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COLLEGIAN WINS AWARDS FOR WRITING AND PHOTOS | PAGE 5 THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN

Fort Collins, Colorado COLLEGIAN Volume 114 | No. 139 Friday, April 14, 2006 www.collegian.com THE STUDENT VOICE OF COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1891

Up in fl ames

IAN CHAMBERS | COLLEGIAN

A grass fi re burns east of I-25 outside of Fort Collins, Thursday. The wind and higher temperatures contibuted to several grass fi res throughout Colorado. Temperatures are expected to remain high today before cooling off slightly during the weekend. ‘No regret, no remorse’ COMMITTED Moussaoui: hearing mourning ‘made my day’

By MATTHEW BARAKAT The

ALEXANDRIA, Va. - Con- fessed al-Qaida conspira- tor Zacarias Moussaoui said Thursday it made his day to hear ac- counts of Ameri- cans’ suf- fering from the Sept. 11, 2001, at- tacks and he would like to see similar at- MOUSSAOUI tacks “ev- ery day.” Tak- ing the witness stand for the second time in his death- penalty trial Thursday, Moussaoui mocked a Navy sailor who wept on the stand as she described the death of two of her subordinates. IAN CHAMBERS | COLLEGIAN “I think it was disgust- Sean Jaster receives the student employment award from Vice President for Student Affairs Linda ing for a military person to Kuk. Jaster is the Alternative Break Coordinator and says seeing transformation in people is the cry,” Moussaoui said of the best part about his job. testimony of Navy Lt. Nancy McKeown. “She is military, she should expect people at war with her to want to kill her.” Student employee rewarded Asked if he was happy to hear her sobbing, he said, “Make my day.” U.S. DISTRCIT COURT VIA | NYT Moussaoui said he had By EMILY LANCE done, then it is a strong tes- Break coordinator is respon- TOP: This photo of a box cutter, found in a car that was left “no regret, no remorse” about at Washington Dulles International Airport by September 11, The Rocky Mountain Collegian timony of what SLCE does,” sible for managing the execu- the 9/11 attacks. Asked by 2001 hijackers, was shown as evidence in the trial of Zacarias Jaster said during his accep- tive board of the program, as- prosecutor Rob Spencer if he Moussaoui in Arlington, Va. This box cutter is similar to that While many students tance speech. “If I didn’t have sisting with the design and would like to see it happen used by hijackers on the fl ights of September 11, 2001. were planning fun in the sun Jen (Johnson, assistant direc- facilitation of a leadership again, Moussaoui re- ABOVE: A photo of the cockpit voice recorder found at the for Spring Break, Sean Jaster tor of volunteer and commu- training school, advising and scene in Somerset County, , where Flight 93 was coordinating a different nity programs) people would coordinating spring break trip See TRIAL on Page 3 crashed on Sept. 11, 2001. version of the typical spring be in a corner in Delaware logistics, and working with the school hiatus. wondering how to get back to assistant director on develop- Jaster, the Alternative CSU.” ing partnerships within the Spring Break coordinator for Among his accomplish- Division of Student Affairs. the Offi ce of Student Leader- ments, Jaster initiated the fi rst The coordinator facili- ship and Civic Engagement international Spring Break tates meetings with individual (SLCE), received the Student trip to Achiote, Panama. He Spring Break trips in planning Senate debates witness protection Employee of the Year award on was also the co-leader for the and implementation. Thursday. spring trip in which he worked The primary responsibility By JAMES BAETKE right questions.” This week is National Stu- with CEASPA (Centro de Es- of the coordinator is to provide The Rocky Mountain Collegian Fields son Javad Mar- dent Employment week in tudios y Accion Social Pana- safe, meaningful and quality shall-Fields and his fi an- which employers are encour- maneno), an ecotourism and service-learning trips for stu- cée, Vivian Wolfe, were environmental conservation dents and to provide opportu- aged to honor their workers The Colorado Wit- slain in their car at an Au- program, to build a trail and nities for them to expand their by taking them out for a meal, ness Protection Agency rora intersection on June bird-watching deck. leadership skills through study writing them a thank-you card may start requiring an 20, 2005, just days before “There was a lot of logis- of cultures and social issues in or giving them a friendship annual training pro- Marshall-Fields was sup- tics involved,” Jaster said. “The conjunction with hands on ex- plant. gram under a recently posed to testify in a mur- trip went smoothly.” perience. Linda Kuk, vice president proposed bill, nearly der case. He also added a fall break The Student Employment of Student Affairs, the depart- a year after two CSU Marshall-Fields and experiential trip to fo- Award began in 1990 to honor WOLFE MARSHALL-FIELDS ment that oversees Student graduates were killed in Wolfe were newly engaged cusing on homelessness. Site an outstanding student em- Media, presented Jaster with connection with one of 22-year-olds and had leaders for various agencies ployee, said Janeen Sivon, as- his plaque in honor of his re- them testifying in a murder in court cases. plans to move to Virginia in Denver volunteered to put sistant director of student em- liability, initiative and profes- case. Speaking at a capitol together. Marshall-Fields themselves “in the shoes” of ployment. sionalism shown in his posi- House Bill 1379 came to news conference in March, was a spring 2005 CSU grad- homeless individuals in Colo- In addition to the Student tion. fruition after Rhonda Fields bill sponsor Rep. Mike Gar- uate and Wolfe graduated rado and refl ect on their expe- Employee of the Year, Jaster “I am a strong believer approached lawmakers cia, D-Aurora, said, “The from CSU in December riences. in community and if this is a about better protecting wit- purpose of this legislation is The Alternative Spring See AWARD on Page 3 strong testimony to what I’ve nesses awaiting to speak out to be proactive in asking the See CSU on Page 3 2 Friday, April 14, 2006 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian

WEATHER CAMPUS BLOTTER Who needs hospitals and order (1) A 40-year-old man in CAMPUS EYE From the CSU Police Department anyway? Admission is free. Cedarburg, Wis., was arrested on suspicion of DUI when po- Today Monday, April 10 Turkish Mysticism Talk and lice noticed the severed hose Mostly sunny Driver cited for driving with a Sufi Music Concert by Latif of a gas station pump sticking suspended license. Bolat out of his car’s fuel door. (It be- 6:30 p.m. longed to a Kwik Trip station). 80 | 48 Intrusion alarm at the Industrial C101, Plant Sciences Building (2) Daniel Nordell, 52, with Science Building. a history of DUI, was arrested Saturday, April 15 Saturday in March when police saw him Contacted a large group of Oval Drive will be blocked off driving through downtown Partly cloudy individuals by Remington from 7 a.m. to noon for a 5K Waupaca, Wis., in reverse (be- Campus – they were just playing run cause he said the other gears football in the moonlight. wouldn’t work). 67 | 42 Engineers Without Borders (3) A 44-year-old man was Motor vehicle accident (MVA) Globe Trot, 5K run/walk arrested for DUI in Australia’s Sunday with injuries in the Pitkin Z lot 9:30 a.m. Northern Territory in March – driver was cited for careless The Oval after he asked a police offi cer Sunny driving. Register at the Student how to get to the hard-to-miss Recreation Center. The cost is Uluru (Ayers Rock, the huge, 77 | 43 Assisted Poudre Fire Authority at $15 for students, $17 for non- 1,000-foot-high rock formation the Engineering Research Center students. that appears red in sunlight), – sparks from a welder caught For more information e-mail which was about 300 feet in some erosion control blankets on [email protected]. front of him, illuminated in his fi re. PFA removed the blankets headlights. DID YOU KNOW and ventilated the room. Spring Honor Day • On average women 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Welfare check at Aggie Village Sculpture Garden, southwest NEWS OF blink nearly twice as – request from Department of side of LSC THE WORLD much as men. Human Services to check on a The Native American Student Association is hosting the CSU • Charlie Chaplin once child. It was not related to the Government forces case above. Spring Honor Day. This is a battle rebels in Chad chance to honor all those who came third in a Charlie N’DJAMENA, Chad – Gov- have supported the organization ernment forces used attack RYAN MAIER | COLLEGIAN Chaplin lookalike over the years. All are welcome. CALENDAR helicopters, tanks and heavy contest. The events will include a Dan Strevey, a senior health and exercise science weapons Thursday to beat back traditional Powwow and Easter major, mixes an electrophoresis buffer solution • In the USA, in 1998, Today, April 14 rebels who charged 600 miles egg hunt. Indian tacos and Thursday morning. The mixture will be used in the National Student Employment in pickup trucks from the Dar- BY310 Biology class. 48 people lost their other food will be available for Week fur border to reach the capital purchase. lives due to roller Campus-wide of this volatile, oil-producing For more details, contact It is time to celebrate the nation in the center of Africa. coaster accidents. Marcella Talamante at contributions our student The assault underscored ferent rebel group in Darfur. National Assembly building in • There are more [email protected]. employees make throughout concerns that the civil war in Deby said his soldiers re- the capital, N’djamena. English speaking the year. Join us in recognizing Darfur, part of western Sudan, pelled the second attempt to Government troops pushed Traditional Turkish Night: these students. All students are has undermined Chad Presi- overthrow him in a month, but them back and were holding 20 people living in China Istanbul – Timeless City encouraged to register for raffl e dent Idriss Deby’s authority and few in Chad believe the fi ghting rebel prisoners on the grounds 5:30 p.m. than there are in the drawings from local business via destabilized the entire region. is over. of the assembly building in University Village Center, RAMWeb. It also showed how little Residents of the outlying the city’s center. Soldiers were USA. Building 34 W. Plum St. • It has been control Deby wields in the neighborhoods who felt the sweeping through N’djamena Mystery Science Theater 3000: countryside, where rebels brunt of the attack moved into rounding up rebels scattered estimated that you Escape 2000 NEWS OF cruise the desert at will. the center of the capital late in in the fi ghting and turned in by spend about a year of 7 p.m. Deby blamed Sudan’s gov- the day, expecting another of- residents. Lory Student Center Senate THE WEIRD ernment for backing the reb- fensive. Four tanks guarded the By Chuck Shepherd your life looking for Chambers els in Chad, where more than In just three days, the rebel presidential palace on Thurs- Universal Press Syndicate things you have lost. Citizens on patrol in this unruly 200,000 refugees from Darfur United Front for Change made day night, and Associated Press Italian fl ick fi ght for their right have fl ed. the journey from their bases reporters saw 13 bodies in the to keep the Bronx looking like Drunk drivers arrested Sudan denies the claim and on the border with Darfur and streets; residents reported see- Source: www.morticom.com the aftermath of an air raid! Outstanding Police Work: accuses Chad of backing a dif- came close to capturing the ing many more.

