INSIDE Classifieds 20 Crosswords 10 Horoscopes 23 Opinion 04 PoliceBeai 08 an i n d e p e n d e n t m o r ni n g d a i I y s e r v i n g a r i z on a s t a t e un »v e r s i t y Weather Mostly Sunny; high 88 low 55 D o rm Volume 84 Number 49 Monday, March 1, 1999 Local!State 03 Sportsl5 Bagpipe players warm up for Scottish Festival Sun Devils take 2 of 3 from Wildcats in Tucson r a t e s g o u p a s r e n o v a t i o n s b e g in f i r K im P rendergast S tate P ress TUCSON — The faded cream-colored buildings that some 4,880 students who live on ASU’s campus call home will be refurbished, added onto and in one case, moved. 1 Dorm dwellers will also be paying more money. The Arizona Board of Regents agreed on Friday to both a residence hall rate increase and an overall renovation plan. Included was the construction of a new dorm between Palo Verde East Hall and Manzanita Hall on the north side of campus. As part of the proposal, student rent will jump 3.7 per­ cent, which means an average increase of $102, depending on the dorm. Currently, students at Hayden and Best halls pay $2,225 per year. The new rates, which go into effect this fall, will increase rent there to $2,307. . The upgrades will start in May and include Best, Hayden and Irish halls. When the project is complete in 2003, ASU will have 362 more beds. The Honors College will be moved to Center Complex on the south end of cam­ pus to expand housing space. “We are trying to provide a living and learning environ­ ment,” said Christine Wilkinson, vice president of student affairs. “We want a living environment that will move stu­ dents toward graduation.” The renovation will include new facilities to allow for tutors, writing center classes and computer terminals. The plan will come in three phases, with a project initia­ tion fee of $21.1 million, which is just the start-up cost and will not cover everything. The south campus development plan alone will call for an additional $10.2 million and the University is looking for a public/private partnership to pay for the project. ASU will also have to get approval from ABOR for any Race issue in debut of new play ‘Soul Sisters’ (*■k Getting schooled — ^ Tracey Borchart (right), a faculty associate wph the American English and C ulture Program. Instructs her level two English students in front of Old Main. A.E.C.P. is an ASU-sponsored pro­ gram that teaches English speaking and writing skills to internationals. Students meet five days a week for a total of 18 hours learning language skills. According to Borchart, approximately 25 per­ cent of the A.E.C.P. students go on to attend classes at ASU. By J une D. W ilhite S tate P ress Vanilla candles lit the small stage where Alisa Cutright and Diane Karl Marshall unveiled the history of their interracial friendship on the set of the debut showing of their play, Soul Sisters. Cutright, a single African-American m other and M arshall, a m arried White woman, shed a thick layer of emotional skin in two performances this weekend at Mitchell SHibbl’s Empty'Space Theater in Tempe. : “I look deep within myself to-find very p ainful ¿memories o f my ch ild h o o d ,” Cutright said. “Every rehearsal was therapy for me because we had to keep digging deeper and deeper into those em otional places you would rather not Visit.” Jennifer Linde, an ASU faculty associate in the Departm ent of Communications, directed the play and can attest to the emo­ tional roller coaster the women rode on dur­ ing the rehearsals. ; “The play forced them to look at feel­ ings they didn’t know they had,” Linde said. “On many occasions our discussions would become very heated, and we would just have to accept that we weren’t going to agree.” Both feel they came from different but equally challenging childhoods. “I grew up in a household where the word ‘nigger’ was tossed around very casu­ ally,” Marshall said. “It was my older sister in a lot of ways who brought me to another world. She set the stage for me and I was opened up to a bigger world.” On the other hand is C utright, who began life in the West Valley’s El Mirage and recalls a time where she “felt alone in the sixth grade as one of only two Black students and one of a handful of Blacks in my neighborhood.” “It was the m ost difficult at school because I felt singled-out,” she said. “They (White students) were always touching my hair and telling me I was funny. I hated it.” Cutright and Marshall began a manageremployee relationship more than four years ago. “I was the one who pursued the relation­ ship, which was partly due to my relation­ ship with my husband, who is B lack,” Marshall said. Two years after working with each other they came to share personal life stories as friends and Cutright said their spirits con­ nected. “My relationship with Diane is because of the spirit, and if it weren’t for the grace of God we wouldn’t being performing,” C utright said. “1 recognize the sp irit because it was in a White female body, but it is her spirit that I connect with.” Linde said they wanted the audience — a group of 60 people, Black and White, young and old, married and single — to recognize their spirits, but not to forget that their relationship is not perfect. “We want people to know that we honor our differences,” Cutright said. “We agree to disagree and we want people to know that it is all right.” The ASU Interpreters Theatre, in con­ ju n ctio n w ith the D epartm ent of C om m unication and Soul Sisters Productions, will hold future performances in March and April in an attempt to find a publisher for the book format of their play. For more information on locations and times contact Jennifer Linde at 965-1641 or visit their Web site www.soulsisters.com. Volunteer Fair recruits students to build Tempe homes B y Jan -E rik S aue S t a t e P ress A SU ’s Volunteer Fair helped build homes for two Tempe families. The fair, which was held last Thursday and sponsored by the ASU Community Service Program, introduced stu­ dents to volunteer opportunities by bringing them together with various nonprofit organizations. A few ASU students were inspired and took part in a Habitat for Humanity project this weekend. B right and early, around 8 a.m ., 34 students gave Habitat for Humanity a hand with die building project. The students worked about 12 hours over the two days. Despite a few blue thumbs, bruises and splinters, no one ffirr plainpri and die students seemed pleased with their effort. Most were recruited from the Volunteer Fair at ASU, however some students had previously helped Habitat for Humanity. “This is great help for (Habitat for Humanity),” said Shawn Dunsim, a regular Habitat for Humanity volunteer. Dunsim volunteers through her church and spends most of her weekends helping out. “We had never dreamed that so many students would show up.” Dunsim said. This shows that the youth today actually do care about their community.” Matt Thompson was one of the students working on the house. The 20-year-old education junior was a first-time volunteer. ‘*1 stopped by their booth on Thursday and Shawn con­ vinced me to sign up,” Thompson said. “I am glad I did. I feel like I’m really helping out.”The ASU students helpied in many ways. They were ham­ mering, painting, moving bricks and cleaning up the area. By the end of the weekend the two houses were nearly finished. “I was just curious as to what they are doing and how they are helping people,” said Mark Johnson, an engineer­ ing sophomore. “I needed community service credits for a class and wanted to do something I find worthwhile. This project teaches valuable skills and you can see results right away. The look on this family’s face shows me how good this is.” Phoenix has the sixth highest deficit of low-income hous­ ing in the nation, according to statistics from Habitat for Humanity International. Nearly 70 percent of the low-income households in Phoenix pay more thfip half their income for housing. The federal guidelines recommend 30 percent. Dorms, Campus clubs and organizations may submit written entries to the State Press in the basement of the Matthews C enter. 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 th ree working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries m ust contain th e 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, jf any of the above information is incom­ plete or illegible ENTRIES W ILL BE D ISCAR D ED . The Today Section is a daily cal­ endar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, firstserved basis and are printed as space permits. • The University Toastmasters is having a workshop on how to improve your public speak­ ing skills at 6:45 p.m. in the MU, room 208. • The Kundalini Yoga Club is offering free Yoga classes tonight for all students at 7 p.m. in the MU, room 224. • Bi Necessity is having a meeting at 5 p.m. in the MU, room 216. • The ASU Actuary Club is hay­ ing a general meeting at 4 p.m. in the Physical Science Building, roOm 111. Come learn what an actuary is and bring your resume. • T h e H ispanic B u sin ess Students Association is hav­ ing an academic luncheon in the MU’s Arizona room at 12 p.m. • Phi Alpha Delta, a pre-law fra­ ternity, is having a meeting in th e MU at 4:30 p.m. in an unannounced room. A guest speaker will deliver “Choosing th e Right Law School For You.” Call 777-1114 for more information. • The H illel Jewish S tu d en t Center is having a Purim cele­ bration at 7 p.m. at 1012 S. Mill Ave. Bring you own cos­ tume and noisemaker. •S A S U is having a general meeting followed by a crim e analyst speaker from th e Tem pe Police Department at 3:15 p.m. in the MU’s Lapaz room. •The E n gin eerin g MBA Association is having a meet­ ing for anyone interested in the graduate engineering pro­ gram, networking, o r intern­ ships. Free pizza will be served. The meeting starts at I p.m. in G W C 5I0. • T he M arriage and Fam ily Therapy Clinic offers individ­ renovations or additions that exceed $1 million. Residential Life system is financially healthy and The funding for the upgrades will come from “active.” Wilkinson said first-week occupancy has grown auxiliary revenue bonds, auxiliary enterprises fund from 92 percent in the and Residential Life fall 1995 to 100 per­ plant fund reserves. cent in fall 1997 and The additional 1998. money that students We want a living environment She added that w ill be paying to that will move students Residential Life could live on campus will not give room assign­ go toward operating toward graduation. ments to 470 appli­ and maintenance of cants in Fall 1997. To the buildings. Christine Wilkinson, m ake sure the Memoy Harrison, vice president of student affairs University was not in vice provost for a similar situation this A d m in is tr a tiv e Services, said this is the time to bring the residence past fall, Residential Life stopped accepting appli­ halls up to m odern standards because the cations in mid June. u fj W eb site shut down for citing racial views ‘taken out of context' PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A phony Internet Web site for Philadelphia mayoral candidate John White that mentioned his views on race was shut down Sunday. The site, apparently designed by som eone connected to an opponent’s campaign, posted an apology before shutting down for “causing Mr. White’s campaign some harm.” The controversy .over the fake Web site has cost the jobs of two top cam paign aides to Democratic rival Dwight Evans. At issue were quotes attributed to White, taken from a Spanish-lan- ual, couple, and family counsel­ ing to all students, staff, and faculty in the Cowden Family Resources Building in room guage new spaper, about how black and Latino voters ought to consolidate political power. The White campaign said it docs not a have a Web page and that the quote was taken out of context. They also suggested the site was created as a smear cam­ paign to create racial controver­ syBoth Evans and W hite are black. They are seeking the Democratic nomination in the race to replace Mayor Edward Rendell, who is barred by the city charter from seeking a third term. The page was registered to a lle w Issue N o w iv - • Hayden’S Feny ReviewX A v a ila h le l ^ ■. ^ C am bridge, M ass., W eb site designer Evans said was “associ­ ated” with his deputy campaign manager. The page displayed in large letters a quote from a W hite interview in Al Dia, which said, “The Black and the brown, if we unite, we’re going to control this city.” W hite said the quote was accurate, but had been taken out of context in Al Dia. What he meant, he said, was that minori­ ties should participate in the political process. - ^ ASU’sUteraiy M a g a z in e J AskfixItatyourlocalbookstore, orcall965~1243 ^ iruxe The ®ffice of Student in collaboration with the MEMORIAL UNION ACTIVITIES BOARD ■vb m w o V i i i mw w ■■ MONDAY: TUESDAY: i v .;•■■ w m S ocials C om m ittee m eetin g ait 12:10 oft th e 3rd flo o r o f th e MU. C offeeh ou se/P oetry Series m eetin g at 1:00 o n th e 3rd flo o r o f th e MU. Rick Bird: M aster H yp n otist perform s at 12:30 in th e MU Program m ing L ounge Film C om m ittee m eetin g at 1:00 o n th e 3rd flo o r o f th e MU. R ecreation C bnim ittee m eetin g at 2:30 o n th e 3rd flo o r o f th e M u . G allery C om m ittee m eetin g at 1 :4 0 o n th e 3rd flo o r o f th e MU. WEDNESDAY: "CRUEL INTENTIONS" N etw ork Event T heater Sneak