INSIDE W eather M ostly Sunny; high 84, low 53 Classifieds 17 Volume 84 N um ber 93 Crosswords 10 Friday, February 19, Horoscopes 19 Opinion 04 PoliceBeat 11 L ocal/State 03 Sports 13 C ou n try-m u sic s ta r G a rth B rooks makes H ockey team lo o ks to v a lle y appearance pum m eling a rc h -riv a ls save lo s t season by A S A S U-in itiated privacy bill close r to law “Everyone at ASU uses theit ID numbers all the time,” Peterson said. “I’ve concentrated on this issue because it By Stephanie Paterik State Press M ost ASU students d o n ’t think tw ice about the University’s policy of using social security numbers as their identification numbers. But student government officers think they should, and several state legislators agree. A privacy rights bill prohibiting Arizona’s state universi­ ties from using students’ social security numbers as ID num­ bers was approved 7-0 Thursday by the Arizona Senate Education Committee. The bill will now go to caucus in the Senate, and if enact­ ed, the new policy Would begin on June 30,2001. “I’m not surprised it passed com m ittee,” said Paul Peterson, Associated Students of ASU executive vice presi­ dent aad one of the bill’s initiators. “We’ve gotten a lot of support from legislators, which is why 1 expect it to go all the way.” Peterson said he first decided to do something about stu­ dent privacy rights while running for office last year. He and other ASASU officers approached state legislators about sponsoring a bill after they were elected. 4 4 Students' social security num ­ bers are everywhere, they're so readily available for people to access. ^ Jenny Holsman, ASASU government relations director ' > * - affects everyone here.” .' A similar bill passed unanimously in the state House of Representatives Rules Committee and has been in caucus since late January. Steve Cecil, communications coordinator for the Arizona Students’ Association, said many students across the nation, including some from Arizona, have reported problems with their social security numbers falling into the wrong hqnds. Possible problems include credit card fraud and identity theft. “Current university policies regarding the use of social security numbers present a very clear privacy concern for students,” he said. “While universities need to collect the numbers for financial aid forms and tax purposes, it’s not necessary to use them for general ID numbers.” Jenny Holsman, ASASU government relations director, said her motivation in helping to initiate the bill was to pro­ tect her peers. “Students’ social security numbers are everywhere, they’re so feadily available for people to access,” she said. "This bilf will make it so that .our lives are protected.” Holsman said student support has played a key role in getting thO privacy bill .this far. “At f ir s t We d id n ’t have the votes (in the Rules Committee), fhat wer needed, but the bill was held for two weeks so Students could explain their concerns,” she said. “The Student voice definitely helped in this case, and will hopefully continue to.” Effects o f slavery still haunt A fric a n -A m e ric a n cu ltu re By Ju n e D. W il h it e St a Te Press Slavery displaced an entire culture, transplanted them into a foreign place, and left them little room to establish good relationships between each other, said ASU p rofessors Neal Lester and Daina Ramey Wednesday night. The professors spoke at a meeting that launched a bi-w eekly, sem ester-long series hosted by the ASU Black African Coalition. “ T oday wc see a lot o f A frican Americans m istakenly defining beauty and professionalism by dominant, white s ta n d a rd s in ste a d o f o u r o w n ,” said Vince Nicholes, BAC president and an ASU c o m p u ter system s en g in ee rin g senior. “ I w ould even say that the single largest strain on African-American rela­ tionships today stems from the distorted view o f self-worth that we have had to contend with since our arrival in this country. This is a strong statement but one that can be factually corroborated with historical and cultural evidence.” R am ey, an a s s is ta n t p ro fe s s o r in American history, agreed. “ S lave m asters em ployed a lot o f s tra te g ie s to ch a n g e the p sy ch e o f Africans, thus affecting the relationships of Black men and women,” Ramey said. “Black men and women had to deal with their own survivals, that resulted in them leading separate lives.” R am ey re c e iv e d h e r P h.D . in American history at UCLA and has done extensive research on African-Americans r in the 19th century, focjiilng prifharily' on the relationship between slave labor, ."■ family and comraankvslhAmerica. —-----— Mateo Montano, an ASU junior, said that A fricans and Europeans differ in their ideas on masculinity. “The perpetuated images of masculin­ ity , su cc ess and sex u al co m p eten ce taught to men are due to the systematic eradication of African thought by Euro­ c e n tr ic id e a s,” said the 20-year-ol A frican-A m erican studies and m usic major. Lester, an English professor, com ­ m ented on p erso n al ads w ritten by African-American men from across the co u n try se a rc h in g fo r an A frican American female mate.: £ He said Black men, “have constructed their manhood through what the white man has defined it to be.” He said B lack men are using in V the ads their professional­ ism , skin tone and sex­ ual capabili­ ties to m ea­ sure th e ir worth. ‘T found an overwhelming number of Black men who have internalized the ‘Mandigo m yth’ that they have to be buff and stallion­ like,” Lester said. “I am particularly con­ cerned with the words the Black men were choosing to describe themselves. It seemed like they were trying to equal themselves to white men through money and education.” ; 1 The statement, however, caused some concerns among the audience. “I t ’s a scary thought that we don’t have a m odel o f who we (A frican American men) should be and how ¿ve should provide for our Black women,” said Shaikh Brown, a 20-year-old theater student. Rodney Heyd, a former ASU student, and Rebecca Fox, a biology junior, stand in a hail of the Physical Science building discussing their research on the Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake comets. Heyd and Fox, together with Susan Wyckoff, an astronomy professor, were the first scientists to discover that the tails of comets contain carbon monoxide gas. . ASU scientists make discovery By C arrie Severson Sta te P ress . A fter a decade o f research, ASU astronomers were the first scientists to discover a link between a com et tail and an automobile tailpipe. A study led by astronomy Professor Susan Wyckoff found that comet tails contain high concentrations of ionized carbon monoxide gas. For the past 50 years, scientist’s assumed that, comet tails were made up o f mostly water. Joining W yckoff in the study |vere com puter specialist and form er ASU stu d en t R odney H eyd, and biology junior Rebecca Fox. Heyd said that nobody had ever bothered to question the tail of a comet before, P h o to by C h ris S ch u r Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement of the, Matthews Center, Requests will not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be 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. If any of the above information is incomplete or illegible Comet Hale-Bopp was discov­ ered in July 1995 by two inde­ pendent observers, one of whom lives in Arizona. Thomas Bopp, of Stanfield, was out with fellow astronom y buffs the night he happened across the com et Alan H ale’s telescope fixed on the com et the sam e nigh t in C ou d croft, N.M . The com et, which caused a lot o f fanfare due to its Arizona tie, was last visible to the naked eye in 1997. { j | j I | ENTRIES WILL BE DISCARDED. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events j printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests .f are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and f are printed as space permits. ■I V; The Marriage and Family Therapy Clinic offers individual, couple, and family counseling to all students, staff, and faculty in the Cowden Family Resources Building in room 140. Call 965-9313: . 1 | • T h e S tu d e n t D e v e lo p m e n t L earn in g R esource C en ter is offering free com puter ! workshops in the Student Services B uilding, ; I room 394. Call the center for times and informa- | tion. \ I • The Counseling Training C enter is offering | Counseling Services. Masters/Doctoral student J counselors can assist with career, depression, j anxiety, personal and relationship issues. No fee for full -tim e AS U students and staff. A $15 . charge w ill apply to other students, and $40 to other non-ASU affiliated clients. Call 965-5067. • College Bible Fellowship will have a general meeting at 7 p.m. in the MU, room 224. • A S A S U ’s G ra d u a te R e se a r ch S u p p o r t Developm ent will have a research grant com­ p e titio n w ritin g w orkshop at 1 p.m . in the Conference room of the MU. Refreshments will be served. • T he Young D em ocrats will have a general meeting where one can talk about local, state and national issues at 3 p.m. in the MU, room 209. Com et “When everyone else placed the telescope on the heart of the comet, we pointed our telescope millions o f kilometers beyond,” Wyckoff said. The three researchers decided to start their study after they looked at the carbon monoxide level in the tail of Hale-Bopp and found almost no wafer. “What really happens is that the water from the comet gets fried by the sunlight even before it can get into the tail,” Fox said. “T h ese re s u lts are e x c itin g because for nearly 50 years we’ve been using the dirty snowball model for comets and gotten a lot of evi­ dence that water is the predominant m olecule in the nuclei,” W yckoff said. As part o f th eir research, they o b serv ed tw o o f th e b rig h te s t comets this century — Hale-Bopp and H y ak u tak e. H ale-B o p p was b rig h t en o u g h fo r the team to observe it for nine m onths before the comet even reached its most vis­ ible stage. Fox said, “We had to fight for observation time and it was quite risky because we weren’t sure if we would see anything anyway.” The te d io u s p a rt o f the study began after the team observed the comets and recorded their data. Fox said that she “calibrated data in th ree step s b efo re they w ere fin ally satisfied w ith the correct information.” The study will be published in th e F eb. 20 issu e o f The Astrophysical Journal, I SPO RTS j I R a in o r s h in e , c h e e r o r w h in e , w e ’ re th e re ! 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The answer to all your ufestyle needs! Nowleasing for Fall 1999! JEFFERSON / , - / \ N.1 *. 1 { \ XI C O M M C) N S LOCATED A T PALM W ALK A UNIVERSITY BRIDGE] 1655 E. U n iversity D rive, Tem pe, A Z 85281 • 802-699-5333 w w w .jeffersoncom m ons.com Local/State “W e’ve gone back decades and decades looking for other German nationals executed in the U.S. and haven’t found any.” -- Jean Pierre Rollin, Germany’s deputy counsel general in Los Angeles. Start* Press fo r F rid a y, February I* , IW » S o cial S e c u rity to p ic of P re sid e n t s v isit By A rthur H , Rotstein A ssociated Press , TUCSON — Republican Congressman Jim Kolbe is happy President Clinton will briftg his message for saving Social Security to Tucson, although they differ on how to approach the bailout. Kolbe said Thursday he’s pleased at the prospect of a presidential visit on Feb. 25, and that Clinton’s remarks will advance the national debate over how to address secur­ ing Social Security and Medicare for future generations. Martin Bacal, Arizona’s Democratic national commit­ teeman, called Clinton’s visit to Tucson — first ever by a Democratic president — extremely important. The visit will be keyed to Social Security and Medicare, the White House said Thursday. “ I’m delighted; any time we can get a president to visit here, that’s good for the community,’’ Kolbe said from Willcox. where he held a town hall meeting. The eight-term congressman acknowledged differences with Clinton over what approach to take to keep Social Security solvent, but said this was not the time to emphásize them. Officials have estimated that the Social Security pro­ gram will be forced into an operating deficit by 2012 as greatly increased numbers of baby boomers retire during the Coming decade. Without an infusion of federal funds, the program will be defunct by 2029 or 2030, experts con­ tend. Clinton’s' visit is part of a swing that will take him to San Francisco and Los Angeles. The White House said details won’t be released until next week. Clinton visited northern Arizona in 1996. He never has been to Tucson. It is likely but not certain that he will arrive after Tucson’s annual Rodeo Parade ends around noon. Bacal said Clinton’s visit “ indicates how highly the White House regards Pima County” as a supportive voting bloc that was instrumental in re-electing Clinton and Vice President A1 Gore in 1996. The county’s margin of victory exceeded the statewide margin, and without the Pima County vote the ClintonGore ticket would not have been the first Democratic presi­ dential ticket to carry Arizona ini 50 years, Bacai said. The hours-long presidential stop will be bipartisan, with no fund-raising event before Clinton flies to San Francisco die sanie evening, Bacai said. The president is likely to give his address at an auditorium in the 2nd Congressional District since Rep. Ed Pastor is Arizona’s only congression­ al Democrat, Bacal added. , Calls to Pastor in Phoenix were not returned Wednesday or Thursday. Tucson also was chosen for a Social Security address because of its high population of senior citizens, “ and this trip is oriented around senior issues,” Bacai said, Social Security and Medicare “ are much more in the forefront of the national concern’’ than such other topics of local interest as urban sprawl, Bacai said, Kolbe said Clinton’s idea of investing Social Security trust funds would turn the federai government into Wall Street’s largest stockholder. G er man govern m ent presses for clem ency Elaine T h o m p s o n o f th e A sso c ia te d P re ss ‘Put me in coach 4— Singer Garth Brooks flips a baseball as he finishes a light fielding workout at the San Diego Padres spring training facility in Peoria Thursday. Brooks, the highest-selling sole artist in U.S. music histo­ ry, is a non-roster invitee to the camp. Lobbyist gift ban wouId h u rt c o u p i e s , la w m a k e r says B y M a t t Kelley A ssociated Press PHOENIX — A measure designed