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Lory Student Center Box 13 Fort Collins, CO 80523 The Rocky Mountain Collegian is an 11,000-circulation student-run newspaper intended as a public forum. The Collegian is published2x8 on Wednesdays during the summer term by the Board of Student Communications at Colorado State University. It publishes fi ve days a week during the regular fall and spring semesters. Corrections may be submitted to the editor in chief and will be printed as necessary on page 2. The Collegian is a complimentary publication for the Fort Collins community. The fi rst copy is free. Additional copies are 25 cents each. Letters to the editor shouldCollegian be sent to the editor in chief at [email protected]. EDITORIAL STAFF | 491-1684 JP Eichmiller | Editor in Chief | Opinion [email protected] Erin Skarda | Managing Editor | Development [email protected] Kate Dzintars | Assoc. Managing Editor for Design and Entertainment [email protected] Scott Bondy | Assoc. Managing Editor for Sports and Special Sections [email protected] Brandon Lowrey | Assoc. Managing Editor for News [email protected] Tanner Bennett | Visual Editor [email protected] Kathryn Dailey | Campus Editor [email protected] Cari Merrill | Regional Editor [email protected] Jenny Ivy | Entertainment Editor [email protected] Brett Okamoto | Sports Editor [email protected] Danielle Hudson | Head Copy Editor Hailey McDonald | Asst. Design Editor

ADVISING STAFF Holly Wolcott | Newsroom Adviser Jenny Fischer | Production Manager Kim Blumhardt | Advertising Manager Gayle Adams | Business Manager Cathy Topf | Administrative Assistant Jeff Browne | Director of Student Media

KEY PHONE NUMBERS Newsroom Fax | 491-1690 Distribution | 491-1774 Classifi eds | 491-1686 Display Advertising | 491-1146 The Rocky Mountain Collegian | Friday, April 14, 2006 3

Wife of 9/11 pilot says husband “Th ere is simply a lack of knowledge that was alive when plane crashed Colorado has a witness-protection program.” Dave Thomas By The Associated Press always knew he was alive and Because the cockpit ceil- Executive director of the Colorado District Attorney’s Council in the cockpit with the hijack- ing microphone also picked DENVER - The wife of one ers, and I haven’t been able to up sounds from the passen- of the pilots on United Flight say anything about it.” ger cabin, there are multiple 93 says the cockpit recording Dahl and other relatives interpretations of the fl ight’s CSU | Bill to keep witnesses safe shows her husband was alive signed agreements to not dis- fi nal seconds. But Sandy Dahl moments before the plane close what was in the record- said she was sure she heard crashed in a Pennsylvania fi eld ings until the jury in Mouss- her husband moaning in the Continued from Page 1 about Colorado’s program to by the Colorado Depart- on Sept. 11, 2001. aoui’s case heard them. cockpit. She pointed to evi- protect witnesses. ment of Public Safety, about The recordings were Dahl, a 45-year-old fl ight dence that her husband’s DNA 2004. “There is simply a lack $183,000 of state money has played Wednesday at the trial attendant, said she believed and teeth were found near the The bill would require of knowledge that Colorado been spent on protecting wit- of Sept. 11 conspirator Zacar- her husband also may have plane’s nose. district attorneys and law en- has a witness-protection pro- nesses in its 11-year span. ias Moussaoui. It was the fi rst disabled the Boeing 757’s au- During the recording, a hi- forcement to conduct annual gram,” Thomas said. Colorado reimburses coun- time that anyone other than topilot system, preventing the jacker can be heard saying in training regimens, education Colorado’s witness pro- ties, with board approval, for investigators and victims’ rela- hijackers from setting coordi- English: “Don’t move. Shut up. and risk assessment related to tection program was imple- keeping witnesses safe. tives were allowed to hear the nates for Washington, D.C. She Sit, sit, sit down.” witness protection. The mea- mented in 1995. If passed, the bill calls recording. said she heard horn sounds on Dahl believes the hijacker sure develops standards for A three-member board for the witness protection Jason Dahl, of Ken Caryl the recording indicating the was speaking to her husband. district attorneys to question approves county requests program to be renamed in Ranch, was the pilot on the hijackers couldn’t use the sys- “He was fussing at my hus- witnesses about their safety. to pay to protect witnesses memory of Marshall-Fields fl ight. tem. band,” she said. “I could tell Dave Thomas, executive if they feel there is a danger and Wolfe. His wife, Sandy Dahl, told She said the recording because he was speaking in director of the Colorado Dis- surrounding their ability to James Baetke can be The Denver Post in Thursday’s showed the bravery of the English, and he spoke Arabic trict Attorney’s Council, said testify. reached at regional@colle- edition that the recording fl ight’s seven crew members. anytime he was talking with there isn’t enough knowledge According to fi gures kept gian.com showed her husband was alive, All 33 passengers, the crew the other hijackers. It’s pos- but dying, and in the cockpit and four hijackers died in the sible they cut Jason’s throat, with the hijackers in the plane’s crash. but maybe not deep enough, fi nal moments. “I don’t think any one per- because he made moaning “All the reports in the press son was more important than sounds after that. It sounded and the government had him the other, but history has glori- like he was trying to mess with dead in the fi rst-class cabin on fi ed four or fi ve passengers and stuff or get up, because the hi- AWARD | Student honored for work the fl oor before the plane was that’s just not what happened,” jacker pilot kept telling him to brought down,” Dahl said. “I Dahl said. stop and to sit down.” Continued from Page 1 disabilities,” Thomas said. their dedication and passion “There are places to work by for community. was honored with the Fort the East Coast that shine a Emily Lance can be Collins Community Civility light on disabilities.” reached at campus@colle- award for his commitment Also present were the two gian.com TRIAL | Moussaoui argues unfair trial to cross-cultural awareness other recipients of the Fort and diversity. Collins Community Civility Joanna Thomas, a junior award. Tobacco Continued from Page 1 didn’t really believe that, but rael. technical journalism major, Trish Baker, junior psy- Accessories Moussaoui was insistent. Moussaoui testifi ed that chology major and special will take over the Alternative Mon-Sat: 25% Off sponded: “Every day until we “I haven’t doubted it he believes his court-appoint- Spring Break coordinator po- needs swim coordinator, 10am-7pm get you.” for one single second,” said ed lawyers are working against sition in the fall and intends and Trina Swenson, SLCE Sun: 11am-5pm Everyday Moussaoui also said on Moussaoui, adding that the vi- him. coordinator, were acknowl- to do more international 810 S. College 484-3710 cross-examination that he is sion came to him in a dream He also said if he’d had con- trips as well as adding edged at the ceremony for convinced President Bush will just like his dream of fl ying a trol over his defense, he would more opportunities to the free him before the end of his plane into the White House. have argued that he should es- program. Thomas hopes to term and that he will return to He also argued that he cape the death penalty and be travel to the East Coast to C AMPUS W EST S HOPS London. could not get a fair trial so available for a prisoner swap if work with disabled people. Spencer tried several times close to the Pentagon and he American troops are captured “I have a passion for EEP HE to get Moussaoui to say he criticized U.S. support for Is- overseas. K T working with people with S AME CINEMA SAVER 6 A DDRESS $3 Evenings, $2 before 6pm NE Corner Drake & Absolutely The Best HOLIDAY TWIN DRIVE-IN Shields • 482-6616 2206 S. 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Come learn about Palestinian culture, history and PPALESTINIANALESTINIAN current events ... within our series of programs AAWARENESSWARENESS WEEKWEEK * Monday 17 th , Nathan Wright: “Life in Palestine” Nathan Wright volunteered for one year in the West Bank. He will illustrate the effects of Israel’s unilateral policies on the political, economic, and social structure of Palestine, as well as the individual lives of Palestinians. Room A-204 Clark Building 6:00 pm * Tuesday 18 th , Presentation and Palestine booth at: “Arabian Festival” University Village Center - 7:00 pm * Wednesday 19 th , Mazin Qumsiyeh: “Obstacles to peace in Palestine/Israel, American Taxpayers Paying the Bill and The Emergence of Hamas in the Palestinian Government” Mazin Qumsiya, PhD served on the faculty of both Duke and Yale Universities. Mazin is currently serving on the Steering Committee of the US Campaign to End the Occupation and the board of the association for One Democratic State in Israel/Palestine. His third and latest book is titled “Sharing the Land of Canaan: Human rights and the Israeli/Palestinian Struggle.” Mazin is a well known activist committed to med ia activism and public education. Room A-203 Clark Building 6:00 pm * Thursday, 20 th , Film about Palestine: “Wall” The wall built between the Palestinian and Israeli settlements in the West Bank region. Room A-205 Clark Building 6:00 pm

FOR MORE INFO CONTACT MICHELLE AT 218.8795 OR RAMADAN AT [email protected] Brought to you by the Palestinian Student Association COLLEGIAN OPINION Friday, April 14, 2006 | Page 4 Do as the U.S. says, not as they do

Iran has no right to develop nuclear The United States was also the judge on such argument for the need for any members of the technology. matters, when in the ’80s it was decided Saddam global community to possess such apocalyptic India deserves an opportunity to devise nuclear Hussein’s regime in Iraq and Osama Bin Laden’s weapons is complicated at best. technology that can be developed fi ght in Afghanistan deserved our support through The best argument that can be made is that This column for energy or weapons. represents weapons and money. History has proven the error such possession creates an uneasy truce among the views of Sound hypocritical? That’s the Collegian’s in these decisions. the world’s superpowers. because it is. editorial board. Not at all surprising, the current administration So if possessing nuclear weapons is really about The United States’ stance has lacked any appreciation or desire to learn from protecting one’s own interests, what right does regarding Iran’s right to develop plutonium is past mistakes. the United States have to say who cannot protect hypocritical. We are furthering our image as the We are not trying to argue for the right for Iran their citizens in the same method we can? world’s police by trying to determine who does to develop nuclear technology as much as we are The right to bear arms is an American creed. and doesn’t have the right to operate without against the arbitrary allowance of certain nations Perhaps a better motto would be “do as I say, not interference within their own borders. (pending U.S. approval) to be allowed to. The as I do.”

