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KEEPING WATCH APRIL199830, VOLUME TheLXVIII I This Week: New questions raise old debate Athletic department makes another bidforDivisionII

JASON LICHTENBERGER decision. "We want togotoschool AssociateSportsEditor here, wepay togeta greateduca- Former Seattle University ath- tion,and he's treating us like the leticdirectorEdO'Brienoncesaid, stupidest peopleon earth." "Athletics,perhapsbetter thanany Since then,SU has tailored its other department in theuniversity, athletic program to meet the re- embraces virtually every facet of quirements of the NCIC, adding SU hosted First university life. programslikemen'sand women's Amendment expert "Forinstance,athletics—servesas swimming, men's golf and CameronDeVoreatthe arallyingpoint foralumni itmeets women'ssoftball toits varsitycur- fourth annual Sharon a social need for students, faculty riculum. The universitystillhas to and — add one more program in Memorial Lec- administrators and it gives men's James the university invaluable public order to meet the conference re- News,page 2 ture. exposure, of benefit to those quirements. chargedwithrecruitingand public BecauseofTitleIX, aregulation relations." thatentails theathletic department Over the last three years, the fu- toproportionallybalance thenum- ture of SU athletics has been a berofmenand womenathletes,SU New website makes cents heavily-debated issue, and its fu- wouldhave toadd atleast another ofSocialSecuritydollars.Page tureis stillinquestion. women's sport,butmostlikelytwo. On February 22, 1996, the Se- Becauseof— costs and limited fa- attleUniversity BoardofTrustees cility space bothin theConnolly FitnessChallenge winners voted 18-3 to apply for member- Center itself and— the university's flex their abilities. Page 4 ship in the Northwest Conference athletic fields university Presi- ofIndependentColleges,anNCAA Steve Ford / Spectator dentFather StephenSundborg,SJ, Division has decided to reopen issue, 111league,after a heavy FatherStephenSundborg,SJ, will withthe Board the meet ofTrusteesnext compe\Vm%VV\eavV\\eV\cdepawmewv Opinion pushfromFatherWilliamSullivan, Thursday they willdiscuss the University as futureofSeattle athletics. (o SJ,thepresidentofSUat the time. makeanotherpushatjoiningthe 11. Education at SU requires With this decision, SU would no opposedtothisdecision,and itstill D-IIor D-111 anymore,it's about NCAADivision studentinvolvementandcon- longergrant athletic scholarships. remains acontroversial decision. what Father Sullivan wants," said Father Sundborg willmeet with cern outside the classroom. Many SU athletes, students and "We've voiced our opinion, disgusted basketballplayer Mark Page6 staffintheathleticdepartmentwere they'veshotitdown...lt'snotabout Stottlemyre.onthedayofthe1996 SeeD-llon page12

Politicalcorrectnessunder- mines tradition and truth. winners, crowd Page 7 ASSU elections draw not a MeghanSweet who is a junior majoring in busi- her statement makegraduatestudentsmoreaware ManagingEditor ness, statedthatheis committedto In the election,public adminis- of campus events, and to propose improving student relations with tration major Patty Linehan de- thoughtfulideas to thecouncil. Features ASSUheldits final electionsof ASSU, and he also wants to see feated Geneva Foster in a close Linehan and Alvarezjointhestu- yearon events, as race. to Students find thatpictures the Tuesday,drawingonly better campus well as dents who were already elected 326voterstodecidewhowould fill more support for the sports pro- Linehan received46.24 percent the 1998-99 council. can tell a thousand words, the tworemainingpositions. grams. of the vote, compared to Foster's JasonMadrano,DaveDoranand especially whentheyare tat- Alex Alvarez defeated Christo- The second election which was 43.25 percent. No votes madeup Frank So make up the executive tooedonarms,legs,or other pher Delacruz in the race for mi- decided on Tuesday was the race 9.51 percentof the vote. team nextyear. They wereelected body parts. Pages8-9 nority representative, receiving forgraduaterepresentative. Linehan, whowas waslastyear's president, vice president and ac- 67.48 percentof the vote. Theracehadbeenpostponeddue non-traditionalrepresentative,said tivitiesvicepresident,respectively. Delacruzreceived30.37 percent, toone candidate'sfailuretosubmit in her statement that she wants to BetsyYanasak,SandraGodincz, A$E while no votes Lillian accounted for Carabeo, Ken Well-written poet creates 2.15 percent. Johnson,Anne visions with words. Page10 In the pri- Cassinelli.Guy mary elections Sutherland, Far gets started on their held the previ- Ani s h a longhaul. Page 11 ous Tuesday, Hathiramani the raceformi- andAuraMaria nority repre- Cuellar were Sports sentative was all elected to the only one representative Men's tennis didn't quite which drew positionsinthe swing into gear in Tacoma. enough candi- primaries. Page13 dates to man- Changing date a final past election A week'srestgetsthecrew election. policy, the again. team'soarshumming In that elec- ASSUelection Page14 tion, Alvarez committee de- and Delacruz cided to hold ... page 15 edgedout third the transfer Classifieds. contender representative ASSU backpage BophaChan to election in the vie for the po- fall, with the On the Web: sition. race for fresh- www.seattleu.edu/ In his state- man represen- student/spec ment,Alvarez, PattyLinehan AlexAlvarez tative. NEWS

2 Speaking about free

newsspeech packs a room Meghan Sweet ManagingEditor

The currentU.S.SupremeCourt is very adamant about protecting FirstAmendmentrights,according to First Amendment expert CameronDeVore. DeVore, whois a seniorpartner at the law firm of Davis, Write, Tremaine, StudentRecognitionAwardswillbeHeldonMonday,May spoke yesterday to a standing-room only crowd in the CaseyCommons. TheannualStudent Recognition Awardswill takeplaceMon- "Ithink we'reall fondofsaying day,May11in the CampionBallroom. The awardshonor the (the First Amendment)is first be- contributions ofindividuals as wellas student clubs and organi- cause it's the most important," zations. The event will begin at 5:30 p.m. Free tickets are DeVore said. available at the Campus AssistanceCenter,located on the first DeVorebeganhisspeechbyfirst floor of the Student Union Building. Contact the Student In- discussing the history of the First volvement Office at 296-2525 for moreinformation. Amendment, asserting thatpart of the reasontheUnitedStatespartici- pated in the AmericanRevolution wasto free themselvesof therigid Local Health Care Centers Unite to Fight Hungerin the English justicesystem. Seattle Area "There is a dreadful, plaintiff- friendly system in England," RegenceBlueShield andNorthwest Harvesthave launched DeVorestated. "Englandis asink- their first annual Mother's Day Challenge, a new campaign hole ofspeech." aimed at fightinghunger. Northwest Harvest, which provides DeVorepointedout thatthecon- speech servicestomore than 500,000destituteindividualsinWashing- cept of beinga connection ton,andBlueShield,the state'slargesthealthcareprovider,hope betweenthepeopleandthegovern- Steve Ford / Spectator ment is a completely American that theprogram willrevitalize support for the needy. Cameron DeVorelectures about thehistory oftheFirstAmmendment. To participate in the program, shop on-line at phenomenon. www.northwestharvest.org. Those withoutInternet access can At the heart ofthe First Amend- dia," callNorthwest Harvestfor a"virtual shoppinglist." Check the mentis thegoalofhearingasmany DeVorebrought upover ahalf a DeVore said. which haveset Afterhis DcVoreinvited items you want to purchase, and send them into Northwest peopleand as many voices aspos- dozenlegal battles speech, sible, Harvest with your donation. Ifyoumake the donationinyou according toDeVore. the stage for themodernuse ofthe questions fromthe audience. /J mother's name, she will receive a Mother's Day card from "ThepurposeoftheFirstAmend- FirstAmendment, whichincludes A law professor from SU's legislature NorthwestHarvest. Thepromotion runs from April 27 toMay mentis toprotectthemost...robust the idea that the should Schoolof Lawaskedabout theSu- — not to preme B—but8 butdonationsare takenallyearround.ContactEllenHansen criticism... of thepublic process," have thepower decide what Court's decision toprotect by at 1-800-722-6924 formore information. DeVore stated. is printed orbroadcast the me- hatespeechunder theFirstAmend- One idea that also was woven dia. ment. throughoutDeYore'sdiscussionof DeVore also discussed other DeVorerespondedtothisinquiry the FirstAmendment'shistory,as thingsrelatingtoFirstAmendment byciting thecases whichhave de- issues, defamation, Registrationfor Summer Quarteris Beginning,and Stu- well as throughhis later detailing such as libel terminedthe currentprotection of dents Need toGet IDNumbers ofimportant legalcasespertaining andprivacy. hate speech, and decided against toit,wasthe concept that the defi- "Inprivacy, we'refinding anew respondingto theprofessor'sques- Almosthalfway throuhSpringQuarter, theRegistrar'sOffice nition of free speechhas been de- body of law which indicates the is already preparing for summer registration. The Summer cidedby the court. suspicion people have of the me- See Speechon page3 ScheduleofClasseshasbeenavailable sinceApril6. Touchtone registration willbeavailableWednesday,May20 throughMon- day,May25. Touchtoneregistration willreopenonJune 7,and Website calls for citizen action be available throughthe 29 for exclusivesummer registration. The Fall 1998 Schedule ofClasses will be available on Friday, AKI YANAGISAWA seventysomethings?'," Sawyer generational inequality,"said Joel May8.Registrationappointments willbe scheduled forMay26 StaffReporter said. Gavino,ajuniorvolunteerprogram- through June5. Toalert young Americans con- mermajoring inphysics. TheRegistrar'sOffice also wants toremind students tocome A lot of students don't worry cernedabout the futureSocialSe- Thesitecalls for attention to the early totheRegistrar'sOffice toreceive theirstudentidentifica- about whether ornot they will be curity system, Sawyer and John fact that the economic "fortunes" tionnumbersandPINs. Althoughstudentsshouldhavereceived receiving an adequate amount of Owens, an associate retired from of younger Americans have dete- thesenumbersinthemail,those whohavelost themcan get them Social Security benefits 30or 40 Microsoft, developed a web site riorateddramaticallyduringthepast at the Registrar's Office,and must do so inorder to register. years fromnow. called "CITIZENACTION!" (lo- 25 years incomparison withthose Students wihany questionsshould contact UniversityRegistrar JimSawyer,associateprofessor cated at http://www.seattleu.edu/ ofseniorcitizens. Dannette Sullivan at296-2443. of political science, believes it is citizen) with the help of student Unless changes are made, the important site states, the tax rates nec- Work Study Awards Willbe AwardedSoon students to attention to essary to take anac- Thesite callsfor thefact that sustainse- Federal andWashingon State Work Study Awards willsoon tiverole in the economic nior en be mailed for the 1998-99 school year. Federal Work Study securing "fortunes" ofyounger titlemen awards aregiventofreshmenandsophomores. Thison-campus Americanshave deteriorated dramatically intheear program gives students work experience within their college Social Se- next cen campus,andoftenhelpsmany transitionintocollegelife. Juniors during thepast 25 years in comparison with tury wi andsenior areeligible for WashingtonState Work Studies,off- increas campus opportunities to work. This program offers students benefits those senior citizens. ext c n opportunities of to work within their field of study, and often sively.am' providesundergraduates withimportant networkingskills. For tirement today information on whetheror notyouqualify,orfor answerstoany "The young relatedquestions,contacttheFinancialAidandStudentEmploy- question is 'will the volunteer programmers from Se- workers willreceivefewerbenefits mentOffice at296-5840. twentysomethings come together attleUniversity. when they retire. outofself-interestand defendtheir "Iworked withthe graphicartist Browserscaneducatethemselves political and economic future vis- tomakesurethegraphics werecon- a-vis the sixty-and sistent with our overall theme of See Website on page3 News MC^iW»TiJ 3 Students make education a family affair