to prevent lobbyists from plying lawmakers with lavish gifts also would prevent state employees and lobbyists from dating, a state lawmaker said Thursday. “There are some people on our staff who date people who are registered lobbyists, and this bill takes away their ability to be real people,” said Rep. Roberta Voss, RGlendale. Despite V oss’ objections, the House E conom ic D evelopm ent C om m ittee endorsed the lobbyist gift ban bill (HB2543) on a 5-1 vote. The measure’s fate in the House is uncertain, however, because Republican leaders would have to pull it from consideration by three other commit­ tees for it to be heard on the House floor. An identical measure is set to be consid­ ered by the full Senate. Both plans would ban lobbyists from taking lawmakers to sporting events or concerts, paying for meals worth more than $25 or giving any gifts beyond trinkets such as t-shirts or cof­ fee mugs. PHOENIX (AP) — LaGriand German officials are pushing to stop the execution o f one o f their citizens who is scheduled to die next week for an Arizona ' murder. The top two German diplomats in the United States met with Gov. Jane Hull on Tuesday to discuss. W ednesday’s impending execution of 35-year-old Karl Hinze LaGrand. His stepbrother, Walter Burhart LaGrand, 36, is to die à week later. Both haye chosen the gas chamber over lethal injection for their executions, partly so they can argue in new appeals that the slower and more agonizing way to die will be deemed by courts to be an unconstitu­ tional cruel and unusual punishment. “Gov. Hull listened to all of their con■cems,” said Francie Noyes, the governor’s spokeswoman, “ But one. thing in her mind always is the victim and family members of the victim.” Besides Hull, German officials in Bonn also have contacted President Clinton, Attorney General Janet Reno and Secretary of State Madeleine Albright in pleading for clem ency. G erm an rep resen tativ es of Amnesty International are said to be plan­ ning to file an appeal in the World Court. Germany abolished the death penalty in 1987. Though the LaG rands grew up in Tucson, court records say Karl LaGrand was the third of three illegitimate children from different GI fathers born to their Germ an m other, Emma, in the sm all Bavarian city of Augsburg. Their mother then married a U.S. Army soldier, who adopted the children, and the family moved to the United States in 1967. Four of the only five German nationals on death row in the United States are in Arizona’s prispri in Florence. Two other German brothers, Rudi and Michael Apelt, were sentenced to death for the 1988 killing of Michael Apelt’s U.S.born Wife in hopes of cashing in on a $400,000 insurance policy. The fifth German death-row inmate is in Florida. “We’ve gone back decades and decades looking for other Gentian nationals execut­ ed in the U.S. and haven’t found any,” said Jean Pierre Rollin, Germany’s deputy coun­ sel general in Los Angeles. “Now, we pos­ sibly have two in Arizona in the next two weeks. “It’s very strange. It certainly has raised a lot of attention in Germany and through­ out Europe.” Numerous German officials and media are expected to attend Karl LaGrand’s hear­ ing before thé State Board of Executive Clemency next Tuesday , The LaGrarid brothers were convicted in 1984 of fatally stabbing bank branch man­ ager Ken Hartsock,. 63, in the Tucson sub­ urb of Marana on Jan. 7, 1982. A clerk also was stabbed repeatedly but survived. Hartsock and the clerk insisted they could riot open the vault because they had only half of the combination. As anxiety grew while they awaited arrival of another bank official with the rest of the combina­ tion, Hartsock -—though bound and gagged — kicked Karl LaGrand in the shins and L aG rand then w ent berserk, slashing Hartsock’s throat and stabbing him again and again, according to testimony. Border security to increase B y C a ssa n d r a B urrell A s s o c ia te d P ress WASHINGTON — The federal gov­ ernment is stepping up security mostly along the border ol Arizona and Texas to fight illegal immigration, said the nation’s top immigration official. The beefed up security will include 1,000 new border patrol agents. Doris Meissner, commissioner of the Im m ig ratio n and N a tu ralizatio n Service, also said the INS still is look­ ing for ways to deal with a shortage of detention space but does not plan to release illegal aliens convicted ol such crimes as burglary, assault, and drug offenses to make room for offenders with more serious criminal records Last week, Rep. Lam ar Sm ith, RT exas, and Rep. Elton G allegly, RCalif., sent a letter to Attorney General Janet Reno demanding that Meissner be replaced if she does not act quickly to improve detention and deportation of ■ le g a l a lie n s. T h ey also said they hoped the letter would stop any discuslio n o f releasing criminal aliens ■ T he INS will send 395 agents to ¡firixonn, 485 agents to Texas,’ 83 to California 15 to New Mexico and 22 to ■ three places on thi border with Canada, JjM a qy r t o i l reporters WadiMHhY.r,»8)8 budget stands at $ 3 .i|p iio n for Opinion Boos & Bravos BRAVO — To the 15 ASU students who joined 40 UofA and NAU students to protest the proposed $6 million university budget cuts. These kids took time out o f their day to lighten the load on each o f our bank accounts. , BRAVO — To the state o f C alifornia for lim iting gun purchases to one a month. W hile gun enthusiasts are crying fo u l, w e ’re p leased w ith the new law, which targets those who buy in bulk and resell on the black market. W hile it’s doubtful the law would ever get past Arizona’s m assive gun-loving population, we at least hope it catches on around the rest o f the coun­ try. BOO — To the Downtown Tempe Com m unity for trying to pass o ff an additional 900 “free” parking spaces as a big favor for Tempe residents. W hile the s p a c e s , w h ic h a re o w n e d b y C h a s e B a n k c a rd Services, are a nice bonus, they’re not exactly free. Friday and Saturday nights the spots will run you five bucks. And don’t count on parking there during class­ es, because they’re not available then/ It looks like the real w inners in this deal are the D TC and C hase, which stand to make an extra $9,000 every weekend, minus, of course, m aintenance costs. BRAVO — To C ongress fo r finally m anaging to wrap up and throw out the whole Clinton/Lewinsky scandal. It may have been a prolonged maneuver, but at this point we don’t care. W e’re simply ecstatic that it’s no longer the main story oh the evening news. BRAVO — To the state legislature for finally figur­ ing out that funding education includes universities, And for realizing that initial budget projections were o ff the m ark and fixing them. W e’re glad they were able to admit they were wrong; w e’re all breathing a little e a s ie r now th a t p ro p o se d b u d g e t c u ts lo o k unlikely. ' BOO — To the state o f Alabam a for defending a law that bans the sale o f sex toys. The ban, signed by the same governor who backed prayer in school, punishes those who peddle sex toys with up to a year in jail and a $10,000 fine. We agree with the six wom en fighting the law who said what adults do in their bedroom is their own business. Butt out, Alabama. BRAVO — To A SU fo r its p artn ersh ip w ith the Sm ithsonian Institute. This is one m ore step in the continuing struggle to better A S U ’s reputation and education. Not only that, but it gets Scottsdale off the h o o k fo r its em b arrassin g fa ilu re , th e S c o ttsd a le Galleria. BRAVO — To the Associated Students o f ASU for initiating and helping to push through a privacy bill that seeks to stop the use o f social security numbers for student ID ’s at the state’s three public universities. Finally, ASASU is doing something worthwhile. BRAVO — To Hillary Clinton fo r her bravado. Sure, everyone will criticize her political am bitions, along With those o f Libby Dole, but we give these women a big thumbs up. Tripp fum bles in m akeover attem pt On Judgment Day last Friday, Linda .C im h a r Tripp suddenly re-emerged onto the me^rumV “ "lumnist public scene not only with a new, slim­ mer figure, but a new message: she had been acting as a mother figure to Monica Lewinsky during the Clinton affair. With that began Tripp’s latest public relations campaign to rehabilitate her, image. The trial she had instigated was coming to an end and her only hope of redeeming her image was to launch a powerful and persuasive campaign. To construct a successful PR crusade, she needed to focus on the four critical com ponents o f every cam paign: research, action, communication and evaluation. The research had already been done. For the past year, Tripp had been viewed as the disloyal friend of Monica Lewinsky and one of the conspirators against Clinton. The media denounced her. “Saturday Night Live” debased her. And Monica told the jury back in July she hated Tripp. Her reputation was clearly tarnished. It was definitely time for action. After a long absence, Tripp appeared on the “Today” show last Friday to tell Katie Couric and the rest of the nation she was acting in Monica’s best interest when she went public with the Lewinsky-Clinton affair. In her teary two-hour interview, Tripp said, “If my daughter found her­ self in a situation such as this, where she was being abused, used, discarded-, I would hope that someone would come in and help her.!’ T ripp’s definition o f “help” is about as blurry as Clinton’s interpretation of sex. Next was CNN’s “Larry King Live”, where Tripp talked about Monica’s suicidal thoughts and her continuous phone call — phone calls that became so excessive Tripp was forced to reveal the affair to her children. Her attempt to rally sympathy here failed. We are expected to feel bad that she was forced to discuss the “birds and the bees” with her kids, as if no other parents in the nation found themselves in the same situation? Thanks to her public outcry, parents, educators and the media had the unfortunate task of explaining the undignified affair to our youth. T ripp also revealed on the CNN talk show that Lewinsky was not suicidal over her break-up with the pres­ ident, but with fern. “(Monica’s) biggest fear was that he Would find out she shared her story with somebody else. That Was her suicide threat,” Tripp said. So, Mommy Dearest decided to go public with the infor­ mation. That doesn’t seem very maternal or an appropriate way to curb Lewinsky’s suicidal tendencies. Her attempt to seem motherly is obviously failing. Will the newest “Mother Tripp” campaign work? Her first I-am-just-like-you campaign failed back in July when she tried to stress to the American people that she was a typical American pulled into a horrible affair. She isn’t just like us. Many people wouldn’t have gone public with the sordid details of the affair, nor would they have Wired their friend or convinced a love-sick intern to save a semen-stained dress. This original campaign unfor­ tunately never made it past the federal courthouse steps where she first launched it. And I don’t believe the new “Mom” campaign. Most mother-daughter banter isn’t about having oral sex with a married man. Most mothers wouldn’t endorse Tripp’s “orthodox” discipline method of publicizing her “daugh­ ter’s” mistake and ruining her professional and social life forever. And lastly, any mom Who knew her daughter was suicidal over an unkept secret wouldn’t seize the opportuni­ ty to leak its explosive contents. The Tripp-Lewinsky con­ nection is far from epitomizing any healthy mother-daugh­ ter relationship. With any PR campaign, the message is important. In Tripp’s case, her newest message lacks credibility and acceptance. If the evaluation of her newest campaign brings grim results as is expected, Tripp may have to embark on a third campaign. We can anticipate in die coming weeks a barrage of new strategies and campaigns coming from the Tripp camp. Tripp may jump on the Taco Bell wagon with a “Yo quiero un appeal,” message. She may opt for the vintage Nike slo­ gan “I want be like Linda Tripp,” campaign. My advice: “Linda Tripp, tumor-causing, semen-staining, smelly, puk­ ing habit.” Stay tuned, Meghan Gamber is a senior studying broadcast journal­ ism and can be reached at gamber@asu.edu WMM ilp iP ii W M M M ËËË8SmaÊBmËËÊSÊm Ê im m ■ ^m ^^Ë ^> . Kara Shire; Editor Dave Woodfill, Managing Editor Alicia A. Caldwell V i i —r— ~ ¿ C i t y Editor Lidia Kelly ————————————Assistant City Editor Mario A. Lopez •• . —Opinion Editor Chrisvi Foist — ——— — — —— —NewsEdi tor Jeremy Hein —— — — —.-------———Photo Editor Doug Flanagan — —-————- — -------- ——— Sports Editor Jonathan Inge —— ——— Graphi cs Coordinator Percy Edjiaiino Jr. —------— ----------- —— ————— Magazine Editor Wadalawala, Brad Whisler. Alyson Hurt Reporters-—— ---- ——— ■Asst. 