Easter holiday: Christian or Pagan?

was also very politically powerful. Popes sought to Christianize the symbols of Easter, presumably in hopes of bringing the pagan and religious worlds together under the banner of the national religion. The egg was By JENNA LYNN ELLIS reinterpreted to represent the tomb of Jesus and, in Easter, historically, is not breaking the egg, symbolizes a Christian holiday. However, His resurrection. the same issues surrounding Christians would give the term “Christmas” versus each other the pagan painted “holiday” are being raised eggs, saying, “He is risen” for using the term “Easter.” and “He is risen, indeed.” In fact, some are going so far The church also adopted as to say the Easter Bunny the celebration of Easter, should be referred to as the redefi ning the pagan symbols “Holiday Bunny” so no one as Christian. Even the sunrise is offended. service, associated in most But the Easter Bunny isn’t churches as a celebration a Christian symbol. “Easter” of the resurrection, actually is a pagan expression and, contradicts the Biblical like many of the customs of account (that the women the Easter holiday, has its visited and saw the empty origins in Greek and Roman tomb of Jesus while it was mythology and earlier still dark). civilizations. In reality, the sunrise Easter, a pagan holiday service worships the of springtime life, fertility beginning of a new day (new and sexuality, is celebrated life), new vegetation and the the same Sunday that sun. Easter is always on a Christians rejoice in the Sunday and the sun, rising Donald, Darkwing and Dubya resurrection of Jesus Christ in the east, also points to the and gift of salvation. But the name Easter. origins of Easter are entirely Then why do Christians By JEREMY JACOBS decimating Bush’s approval the keg of glory!” Caucus that just passed a bill separate from the “Day of still celebrate Easter? We The Stanford Daily rating. Pictures of the president And so you can also imagine by Wisconsin Representative Resurrection” that Christians don’t. We may still call the day (U-Wire) with Jack Abramoff, the rise of my dismay as immigration James Sensenbrenner. celebrate. Easter, but we are celebrating civil unrest in Iraq, the public’s debates heated up over the If the Senate ever does pass a It was not until years after something far different than STANFORD, Calif. – I have distrust of the government’s past couple weeks. Why, oh, bill, it will be forced to reconcile Christ’s resurrection that the bunnies, eggs, fertility and been waiting for this day for handling of the war (nearly 50 why does the one issue on it with the Sensenbrenner Bill, two holidays were blended springtime. Many Christians six years. Since he was sworn percent of Americans say they which I agree with Bush have which may be impossible. into one and traditional and churches have renamed into offi ce, I have argued “strongly” feel the battle wasn’t to come up now? Sensenbrenner’s Bill intended pagan Easter symbols the day as “Resurrection that the president and his worth fi ghting), the NSA wire- Early in the debates, it to keep Congress from any misrepresented as Christian. Day,” a more accurate cronies have manipulated the tapping, the Harriett Miers looked like things were going liberalization of immigration The name Easter refers to the refl ection and an attempt public. He misled the public fi asco, Hurricane Katrina and to be all right. The McCain- policy. pagan goddess of fertility, to restore the secular and into supporting a war for the even Cheney’s shooting of Kennedy Bill seemed to be The bill makes all illegal “Ishtar,” pronounced much sacred differences. wrong reasons. He violated the Harry Whittington have all gaining momentum. The bill, aliens felons. It increases like “Easter,” not Christ. We celebrate the fact Constitution by spying on U.S. contributed to a public distrust which is closer to Bush’s position penalties against those who The word “Easter” Jesus rose from the dead in citizens. All the while, I have of Bush that no number of on immigration, toughens aid and counsel illegal aliens. does appear once in the reality. And we celebrate this contended, the Bushworld staged press conferences can border control but supports It calls for a 700-mile wall to King James Version of the daily, weekly and through has exuded a condescending remedy. a guest worker program – a be built along the border. And Bible (Acts 12:4), but in the partaking in communion arrogance – promising us that Now I. Lewis “Scooter” program that allows Mexican it carefully omits any way for original Greek, the word is (a “meal” to remember His it knows what we should and Libby has said that the workers to legally come to the those illegal aliens to become translated “Passover,” the death and resurrection) and should not know. Now, fi nally, president himself authorized United States. Furthermore, citizens. Jewish holiday that was being baptism. it seems that the country might the declassifi cation of the McCain-Kennedy Bill gives Yet hundreds of thousands celebrated when Jesus was It was the historical be beginning to agree with me. intelligence reports. Again, the illegal aliens who are already of illegal immigrants have crucifi ed and raised from Middle Ages church, so far Huzzah! president misled. He promised here – all 11 to 12 million of taken to the streets of Los the dead. Scholars attribute departed from the original The results of Monday’s to search out traitors that them – a way to become U.S. Angeles, Atlanta, Houston, this translation of “Easter” faith and attempting to Washington Post-ABC poll are leaked information, but he citizens after paying fi nes, back Madison, Phoenix and most in the King James Version blend secular and sacred, staggering. Only 38 percent of himself authorized leaks. As taxes and passing civics tests. recently D.C., draped in as the English version of the that took on Easter as the public surveyed approve Maureen Dowd wrote in a New But things changed American fl ags chanting holiday, after the two events a religious holiday and of how Bush is doing his job York Times column on April 8, quickly. While I reveled in “U.S.A! U.S.A!” and pleading were already celebrated merged the pagan festival – the worst he has ever fared “Really, W. should fi re himself. Bush’s fall to the ultimate lame to be allowed to stay in this simultaneously. into Christianity. in a Washington Post-ABC He swore to look high and low duck, a debate in Congress country. These demonstrators The customs we So, renaming the Easter Poll. A whopping 60 percent for the scurrilous leaker and, lo between Republicans ensued. should remind us of why associate with Easter are Bunny the “Holiday Bunny?” of respondents disapprove of and behold, he has himself in Conservative Republicans our country is different from also completely secular and Well, it’s already a secular his performance as president. custody.” wanted to make sure others and why they want to so pagan. Bunnies, eggs and symbol and pagan title to His approval rating has been Finally the impenetrable nothing that could possibly desperately immigrate just as springtime (the season of new call it the Easter Bunny, and below 50 percent for almost a wall around this administration be construed as “amnesty” our ancestors did hundreds of life) are symbols of fertility, thus a self-defeating purpose year now and the percentage seems to be crumbling. Finally – including a guest worker years ago. sexuality and worship of the to discriminate for anti- of the public that disapproves Bush isn’t winning. Finally program – be left on the table. These demonstrators are fertility goddess Ishtar. Christian reasons against the has consistently been over 50 people are seeing the members In fact, they don’t want any pushing the debate in congress The Ancient Babylonians word “Easter.” percent. of the Bush administration for Mexicans at all. – forcing tight-ass, white, elitist, believed a fable where an In fact, the literal meaning Only 20 percent of the manipulators that they As Colorado Republican xenophobic, conservative enormous egg fell from of the word “holiday” is “holy respondents of the poll are! Representative Tom Tancredo lawmakers to consider that heaven and birthed the day.” Celebrating Christ and “strongly approve” of Bush’s You can imagine my said at the Phoenix Restoration perhaps the face of the nation goddess Astarte (the same as His resurrection is the true presidency, while 47 percent elation. The 48 moons of Weekend on Feb. 24-26, “Yes, is changing. Perhaps, despite Ishtar and Easter). holiday and something we “strongly disapprove.” This Jupiter have fi nally aligned and many who come across the their best efforts, they can’t So how did all of these can rejoice in every day, not marks the second straight the day of reckoning is upon border are workers. But among legislate against these “illegals” pagan symbols and myths just this Sunday. month in which a larger Karl Rove. With such dismal them are people coming to without committing political come to be associated proportion of Americans public approval, the president kill me and you and your suicide. with historical fact and Jenna Ellis is a junior “strongly disapprove” of the has absolutely no mandate children.” Lucky for me, these Christianity? technical journalism major. President’s job than his overall and will be unable to get any And why should you or demonstrators have become During the Middle Her column runs every Friday job approval rating. bill through Congress. In the I care about what a lunatic highly effective because God Ages, the Catholic church in the Collegian. Bushworld has been rocked words of a fellow pinko-liberal backbencher from Colorado knows Bush – the lamest duck by disaster after disaster this operative on The West Wing: said? Because he is a member of of all – can’t help me now. year – all having a hand in “Victory is mine! I drink from the House Immigration Reform (Huzzah?)

Collegian Opinion Page Policy Letter submissions to The Rocky Mountain Collegian are open to all and are printed on a fi rst received basis. Submissions should be limited to The columns on this page refl ect the viewpoints of the individual author and not necessarily that of The Rocky Mountain Collegian or its editorial 250 words and need to include the author’s name and contact information. Anonymous letters will not be printed. E-mail letters to csunews@ board. Please send any responses to [email protected]. lamar.colostate.edu. The Rocky Mountain Collegian | Friday, April 14, 2006 5

“Th e most exciting part of the awards Ryan and I received is the recognition it gives to the Rocky Mountain Collegian Injection to treat alcoholism and CSU. Th e 2005-2006 school year has seen unprecedented accolades wins federal approval for the Collegian for design,

photography and writing.” By The Associated Press Other drugs to treat al- low tens of millions of dollars. said Dr. Elliot Ehrich, Alker- coholism include Antabuse, Vivitrol will carry the mes’ vice president. which has been sold since strongest warning prescrip- The pill form of the drug JP Eichmiller, senior technical journalism major WASHINGTON - A once- a-month injection to treat 1948. tion drugs can bear. bears a similar warning, alcoholism won federal ap- The market for Antabuse The black-box warning which says liver damage was proval Thursday, expanding and naltrexone has been lim- will caution patients that the observed at higher-than-rec- availability of a drug previ- ited, with annual sales in the drug can cause liver damage, ommended doses. ously sold only in daily pill form. Collegian staff The Food and Drug Ad- ministration approved Vi- vitrol, spokeswoman Laura Alvey said. Cambridge, Mass.-based wins awards Alkermes Inc. will make an injectable form of the drug, By Collegian Staff and the American Society of also known as naltrexone. Media Photographers, along Cephalon Inc., of Frazer, Pa., The Denver Press Club with a free membership in the will market and sell it. awarded the Collegian editor press club. The companies hope in chief the prestigious Da- “It felt great to receive monthly injections of the mon Runyon award last week such a prestigious award,” drug, to be administered at a and presented a new scholar- Maier said. “The most impor- doctor’s offi ce, will prove an ship to a staff photographer. tant thing to me was the op- easier regimen for alcohol- J P portuni- ics to follow than the daily Eich- ties the pill. The drug is to be used in miller award conjunction with counseling received pro- or group therapy, the compa- the vides. It nies said. award for will be The drug works by block- an out- nice to ing neurotransmitters in the standing be able brain believed to be associat- body of to spend ed with alcohol dependence, jour- time diminishing the craving for nalistic with the alcohol. “This is the fi rst and work, in- EICHMILLER MAIER true pro- cluding fession- only long-acting medication coverage als at the available for patients, and so of a deadly apartment fi re in Denver Press Club.” I’m thrilled that it is going to the summer 2005. Eichmiller Eichmiller started his become an important treat- is also set to spend the sum- journalistic career as a Colle- ment option for patients and mer as an intern for the Den- gian columnist in fall 2004. He their doctors,” said Richard ver Post. has been editor in chief since Pops, Alkermes’ chief execu- “The most exciting part summer 2005 and worked at tive offi cer. of the awards Ryan and I re- the Fort Collins Coloradoan Pops said the drug’s price ceived is the recognition it over winter break. Maier has wouldn’t be decided until its gives to the Rocky Mountain shot photographs for the Col- U.S. launch in late June. Collegian and CSU,” Eichmill- legian for more than a year. He didn’t offer sales pre- er said. “The 2005-06 school The student-run newspa- dictions and said initial mar- keting would not include year has seen unprecedented per has received numerous FORTCOLLINS accolades for the Collegian other prizes this year, includ- direct-to-consumer advertis- DENVER DENVER FORTCOLLINS for design, photography and ing a fi rst-place Columbia ing. 2595 2595 SouthSouth 633 633 SouthSouth Naltrexone initially won writing.” Scholastic Press Association Colorado Blvd. College College Ave.Ave. Photographer Ryan Maier Gold Circle Award for best FDA approval for treating al- Colorado Blvd. 970-484-9212 received an inaugural $500 newspaper design and Wil- coholism in 1994. It fi rst was 303-757-3371 970-484-9212 scholarship toward his tuition liam Randolph Hearst awards sold to treat narcotic depen- M-F 10-8 Sa 10-6 Su 12-5 M-Sa 10-8 Su 12-5 from the Denver Press Club for writing. dency.