Preview at 7:00 iri th e MU C inem a THURSDAY: Barren M ind Im prov. At 12:15 in th e MU Program m ing L ounge. O p in ion s Forum C om m ittee m eetin g at 2:00 o n th e 3rd flo o r o f th e MU C ollege B ow l m eetin g at 3:00 on th e 3rd flo o r o f MU. FRIDAY: Farce Side Com edy Hour at 12:40 in the MU Programming Lounge. Civic Responsibility initiative invites you to celebrate Women's History Hjlonth ASU Style! Visit the Student Life Web site at http://www.qsu.edu/vpsa/studentlife each day during thefiionth of March to read winning nominations from the CSti 965-6822 TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT MUAB ASU community about ♦ COFFEE HOUSE AND POETRY ♦ ♦ COLLEGE BOWL ♦ COMEDY ♦ FILM ♦ ♦ GALLERY ♦ RECREATION ♦ SOCIALS ♦ “O r d in a r y v fb m e n H ating E x t r a o r d in a r y T h in g s ” nto tic ■ ii - ;J - . ■’ . • • «ÏP&'A Local/State “A lot of times you take things for granted, then something like this happens and you realize just how precious life really is.” —Mel Queen, Toronto pitching coach IMIIhIInI. tUViirfc I tWlll F o rm e r m ajor leaguer killed in auto w reck TUCSON (AP) — Former major league pitcher Ken Robinson is dead, and a fellow m inor leaguer in the Arizona Diamondbacks’ organization is charged with sec­ ond-degree murder after an alcohol-related auto accident Sunday. Police said Robinson, a 29-year-old right-hander who pitched for Toronto and Kansas City , was pronounced dead at the scene of the early-morning accident. The driver, pitcher John Rosengren, was being held in the Pima County Jail. Rosengren, 26, of Barrington, 111., showed signs of impairment, and a blood sample whs taken, police said. Police said Rosengren’s car went off the road and over­ turned. Paramedics arrived at 1:40 a.m. to find both men in the vehicle. Robinson had a severe head injury, police said. Rosengren was not injured. Neither player was wearing a seat belt, Robinson had been a part of the Diamondbacks’ 40-man roster in spring training a year ago, but missed the season because of shoulder surgery. He and Rosengren, who also missed all of last season after arm surgery, were awaiting the opening of the Diamondbacks’ minor league training camp. “This is a sad and tragic day for me personally,” said Diamondbacks manager Buck Showalter. “The organiza­ tion will miss Ken Robinson, both as a person and as a player. “He was a competitor in every sense of the word.” Robinson had brief big league stints as a relief pitcher with Toronto in 1995 and 1997, and with Kansas City in 1996. He spent most 1997 with Triple-A Syracuse, where he was 7-7 with a 3.56 ERA. “It’s a tremendously sad loss of one of the finest indi­ viduals you’d ever want to meet,” Toronto pitching coach Mel Queen said from the Blue Jays’ camp in Dunedin, Fla. “It makes you think just how quickly something can be taken away from you. “A lot of times you take things for granted, then some­ thing like this happens and you realize just how precious life really is.” D i s t r i c t s a w a it a n s w e r s w h ile n e w p ro g ra m b e gin s Leah fasten o f the State Press W e lc o m e to a ll th in g s S c o ttis h •* Liz Steuber and David Nichols of the Sacramento Pipe Band warm up before their performance Sunday at the 33rd animal Scottish Gathering and Highland Games at Mesa Community College. Presented by The Caledonian Society of Arizona, the event lasted all weekend and celebrated Celtic culture and history. New, massive community emerging north of Phoenix PHOENIX (AP) — What is being touted as the first fully-equipped, master-planned community for families will be on tour to potential buyers Saturday. The new community is called Anthem, just off Interstate 17 near New River. Del Webb, the developer that built the Sun Cities retirement communities is also the developer of this most recent addition to the Valley’s metropolis. Anthem during the next 10 years is expected to have 50,000 residents, making it a community die size of Flagstaff. Anthem will have a school, fire station, large central park and community center, grocery store, and health center— all done before the first resident moves in late this summer. But critics have said it would destroy the desert, drain water resources, strain already By P aul D avenport still usable, the cook has to push a cart carrying prepared meats to the students in A ssociated P ress PHOENIX — Two state officials were another building, Studley said. That’s OK oh mild days like the one the briefing school board m em bers from around the state on preparations to imple­ board’s inspector visited on,, but not when ment the Students First construction pro­ there’s bad weather, he said. “It took three of us to push this cart gram. They were told detailed standards are through the snow. These people have no being written and requests for emergency concept what reality is,” he said. “Luckily aid are being evaluated, but the board mem­ we’ve had a real mild winter this year. It’s just so frustrating,” bers’ wanted to know more— much more. Stephen C. Rich, a Tempe lawyer who When is the state going to repair leaking roofs? Will the state set prototype designs heads the board’s projects com m ittee, for new schools? When will die state start acknowledged that requests for emergency paying for sites for new schools? Will those funding not required for health and safety have been put on hold until th e standards schools include sports facilities? They got answers to some questions but are done. “What we’re trying to do is not spend not others; And not all the answers were the the money twice — not go do a repair, find ones they wanted to hear. But more than anything else, school offi­ out that our guidelines across the-state are cials say, there ’ s still an awful lot of going to say you need to do this a little dif­ ferently, rip out the repair arid put in some­ unknowns surrounding Students First. “They promise us everything and we thing new,” he said. T he lawyer who won the lawsuit that don’t know what we’re going to end up with;” said Myrna Sheppard, president­ forced enactment of Students First said he’s elect o f the A rizona School B oards concerned by signs that the board will not meet the April 30 deadline for approving Association. Enacted last year to resolve years of the standards. That could cause a chain-reaction delay court battles, Students First is a new pro­ gram in which the state has committed to in districts getting money for repairs later / building, repairing and equipping public this year, said attorney Tim Hogan. Even more troublesome, Hogan said, are schools. It replaced a local funding system indications that cost may be too much of a that was ruled unconstitutional. Students First’s implementation is prov­ concern in the board’s preparation of tide ing to be complicated, and there are linger­ standards. “The staff, at least, is doing the guidelines ing questions about its cost. The biggest chore facing a seven-mem­ with costs as one of their primary considera­ ber board appointed by Gov. Jane Hull to tions,” Hogan said. “It’s a constitutional implement Students First is writing stan­ requirement that we have minimal adequate dards for minimum school facilities. What facilities. It doesn’t matter what it costs.” those standards require will determine what improvements need to be made at existing Scheduled deadlines for schools such as extra space, better lighting, the Students First school w iring fo r com puters, and w hat new construction program: schools must be like. M arch 31: School Facilities Board P atrice C onley, a C oolidge school to submit final draft of proposed mini­ ad m in istrato r who is chairm an o f the mum adequacy standards to the gover­ School Facilities Board’s guidelines com­ nor and the Legislature. m ittee, said the standards will include A p ril 30: Board to adopt the stan­ square footage requirements, equipment dards. They take effect immediately. needs, school sites, and building codes. June 30: Board to decide which exist­ However, the “very center” o f the stan­ ing schools are short o f space as dards will be conditions such as lighting, required by the standards. acoustics, temperature, and air quality, she A ug. t; Local districts to notify the said.“ These things directly affect a child’s state w hich school fa cilities need performance:” repairs or other work to meet the stan­ The standards are supposed to be fin­ dards. ished by the end of April, but school offi­ Nov. 2: Local districts may hold elec­ cials say they and their students shouldn’t tions on proposals for extra property have to wait for repairs to leaking roofs and taxes to augment state funding. other immediate needs. D ec. I: Board reports to Legislature Roger Studley, the part-time superinten­ on how much salcs-tax money will be dent of Maine Consolidated District in needed in the next fiscal year to fix western Coconmo County, said the board deficiencies of existing schools, build brushed off his 100-student K-8 school’s new schools and maintain old ones. need for a new cafeteria to replace one that D e c . IS: Board submits cost esti­ was built in the 1920s and recently closed mates for fixing deficiencies o f all because of an unsafe roof. schools by June 30, 2003. Though the kitchen built in the 1950s is overcrowded schools, and furthef clog traf­ fic-jammed roads. Tom Lucas, general manager of Del Webb, said die company will spend $180 million on construction and communities before the first resident moves in. Del Webb is spending $66 million on the project’s infrastructure. It is building a water-treatment plant, funding the $12 mil­ lion construction of a freeway interchange off 1-17 and donating the land. And Del W ebb w ill spend $9 m illion to build Anthem’s first K-8 school, the newspaper said. The developer also is. donating 50 acres for a high school and will provide land for two elementary school sites at 50 percent of the appraised value to the Deer Valley dis­ trict.''.'’ Texas v e rd ic t raises j death penalty questions I T h e re is no e x c u se fo r p e o p le lik e Jo h n William King. King was recently found guilty o f capital murder in the dragging death o f Jam es Byrd Jr. in Jasper, Texas. The horror o f the act King committed is hard to swallow: In the early hours o f June 7, 1998, he helped tether Byrd to a pickup truck with chains and proceeded to drag him for three miles. His body was severed in two. It w,as recovered in pieces. The act was motivated by racist hate. L a st T h u rsd a y , K in g , w ho is a w h ite supremacist, was sentenced to death by the jury who convicted him. On his way out o f the Jasper C ounty C ourthouse, w hen asked if he had any comments for the Byrd family he replied with an obscenity, according to The New York Times. King is, by most modem standards, a vile individual and it could be easily said that a w orld without King is indeed a better world. That is, if one were inclined to make that sort o f judgm ent — because w hile the horrible incident seems to be one o f the m ost convincing arguments for the death penalty yet, it still brings into question the logic o f a practice that seeks to reme­ dy a problem through the very m eans by which the problem came about. Let’s face it, King's got it relatively easy. He gets to lie on a gurney while the fatal liquid is fed into his blood stream, he falls unconscious and then he suffocates. Ju x tap o sed w ith w hat Byrd went through — a pathologist testified during the trial that Byrd was alive for most o f the ordeal — and King’s fate seems almost laughable. It seems easy. But the ease o f the death penalty in its implcmentation through lethal injection brings the real issue at hand to the surface: the death penalty is a way that society rids itself o f hum an beings it deems dangerous. And boiled down to the sim plest factor, it is human judgm ent that makes that call. And th a t’s scary. B ecause w hile w hat to do with King seems an easy enough decision to come to, the choice isn 't always that easy to make. Statistics consistently point to racial inequities in the actual application o f the death penalty — The New York Times reported that King would be only the second white man in Texas history to be put to death for killing a Black man, the previous occasion involving a white farm er killing anoth­ e r’s favorite slave. To put it simply, the termination o f human life seem s a p retty heavy d ec isio n to pu t into the hands o f hum an beings. We’re generally a smart bunch, but we have been know n to m ake m istakes, and while the King decision doesn’t seem to be one o f these instances, we stand pretty convinced that the potential for err in hum an judg­ ment is a pretty strong assurance that mistakes do happen. A nd the id ea o f one in n o cen t person being wrongly put to death is pretty scary indeed. , ) 1 j j j I j I f l J W W ß m le i* j , j Technology calls for responsibility j Issues of information crime and privacy protection have recently been guest columnist popular topics in the State Press and o th er m edia. News co v erag e o f R óW G potential privacy violations, such as guest columnist the use of social security numbers in governm ent or educational inform ation system s or Processor Serial Number technologies em bedded in chips — such as the new INTEL processor — have regu­ larly failed to address two of the most important ele­ ments in