Hein’s 13th-place finish was ASU’s Krissy Hamiliton of USC 6-4, 4-6, 7-6. Katy Propstra ished in a tie for fourth place. It was Park’s final round
best. She ran the course in 17 miutes and 22 seconds. was defeated by Ipek Senoglu of Pepperdine, 6-2, 6-4. of 68 which helped Korea pull up to fourth place from
Kelly MacDonald was close behind at 17:44, for 20th Alison Nash was defeated by Amanda Basica of UCLA its previous spot of eighth.
place.
7-6, 6-0.
The United States finished 18 strokes under par to
ASU fared as well in doubles competion. Gierdiono win the tournament, behind Jenny Chuasiriporn’s 12The other five women turned in solid performances:
Lisa Aguilera. 18:13, 42nd place; Amy Maciasek, 18:23, and Pereyra defeated Chappell and Seymour of UCI 8-2; under par perform ance and form er ASU star Kellee
50th place; Nicole Simmons, 18:26, 53rd place; Kristin B radshaw and N ash d e feated C h ristia n se n and Booth, who finished second in the tournament behind
McFerron, 18:30, 59th place; and Cody Sohn, 18:44, V illarom an o f UCI 8-1; and M cCoury and DeVera C huasiriporn with a 5 -under par perform ance. The
defeated Papi and Wells of SDSU 9-8.
United States’ other teammate, Brenda Corrie Kuehn,
75th place. :
Sunday’s final results were unavailable at press time.
shot a total of 293, 5-over par.
For the men, freshmen Juan Chivera (31:18) and Fasil
In their victory, the U S. women broke two World
Bizuneh (31:20) were the fastest Sun Devil freshmen in Swimming
The City of Angels has never been the favorite place Amateur world records. The first is the widest margin of
Fresno. Chivera had the best m en’s finish with 18th
V ,
place and Bizuneh finished two seconds behind in 20th of Devils.
victory of 18 strokes, previously held by the 1982 U.S.
place.
But it was a worthwhile excursion for the Sun Devil women. The second record smashed by this year’s squad
Coming in behind them for ASU was Isaiah Festa swimming and diving squads-last weekend.
is the lowest 72-hole team score of 558, the previous
(31:59) at 35th place, David Burke (32:42) at 54th, Kris
The ASU w om en’s sw im m ing and d iving team record was set by the U.S. women in 1994. Their team
Alexander (32:48) at 60th place, Brandon Strong (32:54) remained unbeaten Friday, defeating the University of score was 569.
at 62nd and Ron Buchanan (32:58) at 65th place.
P ark is still the cu rren t w om en’s U.S. A m ateur
Califomia-Santa Barbara 222-<>8 and tying UCLA 150UofA captured first place in the women’s race, while 150 at the UCLA’s Men’s Gym Pool in L.A.
Champion, a crown she captured last August by winning
“I keep reminding the girls that little things make a the U.S. Amateur Open.
in the men’s race Stanford was the top finisher.
W restling
T he te a m ’s ch an ces o f m aking the NCAA huge difference,” ASU women’s coach Tim Hill said.
Championships next week are slim, as only the first and
Seven ASU g rap p lers placed in this w eek en d ’s
Ju n io r C arolyn A del won th ree ev en ts, the 200
second place teams are guaranteed spots with 13 others freesty le (1 -m inute, 49.21 seconds), 500 freesty le California Open in Fullerton, Calif.
chosen b ased on ra n k in g , stren g th o f reco rd and (4:58.75 seconds) and 200 individual medley (2:03.62).
Most o f the Sun Devils’ starting wrestlers, as well as
Other winners on Friday were: senior All-American head coach Lee Roy Smith, stayed at home for this
Regional finish.
However, some ASU individuals may qualify for the Camilla Johansson and freshman Riley Mants, who both event, but 13 w restlers and assistant coaches Tony
national tournament, Qualified individuals will be noti won two events, junior co-captain Casey Murphy (1,000 Quinones and Aaron Simpson attended.
freestyle) and freshman Sarah Baham (200 butterfly).
Sun Devils who placed were Matt Azevedo, second in
fied this week.
Sun Devil diver freshman Patricia Malatesta placed the 125-pound weight class; Michael Kawamura (133),
W omen’s tennis
The ASU women’s tennis team excelled at the ITA second in the 3-meter competition.
third; Arturo Anaya (133), fifth; Glenn Pero (149), fifth;
On Saturday, the ASU m en’s team was beaten by Kellan Fluckiger (184), sixth; Randy Leydecker (heavy
W o m en ’s T en n is R eg io n al at the U n iv ersity o f
Califcmia-Irvine over the weekend. Five players were USC 134.5-87.5. Top finishers for ASU were senior All- weight), third; and Hector Torres (heavyweight), fifth.