Shane Updike headeda 10-person committee of Saturday was when most of the StaffReporter faculty,staff, studentsand parents events for the parents took place. whohavebeenplanning the week- The day began with the keynote ParentsofSeattleUniversitystu- endsince early this year. addressforthe weekendbeinggiven dents experiencedcollegelife this "TheplanningofParents Week- by Father John Whitney, SJ. The past weekend at the ninth annual endis therotatingresponsibility of talkhe gave was called "Connect- Parents Weekend. the different departments in Stu- ingtheMind to WhatMatters"and Parents Weekend dent Development," Prince said. it was followed byadiscussion by spring to give parents the "This yearand next, New Student SUfaculty andstaff. ■celebrateslunitytovisit thecampusand Programs has the opportunity !o The sunny day gave parentsthe opportunity to enjoy Seattle out- doorswithgamesontheEastSports Field, and SU-sponsored tours of someoftheattractionsofSeattleas well. Thecenterpieceof the weekend was the Parents Weekend Dinner Show in CampionBallroom. The eveningbegan with anin- vocation by Father Roger Gillis, SJ,followed bydinner. University PresidentFatherStephenSundborg, SJ then gave someof his thoughts aboutthe weekend. "The students themselves are hosting the weekend," Father Molly McCarthy / Photo Editor Sundborg said. "I am immensely TheTrenchcoats performfor students and theirfamilies. proud of them and the university thattheychose toattend." mother of sophomore Mike wereinvited to attendMass in the The event continued witha re- Rothwell. "I really enjoyed the ChapelofSt.Ignatiusand thenhave flectionbyBrigadierGeneral James entertainment this eveningand the brunch withthe Jesuits. Dubik,the father ofgraduatingse- invocationbyFatherGilliswasvery "ParentsWeekendisa greatevent nior and current ASSU President inspiring." that brings families together (or a Katie Dubik. OnSunday,parentsandstudents weekend,"Princesaid. He spoke about his daughter's experienceat SU,and thanked the universityforthecommunitythatit provides. Website: SocialSecurity is "The university teachesand ex- emplifies all the right virtues," a concern for students Molly McCarthy / Photo Editor Dubik said. "After attendingSU, Accordingtoarecentsurveyby Jason Madrano andhisfamily speak withFatherSundborg. From page2 I studentsarechildrennolonger,but the AmericansDiscussSocial Se- arecontributing adults." curityProject,youngandmiddle- ineventswiththeirchil- planthe weekend." The festivities ended with the about the issue through agedAmericansareless willingto TheeventsofParent'sWeekend annual appearance by the CITIZENACTIONI's pages, dependonSocialSecurity forsup- Tiis year,Parents Weekend was beganonFridaynight with aclubs Trenchcoats, a local a cappella which include graphs and illus- port intheir laterlives. nned by the New Student Pro- dance competition that was spon- group. trationscreated by thegroupand The survey also showed that Eticipatc Prince, msoffice. Laurie Direc- soredbyASSU. AlphaPhiOmega "The weekendwasreallyalotof AndrewBrinkworth,ananimator only 8 percent of those who are tor of New Student Programs, won the $150first prize. fun," said MaryAnn Rothwell, for Humongous Entertainment not yet retired think that Social company. Security willdo"alot" toprovide The site also contains pages them withadequatemoneyin old Speech: current politics support and where visitors can express their age. protect rights opinionandconcerns on theissue Sawyersaid various factorsex- first ammendment andview theopinions of others. plainreasons for thepossibility of Owenssaidthe site designed From page 2 before the Supreme Court about Philpott commented that James is lessbenefitsfor those whorelyon get pro- First Amendment issues and has would have been supportive of to opposing ideas and Social Security, including the mote open tioningas towhythe courtsprotect defended The Seattle Times in DeVore'sspeech. discussion on the is- country's loss of manufacturing sue, and he to hate speech but not adultnovelty court. "Sharon wasdedicatedtobring- that tried put the jobsto other foreigncountries. dataintoaformatso"peoplewith- stores. DeVore was brought to SU by ing people togetherin thespirit of Tofurtherencouragethe young outmuchbackgroundineconom- Instead,he movedon to aques- theDepartmentofCommunication communitytotalkaboutcommuni- Americans to take active roles in ics tion raised by a student about aspartof the annual SharonJames cation," Philpott said. "She wasa could understand the bottom solvingthe problem,Sawyer in- line, asmuch whether or not First Amendment MemorialLectureseries.This was person of exceptional spirit and and delveinto detail vites students andall who are in- as they issues have ever interfered with a grace." care to." terested toattendthe"SeattleCiti- Brian Henning, a senior phi- defendant'sright toafairandspeedy The Sharon James Memorial zenForum" atUnionStation,401 losophymajor helped up trial. Fundsupportsstudentsdirectly,and who set S. Jackson St., on May 2 from 9 program, thatthe Thequestion-and-answerperiod helps to fundthings suchas books the alsobelieves a.m. to 1p.m. In site beneficial for young alsobroughtaboutdiscussionscon- privacy, we're andtripsforstudentswhocouldnot is the Seattle willhost theprogramas people who have "either written cerningcurrent cases beingfought otherwiseaffordthem. one of series of groundbreaking findinga new off the possibility ofgetting So- overInternet tabloids,on-linecen- After Philpott'sinitial introduc- citizen forums President Clinton Security, (are)angry and sorship, andthe tobaccoindustry. tion, three students who will be cial or and members of Congress initi- body law which animosity Overall,DeVoreis pleasedwith of travelingabroad toChina withaid havelots of toward the atedduringtheGreatSocialSecu- system." theSupremeCourt's desire topro- indicates the fromtheSharonJames fundgot up rityDebate inKansas City earlier "We're in our 20s, notcertain tect and uphold the right to free to thank her family and friends for thismonth. going, speech. suspicionpeople theirgenerosity.Thosestudentswill about where we're what Participantsoftheprogram will doing, we recog- "(The Supreme Court) doesn't be traveling toChina withagroup we're and don't discussaseriesoftopicsrelated to have the media. that Security want to seethe government deter- ofabout I2 otherstudentsas wellas nize Social isonthe Social Security,and their conclu- ' of verge collapse," miningtoday sfreespeechagenda," Cameron DeVore, twofaculty members. of said Michael sions will be compared to there- Peterson, another oneof the stu- DeVore said. The students expresseda desire sults of national and statepublic First Amendment dentvolunteerprogrammers who DeVore was well-qualified to toimprovetheircross-cultural com- opinion surveys and people par- Expert majoring political speak on the topic of the First munication skills as well as their is in science. ticipatingin otherCitizenForums "CITIZENACTION!provides Amendment. A native of Great understanding ofthe Chinese cul- around the country. opportunity Falls, Mont., he went to Harvard ture. us withan to recog- For more information on the t LawSchoolandreceivedamaster's the fourth annual lecture Philpott stated thatJames would nizethatif wedon' dosomething forum, call Kris Jorgensen of degreefromCambridgeUniversity. In his introduction of DeVore, have been proud of the students' now we'llbein troublewhen we Americans Discuss Social Secu- DeVore has spoken regularly Communication professorDr. Jeff efforts. get to theage ofretirement." rity at (206)789-7453. News p££T*fl 4 Challenge winners exercise healthy habits SHANE UPDIKE alcohol toan excess. Reporter Teams turn in their score sheets Staff at the endof every week,and their The final points have been to- pointsare talliedbypeopleinUni- taled for this year'sSeattleUniver- versitySports. sity FitnessChallenge,and the fac- "The approximately 150people ulty/staff team Jumpstarts has who participated in the Fitness emergedas thewinnerandas some Challenge collectively lost about of the healthiest people in the SU 100pounds,"said AnneCarragher, community. Associate Director of University Jumpstarts won with 1,250 Sports andcoordinator of the Fit- points, and its members include ness Challenge. "There waseven LenBeil,President'sOffice;Jerry oneman on campus who took his Pederson,AdministrativeServices; beltinaholebecauseofthe weight David Carrithers, School ofBusi- thathelost." ness and Economics; and Denis AccordingtoCarragher, theFit- Ransmcier,FinanceandAdminis- ness Challengeis agoodprogram tration. because itisafun way togetpeople In addition to the faculty/staff motivated to set personal fitness category, there were also catego- goals and inspirepeople topay at- ries for teams that weremade upof tentiontodifferent habits that they staffand students and teamsofjust normally wouldnot pay attention students. to. The staff/student category was "I know that it is particularly won MixedNuts that mem- challenging for students toput to- by had MollyMcCarthy / Photo Eoitor bers Wendie Phillips, Sam gether thehealthy package of eat- McGraw, Doug Thompson and (l-r)Clara Sziebert,Danica Hendrickson, CoreyShort, andSarahEaton ofthe winningstudent team. ing well, exercising and getting Cathryn Carson from the Albers enough sleep,"Carraghersaid. School ofBusiness. "But is important to try anddo Thestudentcompetition was won year than it was this year," Eaton petition that is heldby the univer- Teams earnpointsbydoingthings this,because the Jesuitideal whole by Your Mom Revisited, which said. "But theother teams helped sity every Winter Quarter that en- like exercising, eating healthy, person should include living a included Corey Short, Danica us rise to the challenge, and our couragesstudents,faculty andstaff brushingand flossing,andgetting healthy lifestyle and having a Hendrickson,SarahEatonandClara dedication really helped us in the topay attention to theirhealth and enough sleep. Points are also re- healthy body. The Fitness Chal- Sziebert. end." toworkonchangingany unhealthy ceivedfor not smoking, for wear- lenge helps people achieve this "Thecompetitionwasharderlast TheFitnessChallengeis acom- habits that they mayhave. ing a seat belt and not drinking health." Sestrich remaining steady in high-pace job NICOLEKIDDER son,ShorelineCommunityCollege lied experiencein the public and do this forus." need to come in and make those Staff Reporter and Seattle's major Catholic private sectors,as wellashercom- According to Scstrich, her first changes,but I'dratherbe deliber- healthcare institution, Providence mitment to diversity,"Ransmeier taskis toget toknow everyoneand ateand methodical than hasty." After 25 years, Seattle MedicalCenter. said. "Theuniversityneeds tolook everything around campus. She Sestrich is a native of King University'sHumanResourceDe- "I'mherebecause of the plans on taking her first County,andprogressedthroughthe partment is witnessingachange values of the Jesuit and 30 days here toacquaint Seattleschoolsystem. Sherec,eived a new AssistantVice President. Catholic institution," herself withthe top50 to herbachelor's degreeinsecondary Anna Sestrich succeeds Anna Sestrichsaid. "SeattleUni- 60peoplearoundcampus education (English and speech) Sarton,whoretiredearlier this year versityis verywellregarded /like to affiliate myself by conducting introduc- from UW in1973. Sheproceeded after two and a half decades. in academicopportunities. toryinterviews. Shealso to obtain her master's degree in Armedwithmorethan 15 yearsof Ilike toaffiliatemyselfwith with winners,and SUis hopes to take it slow so publicadministrationalsofromUW humanresourceadministrationex- winners,andSUis clearlya a that she canlearn the lay in 1992. perience, spanning private and winner." clearly winner. ofthelay,proceduresand In addition, Sestrich has more public sector agencies, and a AccordingtoDenisRans- Anna Sestrich,new gain an appreciation for than 350 hours of continuingedu- master'sdegreeinpublic admin- meier, Vice President of Assistant Vice President cationinhumanresourcesandbusi- istration from the University of Finance and Administra- "The worstthing thatI ness,and wascertified by thePer- Washington, Sestrich stated that tion, the search for a new of Human Resources could do is come in the sonnel Accreditation Institute in jII " " sheis ready todiginherheels. Human Resource Vice door and begin makingI 1981. SestrichcomestoSUafter serv- President was a very thor- changes to the existing Sestrich is a faculty memberof ing as Director of Personnel for oughonethatwasheldnationwide at other waysofdoingthings. We policies without knowing the cul- the University of Phoenix, where theSeattle Fire Department. She "Wefound Anna tobe asuperior need tobreak awayfromtraditions, tureofSeattleUniversity,"Sestrich has also worked at VirginiaMa- candidate because of her diversi- and Ibelieve Anna will be able to said. "Many peoplemay think I See Sestrich on page 5

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Call for more information 524-4915 News

5 Grad students get funding Spectatorearns highhonors inregion SPECTATORNEWS Associate Features Editor SarahBir Each of the winnerswere given nity." STAFF AdrianaJanovichalsowonathird- StaffReporter fundingrangingfrom $310to$837 TheGraduateLeadershipBoard, placeaward,inthecompetition's for their presentations. composedofrepresentativefaculty The Spectator was honored Feature Writingcategory. Six graduate students received Potential fundees first submit fromallofthe schoolsandcolleges alongside otherstudentjournalists Associate Sports Editor Matt awards on March 17 to complete their presentations toacommittee intheuniversitywithgraduatepro- andpublicationsintheNorthwest, Zcmek took second place inthe theirindividual refereed presenta- at the conference in which they grams,appointed a subcommittee as thenewspaperandmembers of ColumnWritingcategory,forhis tions. want topresentfor review. ofitsmembers toreviewand select itsstaffgarneredtopawardsinthe bimonthy sportscolumn. TheGraduateStudent Presenta- Thecommittee selectspresenta- awardees,according toanadminis- MarkofExcellenceAwards Com- Jason Lichtenberger, also an tion Funding Award, established tionsbasedoncontent,and thepre- tratorintheOfficeofthe Associate petition,sponsoredby theSociety AssociateSportsEditor,wonsec- several years ago, supports refer- senter is also asked to speak on Provost. ofProfessional Journalists. ondinSports Writingforhiscov- eedgraduate studentpresentations behalf ofhisorher work. Each student who enters must The Spectator took third-place erage ofthemen's soccer team's atnationalacademicconferences. SeattleUniversitygraduatestu- abide bycertain criteria for selec- honorsinthecategoryofBestNon- run for the national champion- Thisyear's win- tion. Daily Student Newspaper. ship. nersof theGradu- The qualifications ateStudentPresen- for the award include Sestrich: NeivVP tation Funding that the presentation finds Award include: The university is interestedin mustbe ata state,na- homecoming Edward Durgan, tional or international SUto be a JosephGuppy and rewardinggraduate studentsfor conference,it must be From page 4 here,andIam very happy tobe a Timothy Lower studentorjointstudent/ partof that." fromtheCollegeof submittingto professional faculty authored, and sheteachesseveralcoursesinclud- "My impression so far (in two Artsand Sciences, theremust beevidence ingOrganizationalBehavior,Con- days)isthattherearemanyfriendly and Janine King, conferences. of refereed process flict ManagingSystems andMan- peopleandatremendous amountof MaryLouLaprade William Bricken,Assistant prior to acceptance of agingChange. Sheisalsoamem- optimism. Iamveryimpressedby and Kimberly Professor of Computer Science thepresentation. ber of nearly a dozen local and that,"Sestrichcontinued. Mucke from the The students them- national organizations, including According toRansmeier,theone Engineering School of Educa- and Software selves must submit the Society for Human Resource value thathe knows Sestrich will tion. their applications for Management,thePacificNorthwest beable tohelpSUretain isacom- "The university thepresentations. Personnel Managers' Association mitment todiversity. is interestedinre- Twice a year, stu- andthe SeattlePublic SafetyCivil "Seattle Universityisacommu- wardinggraduate students forsub- dent KimberlyMucke,one of the dents are invited to submit these ServiceCommission. nity that strives tomake sure there mitting to professional confer- winners, said that these presenta- proposals,once forconferencesheld According to Sestrich,she feels arenobarriersbetweenfaculty,staff ences,"saidAssistantProfessorof tionscangetquiteexpensive;travel between Jan.1 andJune 30, and a like she came to the university at andtheadministrators,"Ransmeier Computer Science and Software expensesalonecan be costly. another time for conferences oc- just the right time. "I've seenlots said. "We strivetoeliminatethose, EngineeringWilliamBricken,who "I really appreciate having the curring between July 1 and Dec. ofconstruction,andthatsignals to and sheunderstands that. We are oversaw the selectionprocess. award money to participate," 30. meaninstitution thatisundergoing all inthesameenterprise, toserve "It is an honor to receive the Mucke said. The next date for submittal of a lot of change," Sestrich said. the students. We welcome Anna award." "I'mhappytohavethis opportu- studentproject awardsisNov. 1. "There is aconsensusof newness withopen arms."