privacy protection: personal responsibility and criminal intent. Invasion of privacy is not caused by new technology or a numbering scheme. It occurs when individuals use technology in an inappropriate or malicious manner. It is time for a broader look at techniques to protect privacy that encompasses education, training, criminal investiga­ tion, prosecution and punishm ent of infractions and abuse, as well as technological solutions. Efforts to protect privacy with solely technological solutions may restrict or hamper the very technologies that enable us to detect and prosecute information crime. It could also inhibit the efficient distribution of informa­ tion across networks and the Internet. Electronic pub­ lishers and information providers increasingly require users of their products to identify themselves to gain access to information, but we have not developed reli­ able and comprehensive “authentication” mechanisms to verify online identity. In the near future, inability to authenticate users and verify online identity may limit online commerce and access to many new and exciting information products, but misuse of authentication technologies is possible. The potential for violation of privacy is balanced by the potential of the technologies to help identify the perpe­ trators of information crime. ! f f j r i | j j j ; j j j j j j j In this age of rapid technological change, there are no easy answers. Individuals should be suspicious of quick fixes that may significantly alter the underlying balance of access and control. Technologies are developed and adopted well before their implications are fully under­ stood, and often — the benefits and the liabilities of new technologies — only become apparent with experience. Our best protection o f privacy is through a combina­ tion of wise implementation of technology, sound policy and legislation, swift and sure prosecution of criminal abuse and the continued training and education of users. This way, people will have the means to take effective steps to protect themselves. • Changing passwords regularly and keeping them pri­ vate, enabling security to be built into software and reporting infractions and abuses are all powerful tools in limiting abuse and in maintaining individual privacy in the electronic environment. If we can do all these things well, we can learn to make good decisions and adapt quickly to the opportunities and responsibilities that come with new technologies. Relying purely on technological solutions to protect privacy may well paralyze future efforts to efficiently implement new technologies. Legislation and informa­ tion policy is being created that may address some, but not all, of the related issues. Users must fake responsi­ bility for, and participate in, protecting their electronic privacy so we all may enjoy a secure and yet open Internet for years to come. Rob Spindler is an archivist curator at university libraries and can be reached at rob.spindler@asu.edu. Jeremy Rowe is the head o f m edia developm ent information and can be reached at jeremy.rowe@ asu.edu. Kara Shire, Editor Dave Woodfill, Managing Editor Alicia A* Caldwell — — City Editor Lidia Kelly --------— ---------------------------—Assistant City Editor Mario A. Lopez — ------— -— — — Opinion Editor Chriati Foist ............---- --— ——— -News Editor Jeremy Hein ~ —Phot o Editor Doug Flanagan :■— —— ------Sports Editor Jonathan Inge ' ^ „Graphics Coordinator Percy Ednaliriq jr. — -Magazine Editor Alyson Hurt ------------------- ------------------- A ss t Magazine Editor Reporters.—*------ — .........------------ -------------------- .. Erfend Aas, Andrea Balsky, Jason Hallam, Jodie Lau, Stephanie Paterik, Jayson Peters, Kim Prendergast, Jan Seue,Carrie Severson, GangaSubramanian, June D. W iike. Wadalawala, Brad W hisler. Cartoonists - —— —— — —— Brian Balchumas, C arrie L B ehrens, B ruce C rosby, Brian Fairrington, C arlos Ramirez. „ n , T. * Production-™-^---— ™ — — — — — — ——— - N athan Balzer, Tanya Baxley, Alyson H u rt,H e a th e r Nash, Shelley Sports Reporters — — ----- —~ Student Media Phone N u m b ers----- Chris Carlock, Clint Currie, Robert Deal, Percy Ednalino Jr„ Sam Ganczaruk, Joe Mantone, Nick Piecoro. Brian Ary, Mike.Giallanza, David G oodw in, Jennifer Haddan, Copy Editors — — — —— — — .............— — ^— ----- Michael Knievel, Jonathan N egretti, Shane Siren, Kathy W elsh. A m b er Knuth, Susan Schimmel. -----------------Classifieds ------------------------------- — -------- Photographers -— — — — r— Leah Fasten, S o le / H arte!, Hyun Lim, Samaruddin S te w a rt Columnists — >— — - — -— Scott Bracken, Stephanie Conner, Justin Doom , Brant Galloway, Scott D. Gillette, Stephanie D, Johnson, Shawna kemppainen, G regor ficGavin, Megan Nielsen, Brian Pofifoff, Timothy S c o tt Joe The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and d rculated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff o r student body. Kate Desio, Amanda G reen, Paul Holley, Katie McGee, Jeanette Ploium. T h e State Press is published M onday through Friday during th e academ ic year, e x c ep t holidays and exam periods, a t M atthew s C e n te r, Room 2, A rizona State University, T em pe, Aria., 852871502. W e d o n o t answ er questions o f a general nature. State Press Newsroom 965-2292 StcltG Press Magazine 965-1695 5t|J(jent iqej)ja Information 965-7572 Advertising 965-6555 GlaSSifiedS 965-6735 _ . .. Qn the web http://www,statepress.com c .• L -IT U ill . j r »T v V . . a S tp r e S S ( U /< lS U .e C jU inion 05 Right to know* bili will limit women’s rights In a 1992 landmark ®scision, Planned Parenthood v. 17- to 1 ^ , according to the N atio n al A bortion and Jan. 22nd was the 26*^ anniver 1er columnist j Casey, the U.S. Supreme Court found that state govern­ Reproductive Rights Action League " | sary of Roe v. Wade, the landmark ments can rightfully take measures to ensure th at a Ar a Planned Parenthood function commemorating cáse in which the U.S. Suprem e woman’s choice is informed, eves if the purpose of giv- Roe v. Wade laSt fobirth, Howard expressed his concern Court recognized a woman’s right to ; ing the information is to persuade a woman to proceed about the trend, as quoted by Ihv Arizona Republic j have an abortion, in 1999, the pen­ with the childbirth. However, the SuprrtnC'Oourt added, “The battle isn’t about Roe anymore.” Howard said, dulum of public policy t$ steadily ;,“T h c se .^ an undue hurdeo on [a more lnxidioua It’s about strategies that swinging away from that ruling. : '*■ would restrict abortions and decrease providers ” On Feb. -. 23rd:, t h e ' A rizona An “undue burden” is defined as any law with the Legislature passed Senate Bill 1343, purpose or effect o f being a substantial obstacle to a abortion by age 43 84 percent ol all U S counties hast | ' com m only re ferred to ft* th e S o m a n seeking an abortion. no health cam provider to perforin the procedure. “Woman’s Right to Know” hid. ; Informed-consent laws are not considered an undue The biB,which w ttlacw Last April, a 33-ycar-old mother of two bled to death es that an abortion would be illegal if it were performed burden. There’s no inherent reason to suggest otherwise, at a Phoenix abortion clinic, w hile inexperienced or induced without the “voluntary and informed consent based on their language alone v y , .‘¿ 't i i j .. employees helplessly of the patient," H H lim e out from many Arizona residents and lawmakThe new law would require the physician, or another | j j demanding improvements in reproductive health ser­ qualified person, to orally describe the procedure, at 4 m Requiring [women] to docuvices Still, the shocking incompetence and tragic made- 1 least 24 hours in advance. The patient must ment their consent suggests potential health risks' of the abortion and the alternatives quacy of one facility does nor negate the legality or the I that women need laws io§i l i i i É tabilitv o f abortion in this country. to terminating the pregnancy. In An zona, 13 out of every 100 pree nancies wereterOther required details include the gestational age of the fetos, the risks of childbirth, toe availability of medi­ minaied in H H | u '.ÿjiOMthHMh gravity o f their own actions. , '1 cal benefits mid the father’s liability for child Support according to the Department o f Health Serv ices If so IfDo lawmakers really believed The patient must also certify their consent in writing. many women arc making this choice, they need to be This kind o f legislation sends the wrong political protected from inept health care by providing them with women don't take their own message to women. Requiring them to document their more facilities and better staff. A joint House-Senate ] bodies seriously? consent suggests that women need laws to rriake them Sam nuttee lus already approved a state proposal to regu­ , understand thegravity of their own actions. Do lawmak­ late independent abortion clin ics, requiring more '*v* Ij C. •*. ers really believe women don’t take their own bodies ! TimorttyScott, ^ licensed, fully-trained nurses and medical assistants. colum nist seriously? In a quote taken from The Arizona Republic, Bryan you support the right to have an abortion or not, no one .•Howard., th e' c h ie f ex ecu tiv e o ffic e r o f P lanned : - Yel, who voted can criticize legislators for taking the issue seriously, Parenthood of Central and Northern Arizona, voiced for the right to choose in both Hoe v. Wade and Planned Informed-consent laws will definitely create more Parenthood v. Casey, said he believed theft the lack of dtftMjggif bet ween pregnant women and their doctors. J similar concerns about this legislation. “T his b ill dishonors women,” Howard said, “by evidence available in 1992 made the. standard of undue That will certainly do no harm Yet, pro-choice individu implying that they made decisions about abortion glibly, : burden difficult to determine. He expressed confidence aïs need to be aware o f this legislation so it doesn't J that, after wide application, evidence would show that become the first step in a series of truly prohibitive without folly examining their hearts and situations.’^ s ‘Obstacles to the reproductive freedom o f American Howard also said the means by which abortion clinics thq§c'. laws deliver information should be determined by doctors and pbafc»i? ' ' Over the last seven years, the number of states with patients, not government intervention. S ço tt is a sop hom ore studying journal­ Still, a movement to overturn abortion rights is gain- I mandatory waiting periods has increased from zero to ism and can b è reached a t tscott@ im ap4.asu.edu " 12States With informed-consent laws heye juE^ped fi can ing momentum across die country. -a ™ What D o You Think?, ± DOES J W O N E WWE TUE E-m ail: m a ra lop@ im ap2 .asu .e du ... AWONt? W ebsite: http://www.statepress.com G rip e Line: 965-6881 Fax: 9 6 5 -8 4 8 4 M ail: Letters to the Editor A riz o n a S tate U niversity 15 M atthew s C e n te r T em pe, A Z 8 5287-1502 R e a d e r s ’p0 || ^ W h a t is your opinion? N e w York Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan is retiring January 2001. First Lady H illary Rodham Clinton is pondering a campaign fo r his seat during the 2000 election. Should sh e tu n ? .V A . Yes B. N o C , D on’t Care " ' ' To vote, visit o u r website at http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/spress/spress.html Answers w ill be pub­ lished in'next Wednesday’s issue o f the State Press. The State Press welcomes and encourages writ­ ten response from o u r readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer th an tw o pages to be eligible fo r publication. P le a s e In c lu d e y o u r full n am e,- ID n u m b e r , class sta n d in g , m a jo r ( o r affiliation w ith th e U n iv e rsity ) a n d p h o n e n u m b e r; Requests for anonymity will be granted only with an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor for factual errors arid print space availability. Letters containing obvious factual e rro rs will be rejected. Individuals wishing to use e-mail. Gripe Line, Fax o r our website for response are able to do so by providing the same information required for written purposes. P r o g r a m p u ts str u g g lin g residents back on right track By G anga S ubramanian S tate P ress Angela Vance, a 41 -year old ASU arche­ ology junior, gets help from the city of Tempe with her monthly rent. As a single parent, she pays only $15 of the $500 bill. But Vance will not be dependent on the city forever. t h e city o f Tem pe’s F am ily S elf Sufficiency Program assists those like Vance in creating long-term goals and pro­ vides financial incentives when the goals are met, said Karen Pierce, who runs the program for the city. ‘"The idea is to help them get off the sub­ sidized housing program,” Pierce said. She said those who are on the city ’s assisted housing program can volunteer to be part of the Family Self Sufficiency Program. These volunteers meet regularly and lay down personal and professional goals that they promise to meet. To motivate participants to meet their goals, Pierce said the program has set up financial incentives. Typically, when the earned income of assisted housing recipients increases, they pay a higher portion of the rent as the government subsidy decreases. / Re w ■Ëm At this stage, the Fam