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Marketing Tearn—— ————— -———— — — Angelee King Leah Fasten, Soley H artei, Hyun Um, Sam aruddin S te w a rt Classifieds-— Columnists Kate Desio, Amanda G reen, Paul Holley, Katie McGee, Jeanette Ploium. ■ —— ----- —---- —- Scott Bracken, Stephanie Conner, Justin Doom , Brant Galloway, Scott D. Gillette, Stephanie D . Johnson, Shawna Kemppainen, G regor McGavin, Megan Nielsen, Brian Policoff, Timothy Scott, Joe -----— —— —— The State Press is published M onday through Friday during th e aca­ dem ic year, ex c ep t holidays and exam periods, a t M atthews C e n te r, Room 2, A rizona S tate University, T em pe, Ariz., 852871502. W e d o n o t an sw er questions b f a general nature. The State Pressis the only newspaper exclusively published for and c ir-. culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published, in this news­ paper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. S tu d en t M ed ia Phone N u m b e rs ------ State Press Newsroom 965-2292 State Press Magazine 965-1695 Student Media information 965-7572 Advertising 965-6555 Classifieds 965-6735 On the web http://wvyw.statepress.com Opinion State Prats fop Friday, February I f , I f f f Campaign reform essential to cure social inequity Right now, an 89-year-old great- W W f f t H P grandmother named Dons Haddock is walking her way across the Arizona desert. She began the trek in Pasadena, Calif., walking 10 miles a day, and hopes to be in Washington, D.C., by November. It’s not senility that has sent her on this trek across the country. Rather, she is a woman acutely aware of perhaps the single most important issue facing our nation, an issue at the heart of social change—namely, cam­ paign-finance reform. It sounds like a let-down of sorts, just a part of the usual Capitol Hill rhetoric. But Haddock has taken this burden upon herself in order to draw public attention to the dire need for reforms in our electoral process, the very founda­ tion of our law-making body. Campaign finance reform doesn’t seem all that interesting when held up next to any number of real social problems like violence or drug abuse. But when certain problems don’t go away, it’s time to examine what contributes to the persistence of those prob­ lems. ■ lit’s becoming increasingly evident that the ineptitude of our elected representatives has become a barrier to social progress. Our government has turned into a puppet regime sold to the highest bidders. Our representatives are merely advocates hired put to special interests. Something has clearly gone wrong. The fact that money win« elections isn ’t a secret. Television ads are necessary to gain public exposure, but they don’t corné cheap. The problem isn’t the money, but Where it’s coming from. A report released by Arizona Common Cause found that in Arizona, 75 percent of contri­ butions to state elections were tied to special interests and lobbyists. In fact, the top donor during the current election cycle was Bob Fannin, â representative of IBM, Mobile, the Arizona Diamondbacks and various other business inter­ ests. National politics is even more egregious. The ‘96 elec­ tion year reached record levels when almost $2,7 billion was spent on campaigns. Currently, there exists no spend­ ing limits on what is referred to as soft money. In 1996, the Supreme Court ruled that soft money—funds used by national party committees on issue ads may not be limited under the guise of free speech. These ads are simply endorsements for candidates tied to specific issues. Corporations are allowed to bypass limits on campaign contributions by funneling it through the National Republican and Democratic Committees. These committees, in turn, endorse and financially support certain candidates Who will best represent the interests of the lead­ ing contributors to their campaign. It’s a matter of political survival that you don’t neglect the people who got you elected. The result is that our public policy is being dictated by a wealthy elite who seek to increase their wealth and secure their power. So when corporations are given enormous influence in policy-making, who represents the interests of the poor and the powerless? Nobody. Crime, violence, and drug abuse aré problems plaguing the lower-class of this country and nothing is being done to solve them. Getting tough on crime isn’t working. The war on drugs has failed. Most criminals are bom out of a lack of opportunity and support. The fact that public education is funded through local property taxes has trapped the poor into an endless cycle of poverty. Every once in a while, there will be a story about somebody making it out, somebody working against all odds to make something of his or her life, The reason those stories stick out is because they don’t occur often. They are cases of extraordinary individuals rising above the barriers set before them. But those barriers shouldn’t exist. It should go without saying that people deserve equal opportunity. Crime and drug abuse are merely the natural by-products of a govern­ ment that supports the persistence of social inequality. If the legitimate means to be successful are cut off from a group of people, it follows that they will resort to illegiti­ mate sources. People are products of their environment. They respond to what they know. The world isn’t a perfect place, but it’s something to strive for. Whenever I used to complain as a kid that some­ thing wasn’t fair, my dad would always say to me, Son, life isn’t fair, I hated it when he said that. The thing about it is, I think life Should be fair, at least in those aspects that are within our control. There are certain ideals worth upholding and the only way the government is ever going to change is if we change the people who run it. So, to Doris Haddock, I say keep up the good fight. The under­ dogs need someone on their side. Brad Whisler is a junior studying sociology and can be reached at brad.whisler@asu.edu. R e a g a n w ro n g ly d e ifie d b y S a lm o n A m erica , is I ' the land o f I 'n i l # Mai p g p lplftr b , Pavlovian patri­ o tic r i magpgyl 1 ' and the celluloid l t ’s behiftd our fascination. .V w ith I the tr.' “ ru g g e d ia d iv id a ilH il" At cow boy, the cop, the astronaut ; w ho w ill o v erco m e a ll o d d s, 7 d am n it, b ecau se he lo v es bis | Mom and her apple pie and tfae ,t* |j | ;;7’- I t ’s why people w ith slightly ; undersized brains c a n 't uader1 1 stan d th a t b u rn in g m fla g y o u bought at K -M art for 20 bucks I | isn’t really a ¿lap ip dead w m o t m . •„».*■* T- "T; ‘ Wrird that no justice, had no virtue existed before the birth ■ B M United States, which still II jjH I a m o n o p o ly o n a ll .th in g s moral and decent. Ajfcd U iere'K n o th in g m uch w ro n g w ith Hi m , provided you ' lp$ej( i a m in d th e re ’s a w hole . world out there beyond our shores v and th e re 's more going on than the “Hiss-Boom-Bah” crowd lets *' her inhabitants have plenty to be proud of- It’s jwrihnfly healthy, as long as yon k n o w th e d iffe re n c e b etw een g|$yj!tbol and reality, between myth « w N f e t t . / '' •• • *- * ’■ . Somebody needs to explain that | to Matt Salmon. 1 :'/ It seems o u r Republican con­ gressman T^- and Arizona’s front­ ru n n e r fo r th e coveted title o f “ Lord o f Delusions” I— is indent 3 on p u ttin g fo rm e r P re sid e n t R o n ald R eag an on M ount Rushmore. I’m all for it, too, and not just because 1 think be might hD dS, ^ -You see, Ronnie (according to : Salmon) is personally responsible fo r sin g le -h a n d e d ly d e fe a tin g com m unism . T h is h ap p en ed at tu rn in g th e w o rld ’s p re m ie r lender into the prim ary d eb to r natio n ,! assume. ■ - “Ronald Reagan led America to "Victory- in the Cold W ar, despite fierce;opposition from those who despised his aggressive posture tow ard th e S o v ie t O n io n ,” the father-figure-challenged Salmon wrote in an opinion piece recently p u b lish e d i n 'T i e A rizo n a I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I ■7 R eagan to o k on th e “e n tire ;Washington foreign-policy estab­ lish m e n t »— h u n d re d s o f aeadem ies, bureaucrats and experts ^ £ ^ a d ::chsiHetiged th e ir p o stVietnam assumption that detente required America to acquiesce to Sovhdterioft* The exact aetm q o f this “Soviet te rro r” Salm on d o esn ’t care to expound on,;but I’m sure- it w as] simply just another bratreh of the insidious communist threat from which the form er star o f C attle Q a e m d M ontana so selflessly | un d erto o k the responsibility o f j protecting Americans. L ike in N ic a ra g u a , w here Reagan funneled billions o f dolelected governm ent because its le a d e rs le a n e d a little to o fa r toward socialism for his'udhBm H tra tio n ’s tastes. F orget the fa c t t h a t ; S a n d in ista p arty lead e r D an iel' O rteg a■ -spent nearly t p i p decades in prison aw aiting the ch a n ce to answ er h is c o u n try -. m en’s' call fo r freedom from the j .oppression o f a C IA -sponsored puppet government. 7 7 < |||§ § |t, as C ist«» did b g | i j him, Ortega first tried to set up diplomatic and comnrercial rela­ tions between hlscountry and Die Ignited S ta te s, b e fo re b ein g roundly approach the S oviet U nion fo r help. Reagan demonized Ortega, devil. Like the Ayatollah Khomeini th® Cl Asupported Shah (w ho had driven his ow n people to the brink o f sta rv a tio n ) h ad to h av e been w rong. W hy, j u s t look a t the clothes he wore and the religion be practiced — there had to be something wrong with him. It was simply un-American. But that's not all Ronnie did for “In addition to b u r ...dramatic, victory in the Cold War, Reagan in au g u ra ted t h e unprecedented econom ic growth we have been restored America’s hope and faith in the fu tu re," S alm on gushes. A nd h e ’s a b so lu te ly rig h t. Nothing restores a nation’s confi­ dence like racking up trillions of dollars in debt in' order to answer the never-ending cries o f the military-industrial complex that is the sole benefactor o f your mindless policies Why. ju st consider bow many bright-eyed youngsters benefited from breakthrough Reagan prop~inis like Iran-Contra! If Salmon ever awakes from his R eagan? w o rsh ip p in g stu p o r, h e ’ll n i l i r e H H H build a mountain out of a raolebiit. G regor M c G tv in is a :senior r| | studying journalism and can be rei avdaddy@ im ap4.asu.edu. Gun enthusiast responds In two-and-a-half years of reading the State Press, I have seen many editorials taking Sides in discussing various gun control debates taking place across our country. I have not, however, read an article that was I sim ply an unabashed assault on the intelligence, morality and decency of law-abiding gun enthusiasts — until today. Justin Doom’s article, “Guns Tools Not to be Toyed With,” does not strive to accomplish anything besides to vent Mr. Doom’s beliefs about gun owners. To get his point across, Mr. Doom uses brilliant persuasive techniques such as calling gun-shooting “stupid,” “not fun anymore” and calling people who shoot guns “yokels.” In the most insulting inference made, Mr. Doom attacks parents who teach their chil­ dren sport shooting. To imply that these parents are so obsessed with shooting guns as to not take their children to baseball games, movies or the circus would be laughable, if not so insulting, to m yself and others who learned sport shooting from their parents. Fortunately, Mr. Doom gives us his enlightened ideas of good hobbies, such as collecting baseball cards or jenitting. Thanks for the advice, but you can keep your knitting needles, I’ll keep my guns. Geoffrey S. Litchney Junior Education History lesson In Stephanie Johnson’s column (“Goldwater needs no ‘nam e,’” Feb. 18), paragraph 6, she stated, landslide presidential defeat against the victorious Eisenhower in 1964.” Hate to tell you this, but Sen. G oldw ater and President Eisenhower both were Republicans. Mr. Eisenhower was president during the 1950’s and was I I su cceed ed by John F. K ennedy in 1960. Sen. j G oldw ater lost in a landslide election in 1964 to Lyndon B. Johnson (maybe a relative of Stephanie Johnson’s). We couldn’t let your historical revision go unnoticed. Perhaps you should correct your histor­ ical revision before any of your fellow students quote you. I Elaine A. Sw eet I Ruth A. Baer : Fiscal Planning & Analysis I 06 ;:• 6$s T o r r n a a y , T^raroSBTy..;*^^n r y y ^ | Program seeks ‘outstanding’ professors fo r biennial award B y Jodie Lau State Press a love for knowledge, and that knowledge is contagious by his or her enthusiasm,’’ When George Bohlander, management Fisher said. “We hope this will be an on­ pro fesso r, received the ASU Parents going opportunity for teachers to be Association Professorship, he put half of rewarded for their outstanding contribu­ his $20,000 aw ard into a scholarship tion;” endowment for students. Biology professor Richard Satterlie, the “I wanted to recognize the students with 1994-96 professorship recipient, said the a scholarship rather than just use the money award is a high honor. on myself,” said Bohlander, the 1996-98 “I think it’s the recognition that is the award recipient. most important. The money is just an add­ He chose not to use the money to fund a on,” he said. student assistant. Instead, Bohlander said it Satterlie will serve as chairman for the was a gesture for students who helped him professorship selection com m ittee. get the award. Representatives from the campus colleges ¡Students, faculty and staff have the will sit on the board. Selection will be opportunity this month to nominate a pro­ based on several factors, including teaching fessor for the ASU Parents Association’s credentials and student involvement. two-year award for 1999-2001. The award recipient will be announced The association will provide the recipi­ ent with $10,000 over two academic years A pril 12 at the Parents A ssociation and an additional $10,000 to fund a student Recognition Dinner in the Memorial Union. Fisher encourages students and faculty assistant. The Parents Fund, an endowment from to share the recognition of the award. “It’s a wonderful way for colleagues to ASU parents, is providing the money for support teaching by coming (to the din­ the award. “(The award) is to give thanks to the ner),” she said. Nomination forms are available in the professors for their student involvements,” said Christina Kinnear, programs coordina­ Parent Programs Office in the Student Services Building. Nominations must be tor of the Parent Programs Office. Joan Fisher, the aw ard's coordinator, m ailed in by M arch 1 to the Parents said this is an excellent opportunity to rec­ A ssociation P rofessorship Selection Committee, Parent Programs Office, P.O. ognize professors on campus. “We’re looking for a professor who has Box 870112, Tempe, AZ 85287-0112. Not even your personal psychic could have predicted this N o w L e a s e t o r O n ly . mm ^ PerMonth For 36 months+ tax & *2,000 doom! Nothing Extra! The All New 1999 Protegé LX Comes With Standard: AM/FM/CD stereo w /fb u r speakers N ew , m o re p o w e rfu l T.6L D0HC engine Pow er w indo w s, locks & m irrors Cruise co n tro l * 6 0 /40 S p lit-d o w n fo ld re a r seat ^ As see n o n C h a n n e l 12 ! Com e in & re g is te r to w in a n e w 1999 P atented inde pen den t re a r tw in -tra p e z o id a l lin k suspension • F ro n t and rear sta b a lize r bars P ro te g e LX. 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W | > ^ IM v M l1 R jlill, T ib lfty f iir i l i r t c . l i l i i l k t ' nM ^ore^than 1 pace that w ill help our student panel o f decision) .