k Qjq\ your free ticket / >. at theCampus Assistance A\ Center, first floor, _^^^^^/ Student UnionBuilding / and... I Join us for dinner and an / awards ceremony tohonor " \ some outstanding students on y JB^^X MondayMay U,1998 I JB^^SSSkb\ inCampion Qadroom from 5:30-7:30P.M. /^^^r Awardspresented to student clubs and organizations,and

HHH^HIH P^HHP^Q^^NHM^^^^Pj^^^^B'^?^H|^HV| roemore mrorroation, l^fl|JB^2Hb2^^K^«H H^S^IhMI contact 296-2525, f Student Involvement Office OPINION

6 ■v^IWtll EDITORIAL Ignored voices are finally heard as D-IIis reviewed again

Many studentsno doubt rememberthe winter of 1996: the rallies,the protests,theheated "D-11/D-IH" debate,where studentsandathletesalike bandedtogetherin favorofhavingSeattle Universitytransfer over to an NCAADivisionIIaffiliation,rather than the Division111 affiliation that the universitypresidentseemed to bepushing for. And those students most likely remember how those cries of protest went unanswered, as over two years ago, the university's Board of Trustees, under the recommendation of then-president Father William Sullivan,SJ, voted 18-3 in favor of makingSU an NCAA Division111 school. InFebruaryof 1996,theuniversitybegan the longprocessofconform- ing to D-111guidelines.But now, undernew un.iversitypresident Father StephenSundborg, SJ,SU is reviewingthe controversial D-111decision that it madenot thatlongago. And the administration has come to raise the same arguments and questions that, twoyears ago,the students andother opponentsofgoing D-111hadbroughtup:the lackoffacilities,andtheproblems offindingand adding extrateams toan already-tightathletic department. Two yearsafter battling for their voices tobeheardinvain,theprotests Service, religion and arguments of the student body are finally seen as valid points. and Shouldn't that havebeenrecognizeda lotsooner,asinFebruary of1996, when this fateful decision wasmadein the firstplace? It'sstrangethat at aninstitution whereindividuals areencouragedtoget wheretheyare urgedto mindand experience involvedand do something, speak their college their voice toimprovetheir community,students were sent the message withtheD-111vote that theirvoicesdidn't count whenit cametothebottom Tutoring, Easter and SUcome together line. Andnow, afterall that,theadministration appearsreadytojust change reality.SUrequires somany theirmind, and jumbleit all up again. philosophy and religion TheD-11/D-111 debatehas goneonfar toolong. Trustees— andadminis- courses in order to get it tratorsshouldhave trustedthe— voiceot the students a voicewhichthey MattZemek through our thick freshman claim to value ant) respect from the outset. The fact thai students skulls that we must relate to organ/zed,actedandpersistently arguoJ tor DivisionIIshould demon- the world around us. If SU strate that wearcable tomake informed and intelligent decisions. Associate Sports Editor doesn't motivate its students And perhaps if that fact had been trusted early on, the university to do that, it has failed as a communitywould not be lacingthe bigdebateonce again. Jesuituniversity. My twoyearswiththeChildren's couldn't Spring Breakhave taken When a young man or woman LiteracyProject taughtme placeduring high The SpectatorEditorialBoardconsists ofMegan McCoid,Meghan have this finals weekinsteadof leaves the secure world of SweetandKatieChing.Signedcommentariesandcartoonsreflect the much:volunteerwiththeCLPfora EasterWeek? Whycan'tGodmake schoolandgoes it alone incollege, opinionsoftheauthorsandnotnecessarilythoseofTheSpectator,that full year,— and you will make thingseasy? freshman year is often an intimi- of SeattleUniversityor itsstudent body. progress youcan'tavoidmaking Well,nottutoringdidmakeEas- datingandearth-shatteringexperi- The Spectatorwelcomesletters to the editor.Letters shouldbe no adifference if youstickit out from ter Week easyfor me.Ihad seven ence. Only the rarest of 18.-year- more than300wordsinlengthandmust includesignatures,addresses OctobertoJune. more hourson my hands.Ididn't olds enters college with no real and telephonenumbers for verification during daytime hours. The Teachingsecond-grade reading have to make five trips between anxieties or worries.For that rea- deadline forletters is Wednesdayat 3 p.m.All letters are subject to skills to an 8-year-old does not T.T. Minor and SU. Jesus' death son, it's easy to see why college editing, and become property of The Spectator. Send letters via stretch one's raw intellectual ca- and resurrection werecommemo- freshmen can become buried in campusmailor thepostalserviceto:TheSpectator,SeattleUniversity, pacities. That's not the point.Tu- rated afew days earlier,and here I academics, parties or a combina- 900 Broadway, Seattle, WA 98122, or send e-mail to kid, was, [email protected]. toringisabout beingthere fora the picture of idleness and tionof the two. animpressionable soul that needs stagnation. What getsleftoutinsuchalifeis tolearn lessons about math, spell- This is a sorry contradictionfor a commitment to the rest of the ing,reading...and theright way to me as a Christian, but it provides world.That's the role of religion behaveinthe world. valuable insightforallmembersof and philosophy courses. If they The longest-lastingresultof tu- SU.adistinctivelyCatholicschool.— make SUstudentsrealize thatthey TheSi^tatorKeepingWatch Since 1933 toring,especially a year, nothing but study no to account issues and re- for full is If Idid have for the relationshipthata tutor builds newspaper writing,— no CLP tutor- alities that arc outside their own Address: EDITORIAL STAFF: witha youngster.Overayear,kids ing,nonothing mylife wouldbe little world,then SUhas done its realize the attentionand recogni- so easy.Icould mail in As for all job. TheSpectator McCoid, Megan Editor-in-Chief tion they'regetting.Withintellect, my classes. Here's the punchline: grades SeattleUniversity Sweet, Meghan ManagingEditor a tutor might enrich kid's mind; I mean 900Broadway „. .7 ,-,.. ~, ■ ■ Z,° a couldhavedone thatanywhere, absolutely nothing in such KatleChlng'° ""°" Ed"°r Seattle,WA 98122 P with patience,kindness and genu- so why at a Jesuit school?Icould classes if life's larger truths are AdrianaJanovich,FeaturesEditor ine concern,a tutor willlight up a savea lot of moneyby heading to absorbed and thenlivedout. Woldman, TELEPHONE" Jesse FeaturesEditor kid's face,andgiveanexample that UW and punchinginmy academic This discussion has now come DonaldMabbott,A &E Newsroom: (206) 296-6470 Editor could last alifetime. timeclock. full circle. If Ididn't have the AssignmentDesk:(206) 296-6471 Matt Zemek,Sports Editor Iheartily suggest that you join IcametoSU because itappreci- Children'sLiteracyProject,mySU Advertising:(206) 296-6474 Lichtenberger,SportsEditor Jason theChildren'sLiteracyProject,but ates the valueof work. At aJesuit life would be pathetically easy— _ MichelleBoshart,CopyEditor 't the realpoint of this columnis to school like SU, workis important withanemphasis onthe word"pa- tAX Christopher Wilson,CopyEditor (206) reflect on themeaningand valueof becauseitenrichesthehumanstory, thetically," for that wouldbeaccu- 296-6477 MollyMcCarthy p}wtoEditor service within the entire college not just a body of professional rate. ■ JeremyNelson,On-LineEditor E-MAIL experience atSeattle Universtiy. knowledge or career Thegreat ng CLP tutor- Erica Beebe'BusinessMana er skills. The thi about [email protected] S In an ironic twist, T.T. Minor deepesthumanexperiencesarethe ing— or any kind of service— is MeredithBurgin,AdvertisingManager Elementary School had its Spring real stuffof life,just as they arein that you don't have to be task- RachelleLiv,AdvertisingAssistant WORLDWIDEWEB: Break during Easter Week. After CLP tutoring.You won't get those oriented to do something that is RomiePonce,Advertising Assistant http://www.seattleu.edu/ four daysof incredible liturgies at experiences you just meaningful Christ-like. TomasGuillen,Advisor if breeze and Inaca- student/spec St. JamesCathedral,Iwasready to throughclassesand stop there. demics,youhave todo theassign- celebrate Christ'slove (GoodFri- Service converts religion into ment correctly, whetheryou'rean The Spectatoris the official student newspaper ofSeattleUniversity. Itis day)and triumph overdeath(Eas- lived experience,our own human SUstudentoraT.T.Minorstudenl. publishedevery Thursday, except during holidays and examination periods, terSunday) by servingothers in a stories. service,religious for a total of 28 issuesduring the 1997-98 academic year. In beliefs more dedicatedway. jump from the textbooksand into POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: TheSpectator,SeattleUniversity, 900 See Tutoringon page 7 Broadway,Seattle, WA 98122. U.S.P.S.No. 2783 But now Icouldn't tutor. Why Opinion