ily S e lf Sufficiency Program promises to start an escrow account for the fa m ily , where money, determined by the person’s earned income, will be deposited. “When they have completed all of the goals that they have set, they can use this monpy to buy a home,” Pierce said. Vance is one of the' 800 families receiv­ ing rental assistance under the c ity ’s Section 8 housing program, which has an annual budget of more than $5 million. As part of Vance’s list of goals, she decided to go back to school to get a col­ lege degree. She said this Was the right time, for collège because she sees a whole new set of opportunities, “You can't win with these dead-end jobs,” she said. “You have to have a College degree.” ;■ . She said most of her listed goals are aca­ demic. Sabrina Ramirez, a 28-year-old Gateway Community College student who also receives similar assistance, agreed with Vance about the benefits of the program. “It makes it possible for people who start with a disadvantage to further them­ selves,” she said. Qintorii^laxes as. first-lady, Chelsea hftCltah slopes WÊ By T erence H unt ■A ssociated A w PARK CITY, Utah — President Clinton relaxed at a borrowed mountaintop home Sunday as his wife. Hillary, and daughter, Chelsea, went skiing on a brilliantly sunny day. The first lady and Chelsea were spotted on the slopes by photographers and camera­ men. Mrs. Clinton was overheard express­ ing irritation to Secret Service agents about someone who had skied too closely The Clintons had a private dinner and a birthday cake Saturday night for Chelsea as '-be mined I4) The Clintons are staying at the posh home of Hollywood producer Jeffrey Katzenberg, who lent the president his gated, mult ¡mill ion-dóllar estate in the Deer Valley Resort. Katzenberg has sev­ eral intermediate ski runs just off his backyard. The first family arrived Saturday and are staying until 7 uesday. Clinton does not ski He tried it once 15 years ago in Sun Valley. Idaho, where he took repeated tumbles and finished the day with tom ligaments in his left knee. The president said he planned to spend the long weekend reading and might make a trip into town for coffee “He’s at home,” spokesman Barry 1oiv said. T suspect he’s doing exactly what he said he was (going to do), which is read­ ing. Work is low on the totem pole today as far as his priorities. He’s on vacation. * and it happens to be Sunday as well.” o eyw r m u m whebeïEb you pick up MR In every field of competition, the outcome is determined by the players. Take any environm ent, fro m the m ost simplistic to the m ost advanced, and you’ll notice one com m on thread. People. They’re the key to success, discovery, to the fu tu re itself. ■. 1 1 At H ew itt, w e’ve been p u ttin g people first fo r decades. O f course, th at’s o u r business. We’re a global consulting firm specializing in hum an resource solutions. We’ve becom e an industry leader by creating a culture that encourages team work, innovative thinking and personal grow th. i ! -I I 1 Í i 1 i J W hat does it m ean for you? Im agine reaching your potential. You can do it at Hewitt. Majors that have traditionally been successful in o u r organization: Accounting, Actuarial Science, Com puter Science, Economics, Finance, Math, MIS o r Statistics. I For m ore inform ation, including upcom ing campus events, visit o u r website at w ww Jrew itt.com o r send your resume to: H ew itt Associates LLC, 100 H alf Day Road, Lincolnshire, IL 60069. Fax: 847-295-0679. E-mail: careers@ hew itt.com . As a strategy for o u r Continued success and o u r vision for continuing to foster an inclusive environm ent, we seek individuals w ho w ill provide a diverse range o f talent, perspectives, experience, an d background?. H ew itt is an equal op portunity employer. P re -N ig h t P re se n ta tio n M arch 25 th 6 :0 0 p .m . - 8 :0 0 p .m . A p a c h e R o o m M -U 221 In te rv ie w s M arch 2 6th S t u d e n t S e r v ic e s B u ild in g T h ir d F lo o r H e w itt Improving Business Results Through People c e le b ra tin g S LA S H IN G P R IC E S B A C K TO B U D 'S N E W J L V in n iia DRAFT Baer Reg. J1.75 limit 4 In House Only ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ T O T O P 1 0 R P A R T Y E A W S O I T H N S U S 1. Live entertainment on the patio 2. Pictures with the Budweiser Girls 3. FREE Budweiser giveaw ays 4. FREE prizes (movie tickets, mama's money) 5. W in FREE pizza 6. H appy Hour prices all day 7. Free parking 8. Best calzones in town 9. Closest pizzeria to campus 10. Friendly service KTMSOFBEERS C o m e E x p e r ie n c e T h e M a m a ’s T ra d itio n 106 E. University Dr. " U CHOICE P r e fe rr e d a t A 8 U 1 Block East of Mill Ave. on University FREE DAYTIME CAMPUS DELIVERY $10 M inim um Delivery 8 9 4 -M A M A U n iv e r s it y ‘M a m a K n o w s B e s t ” ASUpolice reported the following incidents Saturday: • Two men not affiliated with ASU were arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at 601 Alpha Drive. , ♦ • Twt> men not affiliated with ASU were arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at 609 Alpha Drive. ; ' • A man not affiliated with ASU was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at Area 51. • An ASU student was arrested, cited and released for underage possession of alcohol at Sonora Center, Tempe police reported the following incidents Sunday: • Police arrested two Phoenix men Wednesday at 5000 S. Arizona Mills Circle in the theft of a CD player from a car in the mall parking lot. One man was charged with burglary and possession of burglary tools, while the other was charged with burglary. Both Were booked into the Tempe City Jail. • A 29-year-old Mesa man was arrested Wednesday at 215 E. Orange St. on an outstanding warrant from the Mesa City Court. A search of the man revealed a glass pipe, which officers believed could be used to smoke “crack” cocaine. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail on charges of pos­ session of drug paraphernalia and held to see a judge. • A 33-year-old Texas man was arrested Wednesday at 1116 S. McCIintock Drive on charges of driving under the influence of alcohol, driving under the influence of drugs and driving on a suspended license. Officers contacted the man after he reportedly Committed several traffic viola­ Mass, boy’s body found near home tions. He submitted to a sobriety test, which revealed he I was intoxicated and further investigation revealed that he 1 was possibly impaired by drugs. He was booked into the J B y D aye H owland A ssociated P ress Tempe City Jail. NORTON, Mass. — The body of a 9-year-old boy • An 18-year-old Phoenix man was arrested Wednesday at ; 1330 W. Baseline Road on charges of burglary, and a 20- j who disappeared while looking for his dog in a snowstorm was found Sunday by a shallow stream about 300 yards year-old Phoenix man was arrested Wednesday at 1010 W. j from his family’s home, in an area that had been searched Southern Ave. on charges of burglary and possession of bur- J several times before. glary tools. Police said the men were observed breaking into a | The body of Corey Anderson was found curled in a car at 915 W. Malibu Drive and removing property. They I ball in dense underbrush along the banks of an icy brook were booked into the Tempe City Jail and held to see a judge. { after the stripes from his Boston Bruins jacket caught a • Police arrested a 36-year-old Mesa man Thursday at 915 I searcher’s eye, police said. Search crews in canoes made the discovery shortly E. Apache Blvd. on charges of possession of drug para- j phernalia and failing to appear before a judge on charges of 1 before noon on the bank of Mulberry Brook, It was the fifth time the area had beep searched. But drug paraphernalia. He was contacted about suspicious I activity. A search of the man revealed a pipe, believed to be j police said the body was only visible from the creek, and snow that had obscuTed the body may have melted; used to smoke “crack” cocaine, in his sock. He Was booked 1 It appeared the boy was trying to stay out of the Waters into the Tempe City Jail. of the swamp next to the creek when he died, Hartley said. • Police arrested a 27-year-old Tempe man Thursday at 800 j Police said they do not believe Corey drowned, but were E. Southern Ave. on charges o f assault after he reportedly | unsure of the cause of death. An autopsy was scheduled. pushed an officer. He was booked into the Tempe City Jail I Corey’s parents and young sister did not immediately comment. and held to see a judge. “Our hearts go out to them,” said State Police Lt. Paul • A 24-year-old Tempe woman was arrested Thursday at J Zia Record Exchange, 105 W. University Drive, on charges 1 Maloney. Corey was dressed Warmly, wearing two jackets, a o f shoplifting. O fficers said she concealed two CDs I sw eater and fur-lin ed boots when he left his house between two notebooks and attempted to leave the store j Thursday during a storm that dumped 7 inches of snow in without paying, setting off a store alarm. She was booked j the area. He was looking for a golden retriever mix named into the Tempe City Jail. Jasmine that had bolted from the house earlier. The dog Reports compiled by State Press reporter Jayson Peters, j turned up an hour later in a neighbor’s yard. OPEN TO A LL BUSINESS STUDENTS!!!!!!!! Alpha Kappa Psi Presents Office of Student Life presents Career Night Tuesday March 2nd ' Memorial Union Turquoise Room 6:00-8:00 P.M. Companies are looking for hill-time and internship positions. F E S ffV A L « * March 1, 1999 • Student Services Courtyard • Time: 10 :3 0 -3:30 E n te rta in m e n t: P h o e n ix Irish F o lk D a n c e rs , N e w S c h o o ls fo r th e A r ts D a n c e rs .C a rib b e a n M u s ic / A n s e l J o s e p h , India F o lk D a n c e /A s h a G o p a l, Y e llo w B ird In d ia n D a n c e rs , N o s o tro s / L a tin o F o lk D a n ce . Tosco Corporation Enterprise Andersen Consulting PCS Health Systems And Others Philip Morris Sears Arthur Andersen Princeton Review Professional Dress and Resumes are encouraged Companies scheduled to appear are subject to change FOOD PROVIDED BY STUD EN T O RGANIZATIONS Alph AÉI é p a PSI F o r f u r t h e r in f o r m a t io n , p le a s e c o n t a c t L lo y d B r im h a ll, P r o g r a m C o o r d in a t o r The P ro fe ssie « * l t « f iir » is F ra te rn ity I n t e r n a t io n a l S t u d e n t O f f ic e a t 9 6 5 -7 4 5 1 M i dwes tern U niversity CELLULAR P H O N E M O N TH LY ACCESS A S LO W AS $ 2 7 . 9 5 / M o n th (requires approved credit and one year service agreement) V ▼ ▼ M O TO RO LA PAGER M O N TH LY SERVICE FROM $ 8 . 9 5 / M o n th Includes V o ice m a il FREE w ith this a d o n ly (requires one year agreement) ▼ ▼ ▼ Free Delivery Available B E E P E R 970-7676 G Visit our Health Sciences Career Fair AA»_j— Jay, March 10, 1999 1:00 to 5:00 pm Featuring guest speakers, interactive booths, demonstrations, tours, and informational sessions ith MWU students and faculty lendale, A r iz o n a Learn about our degree programs in : Biomedical Sciences (2+2 bachelor’s degree) Occupational Therapy (bachelor’s and master’s degrees) Physician Assistant Studies (bachelor’s and master s degrees) Pharmacy (3-year doctoral degree) Osteopathic Medicine (4-year doctoral degree) Bioethics (master’s and certificate program) Health Professions Education (master’s program) M id w e s t e r n U n iv e r s it y 19555 North 59th Avenue Glendale, AZ 85308 Office of Admissions 888/247-9277 or 602/572-3215 admiss@midwestern.edu www.midwestern.edu Institute o f H u m a n O r ig in s elects n e w b o ard m e m b e rs 3/10/99 Curried Chicken Salad A twist on the dtatk dttdcen saiad, this version not only has the spunfy spiciness of am% fts got the sweet and crispy crunch ' ' peanuts, raisins md apples. Reg $7.99 lb Artichoke Triangles A combination of artichokes, Cheddar cheese, herbs and spices - great served with a dollop of sour cream! Reg. $6.59 lb Tofu Eggless Salad An all time favorite without the eggs! We add tofu, given onion, spices and toss with veganaise dressing. Reg. $4.99 lb no artificial ingredients...ever! bulk foods «hormone free meats microbrews • organic wines largest selection o f nutrition products vegetarian and vegan selections seminars • events Ja m b a Ju ice B a r w r i& L E FOODS O p e n 8am -10 pm Everyd ay 5 120 S R ural ltd . Tem pe 456-1400 P u re fo o d . T h a t's th e w h ole Story. By J odie Lau S tate P ress The ASU-affiliated Institute of Human Origins — known for findings such as “Lucy,” the 3.2 million-year-old hominid fossil from Ethiopia — is adding three new board members. The Institute also re-elected Jeffery W. Meyer as the board’s chairman. James S. Gilliland, chief counsel Of the U.S. Department of Agriculture until 1998, and Ian Tattersall, curator of the American Museum of Natural History’s Anthropology Department in New York, will be joining the board of directors. Their appointments will be effective at the group’s first meeting of the year in April. In Arizona, Janet Sands was chosen to sit on the board. Sands is chairwoman of the Phoenix’s RORD Foundation, an orga­ nization that offers scholarships to econom­ ically-disadvantaged students. D onald Johanson, d irecto r o f the Institute and an ASU anthropology profes- New crosswalk signs allow time for pedestrians to cross By P aisley D odds A ssociated P