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For more information pick up an application and job description at the front desk of Student Media in the Basement of The Lory Student Center or call 491-1683. A RECENT SURVEY CONDUCTED BY THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE HEALTH ASSESSMENT INDICATED THAT 86 PERCENT OF CSU STUDENTS USE DESIGNATED DRIVERS. FOR MORE INFORMATION, GO TO WWW.ALCOHOLPREV.COLOSTATE.EDU

This campaign is brought to you by ASCSU, Rocky Mountain Collegian and TEAM Fort Collins. 6 Friday, April 14, 2006 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian LoDo hit with 2-hour power failure RAM Connections

The Associated Press The city’s major sidewalks. “It’s good for me. I am institutions, including the Standing on Wazee Street just taking a little break. It’s a seek applicants DENVER - A power failure state Capitol and Denver City with her giant great Dane, lovely day for it,” he said. hit part of downtown Denver Hall were not affected. Judy McNersh said the outage In front of the Metropolitan on Thursday, knocking out Henley said the problem left her car stuck in her Mudd coffee, Robb Lewis said traffi c lights and darkening was traced to underground garage. his cash register didn’t work By MARISSA HUTTON-GAVEL we came up with the mentoring restaurants and offi ce power cables. “It is inconvenient but it’s but his coffee was still hot. The Rocky Mountain Collegian program.” buildings for up to two hours. Cars and trucks on not the end of the world,” she “I’d give it away if anybody RAM Connections has some of the busiest streets said. asked,” he said. At least 1,600 customers As the year winds down and grown from 21 groups during downtown had to take turns Salesman Shawn Williams The streets were lined were affected, Xcel Energy thoughts turn toward summer, the pilot program to more than at blackened stop lights. took advantage of the outage with people using their cell spokesman Tom Henley said. a few seasoned Rams are 60 planned groups for the fall. Crowds of workers to take catch a little sun on a phone because switchboards Power was restored shortly thinking ahead and planning a Donovan credits the growth of congregated outside on the warm spring day. weren’t working. before noon. smooth transition for new CSU the program to the benefi ts for students. everyone involved, especially The RAM Connections freshmen. Mentoring Program is looking “What I tend to see is for sophomores, juniors, students who are really seniors and staff members to motivated to maximize their Five killed when train, SUV collide in rural area serve as mentors for incoming experience at CSU,” she said. freshmen and transfer “They see this is a way for them students. to connect to campus.” The Associated Press survivors suffered serious migrant workers whose but it wasn’t immediately Students with leadership Potential peer mentors injuries but no details were hometowns were not yet known whether they were skills who have attended can sign up for specifi c GRANADA, Colo. – Five released. known, but the SUV had among the dead. CSU for at least a year and affi nity groups, including people were killed and two Patrol spokesman Ron Texas plates and he found BNSF spokeswoman Lena have a minimum 2.5 GPA and non-traditional students, were injured when a sport- Loven said the names of the identifi cation papers from Kent said the railroad crossing an interest in helping other gay, lesbian, bisexual and utility vehicle collided with victims would not be released Texas and Montana. where the accident occured is students are encouraged to transgender students, a freight train Thursday, the until family members were He said all died of massive marked by signs but lights or apply. leadership and adventure, and Colorado State Patrol said. notifi ed. trauma. gates. Groups consisting of a community service. All the victims were in Prowers County Coroner The SUV was northbound She did not know how peer mentor, a faculty or staff There are also groups the Ford Explorer and no one Joe Giadone said the dead on a county road west of many tracks were there. member and 20 freshmen will based from residence hall aboard the BNSF Railway included three women in Granada when it was struck Granada, a farming town meet for the fi rst eight weeks fl oors that are not already train was hurt, authorities their 20s, a boy 12 to 14 years by a westbound train at about of 640 people, is 170 miles of the fall semester to help ease designated as Living Learning said. old and a 36-year-old man. 10:20 a.m., the patrol said. southeast of Denver near the the transition into college. Communities, such as those The patrol said the two Giadone said they were Four people were ejected, Kansas border. “The biggest piece of it located in Braiden Hall. The is sharing experiences with resident assistants for these freshmen,” said Keith Lopez, halls will also serve as peer graduate assistant for the mentors for these groups. Student Transitions and Parent “We’re trying to hit as many and Family Programs. people as possible,” Lopez Weekly meetings will said. Sanctuary to illegals Legislators visit ASCSU cover topics ranging from Peer mentors and making healthy food choices graduate students serving as and navigating campus and mentors earn a graded credit By JAMES BAETKE and Rep. Bob McCluskey, Fort Collins to how to talk to a for participating, while full- The Rocky Mountain Collegian Republicans, are expected being questioned professor. time administrative faculty is to be in attendance, said Jody Donovan, director of awarded a $750 stipend. The The Associated Students Alec Jeffries, the Associated Student Transitions and Parent stipend amount was based By The Associated Press the state to pay the cost of of CSU will play host Students of CSU director of and Family Programs, said on the fact that teaching the housing illegal immigrants if to Northern Colorado Legislative Affairs. these meetings “jumpstart original freshman seminars DENVER – The House municipalities detain them. legislators today. “They are going to freshmen’s academic was a paid position. approved a measure Republican lawmakers At 3 p.m. in the ASCSU be speaking to students experience” at CSU. A portion of the new student Thursday that would deny said the state doesn’t Senate Chambers, local about legislative issues Donovan helped start the fee of $65 that incoming state funds to cities that reimburse communities for lawmakers will discuss affecting them,” Jeffries program three years ago in students pay each year for discourage or prevent enforcing drug or traffi c laws issues and bills most relevant said. “Students will have the response to the cancellation programs like Ram Welcome police offi cers from working and should not reimburse to students and higher opportunity to speak to their of the then-required freshman and the mentoring program go with federal immigration them for enforcing education. representatives and listen to seminars. toward the stipends. authorities. immigration laws. There will also be a Q & A issues pertaining to higher After the faculty council Sheena Martinez, a senior The measure passed on The measure, which is session for students. education.” voted to eliminate the sociology major, was asked to a 49-16 vote after lawmakers Senate Bill 90, now goes back Sen. Bob Bacon and Rep. James Baetke can seminars, student leaders, apply by a fellow Greek Life rejected an amendment to the Senate, which passed Angie Paccione, Democrats, be reached at regional@ including former Associated staff member. Martinez acted that would have required a different version earlier. and Sen. Steve Johnson collegian.com Students of CSU President as a peer mentor for a group Katie Clausen, decided most of transfer students from of the information taught was Louisiana following Hurricane important and necessary for Katrina. new students. “We got to work with kids “We put our heads from New Orleans,” she said. together,” Donovan said. “And “Some were from Colorado and went to Louisiana for school and some were kids who lived in Louisiana their whole lives.” B B Marissa Hutton-Gavel ARBER ARBER can be reached at campus@ collegian.com Ω

ON Bring in your CSU student ID for a 3 30% ddiissccountt ON APPLY Today is the last day to

DUTY DUTY apply for the RAM Connections Mentoring Program. Apply online at www.ramwelcome. Walk-ins welcome • Call for discount and to make an appointment colostate.edu under the 204.4466 RAM Connections Mentoring Program link. Although today is the application deadline, applications will be accepted until positions are fi lled.