__________ Richard Portman Tlie DowHunterrOscur). ierëhips 'I V . f.iretfalhr r N w iliv illr TICKETS O N SALE N O W ! ( 8 0 0 ) 7 8 0 -A R T S ail Code DANCE • MUSIC • VIDEO THURSDAY THE 0RI6INAL mm 25C NIGHT $2,00 DRAFTS FRIDAY 32u, HONSTER BCEBSGL.ITEAS Law College se m in a rlo focus on N ative A m erican By A ndrea Balsky State Press The ASU College of Law’s Indian Legal Program Will host a seminar about land, resource and culture issues within tribal communities, to explore how conflicts in these areas could be resol ved. The sem inar is scheduled for next Thursday and Friday in Armstrong Hall. Sandra H allenbeck, senior program coordinator of the College of Law, said the seminar will include lectures about tribal economics, environmental issues and cul­ tural survival of tribes. There will be also discussions about the protection of Native American graves, tribal sovereignty and land-use planning. Keith Smith, the legal program coordi­ nator in the College of Law, said the pro­ gram is important to ASU because it will provide inform ation that is relevant to Native Americans and tribes that are largely represented within the state. You'll never know unless you read your 2f o i l 4-7 STARTS AT 7PM NO COVER FOR LADIES BEFORE 10PM F ie e Food B uffet 2 fo il D rinks til 9 p m SATURDAY D_____ GROOVY 32 oz. MONSTER BEERS RUTEAS HOROSCOPE In th e CLASSIFIED section Page 19 LADIES NIGHT Happy Hour “The locale of ASU is close to many of the tribal nations,” he said. “A lot of people have interest in tribal economic develop­ ment.” Smith said the target audience of the program is ASU students, faculty and any­ one from the community with an interest in tribal issues, ■ Hallenbeck said the seminar’s address­ ing of tribal issues is one of the goals of die • Indian Legal Program. “It’s a scholarly sem inar,” she said. “One of the tasks (of the Indian Legal Program) is teaching research. It’s a way for us to share tribal communities.” Smith said the symposium is a way for the Indian Legal Program to provide rele­ vant information about Indian tribes to the community “The symposium is one of the events we have to promote dedication to Indian com­ munities,” he said. For more information, call 965-6413. 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We W ill Be On Campus Feb 23rd At The Super Recruiting Day In The M em orial Union, 2 n d Floor. OR Fax Your Resume To 753-6740 A M f lU I T A C E RENT-A-CAR Advantage is an Equal Opportunity Employer. MDS Harris Together, W e 're M akin g Lives B e tte r 4639 South 36th Street, Phoenix vwvw.nndsharns.com/rcrtyrecruit.htm fnr Friday; February 79 i mam an t m m a tm mm P f M M Ih IW V H I.f W i f fW Ü I1 Ü M ffv ASU police reported the following incidents Wednesday: • Three students reported their bikes stolen from various loca­ tions on campus. • A student reported his cellular phone stolen from the Language and Literature Building. , • A student reported that someone removed two hubcaps from her car while it was parked in Structure 5. Tempe police reported the following incidents Thursday: • Police arrested a 29-year-old man of unknown address Monday at 1120 W, Warner Road on charges o fdriving under the influence of alcohol, DUI with a blood-alcohol level over . 10 and leaving the scene of an accident Officers said the man failed to control his car and hit another vehicle, then attempted to leave the scene on foot. He was treated for facial injuries stemming from the accident at Tempe S t Luke’s Hospital and lata1was booked into die Tempe City Jail. • A 34-year-old man o f unknown address was arrested Monday at Fry’s, 2700 W. Baseline Road, on charges of shoplifting. Police said he took and drank a bottle of Jack Daniel’s liquor. The man was booked into the Tempe City Jail and held to see a judge. • Police arrested a 20-year-old Mesa man Monday on charges of burglary at Arizona Mills Mall. Officers said the man P E ' B y D avid G oodman A ssociated Press R F O R M A C INTHE RURAL & UNIVERSITY E CORNERSTONE 829-7473 MCAT • LSAT • GM AT • G RE MÏ “àÉâs“^“ ‘ ^ reasons you should t a k e T h e Princeton Review THE BEST TEACHERS / / O u r teach ers a re exp erts. They have a ll scored in th e 9 5 th p e ie e tiftle o r h ig h e r on th e test th e y tfe a |h ancL h av e c o m p leted our rig o ro is Aq in jp y process. T h ey k n o w w h a t IV ta k e iT o g e t you y o u r h ig h est score. PERSONAL ATTENTION W e lim it o u r class s ize so w e can focus in on y o u r in d iv id u a l strengths YOU’LL LOVE OUR COURSE O v e r 9 0 % o f o u r s tu d e n ts a r e re co m m e n d ed to us b y th e ir friend s o r c o lle a g u e s . Spring classes forming now! * MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. — A teen-ager who impregnated his sister when she was 12 was sentenced to six months in jail and six months on an electronic tether Thursday. He could also be deported to his native India. The girl’s immigrant family had to go to court last year to win the right to take her to Kansas for a late-term abortion. Late-term abortions are ille­ gal in Michigan. Her 18-year-old brother, who was 17 when the girl got pregnant, pleaded w w w ,.„r e v i e w , c o m Thé teen-ager was also given three years of probation. Im m igration law req u ires the deportation of non-citizens who com­ mit what the government considers “aggravated felo n ie s;” said INS D istrict D irector C arol Jen ifer in Detroit. “He is not eligible to remain in this country,” Jenifer said. The parents, factory Workers who came to the United States 18 months ago, said they will also leave the coun­ try if their son is deported. S ports season pass. See page 13. STU D EN T TRAVEL That voice Inside you head teKi« you to hit the road is not to be messed with; • 1st Person Pays Admission • 2nd Person Skates FREE • Skate Rental Extra O C E A N S ID E IC E A R E N A W ith ou r s ta ff o f experienced tra ve le rs, a global n e tw ork o f because w hether o ffice s, great prices, tic k e t you knew i t or net fle x ib ility and a ton o f tra v e l you r in n e r c h ild is - services, w e know firs th a n d w earing a backpack. w h a t i t takes to pu t together a m ind-blow ing trip ... 1520 N. McClintock, Tempe 941-0944 Expires 5/31/99 www.iskateaz.com CollegeNighi Every Monday is your night to skate to THE PRINCETON REVIEW 6 02.9 6 / 1480 Reports compiled by State Press reporter Jayson Peters. guilty in December to criminal sexual conduct. He could have gotten two years in prison. The Im m igration and N aturalization Service said it will deport him when he finishes his jail term. Judge Roland Olzark and prosecu­ tor Steven Kaplan said the parents bear significant responsibility for putting their son and daughter in the same small bedroom. “I see a young man with an excel­ lent future, absent this offense,” the judge said. a n d w eakn esses . • W e understand th a t p erso n al atten tio n is c ritic a l to y o u r success. entered Jars of Clay through die back door and raided die cash register on two separate occasions, removing $90 in cash Jan. 27 and $2,000 in cash Feb. 10. The man was booked info the Tempe City Jail. •A 38-year-old Mesa man was arrested Tuesday near the inter­ section of South Priest Drive and East Southern Avenue on outstanding Tempe and county warrants for false reporting to police, driving on a suspended license, possession of marijua­ na and possession of drug paraphernalia. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail. * Police arrested a Tempe man of unknown age Wednesday at 1328 E. Apache Blvd. on charges of possession of dangerous drags. Officers contacted die man regarding paridng-lot loiter­ ing arid found mushrooms on the floorboard of his car. The man was booked into the Tempe City Jail. • A 23-year-old Mesa man was arrested Wednesday near the intersection of East Sixth Street and South Mill Avenue on charges of possession of narcotic drags and possession of drag paraphernalia. Police found a substance believed to be cocaine in his pocket. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail arid released. Teen accused o f impregnating sister gets six months jail tim e, faces deportation n» Sir l«w» k nmémi ipK>ieivniw. Hhum snitormcitty correasaatinw foi support uns sototy, ira Im i fetes tohecpù »arm's rm m ankle and hcctsnog Plus it's Ught enough to make "psi ont m>œmtle'‘som!thiag)*>u said thrmmlma&i. N Clfill!! 8 - llp m $ 3 .5 0 per person STA TRAVEL WE’VE BEENTHERE. w w w .s ta tra v e l.c o m 1625 E. Weber * 968-9600 nmes T rials & T ribulations B y Jo n a th a n I nge Stic kw o r ld M it KWW I nnEUBKfl “ H e r e ’s a n i d e a . . . h o w ‘b o u t w e s k i p t h e f i g h t a n d g o s t r a i g h t t o m a k in g u p .” B igger T han H uge B y B r ian Balc h u m a s C h ic k e n - stick B ug Face B y J im W o dark i v 0> VitVc Ms "Itare'V shorts o£ cWicjfcS ^ / / Jim W odaik® 1998 All Rights Reserved s S h a r e in t h e 7 1 2 S . C o lle g e (C o lle g e & U n iv e rs ity ) 9 6 7 -4 0 4 9 B U L I G Glorvof C C a m p u s o r n e r llairiiY of defeat, • Beer & Soda • Photo Developing • //ea/M <£ Beauty Aids 6 0 3 S . M ill (A c ro s s fro m C o ffe e P la n ta tio n ) 8 5 8 -0 5 6 7 B eer only at C ollege A ve. D H T MICHELOB seepace13. Bring your IDs Sale ends 2/21/99 YOU C A N ’T A F F O R D N O T TO H A V E A P A R T Y A T T H I S P R I C E Sports "They were rusty, but even if you’re rusty you ought to make more than four baskets”.— ASU basketball coach Rob Evans on his team’s poor first-half performance $ £ £ § j||||g g | Sun Devils go ice-cold i I st half, lose to Ducks By N ic k P iecôro Sta te P ress the game really wasn’t lost in the end, it was lost in the first 20 minutes. For all the hope that the Sun Devils’ A 13-3 ASU fun cut the Ducks’ lead to men’s basketball team had of reaching thé one with 1:52 remaining, but Oregon (14-9, NCAA Tournament, it didn’t carry over to 6-8), behind free throws, was able to hold on. the court the first half Thursday night “We talked about that they were going to against Oregon. Whatever the reason, an make a run at sometime in the gam e,” out-of-sync ASU team could muster only Oregon head coach E rnie Kent said. four of its shots to go in during the first 20 “W e’ve got to be ready to step up and minutes, which, according to head coach weather that run and keep our composure. Rob Evans, was too “We felt like we much to overcome. were in the driver’s Men's Ho o p s “We dug ourselves seat.” such a big hole,” A three-pointer Evans said. “It’s diffi­ by Mike Batiste, who Weite Fargo Arena, 2 p.m. TV: FOXNorthwest R a KMVP 860 AM Radio: cult to come out of d idn’t start after such a big hole. breaking a team rule T hat’s one of the earlier in the week, ( l i n i . 6-8 P IC IO ) (1 3 -1 2 -S-8 P - KO things that this bas­ tied the game at 75twtiart: ketball team has kind Josh Steinthal, 6-4 so. 75 with 37.1 seconds Kenny Crandall, 6-4 fr. 1 l.l ppg.2.5 rpg I 6.3 ppg, 2.5 rpg o f struggled with rem aining. On the most of the season.” next possession, Clifton Jones, 6-8 jr. | Bobby Lazor, 6-9 sr. Down by as many O regon’s Terik 5.5 ppg, 6.9 rpg 18.0 ppg, 8.6 rpg as 15, a resilien t, Brown drove through Jason Heide, 6-10 jr. Mike Batiste, 6-8 sr. panic-struck team the lane and drew a 10.8 ppg, 5.5 rpg 16.8 ppg, 7.1 rpg fought back to make foul on ASU’s Kenny it close, but Bobby C randall with 5.3 \ M court Lazor’s three-pointer Deaundra Tanner, 6-2 so. \ seconds remaining. Eddie House, 6-1 jr 14.8 ppg. 5.5 rpg j 19.6 ppg, 4.7 rpg from way behind the Brown made one of arc w ith seconds two free throws, giv­ Ramunas Petraitis, 6-3 jr. t Alton Mason, 6-2 so. rem aining m issed ing the Ducks a 766.9 ppg, 3.7 rpg 7.7 ppg, 3.9 apg arid O regon left 75 lead. Wells Fargo Arena After a time out, with a 76-75 win in Crandall inbounded front of 5,823 mostly-quiet fans. to guard Ron DuBois, who passed it to “I think we had more o f a sense of Lazor who hoisted up a long three-pointer urgency (in the second half) that we should that clanked off the left of the rim. have had the whole game,” Lazor said. Like when guard Eddie House didn’t “They were rusty, but even if you’re execute at the end of the UofA game in rusty you ought to make more than four mid-January, Evans was frustrated by his baskets,” Evans said. team’s finish. He had hoped to get the bail The Sun Devils (13-12, 5-8 in the Pac- into the hands of either guard Alton Mason 10) shot 18.2 percent (four of 22) in the or DuBois, since House had fouled out at first half. They did regroup in the second the two minute mark. Turn to Duch soup page 16 half, shooting 64.5 percent (20 of 31). But Saturday's tip-off OregonStatevs. ASU m jeremy nein or tne state tress ASU forward Chad Prewiit battles Oregon’s Mike Carson for a rebound Thursday night Prewitt started in place of Mike Batiste, who broke a team rule, as the Ducks won 76-75 at Wells Fargo Atena. ASU thumps Cougars 16-1 in opener Waldrip shuts down form er teammates in complete game 8-hitter; Em ster goes Z-4 with homer, 5 RBI to lead Sun Devils' 17-hit attack B y C h r is C a r lo c k S t a t e P ress ; The home fun was just the beginning for ASU as it tacked on five runs in the seventh and seven in the Things got out of hand last night at Packard Stadium. eighth. Ernster came up with the bases loaded in his What started off as a good, close college baseball next two at-bats, walking once and smashing a two-run game turned into a laugher as ASU (14-4) thumped single in the eighth. BYU (6-6) 16-1 in the series opener. ASU got on the board in the second when Mitch Sun Devil hurler Will Waldrip, Jones drove in a run on a fielder’s facing the seh o d i he transferred choice. Jones then scored in the from for the first time, scattered fourth on a double play ball giving Things work out eight hits in his third com plete the Sun Devils a 2-0 lead. game of the young season. His 13 when you throw T he C o u g ars had a ch an ce strikeouts tied a career high and his fo r a b ig in n in g in th e s ix th , strikes. It's easy 5-1 start is the best for a Sun Devil loading the bases with one out. pitcher since Phill Lowery did the But W aldrip got Kevin B ilis to when you've got same in 1995. strik e ou t, gave up the in field guys behind you “T h in g s w ork out w hen you sin g le to M ic h a e l D a v ie s and throw strikes,” Waldrip said. “It’s th e n stru c k out C raig H ow es. like Bloomquist ea sy w hen y o u ’ve g o t guys W a ld rip is on p a c e to w in at and Beinbrink behind you like B loom quist and le a s t ten g am es th is se a s o n , B ein b rin k b lo c k in g b a lls w ith which would make him the first blocking balls with their chests.” p la y e r to do so s in c e L ow ery their chests. The Sun Devil offense pounded turned the trick in 1994. out 17 hits and broke open a close The rout was a nice start to the Will Waldrip, game in the seventh. „ th ree gam e serie s fo r the Sun ASÜ pitcher A fte r an in fie ld sin g le by Devils. B Y U ’s M ic h a e l D av is cu t the “It gives us a lot of momen­ ASU lead to 2-1 in the top of the sixth, Mark Em ster tum,” Ernster said. “But we gotta come out tomorrow blasted a two-run hom er over the left field fence to for a new game.” give the Sun Devils some breathing room in the bot­ ASU will send Chad Pennington (3-2, 2.10) to the tom o f the inning. mound today at 1 p.m. to face lefty Jordan Opdahl, “My teammates were telling me inside,” Emster said. while Jon Switzer (2-1, 4.91) will face Micah Mangrum “I got the pitch I wanted.” on Sunday. 