ress SOMERVILLE, Mass. — You’re on foot, running late and thé crosswalk sign starts flashing “Don’t Walk.” Cars are lined up at die busy intersection, drivers anxiously wait­ ing for their light to turn green. If only you knew exactly how much time you had before the cars zoom off the line. Now you do. New crossw alk countdown signs are telling pedestrians exactly that in communi­ ties in Florida, Colorado and Connecticut, as w ell as Somerville and two other Massachusetts towns. .When the traffic light turns red, pedestri­ ans gel their turn t6 move with an image of a walker and a 20-second countdown that flash­ es “20U9-18 ...” Ann Johnson, acting director of the Somerville department of traffic and parking, said she decided to install one of the signs W hat M AKE A DIFFERENCE BY ASSISTING MEDICAL RESEARCH You can be part of a medical research study at MDS Harris and earn $810 IN 3 W EEKEN DS. By participating, you can help improve the quality of life for people around the world, if you meet the criteria below, call us at 254-PA YS (7297) to learn more. sor, said he is thrilled to have Sands join the board. “We really feel that Janet brings lots of energy, enthusiasm and intellectual pursuit that Will certainly strengthen the board’s involvement,” Johanson said. In addition to her involvement with the RORD foundation. Sands is active within the ASU community. She is working with the University in establishing scholarships for students in financial need. Her current project is setting up a new scholarship at ASU West. “I’m expecting to be very well-informed with how they operate their Institute and what their goals are,” Sands said. Since its move from Berkeley, Calif, in 1997, Johanson said the non-profit institute has continued to be successful. The board of directors consists of 18 members from around the United States who are responsible for fund raising for research and setting the research agenda for the Institute. ' after seeing them in Canadian cities. “Many people feel they don’t have enough time to cross and some of them get upset when the ’Don’t W alk’ Starts to flash,” Johnson said. “They don’t know whether they should try to get across or whether they should turn back.” The $550 signals by Tassimco in Terre Bonne, Quebec, have been particularly popu­ lar in M assachusetts, where drivers are aggressive arid busy intersections baffle motorists and pedestrians alike. “Anything helping pedestrians will be use­ ful,” said Nancy Wright, a Somerville resi­ dent waiting to cross a multiple-street inter­ section.. • -Colorado has installed the signals in Aspen and Grand Junction. “The countdown signs are self-explanato­ ry. It’s one of the best things I’ve ever done in this job,” said Jim Nall, a traffic engineer for the Colorado Department of lYansportation. co u rsé at t h e t o i» a u o th e rs ■ men and women ■ 18 to 45 years old ■ nonsmokers ■ availability: three weekends Harris lesliny pays. Call 2 5 4 -P A Y S today! mDSHarris Together, W e're M«king Lives Better 4639 South 36th Street, Phoenix www.iridsha r r is .f c o m / r c r t / r e c r u it . htm . Call today to enroll! KAPLAN 1-800-KAP-TESÏ .www.kaplan.com , ■MPI WB$ ; C u re fan gets $ 7 5 K from suit Experts: Avalanches a danger in U.S., not as bad as Europe SANTA ANA, Calif, A man who claim s a bodyguard for the C ure beat him up when he tried to get an autograph after a concert was aw arded $75,000 after the band allegedly failed to respond to his lawsuit: The g ro u p ’s law yer denied M ark Perry’s claims and said the band never responded because it was never lawfully served with the suit filed in 1997. Perry, 25, says he was roughed up by guard Brian David Adsett when he tried to get an autograph after a 1996 concert in Irvine. He suffered injuries to the face, lips and teeth and had to under­ go root canals and need surgery to repair a scar on his lip , said atto rn ey E rik Gunderson. Stephen L. Hewitt, the Cure’s attor­ ney, denied all allegations and said he’11 ask a judge to overturn the judgm ent issued last week because the law suit Wasn’t properly served. , The British band is known for such songs “ F ascination S treet” and “The Walk." NEW YORK — Rising Hollywood hunk Ryan Phillippe plays a manipula­ tiv e je rk in his new m ovie C ruel Intentions, a role he calls rolé reversal. “I have a really dark sense of humor, so 1 loved how w e'd say such horrible things in such a flippant way,” Phillippe says in Sunday’s Daily News. “But my character is the exact opposite of me. I never had friends like that because 1 never liked guys on the make. They were full of themselves and slick. 1 don't have those sexuality issues of having to be macho. I’m fine with being sensitive and crying.” Phillippe got his career start playing a hom osexual teen -ag er on the soap opera One Life to Live. His film credits in clu d e / K now W hat You D id L a st Summer, White Squall, Homegrown, 54 and Playing by Heart. Being coldhearted, even in a movie role, just isn’t his nature. When Phillippe did a scene in Cruel Intentions where his character breaks up with a girl played by Reese Witherspoon, who is his girlfriend in real life, he says, “I threw up.” ST. PAUL, M inn. — G a rriso n K e illo r lik es M in n eso ta G ov. Jesse Ventura’s chances for president in 2000. Plugging his satire loosely based on the former professional wrestler, “Me: by Jimmy (Big Boy) Valente, as told to Garrison Keillor,” the author acknowl­ edges the splash Ventura made with his surprise election win in November, call­ ing him a “viable ca n d id a te” for the White House. “And he’s picked all the right ene­ mies — liberals, bureaucrats, your high school c iv ic s te a c h e r, jo u r n a lis ts ,” K e illo r says in S u n d a y ’s St. P aul Pioneer Press. “But h e’d better run in 2000. because he isn’t going to have a very long shelf life.” Ventura last week told the National Press Club he was not going to run for president in 2000. When he first learned of K eillor’s book, he denounced the author, compar­ ing the book to unauthorized T-shirts and other m erchandise trading on his fame. Later, a spokesman said the gover­ nor wished Keillor luck with the book. Compiled by the Associated press. DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe ACROSS Snug spot Star of “Camille” Cleans, in a way A.k.a. Bruins Country singer LeAnn 16 Beehive State 17 Junket 18 Pandora’s boxful 19 “Breaking Away” transport 20 1960’sfa d 22 Troubled 23 Lamprey 24 Persian Gulf ships 26 Work like a dog 30 Burns badly 32 Moving sculpture 34 Fan’s cry 35 Movie theater 39 "The Party’s — ” 40 Bowser’s buddy 42 Pre-owned 43 Moola 44 Horace’s “Hail!” 45 Postponed 47 Gives a fit 50 Skeptical 51 He can’t keep his hands to himself 54 Mount near ancient Troy 56 Singer Simon 57 1920’sfa d 63 Each 64 Patriot-author Thomas 65 Circle dance 66 Posse’s shout 67 Early or late person 68 Absentee 69 Torment 70 “Golden Boy" playwright 71 Scruff 1 5 10 14 15 5 Pied-billed bird 6 Harvard and Yale, eg7 Pianist Gilels 8 “The — Heart” 9 Halfwit 10 1980’s fad 11 Of some value 12 Portable oven 13 Radiates 21 Line winder 22 Moreover 25 Heads-up 26 Breather's bane 27 Wedding word 28 “Genesis” name 29 1990'sfad 31 Hanker for 33 Undo 36 Aruba, e.g. 37 — do-well 38 Old MacDonald’s song mate 41 Like the boss's son, perhaps 46 “Too-bad!" Solution to Puzzle in the classified section. 48 49 51 52 53 55 58 59 Thickness Official seal Wolf down Rain forest animal Grind away They're on the job River to the Seine Comparer's word 60 61 62 64 B y Joseph B . Verrengia leys for centuries and the population den­ sities are much higher." A ssociated P ress it's a recipe for disaster, whether you It's been a relatively dry winter, with live in Aspen or the Alps. the exception of the Pacific Northwest, Combine deep snow with steep slopes where it has been raining or snowing vir­ and too many people, and in a few seconds tually nonstop for weeks. a winter vacation playground can become Hundreds of slides occur every day in a killing field, according to avalanche the II S., although few threaten lives or experts. property. So far this winter, at least 12 Avalanches across central Europe people have been killed or remain missing have claimed more than 70 lives in what with the snowiest months March and has become one of the century’s snowiest April— still to came. and most precarious winters. In Austria, M ost mountain com m unities have massive slides suddenly thundered into the building codes that limit construction in picturesque villages of Galteur and Valzur known avalanche paths, but they are strug­ last week Thirty-eight people were killed gling to cope with the building booms at The calamities in Europe are prompt­ ski resorts and postcard pretty towns in ing U S. officials to consider whether sim­ Colorado, Utah and othet slates ilar disasters could happen here. jjg | Am ong the U S. locales on most “There aren't too many villages in the experts' avalanche danger lists are Juneau, way here," said Don Bachman, executive director of the American Association of Alaska. Kctchum, Idaho, and Alta and Avalanche Professionals in Bozeman, Sundance resorts in Utah. ■ In Colorado. Vail has strict avalanche Moot. ' “There are communities that are in codes, but development isn’t slowing In jeopardy, but not in the magnitude of Aspen, more nullion-dollar homes are Switzerland or Austria." he said. “People creeping up steep creek drainages away have been living in those high alpine v«il- from the restored Victorian mining town. ■ An InterventionStudy in Tension Headaches Two research conditions will be studied. The experiment will be held on the ASU Main Campus. Students, Faculty and Staff are invited to participate. Study Criteria: •18 years of age •Able to read and write English • Individuals who suffer from tension headaches • Able to commit to an 8 week intervention If you are interested in being a study participant please call 632-0418 T h e S a m a r it a n I n s t it u t e o f R e p r o d u c t iv e M e d ic in e Davenport site Produce Cabbage's kin Debate side Local in fertility practice w ith caring sta ff seeking healthy wom an ages 18-32 w ho are w illing to be anonym ous egg donors fo r in fertile couples. IVfinim al tim e com m itm ent w ith $2000 com pensation paid for each .com pleted donor cycle. I f you are interested in participating, or qualifying to becom e an egg donor please call (6 0 2 ) 2 3 9 -3 6 0 8 or visit our w ebsite www.sirm.dijgiscape.net DOWN 1 Kooks 2 Light brown 3 Boo-boo 4 Paper repairer Samaritan Health System By Gregory E. Paul © 1999 Los Angeles Times Syndicate 3/1/99 KB A O Study: kids not harm ed M AR CH P ERF OR M A N CE S PRODUCTION STUDIO Broadcast on KBAQ, 89.5 FM A Part o f KAET-TV/Phoenix (602) 965-3S06 SOUTHWEST SEASON TICKET ?PM TUESDAY* March 2 March 9 March 16 March 23 March 30 From Carefree: flutist Laurel Zucker and guitarist Richard Savino in Handel, John Dowland, Heitor Villa-Lobos and much more From Tucson: the venerated Beaux Arts Piano Trio; and from Scottsdale: pianist Oleg Volkov From TUcson: Ensemble Clément Janequin de Paris sings songs of the sixteenth century - some lyrical, others rowdy From Scottsdale: the London Chamber O rchestra plays Mozart, Haydn, Shostakovich, and a smashing encore From Scottsdale: the Muir String Quârtet offers Dvorak, Prokofiev and Mozart . , g. THE GREEN RQOM 9 PM WEDNESDAYS Our weekly preview program offers recordings by artists upcoming on Arizona's concert stages. This month, host Richardson Taylor features: violinist Joshua Bell; TVio Fontenay; pianists Jeffrey Kahane, Kirill Gliadkovsky and Vfefim Bronfman; the Vermeer String Quartet; and Arizona Opera's La Bohème. ASU IN CONCERT 7 PM THURSDAY». JoAnn Yeoman brmgsyoalfefebestlrotB ^ ^ March 4 March 11 March 18 March 25 Guitarist Stephen' Aron's program includes transcriptions of Bach, Chopin, Brahms, and Scott Joplin Duo-pianists Del Parkinson and Jeffrey Shumway offer an evening of Gershwin Oboist Martin Schuring and his School of Music colleagues provide a flavorful menu of Bach, his eccentric contemporary Jan Zelenka, and Henri Dutilleux Robert Hamilton interprets piano music by Scriabin, Chopin, Bartok and more THE FABULOUS FRITTS 7 PM SUNDAYS i ; . The Smithsonian Institution's Jim Weaver introduces conceits : played March 7 ASU's Robert Clark’s Bach and Friends on the Fritts CD; March J4: David Boe; March 21 William Porter; March 28: Robert Clark in concert Partial funding for these programs provided by the Arizona Commission on the Arts appropriations from the Arizona State Legislature and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. Y o u r p o t e n t i a l is w orth 1 B y Pa u l Re c e r A s s o c ia t e d P ress W ASHINGTON — C hildren of women who work outside the home suffer no permanent harm because of their moth­ er’s absence,' a study that evaluated the development and health of more than 6,000 youngsters suggests. “ I found there was no difference between children whose m others were employed versus children whose mothers were not employed during the first three years,” said Elizabeth Harvey, a psycholo­ gist at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. “Being employed is not going to harm the children.” Harvey’s study, published in the March issue o f the jo u rn al D evelopm ental Psychology, came to a different conclusion than some earlier studies of the same group