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Rock Stars L ADIES $1 A LL N IGHT L ONG & Groupies S ATURDAY , A PRIL 15 P ARTY S TARTS AT 9 PM E ASTER E GG H UNT A IR G UITAR C OMPETITION K ARAOKE F OR B AR T ABS & 820 City Park Ave. O THER GREAT PRIZES L IVE D J 690-0302 The Rocky Mountain Collegian | Friday, April 14, 2006 7 Pakistani military forces kill Iran weapons talks fail Egyptian al-Qaida terrorist to reach agreement By MUNIR AHMAD and U.S. and Egyptian focused on a house in which The Associated Press diplomats in Islamabad were a group of men from “outside unable to confi rm that Atwah the village” had been staying. By ALI AKBAR DAREINI Iran says its nuclear work United Nations, John Bolton, ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - had been killed. The building near an The Associated Press is solely for peaceful, civilian said after the meeting. An al-Qaida member, wanted Pakistan, a close U.S. Islamic school was destroyed purposes, but the U.S. and a Secretary of State for his suspected role in the ally in the war on terror, and three cars exploded. TEHRAN, Iran - Iran’s number of its allies believe it is Condoleezza Rice said bombings of U.S. embassies has been battling Islamic “There was a huge president insisted Thursday after a nuclear arsenal. there will “have to be some in East Africa, was killed by militants operating along explosion, which we think his country will not retreat ElBaradei said the extent consequence” for Iran’s Pakistani forces in a raid the volatile, porous Pakistan- was a missile attack, before “one iota” on its uranium of Iran’s nuclear program was refusal to suspend uranium near the Afghan border, a Afghan border region, where the helicopters came and enrichment, and his negotiator uncertain: “We have not seen enrichment activities. Pakistani Cabinet minister attacks by al-Qaida and bombed the house,” said made no such concession in diversion of nuclear material “There is no doubt that Iran said Thursday. Taliban-linked militants village tribal elder Khan Wazir. talks the U.N. hoped would for weapons purposes, but the continues to defy the will of Egyptian Mohsin Musa against Pakistani forces have “When we came to the house head off a confrontation with picture is still hazy and not the international community Matawalli Atwah, 45, who intensifi ed in recent months. there was dust and other the Security Council over very clear.” despite the fact that the was on the FBI’s list of most- Pakistani authorities have people who were already Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. During the 20 years of international community very wanted terrorists, was killed also arrested more than 750 trying to pull out bodies and The U.N. nuclear agency Iran’s nuclear program, “lots clearly said stop,” Rice said. along with at least six other al-Qaida suspects, including sift through the rubble.” chief, Mohamed ElBaradei, of activities went unreported,” Undersecretary for militants in a raid led by top lieutenants of Osama bin After the attack, a group said that in four hours of ElBaradei said. Arms Control Robert Joseph helicopter gunships late Laden such as Abu Zubaydah, of armed men surrounded discussions Thursday with Higher-level enrichment rejected Iran’s claims that Wednesday in the remote Ramzi Binalshibh, Khalid the crumpled house to keep Iran’s top nuclear negotiator, makes uranium suitable for a its nuclear program was for North Waziristan village of Shaikh Mohammed and Abu onlookers back before taking Ali Larijani, he put forward nuclear bomb, though Western peaceful purposes, saying its Naghar Kalai, near the Afghan Farraj al-Libbi. at least seven bodies away, the U.N. request for Iran to experts familiar with Iran’s enrichment “is for a weapons border, the minister said According to a senior Wazir said. suspend uranium enrichment program say the country is program and that is what we on condition of anonymity army offi cial, Atwah was “We had information until questions over its nuclear far from producing weapons- are trying to deal with.” because of the sensitivity of tracked down to the suspected about the presence of foreign program are resolved. grade uranium. “If it had nuclear weapons, the situation. al-Qaida hideout with militants,” said Maj. Gen. But Larijani indicated ElBaradei said that in their I am sure (Iran) would be even Another senior Pakistani information gleaned from Shaukat Sultan, the top suspension was not an option. talks, Larijani had renewed more ambitious in its use of intelligence offi cial said militants detained during a Pakistan army spokesman. “It “Such proposals are not very Iran’s commitment “to provide terror to undercut the prospects military reports from the recent military operation in was a sting operation and the important ones,” he told clarity to outstanding issues of peace in the Middle East,” fi eld indicated that Atwah the region. target was knocked out.” reporters matter-of-factly while before I write my report to the Joseph told reporters in Cairo, had been killed in the attack, Atwah was a key supplier of Sultan said al-Qaida standing next to ElBaradei at a (International Atomic Energy Egypt. along with the militants and “weapons, explosive material members are moving in joint news conference after the Agency) board by the end of China said Thursday it was two children. The intelligence and other ammunition to small groups and mixing with talks. this month.” sending its assistant foreign offi cial also declined to be terrorists who often target locals in North Waziristan, ElBaradei looked much The Security Council has minister to Tehran to convey its identifi ed because of the our forces in North and South which has witnessed a spike less optimistic than when he given Iran until April 28 to concerns about Iran’s nuclear sensitive nature of the case. Waziristan,” the offi cial said in militant activity in recent arrived at the Tehran airport cease enrichment of uranium. program. Neither offi cial specifi ed on condition of anonymity, months, with almost daily early Thursday for a one-day But Iran has rejected the Iran’s deputy nuclear chief, how they knew Atwah had as he was not authorized to attacks on Pakistani security visit and said the time was demand and announced Mohammad Saeedi, said been killed. Offi cials and speak to the media. forces in the area. “ripe” for a political solution to Tuesday that, for the fi rst time, Wednesday that Iran intends village residents said that An intelligence offi cial in “The people (behind the the standoff. it had enriched uranium with to move toward large-scale armed men took the bodies Miran Shah, the main town in attacks) are certainly the al- The talks came hours 164 centrifuges – a step toward uranium enrichment involving away after the attack. the volatile North Waziristan Qaida people,” Sultan told after President Mahmoud large-scale production. 3,000 centrifuges by late 2006, U.S. authorities had region, said Wednesday’s raid Associated Press Television Ahmadinejad said enrichment Representatives of the fi ve and then expand the program posted a $5 million bounty killed nine people – seven News. “They are the ones who was a line in the sand from permanent Security Council to 54,000 centrifuges. for Atwah, who was accused militants, including fi ve non- are fi nancing and they do which the Iranians would not members – the United States, Saeedi said the 54,000 of involvement in the Aug. 7, Pakistanis, and 2-year-old have some local facilitators.” retreat. Britain, France, China and centrifuges would produce 1998, bombings of the U.S. and 2-month-old brothers Pakistani security offi cials “We won’t hold talks with Russia – discussed the latest enough enriched uranium to embassies in Tanzania and who lived in the house. have previously said bin anyone about the right of development Thursday fuel a 1,000-megawatt reactor, Kenya that killed more than Residents in Naghar Kalai Laden, his deputy, Ayman al- the Iranian nation (to enrich morning. such as the one Iran has built 200 people, including 12 said they heard at least one Zawahri, and other al-Qaida uranium), and no one has the The United States and with Russian assistance at Americans. loud explosion followed by fi gures could be hiding in right to retreat, even one iota,” Europe are pressing for Bushehr. The reactor is due to FBI offi cials in Washington intense machine-gun fi re the Pakistan-Afghan border. Ahmadinejad was quoted sanctions, a step Russia and come on stream later this year. saying by the offi cial Islamic China have so far opposed. Iran’s nuclear chief, Republic News Agency. “We want to see what the Gholamreza Aghazadeh, “Our answer to those who outcome of the discussions said Wednesday that Iran is are angry about Iran achieving between ElBaradei and the prepared to give the West a the full nuclear fuel cycle is just Iranian government is. And share of Iran’s enrichment one phrase. We say: ‘Be angry when we get information on facilities to allay fears that at us and die of this anger,’” that, we’ll consider what to do the country may divert some Ahmadinejad said. next,” U.S. Ambassador to the product to build weapons.

WHY SUMMER SCHOOL? Focused • Flexible • Friendly • Great selection of courses and convenient terms. • Flexibility! You can work too and make other summer plans. • Broad Selection of Business Courses, open to non- business majors. • Over 90 core courses and a wide selection of 300 & 400 level courses. • Computer Science Classes: CS110 Personal Computing (June 12 - Aug. 4) CS153 Intro to Java Programming (June 12 - Aug. 4) CS155 Intro to Unix (May 15 - July 9) CS156 Intro to C Programming I (June 12 - July 7) CS157 Intro to C Programming II (July 10 - Aug. 4) CS200 Algorithms + Data Structures (June 12 - Aug. 4) All courses listed on the website: www.summer.colostate.edu Summer 2006 Class Schedules are available at: Lory Student Center CASA - The Advising Center Registrar’s Office- Admin Annex 8 Friday, April 14, 2006 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian

ENTERTAINMENT Traditional Turkish Night SPORTS presented by Annual ALMANAC CALENDAR Turkish Days Turkish food, music and Today, April 14 Today, April 14 dances hosted by Turkish “Pump Boys and Student Association at CSU Rams sign three Men’s Golf Cougar Classic, Provo, Utah, Dinettes” 5:30 p.m. All Day 7:30 p.m. LSC Nonesuch Theater, 216 Softball vs. Utah, Ram Pine St. Benevento-Russo Duo Field, 1 and 3 p.m. with Eliot Lipp Live Turkish Music 8 p.m. doors open new track athletes Women’s Tennis vs. Annual Turkish Days at $10 BYU, Colorado Springs, CSU presents Turkish Aggie Theatre 10 a.m. Mysticism Talk and Sufi music by Latif Bolat. FortJazz Big Band Swing Team competes in two events Men’s Lacrosse vs. Plant Sciences Building Dance BYU, Denver, 3:30 p.m. C101 Directed by Mark Manges 6:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. By DREW GONZALES pact to the program.” to California, where they met Women’s Lacrosse vs. $6 admission for ages 18 The Rocky Mountain Collegian Leslie Peterson of Avon varying degrees of success. CU, Fort Collins, 7:30 Buckethead and older was the third athlete secured After the fi rst round of p.m. Second of a two night Sunset Event Center, 242 CSU track and fi eld signed Thursday. events, CSU junior Kevin John- concert series Linden St. three more athletes to national Peterson ran the 400-me- son sat in second place of the Colorado Rockies vs. 8 p.m. doors open letters of intent on Thursday. ters at Battle Mountain High California Invitational Decath- Philadelphia Phillies, $20 “Finding Place: Life in All three come from Colorado. School, but will likely run hur- lon with 3,669 points, just 139 Ritual,” an exhibition Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. Aggie Theatre dles at CSU. Assistant coach off the leader’s pace. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Ryan Friese comes out of (FSN TV) John Carter expounded on her In the Mount SAC relays Art Exhibit: “The Last Fort Collins Museum of Rampart High School in Colo- talents. heptathlon, junior Katie Lloyd Saturday, April 15 Supper” Contemporary Art rado Springs where he com- peted in the 400-meters and “She has great athleticism was the Rams’ lone represen- Men’s Golf Cougar 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and being a multi-sport ath- tative. Through the meet’s fi rst Classic, Provo, Utah, Fort Collins Museum of “Pump Boys and the triple jump. All Day Contemporary Art Dinettes” Friese will join his Rampart lete, should be able to handle day of events, Lloyd had the 2 and 7:30 p.m. teammate and incoming fresh- life at the college level,” Carter fourth highest score overall, Track and Field Sun “Grease” Nonesuch Theater, 216 man JD Snell, whom the Rams said. but was second among colle- Angel Classic, Tempe, 6 p.m. Pine St. secured in November. CSU’s current track and giate athletes. Ariz., All Day Carousel Dinner Theatre, Another signing, Tanesha fi eld team is split up again this In the California Invita- 3509 S. Mason Art Exhibit: “The Last Johnson, is from Eaglecrest week, with fi ve athletes com- tional Heptathlon, CSU had a Track and Field Mt. Supper” High School in Aurora. John- peting in California and the trio of sophomores in the top 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. SAC Relays, Walnut, “Finding Place: Life in son joins three former Eaglec- rest heading to . 20 after the fi rst day. Emily Ritual,” an exhibition Fort Collins Museum of Calif., All Day rest Raptors already on the The nation’s top decath- Pearson had the highest score 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Contemporary Art Fort Collins Museum of team. letes and heptathletes gathered among the Rams, good for Softball vs. BYU, Ram In a CSU press release, as- in Azusa, Calif., where Azusa sixth place. Field, noon and 2 p.m. Contemporary Art Shanti Groove 8 p.m. sistant coach Tim Cawley com- Pacifi c University will host two Ashleigh Morton and Women’s Tennis vs. CSU Idol $8 mented on the new additions. different track meets. Tonya Cure were in 12th and Utah, Colorado Springs, Final round Mishawaka Amphitheatre “Both Ryan and Tanesha Athletes from schools like 18th place, respectively, after 10 a.m. 7 p.m. are not only great athletes, but UCLA, Hawaii, and Thursday’s opening events. Ramskellar Sunday April 16 also phenomenal students,” the Air Force Academy com- Drew Gonzalez can be Water Polo vs. Art Exhibit: “The Last Cawley said. “I believe both peted in the meet. reached at sports@collegian. Colorado College, “The Squid and the Supper” will make an immediate im- Five Rams made the trip com Moby Pool, 1 p.m. Whale” 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. An Oscar-nominated fi lm Fort Collins Museum of Baseball vs. CU, Ram presented by CinemaCSU Contemporary Art Field, noon. 7 and 9:30 p.m. Lory Student Center “Grease” Colorado Avalanche Theatre Noon vs. Vancouver Carousel Dinner Theatre, Canucks, GM Place, 8 Opening Reception for 3509 S. Mason Offi cer claims alleged rape p.m. (Altitude TV) Alan Klug New works by local “Finding Place: Life in Denver Nuggets vs. photographer Alan Klug will Ritual,” an exhibition Sacramento Kings, be displayed. Guitarist Jerry 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. victim ‘passed-out drunk’ Pepsi Center, 7 p.m. Palmer will perform during Fort Collins Museum of (Altitude TV) the reception. Contemporary Art 6 p.m. Colorado Rockies vs. Illustrated Light Gallery of “Pump Boys and By TIM WHITMIRE her, according to a recording of have said time-stamped pho- Philadelphia Phillies, Fine Art Photography Dinettes” The Associated Press radio traffi c obtained Thursday tographs taken by the play- Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. 1 Old Town Square 2 p.m. by The Associated Press. ers show that the accuser was (FSN TV) Nonesuch Theater, 216 DURHAM, N.C. - A woman The conversation between drunk and already had suffered Saturday, April 15 Pine St. who claims she was raped by the offi cer and a police dis- some injuries when she arrived members of Duke University’s patcher took place about 1:30 at the house for the party. lacrosse team was described as a.m. March 14, about fi ve min- The recording is consistent “just passed-out drunk” by one utes after a grocery store secu- with “what I have seen of the of the fi rst police offi cers to see rity guard called 911 to report a photo evidence before,” attor- woman in the parking lot who ney Kerry Sutton said. Those would not get out of someone photos, she said, showed that else’s car. she was “way beyond where The offi cer gave the dis- you would put somebody be- patcher the police code for an hind the wheel of a car.” intoxicated person and said The description of the Hate when Teh the woman was unconscious. woman’s medical exam – which When asked whether she Nifong has said is his basis D D ON ON ’ ’ T T WAIT WAIT TOO TOO LONG LONG needed medical help, the of- for believing a rape occurred R ESERVE ESERVE SPACE SPACE FOR FOR fi cer said: “She’s breathing and – does not mention her being R Collegian makes appears to be fi ne. She’s not in drunk. It states only that the YOUR YOUR GG RAD RAD PP ARTIES ARTIES distress. She’s just passed-out woman’s injuries and behavior drunk.” were consistent with having AT AT SS ULLIVAN ULLIVAN ’ ’ S S ! ! misteaks? The black woman, a 27- been raped, sexually assaulted year-old stripper and college and having suffered a traumat- DAYSDAYS student, told police she was ic experience. OO NLY NLY 22 raped and beaten by three The woman has told police !! white men around midnight she and another stripper hired LEFT AVAILABLEAVAILABLE Put your proof-reading at an off-campus party thrown to dance at the party arrived LEFT by Duke’s lacrosse team. The at 11:30 p.m. March 13. The racially charged allegations pair reportedly left the house Call 690-0302 820City Park Ave. skills to use. have led Duke to cancel the a short time later, fearing for highly ranked team’s season their safety. Become a 2006-2007 copy editor or and accept the resignation of The accuser told police its coach. the two were coaxed back into chief copy editor for No charges have been fi led, the house with an apology, at but District Attorney Mike which point they were sepa- The Rocky Mountain Collegian! Nifong has said he believes a rated. That’s when she said she For more information visit the front desk of Student crime was committed. was dragged into a bathroom Media in the basement of The Lory Student Center Attorneys for the players and raped, beaten and choked have said DNA tests failed to for a half hour. connect any players to the al- At 12:53 a.m., police re- leged attack, and they have ceived a 911 call from a woman urged Nifong to drop his inves- complaining that she had been tigation. called racial slurs by white men The radio recordings, ob- gathered outside the home tained by the AP through a where the party took place. e’ re records request, are the fi rst The defense has said it be- instance in which police or lieves the second dancer at the anyone connected with the in- party made that call. The 911 vestigation has said the woman call from the grocery store se- Congratulations to appeared to be intoxicated. curity guard was placed at 1:22 w Defense lawyers, however, a.m. iring Sean For 2006-2007 h we are looking for: Editor-In-Chief Jaster Managing Editor Design Managing Editor Student Leadership & Civic Engagement Visual Editor Student Employee of the Year for Advertising Manager Colorado State University! Photographers Reporters Designers Copy Editors Ad Representatives DEADLINE APRIL 19 Résumé and Clips required. Most work done during the summer! Fill out an application at Student Media in the basement of The Lory Student Center. Contact us! Call 491-7513 or E-mail [email protected]

Sean Jaster

Sponsored by Student Employment Services The Rocky Mountain Collegian | Friday, April 14, 2006 9

To pla ce an ad: R a tes: Pa ym ent O ption s: ‚ P h one: (9 7 0 ) 491-1686 ‚ 30¢ p er w ord , p er d a y, C L A SSIF IE D LIN E ADS ‚ F a x: (9 7 0 ) 491-1690 15 w ord minimum REQUIRE PRE-PAYM ENT ‚ O ffice: Lory Stu dent C enter ‚ 3 pu blica tion s or m ore, 25¢ T h e C ollegian a ccepts: CLASSIF IED S L ow er Level , Sou th E nd p er w ord p er da y (B est B u y) ‚ C a sh ‚ M oney O rd ers ‚ M ail: Lory Stu dent C enter, B ox 13 ‚ Bold Type - 20¢ p er w ord ‚ IM O ‚ P erson a l C h eck s 970-491-1686 F ort C ollin s, CO 80523 (in crea se you r visibility!) ‚ Visa , M a sterca rd Office Hours: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday ‚ E -M a il: ‚ G ra ph ic † $1.20/Day and Discover Deadline to submit ads: 4 p.m. day prior to publication cla ssa d s@ lam ar.colo sta te.edu All classified ads also appear online at www.collegian.com

FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT HOUSES HOUSES CSUREALTY.COM *3+2 = 5 BDRM 3 bdrm/ 3 bath- CLEAN, SHARP Pre-leasing almost new 3 2 BLOCKS TO 5 bdrm house, good location, new bath and kitchen, price BARGAIN BIN Houses, town homes, con- DUPLEX All new!!! Granite counter 2 BED FOR AUG bdrm town home. 3 levels, CAMPUS dos for sale. Invest in your tops, new kitchens and bath, 2.5 bath, W/D, A/C, new nego. Call 303-210-0378. FENDER GUITAR (City legal). W/D, near cam- Quiet, all remodeled 2 bed 3 or 4 bdrm- 1 bath. Gigantic education today. new hardwood floors- kitchen, fully carpeted, near fenced yard- most pets ok- Black Fender guitar, case, pus, no pets. Former student Goooorgeous!! Walk to cam- with A/C, fireplace, all appli- trails, CSU stadium, bus, stand, practice amp, elec- owner. $275. 970-690-5700. ances and W/D included. 1140 W. Myrtle. W/D. Bob- CLOSE TO CAMPUS pus. Kris 970-689-8803. club house privileges. 222-4848. 5 bdrm, 2 bath. W/D, on bus tronic tuner, +more! Great OWN, DON’T RENT! $650.Water, trash, 2 parking spots condition. $275/OBO. 970- thebrandtcompany.com. route. $1750/mo +utils. 303- Rented through May. 3 bdrm, 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 levels, real- 3+ BED FOR AUG incl. $990/mo + utils. Avail 652-2778, 720-938-5984. 749-6031. 3 bath, 1-car, small yard, ly nice condo. W/D, A/C, N/P, 224-0852. Aug 1. Josh, 303-817-1936. 4 bdrm, 4 bath. $1500/ house opens to greenbelt. 2955 W. N/S. Close to campus. 2 family rooms, 2 fireplaces, or $300/ room. Backyard, awesome bar, 2 full baths, Stuart #2. $159,900. Contact $700/mo. 303-332-1332. Garden level. Near CSU. 1 W/D, near campus/ village HORSE PROPERTY Loft for sale. Sturdy wood, great clean home. Pet ok. Jim Chance, 377-4942. The bdrm, large kitchen. W/D, 1 west. 10 acres, 4 bdrm, 1.5 bath. good for dorms/ stadium $1025. Group, Inc. year lease, $475/mo, deposit Joe: 213-841-3680. $1500 or $375/room. 970- seating. $100. Call 720-280- 2 BDRM DUPLEX thebrandtcompany.com. $400. Avail August 1st. 686- 218-1335. 2549. Avail 5/12 FOR JUNE 224-0852. 7340 or 391-6495. 3 BDRM 1 BATH Town home for sale, 4 bdrm, Close to campus, Old Town, 3 bath, Kiddy Condo Loan, HOUSE Hot tub, fenced yard, and GARAGE SALE and bike route. Perfect size 3 or 4 bdrm town home, <1 !ALL UTILITIES $154,900. Call Diane at 303- A/C at this bright, sunny 4 yard for pets. Sunny, spa- mile to campus/ park, W/D, *3 bdrm, 2 bath w/ hot tub. 2- INCLUDED! Just remodeled. Granite. 916-4669. New bath. New wood floors. bdrm, 2 bath house near MOVING SALE! cious, and clean home. avail 8/1, $1095/mo 420- 5 bdrms, 2 bath, pool, sauna Free cable and high speed 3 car garage. $1200/mo. campus. Just remolded bath- Everything must go! Huge ONLY $675. 1381. & bar. Great Internet. 4, 5 bdrm quality 481-8712. rooms, W/D, sunroom, N/S, variety at great prices. 1913 FOR RENT thebrandtcompany.com. Call properties close to campus. houses. Near CSU, W/D. Pre-leasing for August. pets nego. $1200/mo + Connecticut Drive. 7:30- 4:00 for showings 224-0852. 4 bdrm, 2 bath home for rent. www.colostaterentals.com. www.kwinmanagement.com, $1200 deposit. (970)231- Saturday April 15. !!OPEN HOUSE!! Everything new, crawl to 224-3656, 581-3277. CLOSE TO 970-980-4747. 6284. AUTOS 1610 PETERSON PL 2 bdrm, 1 bath +den. 4 campus. $1050/mo. Mark FOOTHILLS AND Open Thurs, Fri, 4:45- 5:15. blocks to campus. All utils 970-308-6313. PRELEASE FOR AUG TRAILS. NEWLY ‘01 Wrangler Sport. Manual, Roomy 4 bdrm, 2 bath, brick incl. 419 Elizabeth. $800. Horses welcome. Pre-leasing JUNE 1 Downtown. Modern. 3 bdrm, 3 bdrm, 1.5 bath, garage, soft- top, 3 inch lift, 39K F/P, W/D, garage, great 214-1047. 4 bdrm, 2 bath. F/P, W/D, two 1 bdrm units, including REMODELED miles. GREAT SHAPE! patio/ yard, N/P. $1050/mo. stall and turnout $650 +util. 3 bath. Close to CSU + Old 3 bdrm, 2 bath garage, D/W, hardwood, W/D, F/P, fenced D/W, 2 car garage, fenced Town. Immaculately cared yard, D/W. $1100/mo, 214- $13,000. 970-819-0318. 503 1/2 W. 2 BDRM, 2 BATH yard, cement patio, near City 10 min to CSU 970-481- W/D, big fenced yard, lots of 1449. for. Only $900. May or trees, pets nego. Avail Aug 3043. MULBERRY Central heat & A/C, D/W, Park, small pet nego. Avail August. 224-0852. 8/1, $1,500/mo. 1st, 988-4516. 1997 FORD TAURUS Open 3- 3:30. Sweet 2 bdrm wood F/P, disposal, parking. thebrandtcompany.com. JUNE 1 SEDAN near oval. Cozy w/ oak floors, Pet friendly. $645. 224-3008. 970-402-0257, 970-663- HOUSE FOR RENT F/P, loft bdrm, D/W, garage, 9385. 5 bdrm, 2 bath. Blks from 3 BDRM 2 BATH 5 bdrm 2 bath. Close to cam- Green, V-6, fully loaded, 106k PRELEASING FOR pus, hardwood floors, W/D, W/D, private yard. Very 2 BEAUTIFUL BED campus, hardwood floors, HOUSE IN miles, great condition. 3 BDRM, 3.5 BATH, near JUNE 1ST OR fenced yard, parking, $3800/OBO. 689-1738. appealing, N/P. $600. large private yard, W/D. 970- OLD TOWN DUPLEXES, AUG campus. Great area, excel- 219-7280. AUGUST 1ST $1400/mo. 214-3043. Great location on 1105 and Beautiful must see! Stainless lent cond, all appliances, All locations, all sizes, all appliances. Granite counter- 1997 JEEP GRAND 1206 Cypress. Super clean garage, guest bdrm or study. price ranges. 970-402-0382. OLD TOWN 3 BDRM, !BEST HOUSE IN sparkling units with yards for HOUSES FOR RENT! tops, new wood floors, Summerhill Townhomes, garage. $1400/mo. 481- 1 BATH CHEROKEE LTD FIDO. Excellent condition. 1637 Westbridge J-1 (off 5 bdrm, 2 bath, & 4 bdrm, 2 FORT FUN! 8712. Wood floors, front porch, tile V-8, 4 inch lift, 32 AT. Many Thebrandtcompany.com. Call West Prospect), avail June 1 bath, close to campus, W/D, RENTING MADE 5 bdrm, 2 bath, garage, pool kitchen. Avail 6/1. $1050/mo. extras. $7995. 719-499-5733. for showings. 224-0852. or Aug 1, $1195/mo. See at garage, yard, pets ok. EASY WITH table, sun room, W/D, D/W, 3 bdrm 2 bath. Large fenced 970-567-4866. $1500/mo. 970-690-0252. www.rentalsnearcsu.com. www.rentfoco.com, 596- KRIS TICNOR 2 STORY 2 BDRM 577-1915. 8600. yard, Old Town, pets ok. Avail. 8/1, $1200/mo. 970- OLD TOWN HOUSE FOR AUG 481-5914. !MUST SEE! 4 BDRM $1500** HUGE 3 BEDROOM Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 4 bdrm, 2 bath. 2 car garage, Near the foothills, nice patio bath, W/D, D/W, N/P. Super A/C, deck, off Drake and yard area, full basement for THIS IS THE HOUSE!! Prelease this super clean, modern, new 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 3 BDRM HOUSES- nice. $1,100/mo, avail now. College. Call Nick 303-358- storage, 1.5 bath. Updated Close to everything !! CSU, OLD TOWN 970-980-7040. 1997 SUBARU 0349. and pet friendly. $620. Old Town, City Park>> 2-car garage. A/C. Pool +hot IMPREZA OUTBACK thebrandtcompany.com. www.rentfortfun.blogspot.co tub. Water/ sewer +trash 316 E. Elizabeth- 3 blks to SPORT 224-0852. m paid! $990. CSU, 2 kitchens, 2 living OLD TOWN HOUSES !PRE-LEASE! thebrandtcompany.com. rooms, W/D, pets ok, avail Prelease for May/ Aug. 1- 4 Green, manual, AWD, power Avail 5/15 or 8/1. 5 Bdrm, 3 224-0852. Aug 1. $1200. bdrms. Wood floors, fenced windows/ locks. Great fuel 2, 2 STORY 3 5 bdrm, 2 bath. 2 living Bath home close to CSU, Premiere housing & great yard, garage option. Close to economy, reliable transporta- rooms, enclosed patio, pets large back yard, deck, corner BEDROOMS FOR customer service! We are 312 Cherry- 3 blks to down- DT & CSU. Price negotiable. tion. 109K. A/C, 6-disc CD ok, avail May, $1450/mo. Huge 4- 5 bdrm, 2 bath, all lot on cul-de-sac. W/D, N/S, AUG leasing for Summer & Fall town, W/D, fenced yard, pets Call for details. Local, easy changer, ski rack. Fun, reli- 227-2292. appliances, PRIVATE LAND- now! Contact me to set your N/P, $1595/mo. Dimitri 720- 1701 Erin Ct #1. $785. ok, avail July 1, $1000. going landlord. 303-929- able car. $4200/OBO. Call LORD, EASY TO WORK showing. Start early and 470-3909. Steve 970-412- Fireplace, backs to park, 7007. Travis 303-250-2708. 5 bdrm, 2 bath, 2000+ sqft WITH. Pets ok, close to cam- reserve you prime property 7825. fenced pet ok. 1936 Pecan Good landlord: 472-1270. +garage, W/D, D/W, fenced pus, garage. $1400/mo. 303- for next year. Visit us at our #4. $790. Very sharp, lots of yard. 6/1, $1375/mo, Taft 525-9223. 2000 Land Rover Discovery. website: 3 bdrm, 1 bath, hardwood & room, full basement, pet ok. Hill/ Prospect area. Party of six. 2 baths, one Black, tan, leather, auto, CD, $260 PER ROOM! www.myfortcollinshome.com tile floors, F/P, garage, patio, thebrandtcompany.com. 720-320-8447, 970-310- block to CSU, big backyard, sunroof. 88K. Excellent con- FOR AUG LAMB PROPERTIES Call me: :)689-8803. large fenced yard, 1/2 block 224-0852. 6198. W/D, newer carpet/ paint, dition. $12,600. 970-310- Incredible deal on newly 493-7923 or 219-6214 from Avery Park. 1020 LEGAL DUPLEX. Call 7689. remodeled SUNNY three 2, 3, 4, 5, AND 6 Old Town. Pets Nego. W/D. ROOMMATE(S) Glenmoor, $1050/mo. 490- Vantage Properties- 218- bdrm duplex. Great yard, *2 bdrm home. $800. WANTED 1830. 