■■1Urm11 H *^^^ 7 Forcing politically correctlanguage Inclusive writingprevents usfrom discovering truth Inthis self-interested editing guageisforcedintopolitically-correct symbolically, however, convincing olboththeOld;indNewTes- interpretations. Stranger still is that themthat theactual definition should TomGahan tament,there islittle consid- contextandsheercommonsenseshould beignoredinfavorofuprootingsome erationoftheactualmeaning already beenough foranunderstand- hiddenchauvinistagenda,is far more Spectator Columnist of terms. There isinstead a ingofmostusages of"man," "men," exclusive in nature than permitting narcissisticemphasisonhow etc.: Webster'sprimary definition of" them to discover the truths of great thetreated,modemmindim- "man"is "amember of the human textsindependentoftheoftenantisep- Recently, whileconversing with a intelligenceofour ownlanguage. mediately reacts; a focus on pro- race." Certainly,JohnMilton didnot tichandsofpolitical correctness. professoraboutmy high school days, Thecomplaintthat womenhavehad grammedreflex usurps authentic re- seek to"justify the ways ofGod" to WhileSU has not gonethis far, in Imentioned thatIwasonceanactive asometimes less-than-significant role flection. Itis doubtfulthat St.Theresa males alone,nomore thanSteinbeck some extreme cases, "inclusive lan- memberofJSA,theJuniorStatesmen inourstudyofWesternCivilizationis of AvilaorSt. Catherine ofSiena or meant to limit theabsoluteloneliness guage"evenrefusestocallGod"Him" ofAmerica alegitimate one;itiscertainly neces- anyotherreligious womaninthepast capturedin "OfMice andMen"toa or "Father," pretentiously refuting His tone suddenly changed from sary to engage and incorporate all assumedthattheirsalvationwassome- specific gender, no more than Jesus'ownlovingphrase.Itisablaring friendlytoaccusatory:"Theystillcall people in the search for truth. The howlimitedby theirgender,that they Shakespeare's"poorplayerthatstruts signthatamovementhasoverstepped it that?"he asked, his nose curling. difficulty,however,does notlieinthe werenotincludedinChrist'spromise, andfretshishour"uponthestageoflife itsboundaries when,whileclaimingto C\mfuscd;indcurious,Ireplied,"What intent,butinthereasoningandeffects— even whilepraying"For us men and is a statementsolely about the male stand withinChristianity, it assumes doyoumean?" ofmanyefforts tobe"inclusive" not for oursalvation..." (Latin andmost condition. Iamfrequentlysurrounded errorand intolerance on the part of "Well,Iwould think that by now onlydotheyassumeasortofhistorical othertranslationsretain themasculine bydearfriends and family for whom JesusChrist. they wouldbe including women in andetymologicalignorance,butstill form).Instead,theautomaticassump- Englishisasecondlanguage;notbur- Some words can stand outside of theiractivities,"heansweredabruptly. worse, force a 1990-style agendaon tionexistedthatthe words themselves denedby somemodem American in- timeand history and say something Ittakesworktoconsideran—organi- works and ideas which openly tran- wereasuniversallyinclusiveasispos- terpretationswhichconstantly seek to truerthanevenour own agendasand zation like JSA aschauvinist most scend the inherent limitations of the sible. Simply becausea woman's so- demote greatnesstosexism,theytend prejudices,somethingthatpoliticalcor- ofitsmembersandleadersarcfemale, politically-correctmovement. cial status is muchimproved is little toenjoygreatliteratureandphilosophy rectness ignores in its eagerness to and the topicsdiscussed tendtobe as The Veneration oftheCross at the reasonto deny thesame integral uni- in a far more intimateandauthentic rewriteandrewordmuchofhumanity's "progressive"aspossible.The"men" ChapelofSt.IgnatiusonGoodFriday versality to wordsonceembraced by manner,regardlessofgender. formativeworksinfavor ofashallow in the title of the organizationitself, managedtobeboth alovely,moving both genders. Too often, it is our Some argue that thepoint toward contentness. however,seems enough torender it serviceandanexampleofsomestrange limited interpretation of words that "inclusive"rewritinghas more todo sexist and exclusionary. The experimenting. Thepoetic beautyof forceschauvinismuponthem;theterms withthesymbolicweightofmasculine Tom Gahan is a junior professor'sreactionshouldnot have Good Friday's solemn tradition was themselves are entirely open to the terminology than with grammatical majoring in philosophy and been asurprise tome, but like many disturbedonlybyanextremeemphasis veryinclusion weclaim tobeabsent. correctness. By separating modern English. His e-mailaddress is others,Ihave yet toswallowthatlast onwhathasnow beendubbed "inclu- Oddlyenough,itisfrequentlydueto femalereadersfromgreatworkseven [email protected]. essential dosage ofpolitical correct- sive language;" the lectors stumbled the veryinherent,transcendental free- ness necessary for that acutely-blind overthemissal,awkwardlysqueezing domoflanguagethat,historically,hu- sensitivity too prominent in higher out every"men," "man,""him," "he" manshavebeengrantedpersonallib- Service: applying SUvalues learning,asensitivity that quickly and"mankind,"strugglingtoreplaceit erties; it is this very freedomthat is is thosestoriesarc/i'vedout. Whatuseis at the intricacy and withsomenon-gender-specific term. beingoppressedand From page 6 whittling away refutedwhenlan- areligion book ifitsstories are not When you'relearningabout life in actedon? general,yousimply have toconnect TutoringbringsSU andT.T.Mi- Engaging ASSU: withothers. nor students together torelate with Thetime whenItruly serve others eachother.Ifa—second-gradegirlcan iswhenItakeabreakfrommyactual see the— story the lived-out ex- Students need to be involved work to talk withpeople.Why?Be- ample ofhowacollcgestudentcares cause that's when Ishow thatIcare enoughto talk with her andnot just involved,frustrated,challengedand abouttheirconcerns andtheir world, teachher, that countsfor more than KatieDubik successful. notmine.Doingthe taskistheunim- anyactualreadingassignment.That's There aremany ways todecrease portantthinginservicework;relating why tutoringis someaningful,and Guest Columnist theapathyhere.Ihaveafew sugges- to people is what's important. The that'swhyserviceisattheheartofthis tions:First,professors need tostop beauty ofservice,— then,is thatitis so school'sexistence. My vocabularywasslightly more tofix what webelievetobebroken. snickering at ASSU and other stu- attainableforus ifwecanonlymake limited when Iarrived at Seattle Weare content tomaintainourpart dent activities and startpromoting thatfirstrealizationofhowcentralitis majoring University than it is now. There of the conversation,but not stick involvement. SU students should toourlives. MattZemekisasenior is also an were many words Iheard here for aroundand do the difficult thingof developthehabit ofwillingengage- SU'srole asaCatholic schoolis to in journalism. He sports of The the first time. Oneof those words, comingup withasolution thatcre- ment in activities that improve our help us make that realization. The associate editor ironically enough, was "apathy." I atively incorporates all thoseideas communities, both present and fu- Catholicuseofstories toexplainreli- Spectator. Hise-mailaddress mtlexpos@ had no idea what my new upper- involved. ture, by commencement. Second, gious truths is mciiningful only it is seattleu.edu. classmanfriend was talkingabout It'snot easy,but wehavetolearn students need to take the bold step as she complained about the apa- to be citizens of our community beyondcomplainingandtakeaction. thetic students she encountered somewhere. And why nothere at Forexample,ifastudentbelieves the LETTER TO THE EDITOR: while workingoncampus. — our ownuniversity? CoreCurriculumtobe tooeasy,heor Columnists should offer solutions Apathy wasa wordthat— Iheard FatherStephenSundborg,SJ,uni- sheneedstohuntdownFatherDavid and continue to hear quite fre- versitypresident,remarked atafo- Leigh, SJ, the director of the pro- Iam writing inresponse toan then tooffer asolution. quentlyafter thatfirst time.IfIhad rum last quarter that a student's gram— because it's up for review, article writteninlastweek'sSpec- Here atSeattleUniversity,stu- adollar for every time Iheard it, presence isinappropriate atcertain the time is now. Third, we need to tator,entitled"Religion,classand dentsmerelycomplain aboutthe paying my tuition would not be a times and in certain places. As havecommunity goals andcommu- ethnicity make peace difficult." problems instead of taking ac- problem. ASSU president, these words are nityobjectivesofachievingthestated IapplaudMr. Balasbas' efforts tion or presenting viable solu- Faculty memberssay it of their noteasy toswallow. WhenIasked purpose. Students, staffand faculty to present this issue to the cam- tions,whatkindofleadersare we students: "If they weren't so apa- himabout it,hesimply explainedto should work toward reaching the pus community, and encourage educating? thetic, they would become more me thathebelievedstudentsshould same vision. him toexpandon the issue. Iwould bemore interested in engagedinthematerial." Adminis- maximize thespheres ofinfluence Apatheticis notawordthatshould Iam well aware of the prob- an article on the Opinion page trators flingitaround withfamiliar- open to them, then demand more besynonymouswiththisJesuitcom- lems in Northern Ireland, and whichactually givesanopinion ity and flair: "What programs can powerandinfluence. munity. Rather,weshouldchoose agreethatpeacewillbe difficult Mr. Balasbas merely repeats a we createtodecrease theapathyof Suchblunt words! Ihad to think the words "engaging"or "compel- to come by;however, the state- lecturegiveninourDiversityam our students?" Andseasoned stu- long and hard before Iacknowl- ling" or "active" to describe our- ment "it seems only a perfect Changeclass. dent leaders are not afraid of the edged his words made sense. He selves,thenacttomakethedescrip- peaceagreementthatmakes— ev- Now,Iwould like to see him boldstatement: "I am sick of the wasrightabout this one. Thereare tiontrue. eryonehappywillwork" Now, dosomething withhiseducation apathyof myclassmates!" many students whoareinvolvedon tellme somethingIdon'tknow! inpolitical scienceandbecomea Apathy is a deadly syndrome thiscampus,but weover-involved— Katie Dubik is thepresident of Theproblemofopinionarticles problem-solver. Only then will where westudentsstopbeinginitia- studentsneedothers'help weneed ASSU. Her opinions do not inour paper stems form the fact weactually see Opinionsonour tors and become reactors. We ac- tohear your experiencesand your necessarily reflect those of that all the writers do ispresent opinionpage. cept whatishanded down touswith ideas. Inordertohavemoresay in ASSU or the ASSUcouncil. anobviousproblem.Iencourage ascowl,and a roll ofour eyes,but thedecisionsofouruniversity,more Her e-mail address is allofyouropinion columnists to KateEckhart don't commit the time and energy of ushave tobe willing tobecome [email protected]. notonlypresent theproblem,but Junior,Political Science FEATURES

8 "The AreoftheNeedle: SU campus a "prims

something tocherish manyofthem view theexperience CatTaylor,theowner oftheshop "It is McCarthy away from Katie as a baptism of freedom frompar- where Taniguchi had her tattoo sinceIam so far Staffßeporter home,"she added. ents,ora waytoexpresstheirinner done,has been in the business for tattooof as- selves. over 14 years, and charges a base Ari got her the rateof $40. trological signAries near her Thearthasbeenaroundfor thou- "Iam pretty conservative,"said mostly see peopleun- righthip whenshe was 20. sandsof years. juniorRuth Taniguchi. "I young — Taylor, "I am a strong Aries, and I involves guns, needles,paint "That's whyIgotitonmyback der 20 yearsof age," said It reallyintoastrology," Ari extremelyskilled hand. so people don't see it," she ex- whose shop can be found tucked am and an onBroad- explained. Someenthusiastsenjoytinyflow- plained. awayinanupstairs studio Ari gother tattooin aplace ers, while others prefer gigantic Now 21, Taniguchi was a 19- way. designs on some that is generally hidden, be- assortments that range from ani- -year-old fr.eshman whenshe took The intricate the befound in the cause she intends to become mals to naked women. the plunge and went under tattooedbodiescan books in shops. both a mother and a profes- What ofart is this? needle. Like many students, she various sample kind and sional. Tattooing, of course. roamedBroadwaytofind "Taylor- These books help customers they She explained she doesn't Tattooingis an art form that is made Tattoos." artists decide what direction want to take. wantherkidsasking,"Mommy, alive and strong amongmany Se- Taniguchivisualizedayin-yang Some- what's that?" times, if the Itslocationalsomakesiteasy is to it from herunsuspect- artist hide Katie McCarthy / Spectator highly ing father and swimcoaches. skilled, he When her mother found out Senior Shannon Terlaje'splumeria tattoo is areminder ofherhomeland,Guam. or she can about the tattoo, Ari thought copy any she wasdead. "Everydayis different,"Gosnell was linghere and there." idea a cus- Surprisingly, Mom fairly said. The issue ofpain seems toal- — tomer per- "cool" withit. "Thisbusinessisunpredictable c arite passage into waysbeassociatedwithtattooing. sonally de- "It was like of we can be busy and then slow. ; Lucky Devil TattooParlor (1720 signs. adulthood," Arismiled. Sometimes wehave no ideaabout Manylike "I defi- the moneysituation," she added. the idea of nitely won't parlor a total of five , Josnell thinks itall Her has having a growoutofit," Gosnell runs her business depends on where artists. hand in cre- she added. with a firmhand. you get the tattoo on ating their Ari has ad- According toGosnell,shehas to your body— and how tattoo. Jun- vice for other f betough,becausethestateofWash- high of a pain threshold ior Christo- students consid- ingtonis not. you have. pherWilson, ering getting a Washington is amongthe many Gosnell's threshold, forexample, tattoo in the fu- states in the nation withnohealth for example,appears to SUjuniorChris Wilsonshowsoffhistattoos:ageckoandavariationofanAfricantribalbracelet. loves to take ture. and safety standards or require- "Always adesign and go ments for tattooing. friend, and "Isat for agood10hours attleites,includingcollegestudents. symbol for her tattoo. But when developit alittle further beforehe with a Gosnellsaid thattheonly things to take bigbreaths,"she in the chair when Igot my fact, art form can befound she saw the hundreds of designs has the artist tattoohis skin. remember the state requires are for a shop to In the whole chest tattooed," shesaid. thestudent "bodies" attend- available in a sample book, she "It's addicting," Wilson said. said. haveapressurizedcleaningsystem 1987, "Talkingisgood way toget your Gosnell was only 17 years old tmgSeattle University. decided togetamore extravagant "The first one Igot was in and floordisinfectant (nocarpet), years pain," Ariadded. when she firstbecameattracted to The SU campus happens to be designaroundher ownyin-yang. whenIwas 20 old." mindoffof the no spitting be allowed, customers Taking a friend is exactly what the art. located in a prime spot "It wasanhourand Now,hehaseight tattoosinvari- must be 18 orolder,and the estab- did when she got her first Her first tattoo? for thosecravingatat ous placesonhis body. Milnor lishment must have some sort of a tattooonValentine'sDayatage 18. A cross with a rose wrapped too,or two. ormore "Thelongest Isatin achair for release form. hours," Milnordecided totry tobediffer- aroundit. Many students CellIOt 1. tattoowasfour Wilsonsaid. Gosnell has many years of tat- ent,andgotatiny tattooofaspider Now,at 32, Gosnell can't even belt, have visitedthe vari- "Iwasgonnaget "Iplan on getting morein the tooingexperience under her future," on topof her foot. begintocount the tattooscovering ous tattooparlorson it onmy butt,butI headded. the and has tattooed in other states. students, like Now,the20-year-oldseniorsays her bodyfromneck to toe. and around Broad- didn't want the art- Other Taniguchi, Compared tosome,shefeelsWash- Junior withherspider. "I'm just completely covered way to just look, ist tosee it, soIgot feel that one is enough. shestill is inlove ingtonis toorelaxed withitsregu- c Ari, "I Igot a spider because withtattoos," she said. supporta friendre- it on my lower Anett and seniors Shannon think lations. allhave when I afraid of TherearetwoLuckyDevilloca- ceiving tattoo, or get a tattoo back," she ex- TerlajeandTienneyMilnor was little Iwas a thought they would tions. Gosnell manages the store themselves. plained. asingle tattoo,and do not planon spiders, and onme," Milnor said. on12thAvenuenearSU,whileher However,a tattooparlor is not a Most tattoosdon'tcomecheap. getting anynew onesin thefuture. crawl atattoothatcouldbe husband runs a store in Rainier typicalplacefor astudybreak.For Taniguchi shelled out $150 for Terlaje's tattoo has deep roots She wanted easilycovered up, since neither of Valley.Gosnellchargesabout$100 those students who have tattoos, hers. connectingher back to hernative her parentsknew. anhour,butlessforsmallerpieces. "It's not really that noticeable, Gosnell isoneoftherare female butfinding theright shoestohideit tattooartists in the male- domi- canbe annoying,"Milnor said. natedprofession.Shesaidthatonly For Milnor,painreallywasn't a inthelast 15 yearshavea handful factor. All shefelt was"alittle tick- ofwomentattooartistsemerged. flowernativeto