4 4 rt Jeremy Hein of the State Press Sun Devil southpaw Will Waldrip showed no signs of giving in to his former team­ mates, the BYU Cougars, on Thursday, as he tossed a complete-game eight hitter, allowing just one run and three walks while striking o ut 13. Sun Devils prepared for Ducks, raucous crowd By D oug Flanagan State Press Playing in front of rowdy, enthusiastic crowds in hostile environments is nothing new for the ASU women's basket­ ball team. Contests earlier in the season at Rutgers, ÜCSanta Barbara; Washington and Stanford are proof of that. But perhàps nothing the Sun Devils have encountered so far this year will prepare them for Friday’s game in Eugene, Ore., against the 18th-ranked Ducks. Oregon, in first place in the Pac-10 (along with UCLA) with an 11-2 record, is also leading the conference in atten­ dance and had a school record crowd of 7.134 for its Feb. 4 106-79 destroying of the Bruins, then ranked seventh in the country. ' “(McArthur) Court is just a really, really tough place to play,” ASU head coach Charli Turner Thorne said. “But we’ve had some tough road games with loud crowds, (so) I think we’re pretty used to that. I think they'11 be a good test to see how far we’ve come.’’ The Ducks attained their 19th and 20th victories of the season last weekend by defeating W ashington (6757) and W azzu (65-54) in the Evergreen State. Head co a c h Jo d y R u n g e sa id h er team is e x c ite d at the prospect o f once again playing in front of the home fans after a physical road trip. "We had a very difficult road trip up to Washington, so ’ we’re very anxious to be home in front of our crowd again.” she said. "There’s a lot more comfortability in playing at home in front of our crowd. I think (they) have a huge impact on our player's enthusiasm, and (they've) done a great job of attending. W e're hoping for some big crowds.” , : ASU (10-11.4-8 Pac-10), winners of two of its last three to clim b into Sixth place in the conference, w ill enter Women's Hoops tonight's tip-off McArthurGout, i t 8 pm p m tDriÿt tonieft TV FOXSpots SportsAnaona Arize Rado: KMVP 860 AM ASU YÜOreqon M l, 4-8 Pac-10, 6th) (20-4, 11 T , — ■ front court Leaf Newman, 5-9 so. Natasha O ’Brien, 5-11 sr. 10.2 ppg, 3.7 rpg 9.1 ppg, 3.4 rpg • I -■■.' • I ■■ * Theresa Jantzen, 6-3 fr. I Brianne Meharry, 6-1 so. •0.1 ppg, 6.1 rpg ->- j 10.1 ppg, 4.8 rpg Rachel Holt, 6-3 jr. 10.2 ppg, 5.3 rpg Kitch Kitchen, 5-7 jr. 6.6 ppg, 4.1 rpg Natalie Tucker, 5-9 so. 7.9 ppg, 5.1 apg Jenny Mowe, 6-5 so. 8.1 ppg, 5.1 rpg Shaquala Williams, 5-6 fr. 9.6 ppg, 3.1rpg Nicole Strange, 5-10 jr. 4.8 ppg, 2.4 apg Eugene with an altered game plan for­ m ulated to com bat the raucous Duck supporters. “In practice w e’ve been playing with some real loud music on the speakers (to) get ready, because we know it’ll be hard­ er to hear plays,” point guard Natalie Tucker said. "W e’ve been working on doing the hand signals, like me holding up my hand to (let the team) know what play they're running. “(Also), .it really helps in games like this to huddle a little bit more and talk to them and make sure they're tuned into the gam e and not thinking about the crow d. But w e’ve played in front of some real good crowds, so I think we’ll be okay. And we have more confidence now than we did back then.” The last tim e these two team s got together was on Jan. 23, when Oregon, then ranked 25th but com ing o ff an upset loss to UofA in Tucson, defeated the Sun Devils 68-52. ASU led at half 28-25, thanks to a 27-11 rebounding edge, but Oregon outscored ASU 14-4 to open the second half and later went on a 14-0 run to put the game away. “Obviously, w e're going to have to defend them , w hich I th ink we can do,” Turner Thorne said. “We felt like we did a good jo b against -them last time mixing up our defenses and hold­ ing th em . T hey h it som e big Shots when they went on their little run in the second half against us. (Also,) we had some balls that bounced out and off a rebound, they’d gather it up and hit a three-pointer.” Samaruddin Stewart of the State Press ASU’s Rachel Holt (left) and Kristine Sand battle for a loose ball with Oregon forward Brianne Meharry during the teams’ Jan. 23 68-52 Duck win in Tempe. Meharry is Oregon’s leading scorer at 10.1 points per game. Tucker added that they will have to play better transition defense and not turn the ball over as much (she had 10 Oregon State, which is looking to snap a three-game losing turnovers by herself in that game). “We’ll play the same defense as usual,” she said, “and streak. The Beavers’ leading scorer, Sissel Pierce, is now we’ve been working a lot in practice on help side because back after a knee scope in early January, and head coach in the second half last game, we gave away some transi­ Judy Spoelstra said getting her back has been beneficial to tion layups because our help side wasn’t ready. I think if *her young team that features four freshman starters. “We’re playing together a little bit better and got (our) timing we’re ready with that, it will help us stay in it.” Oregon is in a new and potentially uncomfortable posi­ back,” she said. “We were missing some key players for a cou­ tion — if it wins out, it will win its first-ever conference ple of weeks, and getting them back has been the main thing.” “It’s not like they have all these awesome scorers that championship due to tiebreakers, and while Runge is pleased with her team’s position, she said a concern could are necessarily going to kill you,” Turner Thorne said. be that unfamiliarity of being on top and taking other “They’ve had a lot of low-scoring, close games because squad’s best shots. they stay right with you. Their defense is pretty good. The “We’re going to have to be able to play our best game,” big key there is adjusting to their half-court trapping she said, adding ASU is playing as well as anyone in the defense and their mixing up man and zone defenses, conference right now. “We have a young team that hasn’t because they did that well against us last time.” been in this situation very often — going down the stretch Turner Thorne, who has admitted to thinking ahead run (being) a team that can get knocked out of first. That’s toward the possibility of a winning season, still wants her a different challenge for us, and not only do I think we’re squad to keep its focus on immediate matters — and this going to have to have our best foot forward, we have to be week, that means Oregon and Oregon State. prepared for the best game (ASU) has for us.” “Obviously, it’s very tough to sweep on the road in die PacOn Sunday, ASU will travel to Corvallis to take on 10,” she said. “But we’re going there with that mentality.” ASU men’s tennis team wants win, not revenge, vs. Gauchos B y R o b er t D eal "'■St a t e P ress . v The Sun Devil m en’s tennis team is set to play its last dual.m atch before the Pac-10 season against No. 31 UCSanta Barbara at 1:30 this afternoon at the W hiteman Tennis Center. ASU is 6-1 and on a five-gam e win­ ning streak going into the m atch, while the Gauchos are 1-5 and coming o ff of two straight losses. D espite UC S anta B arbara’s unim ­ p ressiv e record, its rigorous opening sch ed u le can be som ew hat m isle a d ­ in g , as th re e lo sse s w e re to to p -2 5 team s. “ ( S a n ta B a r b a r a ) is n o t a b a d team ,” senior Jeff W illiam s said. “W e ju s t have to m ake sure we keep play­ ing to w in.” The G auchos-are led by senior Cory G u y a n d j u n i o r S im o n S h e n , w ho aside from starting in the top tw o sin­ gles spots, com bine efforts on the top- seeded doubles court, where they are c u r r e n tly 4 -1 . S h e n , w ho r e c e n tly m oved up 16 spots to No. 60 national­ ly, leads the G auchos w ith a 4-2 sin­ gles record. L ast y ea r S anta B arbara m anaged to upset the Sun D evils in a close 3-4 b a ttle . T h e e x p e rie n c e d S un D e v il team is not ready to let history repeat itself. “L ast year d o esn ’t m atter,” senior Tim H am m ond said. “W hat happened then happened then. T his is now , and as long as we play our gam e the way we can, we sh ouldn’t have any p ro b ­ lem s.” L The In te rc o lle g ia te T e n n is A ssociation released updated singles r a n k in g s la s t T u e s d a y . S e n io r G u s ta v o M a rc a c c io m o v e d up tw o spots to the No. 29 spot, leading the Sun D evils in national rankings. A lso ra n k ed fo r A SU is A lex O s te rrie th , who is ranked 85th. T u e sd a y , F d j^ u a r v 2 3 rd Memorial Uni4R|fr^ndFloor Cat! Careef Services at 9 6 5 -2 3 5 D f'o r more iriTormation ASU hockey team looking to go out in a blaze of glory against UofA assists in the two earlier loss­ es against UofA. After losing all four meet­ The ASU hockey team ings against the Wildcats, (8-11-1) will clash tonight who are ranked sixth in the and tomorrow against the country and heading for the UofA Icecats (20-3-2). It national tournament March 2 will be the regular season in Delaware, Hammett is still finale for both teams. The banking on his players. games are 7:30 p.m. Friday “We feel the spirits are and Saturday in the Tucson right and good going into Convention Center. the game,” Hammett said. “We want to win,” senior “Besides, a lot o f people defenseman Keith McElroy think we should have beaten said. “Not as much (for) the them twice last time.” standings, but from a per­ “W e’ve been playing sonal and team standpoint.” tough games against ASU “All the seniors would for 20 years,” UpfA coach love to go out of their career Leo Golembiewski said. with a win,” senior goalie Adding to ASU’s woes Greg Powers said. “My this year is its trend of letting freshman year, I couldn’t down in the third period. believe that I was sitting next “There is nbthing to save to seniors who were playing anything for. There will be their last game. But if I had no letdown in the third peri­ to pick a place to end my od,” McElroy said. “There career, it would be there.” is no choice but to give it This year’s go-to-goalie, our all. I plan on coming Pow ers, will be starting out tough — these are my S atu rd ay ’s gam e, with last two collegiate games.” freshman goalie Dan Woog . Hyun Dong Lim of the State Press In the Jan. 24 contest, starting on Friday. ASU’s seven seniors will take the ice for head coach Gene Hammett (back row, fourth from left) for the final time this weekend in Tucson “We’ll get him (Woog) a against UofA. Pictured left to right: Greg Powers, Webster Warner and Jeff Kennedy (front row); Gordon Hester, Ron Altavesta, Keith McElroy was ejected for fighting with UofA’s Pavel game down there before McElroy and Dan Baltramos (back row). Jandura, a fight McElroy won next y ea r,” head coach “We’re going to concentrate on their top team, he would choose Austin Messer and with ease. McElroy said he went after Jandura Gene Hammett said. “It’s important for him lines, center Paul Goff said. “They have Nils Satterstrom. because UofA was running ASU’s goalie all to play against UofA (in Tucson).” ‘T d take Nils and Messer over anybody,” weekend. It was simple teammate protection. The games will not only center around showed that they can beat us with them.” “They are the best line I've gone against he said. “Nils is heads and shoulders above “I’m hoping they send somebody after goaltending but the teams top lines. UofA’s everybody else — the best player in the ACHA me so we can get things going,” McElroy line of Paul Dom, Mike Graves and Marc all year,” Powers said. said. “We were too nice last tipie. I While Powers thinks the Icecats’ offense (American Collegiate Hockey Association).” Harris combined for seven goals in the teams’ last series, held Jan. 23-24 in Phoenix. is formative, if he could pick any two on his Satterstrom had three goals and two wouldn’t mind winning a little dirty.” By C lin t C urrie State Press BYU grapplers come out o f the woods, set to battle Sun Devils on Friday “BYU is strong at 125, so Azevedo has good competition,” head coach Lee Roy Smith said. “Blackford has his work cut The ASU wrestling team will face its final challenge out for him with the competition he is looking at.” “BYU we can beat,” Blackford said, “and I am going to before the Pac-10 Championships next weekend, facing Embry Kiddle and BYU tonight at Wells Fargo Arena. The have a real good match.” The Cougars have excellent stamina from training up in meets begin at 4 and 7 p.m., respectively. the woods. Embry R iddle is returning to “BYU are goers — th at’s what Tempe for the second time this year. they are known for,” Blackford said. The Eagles were in town to wrestle Hard work is the “They train up in those mountains and Cal Poly SLO and Cal State they come down here in this oxygen-rich Bakersfield on Jan. 31st. BYU leads main thing, (in addi­ environment and they can go forever.” the all-time series with ASU 9-7. tion to getting) Although BYU can be taken light­ The weekend doesn’t get any easi­ myself mentally ly, assistant coach Aaron Simpson wants er on Sunday, when ASU faces No. 5 to see the Sun Devils go harder then they Oklahoma. The Sooners are 15-5-1 on ready. Both of m y have been going. the season and are 1-3-1 in the Big guys are pretty 12. “W e got to com e in and take Casey Strand has formidable chal­ BYU,” he said. “We can’t take them tough. (I need to) go lenges ahead with Embry Riddle’s lightly. They have some tough kids. We right through them. r t gotta push and impose our will on them. Dave Jam es, ranked ninth in the NAIA, and the C ougars7 Scott (That) means getting extra points, trying Coleman, who has a 14-7 record. to get a tech, trying to get a pin and not Casey Strand, just trying to get by with easy wins.” “Hard work is the main thing, (in ASU wrestler Blackford summed up the addition to getting) myself mentally ready,” Strand said. “Both of my guys are pretty tough, a whole weekend in one sentence on the level of competition they are wrestling. need to) go right through them.” “Our guys have to crank it up to that level,” he said, “and Steve Blackford and Matt Azevedo will also wrestle they all can raise it up to that level.” against two ranked opponents. By Sam G anczaruk State Press 4 4 Pulliam Journalism Fellowships Graduating college seniors are invited to apply for the 26th annual Pulliam Journalism Fellowships. We will grant 10-week summer internships to 20 jour­ nalism or liberal arts majors in the August 1998-June 1999 graduating classes. Previous