of children. The new work examined the children at a later age, 12 years old. This suggests, said David Eggebeen of Pennsylvania State University, who co­ authored an earlier study, that problems detected in children of working mothers at âgé 3 and 4 may have gone away by the time the children were 12. “Harvey’s study suggests that the num­ ber of hours spent away from home is not as important as the quality of parenting,” said Lindsay Chase-Lansdale, an associate professor of human development at the U niversity o f Chicago. She called the Harvey study “an important contribution” but riot the final answer on issues relating to children and working mothers. In the study, Harvey used data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, art in-depth interview study of 12,000 young people between the ages of 14 and 22 that started in 1979. D on’t panic over Y2K, but be p re pared, senators say B y J im A bram s A s s o c ia t e d P ress WASHINGTON — The Senate’s lead­ ing experts on the Year 2000 computer problem discounted doomsday scenarios but said Sunday that, as before a snow­ storm or a hurricane, it wouldn’t hurt to put in a supply of food and water. Sens. Bob B ennett, R-Utah, and Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who head a special Senate panel on the subject known as Y2K, said it could bring on real prob­ lems in this country, from electrical brownouts to breakdowns in medical equip­ ment. But “we will probably not have melt­ down. This will not be the end of the world as we know it,” Bennett said. Bennett and Dodd, who appeared on CBS’ Face the Nation, are to issue a report this week on the effects of the computer glitch arising, from the many computers’ inability to differentiate between the years 1900 and 2000. If unfixed, this could cause computers to malfunction or shut down. Fears of transportation, financial ser­ vices, power and nuclear systems going awry have led to a growing number of what Dodd called “Y2K survivalists,” are stock­ piling food and energy in advance of what they fear will be social chaos. That’s highly unlikely, at least in the United States, the Senators agreed. “What you ought to do is prepare for a good storm, a hurricane, a storm where you’d like two or three days of ... water and canned goods and the like,” Dodd said. a lo t m o r e . F r e e b ie s . E v e r y o n e is h a n d in g t h e m o u t . Is t h a t e n o u g h f o r y o u ? W e t h i n k y o u d e s e rv e m o r e . A n d a t S c h w a b , w e ’ve g o t a l o t m o r e t o o f f e r . W e ’ r e in v e s t in g i n t h e p o t e n t ia l o f o u r p e o p le . C r e a t in g a p o w e r f u l t e c h n o lo g y i n f r a ­ s tr u c tu r e . A n d p r o v id in g v is io n a r y f in a n c ia l s e r v ic e s . W h i c h is n o t t o s a y t h a t i f y o u w a n t a n e w to y , y o u d o n ’t d e s e rv e o n e . W e j u s t t h o u g h t a s o u n d o p p o r t u n it y w o u ld be: w o rth m o re . O n-Cam pus In t e r v ie w s Meet th e C om pany will be con d u cted T uesday, March 9th Monday, March 8th 5: 30 PM MU 2 0 3 , Gold Room C o n ta ct your ca reer c e n te r fo r more in form ation . Visit our Web site at: www. schwobcoliege. com The car might cost too much. The insurance doesn't haue to ♦ Low down-payment ♦ 24-hour claim service ♦ Monthly payment plan . ♦ immediate coverage ♦ Money-saving discounts ♦ Free rate quote Call or visit your local GEICO representative for car insurance: (602) 931-0766 Charles Schwab T h i s Is w h e r e y e u c e n d e th e h e s t work e f your li f e . Charles Schwab&Co.. Inc.. MemberSIPC/NYSE. February>999* Equal Opportunity Employer. Government Employees Insurance Co. • GEICO General Insurance Co. • GEICO thdemroty Co. • GEKj O Casualty Co. Wrahingwn, DC 20076 Il mm Bombs kill one in Zam bia, Israeli general in Lebanon LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) — Bombs exploded Sunday at the Angolan Embassy and four other areas of Zambia’s capital, killing a security guard and causing extensive damage. There was no im m ediate claim of responsibility. P resid ent F rederick C hiluba co n ­ demned the bombings as “unacceptable acts of terrorism” and asked Zambians to be on alert for further attacks. Police sealed off the Angolan Embassy in a northeastern suburb after the explosion shattered windows and damaged part of the upper floor of the two-story building. One security official at the embassy was killed and another was slightly wound­ ed, state TV reported. Witnesses said police defused a second device at the embassy. The nationalities of the victims weren’t released. Relations between Zambia and neigh­ boring Angola have been strained over alle­ gations Zambia allowed illegal weapon shipments to pass through its territory to Angolan rebels. Zambia denies the allega­ tions but concedes its lengthy border with Angola is almost impossible to police. Bombs also exploded in the southern district of Chilanga, in a deserted railroad yard close to downtown Lusaka, in the afflu­ ent northern suburb of Ibex Hill, and in east­ ern Lusaka, police and witnesses said. None had any apparent Angolan connection. The first explosion occurred early Sunday, damaging an apartment building in eastern Lusaka and leaving a knee-deep crater, witnesses said. Two bombs in an unrelated blast near Kawkaba, Lebanon Sunday a brigadier gen­ eral and three other Israelis in one of the most serious attacks on Israel's forces in southern Lebanon. Israeli warplanes retaliated after the bombing, firing missiles at suspected guer­ rilla hideouts in southern and eastern Lebanon. Lebanese security officials said. There was no immediate word on casualties from the air raid, the second in south Lebanon in as many days. Brig. Gen. ErezGerstein was the highestranking officer to die in Lebanon since the 1982 Israeli invasion. His vehicle, described by area residents as an arm or-plated Mercedes, careened off the road, rolled into the valley below and burst into flames. Two Israeli sergeants and an Israel Radio reporter, all of whom were in Gerstein’s vehicle, also were killed. Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Lebanese guerrilla group, claimed responsibility for the attack. It came five days after another south Lebanon ambush killed three Israeli army officers, prompting renewed calls for Israel to pull troops out of Lebanon. fitness Food R E G U L A R SM O O T H IE 8 r B A G E L S A M O W IC H $ 5 0 0 Good, -through March 7. J999 Earn extra cash for Sparine Break ...donate Plasma Earn up to $192 a month U by donating potentially life-saving-plasma! 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We just didn't come up with the victory” — ASU men’s basketball coach Rob Evans after his team’s 78-73 loss at Cal Twill Pi m i fill Monday, March I 1999 W restlers place 3rd at Pac-10 Championship B y Sa m G a n c z a r u k S t a t e P ress STANFORD, Calif. — The number three was involved with the ASU wrestling team’s finish at the weekend’s Pac-10 championships at Burnham Pavilion, but not in the form that it wanted. Rather than three-peating at the conference tide meet the Sun Devils took home third place, finishing behind Cal StateBakersfield ( 136.5 ) and Boise State (106.5) with a total of 98.5. ASU had the lead going into Sunday’s championship matches with 86.5 points, but were unable to sustain the advantage. The five Sun Devil grapplers to compete in their respeedve weight class finals and earning All-American status were Casey Strand, Steve Blackford, Quinn Foster, Eric Larkin and Mark Perryman. Individual results of the championship match­ es were unavailable at press time. Strand, seeking his third straight conference tide in the 184 pound weight class, began his run by defeating Kim Kendall of Stanford 22-11 and Dax McMillan of Boise State with a techni­ cal fall at 6:12. He then beat David Cobb ofUC-Davis 10-3, advancing him to the championship. Larkin, competing in the 133 pound weight class, advanced to the finals by defeating Charlie Griggs of Boise State 10-0 . • and David Yi of UC-Davis 14-4. “1 wasn't nervous at all,” he said. “I felt real good (and) I have been to big tournaments before, so I wasn’t really ner­ vous.” ‘ ’■• _ Blackford battled his way to the 165 pound finals with many close matches. He defeated Clay Hackerman of Stanford 4-3 in the first round and R.J. Gillespie of Portland State with à pin at 1:15 in the second round. His semifinal match was against Sean Morgan of Oregon, which was a nailbiter. Blackford ended up with the victory of 5-4. Perryman rode his 17-6 overall record to the finals of the 141 weight class. After a first round bye, he defeated David Watson of Oregon 12-4 and James Gross of Cal-Poly 13-7. “I don’t like close matches: I like to win by laige margins,” Perryman said. ‘-"I tried to ride those previous matches to get to the nationals.” : Foster, in the 149 pound weight class, after a first-round bye. faced Mark Castle of Oregon and won 10-1. In the semis, he faced Cedric Hymon of Cal Poly and deafeated him 6-3. “I was pretty happy with the way I wrestled,” Foster said. “I can’t really complain about the way I wrestled." Five other ASU wrestlers went two and out, but gained valuable experience, according to head coach Lee Roy Smith. "We gained some valuable experience.” Smith said. “They guys that didn't qualify here saw what it was all about and saw what you have to do all year long to put yourself in a position to qualify." 1 Matt Azevedo, wrestling in the 125-pound class, stumbled out of the gates, losing to Rudy Ruiz of Stanford. He was pinned at the 6:20 mark. “I kind of faulted in the first round, but 1 came back,” he ^s«yd. "Nationals is the ultimate goal. It’s what matters.” ASetedo came back by winning two of his next three » matchesih grab fifth place. He will most likely go to nationals 1as a wild caid. I “We will get Matt in as a wild card,” Smith said. “We came in thinking that we would be able to qualify six. Anything over that would be a bonus. We weren’t able to pick up those bonus qualifiers.” S am aruddin S te w a rt o f t h e S ta te P re ss Casey Strand gunned for ins third straight, conference title on Sunday at Stanford. He advanced to the 184-pound championship meet by defeat­ ing the Cardinal’s Kim Kendall and Dax McMillan of Boise State. v Erik Gladish, wrestling in the 197 pound weight class, lost his first two matches to Raphael Davis of Cal-State Bakersfield 8-5 and Shane Zajac of Oregon State 18-7. John Groundwater also went 0 for 2. He was defeated by Jeremy Wilson of Portland State 3-1 in sudden death overtime and Ian Nelms of Cal-State Bakersfield 3-2. “I tried not being nervous and put together everything I have learned throughout the season together in match,” Groundwater said. “Experience at these tournaments really helps. I had a mental lapse at the end (of my first match). That is what lost it for me. I shouldn’t have lost that match.” In addition, Glenn Peru and heavyweight Randy Leydecker also went two-and-out. “We took some tough losses,” Foster said. “They were all losses were expecting at sometime in the tournament, bub we took them kind of early.” “I thought we would do a lot better,” Perryman said. “I thought we had a good chance toqualify all 10.” A S U once again loses dose contest B y N ick P iecoro St a t e P ress A sso c ia te d P re ss p h o to C al’s Thomas Kilgore attem pts a shot over ASU guards- Kenny Crandall (12) and Alton Mason. the Pac-10) came with 22.7 seconds to Saturday, was instituted because of a go and the score 70-68 in Cal’s favor. vote by the coaches. OAKLAND —• The same thing has Boyd grabbed a rebound off a missed “All Pac-10 observers and all the offi­ been said by ASU head coach Rob free throw by Alton Mason and was cials cover for each other,” Evans said. Evans all season long. That’s not to say fouled by Jason Patton. Boyd then threw “I’m not familiar with (the rule). I didn’t that it’s any less true — it’s just getting an elbow that hit Mike Batiste, who vote for it and I’m at every meeting that old. retaliated with a swing back that missed. goes on. I didn’t vote on it either.” “Once again, it’s the same-story,” he The two were then separated by a swarm Regardless, ASU never recovered. said after his team’s 78-73 loss to Cal at of players and officials. Down two when the ejections took place, Oakland Arena on ¡Saturday afternoon. No harm was done, except in the offi­ thej^un Devils wound up down six by “We played well enough to win the bas­ cials’ ruling. Both players were called for the time they got the ball back. ketball game. We just didn’t come up ‘double flagrant technical fouls and were Chad Prewitt, probably one of the last with the victory.” ejected. Not a bad exchange for the The Sun Devils again had a Golden Bears — Batiste is one of ASU’s guys Evans would want shooting a three, formidable lead they couldn’t hold on to top scorers and Boyd is a role player for nailed one from the comer to cut the lead because of an inability to execute in the Cal. Evans didn’t think that Batiste in half, 76-73, with 12.9 seconds left. It was his first three-pointer and his first end. deserved to be tossed. “It’s just kind of the season in a nut­ “He didn’t do anything,” Evaas said. attempt of the year. But Thomas Kilgore shell,” said ASU guard Eddie House, “He took an elbow in the face and took and Geno Carlisle made four straight free throws for Cal, icing it who’s 26-point, six-rebound effort was offense to it” “It’s really just been a matter of us not overshadowed by the loss. After freshman Ryan Forehan-Kelly executing in the end,” House said. “With The Sun Devils usually manage to do made two free throws in Boyd’s place a lot of things right but do just enotigh (Cal was in the bonus), the Bears were a few more plays of us executing, we wrong to lose games. Saturday it was able to retain possession. That’s follow­ come out on top with a victory.” Kilgore, a senior, had a fitting perfor­ turnovers. ASU committed 27, the most ing a new rule just instituted this year in since Feb. 2,1995. the Pac-10: after a double foul, the team mance on Cal’s Senior Day. After check­ “We weren’t as sharp as we needed to that had possession gets the ball back ing back into the game at the 6:45 mark, be,” Evans said. automatically, disregarding the posses­ he scored 14 of his 24 points, 12 in suc­ And again, it was a short stretch of sion arrow (which was in the Sun Devils’ cession. For Cal (16-10, 7-9), it was the timé in which the Sun Devils didn’t play favor at the time). well that cost them. Saturday it was the Neither of the head coaches recog­ biggest come-from-behind win of the final five minutes. nized the new rule that, according to an year (ASU was up by as many as 14) and The fatal blow for ASU (14-14,6-8 in ¿ ¡(.official. Pac-10 observer on hand it keeps alive NCAA Tournament hopes.