ASU grapplers who did not place were Daniel Hyman
able to reach the second round, two reached the third and American Francisco Sanchez, who placed first in the 50
and 100 freestyle and runner-up in the 200 freestyle; (133), Jose Moreno (157), John Groundwater (174), Erik
one advanced to the quarterfinals.
Gladish (197), Phillip Alejandrino (197), and Chuck
Junior Kerry Giardino defeated the tournament’s top Matt Carter, who placed second in the 1,000 freestyle.
Both ASU squads return home to face SEC power Halstead (197).
seed, UCLA’s Annica Cooper, in three sets, 3-6, 6-2, 6-
Sm«Pr«$s for Monday, November 16,1998
m
______ i
______n
t
j
_______. a _______________ ^
i
■
i #
s i
B y E d O deven
S ta t e P ress
No one doubted the heart and playmaking capabilities of
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Jake Plummer.
But there were serious doubts about the referees’ non
call on the game’s final play.
With the ball at the Dallas 5-yard line and three seconds
left in regulation, All-Pro receiver Rob Moore dashed
toward the end zone. He leaped to catch Plummer’s welltimed lob, but had no legitimate chance to snatch it. As
television replays clearly showed, Dallas Cowboys comerback Kevin Smith was all over Moore and could’ve been
flagged for pass interference.
Still, the non-call resulted in a 35-28 Cowboys win in
front of 71,670 fans at Sun Devil Stadium on Sunday.
Afterward, Plummer gave the referee his biased opinion.
“Step up and make the call!” he said.
Moore agreed the non-call was a bad call.
“They know it wasn’t a good call,” said Moore, who fin
ished with three receptions for 77 yards and a touchdown.
Cardinals head coach Vince Tobin shared Moore’s
lament.
“There have been a lot of controversial calls going
against us,” Tobin said. “It bothers me, but you can’t do
nothing about that.”
Translation: Moore was robbed of a potential gametying touchdown and the Cardinals two-game winning
streak was halted by the Cowboys.
Arizona fell to 5-5. Dallas improved to 7-3. :
Said C ardinals veteran offensive lineman Lomas
Brown: “We don't want to be in that position where we
have to have someone else control our destiny.”
Wishful thinking.
The Cardinals trailed 28-0 with 3:29 remaining in the
opening half. Yet despite their rallying efforts, they would
have been the'proud recipients of a personal interference
call and one more shot at the end zone.
“Teams that have won Super Bowls get a few more
breaks (from the referees)." Brown said. “It’s sad, but that’s
the way it is ."
Plummer, who threw for a career-high 465 yards (31for-56 passing) and three touchdowns, said the Cardinals
once again proved they are not quitters. .
"We were definitely not done, ’ he said, discussing the
team's will to win. “We’re never done.”
Guiding the C ardinals' newly installed no-huddle
offense, Plummer threw for 314 second-half yards to lead
the team's comeback effort. They began the third quarter
with a 15-play, 60-vard drive, when Dallas superstar
defender Deion Sanders was nursing a bruised foot. ExASU standout Mario Bates' 2-yard touchdown run trimmed
the lead to 28-14.
Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Frank Sanders (81) is chased down by Dallas Cowboys safety Darren Woodson. Sanders caught a game-high
11 receptions for 190 yards and a touchdown in a losing effort Sunday.. Dallas won 35-28.
But the Cowboys’ dominating offensive line continued
to open holes the size of Mack trucks for running back
Emmitt Smith, who scored his third touchdown of the game
with relative ease, a 3-yard run. Smith’s run increased the
Cowboys’ lead to 35-14 with 3:48 remaining in the third
quarter.
Smith finished with 118 yards rushing on 26 carries.
“Emmitt’s a great player,” Tobin said. “There’s no
doubt about it.”
,
The Cardinals were less fortunate— being held to 32
yards rushing on 21 carries. Thus, Plummer was forced to
throw. And throw often.
But he was able to do so successfully throughout the
second half, leading the Cardinals to 21 second-half points,'
including TD strikes to Moore (4 yards) and running back
Adrian Murrell (7 yards). Murrell’s TD cut the deficit to
35-28 with 3:09 remaining.
And rightfully so, Plummer received a ringing endorse
ment from Sanders.
“The guy is going to be special, If you keep the right
personnel around him, he’s a special quarterback,” said
Sanders, who picked off one of “The Snake’s” passes in the
second quarter.
“He looked like a young Fran Tarkenton out there. I’ve
seen him in film week in and week out make plays. He
made some tremendous plays today that not many quarter
backs can make.”