internship or part-time experience at a newspaper is desired, or other demonstration of writing and reporting ability. Winners will receive a $5,250 stipend and will work at either The Indianapolis Star and The Indianapolis News or The Arizona Republic. Early-admissions application postmark deadline is Nov. 15,1998. By Dec. 15, 1998, up to five early-admissions winners will be notified. All other entries must be postmarked by March 1,1999, and will be considered with remaining early-admissions applicants. To request an application packet, write: Web site : \vv\ vv.stamews.com/pjf E- mai 1: pu li iam @slarnews.com Russell B. Pulliam Pulliam Fellowships Director The Indianapolis News P.O. Box 145 Indianapolis, IN 46206-0145 W r e s t l i n g ion the mats WeHs Fargo Arena, 7 p.m . Friday lYUvs.A (No. 25, 10-4) (No. 12, 9-7-1, 2-1-1 Pac-10) ItCOKDB . Mark Schultz ■ H Lee Roy Smith ■m / 1 H M M N H I • Jose Enriquez (|r.) H H H No. 7'MattAzvedo (Jr.) Aaron Holker (Fr.j 133 No. 4 Eric Larkin (Fr.) Torn Meacham (Jr.) H j | Mark Ferryman (Jr.) Gary Sanderson (Sr.) 149 Russel Brunson (Fr.) ■ ■ No. 3 Rangi Smart (Jr.) 165 N o 16 Quinn Foster (So.) Jose Moreno (Jr.) or Glenn Pero (Jr.) No. 10 Steve Blackford (So.) Ethan Harris (Fr.) ■ ■ ¡ J o h n Groundwater (Fr.) Scott Coleman (Fr.) Brandon Ruiz (Jr.) No. 18 Chris Miller (So.) Casey Strand (Sr.) ill Erik Gladish (Fr.) Randy Leydecker (Jr.) Sute Press for Friday, February I Í , I Í W 16 Gymnasts ready fo r an o th er show dow n B y C h r is C a r l o c k S t a t e P r e ss After beating, lOth-ranked UCLA last weekend, things don’t get any easier for the ninth-ranked Sun Devils as they face defending Pac-10 champion and eighth-ranked Stanford tonight in Palo Alto. The Sun Devils are com ing off their best perfor­ mance of the Season, a 196.325-194.400 win over the Bruins. A solid beam performance was finally a reality for ASU. Led by freshman Lea C arver’s 9.975, the Sun D evils put together a school record score of 49.55. “It was a really good win,” junior Elizabeth McNabb said afterward. “We finally put everything together.” The Sun Devils are going to have to keep every­ thing together in order to defeat the Cardinal. ASU knows that defeating the defending Pac-10 champs on their floor is not something people are expecting to happen. “We’re always the underdog,” McNabb said. “But now people will say ‘wow, they beat UCLA’.” Stanford is coming off a 192.975-192.950 defeat at the hands of Washington in a four-team meet last Friday in Seattle. The Cardinal defeated UCLA two weeks ago 194.05-193.9. The Sun Devils are still without injured All-Americans Lisa Vincijanovic (back) and Amy Shelton (elbow), but they aren’t without a high level of talent. “I feel confident we can beat them,” junior Michelle Hess said. Hopefully, everybody else feels the same. D uck t t t f @4?* tlHfl' Real advice for real problems that ASU students face every day. This (college) guy I know only dates high school girls. It’s really annoying because he does not date (anyone his own age). Grown up Kelly Christiansen, a transfer from BYU and an All-American on the bars, helped ASU defeat UCLA last weekend and will contribute this weekend at Stanford. t s w im i i4 “We were pretty distinct in what we don’t know what exactly — whether wanted to happen,” Evans said. “We we hadn’t played in a week or whatev­ told them, ‘Even if one of you guys er —- I didn’t see the fire we had in (ASU’s forwards) get the basketball in practice all week.” The Sun Devils last played on Feb. that situation, you still have time to go 10 in Tucson, but they looked like to the hole.’” The fans were angered by ASU’s they hadn’t played all winter. “It was very frustrating because we first half performance, which saw the team’go over 15 minutes without a couldn’t get anything across to them,” Evans said. field goal. As good as the Sun Devils had When Jason P atton’s bank shot went in at the 2:50 mark of the first been practicing, the way they played half to end the drought, the crowd was even m ore o f a sh o ck er for Evans. responded with a facetious applause. “It was totally unexpected...It’s “1 felt in the first half we came out very, very flat and lackadaisical,” late in the season and these guys Evans said. “Whatever the reason, I have played some good basketball. For them to come out and play like they did in the first half was totally fo reig n to me and it was to ta lly unexpected.” House, who scored 34 points in ASU’s win over the Ducks a month ago on the road, was contained well by Oregon. He made his first field goal 1:13 into the second half and finished with only 12 points, about eight below his average, after fouling out with two minutes left. Patton was again a bright spot for the Sun Devils, as he paced the team with 18 points. It was the first time all season that either Batiste, House or Lazor didn’t lead the team in scoring. W ell you know what they say about high school girls! W e g èl deter b t# th e y stay the sam e. In high school, I didn’t like college guys who preyed pn high school girls, and in college I don’t like it either. However, unbeknownst to mè» I indulged in such a tasteless act. And a time honored tradition it is. See, this is how rt WMtc& W hen a col­ lege guy is a freshman, he is at the bottom of the coUegiar):foo4.oK8Ai;:'| ^ ^ : t l w i r in a sorority, other college g irtf wwi*t;t a k ?;to them (sorority ^ ^ vidll ^ jkianycm ej^so they are out of luck. However, there is a whole group of girls who took up to college guys because they are supposed to be intelligent, s o p h is fie fi^ ^ ^ .^ w w » ^ the biggie) mature. Younger gins like older guys, and guys just like girls. Therefore, how tacky it may be, your friend is just shopping at the only store he can. Next, please. My friend is one o f th e girls in the Nude calendar, and she is a frat groupie. She spends ail her weekends at frat houses doing w hatever and whoever. She wants me to hang out withdherwhen she goes, but I want to tell her that I th in k.it is totajly tram py but i don’t w ant to lose her as a friend. Tattle Tale If I had a friend who was a calendar gill, 1 wouldn’t want to tose her either. I would get a cardboard cut out of her and keep her in the passenger seat of my car. But I think the solution to this problem may be one that is deeper than “doing whatever or whoev­ er." Of course I do not know the details of the situation other than, that in which you wrote, but it sounds like a situation in where your hot-to-trot friend is trying to gain atten­ tion; Attention, that she may not be getting or have gotten when she was younger. As a result, she is posing and acting out. I say the best way to try and curtail her partying with the boys, is to insist on having girls’ night out. Tape Friends, o r spy g f those sappy chick shows. N ext caller. My girlfriend and I w ill be m aking out, and she w ill ab ru p tlyato p when I want to go further. How can I make b er feel more com fortable because ( i t physically hurts)? Teased Q,&*c Q .&táú' AZ's M o st U n iq u e , U p sc a le T n r ift & B o u tiq u e • 2 7 9 -6 3 8 0 IFFEIEITTHIIK Y ou’d b e tte r hurry, th is o ffe r e xp ire s 2 /2 8 /9 9 . V alid w / cou po n an d stu d e n t ID I / W Á A /K vJ L ' Yburjgirffriend m ay not be heady to-go fur­ ther than you would like, yyWeh in that case you should respect her wishes, or you bet­ ter start looking for a new girl because^ she’s not a girl at al)...S h è ’s a MAN. Next. 6 Ü 3 Convenient Locations 1911 W. Main S L Mesa (Comer of Main & Oobson, Albertson’s Shopping Ctr) E-mail your question to; ads@asu.edu and don’t worry, your name is confidential. 801 W. Indian School (7th Ave. & Indian School) 3545 E lndian Sctra°t (36th St. & Indian School) 1-900 is produced by State Press advertising department students. And it’s not condoned by anyone. Sun Devil softball squad seeks successful series By C hris C arlock State Press Tbe award-winning ASU softball team will show off its stuff this weekend at Sun Devil Club Stadium as. the Sun Devils host the three-day Louisville Slugger Classic. Freshmen Kirsten Voak and Erica Beach were named Pae-10 player and pitcher of the week, respectively. Last weekend Voak went 8-for-20, including two home runs, in six games at the Fiesta Bowl Tournament in Phoenix. She also scored five times and drove in seven runs. Her offen­ sive surge helped the Sun Devils outscore their opponents 42-14 over the weekend. Beach finished the weekend with a 3-0 pitching record while posting a 1.31 ERA with nine strikeouts in 16 innings of work. Beach, Voak and Kathy Ponce combined to post a 1.33 ERA during the weekend. ASU (5-1) is coming off a pro­ ductive weekend in which it knocked off No. 8 Nebraska and No. 10 Massachusetts. This weekend will be the first opportunity for the Sun Devils to establish some home field dominance. Head coach Linda Wells has moved the fences in from 225 feet to 200 to take advantage of the team’s new found power. “It’s nice playing on our own field because we know (the field),” shortstop Holly Smith said, “It’s important to get off to a good start. We want to establish home field advantage early on.” ASU opens up with San Jose State at 3:30 this afternoon before taking on Illinois State at 5:30. Tomorrow it will face Michigan State and No. 16 Iowa, again starting at 3:30 and on Sunday the Sun Devils will get up early to face Michigan State and Illinois State and 10 a.m. and noon. The competition won’t be as stiff as it was last weekend, but the Sun Devils are ready to play anybody. “We don’t play the shirts,” Smith said. “It’s not about who they are. It’s about what we do to them.” Strong words from a strong team. So far. Q ualifying, n o t winning, firs t p rio rity fo r tra c k team in Reno By Joe M a n Tone State Press W in n in g th is w e e k e n d ’s M SPF Championships in Reno, Nev., ranks as the second priority for the ASU track and field teams. “About 10 teams will be there,” head coach Greg Kraft said. “Team scores will be kept, but we just want to get some indi­ viduals qu alified for the NCAA (Championships).” Senior Priscilla Hein is one of those individuals on the women’s team (1-1). Hein set a school record in the one mile with 4:50 at Iowa State, but she has yet qualify for nationals. “I definitely want to run in the NCAA for indoor, but you can’t get discouraged if you don’t make it,” Hein said. “Our main goal is the outdoor season.” H ein becam e the first fem ale ASU runner to earn All-American honors in cross country. If she qualifies, she could become an All-American in the indoor and outdoor season. “T h at’s a pretty tough nut,” Kraft said. “I’m not saying she Can’t do it, but I do know you can’t do it if you’re not at the meet;" Hein will attempt to add her name to the NCAA list in twoevents. “We’re going to give her a shot in the 800 this w eekend," K raft said “ Then, she’ll come back for the mile the follow­ ing week.” Although the Sun Devils are sched­ uled to go to A tlanta for th e USATF Championships (Feb. 26-27), some mem­ bers o f the distance team will travel to the Midwest. “W e’re going to take them to a last chance meet. It looks like it will be Notre Dame,” distance coach Walt Drenth said. “We also might go to Iowa State, but noth­ ing is definite right now.” Drenth added that there will probably be better milers at the meet in South Bend, Ind. The stiffer competition would help pace his runners. “I probably will take Priscilla some­ where no matter what,” Drenth said. “For everyone else we’ll just see how the week­ end goes and see how tired they are.” Sophomore Brandon Strong could also be on the plane to the last chance meet. Strong is one year away from reaching his full potential, Kraft said, but a trip to this season’s NCAA remains a possibility. “If he continues to chip away he might qualify in the mile,” Drenth said. “Every meet last year he got better and better.” Getting better and better is what Kraft wants out of his team. “ W e j u s t h o p e you im p ro v e each week and by the end your pretty good,” Kraft said. The men’s team.(2-0) right now is pretty good. In the latest Trackwire power rank­ ings, the Sun Devils moved into a tie for the fifth- spot with Texas. “(At Reno) we’ll try to upgrade what we did in the past,” Kraft said. “Some people will compete in off events.” Sophomore Tony Berrian, who quali­ fied for the cham pionships in the 400 meters, will run in the 200 for the first this season. Junior Dwight Phillips — third in the nation in the long jump — will attempt to qualify in the triple jump. “If we can get P hillip s, (senior) Dawnyell L inder in the 60 or 200 and Priscilla to qualify this weekend, it will be a successful meet,” Kraft said. e-m ail the sports editor fete! Classifieds Notice to our readers:. Before ANNOUNCEMENTS responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the. CHI OMEGA would like to congratulate: Mary A., Andrea, company and offer. The State Press Joanne, Sarah J., Laurae, cannot assume responsibility for the validity of the offers advertised in ; M ichelle L ., Kelly M , Julie, our classified section. For more and Amanda S. on their information and assistance regarding outstanding academic achieve-, the investigation of an advertisement, ment for the Fall *98 semester! please contact the Better Business Keep up die good work! ; Bureau at 264^1721. APARTMENTS Mare Trivia... The Hawaiian alphabet has 12 letters. APARTMENTS EL DIABLO Apts. NE comer of Apache/McClintock, quiet lux­ ury living, lbd $500/mo, 2bd $620/mo. 921-0699: APARTMENTS APARTMENTS GALLEON APTS, 1920 E. Hay­ den Ln., 2bd, 2ba. $ 100 off first mo rent w/ this ad. 9689315.; /. deled, a/c, cov’d, parking avail now. $550/mo., assistive ani­ mals only, move in special. 804-0537 TEMPE: 4BD/2BA home, pool, carport, only $ 1200/mo. Avail. mid-March 804-0537 TEMPE: 1BR apt, walk to cam­ pus, only $425/mo. Avail. midMarch. 804-0537 HOMES FOR RENT TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR TEMPE: 2BR, near ASU & downtown, beautifully remo- 4BD/ 2BA HOUSE w/ pool, all appl., close to ASU; new car­ pet. Call 432-36^^ = L = = = = HOMES FOR RENT WE RENT HOMES! STUDENTS WELCOME! BEAUTIFUL TEMPE HOMES 1-5+ BR, SOME W /POOLS $595-$1695 J&T 446-RENT 1 2 0 9 W . B a s e lin e 4BD/2BA, POOL, w/d, dshw, newer tile, very clean, Broad­ way & Hardy, $ 1400/mo. Avail. 