ThL ThePink Zone 211 Broadway Aye.E., 325-0050 TaylorMadeTattoo 219Broadway Aye.E., 860-3907 Lucky Devil 1720 12th Aye. E., 323-1637, e-mail: [email protected] HalawaHennaArtStudio 221 3Market St.NW, Ballard, Fall Qua "Ineverwant 782-7314 ♥Mnt< Katie McCarthy / Spectator to erase it," AmericanBeautyTattoo 1017E.Pike St., 324-6443 LuniorRuthTaniguchidisplayshervariationoftheyin-yangsymbolonherlower back. Features

is a "prime location" for tattoo-seekers

"Ispray the tattooingunit af- tereach customerleaves witha disinfectant,becausetherearea to ask When lot of airborne diseases out Questions there,"Gosnellsaid. "The law doesn't require it, and it's left up to the business getting a tattoo: owner. That is the main prob- lem withother tattoo places," sheadded. 1.Doestheshophaveanautoclaveandanultrasonic Health and safety should be considered first, but many cleanser? peopleclaiming tobe aprofes- 2.Cantheshop provethat theautoclaveis tested sional in theindustryare out to makeaquick buck. monthly? A number of diseases and even theHIV viruscanbe trans- Doestheshop usesterile,disposableneedles? mitted fromuncleanprocedures 3. and instruments. 4. the and well-lit? AnotherproblemthatGosnell Is studioclean Katie McCarthy / Spectator andthehealthdepartmenthave Doesthe shopuse sterilizedandbagged tools? withtattooartists inWashing- 5. minder homeland, ofher Guam. ton is the illegal tattooing of they gloves witheveryclient? minors. 6.Do usefreshlatex dayisdifferent,"Gosnell "Parents are alwayscoming in ("Everysaid. and giving their consent for their Tattoo anb 'boby 1615 Aurora Atfe. "N. "Thisbusinessisunpredictable— kids,but westillcannot acceptit," Profited by QreenUke "Vlercin^ we can be busy and then slow. Gosnellsaid. Sometimeswe haveno ideaabout "Alotofplacesdoit,but if they themoney situation,"she added. comeinhere witha fakeidentifica- scarringissome- Her parlor has a total of five tioncardtheyareheldresponsible, times unavoid- artists. Gosnell runs her business notme." able. with a firmhand. When choosing a tattoo estab- One web site AccordingtoGosnell,shehas to lishment,Gosnellsaidthatitisgooc to check out for betough,becausethestateofWash- the different ington is not. Also, methods of re- Washingtonis among the many w h a I moval is states in the nation withno health should gc www.patient- and safety standards or require- withoutsay info.com/ mentsfor tattooing. ing but is tattoo.html. Gosnellsaid that theonly things sometim Anotheralter- the state requiresare for a shop to forgotten i nativetothepain haveapressurizedcleaningsystem this: TAT- or anxiety of a and floor disinfectant (nocarpet), T O O S permanenttattoo no spitting be allowed, customers LAST isanew product must be 18orolder,andthe estab- FOR called "henna." lishment must have some sort of EVER! Those who release form. Fortunately,there is nowasolu- want the style has many years of tat- for regrettingthe tattoos not Gosnell tion those but the per- McCarthy / Spectator her belt, younger Katie tooing experienceunder from their and carefree manence of a A manshowsoffhis lion tattoo. and has tattooed in other states. days. real tattoo may Comparedtosome,she feelsWash- Somephysiciansoffer a variety want to try this ancient form of moreparent-friendly formof body thing. The henna tattoo usually ingtonis toorelaxed withitsregu- ofdifferent removal techniques. bodyart thatoriginated inIndia. art that is temporary, and signifi- staysonthebodyfromaboutoneto lations. Thetreatmentremainscostly,and The harmless art is a safer and cantly lessexpensive than thereal three weeks.

*" ■ *V- *nT I ! Women inPopular Culture I ■ HUMT 191,Betsey Barker Klein j J FallQuarter 1998 . * IHtTHjfc *_-5- "-" tj^

ThinkimAboutSeattle I Dr. Paul Kidder !; ♥offeredby ♥ I FallQuarter 1998: PHIL 480/HUMT 400 J ♥InterdisciplinaryCore Course♥ '; AlUttgo Ricci Coll€G€ S Ijvwwwwwwwwwww ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT jgin 10 H*J Poet's images captivate Susan Meyers ence begin to understand that the StaffReporter mediums for capturingimages are endless. Ifawedby thecaptivatingpower AsBierdsexplainedat therecent ofphotographs,thenLindaBierds' UW reading,evenhandwriting isa latestbook of prose,"The Profile medium of thecaptured image. Makers," is an image feast fit.for Bierds said that a person'shand thediscerningmind's eye. captures amovement,agesture.It Bierds, the director of the Uni- records— the speed or sloth of a versityofWashingtoncreative writ- writer his or her excitement or ingprogram,exploreswhatitmeans dismay. to capture a visual image, physi- According toBierds,everything cally orthroughone'simagination. that weleave,beitaphotographor AssheexplainedatarecentUW a footprint,carriesinformation. reading,itis not somuchan image Intheclosingpoem,sheexplains that sheis interestedinas "thecap- a similar phenomenon. From an turing itself:theholdingand shap- anecdote she read in a book, she ing that wedo." Photo courtesy of Owl Books describes the skillof human track- This"holdingandshaping"may Linda Bierds. ers: be an act ofinterpretation,but for /readatracker'slore,halftruth, Bierds, itis more than that. What As a descriptive poet, Bierds Ithink, Besure tomiss the unveiling of this year'sissue of"Frag- — not wecapture— areourlives,and what tends toemploysubjectmatterfrom halfwonderment how,fleeing, ments."HeldintheCaseyAtrium,thiseventhonors theoutstanding remains an— imageor thememory outside of her own life. But what onemanmountedstilts, student writers and artists in Seattle University's own annual ofanimage ismeaningfulonlyto readers see in "The ProfileMak- anotherfastenedto hissoles the literary/artsmagazine.Thisyear'sselectees rangefrompoetsand ourselves. ers" are the things that fascinate stiffenedgnarls storytellers to painters and photographers. Artwork will be on "The Profile Makers," Bierds' Linda Bierds. And this vantage ofcow 's hooves. Such fussings exhibitionintheKinseyGallery,andsomeofthe writers willbeon fifth full-lengthbook of poems,is pointmayactuallygivethemamore overtwists hand toreadexcerptsfrom their work.EditorKhoaNguyenandhis arrangedinsixsectionsthat weave intimate understandingof her than indust!Butbeauty,too, thatone out issue, staff have reallypulled the stops on this making each together two separate but related thatof abiography. can read piece ofart harmonically coexist with eachpageof text. storylines. But each of the poems in "The aresidue, thatfromtheprofileof Scheduled tobeheldMay5at4p.m., the "Fragments"unveiling Thefirst storyisthatofawoman ProfileMakers"also lendsreaders a stride passion isanexcellentopportunity tosupportyour classmates for who, having discoveredsome old an eye into themselves. They pro- abodymightbecrafted. the arts. Contributors who will be readinginclude: AyuOthman, photographicnegativesofher fam- voketheiraudience toconsiderthe It is the unexpectedimage, like Orlin, Harrell, Lean, Linda Gail KevinPlumberg,KenMac Susan ily,considers the natureof images, questionsthatBierdsposesfor her- footprints, that seems to fascinate Hanna, Charles, Mabbett, Meyers, Robert Jill Donald Lcanna family anddecay. selfandhervariousnarrators: What Bierds the most. Widgren,Jenßurton,KhoaNguyen,ElisabethGreenwood,Monica — t The secondthreadtraces thehis- is captured in each of our lives? What wecreatecapturesvs our Othman, — ClarkeandKatieChing.Artistsonexhibitioninclude:Ayu toryofthecapturedimagethrough- Whatis aphotograph,and whatis a imaginations just as the shapeof Heron, Liz,Nielsen, JoAnne RyanNishio, AngelaRenter,Anna outitsvariousartisticforms:paint- memory?Whathasbeenrecorded, our footprintcanreveal theprofile Teles, Tom Htuining, Gonzales, I Bergeron,Brian Brian Aubrey I ings, silhouettes,photographsand and whathas been /bund? ofour entire body, or the slant of served, BeasaandMikeLong. Somemunchies willbe butamore countlessothers. Again and again, these poems our script records our momentary satisfying visual andaural feast awaits! The beauty of this book is its blur the distinctions between the feelings. precision:oflanguage,ofstructure imaginedand thereal,andbetween This is the irony thatBierds un- and of thought. Bierds' verse is remembered and documented im- covers thoughout— "The Profile Royal Chicano Air Force careful, well-crafted and subtle. ages. Makers" sometimes it is an im- Poster Exhibition Throughout thebook, poemsare In the end,Bierdsand her audi- age that capturesus. narrated by— historical or fictional ElCentro delaRazaisproudtopresent "In SearchofMr.Con characters it isn't until the final Safos,"aretrospective ofsome of themost famousimagesofthe pages that thereader gets toknow Chicano movement,including silkscreenpostersfeatured inthis the author. distance, however, freeexhibit. TheexhibitionrunsMay4-29 atElCentro,locatedat Authorial is 2524 16th Avenue S., Seattle. Call (206) 329-0786 for more oneofBierd's mosteffective tech- details. niques. The Hudson Review has calledher"America'spremierpoet ofdescription." New websiteoffersashareofcher Christopher Wilson Actors, authors, famous scien- There's a little twist to this vir- trends, power plays and endless Copy Editor tistsandmanyothercelebrity-types tual stock exchange. Unsubstanti- self-promotingof the90s. Onthis canbeboughtandsoldontheRogue ated rumor and scuttlebutt, often exchange,we can trade tobeat the Want to experience the heady Market. created and posted in the Rogue market,or simply voteour tastes. powerrushofofaWaiIStreetcom- Traderscan buy and sell shares Journal by the traders themselves, There is no cost to trade on the modities broker, without running inHowardStern,BillClinton,Mick can influence stock value. The Market, which makes its money theriskofulcers,potentialhairloss Jaggerand Claudia Schiffer. Journal, irregularlypublished by fromadvertising. and jail time? Care to toss off Deathevenprovestobenomatch "personsunknown,"chronicles the Tradersinitially earnlO.OOOcred- casual comments about the latest for popularity, as Elvis and other activityon theMarket, andthe as- itsjust forsigningup;anadditional Microsoft stock,but don't knowa life-challenged celebrities consis- sets that underlie it. 5,000areawardedifthe new trader splitfrom anIPO? tently maintainahighvalue. Traderswhofindinformation in fills out an anonymousmarketing For people like this, and those Here'show it works. the Journal that is detrimental to survey oninterests andpurchases. whocan't afford to tradeanything First,the trader selects,say "ac- their investment's value are wel- The site has attractedmuch at- more thanglances,a funand enter- tors,"fromdozensofcelebrity cat- come topostany contraryinforma- tentionandpraiseasahighly enter- taining compromise can be found egories. Afterbrowsingthrougha tion they may have,regardless of taining site, andhas beenprofiled at theRogueMarket. This on-line thorough list of stars, the trader whetherit is true or not. onCNNandintheNewYorkPost. stockmarketprovidesafun wayto might select "Nicolas Cage." In- Soundlike fun? Recent highgainers inthe Mar- learn about how stock markets formation onhistorichigh,lowand It is. ket have been Bill Clinton, Van work,but trafficsinfarmoreinter- currenttradingvaluesaredisplayed. Washejustcaughtbeingnaughty Italso providesan imageof the Halen and supermodelIman. Re- esting commodities thanpork bel- If Cage looks like a keeper, the in apublicrestroom? valueofour popularculture. centbig-timelosers include Frank lies or soy futures. It's even pos- traderselects thenumber ofshares Allthisaffectshow well thestock "TheRogueMarket isacontinu- Sinatra, Al Unser Jr., and Matt sible to turn in virtual "winnings" desired and "purchases"them. performs, whichaffectshowmany ous barometerofthepopicons that Damon. for some realprizes. Theupsanddowns of theceleb- credits (virtualmoney) the trader dominate our lives,"said William The RogueMarket is entertain- The Market, found at rity market are based on the fluc- receivesorloses. Peopletradingon Fisher, co-producer of the Rogue ing,educational and slightly titil- www.roguemarket.com, trades in tuations ofthat star'scareer. theRogueMarketcan loginevery Market,in theRogueMarket Press lating. Andfor freeentertainment, the futuresofover1,300celebrities For example,did shejust win a few days to see how their invest- Room. it can't be beat. Sologon,log in, inmore than 30 categories. Pulitzer? mentchoices arepayingoff. Now wecan allcapitalizeon the andgo wreck some careers. Arts&Entertainment