* Gymnasts get little rest but big scores B y C hris C arlock S ta te P ress The ASU gymnastics team passed its test o f stamina this weekend. The Sun Devils are still kicking after winning the UNO’s Classic on Friday at Wells Fargo Arena and then, finishing second in the Masters Classic in Nebraska on Sunday. At the four-team Masters Classic, seventh-ranked , Nebraska edged the No. 8 Sun Devils, 195.725-195.250. ASU finished ahead of No. 24 Maryland (195.200) and Cal (188.850). ; ; ,■. . _ Head coach John Spini was hoping for a score better than 194 in Nebraska, and that’s what he got as the Sun Devils posted a solid away meet score, ASU trailed by only .05 heading into the final perfor­ mance, the balance beam, where it has had problems all season. The Sun Devils had no falls count against their score and tallied a meet-high 48.825 on the beam. But the Huskers turned in a 49.25 in their final competition, the floor exercise. Freshman Leah Carver paced ASU with a second place 9.9, and junior Michelle Hess fin­ ished fifth on the beam with a 9.825. A rarity occurred on the floor exercise for the Sun Devils when junior All-American Elizabeth McNabb scored a 9.875 and finished second behind Maryland’s Gillian Cote. It was only the fourth time in her last 17 meets that McNabb did not score a 9.9 or better. Senior Wendy Ellsberry led ASU on the uneven bars with a score o f 9.875, good enough for third place. HesS’s 9.75 on the vault was a team high. At the UNO’s Classic, the Sun Devils led wire-tow ire in front o f the hom e crow d as they posted a 195.875 to outdistance 16th-ranked Denver (193.475), Cal (189.550), and Illinois State (187.825). ASU put up season-bests in the vault (48.6) and the uneven bars (49.175) as it notched its 16th straight victory at home. The Sun Devils increased the difficulty on their vault routines and put up their best scores, of the season. Junior All-American Amy Shelton, who is recovering from an elbow injury that kept her sidelined until last week, vaulted for the first time this season and won the. event with a 9.825. But Shelton was far from pleased with her performance. “Right now I’m a little out of it,” she said. “I’m not going as hard as I can, but I know I can do it. I just need some more pressure sets.” ASU' followed their season high on the vault with a season best in the bars. Ellsberry, who also won the all; around with a career-best 39.225, and freshman Becky Acker posted career highs in winning the event with identical 9.9s. Sophomore Kim Skinner (9.775) and freshman Rhonda Robinette (9.825) also scored person­ al bests. Prior to Friday the Sun Devils had fallen three or more times on four different occasion on the beam. But ASU put together a solid perform ance that included only two falls. Junior A ll-A m erican Elizabeth Reid highlighted the event with a career-high 9.95. After this perform ance the Sun D evils w idened th eir lead to almost two full points before heading to their bread and butter, the floor exercise. Only the top five are counted toward the team score, but ASU swept the top six spots on the floor. Reid (9.925), Ellsberry (9.85), Acker (9.825), sophomore Kristin Fanning (9.825) and McNabb (9.95), who is ranked No. 1 in the nation in the floor exercise, com­ bined to tie a season high in the event for the Sun Devils. “I’m really pleased with the outcome of the meet,” head coach John Spini said afterward. Spini might be more pleased with the fact that ASU won’t compete until next Sunday, when it hosts Pittsburgh at Wells ASU freshman Becky Acker posted a career-high score of 9.9 in the bars at Friday’s UNO’s Classic. Fargo Arena at 2 p.m. Softball team fares well against nation’s best B r C hris C arlock S tate P ress The ASU softball team met some pretty stiff competition this week­ end in Georgia and came away with a respectable 4-2 record. The Sun D evils (15-3) lost to top-ranked and defending national champion Fresno State yesterday, 40, and were downed 4-2 in extra innings by fifth-ranked Michigan on Friday. But ASU avenged the loss to Michigan with a 5-4 tiebreaker vic­ tory over the Wolverines yesterday. “We’re certainly capable of play­ ing with the top five,” head coach Linda Wells said. “We have a lot of people chipping in right now.” Tournament rules state that d u r ­ ing extra inning games, each team starts with a runner on second base. After Michigan scored to take a 4-3 lead in the top of the eighth, the Sun D evils started the bottom o f the inning by using M elissa M iller to pinch run for Kathy Ponce. Jaime Hlebechuk then sacrificed M iller over to third before M issy Hixon drilled a ball off the fence for. a stand-up triple, scoring M iller to tie the game. Hixon then scored on a passed ball, giving the Sun Devils the victory. Kirsten Voak picked up the win, striking out seven in a com plete 4 4 We got a little taste o f what you have to do to (play) w ith them. W e're right w ith them . The more we play, the better off we'll be. ^ _ Linda Wells, ASU head softball coach game victory. Ponce hit her second home run of the season for ASU. Against the top-ranked Bulldogs, Erica Beach was dealt her first loss of the season as the Sun Devils were sh u to u t on only fo u r h its in the Silver Bracket championship game. “We have it in us to beat them,” Voak said of Michigan and Fresno State. “It was a great learning expe­ rience. We can hang with anybody.” ASU opened the tournament with a 3-2 win o v er No. 23 H o fstra b efo re fa llin g to M ich ig an on Friday. The Sun Devils came back on Saturday by beating Southwest Louisiana 3-2 and then shutting out No. 21 Florida State 2-0. ’ ASU, ranked 18th in the first poll o f the season, has now. d efeated three to p -10 teams in the last two weekends. “We got a little taste of what you have to do to (play) with them ,” Wells said of the top teams in the nation. “We’re right with them. The more we play, the better o ff we’ll be.” “It was huge. Incredible,” fresh­ man Voak said of the competition o v er the w eekend. “ E very gam e alw ays means som ething more at this level.” The Sun Devils return home to fa ce C al S ta te N o rth rid g e on Saturday at 1 p.m. — W A N T E D : *_f ■ > 1 | ■ ■ S B C . : .a : ■F r e e l a n c e m l l â p h i c a r t i s t - t6 aW¡*d*e8p4BeB, 4-5 days/w k.). Year-found em ­ ployment. B egin'immed. $7/hr. If interested, call Tom at 285-1282. WESTSTAR TALKRADIO Net. Work: P/T Entry Level Broad­ casting, PR,- & MKT As'st; Strong organization skills, self- ; motivation & ability to handle mult, tasks ¿ must! Fax resume: 0 fgigiBiBiBigiaigiBigiBiBiBiBiBiBlglciiiayairUBiBfBiBlBigiBlBigiBl 0 i I h GREAT SUMMER COUNSELOR POSITIONS I Have Fun • M ake a Difference • Sum m er in New England Residential Summer Gamps seek staff in all indi­ vidual and team sports: Baseball, Basketball, Tennis, Soccer, Inline Hockey, Golf, Swimming, Sailing, Water-skiing, Mt. Biking, Backpacking, C lim b in g w a ll/c h a lle n g e C ourse, F o o tb all, Lacrosse, C oaching, G ênerai staff p o sitio n s, office, dance, and gymnastics. Located in th e mountains of Massachusetts just 2.5 hours from NYC & B oston. C o m p e titiv e S a la rié s + room /board. Call Camp Greylock for Boys (800) 842-5214 or Camp Romaca for Girls (800) 779-2070, Càr^ HELP W AN TEDSALES LOOKING FOR energetic, selfstarting people to call existing customer base. Fun, motivated atmosphere. Starting @ $10 + bonuses, p/t only. C lose to ASU. Call 894-9200 PUT YOUR money where your mouth is. Set appts. for travel àgenices. No selling. Flex, hrs, Near ASU. $8/hr. to start guar. + conun. $12/hr. avg. 829-6222 HELP W AN TEDC L E R IC A L RECEPT - BILINGUAL a data entry, busy phones, work Sat.-Wed- 7:30-4:00* Apply in, person @ 3707 E. Broadway, #3, Phx. RECEPT P/T, evenings, Thurs & Fri 5-9pm. Apply at 6850 E. McDowell. Call 994-9922. Ask for Darline HELP W AN TED C L E R IC A L HELP W ANTEDF O O D SERVICE HELP W AN TEDC H ILD C A R E RECEPTIONIST FOR Pruden­ tial Securities. Pt M -F 12pm4:30pm Great business exp. Call Nancy 932-5150. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch serv­ ers & dinner hostess. Apply in person, 1pm-5pm, M on.-Fri. 5001 E. Washington. LOOKING FOR p/t, long-term, nanny-like caregiver, 20-25 hrs/wk. Trans, req’d. to N. Scotts. for 2 kids under age 3, beginning 5/1. Pref. 21 yrs. or older, ns, w /knowledge in the ed. or nursing fields. Pay to be determined w/exp. & refs. Call 948-1525 HELP W AN TEDF O O D SERVICE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for day/eye. 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 PETE’S 19TH Tee restaurant at R olling Hills^ 1405 N. M ill, 1/2 mi N. o f Mill Ave. bridg^, . accepting appls for pt wait staff & bvg cart. Apply in. person. SERVER NEEDED, Have fun & make money! P ositive people only. Pasta Brioni 994-0028 Classifieds 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 HELP W ANTEDGENERAL HELP W AN TEDGENERAL BABYSITTER NEEDED, flex, am hrs., own trans., Cameiback & 24th St. 955-2881 Classifieds WORK! HELP W ANTEDGENERAL Preboard Screeners FLEX SCHEDULES FT A PTM ust b e 18. Have high school diploma, drug-free & pass background check.. Arizona’s largest and fastest growing theatre chain has immediate openiing for a File Clerk in our corporate office, FT, M-F only, entry level, flex, sched. Fun, Fast-paced office. FREE movies! OPPORTUNITY with GREAT PAY! Don’t let It pass you by... Red Valley offers: • $15-$40 p er hour Base + Bonus + Commission • Paid Training • PT evening hours w / FT pay • Casual Business A tm osphere • Fun Telemarketing M k la n n r lk M t iB Applications available: 8350 E. McDonald Dr. Scottsdale, 85250 or send resume Attn: Janet Schwartz 602-443-1527 Take a step In the right direction and join a winning team. No experience necessary Call Mate Now! 9 5 6 -0 6 0 0 supplied & maintained, Apply at: Worldwide Security Assoc. Inc. 627 South 48th St. #105 Tempe 966-0141 • SKY HARBOR AIRPORT TERMINAL 4 Do you have M/W/F or T/TH and weekends free? Close to campus, free meals, free parking, benefits available. Graveyard/ early am/ late pm shifts. All positions need to be available for weekends, FT or PT. • B aker 9pm-7am, 3-4 days/week $7-S10/hr based on experience • C o u n ter Servers 5 or 6am to 1 or 2pm; 6pm to 12 or 2am; 8pm to 6am . $6-$8/hr based on experience and shifts WHÒLE FOODS Looking for acoustic performers for 1year anniversary celebration. $50 per hour Call Suzy MAKE MONEY -BE PROUD - HAVE FUN WITH OUR QUALITY PEOPLE-DRIVEN COMPANY Suites Manager Administrative A ssistant Major em phasis on data entry. Take phone/ fax orders and input them into the computer. Part-time primarily Mon.