3/1, Joe 922-2715 BEAUTIFUL 4BD, 2 eg, pool, cov'd, patio, near ASU West. Call 483-2749/753-0150 $1200 HOUSE FOR Rent $l,000/mo. 3bd/2ba, 2 car carport, 1200 sq. ft., very clean, quiet area. 3/4 mi. from ASU. Hardy & 14th St. 922-3552 ask for Mark. HOMES FOR RENT IBD CONDO, all appl's. incI'd. w/d, free H20/trash, $495/mo. Call Jeff 893-1651 2BD CONDO, Scene One, all appl's incl'd. w/d, free H20/trash, pool/jac, cv'd pkg, $65G/moi Call Jeff 893-1651. CLOSE TO ASU- 2 b d /lb a $550, lbd/lba $450. Call 8940288* Summer/Fall rentals : avail. PAPAGO PARK 3bd/2ba con­ dos avail, in Feb. All applianc­ es, very large. Call 432-3636. PAPAGO PARK II- 1bd condo, Roman tub, w/d, like new $650 mo Treg 967-4100. TO W N H O M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT QUESTA VIDA 2 master bed/ 2ba, w/d, vaulted ceiling, -fifeplace, c'vrd prkg, $800/mo. 2bd/2ba, $650, Hardy/ Uni­ versity. 226-8875. RENTAL SHARING M /F FOR 2bd/2ba, pool/jac, ns, Rural/Southern. $360/mo, +1/2 utils. Russell 672-7877 RO O M S FOR RENT 1.5 M TO ASU- m/f, furnished. $450 mo + utl,, w/d, pool on site. Radial 350-9532. BDWY & MCLNTK- one br, $275 + 1/4 utils. Last mo. dep. req. Smoke ok/ no Ise. Nate 530^7646, lv. msg. BEAUTIFUL 4BD/2BA home, Southern/Rural w/popl, cable, fireplace & Crystal water. Fern, prefd. Avail, now, $350/mo.+ utils. Shar 456-9370 Boring?? T ire d of n o is y , lo u d n e ig h b o r s ? We o ffe r q u ie t liv in g . 1/2 b lo c k ; from cam pus. Beautifully i fu rn ish e d . H uge 1 bed-1 room, 1 bath apartm ents. All bills paid. Cable T.V. | ready, h eated pool, and i sp a c io u s laundry facili­ ties. Friendly c o u rte o u s m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by today!!! Terrace Road Apartments 9 5 0 S. Terrace Rd. 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 HELP WANTEDGENERAL Greenspoiht Apartm ents • Walk to PV Mall • Bus line/ Student leases 4 2 0 2 E. C a c t u s R d. Taking reservaions for summer semester. Order Clerks 40 needed imm edi­ ately In service and m arketing division. No experience necessary - we train, $12/hr + bonuses. W eekly pay, flexible p /t day evening or weekend hours. Downtown Tempe location. For details call Brad 894-1151. RO O M S FOR RENT QUEEN BED, phone, cable, Chaparral/Scotts. M student pref. $275/mo. 970-5830 ROOMS AVAIL, in d beautiful house, ¡quiet» clean, all amen., pool/patio, 10 min. to ASU on Greenbelti $30Q/mo. + util's. Avail. March & June - Jay, 9901941 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR SALE HAYDEN SQUARE. 1 Bdrm 1 Bath, great location, asking $85,000. Re/Max Excalibur Realty: ask for Gary Greenacre 483-3333. SOUTH SCOTTSDALE lbd co­ op, new carpets, floors & paint, $18,500. 947-3370 or 9473622. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE SCHWIN BIKES- 2 girls’ (24" & 26"); tall 5 drawer dresser; small dressing table w/ 2 lamps. 278-5081 AUTOMOBILES 84 TOYOTA CAMRY, runs good, clean, 4-cyl, new tires* automatic, $1,500.412-Q1Q3 85 NISSAN 300ZX, T-top, 5 spd, cold a/c, cd, looks and runs great, $2500 obo. 809-3326 89 TOYOTA 4-runner, custom paint & wheels, mint ednd, huge stereo $12,400.855-1340 I B U Y Used Cars/ Trucks/ Jewelry/ Antiques/ LP’s/ Mise. 874-3268 Ä smimmim AUTOMOBILES HELP WANTEDGENERAL 91 M1ATA - Exc cond, 97k mi, 35 mpg, new cd, interior/exterior pckg, top, high perfor­ mance tires, tags. Exc maint. $7500 990-1941 APPTSETTERS Up to $25/ hr, N. Tempe, ft/pt hrs. Kim 424-7399. APPT SETTERS wanted- Re­ sort co. 16th st/ Indian School. $8.00/hr, PT evenings M-F, 954-7099. 92 PLYMOUTH LASAR rs, tur­ bo, awd, exç cond, 67K m, $5500 obo 460-4554. 94 JEEP Wrangler; 4*' lift, 32" tires, custom stereo, runs & looks great. $15,500. 8551340 99 VW Beetle for $2,39 per month. Call for details. Fleet dept. 265-6600 80'S-90‘S CAR$ from $500- Po­ lice impounds. For listings call: 1-800-319-3323 ext. 4740. TRAVEL BE FLEXIBLE... Europe $448 r/t + taxés. Travel' any time in 1999! Hawaii $119 o/w. Cheap fares worldwide !!! Call 888-Airhitch; www.airhitch.OTg MEXICO/CARIBBEAN OR Ja­ maica $250 r/t. Other world­ wide destinations >cheap; Rook tickets 'online wwwj.airteçh.com 1-800^575-TECH HELP WANTEDGENERAL S500+/WK, P/T, great attitudes only heed apply, fax resume 971-788-4684. Call 1-800-870 •9589 ■ V - '.Y.' HELP WANTED* GENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL tomer service, account reps, fraud reps, mail openers, data entry, and collections. Apply in person 8:30am-4pm, M-F. Chase cardmembers services:' 100 West University Drive (Univ; & Mill) Tempe (prkg. avail, on Ash). Job-line 9026000. EXP’D REGISTER help needed nights/ wknds. Please apply in person a t Jerry's Drive-In Liquors: 1217 S. Rural Rd. INTERNATIONAL FORTUNE 1000, Co. searching for people with the following qualities; Ambitious self starter, positive attitude, leadership skills, team player. Excellent business op­ portunity for students. For more info, call 340-4796 260; e-mail scampt@aoi.com $6-$33/HR. P/T WORK On­ line!!! Visit us today, work to­ morrow. www.4research.com F/T OR P/T driver/packer posi­ tion w/ shipping co. Must be articulate, org'nzd, work well with others, clean driving record, ex. start wage 966-9929 ARE'YOU a people person? Seeking 5-10 indivs. for sales pos. Opportunity for for great $. Flex hrs. Call 599-2308. CLOSE TO ASU. Flex P/T hrs, general office work; $6.50/hr. Call Nancy, 966-8105 ARTIST NEEDED: New Italian restaurant opening soon is looking for talented artists to paint murals. Please call 8581660; ask for Domenick. COCKTAIL SERVERS, Starbucks A ssociates, Gift Shop cashiers, Snack Bar cashiers at Airport. Call 275-1721 eXt.3302 for more info. BILTMORE AREA law firm, needs messenger for errands & general office duties. M-F, 125:30pm, need own ea r & in ­ surance. Mike 468-8900 COULD YOU use an EXTRA $2000 for Spring Break? No exp. needed. Call 750-0816 Wanted! Appointment setters, fof Universal Portraits. $7$12/hr. 777-1054 COURTESY PATROL of prop­ erty in exchange for beautiful apartment with full size w/d near PVMall. Drug and back­ ground check required 4940391 (retired ok) GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR. Good w /children. Experience & enthusiasm a must. 8-20 hrs/wk. State's Top Gymnastics Program. 940-4041. CALL TODAY for the follow­ ing positions; Customer Serv­ ice Reps, Data Entry Clerks, Re­ ceptionists, Admin. Assistants, Assemblers. Volt Services: 7301808 CASE AIDES & Educational Support Tutors needed work­ ing w/ juvenile offenders. Morn/eve shifts; ft/pt positions avail. Excellent benefits, fax re­ sume to 415-9545. CHASE IS hiring! F/T & P/T positions available with cüs- DESK CLERK, p/t eves & wknds. Flex sched, close to ASU. Pay* depends on exp. Apply in person: 1020 E. Ap­ ache-Super 8 Motel DIRECTORY INFORMATION operator; 25 wp.m, Phx. area knowledge, all shifts. $8/hr. to start, 225-9699. Metro One, 120 N. 44th St. #150. Foots Market Research In d iv id u a ls to c o n d u c t o p in io n surveys in person or on th e phone. NO SELLING, no exp eri è nee required, FLEXI­ BLE SCHEDULE. B ilin g u al a p lu s . $ 6 -$ 1 0 / h r . Call Dixie 892-5644. Help Wanted Start Bunding Your Resume & Business Stalls Now! Become a Market Research Interviewer or a Client Qualitative Assistant We offer: • $7.50/Hr (eye; shift) t Bonus. Plans Flexible schedule / * Convenient location - about 4 miles fromASU , : • Abçôluteiy NO Sales! No oçperiehcé Necessary Call Ray at 874-2714 -fo cu s Market Research , [P9I EMBASSY IBJ a SU ITES IZJSI ‘ RESO RT ------------ S C O T T S D A LE A C C E P TIN G W A LK -IN IN TE R V IE W S M , Tu, and F 8 :3 0 - i 0:30am or 1;30-3:30pm >R oom vmmmm S ervie» A tte n d . Now open the following Saturdays 9am - 3pm :: Feb. 27 . • B e ll S ta ff >H ouseperson »B a n q u e t S et-up *B a rtende rs • D ishw asher FT & PT w o rk a va ila b le P le a se apply with Human R esources, 5001 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale E m bassy Suites supports a Drug-Free Workplace. FINANCIAL HELP, battle slow credit hassle free w/ no up-front fees. -Quick application re­ sponse Call toll free 1-877-7503850 :■' _ 1‘ FUN PEOPLE GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR for mobile program. Must be en­ thusiastic, dedicated, and great w/ kids 3-5 years. $8-10/hr. doe; 200-8255 IMPROV COMEDY Club searching for box office mgmt candidate. Cash handling & mgmt a must. Please bring re-, sume, no phone calls. 930 E. University. Educational Catalog Company 6 minutes from ASU We have many great ASU students oh staff, and we want you to join our growing team! PT and FT positions are open in these departments: • Customer Service • Answer incoming customer phone calls, enter orders in computer system/ Qood typing skills req’d. Morning, afternoon, evening, and weekend shifts available. • Graphic Design • Use Photoshop and Quark on Power Macs. Morning and afternoon shifts . available. $8/hr to start. • Website Design • Create and maintain company Website. HTML knowledge is preferred. Join a growing company that accomodates student hours! Call Ronda 438-4400 VOCATIONAL CASE M gr needed to work w/ disabled. 85 M-F, $8.50hr. Audra 2775787 or fax resume 277-7377 JOHN HANCOCK Arizona Kersting general agen­ cy needs agents. $2000mo training subsidy. Call Jim 5222100 ext5Q7 EÒE MFVD 304061198-019 LEGAL COURIER F/T & P/T avail. Professional appearance & car required. Call 452-1826. LIONS CAMP 'TatiyCe for hand­ icapped children & adults, lo­ cated in.die White Mtns- of AZ, is seeking to hire ail RN, re­ creation director & counselors for the 99 Reason, 5/30-8/1. Room, board & salary provid­ ed. Credit avail. For appl & appt time, call Pam at 602-275- lion- LOOKING. FOR energetic, selfstarting people to call existing customer base. Fun, motivated atmosphere. Starting @ $10 + bonuses, part-time only. Close to ASU. Call 947-0775. MECHANICAL TECH, ft/pt, some mechanical exp. desired. Some tech school òr college de­ sired. Starting pay $8-12/hr. w/ advancement. 15 mins, to ASU. Flex, hrs; Call 956-8200, days. We’re Host Marriott Services at Sky Harbor Airport arid w e’re looking for associates to join our team! Great benefits like FREE food, FREE bus pass & parking, FREE uniforms. Excellent wages in a fast-paced &, excit­ ing environment. Call today to schedule an im­ mediate interview: 1-888-HOST-JOB (1-888-467-8567), or call the recruiter at 275-1721 x3302 for more info. EOE Drug free workplace M/F/V/D f t TJnvr M a ttw o r r ; Prescott, Arizona Security Officers and Preboard Screeners WE NEED A FEW TO P COUNSELORS! Resident camp for Boys & Girls Agés 6-13. 19989Season: May30-Aug. 1 call 602-255-0550 email: info@friendlypines.com P Ü M R ik, a n d v i» w e n # ’ w p a y you t a ' W r i t ¡ |F ^ hang out anyway. N W re getting ready to serve up handcrafted brews, quality food, andarttWtcHing atmosphere Kitchen Staff * W ät Staff * Aa*t. Walt Staff • Bartenders • Hosts/Hostesses • Office Manager Apply in person Mon, - Fri., 10am - 6pm and Sat, 10am - 1pm Look for our hiring trailer at: 14205 S. SOth Street, Phoenix, AZ 6 5 0 4 4 (Located 1/4 mile west of Interstate 10 and Ray Rd. behind Petec) • H O C K -H O T T O M M AN AG EM EN T O PPO RTU N ITIES A L S O A V A ILA B LE PIm m Aw rMunw te ( 303 ) S S 4-4071 Equal Opportunity Employer FLEX SCHEDULES - FT & PT Must bp 18. Have high school diploma, drug-free & pass. background check. • We offer low cost Medical Dental, Vision, Umfonhs supplied & maintained. Apply at: Worldwide Security Assoc. Inc. 627 South 48th S t #105 T^mpe 966-0141 Summer Employment $10.25/HR. OVER 2 0 0 JOBS! to start! • $300 Sign-on bonus!; • Flexible Schedules! • Immediate Start! • No Experience 'Necessary! • Paid every Friday! u#cu*. Dobson/ Guadalupe 777-8757 AZ Ave. & Warner 735-0000 Mt. Ranier Nat'l Park, Washington state. Hotels, Retail Shops, Food Service. Room & board on site; also RV park. See us Feb. 22 & 23, at j the Embassy Suites, 1515 N. 44th St. in Phoenix from 9am til 4pm. For more info, call 360-569-2400, ext. 104. See our Web site www.coolworks. com/ranier EOE M /F/V/H F S IS I2 M 0 M 0 I0 M 0 ÎS ---M 0M 3J0M B M 1I --------------- NEED A JOB? fr ~ -y J M o m itM n g È ^ F o r S p rin g - ; ' t t j m s s j H.90 plus bonus your hours * - tl way w ith d isa b ilitie s s in c e 1 9 7 6 Rock Bottom Restaurant and Brewery is opening In PERSONAL ASSISTANT for male wheelchair user in Tempe, p/r, $8.10/hr, no exp nec. Heavy lifting req'd. 804-0300 PT DATA entry/receptionist for busy Scottsdale tax office. 1pm5pm. M-F & 12:30-5pm Sat. until 4/15/99. $12/hr. 9413421 for job interview. E n h a n cin g th e liv e s o f in d ivid u a ls V e A t DVf rr AT T il ^T T <^! P/T WORK - F/T pay. Come to play not to work. Day & eve, shifts avail., $9/hr. University & Priest. Mr. Belles 517-1977 P/T SATURDAY Morning help wanted. $ 10+ p/hr, make money buying concert tickets from your home. E-mail address required. 857-8601 To schedule an interview, COCKTAIL SERVERS STARBUCKS ASSOCIATES GUT SHOP CASHIERS SNACK BAR CASHERS PARADISE BAR & G rill is now accepting applications for breakfast servers. Apply at 401 S. Mill Ave. Tempe C ro u p H o m e S u p e rv is o r East Valley area. Make a difference in the lives of individuals with disabilities. Oversee the daily operations of a com ­ munity living setting. 1 year field experi­ ence plus 1 year su p erv iso r experience. Good written/ verbal communication. ■6754 i N und ÜÜ UB1BIB1BIBJBJBIB1BIBIBIBJBIB1B1BJB1BJBJBJ h ^y- a -t^ t Excellent Benefits: - 60 Hours Paid Time Off Every 6 Months - - Paid Holidays - Paid Training - Medical DISCOVER THE PEOPLE WITH THE HYATT TOUCH! • Front Desk Agent ■Spa Attendant • Bussers • Security Officer - Dental F o r Mo r e In fo rm ation C a l l : - Life Insurance - Long Term Disability - Credit Union Membership - Direct Deposit -Tuition Assistance Mail or Fax Resume to: TCH Attn: Lex 210 W. Lodge Dr. Tempe, AZ 85283 Fax: (602) 730-5260 EEO/ P re-em ploym ent drug screen • Host/Hostess • Sandolo Server • Room Service Cashier • Door Person 991-9670 Experience the benefits at the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale: „ • Medical/Dental Insurance • Life Insurance • 401 (k) Plan \ ' • Vacation/Sick Pay • Tuition Reimbursement • Free Uniforms • Complimentary Room Rates *■ > Applications are accepted Mon. 9am -Noon and Tues. 3pm-6pm; At the Human Resources Office 7500 E. Doubletree Ranch Rd. Please enter a t the w est end of the building next to the loading dock. Certain positions m ay require testing. Hyatt supports a drug free workplace. A A /E O E/M /F/D /V 0 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL RECEPTIONIST FOR Universal Portraits. Fun, outgoing, Jem pe. Kristen, 777-1054. UP TO $25/HR Fun Environment, ft/pt hrs, full benefits, Kim 424-7399. SECRETARY/RECEPT/ADMIN. ASSIST, for sports law firm. Bi­ lingual preiTd for filing, phone & correspondence. 24th St. & HELP WANTEDSALES LADIES ACTIVE wear, flex, hrs. EOE, com petitive sal's. Fash Sq & PV Mails. 