Notes
•Plummer’s yardage was the third-most yards passing
ever by a Cardinals quarterback (Boomer Esiason, 522;
Neil Lomax, 468).
•Plummer’s passing total was the most ever by an NFL
player at Sun Devil Stadium and was the second-highest
total ever against the Cowboys (Bill Wade, 466 yards vs.
Chicago, Nov. 18, 1962).
•Dallas wide receiver Michael Irvin failed to make a
catch, snapping his streak of consecutive games with a
reception at 117.
Dallas’ second-half w oes disturb ex-ASU standout W oodson
Sanders' departure aids Plummer's passing attack
B y P e r c y E dn a lin o
S t a t e P ress
D allas C ow boys strong safety Darren W oodson
didn ’t have much reason to celebrate after the team’s
35-28 win over the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday.
The last time Woodson set foot in Sun Devil Stadium
was on Sept. 7, 1997. when the Cowboys lost to the
Cardinals in overtime. 25-22.
With seconds left in the game. Cardinals quarterback
Jake Plummer was working toward a repeat of last sea
son, but fell short when Cowboys cornerback Kevin
Sm ith broke up a Plum m er pass intended for Rob
Moore.
Still, Plum m er’s surge and the Dallas secondary’s
lackluster performance left Woodson feeling puzzled,
but relieved, after the game.
“We gave up way too many yards in the second half,”
Woodson said. "But a win is a win and I’ll take it.”
Although productive — Woodson snared seven solo
tackles and three assists — the former Sun Devil saw the
Cardinals surge in the second half and nearly tie the
game at 35-35 with seconds left in the game primarily
on the strength of Jake Plummer’s passing.
The All-Pro Woodson, who leads the Cowboys in
tackles with 87, said he’d take responsibility for the sec
ondary's woes.
The Cowboys’ defensive line held the Cardinals to
ju s t 32 y ard s ru sh in g and one touchdow n on 21
attempts. By comparison, Dallas running back Emmitt
Smith carried the ball 26 times for 118 yards and three
scores.
Still, C ardinals receivers feasted on the defensive
secondary, giving up 465 yards passing to Plummer.
It was a statistic Woodson wasn’t happy to hear. The
Cardinals’ second half comeback also was something
Cowboys cornerback Deion Sanders w asn’t pleased
with.
“They (the Cardinals) persevered and never gave up,”
he said.
.
.
Sanders, however, managed to snare an intereception
in the second quarter.
But Sunday was a relatively quiet night for Sanders,
who sat out the remainder of the game because of a
freak injury to the big toe on his left foot.
“I gave up a slant to Eric Metcalf,” Sanders said.
“I’m going to have to review the film. I don’t know
what happened. Something happened to my foot around
my big toe.”
Still, Sanders echoed Woodson’s words and said he’d
take the win, regardless.
Sanders added that if not for the injury, the outcome
would have been drastically different.
“With my injury, they had freedom,” Sanders said.
“They had some freedom to do some things on the cor
ner. When I left the game, they went to that comer.
“Let’s be honest. The first half wasn’t like the second
half3*
And how.
Cowboys head coach Chan.Gailey also said he was
pleased to leave with a win, but added the secondary
still needed improvement. .
"
“I really would like you to talk to ""(Cowboys defem.
sive coordinator Dave) Campo because I was really pay
ing more attention to the offense during the course of
the game,” Gailey said. “But I know we need to máke
some adjustments.”
Bran Lang of the State Press
Ex-ASU: star Darren Woodson leads the Dallas Cowboys with 87/tackles, which includes 10 against the Cardinals. The Ail-Pro strone salety
has been a fixture in the Cowboys’ secondary for the past seven years.
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APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
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Divisional Offices:
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$9/hr, potential month
RENTAL
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istin g custom ers. Flex, h rs.,
c lo se to cam pus, g reat $ and
bonuses. 947-0775
96 H O NDA C iv ic 4 d r, AC,
5sp, stereo , 3 5 .5K, blue/grey,
exc. cond $11,900, 775-0994
97 PO N T!A C G ra n d Am SE,
4dr runs/looks great. Great deal
priced at $7995. 884-9315
$6.50 +/HR.
Preschool or afterschbol teach
er, F lex ib le ho u rs. T rain in g
avail. Children's Village Learn
ing Center, 949-5552.
CARS $ 100-$500 - police im
pounds. H o n d as, C hevy s,
Jeeps & Sport Utilities. MUST
SELL! 1-800-522-2730x4740
$7.00/H R + In c e n tiv e s (paid
cash w eekly) - client prospect
ing for m ajor investm ent firm.
G ood phone sk ills a m ust!
M o n day-T hursday
4:3 0 -
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
8:30pm . C ontact Kyle or M att
at 833-1809 e x t 248
C all 568-5525 or 990-7275.