11 On the road with Far's

StevenP.Ford all-ages venueswheneverpossible tournot because we're necessarily allowed to suck in private," indicative of is a fan base that is Stajfßeporter "It'sreally hardbeinga bandon big enough to pull it off, but be- Matrangamuses."You'reallowed very passionateabout us. It's not tourbecause ifyoudon'tknow the causeitismoreofanidentitything," toget out all yourhorrifyingsongs that ourfan baseis sohuge,it'sjust It'sshortlyafter5:30p.m.. when town, a lot of times the all-ages Matrangasaid. "One thing that is and performances withoutall the verycommittedandveryinterested the lead singer from Sacramento, venues,if theyeven exist,are very changingslowly thatIthink would glare andcompetitionof abigcity in being a part of what we do," California's Far finally strollsout low-key, underground clubs that changemorequicklyifwedidhead- scene." Matrangasaid. to the front of RKCNDY. Jonah are not in the yellow pages, let lining stuff, is this thing where we Withbuddingpunk,hardcoreand Matrangashows a strongbelief Matrangafinds a seat on the steps alone in the booking agent's get associatedwithKorn, and the popscenes runningtogether,it's a thatthis web-basedmethodofget- onthenorthwest cornerofthe club, tourbook,"Matrangasaid. ... where Isee us morein surprise that up until recently, not ting to themusic and gettingit out and quickly surveys the surround- A frown develops on his brow. linewithbandslikeHum,andSunny much of anything has taken off there stimulatesa natural growth ings. Long, skinnyarms shoot out from Day(RealEstate)andRadiohead." with any noticeable sucess. But for theband,rather thanthehyped- Near the entrance of the club,a his squatting frame to accentuate Matranga believesmuch of the now,o bands like Cake and the up growthof the music industry. fanhas already stakedclaim to the particularsofhis answer. Yeteach confusionaboutFar'smusicalclas- Deftones havebroughtmore atten- Thelankysingercollectshimself "first-in-line" spot, and although thrustofanarmor tionto the scene. for a moment. A mentalcharge is themusic won't startforacouplcof leg makes him When Far gathering, and he quickly segues hours, he's content to sit and read look like some started sticking intoa belief that seems bothper- his book in what remains of the half- crazed its head out into sonal and inspiring. day's sunshine. prophet. the wider world, "Writing music is very much Out in the street, commutersare "In Boise, we people were yourownthing.Puttingitout there tryingtoremaincalm,even though played a 21 and quick toidentify isaverycommunity-orientedthing, traffic is backed up for blocks. over club, which theband'sheavy andso I'm veryinterestedincom- Drivers slowly navigate around a was awful," guitars with the munity," Matranga said. "It'snot shattered windshield thathas pep- Matrange re- likes of the just to have people whodig our pered the street with glass. called. "We met Deftones. record. One wayIlike toput it is Yet, Matranga is caught up in somekidsafterthe Thebandcom- that Iwould rather make friends otherthings at the moment. While show... and Iwas pounded this that fans. Idon't needsomeone to on tour with fellow Sony bands like'isthereanall- misclassification tellmeIrock. Iwantsomeonetogo Incubus andUltraspank. Matranga ages place?' and whentheysigned home after seeing our show and andtherestol'Farhavebeenthrough they said "yeah, to theSonylabel writea f— kingbettersongthanme." a lot. someguy's community not it'sin " Immortal. Its But is allof what Last night, the tour landedthem basement.' band at MatrangaorFar arc about. in Boise at a club that catered to Far has opened ime was the Listening to the newalbum,reli- Steve Ford / Spectator those of legal drinking age. For for a wide assort- JonahMantrangaofFar. Eihipcore group gious imageryrunsby likea papal Matranga,theproblems withlining ment of bands, Korn.Farshared parade. up"all-ages"gigshasbecomemore rangingfromthenowdefunct Bra- sificationis twofold. management with Korn, and the Bornthesonof aUnitarian min- andmoreofanissue as thebandhas zilianmctaibandScpultura,to3 1 1, First, the band's hometown be- close ties tometalhavebeenhardto ister, Mantrangaclearly comes to grown. to the Deftones. They also had a came somewhat of a misnomer. shake eversince. hismusicequippedwithareligious Onprevioustours,eitherfortheir spotonlastsummer'sWarpedTour. Sacramento has been harboringa However, Far's newest release background. 1996 release "Tin Cans Tied To Inplayingmoreandmoreshows, very eclecticmusic scene for sev- "Water&Solutions"takestheband "AllGo Down" andFar's new- You," or whileopening for other thebandhas developeda smallbut eralyears. in a more ""direction, where est single, "Mother Mary", both bands,thedesirejust toget aplace devoted fan base. "TheSacramento scene is great. previous work lended itself to an employ religiousimagery. to play supcrccded all else. "We're slowlybuildinganiden- It'squiet.Myfavoritewaytophrase indierock vibe. The first makes references to But now, theband wantstoplay tity. Iwouldlike todo aheadlining itis that it's aplace whereyou are Matragna believes this shift in Mother Theresa,while the second intentions wasbrought toactuality makespious allusions, hiltinghome through the work of producer D. withthe chorus: Sardi. Mother Mar\ overme. Matranga'svocalsplayabigpart Yet,Matrangamaintainsthatthe inFar's musical. Hissweetly lift- imagery ismore for aspiritual pur- ing falsetto can carry beautiful pose than to promote a specific acoustic ballads like "All Come religion. Down" from the "Godmoney" "What is interestingtomeabout soundtrack,orit canlaunch intoan the Virgin Mary is that she exists emo-punk screamofguitardriven outside the confines of any set of tracks like "The System." beliefs. Whether youarcCatholic In fact, Matranga stifled many ornot,she is thesymbol ofpurity... music critics by admitting to the the icon for the Western World," emo classification. Most bands Matrangasaid. havebeen wiMingtoshy awayfrom "Mother Theresa has the icon theclassification,whichderivesits thing too, but she's a convenient name from a vague reference to symbolforsomeonewhoreally puts emotions. themselvesout thereforthe world. For Matranga,the different clas- Full of compassionand tirelessly sificationshave becomealmostan devoted tohelping otherpeople. exercise inphilosophy. "And whatIwassaying withthat "It'sa multiple-choicequestion. song,is that thatenergy,thatstring At this point, Ichoose emojust is gettingtight,"Matrangasaid."At because it has been least the time Iwroteit, and now five commodified,anditis theonewith yearsdowntheline.Iseeotherwise the least specific definition," compassionatepeoplebecomingin- "V , Ihe debul album Matrangasaid. "Thereare alotof tolerant,andit scaresme." Qlee different bandsthatpeoplecallemo; Matrangaexpressesthebeliefthat ■ iPBIHP tfft I everythingfromThePromiseRing muchof what happensinhis recent toQuicksandtoFugazi,and thereis music is a reflectiveof this think- a worldofdifference betweenthose ing. bands.Ireallyenjoy beingassoci- "The plot of more and more of ated with a term that not many whatIamdoingandtryingto truly peopleunderstand." live theidea thathitting youis like Far is one of many bands who hittingmyself," Matranga said. havegaineda verydevotedfollow- In the backgroud, the sounds of I— taring " ing via the Internet. Severalsites soundcheckproceed:drumsreport on the band, including pages by through the hall,somebodychecks "DrinkingInLA. I Matrangahimself,havebeencom- amic,and ablastoffeedback adds ■ piled form "Far to to the WebRing." a piercingsound the crew's col- The sitesoffer everythingfrombios lection. INSTORES NOW topictures tosoundclips. Matranga asks what timeit is. 7 "What Ithink the webpagesarc p.m. Nearly showtime. SPORTS B^v uTmI||h(f9JHPl*T^^B 12 D-II: THE SAGA CONTINUES DivisionIIstill remains apossibilityfor thefuture ofSUathletics From page1 donotcarrytheprestigeDivisionII hisacademiccareerindentalschool ever, theathletic department feels tostayandcontinue to workatthis supportersfeelSUcan attain. "If wedidn't have a 3.43 team that we have already established university or seek other employ- theBoardofTrusteesonMay7,but It would seem morerealistic to GPA, if we didn't win the sports- rivalriesagainst schools like Cen- ment,"saidAlHairston,men'sbas- he does notintend to make afinal compare SU to theother Jesuit in- manshipawardandwererunninga tral Washington University and— ketball coach, the day of the 1996 decision at thatmeeting. stitutions on the west coast like renegadeprogram, we wouldhave WesternWashingtonUniversity decision. "IfIstay,obviously I'd "Iwill reportto the Trustees that Gonzaga,SantaClara,the Univer- sealed ourownfate," Fewingsaid. whobothopted tomove from the havetosupportanddothebestIcan theplanis togo withtheir original withthe situation." decision(toapply forDivisionIII)," "It wouldbeashametolosegood Sundborg said, "but Iwill coaches,"Gerou said. "Iwouldn't formthemof theissuesthathave / love SUand what it standsfor. Idon't mean to be blamethemfor wantingtocoach at unt up. to past decision, there are a things ahigherlevel." "We'll go forward to apply to disrespectful the but few Thenextmonthis a veryimpor- ivision111,but weneedaprocess Itake seriously,andsoccer is one them. tantonefor thefutureofSUathlet- investigateitfurther." of ics, but each side is going to be The 1996 decision was highly Pete Fewing,Men's Soccer Coach givenafair chance. ntroversial because of the pre- "Thedeterminingfactor is what dingevents.Many students,fac- sity of SanFrancisco and Loyola "But wehavegenuine student ath- NAIA toDivisionII— andSeattle isbestfor theuniversity andwhatis lyandstaffheavilyexpressedtheir MarymountUniversity,allof which letes,andthey areexcellentrepre- Pacific University (D-II) and the a fit for us as a university," said pportofapplyingforDivision11. areDivisionIschools. sentativesofSeattleUniversity. Universityof Washington(D-I). HankDurand,vicepresidentofStu- Thatdecision wasmadeafter an Infact, ofthe 28Jesuituniversi- "Theseguys deservebetter, and "We are way above the level of dentDevelopment."Whatl'vebeen 8-month period of extensive in- tiesinthe country,20 areDivision the students deservebetter." players thatNCIC schools recruit, impressed with is the president's iitherestigation. During those 18 affiliates, 11, thecommitment want togobackwards," willingness tolisten to allsides of I four are inDivision Gerounoted of andIdon't months,manyproposalsweremade two are in the NAIA, one is in the coaches to the academic suc- Fewingsaid. "We areaheadof the this issue... This is going tobe an n favor ofDivision 11. Division 111, and then thereis SU. cess of their athletes,anddoes not NCIC, and the only way to create openprocess. A sportsadvisory task force,ap- Another reason the administra- see achange if the school were to rivalries and become even with "Ithasbeen aneducationalexpe- )ointed byFather Sullivan, voted tion favored Division 111 was to makethe transition toDivision11. themis toget worse." rience for allof us." 1-2 in opposition ofDivision HI. emphasizeSU's focus onacadem- "Thecoaches gooutoftheir way "Once you'vetasted that (SU's FatherSundborgsaid thathehas OnJanuary 30, 1996,the ASSU ics. DivisionIIsupporters, how- to schedule practice aroundclass national championship) why would learnedalot aboutthis issue,espe- epresentativeCouncil voted8-0- ever,pointout thatSUhasearneda and lab times," Gerousaid. "That you want anything else?" Gerou cially in the last six weeks. He -1 infavorofDivision11,andsent a reputationfor recruiting outstand- kindofphilosophy willcontinue." added. "It would be taking astep wantstobeasinformed aspossible letter toFatherSullivan in whichit ingscholar-athletes. AnNuon,a junior onthe soccer back bygoing DivisionIII." before a final seal of approval is stated, "We feel the council deci- "I don't think you can find a teamandan importantpieceof the The fact that SUwould— have to hastilystampedontheapproaching sion accurately champion- add at least two more probably future ofSUathletics. reflects student shippuzzle, three— athletic teams is another "I'vebeeninvolvedinmanygood concern for the Why wouldwe hold back when we have is thefirstin concernoftheathleticdepartment. discussions,andI'llreportas best future integrity — his familyto SU wouldhavetoaddanotherfull- as Ican to the Trustees," Father and mission of the chance to expand whystop when we attendauni- timetrainer,andthereis noroom to Sundborgsaid. "We should take Seattle Univer- versity. He addoffices fornewcoaches,nor is advantageofthisopportunity togo sity." have the opportunity to move would not thereany fieldspacefornew teams. Division111, but not close the is- J, forward? c r r y AnNuon,Men's Soccer Player have been Adding these teams would also sue." Viscione, the abletodoso havea heavy impact on the avail- With this opportunity having formerDean of without an ability of the Connolly Center, arisen, the athletic department theAidersSchoolofBusiness,sub- moreacademically-focusedathletic athletic scholarship. Henoted the which prides itself inhow much hasn't been able to maintain the mitted a report toFather Sullivan program," Gerou said. "Often soccer teamhelped put SU on the time is allotted to all SU students same type of patience that Father onNovember 27, 1995,reviewing times,theathletes getahigherGPA mapthisyear. anditsopennesstothecommunity. Sundborg has displayed. The the finances and statistics of the intheir seasons." "A lot of kids want togo here "Thisisanimportantissue,"Fa- coaches and staffhope this newD- controversy. In that letter,heem- Gerou did not have the exact now,andthey can'tbecauseit's too therSundborg said. "Everyoneat IIpush can have a significant im- phatically statedthat he was in fa- figures, but noted that the com- expensive,"Nuon said. "The size SUshouldbeable touse the facili- pact inarelativelyquick time. vorof Division11. binedGPAofallSUathletic teams of the university really attracted tiesatConnolly Center." "The hardest partis forme tosit Despite the heavy support for wasarounda3.4GPA. me, and having a scholarship al- IfSU weretogoDivision11, the inthisofficeandwaitforourfateto Division11, thedecision wasmade One teamthatembodied' thisar- lowedme tocome here. athleticdepartmentwouldnothave