8952835 lv. tnsg. Fax: 895-3458 Cameib.ack 957-0083 THE PICNIC Co. Gourmet Cafe is. currently hiring delivery driv­ ers for Tues./Thurs. 10-3pm. Must have own car. Apply in person at 1415 -E. University pr. # 101A Tempe PUT YOUR iponey where your mouth is, Set appts. for travel TRIANGLES BIKINI Shop, p/t : days, nights of weekends, fiin job. 947-6562; 2013 f t S cot- ' tWale Rd. - HELP WANTEDGENERAL SUN LAK ES R E S O R T O M M UN IT Y NE E DS: C HELP WANTEDSALES agenices. No selling. Flex. hrs. RED DEVIL Tempe needed, Near ASU. $8/hr. to start guar. bussers, pizza makers, wait + comm. $ 12/hr. avg. 829-6222 , staff, cooks, (exp. in Italian food) Apply in person at 208 HELP WANTEDW. Southern | FO O D SERVICE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for tiay/eve. host, servers, bar­ tenders, kitchen/ hobart staff. Will train pt/ft apply in person, M-F 2-4;30pm, 3159 E. Lin­ coln Dr. Phx BO JO ’S Bar and G rill hiring night cooks. Exp. piref 829 S. Rural Rd 966-5543 PEL! COUNTER person, f/ptime, good pay. Manhattan Bagels/Estelle 838-3097 HELP WANTEDGENERAL M ail C enter M anager S u p e rv ise M ail C e n te r s ta ff. R e s p o n s ib le fo r all in co m in g /o u tg o in g m ail. M ust h a v e m an a g em e n t experience. Pay co m m en su rate w ith experience. M ail C enter C oordinator P rocess all incom ing/outgoing mail. $8/hour. Both p ositions require good organizational and p e o ­ ple skills. Know ledge of P itn ey Bow es o r N e o p o st equ ip m en t, bulk mail, Fed Ex, UPS a n d c o m p u te r helpful. Will train . M ust lift u p to 501bs. Excellent b e n e fits. S e n d re s u m e to 9532 E. Riggs Rd., Sun Lakes, AZ 85248 o r fax 895*5191! EOE M/F/D/V AWESOME $200 SIGN-ON BONUS Start Now, Pay Weekly Like to talk to people and work where you are appreci­ ated? The Orange Tree Golf Resort is the place to be! . • Eve. Hrs/Scottsdale Location •N oE xp. Necessary • Big $$$$$$$$$ by Sidney Omarr ever. Stock up on vitam ins, ARIES (March 21-April 19): Cycle is perfect for special stiidmany activities drain vitality. Burden lifted, you’ll receive sur­ .■ies, reading and writing. In prise in mail. Sagittarian is in betw een, flirtation starts picture. slowly. Warms up, could get too SAGlTTAkiUS (Nov. 22-Dec. hot. Virgo plays top role. 21): Rebuild on more solid struc­ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): ture — Scorpio native declares, Too. rtiuch of a good thing, Venus keynote blends with your. " I have a secret, will let you know in time.” What was sup­ Venus sighificator — desserts, declarations p f " I lo ve you pressed will be released -— truly!’ ’. Keep track of foreign works to your advantage. . C A P R iqpR N (Dec. 22-Jan. exchange rates. . 19): Toss aside preconceived GEM INI (May 21-June 20): notions — welcome opportunity Don’t attempt to please everyone to rew rite, review , rebuild. lest you please no one. Lunar Staying power is,becoming legaspect highlights versatility, tri­ umph over adversity i Steer clear end " - decision to move will be o f get-rich-quick scheme. Enjoy apparent. Written material valu­ magic show. able. CANCER (June 21 -Ju ly 2 2 ): AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Focus on added responsibility, Strive for harmony, especially on ability to accept challenge and domestic front. Argument con­ cerning budget really does not win. Marital status spotlighted. . By summing up, you'll discover make sense. Focus on Where you you have been happy without live, love, anti marriage. Libra being aware of it. plays rede. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): All PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): aspects point to travel, including D iscussions revolve around journeys of the mind. Focus oii ancient Indian arrows!: Be intellectual curiosity, publishing; pleased w ith yourself. Use "p o etry of the universe,” Wear arrows as take-off for educating bright ctriori, pjut forth unortho­ people concerning Indian lore. dox concepts. Be near water, if possible. VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22): IF FEBRUARY 19 IS YOUR You’ll b e accused o f being BIRTHDAY: You are indepen­ active in playground o f the dent, original, temperamental, occult. Maintain universal outhave ability to appear glamorous . look, don’t be limited by those no m atter what the time or who lack faith, talent. Leo will wardrobe. Leo, Aquarius persons play sensational role. play amazing roles in your life LIBRA (Sept, 23-O ct. 22>: —- could have these letters, ini­ What was m issed will be tials in nam es: A, S, J. You returned soon -— don’t make fed­ revere explorations aim ed at eral case of it! Marital status fig­ finding truth concerning people ures prominently. Improve pub­ who played historic redes in our lic relations. Cancer native is lives. Mystical experience takes ally. place in March. April could be SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21); big money month. © 1999, The LÀ Times Syndicate You’II be more popular than ANSWER TO CROSSWORD PUZZLE: D 1 8 H T 1 0 O w .!f E A- L A L L A M O A S V C R S A R T W A O G L E E R S E S -T A 8 A T T 1 N O O N 'f V A. G E E D E T Scottsdale 3 33 4)109 Downtown Phoenix F rid ay, F e b ru a ry 19 , 19 9 9 JE T w O E P 8 A V E E f t 1 N R A U L 2/19/99 SERVER NEEDED, Have fun & make money! Positive people only. Pasta Brioni 994-0028 HELP WANTEDCH ILD CARE 253 -2 100 Ask for Irene (Leave message for same day interview) HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE JOB OPPORTUNITIES g p r o g y ^ r a ||_ older, ns, w/kn6wledge in the ed. or nursing fields. Pay to be determined w/exp. & refs. Call 948-1525 $20-$40/hr. in spare time! $100 signing bonus! 80Ô-6000343 ext 1027 GREAT $$$ making oppor­ tunity; http://members.aol .com/ Atear1607/CircleOne.html PT MARKETING Reps for collegestudent.com. Unique oppfor creative, independent indiv. Set own hrs, marketing/ adver­ tising éxp prefd but will con­ sider any high acheiver. Con­ tact Ms. Bayer 888-915,-6200 M USIC MOTHER'S HELPER needed for; stafy-home mom: Scotts. Rd/Shea. 3 kids, ages 5,3,1. MWF 8am-6pm. Early child­ hood ed. or work w/gifted kids a +. Professional bckgrnd checks. Call 905-7037 r BUSINESS GUITAR LESSONS- The Music Store (Tempe arda). Very pro­ fessional, all styles/ levels; the­ ory, comp., reading 829-3559 IBANEZ RX240 guitar, w/éase, like new, $250.732^)698 GÈO PT STUDENT Sales Exec, need­ NANNY NEEDED . ed for www.collegestudBABYSITTER NEEDED in our ent.com. Strong commission + Negotiable hrs, $ 10-12/hr. Call home, Fri./Sat. 5- 10pm. 813incentives based pay while set­ 854-2201. ■ 4614 i.,. ", ting your own hrs. Contact Ms.; WORK AT home father, needs ' Bayer 888-915-6200.; LOOKING FOR p/t, long-term, nanny-like caregiver, 20-25 .* help w/4 mo. old. 10BUSINESS — 20hrs./wk. McClinhrs/wk. Trans., req'd. to N. tock/Broadway area. 966-8593 Stotts, for 2 kids under age 3, OPPORTUNITIES beginning 5/1. Pref. 21 yrs. or INTERNSHIPS CORNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more PAID MERRILL Lynch Intern HELP WANTEDabout day trading for a living, needed for Scottsdale office. GENERAL call 423-1700. www.protrader. com 607-8739. I M M E D IA TE $8/HRGUAR + BONUSES UP TO $1000/WK ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE . ® > Hilton Scottsdale Resort &Villas We are immediately hiring fo rth e following positions. Please apply at 6333 N, Scottsdale Rd. in the Human Resources Dept., M-F, 9am-4pm. • Restaurant Server 5am-2pm, $3.75 plus tips • Lead Restaurant G reeter 5pm-10pm, $8/hr i • Restaurant G reeter 6am-2pm, $6.25/hr • Busser Weekends, 6am-2pm, $5.15/hr • Steward Flexible shifts, $6/hr Call for infonnation on Classified Displayadrotisiog 9656555 SERVICES 50%. OFF dry cleaning bill w /, ASU I.D.- biz. shirts $1. Cheap fluff & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SE Cofner of Rural & Univ. 966-7454- - m u ie _ MpNty HELP WÁNTEDGENERAL 396 N. W m . Dillard Dr., Bldg. D, Gilbert, AZ (McQueen & Elliott) accepting apps for FEB. 17, 1996: I fell in front of the Lang. & L it bldg,-Looking for witnesses. 464-0574 or pg. 203-8789. W M P UCI TO OCTMOfVE Find it FAST in the Classifieds DILLARD’S DISTRIBUTION CENTER PERSONALS DUI OR CHILDS UPPORT Problems? ASU Lawschool . graduate handling crim inal, civil, domestic relations matters. Discount for ASU ID,. Call the Law office of Dwane M- Cates 905-3117 for a free phone con­ sultation Every S ta te P r e s s classified ad is n o t only prin te d in the paper, but also uploaded daily to the D ig ita l S ta te P ress in html! GREEKS-CLUBS h ttp ://n e w s .v p s a .a s u .e d u /! C lassified% 20A dvertising/ ' Classifieds.htm l Need awards, trophies, banquet cups, or personalized gifts? ACT Awards has a huge show­ room w/competitive prices & free delivery. (NW corner of Price/Guadajupe): Call for free catalog 777-5101 HELP-WANTEDGENERAL M erchandise P rocessing. PT shifts, M -F, 7am 11am or 4pm -8pm. Some Sats 7am Noon or Noon-5pm. Competitive wage + bonus. Apply in per­ son, M -F. 7am-6pm. - EOE ! . RESTAURANTS/ BARS College Students and Teachers! Children’s Summer Camp in Oracle, AZ is looking for Counselors with expertise in Horseback Riding, Riflery, Music & Songs, Nature, Ropes Course, lifeguards, Camp Nurse, and Cooks to Work May 26 - Aug 7, Good salary, job experience, plus Room/Board. Email us at campman@azstarnet.com or call 1*5206844)987. State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 W O O D SH ED I Oldest nM nhb'iitior J bar in 1 Temps -E s t. 1979 ! • New Times award w inner !* Cheap B eerS $1.25 Shots !• NBA, ESPN, Full Court, MLB ! !• Greeks Welcome - 3 pool ! ! tables ! ! ■ 1/2 Your W ing Order FREE I i Sun 9 Mon ■ K tt ASU Box 871502 Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Please b e sure to check your ad. Maks sure it reads exactly a s you wish it to appear in the S ta te P ress, including punctuation. Please check your ad the first day it appears-the liability of the S ta te P ress shall not exceed the cost of the ad and credit may be given for the first insertion only. Minor spelling errors do not qualify for make­ goods. No refunds win be given, but if you need to caroel your ad a credit will b e held on account for future advertising. p Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 per line, per day A 5-9 days, $1.65 per line, per day __ 10+days, $1.49 per line, per day i j i Commercial 1 day, $2.60 per line 2-4 days, $1.99 per line, per day 5.9 days, $1.76 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.60 per (ine, per day 3 line minimum. A dda 13-character bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. YUCATECAN IMPORTS FREE INTERNET p)nv(p i\ jLMil rail C ool s tu ff from Guatem ala* Pam • Nepal and m ote Good fo r one FREE Handmade C entral Am erican , Weaving 414 S. M ill • 303.9404 (behind C hanging H ands) DU I? Photo radar Ticket? Inform ation Solutions, Inc Charged w ith any other crime? •FREE consultation •A ffordable paym ent plan Computers from $710 SERVICE Call PERRPS GERMAN AUTO REPAIR www.ISIBOB.COM 930-651? ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Call SERVICING VW , AUDI, BMW & MER­ CEDES AUTOS 5% Discount with this ad and ASU student I.D. 2221 W. Broadway Rd., Mesa, AZ Adelie Penquin TravelAgency JA S O N B E S K IN D A ttorney at Law 968-4613 Specialize in SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ADVENTURES Reservations call • 979-6569 949-946 9 NetWorld @ 446.9275 fo r details Formally at 922 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe 1960-1996 _______________ A cu p u n ctu re • H erbal Formulas • N utrition T reatm ent & Prevention o f disease & c h ro n ic pain T em pe • 491-9655 1 -8 00 -S K Y D IV E FREEWeight Loss Sembrar - 2/24 @ 7pm w w w .s k y d iv e a z .c o m BARTENDING W ACADEMY Drivers W anted. Be a bartender Earn up to $20/hour Cameiback Volkswagen 1 or 2 w eek program Placement assistance V 1499 E. Cameiback Road Phoenix 265-6600 J Phnx Campus Tempe Campus 957-3771 921-9925 www.bartendlngacademy.com 1 5 % O F F U P S S H IP P IN G 13,000 FT. SKYDIVE J o rd a n , O rie n ta l M e d ic in e , THESIS AND DISSERTATION ASSISTANCE • • • .. • Research Design Assistance Data Analysis Tabie and Graph Layout Report Summary Assistance S tu d e n t S ta ts C o n su ltin g (Min. 5 Ibs. Expires 5/31/99) Mail Boxes, Etc. 903 S. Rural Rd. 1730 E. Broadway (On Rural-1/2 block S. of University) 967-1414 FREE DUI SURVIVAL TIPS 1st VISIT 1. IM M ED IA TELY request a lawyer. AUTO ACCIDENT VICTIMS •20 yrs. experience • Close to ASU 2. D O N O T answer questions (other than nam e and address) 3. D O N O T consent to take o r perform any exercises or tests w ithout first consulting a lawyer • No out of pocket co st The right doctor for you The Law Offices o f Edward A. Loss HI, RC. Dr. Bruce Lubitz 258-7800 (Tempe) 931-6362 (Glendale) C all today fo r yo ur fin t fraa vtatt ($200valúa) Call: 402-2737 968-7767 Leave nam e St num ber 2504 S. Rural Rd. (McClintock & Broadway in the ABCO Center) 829-3900 Member: National College of DUI Defense Aggressive Representation From $500.00 Down » ;* 7 - v " V i GREEKS 6 CLUBS la se r Engraved P o d d e s* Banquet C ups Aw ards • Trophies * Personalized Gifts Free C atcio g s ft Consultations A C T. Awards H A Y D E N ’S Internet Business Opportunity Amway Distributor F E R F Y R E V IE W C all 443-1102 or Bozdough@AOL.com 777-5101 I ASU's literary magazine's new issue isnow available at your favorite bookstores Distributorships or products now available ¡¡¡¡¡¡IB The Valley's Hontfl; . I Newest Gnr &LesbianDance Cuit Cam eiback— V O L K S W A G E N É J J M í i f t S I I mm • NEW 9 9 JETTA GL K lC K O F F f f t iiï^ l D ance Club • Happy Hour Sunday, Febiuut 21,1999 M o n -F r i 3 -8 $ 1 .7 5 D r in k s $1 D rafts $ 1 .7 5 D o m estic Free B uffet 25 CENT Dunks 8d)0-l(k00PM T uesday C ollege N ig h t 5 0 < D rafts Dunk Specials AuNight P r ic e ■ o f Rd. Tempe, AZ 101 loop &| ■ IH O O 10056 ° 1999 JettacH ■T T Per m o .*/4 8 T n o s . Cap. cast reduction.................... $ 1 ,299 First month's payment.....................$212 DOC Fee..... . .... ...............................$198 ■Licenses Fee........................... .........$ 3 3 6 1 Am ount Due at Lease Inception..$2,045 4 8 M o n th Lease 12 k M ile s • • • • • 5 speed A/C Power door locks Keyless entry ABS • • • • • 4 air bags AM/FM cassette w/8 speakers Full size spare tires 2 year no maintenance 10 year/100k mile powertrain warranty O.A.C. 48 months dosed end lease. 12,000 mile annually. Drivers wanted.’“ 0 w w w .ca m e lb a ckvw .co m 1499 E. Cameiback Road • Phoenix 265-6600