ACTORS FOR educational vid
eos. M ust pass for high school
student. On call PT. Great exp.
in front of camera. 438-4400.
BE A mobile DJ. PT weekends.
Good income + O T & tips. 8208220.
EARN UP to $12/hr. KFC is
hiring delivery drivers, must be
@ le a st 18+, w / v e h ic le, in
surance i & valid d riv 's Lie.
A pply 7055 E ast Shea Blvd,
S c o ttsd a le. O r call B ryan or
Krista 596-0937.
A REA M ILL IO N A IR E E arn
while you learn. Need five peo
ple to make some money. Work
from apt. or dorm ok. Phoenix
toll free 1-888-3543179.
ASU CHANNEL 2 seeking crea
tiv e , de p en d a b le stu d en t to
surve as station director. M ust
Jive on campus. Apps. avail, ip
Mathews Center basement Rnu 002.
a x is
N ight Club Hostess, .valet at- ’
te ndants, keybox g irls: G re a t ,
. pay + tips. Start immc'diately.
B u sy S co ttsd a le Travel
A g en cy is in im m ediate
need of “B u sin e ss S avv y
P ro fe ssio n a ls”
for its contract admin
istration department.
Applicants must be
articu late, p leasan t,
p erso n ab le and
p ro fessio n al.
DONOR EGGS
FACT: O n e w o m a n in six h a s tro u b le c o n ce iv in g .
S o u th w e st F ertility Center needs e g g
of ethnic diversity.
* W e need w om en
• 1 8 -2 8 y rs o f a g e
donors
• In g o o d h e alth
• W ith n o h e re d ita ry
d is e a s e facto rs
t. All medical expenses paid
2. Fee paid to donor
For m o re in fo rm atio n
Please call 956-7481
& RADIUS
This job will have lots of
customer contact, and you
must be flexible to work
varied schedules. Salary
+ comm, could earn you
$500+/wk.Thls is not a
sales job, and we will
provide training to the
right individual. Open
interviewing T, W,Th
only at 3:30pm. Please call
874-5888 for directions.
F/t & P/t. Male/female
CHASE IS hiring! F/T & P/T
po sitio n s a v ailab le w ith c u s
tom er serv ice, acco u n t reps,
fraud reps, mail openers, data
e n try , and c o lle ctio n s. A pply
in person 8 :30am -4pm , M -F.
C hase cardm em bers services:
100 W est U n iv e rsity D rive
(U niv. & M ill) Tem pe (prkg.
avail, on Ash). Job-line 902-6000.
C la s s ifie d s
9 6 5 -6 7 3 5
CHy o f Tamp«
EN E RG E TIC TEAM p lay er
needed for management team at
Spaghetti Company. Great ben
efits, good starting salary. Ex
perience not necessary. Contact
Dan Click, GM, @ 966-3848
You're smart.
Do the math!
$$$
TENNIS
INSTRUCTOR
Full-tim e m oney,
Fart-time hours.
$$$
Part-time, exp. tennis
Instructor for public
facility, $8-$10/hr.
Hours vary for
Fall/Winter sessions.
: S8/hr. base + comm.
■Flex AM & PM hours
1 Convenient locations
,
FEMALE SCHOOL aide needed
fo r d isab led g irl. M -F, 9:303:30pm , 12/1 - 6 /1 8 /9 9 , $9
/hr, own car. 423-5903.
FUN PEOPLE
W anted! A ppointm ent setters
fo r-U n iv e rsa l P o rtra its. $7$12/hr. 777-1054
T h is sh o u ld bo y o u r a d C a ll 965-6735
Security Officers and
Airport Security Officers
: FLEXSCHEDULES- FT A PT
Must be 18. Have high school
diploma, drug-free & pass
background check.
'W e offer:
• Medical/Dental benefits
• TUition Assistance
• Uniforms supplied & maintained
• Monthly, Quarterly Bonuses
Applyat:
Worldwide Security Assoc. Inc.
627 South 48th S t #105
Tempe 9664)141
Dobson & Guadalupe
AZ Ave. & W arner
350-S791
400 W. University Dr., Tempe
735-0000
(2 blocks west of Mill Ave, over th e tracks)
777-8757
S ta r t D e c . 1 ( e n jo y T h a n k s g iv in g h o lid a y )
O u r 1 s t lo c a tio n in t h e V alley f o r a
3 5 - y e a r - o ld f r a n c h is e c h a in .
Mow W iring
Hilton
Old Country Store
"N EED E X T R A C A S H ”
C ra cker B arrel is now hiring for
The Hilton Scottsdale Resort and Villas has trem endous opportunities and
w e are willing to accom m odate your current schedule. Hotel experience is preferred,
how ever custom er service experience in a related industiy m akes you
a viable candidate. We are seeking to fill the following positions immediately:
EXCITING OPPORTUNITY in
M esa for am bitious individual
w / interest in Sales/M arketing.