be sealed,"Fewingsaid. to pursue membership into Divi- gument wasthemen ssoccerteam. "Whywouldwe holdback when toadd any more teams to its cur- Butthisimmediate push byD-II sion111, and theathletic department A teamcomprisedofnearlyallath- we have the chance to supporters does not felttheirfate hadbeensealed. That letes thatarereceivingsomesortof expand— why stop when meanthat anewdeci- is whereSU stands today,but the athleticscholarship,thesoccerteam we have the opportunity sion is going to be DivisionIIhopefuls have found a wontheNAIA nationalchampion- tomoveforward?" The determiningfactor is what made at next week's window of opportunity,and they ship while boastinga 3.43GPA. "Ilove SUand whatit university meeting. Father hope that whenSU turns inits ap- Threeplayers werenamed Aca- stands for," Fewing is bestfor the and Sundborg stressed plication byJune,it will be D-11. demicAll-Americans,andthe team added. "Idon'tmean to what is us as a university. that the purpose was "The main argument for Divi- was awarded the sportsmanship bedisrespectfultothepast fitfor to continue as origi-— sion111 is to jointhe independent awardat thenational tournament. decision,but there are a What I've been impressed with nally planned go schools (intheNorthwest)andalign Klubberud, a Rhodes Scholar few thingsItake seriously, withDivisionIII— but with them," said NancyGerou,di- nominee,addressed thisissue inhis andsocceris oneofthem. is thepresident's willingness to have an informative rectorofSUathletics. "It'sjustthat letter, which wasendorsed by the "Ibet if youasked Fa- session on these new we don'talign with them. majorityof the student-athletes. ther Spitzer to teach just listen toallsides ofthis issue. concerns thatarenib- "Ifthat is whatweendupdoing, "(This) argument is a personal 101Philosophy,hewould Hank Durand, Vice President blingaway at the at- we are just looking at a different insult tome and the otherstudent- not be happy man." of D-111. a of Development tractiveness program than what exists today." athletes thatare amongstthe finest OneconcemforFewing Student Father Sundborg The Division111 supporterssay students in all of Seattle Univer- and all of the coaches is wants to hear from the NCIC is good for the school's sity," Klubberud stated. thelackofcommitmenttoathletics riculum. Rather, it would even both sides,and with the Trustees, academic focus and prestige. SU Pete Fewing, headcoach of the by the NCIC. Teamshaverestric- haveroom tocut someprograms. decide ifthis issue needs asecond willbecompetingwithinstitutions soccerteam,notedthecommitment tions which allot for very limited "Itmakes totalsense tobe Divi- thatthesesupporterssay are "like- toacademics byhisplayers. Goal- practice time during the off-sea- sion11,giventhefacilities wehave," "It is time for us to submit an minded" andare agood fit. keeperJasonPalmerhas theoppor- son. Gerousaid. "Theathleticprogram application, and thequestionifwe "(This) insults andundermines tunity to tryout for some profes- "I am concerned it will bring could be much stronger overall if need toreview thedecisionarose," theprestigeand promiseof Seattle sional teams, but hehaschosen to downour program,"Fewing said. we were DivisionH-affiliated." Father Sundborg said. "Icould Universityas aJesuit institutionof graduate before pursuing any of "I have been told athletes won't Yet another concern of the ath- havesaidno,andtherewouldbeno higher education," stated Arne thoseoptions. come tothisschool,bybothparents letic department bya Division 111 issue." Klubberud, acaptain on both the Forward Kurt Swanson has re- and the athletes themselves, be- move is losing the fine coaching But talksofD-IIare againfloat- men'ssoccerandbasketball teams, ceived alot of attention from the cause of thelack of commitment." staff it has attracted to SU. ingaround theSUcampus, and the inaletterto thepresident'scabinet. Seattle Sea Dogs, a professional Thegoal of theNCICis toform "If theuniversity or the Trustees athletic department, athletes and TheNCICschools areas amatter indoorsoccer team,yetheis com- rivalriesamongstthe independent votetogo toDivision111...I'dhave students allhope their voices will of fact quite smaller than SU, and mitted tograduatingand furthering schools of the Northwest. How- adecision tomake whetherIwant bemoreaccepted this time. Sports I tKKJ* MrtIWellJ 13 Men's tennis wins battle but loses the war Collapse in doublesprevents valiant Walter outlasts rivalfor Chieftainsfromgaining NCIC title singles championship three-setter, 1-6,7-5,6-4. (see story, Matt zemek Willamette University MATT ZEMEK AssociateSports Editor Walter and Scott should prob- right). Walter never lost an NCIC SportsEditor ably receive a wild-card entry in match this season,going 16-0and Associate TheSeattleUniversitymen'sten- the NAIA National Tournament, beating Ugarte twice. He was a JesseWaltercappedhisNCICcareerinablazeofglorylast Sunday. nis team won two events at last whichbegins onMay 18 in Tulsa, runawaychoicefortheNCICPlayer Onacloudless andsun-bakedafternooninTacoma,adesert setting weekend's NCIC Tournament in Okla.But evenwith thatconsola- of the Year, heading up the All- was the only thing missing from Walter's NCIC singles title match Tacoma.Their topplayersprovided tion, the pain of their defeat re- ConferenceTeamas well. withWillamette's Pablo Ugarte. Theold rivals shouldhave carried strong showings and performed mained unshakable,a scarringand While Walter won the overall six-shooters insteadof rackets.The animosity betweenthe twofoes admirably.If theChieftains could lastingmemoryfrom anotherwise singles title,SU's Erik Berninger was sopalpable thatalinejudgewasneeded for thematch,ararity at haveaccepted this scenariobefore stellar weekend. wonthe lower-division champion- such alevelofcompetition. theseasonstarted,theywouldhave "The loss was devastating for ship,despitea stressfractureinhis Against that backdrop, the NCIC's premiere tennis rivalry was done soina New York minute. me, because Iwanted the confer- left leg.Berninger went down to stagedfor the final time.SinceOctober of 1996, Walter andUgarte ButastheChieftainsleftthecam- encetitle for our teamand atrip to the wirewithPLU'sWillSnyderin dueledonfour separateoccasions,inregular-seasonplayandat-large pusofPacific LutheranUni- the title match before pre- tournaments.Befittingthenature of their rivalry,Walter andUgarte versitylastSunday,theyfelt vailing, 4-6, 6-2, 7-5. For split the four matches.Thismatch woulddecide their all-timeseries. dejected because they had (indoubles, Berninger, the victory rep- The stakescouldnothavebeenanybigger,and Walter knew it. just lost the tournament to "The loss resentedatriumphoverpam "BothPabloandIknew allseasonlongthatitwasallgoing tocome PLU,48-46. with Scott) was and questionsabouthisabil- downto thismatch," Waltersaid."Ihadbeenpreparingallseasonfor the Lutes cel- Jeff ity toperform. thisduel." led their seventh con- me "Iwasveryexcitedto win In order to beat Ugarte, Waiter needed to use his fitness to his title, devastatingfor ladder,"Berninger Ehiletiveconference the thelower advantagebyreturning all the shotsinhisopponent's well-rounded second-place Chieftains, becauseIwantedthe said. "I had my doubts on arsenal.Waiterneededtoabsorbhisrival'sbestpunch,andinathree- whohad much tocelebrate whetherI'dwin becauseof setmatch,hegotjustwhathewanted.TakingapagefromMuhammad themselves, walked away conference titlefor our the stress fracture and my Ali,Walterperformedatennis versionof therope-a-dopeby wearing disappointed. Their heart- of practice time." downhisrivalfor thechampionship,6-3,1-6,6-2.Walteremphasized break stemmed from a re- team... It's very Scott was SU's other theimportance ofhis fitnesslevel. col- (k standoutin markable andshocking disappointing to know gles Tacoma. "Myconditioning was themajor difference,"Walter said. "I wore lapse. Scott, whohas had the sea- him down with long,exhausting rallies. By the time the third set Jesse Walter and Jeff that we werejust inches sonofhis life, made a bold started,hewasoutofgas,whileIsteppedupmy gameanothernotch." Scott, SU's top doubles run tothesinglessemifinals After winningboth the titleandhispersonalrivalryagainstUgarte, I team, werebearinginonthe away winning. before falling to Ugarte,6- themomentousnessofthe winsunkinforWalter, whowillgotoTulsa, I doubles title, which would from -3,6-4.,6-4.He joinedWalter on Walter Okla. for the NAIANational Tournament on May 18. have given theChieftains a Jesse the All-Conference Team, "Itwasaglorious endingforme inmy rivalry withUgarte,"Walter I clean sweep of the tourna- andstandsagoodchanceof said. "This match means a lot for my confidence. Ifeel that Ican I the everyone," getting singles entry ment and overall team champi- nationals for Walter a wild-card in compete withanyoneat the" NAIA level,andIhopetogoalongways I onship.Leading 6-1, 4-1, in their said."We lost ourfocus inthesec- Tulsa. inTulsaat thenationals. / semifinalmatchagainstPLU'sMatt ond set (and) looked past them a With thesestellarperformances, Going far inTulsamight onlybethe beginningof Walter's tennis I BraundandClaytonHarris,Walter bit...lt'sverydisappointingtoknow the Chieftains had the conference odyssey.Asaplayerwhohashadareputationforplayingdowntohis and Scott seemed primed to help that wewere justinches awayfrom titlein theirgrasp,only tosuffer a competitionovertheyears,Walter'smotivation levelhasbeenlikean I SUtakeall three eventsat the tour- winning." crushing defeat. If they get an at- on-and-off switch. Sunday's match, the capstone of a legendary I nament and walk away with the While losingthe tournament de- largebid to the nationals,the pain season,provedthathecanalsoplayup tohiscompetitiononanygiven title. niedSU anautomatic team bid to of this past weekendwill be less- day— ifthe motivationis there. Then the wheels came off. the nationals, the Chieftains still ened,but will neverbe forgotten. Spurred by his remarkable success at SU, Walter feels that his WalterandScottstruggledas the haveashotat anat-largebid.They "Our teamperformance was al- motivation to playprofessional tennisis onlygettingstronger.That second set continued,buttheystill showed whyinthetwosingles tour- most like adream,"Berningersaid. couldbe the startofsomething big,in Tulsaandbeyond. stood just two points away from a namentsplayedoverthe weekend. "Goingintothelastday,weneeded "I hope tocontinue my tennis career after college," Walter said. berthin the titlematch,leading5-3 Waltercarried theChieftains,just to winthree out of four matches to "Thismatch, as wellas the nationals,becomes aspringboardfor me and30-all. Yet, SU'sstarperform- ashehas throughout his career.He go tonationals(andwononlytwo). indoingso." ers couldn't put the match away. stormed to the singles champion- We playedagreattournament,but But first things first:hehas another tournament to win. BeforeWalterandScottknew what shipwithacareer-definingtriumph the heartbreak of losing was be- "Myhard workhaspaidoff,butitisbynomeans finished,"Walter hit them, they lost a devastating overhisoldrival,PabloUgarteof yond words." said."Myultimategoal is to winthe nationaltournament.I'mfinally prepared,bothphysically andmentally, tomakea goodrun at it." With his conditioning and an affirmed sense of purpose, Walter Weller, women's tennis couldmake arun attennis greatnessbeforeit'sall saidanddone. finish onpositive note London $671 Matt Zemek DespiteagallanteffortfromWeller, NCICTournament Wrap Associate SportsEditor Hrebener wasabletoavengealoss First BYE to Weller justone week earlier. FINALMEN'SRESULTS round: Paris $727 Ledby Erin Weller, the Seattle SUassistant coachB.J. Johnson I.PLU 48points Secondround: WON, 6-0,. 6-0 WON, 3-6,6-2, University women's tennis team wasimpressed withWcller'splay. 2.Seattle 46 Quarterfinals: 6-2 3.Willamette 37 Semifinals: LOST, 1-6, 7-5, 6-4 Rome $891 closeditsseason witharespectable He said that Hrebener wasn't the sixth-place finishat theNCICTour- only thing that accounted for (1) nament, held over the weekendat Weller's heartbreakingdefeat. Jesse Walter: OTHERSUENTRIES to title singles:Kumran Madrid ...$B7B GeorgeFoxUniversityinNewberg, "Erin did not make too many Road the singles Upper-division Ore. unforced errors, and played good Firstround:BYE Jafrelostinthe secondroundofthe WON, 6-1, The Lady Chieftains posted 22 tennis," Johnson said. "(Unfortu- Secondround: 6-2 consolationbracket. Athens $990 WON, 6-1, singles:Ryan points, good enough to tie nately) she was slowed down by Quarterfinals: 6-0 Lower-division WON, Willamette University for sixth blisterson her feet." Semifinals: 6-3. 6-3 Tuiningalost in thequarterfinals; WON, 6-3, 1-6, Mcighem place in the 10-team event. The Overall,Johnsonwasencouraged Final: 6-2 Joe Van lost in the sec- UniversityofPugetSound wonthe by the effort of his undermanned ondround. (4) Berninger: lost event with46 points, followedby team. If he can add depth to his Erik Doubles:Berningcr/Tuininga Fares roundtpptrcm Seattle anddc- not include Roadto the lower-division in the quarterfinals; tax which runsanextra$40 $80. Whitman College(34) andPacific roster next year, the LadyChief- Jafre/Joel to change. Faressubject Some restrictions apply. LutheranUniversity(27). tains could withstand the loss of singlestitle Punzal lost inthe secondround. WON, 6-2, Weller hadanimpressive show- Weller,aseniorwhowill graduate Firstround: 6-2 WON, 6-0, ing atthetournament,asshereached this year. Second round: 6-2 FINAL WOMEN'SRESULTS WON, 6-3, 6-1 I.UPS 46points 4341 University Way NE the semifinals andearned a spoton "The team didquite well.Iwas Quarterfinals: WON, 6-4, 6-3 2.Whitman 34 STA TRAVEL... the NCIC All-Conference Team. happy with the way weplayed," Semifinals: WON, 4-6, 6-2, THE WORLDS a^2J/| Wcller'sbidforthetitlewasstopped Johnsonsaid."Our record(5-15,3- Final: 7-5 3.PLU 27 LARGEST STUDENT STA TRAVEL inthe semis, whereshelost anepic -10 NCIC) was not as good as I TRAVELORGAWIZATIOH. W«'v» bwittwfC. points battle toMari HrebenerofUPS,7- wantedit to be,but workedout (1) Jesse Walter/Jeff Scott: 6.Seattle 22 BOOK YOUR TICKET ONLINE AT: it -6(11-9 tiebreak),2-6, 7-6 (7-4). for usbecause weplayedwell." Roadto thedoubles semifinals (tied with Willamette) Sports