-Fri. (9am - 4:30pm). Days vary according; to Arizona Dlamondback’s schedule. Pay rate based on hourly rate plus gratuity percentage. Ranges from $9.25 to $ 12.25 per hour. Contact Mike Charles at 462-3017 You deserve Paradise! Paid training Fun, motivated, professional work environment Afternoon/early evening shifts available Advancement opportunities Excellent benefits for FT and PT employees fhpalth rtfntalvirion tnlHon vrimlwmemeilt. profit sharing and more) Apply now - classés are beginning soon! Applications are accepted Monday-Friday, 7am-4pm at: 3137 E. Elwood Street, Suite 100, . Phoenix, AZ 8S034 (University, east of 1-10). For more information/ directions, please call: 414-2592. Equal Opportunity Employer ^ ^ . Advanced S ervices. Inc. CI VIC Pt A Z A Experience th e rew ards of a career w ith a w orld class hotel! We have openings in the following departm ents: • NETWORKS BAR & GRILL • COMPASS RESTAURANT • TERRACE CAFE • EINSTEIN’S BAGEL SHOP •BEVERAGE • BANQUESTS • CONVENTION SET UP • STEWARDING • FRONT OFFICE • GUEST SERVICE • CULINARY • HOUSEKEEPING We offer excellent benefits, flexible schedules & vast opportunities. Interviews available Mon. 3pm - 6pm & Tues. 9am - Noon. à A 1 • Paid white training • $9.20/hr after certification • Fringe benefits • Flexible hours Apply In person: Chandler Unified School District 1525 E. Frye Rd. Chandler, AZ 912-7016 00 • » • v• S8/hour after training AT Call 483-1862 ^ C h a n d le r U n m e tT S c h o o l D is tr ic t i !" e-mail murdockden@aol.com m z 456-1400 r Toll free 888-205-0432 As an affiliate of General Electric, Advanced Services, Inc. (ASI) is a national service center providing telephone . assistance to customers regarding GE appliances. As a member of our inbound Customer Service Department team, you must have a dynamic telephone personality, type at 20 wpm and be ready to work with a great team. Previous customer service experiènee and Windows com­ puter skills are preferred. ; • C A F l New network looking for players in AZ to represent top names in Sports, Outdoors and Fitness equipment. Work w ith one o f the best names iri the appliance industry! $$ and fun! & SPO RTSN U T.CO M Customer Service Assodates Great opportunity for BAKERY HELP W AN TEDGENERAL Get “Paid to Play* S ecurity O fficers F ile C le rh g LOOKING FOR long-term help w /lOyr. old, 3 days/w k, after school. Must have own trans. w/exp. & refs. Call 491-2756 . W e offer low cost M edical Dental, Vision, Uniforms Healthy summer • Stay in shape • Work outdoors I n d iv id u a ls to c o n d u c t o p in io n surveys in person or o n th e p h o n e.' NO SELLING, no e x p er fence required, FLEXI­ BLE SCHEDULE. B ilin g u al a p lu s. $ 6 -$ 1 0 / h r. C all Dixie 892-5644. I FT, MUST love children, edu­ cation major prefd. N. Scotts. 2 kids, n/s. Brigitte 563-4216 and environment. 3 ASU grads em ployed now. HELP W AN TEDC H ILD C A R E At the Human Resource Office (1st St. & Monroe entrance) 00 24 Hr. JOBLINE: (602) 440-3154 j EE Ol Pre-employment drug screen EOE/AA M /F/D /V HELP W AN TEDCHjLD^CAR^_____ »LOOKING FOR p/t sitter in NE Scottsdale. Som e a.m ., need transportation 860-8466 PRIVATE FAMILIES Peeking caring providers for children w /disabilities to work in fa­ milies homes. 10-30hrs. avail., need to be fle x ., w ill-train, $7 05/hri Gall 9 6 9 -3 8 2 8 , ask for Fran JO B OPPORTUNITIES JO B OPPORTUNITIES JO B OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES RTUI "GIRL FRIDAY", errand run­ ner, light office work, mother's helper for active home/ offfice on Nantucket Island, Mass. May thru Sep. 6. Room and sal­ ary 602-991-4271, PT STUDENT Sales Exec, need­ ed for w w w .collegestudent.com. Strong commission + incentives based pay while set­ ting your own hrs. Contact Ms. Bayer 888-915-6200; SIDEA- PT Job in HiTech. Earn $7-12hr. Eve + Wknd hrs. Work, w / HiTech products. A pply by e-m ail: Jòrens@ sidea.com or 1-888-2388017 X58. Scholarship ops. CQRNERSTONE SECURITIES Corporation: To learn more about day trading for a living, call 423-1700. www.protrader. com PT MARKETING Reps for collegestudent.com. Unique opp. for creative, independent indiv. Set own hrs, marketing/ adver­ tising exp prefd but w ill con­ sider any high acheiver. Con­ tact MsrBayer 888-915-6200 PRESCHOOL Teacher 4 yr. old cla ss FT, benefits, BCD, or GDA pref. Mesa/Tempe border 839-5953. Find it FAST in the C la ssifie d s Arizona's largest and fastest growing theatre ASTK0Ù0&CAI FO R ECAST by Sidney Om an M o n d a y , M a r c h I , 1999 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Scenario highlights fun; frolic,. dancing, romancing, coming to terms w ith fam ily. Focus on diplomacy, ways o f increasing earnings. Libra play s'fascinat­ ing role. • TAURUS (April ¡20 May 20): Those who insist,''Y ou missed the boat,” Will have red faces and w ill dine on crow. You’re due for remarkable comeback. Pistes, Virgo persons play fea­ tured roles. GEMINI (M ay 2 1 -June: 20): Y ou w ill be asked to settle down. Focus on payments, cotlections, ability to increase earn­ ings. Romantic relationship gets too hot. Cancer native involved. • CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Reaoh beyOnd the immediate, study Gemini messaged aim for brass ring and. hold tight. You are on precipice o f fame, for­ tune >— member ofopposite sex declares; 1 won’t let you go!’ ’ LEQ (July 23-Aug. 22): Make fresh start in different direction.; . — moon in your sign equates to high cycle! Take initiative, trust judgm ent; d esig n a te w here action will be. Aquarian takes lead. VIRGO (A ug 23-Sept- 22): ’ Numerous Choices, select quafi■' ty although more ex p en siv e. People express appreciation for your constructive criticism. You c o u ld encounter future soul mate. YOU are on right track. L IB R A (S ep t, 23 -O ct. 22): D iv e r s ify , lo o k beyond the immediate, express opinions in humorous, manner. Wonderful for winning friends and influ­ encing p eo p le, for obtaining funding. Element o f luck rides with you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21): Situation that had been puzzling will be solved, you’ll say, '’This is m ade to order fo r m e .” T aurus, L eo and another Scorpio figure in dynamic sce­ nario. . SAGITTARIUS (Npv. 22-Dec, 21): You’ll muse, ''This is more like it.” Excitement that accom­ panies change, variety, sexual attraction w ill be present. Leo moon relates to philosophy, the­ ology, plans for journey. CAPRICORN (D ec. 2 2 -Jan 19): Slow dow n Be diplomatic, g iv e opponents room to save face. You will emit aura o f sen­ suality, personal magnetism . Y ou’ll say, "L ady Luck, it’s about tim e you came; back to ■m e.” • , ' l ' ;• - • • ; AQUARIUS (Jan. 2©-Feb. 18): Obtain added w isdom from Capricorn m essage. You .will reunite with elements o f timing, luck. Recent invention attracts favorable attention, might even­ tually make you rich. PISCES (Feb, 19-March 20): T h o se w ho ex p ressed doubt concerning your ability to win w ill be apologizing- Focus on promotion, production, ability to m eet, b eat deadline;.! R ela tio n sh ip co n tro v ersia l, worth i t V ! IF M ARCH 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY': You are sensitive, creative, tough and domineering on the outside and tender on the in sid e. Y ou are an o r ig in a l thinker, not afraid o f controver­ sy , have in stin ctiv e sen se o f salesm an ship. Current c y cle relates to change o f venue, vari­ ety, sex appeal, marital status. March most memorable. © 1999, The LA Times Syndicate ANSWER TO CROSSWORD PUZZLE: S T U A 1 P R E 3 L A V M O B 1 O V E R G E L T U S T E A e A R L A P O P R 1 D E F R E Tj G R E B E, E R A S E R E 1 M V 1 A L L S C O V E R P’ P A R t O D T E L L T A 0 L V 1 E T S r o G 1 N 3 E; E T A S R U B s U T A H B 1 K E 8 A 1 L E D A N K E R 3 L O 3 E C 1 N E R U S E D T A B L E D L E E R V O A O S T 1 C K E H O R A R A W O L 3 N A P' E 3/1/99 ULTIMATE EMERGENCY prepareness tool. This portable, cook stove is a must for any . storage program. $89.95 call 1800-774-3889 tia ll 965-6735 fa placa your ad HELP W AN TED GENERAL ASAP!!! S top by M atthew s C en ter b a sem e n t, Rm 35 today a n d s e e Jack ie Eidridge, o r call 965-6741. E c R Ú HELP W ANTEDGENERAL O ffice Whiz N eeded The S ta te P re ss advertising d ep artm en t n e e d s so m e o n e to a s sis t with th e d ay to d ay office functions a n d th e im plem entation of ' sp ecialprom otions. The su c c e ssfu l candidate: ✓ m ust love interacting with people ✓ h a s m aste re d Excel ✓ h a s a k een s e n s e of detail ✓ ta k e s g rea t p ride in his/her work R e sp o n sib ilitie s Include: • planning & im plem enting prom otions for th e S ta te P re ss • rese a rch » delivery o f coupon b ooks o n ca m p u s • proofreading • answ ering th e p h o n e s * 0100109 e rra n d s • etc. Hours a r e flexible - w e ll Work with' y o u r schedule. 15-20 hrs/Wk, $ 5 .5 0 /hr, N U T S SECRETARY WANTED w good typing, leadership, com ­ munication sk ills, for a busy gallery on Nantucket Island, M ass. May thru D ec. (would consider May thru Sep.) Room & salary, (602) 991-4271. WORK AT’home, be your own boss! Learn to earn 2k-3k/wk. N ot MLM! 1-800-345-9688 e x t 4668 RESTAURANTS/ BARS GRILL COOK $7-10/hr. Fun neighborhood Sports Bar/restaurant New Times award win­ ner. 20-30 hrs/wk- Apply the W oodshed II. D obson/Ujiiv! See Louis after 5:30. HELP W AN TEDGENERAL =S U 5 t Luxury Cinemas in scheduling and FREE Restaurant General Mgr. Human Resources Asst. Pool H ostess) Reservationist Sales Telemarketer Concierge FrontDesk Agent H ost/ Hostess Cocktail Server A M Food Server Banquet Food Server Bus Person Cook Very Generous Compensation and Benefits Package A pply Anytim e 7401 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, A Z 05253 Ph.(602)367-2443 Hotline (602) 367-2496 Fax (602) 607-0268 M U S IC K jjS T ^ F O U N I)^ ENGAGEMENT RING lost at Hayden Library bathroom; Please return to circulation desk o f library. No questions asked, owner desperate. LOST: BLACK cat, very friend­ ly, chips out o f ears m issing, sm all front teeth, answers to R ocky, $100 reward. Andrea 894-8662 I W OODSHED I j M*Oldest neighborhood bar in Tempo • ESt 1979 I I New Tones award winner '• Cheap Beer &$ 1.25 Shots • NBA, ESPN. Full Court. MLB ■ • Greeks Welcome ■ 3 pool Front D e sk Van Driver DUI OR CHILDS ÜPPORT P roblem s?. ASU L aw school 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 U n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t dis­ count, long distance; rate 7c/miri. 24 hrs à day! Call 8198615 | i i i ! ! DAVE MATTHEWS ticket wanted. The closer to the front the better! Could exchange for prime Alannis Morrisette/ Gar­ bage ticket. P lease call 8849817 after 5pm or 965-6735 during the day; ask for Paul. LOOKING FOR 89-90 Year­ book. Call Steve @ work: 619595-1067 home: ,619-5161304 fax: 619-283-1121 1 Every Thursday positions available. No experience necessary, with Flexible Hours to meet your schedule! For immediate consideration, Apply in person at our Chandler location: 1-10 and Chandler Blvd. or call John Slaughter at TUTORS Pre-Em ploym ent Drug Testing TUTORS ALL TUTORS ARE NOT ALIKE ... We offer tutorial for the following classes: Algebra/Finite C a lc u lu s P re c a lc u lu s Statistics Physics Business Accounting MAT 114, MAT 117, MAT119 MAT 210, MAT 270, MAT 271, MAT 170 QBA 221, PSY 230 PHY 111, PHY 112 FIN 300, 0PM 301 ACC 230, ACC240 Successfully Helping Students Since 1980. .. 557-5382 EOE M /F/D /V 50% OFF dry cleaning bill w / ASU I.D.- biz. shirts $1. Cheap flu ff & fold. Pueblo Cleaners SE Corner o f Rural. & Uriiv. ■966-7454. . W ANTED RESTAURANTS/ BARS will soon be opening its newest hotel just 3 miles from the ASU campus! +$ 1250! Fundraiser open to student groups & organiza­ tions. Earn $3.-5 per Visa/MC app. We supply materials at no cost. Call for info or v isit our w ebsite; Q ualified callers re­ ceive a free baby boom box. 1800-932-0528x65, w w w .ocm -concepts.com SERVICES Find it FAST in the Classifieds Red Roof Inns Current positions available Include: FREE RADIO SIGNED NATIONAL band seeks trumpet player. Contact Tim at 520-320-3742 H I R I N G McCormick Ranch = MAJERLE'S SPORTS grill is hiring for all positions, apply in person at 24 N. 2nd St, Phx. No phone calls please. LOST LONG haired c&t could have been picked up at the Mobil Station, Mill & Univers­ ity. Dark grey white 306-0049 Tempe. FT/PT, flexible movies! Apply in iâ M F U N D J M I S jN G _ FREE drain: Centerpoint 1 i person: 730 S. Mill Ave. RESTAURANTS/ Call us for information MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • "SIMON" • Cornerstone Mall * 968 4668 State Press Classifieds Matthews Center, Basement Office: 965-6735 A S U Box 871502 Tempe, A Z 85287-1502 Fax: 965-4706 C lassifie d Ad O rder Form THE SCOTTSDALE PLAZA RESORT Our success depends on your experience and desire to be a part of our team. Many Food & B everage & Room s area positions are now available: • PM S erver • C ocktail S erver • F ront Desk Assoc. • B arrista • PT B usiness C enter A ssociate • G eneral Maintenance • Painters • N ight A uditor . • A ccounts P ayable • 2nd S hift S ecurity O fficer • 3rd S hift S ecurity O fficer • S hipping C lerks Fa x y o u r resum e or apply in person to: The Scottsdale Plaza Resort 7200 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale, AZ 85253 Fax: 948-0513 Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. P le a s e b e s u re to c h e c k y our a d . M ake s u re it re a d s exactly a s you w ish it to a p p e a r in th e State Press, including punctuation. P le a s e c h e c k y our a d th e first d a y it a p p e a rs -th e liability o f th e State P re ss shall n o t e x c e e d th e c o s t of th e a d a n d credit m ay b e given for th e 'first insertion only. M inor spelling e rro rs d o n o t qualify for m ak e­ g o o d s. N o refu n d s will b e given, b u t if y ou n e e d to c a n ce l your a d a credit will b e h e ld o n a c c o u n t fo r future advertising. Please include ' I Driver'» license# ! □ A® u J Private Party 1-4 days, $1.70 p e r line, per day 5-9 days, $1.65 p e r line, per day 10+ days, $1.49 per line, per day Commercial 1 day, $2.60 per line 2-4 days, $1.99 p er line, p e r day 5-9 days, $1.76 p e r line, p e r day 10+ d ays, $ 1.60 p er line, p e r day 3 line minimum. Add a 13-character bold headline for the c o st of 2 lines. . Otim you wteh your ad to run:____ Price per Day < *!MESA 5 0 3 -0 3 4 4 1126 S. Gilbert Rd. MOON VALLEY SCOTTSDALE 8 6 3 -3 8 3 0 945-8118 2 4 4 E: G reenw ayPrkw y 7529 E. McDowell Rd. PHOENIX TEMPE 9 9 5 -1 2 3 4 8 2 9 -0 6 2 2 8 2 2 ! N. 23rd Ave. 63 E. Southern Ave.