C utom er contact, ord er entry,
phones, admin, computer work,
and other duties as req'd. P/T
w / opportunity fo r F/T. Phone
4 61-5235, ask fo r S h eri Gabaldon, National Sales Mgr. $7 /hr.
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
Apply in person at:
Mwanis Recreation
Center, 6111 S. All
America Way, Tempe
o r call
MICI
Scottsdale Resort &Villas I
■ HELP WANTEDGENERAL
W e 'r e lo o k in g fo r p e o p le w ith g r e a t
p e r s o n a litie s w h o like t o h a v e f u n
w h ile t h e y w o rk .
W e need:
C o o k s ($7-512 DOF)
Servers ($2.13-54 lS§E)
H osts (M arket)
D ish w a sh ers (M arket)
Bussers (M arket)
the following positions:
• F oo»(servers
• C ash iers/ R etail
Guest Service Agent:
Duties will indude PBX, Reservations and Front Desk; Strong
customer service, cashiering and computer literacy required.
Starting salary $7.50 an hour.
Preventative Maintenance Engineer k General Maintenance Engineer:
Entry level maintenance engineer will provide basic carpentry,
plumbing, electrical, air conditioning, painting, wall covering and
masonry. This Is a regular, full-time position. Starting salary is
$7 an hour.
Bellstaff:
Customer service, baggage handling and van transportation.
Starting salary is $4.75 an hour plus tips.
Spa Attendant:
Customer service, supervising spa facilities and equiprnent.
Starting salary is $7 an hour.
Line Cook:
Responsible for setting up and maintaining food production and
quality control of all meat, fish, fowl, sauces, stocks, seasoning
and other food items. Starting salary $7 to $8 an hour DOE.
• J4 o st/ H o stess
by Sidney Omarr
We are located at HO
and Chandler Blvd.
Monday, N ovem ber 16, 1998
Create Your Own Schedule
Banquet Set-up Supervisor:
Will direct and assist the housepersons in the set-up, break down
and servicing of all meeting rooms in accordance with customer
spedfications & hotel standards. Starting salary is $7.50 an hour.
Restaurant:
Customer and food service. AM Hostfess), AM/PM servers,
AM busser.
94%-Wi©
Jo b
4$0
Please apply M onday through Friday at 6333 N. Scottsdale Rd.,
In the Human Resources Departm ent, from 9am to 3pm.
We offer com petitive w ages and benefits.
Business Attire required for sam e day interviews.
EOE/Drug Free
E M B A SSY
S U IT E S
R ESO RT
scorrspALE
A C C E P T IN G W A LK -IN
IN T E R V IEW S
V M, Tu, a n d F
8:3 0 - 10:30am o r 1:30-3:30pm
I
Now open the following Saturdays
9am - 3pm ; Oct. 24
Nov. 7
Nov. 21
• B q t. S e r v e r s
•B u c e a r
• R o o m S e r v ic e
•S e rv e r*
si • 1Jj ¿ ;T::.• S e t- u p S ta ff ■
* S w itc h b o a r d O p e.
FT & PT work available
Please apply with Human Resources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd.
Scottsdale Em bassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace.
AST*0 £i0 &ICA£i FORECAST
P le a se apply in person.
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
IT S FU N I
IT 'S E A S Y !
IT P A Y S !
• NO SELLING
• Permanent Part time
Evening & weekend shifts
• Flexible scheduling
• Exp not req’d
• Women Excel
• Casual Dress
• Automated Dialing System
• Fun Atmosphere
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Minor crisis exists in connec
tion with marital status. Play it
cool, you are responsible for
birth of the blues. Light shines
bright, recognition is due.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Be patient. Historic musical
figure befriends you — you
finally will know where you’re
going and why. You’ll get
answers to questions concern
ing marriage.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Accent diversity, versatility,
ability to laugh at your own
foibles. Locate tailor who
makes suits that fit like prover
bial glove. Color harmony
equates to musical scales.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Keep up with the tim es.
Taurus, Leo, Scorpio persons
play leading roles. Y ou’re
doing OK — respond accord
ingly, come closer to marriage.
Replace frown with smile.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Highlight Showmanship, color
coordination. YoU will know
when to say, ^E nough is
enough.” Virgo declares,
"Y o u are easy to get along
with.’*
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Attention revolves around
music, style, ability to play
game of m usical chairs. Be
diplom atic. G ift received,
relates to beauty, fashion.