14 Golf team fifth inNCIC SU crew team Chieftainsfinishstrong inconference takes advantage championship after afinefirst year of one-week layoff lichtenberger SeniorJames Collins led the team creepingupontheChieftains, trail- Jason Matt Zemek AssociateSports Editor thatround withascore of 80. ing themby 14 strokes. After that secondround ofcom- Onthe finalday ofcompetition, Associate SportsEditor TheSeattleUniversitymen'sgol petition, SU had a team score of SU held its ground with a solid along current, teamcompleted its first seasonas team performance. For the first Whenaboatgetsswept witha itscrewhaslittletime a varsitycollegiatesport with timeinthetournament,allSUgolf- tomake decisions.Iftimestoodstillforashort while,theboatcould afifth-placefinishintheNCIC ers shot under90 for theday. berightedandsteeredtosafety. sense, championshipoverthe week- Bruno's80paced theChieftains Ina thatisexactly whathappenedtotheSeattleUniversity crew Chieftains, a off, end. as they held on for the fifth-place team this past weekend. The after week Tacoma, The tournament, at the finish, and a score of 986 for the excelled at theCascade Sprintsin placinghighlyinseveral Tokatee Golf Course in Blue tournament. Bruno finished the events. River, Ore. was a step in the tournament witha 237. The men's varsity four finished fourth inaneight-boatrace. The right direction for this young Collins was righton his heels performance wasnoteworthybecausetheChieftains finished ahead Gonzaga earlier, Bulldogs team. with a final score of 243 in his of in the race.Two weeks the bested the After finishing sixth out of final collegiateappearance. Chieftains at theGonzaga InvitationalRegattainSpokane. varsity theeight NCIC schools in their Rounding out the rest of the The women's four reached the final heat of its race and two heats, last couple of conference tour- golfersforSU wereRussDorsett finished fourth. With 12 boats entered in semifinal the naments,theChieftains wereable (252),PaulHanken (254),Surya LadyChieftains,simplybymakingthefinal,placedhighlyamongall toclimba spot in thechampion- Indarta(267)andColinHastings their competitors. ship. Allinall,it wasagoodweekendforSUvarsitycoachHughDodd, An opening-round team score PLUcapturedtheNCICcrown whocredited the week offfor muchofhis team'simprovement weremuchmore focused," varsityrowers. of 325 placed SU in fifth place with a team score of 924. "They Doddsaidofhis ideaof they wanted do. headinginto the second round of Willamette was aclose second "Theyhad abetter what to Theyresponded (to off) competition, but the Chieftains at934. Thereal battle,though, pretty well the week andracedconfidently." were wellin thehunt. was for third place between Doddalsonotedthattheone-weekbreakallowedhimtotinker with (simulatedraces) Pacific Lutheran University Linfield and Pacific. lineupsand have seat races atpractices. With the had already taken a command- Pacific tookafirst-roundlead PacificCoast RowingChampionships just three weeksaway,Dodd inglead,but SU wasonly seven byshootinga320,withLinfield wanted tohave amotivated andbattle-tested team.He gothiswish. strokes away from second justone stroke behind. "We made goals for Sacramento (the site of the Pacific Coast said."We realhardon boat place, and five strokes from Linfield then shot a team Championships)," Dodd worked selec- Overall, Everybodyproved moving intothe top three. score of 307 to take the lead tion. allthe lineupsdid well. tobe pretty Freshman Andy Bruno inthesecondround. Pacific competitive." electrifiedtheChieftainswith shota 314 to fall six shots Dodd hopesthings stay that wayinSacramento. the second best score in the behind. first round, a 76. Only a But Pacific followed COMPLETE CHIEFTAINRESULTS member from Linfield was withafinalround of309 Cascade Sprints Sat, abletotopthatscorebyshoot- to put the pressure on. April25 atTacoma ing a 75. Linfield shot 314 as a But as Bruno's score ta- teaminthe final roundto Men's varsity four: 4th(of 8), 7minutes and47.38 seconds peredoffinthe secondtound hold on for a one stroke Men'slightweight: 7th(8), 8:03.52 four, (6), ofcompetition, so toodidthe lead,942-943. Women's varsity semifinalheat: 3rd 8:27.87 Chieftains' hopes of sneaking Whitman (1007), the Uni- Women's varsity four,finalrace:4th(6),8:11.73,just6.1seconds 1 (Humboldt intoa top-three position. versityofPugetSound (1010) and behind the winner State College) Bruno still shot an impressive 656, 22 shots behind fourth-place Lewis and Clark (1084) were the Women's lightweight:4th(6), 8:52.2 four, (6), 81, but that was enough to wipe Linfield. rest ofthe teams thatparticipatedin Women'snovice semifinalheat: 3rd 8:44.69 four, (6), himofftheindividualleaderboard. Furthermore, Whitman was theNCIC tournament. Women's novice finalrace: 4th 9:30.31 SCHEDULE UPDATE: SU's next two scheduled entries, on May 2and May9,havebeen scratched. SOFTBALL RESULTS

Saturday, April 25 at Linfield The women's softball team fin- Gameone isheda see-saw seasonwith acouple Seattle U. 3 ofdisappointinglossesat theUniver- Linfield 4 sityof PugetSound onTuesday. A first year program, the Lady Game two Chieftains wereoff to a respectable Seattle U. 2 start, winners infour oftheir first 1 1 S.U.MTE! Linfield 7 games. The injury bug then took a big bite out of the Lady Chieftains ______EveryThursday! leavingthemwithbarelyenoughplay- Sunday, April 26 at Willamette ers to fielda team, and their troubles Game one began. Seattle U. I A season that startedoffsobright Willamette 2 came to an abrupt end with an 18- -game losingstreakand adisasterous beatingat " M Game two thehands oftheUniversity $7.00 0 of Puget Sound. The Lady Chief- 17 NewYorkPizza Seattle U. (Toppingsnot included} Willamette 8 tains finished aneducational yet fun Please mentionthisad whenordefing-Vclidonly wilnSrudenlID.Card first season 4-29 overall and 1-22 in theNCIC, andthey seemevenmore Tuesday, April 28 at University of Puget Sound excited for nextyear. Game one The team only graduated one Seattle U. 0 player,and that wasat theverybegin- UPS 6 ningoftheseason.The remainder of the 14 players, 10 of which were Game two freshmen,arereturningnextyearas a FREEDELIVERY!" SeattleU. 0 more experienced and mature unit CORNER Of iJTH & MADISON FREEPARKING INREAR UPS 21 readyto elevatethis new program. 322-9411 J LEGAL ASSISTANT MARKETING COMMUNITY SERVICE

Small,downtown Seattlepersonal No sales;appointment setting only. Summerplans? Join the AmeriCorps/ injury law firm seekingfull-time $8.00-$1 5.00hr. +Bonuses. Conve- VISTA Summer ReadingCorps and assistant. Opportunity for those nient location and shift schedules for work directly with school-agedchil- seekingfirsthand experience in students. Please callmornings: dren. 20 full-time positions available the fieldbefore beginninglaw Laura,(206) 783-0202,afternoons/ in Seattle— June 22-August 14th. school. Responsibilities include evenings,Brett (206) 812-6340. Living allowance of $716 per month; typing/drafting daily correspon- $1,000 educationalaward at theendof denceandpleadings, filing, the summer. Call 675-3200. Deadline working withclients. $10/hour May 13th. AA/EEO. plus benefits. 1-year commitment AmeriCorps/VISTA desired. Non-smoker. Send resume, cover letter to 500Union AmeriCorps/VISTA year-longand Street, 645, Seattle, summer-long full-time positions in Suite WA IIHCre&ICUTnfprP«fpH 111in artdUVCniMIIgvprticino 98101. Seattle area. Work withcommunity agencies to provide tutoring/ 111 mentoring for children ,housing/ y, Snectator? employment support to low-income opctiaiui. ATTENTION! people and direct service to at-risk Contact Meredith, youth. Stipend of $716/mo, mcd/ Harhpllp or Rnmip in thp EARN $$$ INA RESEARCH childcare/vac,$4,725 (full-year) or rutciiciie VI rvuinic illuic STUDY ONSTDs $1,000(summer) scholarship. Call business office at PLEASECALL 1-800-540-7015 675-3200for application. Closes 5/ ~q^Zyo-o<*/4.f.±l± U COMPLETELYCONFIDENTIAL 13/98. AA/EEO. I THE SPECTATOR isPekingapplications I from studentsinterestedineditorial,productionand I businesspositions for the1998-99Spectator staff.

yr PositionsAvailable: fli /j -ManagingEditor --PhotoEditor '%. ' ewsEditor On-LineEditor rtfTHUll ' * " /W%3£/ 111V\111l\■I Op*n onEditor Reporters H^MByl*"1 15- FeaturesEditor Photographers / ""-! 4 ' " f & &EEditor BusinessManager \M «^JjfE SportsEditor AdvertisingManager wLm/f^ ' Fditor " AdvertisingAssistant Applicantsshouldsubmit: " Aletter ofapplication explainingyourinterest. " A completedresume,includingthreereferences. " A smallportfolioofprevious journalistic writingandediting work.

TheapplicationdeadlineisThursday,May7.1998. Sendapplicationpackets to: MeganMcCoid,c/oTheSpectator,SeattleUniversity,900Broadway,Seattle, WA 98122. Mk 1 M.E.Ch.A. invites you to celebrate /IboU CINCO DE MAYO Join us on Saturday» May 2> in tne Campion Ball- r^OkfA.fs\ room for a night full of fun. i\ We will be hosting a Chicano muralist,ca- JBSWJffljffik. sC^ tered dinner,folkloric dancers,pinatas, and — *&*iKK.— * — a dance. Come andboogie to Salsa, v^ZSc&JKSS f -k * 4 Tfc Nortena,Mambo, and Quebradita music! %S^irttw3r "ets" $5 TheASSUPageis preparedbytheASSUoffice. Thispageis for 8 for tf c e"«re "<*W or for th« on| Q - ] the advertisements ofregisteredclubs andorganizations. Formore dance y and Aft ShOW lls your Club looking for money? Thenew edition of"Fragments" is here! Come TO^^^^T^i^SS celebrate' with the contributors at the reading ¥ !.,$,, wjfc!®. J a!K art show Tuesday, May 5 from 4to 6 p.m. in the Casey Atrium. Check your mailbox inthe ASSUoffice for information about how you can earnmoney at Quadstock. Raft tllC Wdl^tcliGG R.IVGI* O-^^l^^- "O"O^| C^O ISC want to take you to the Wenatchee River for >i3l/X lIIL^ X#J3\^ 2_^j fun in the sun and excitment on the river. ISCandISAC wouldlike to invite you to rs. V"^" fa May 10th JOJr attend a freeBBQat LoganFeild,May6, Y^Jjfe^Tns 60 for transPortation- lunch, <%fcr~y^^is-^. fromnoon to Ip.m. Come andenjoy great W^^wg equipment" and rafts food wonderful weather and good times P \ Ca the 'nterantional Student isn*&v\ ■ , , , Center 296-6260 for t ... , . at more ~^3&»jy .. ■ withyour friends. Everyone iswelcome! G&s(£& t ♥" „"K>JL

3* * i^S^ VVi vN\\ vl vV \** fie* /tf\3M These are the groups you will be

here, - Quadstock is almost and it's time to . ori ,,CTID ¥ . . , -j noo n to 1:30 p.m. -KSUB get pumped up! ThisT years Quadstockr^ i r __ . DJsJ is going to rock! 1:30 to 2 p.m. -TBA 2 to 2:30 p.m. - FllynrmgV ©irlbaiD (Battle winner) Here's what's is on the agenda so far: of the Bands 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. -NLUSUSCI (Marimba) -Contests throughout the day. Yes, the water drinking and cracker eating contests - (Ska) 3:45' to 4:45 p.m. Engine 5 4 are back! _ , _ __ , 5 to 6 p.m. - -Andy-O(Reggae) -Clubs will be providing food/activities 6:15 to 7:15 P m Illi-a^l'lll^lVyi^t^l j -(Celtic Rock) 7:30 to 8:30 Pp.m. IfWIC riHOCRJOf P-JlirilK -TERRIFIC MUSIC (Funk/RaP) - gffi^fk -Plenty of sun (Well, we hope!) 9to10:30 p.m. Cr3/000 oJy^^^^ (Folk Rock) %|^^-<^^¥-As much fun as you can imagine! Wntc/i next weekfor ticket info!