Aries, Libra persons in picture.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. g2):
Define terms, give attention to
real-estate .announcement. Be
ready, alert, fam iliar \vith
boundaries. See people, places,
relationships in realistic man
ner. Pisces represented.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Cycle moves up. You will be at
right place at special moment,
almost effortlessly. Scenario
features passion, creativity,
controversy. Passing parade ~
you ask, " Is this deja vu?’•
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): Long-range project
comes into sharp, clear focus.
You’ll be complimenting your
self, " I did it despite the
odds.* ’ Aries, Libra individuals
in major roles, these letters in
names: I and R.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Make room for the new,
let go of the old, tattered. Leo
plays outstanding role. You ’11
be pleased to knów you are not
alone. Light shines bright,
darker areas of life benefit.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Focus on marital status,
public appearances, selection
of tailored goods. You’ll be
complimented on taste
respond, "W ell, just another
day.” Capricom involved.
PISCES (Feb 19-Mafch 20):
Focus on diversity, entertain
ment, ability to make people
laugh if even through* their
tears. Highlight humor, special
selections. Choose quality, let
others have excess.
IF NOVEMBER 16 IS
YOUR BIRTHDAY: You are
moody, tend to brood, to hit
yourself with sledgehammer
words. Pisces, Virgo persons
play leading roles in your life,
could have these letters, initials
in names — Gf P, Y. You are
sensitive to degree of being
psychic. Your musical JasteS
are exquisite. December finds
you in social whirl.' Also dur
ing December you’ll be busy
with remodeling, decorating,
preparing for holidays.
(c) 1998, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
GRAPHICS DESIGNER - Prod.
Assist. Int'l Trade Assoc, for the
Beauty In d u stry has Pt pos.
avail. (Ft m id-'99). M ust have
Quark, Photoshop, Illistrator &
prod. ex p . C all B B S I- B rian
Condit @ 404-1800 ext 113.
HELP SANTA N ov30 - Dec24
$7+ p/hr. O n/offload aircraft.
D river's license, necessary, p/t
am/pm shifts, M-Th 225-2066.
RESTAURANTS/
BARS
INFO/SPECIAL PROJECTS Co
o rd in ato r: n o n -p ro fit g roup
seek in g in d iv id u al to a ssist
w /adm in. & pu b lic a ffa irs in
Tem pe
o ffice,
info:
www.asa.asu.edu or’ 1(888)9666358
Find it F A S T in
the C lassified s
HELP WANTEDG |N g j ^ _ _ _
KOLBY’S
B illards is now accepting ap
plications. Fun, friendly envi
ronment. Inquire within 1301 E
University Dr., Tempe 829-7344
M AR K ET RESEA RC H a ss is
tant. Education co. near ASU.
Administer surveys, & moderate
focus groups. Call 438-4400.
MI AMIGOS
RESTAURANTS/
BARS
Food Servers w anted. G reat
P ay / fle x ib le hou rs. 1285 W.
Elliot Rd., Tempe.
MODELS/ ACTORS, all types,
m/f needed immed. for n ati cómmercials/print! 941-6922.
P/T WORK for computer com
pany near ASU. Salary doe $8$16 p/hr. If you have e x p eri
ence or other qualifications in
data base, accounting, market-
RESTAURANTS/
BARS
L
ACME
HELP WANTEDSALES
ing, and/or hardware please fax
resume 968-0590.
C A SH FOR C hristm as! P /t
sales, flexible hours. C all 4078782
P/T WORK - F/T pay. Come to
play not to w ork. D ay & eve.
shifts avail., $9/hr. U niversity
& Priest, Ms Tobin 517-1977
■ Food • S p irits • Pool •
• Bowling • C ig a rs-
4245 N. Craftsm an Ct.
O ld Town S co ttsd a le
PT LABORER wanted flex. 30
hr./wk. shipping /receiving /me
ch an ical rep air. $7+ A hw atukee. Call Mon. am 496-4222
SHOW ME THE $!
B u rg er M ad n ess-Tu esd ays!
Beer & C h eap
C h e ap
S h o lS
A8 A p p etizers on H appy H r.
Searching to make $7 Int'l mar
keting frrm looking for energe
tic asserting s elf starter, top $.
Flex. hrs. w ill train. C all 7517586.
C R U ISE SH IP em ploym entw orkers earn up to $2000/m o
(w/tips & benefits). W orld Trav
el! Land-tour jobs up to $5000$7000/sum m er. A sk us how!
517-336-4235 ext. C59182
LU N C H SERV ER, 10-2:30,
$5/hr + tips. D inner hpstiess),
5 -1 1 , $6 to start. 598-0506,
5061 E Elliot, Phoenix.
EARN $700 extra cash for re
fe rrals. Join our "No. B ull"
C ash R eferral Program , E arn
hardt A uto C enters. C all 7563 5 i 2, 813-5580, 756-3601 for
more details.
RUBY TU ESD A Y , 4843 E.
R ay Rd. H iring servers, hosts
& cooks. 940-3504 •
VALET PARKING atndnts, PT
eves $6-$9/hr (inch tips), must
be cleaneut, 548^0599 lve msg
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
HELP WANTEDCHILD CA R E
HELP WANTEDSALES
W O O D SH ED II
* I h w Tim®» B « l .
N ei ghb o rh o o d B a r
COLLEGE BLUES
HELP W ANTED- Deli person
pt, days/w knds, flex. hrs. Exp.
pref. but not nec. Apply in per
son: C apistrano's Italian D eli,
655 W. W arner, Sjuite #110,
•Tempe, Kyrene & Warner, 4969044
T H E W ORLD S L argest Auto
Retailer has many career oppor
tunities. Call Human Resources
- 813-9009. E arnhardt A uto
C enters, Tem pe, G ilb e rt &
Chandler
CORNERSTONE SECURITIES
C orporation: To learn m ore
about day trading for a living,
call 423-1700. w w w .protrader,
com
FT NANNY must love, kids, be
caring, trustw orthy & reliable,
N/S, education m ajor pref., N.
Scott. 563-4316 start Jan 4.
l-6pm. SlO/hr. Call 854-2201..
FREE WINNERS, scores, lines.
No m oney, no o p e ra to rs, no
hassles www.line-busters.com
TUTORS
TUTORS
NANNY NEEDED
RESTAURANTS/
BARS
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
LAMSON JUNIOR College has
day and evening c la sses for
Legal A ssistants, Legal Secre
ta rie s, P a rap ro fessio n al A c
cou n tan ts, B usiness & O ffice
Managers, and Computer Tech
nicians. "Learn a Living at Lamson" Call today! 898-7000.
NO EXP. necessary, $535/wk,
a ssem bling pro d u cts, PT /FT ,
Call 1-800-211-2067.
JO B-“
OPPORTUNITIES
HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE
TELEMARKETERS SEMINAR
appointm ent setting. $7 p/hr +
bonuses 423-2207 Mark.
$9 PER HOUR
M USIC IN D U ST R Y in te rn
ships. W arner Elektra Atlantic
is hiring spring 99 interns. See
Prof. S piers in the M arketing
Dept, for details. Soph and Jrs
are encouraged to apply.
ACCOUNTING ASSIST. Pt 20
hrs./wk M-F $8/hr. Send or fax
info, to AAA o f AZ; 3144 N.
7th A ve; P hoenix, AZ 85013
Attn: M. Lewis. Fax 234-1327.
A re you earn in g $5O0/wk.?
Local marketing company, is hir
ing 6 people to fill direct sales
positio n s. W ork ev en in g hrs.
prom oting
local
re sta u
ran ts.$ 1 0 /h r+ comm = $20/hr.
Call Tom at 460-0859.
+ comm. Have fun talking on
the te lephone te llin g people
about our disco u n t travel op
portunities. Call now. 736-9500.
BTL TOURNAMENT seeks interm\n for am ateur athletic ev
ent. Individual needs to be en
ergetic, self-m otivated, & su
p e rv ise v o lu n te e rs. C o n tact
O .D . Fought @ 972-818-6430
or e-mail: odf@sbtl.org
HELP WANTEDCLERICA L
RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal
Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Tem
pe. Cindy, 777-1054.
990-7111
I N T C R N m r e _ _
L IQ U O R W IN E c lerk , P/T
n ig h ts, w knds & holidays a
m ust. R etail exp. p r e f d , w ill
train. 345-9110
BAR a GRILL
“Your Neighborhood"
Bari
BLA D D ER B U ST ER
10 Draft $1 Drinks
DJ Steve Levine
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
40% O FF dry cleaning bill w /
ASU I.D.- biz. shirts $1. Cheap
f lu f f & fold. Pueblo C leaners
SE C o rn er o f R ural & U niv.
9^6-7454.
HEY STUDENTS! Got a web site
you'd like to show off? Enter the
weekly Web Devil contest at StatePress.com featuring the University's
top student-designed web sites. Send
your URL and a brief explanation
of how you developed yoUr site to
Paul Mathews at Pmatth@imap3.
'asu.edu. We'll provide a link to your
web page and let veiwers decide
the winners. For more information
Call.Paul Mathews, 727-6941
PAPER PROBLEMS? Research,
w riting, e d iting. 844-5272 of
rgplzpalmer@worldneLatt.nët
TUTORS
TUTOR NEEDED for account
ing 240, 250. Must be 'A' stud
e nt in accounting. W ill pay
$15/hr. Call Mark @ 951-6777
Calf 965-6735
place your ad
O SS Sysl«m> 22 screens
Acoustic Evening
• AH N F L • E S P N G am e Plan
8 FOOT
-MLB
w/ Sh a w n Jo h n so n
$2 32oz Steins • $2 Jager Shots
8 4 4 -S H E D
U n iv e rs ity & D ob son
B
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
$2 Any Rum Drinks
M
ig
o n day
S
N
W e offer tutorial for th e following classes:
Algebra
Finite Math
Calculus/Precalculus
Statistics
Physics
Business
Chem istry
cr een
ig h t
F o o t b a ll
M AKE A
DIFFERENCE
$2 Coronas
$2 Kamikaze Shots
H e in y ’s & H o o t e r s
$2 Heinekens
$2 Purple Hooters
MAT 114, MAT 117
MAT 119
MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271
QBA 221, PS Y 230
PHY 111, PHY 112
FIN 300, OPM 301
CHM 113, CHM 115/6 .
Call us to d a y for m o re inform ation.
Succéssfully h e lp in g stu d e n ts since 1980.
Work with people
with disabilities.
101 Is hiring - FT/PT.
$7-$7.50 • ExceUent
Benefits. O sStkaS
838-8111 ext. 110
F i e s r f c a ! Ilf
TYPING/WORD
PROCESSIN G
ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE...
$ 2 J a g e r S h o ts
DJ Barry Bad A ss playing your favorite punk songs
MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER
Cornerstone Mall
TYPING/EDHING
THESES
TERM PAPERS
RESUMES
APPLICATIONS j
I -Day Service
Kathy @ 2 6 2 -5 4 5 4 ;
"SIMON''
968-4668
State Press Classifieds
Matthews Center, Basem ent
Office: 965-6735
www wotdwoikx.eom
ÌagÌMtBABj'"wV“"V^ J ÉBBBgBB.ÏÏi'¿’""'.T g I
A SU Box 871502
Tempe, A Z 85287-1502
Fax: 965-4706
C lassified Ad O rder Form
Part-Time
O p p o r t u n it y
$10/hour
Are Von:
$2 Pitchers
$2 Long Island Iced Teas
$2 Coronas
NFL SU N D A Y TICK ET
$2 Steins $2 Bloody Marys
Home o f the Patriots
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
HELP WANTEDGENERAL
YouCairtAsh for aBetter
Student Job!
** luirioN Assistance
* * PIione Bill CitEdirs
** UNbtliEVAbli BeneKis
** Fun Wonk EnvIronmeni
** Earn lull time wAqts wouldNq part ome ImmjrsI
*
I
To ApplyANd¡NTERViEWCOMETOOllRPIlOENix loCAiiONAT
1801 E. CAMElbAck Road, Suits 210
(In iRe CoUoNAdEPIaza)
MoN-Fni
9AM'6pM
Sat
9AM'2pM
—
• Self-Motivated
• Responsible/
■Well Dressed
• Friendly
We Offer:
• Afternoon Hours
• On The Job Training
(No Sales)
• One Of A Kind Work
Environment
Only futi upbeat person
need apply, no
experience necessary.
There are only !
9 positions available.
C aU N ow
874-5888
BA N Q U ET
SER V ER S
P le a se b e su re to ch e ck your ad . M ake su re it read s exactly-as you
w ish it to ap p ear in the State P re ss, including punctuation. P le a se
ch e ck your a d the first d ay it ap p ears-the liability of the State P re ss
sh a ll not exceed the co st o f the a d and cred it m ay b e given for the
first in sertion only. M inor sp ellin g e rro rs do not q ualify for m ake
good s. No refunds Will b e g iven, but if you need to ca n ce l your ad
a cred it w ill b e held on acco un t for future, ad vertising .
**
M ake extra m oney,
join our b usy bqt se aso n .
F lex ho u rs.-Exp . req'd.
Qe**sML_
ig g )
u
I n o n e Include
Driver's Uowuwrt
1-4 d ays, $1.70 per line, p er day
5-9 d ays, $1.65 per line, per day
10+ d ays, $1.49 per line, per day
BankCsrdNwmbiW'
Com m ercial
1 day, $2.60 per line
2-4 d ays, $1.99 per line, per day
5-9 d ays, $1.76 per liiie , per day
10+ d ays, $1.60 per line, per day
3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines.
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Sco ttsd ale E m b a ssy
S u ite s
H um an R e so u rce s
5001 N. Sco ttsd ale R d.
P le a se apply
M , Tu , or F betw een
8:30am -10:30am
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Sco ttsd ale Em b a ssy
S u ite s supports a drugv
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BETTER THAN
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