2396. BDRM HOUSES. *2 bdrm apartment. $690. ceramic tile floors. HUGE For summer &/ or next school 2002 Honda Civic EX, Silver, Aug leasing, 1 year, dogs OK, *4 bdrm, 2 bath, updated, bdrms. HEAT PAID! 440 year. 2 bdrm, fully furnished, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, deck, fenced 2- door sports coup, custom cool landlord, 221-4009. clean, near Roger Park. PERFECT FOR Alpert. wireless internet, W/D, deck, yard, 2 car garage, large 17” wheels, tinted windows, $1200. ENTERTAINING thebrandtcompany.com. F/P. $495/mo + half utils. driveway, W/D, 1 mile to fully loaded, excellent condi- www.AggieProperties.com Beautiful, 3 bdrm, 2 bath 224-0852. 28 STEPS NORTH OF N/P, N/S! Call Kyle 970-443- campus, F/P. Summer pre tions! $11,800. Call Paul 215- Pre-Leasing Prime Rentals house. 2 full kitchens for Aug, 6066. CAMPUS Near CSU Now! All Price LAMB PROPERTIES 0660, or email bruthaky@hot- lease this nice house. Avail 8/1, 2206 Suffolk, $1200/mo. 2 family rooms. Cool yard. 3 bdrm, 1 bath basement Ranges & Sizes. 212-RENT. 493-7923 or 219-6214 mail.com. $575 FOR A 2 214-1047. $1140. Brandt Co. 224-0852. ‘78 VW BUS BEDROOM! apt. Corner of Grant. 728 W. Available Now Laurel. Large space for AUGUST 3 BDRM Old Town. Pets Nego. W/D. Studio apartment, great view, Pop top- sleeps 4- runs well- Spotless and spacious. Has a 3 BED FOR AUG PET PERFECT! F/P and nice deck with views $600/mo. Bob- 222-4848. Near CSU, laundry, kennel, *2 bdrm home. $800. W/D, lots of storage, horse cd player- $1500/ OBO- Nick Must see this spacious home 3 bdrm, 3 bath house. of mountains. 1206 Muddler. fireplace, wind electric, *2 bdrm apartment. $690. boarding avail. $450/mo plus 970-412-8694. near CSU. Great yard, pets Beautiful wood floors, fire- thebrandtcompany.com. 3 & 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car garage, $880, [email protected]. *4 bdrm, 2 bath, updated, deposit, pets ok. 970-310- ok. 2 family rooms, 2 baths, 2 place, barn +3/4 acre. 224-0852. garage, Internet/WIFI ready, clean, near Roger Park. 4280. $1200. dens, $1140. thebrandtco. Horses- goats- dogs ok. DEAD CAR near campus. Exceptional Avail 6/1. 3 bdrm, 3 bath features. 282-1727. *3 bdrm, 2 bath. $925. SUMMER SUBLEASE 224-0852. $1100. Avail Aug. thebrandt- Cash for your unwanted car newer town house, hot tub/ Pre-leasing company.com. 224-0852. ***AUG 1ST*** 1 bdrm in 5 bdrm house. or truck with mechanical or garage, Stuart/ Overland *6 bdrm, 2 bath. $1595. 3 bdrm duplex near CSU. 3 bdrm, 1 bath. 1712 Dale $299/mo +1/5 utils. 1 mile 3+ bdrm, 2 bath, W/D, body damage, free towing. area, D/W, W/D, N/S, N/P. *2 bdrm, 1 bath apartment. W/D, N/P, N/S. 970-443- Ct. 1 block from City Park, west of CSU. Call 719-251- garage, fenced yard, pets SWIMMING POOL 391-2002. $1060/mo. E-mail $650. 3846. living room, dining area, large [email protected]. 7557. nego. Avail 6/1, 8/1. $1050. 4 bdrm, 2 bath. Drake & family room, hardwood 226-3361. Shields. W/D, D/W, 2 car **PETS OK!** floors, F/P, deck, W/D, pets Avail June 1st. 3 bdrm, 1.5 LUXURY 2 STORY garage, fenced yard. Avail ‘99 Mercury SUMMER/ FALL 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 1200 Ash. August 1st. $1400. 970-215- 2 bdrm near CSU. W/D, dish- nego. Avail June 1st. bath, hot tub, fenced yard, 3 BED FOR AUG Near campus, new, 2 bdrm, W/D, lawn care provided, No 9555. Cougar washer, yard, satellite TV, $1150/mo. 490-1830. W/D, near campus and Old All new carpet, gas, fireplace. 2 bath, 3 bdrm, 3 bath, W/D, smoking/ pets, $1380/mo cable internet, N/S. 6/1. Town. $1020/mo, 581-6941. 5 piece master suite, 2.5 high speed internet access, +deposit. 215-0411 or 221- $690/mo. 970-481-7182. 3 bdrm house for rent. 1 VERY PRETTY 3 BED bath- 3525 Fieldstone. water and some cable TV 9268. bath. Close to City Park. Very $1100.paid, cat or small dog ok. For Aug. Spotless- spacious. nice, huge back yard. W/D, thebrandtcompany.com. $320-450/ mo/ room. 226- Modern house, W/D, all *3 & 4 BDRM HOUS- D/W. $1000/mo. 970-481- 224-0852. 4 bdrm, 2 bath. 1209 Village appliances included. $1075. 0650. Ln. W/D, lawn care provided, 1999 Custom Mercury Cougar, ES & 8712. thebrandtcompany.com. Auto, 72K, $6999. Auto-start, DUPLEXES No smoking/ pets, $1350/mo 224-0852. Tint, Excellent Condition, 3 bdrm, 1 bath, basement AVAIL AUGUST SUPER HOUSE +deposit. 215-041, 221- W/D, A/C, 2+ blks campus, NEAR EDORA PARK 9268. Great stereo. duplex. Walk to CSU. Fenced 5 bdrm, 2.5 bath. W/D, D/W HALF OFF no pets. Former student Pre-lease for August. Town APARTMENTS yard, W/D, pets ok. utils paid. hot tub. $1800/mo. 1300 First month w/ signed lease 3 $6,999 owner. $275. 970-690-5700. home. 4 bdrm, 2 bath. $700/mo, incls water & trash. Avail now. $850/mo. 227- Springfield. bdrms w/ 2 car garage/ 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 1213 Village Starting $750. 970-226- Heatheridge Condos. Aug Alan - 214-417-0840 2292. 4 bdrm, 2 bath. W/D, D/W, opener, A/C, fireplace/ insert, Lane. W/D, lawn care provied *Large 5 bdrm bi-level, 2 2046. lease. 2 bdrm, 2 bath. hot tub. $1500/mo. 1405 BIG covered deck, great yard No somking/ pets $1380/mo. bath. F/P, 2 family rooms, 3 bdrm, 2 bath walk to CSU, 2 1/2 mi. to campus on west +deposit. 215-0411or 221- Spencer- 720-272-8153. Honda Civic DX. Blue, 1991, Bryan, 1917 W. Lake, & 2008 W/D, A/C, large backyard, avail 8/1. D/W, W/D, Great rental properties and side. $1050/mo. Pets nego. 9268. two-door, 35 miles/ gal, stan- W. Lake. 1.5 miles to campus. $1250/mo, backyard, 1 car. roommates near CSU! Pre-lease for August 1, Kathy 1 bdrm +den, 1/2 block to dard. $2100. Call Grace at 1 bdrm, 1 bath. $550/mo. $1,575/mo. Avail 8/1. 1240 S. Bryan Ave. 231- Immediate, summer, and fall 303-973-1430, or Matt 970- 4 bdrm, 2 bath, deck & large CSU, $450 + $75 flat rate 970-371-0005. 326 E. Elizabeth. 7340. Call 970-218-2740. preleasing availability. 495-0092. yard. Pets ok, W/D, 2-car, utils. Summer only avail June *2 bdrm, 1.5 bath, large www.housinghelpers.com. new paint & carpet. 1st. Call 419-8394. kitchen, 1 car garage, W/D, CYCLES Avail June. 2 bdrm/ 1 bath 970-484-RENT(7368). TERRIFIC $1175/mo. Avail now. Call large backyard, 1.5 mi to 3 BDRM, 3.5 BATH, 266-1287. SUZUKI KATANA campus, $795/mo. Avail 8/1. LIKE NEW house. W/D. Hardwood 2 STORY 2 BED 2 BDRM, 2 BATH 2000 floors. No pets. Next to cam- NEW CONDO FOR Kool floor plan, with 1.5 bath, Wood burning F/P, Central TOWN HOME! pus on Remington. $850/mo 4 bdrm, 2 bath, newly remod- Red, 600cc, 12k, K&N, pipe, *3 bdrm, 1 bath, newly RENT, NEAR CSU modern appliances, cute pri- air/ heat, D/W, disposal, Want your own bathroom? incl util. 970-402-2559. eled. Pets nego. Close to parking, pet friendly. $645. tuned, fast, $2800/OBO. 970- remodeled, F/P, W/D, How about a garage and 3 bdrm, 3.5 bath, A/C, W/D, vate yard that backs to a campus. $1300/mo, avail fall 231-6600. garage,. 1 blk o campus. D/W, garage, on bus route, stream. Close to CSU. driveway to park in? 2 story Avail May 1. 3 bdrm, 1 bath, semester. 970-223-2161. Now Preleasing $1,150/mo. Avail 8/1. water & cable included, Excellent condition. $625. end unit with lots of win- $725/mo. Pets ok. 421 Call for Specials FURNITURE dows, garage, W/D, D/W, $1375/mo, 970-310-0555. Avail AUG. 224-0852. 4 bdrm, 2 bath. W/D, D/W, *6 bdrm, 2 bath, newly Mathews St. Walk to Old Used Furniture - Twin bed- oven, fridge, microwave. CSU 6 blocks. $1250, Aug remodeled, 2 kitchens, F/P, Town & campus. 914-282- Sunray Place Apts $45, computer desk- $40, Shields and Harmony. Town home with game room/ 1st (optional $1000/mo May- W/D, garage. 1 blk to cam- 2403. New Old Town Loft. 1 bdrm 224-3008 study chairs- $25. $1050/mo or $950/mo with 2 pool table, 3 bdrms, 2.5 bath, July) +deposit + utils. Screen pus. $,100/mo. Avail 8/1. studio. www.sunrayapartments.com. National Furniture year +lease. 970-214-7607. www.fortcollinsloft.com. W/D, D/W, no pets, garage, porch. Nice! 495-9914. 1760 Laporte Ave. Available Aug 1. $1000/mo +deposit, Call 970-532-4528 Over/ under duplex 1 block Short term lease. $995. 214- AVAILABLE AUGUST 221-2313. 3 bdrm, romantic, near CSU, 1047. 303-489-6330. from CSU. Rent 1 unit or 4 BDRM, $960/MO 1ST (OR JUNE 1ST) F/P, wood floors, large both. 3 bdrm up, $1100/mo, Best for 3, W/D, D/W, fenced 1 bdrm apt. $475/mo +util. Cozy, 3 large bdrms, living Used furniture- sofa $55, kitchen and fenced yard, 3 bdrm down, $1000/mo, VANTAGE yard, across from campus. Possible horse pasture. Call OLD TOWN room with fireplace. Lots of desk $35, beds $50. W/D, $1,050/mo. 691-5954. W/D, wood floors. PROPERTIES 690-0252. after 7, 568-3620. 2 & 3 bdrm, newly remod- windows. Kitchen with all National Furniture 5 bdrm house, $1200, W/D, eled. Yard, behind Tony’s. 1-6 bdrm houses, condos & appliances and serving bar. 1760 Laporte Ave. 3 BED 2 BATH fenced yard, 2- car garage. $700/mo. 970-988-5124, town homes. 1-2 blocks to 407 Tedmon. 4 bdrm, 1.5 For non-smokers with no 221-2313. 1 BDRM FOR RENT Jenell 970-227-1130. 2 STORY after 5pm, 303-883-1845. CSU. All price ranges!!! Avail bath, fenced yard, 1 mile pets. Near campus. $900/mo 1 bdrm apt in 4-plex. Avail for Avail Aug. Prelease this Aug 1. 419-8384. from campus, pets nego. +utils. Call 484-4518. lease 5/1/06. Right next to Beautiful 3 bdrm condo. REAL ESTATE beautiful town home. ON SPRING CREEK $900/mo. Avail Aug 1st. 229- campus. $525/mo incl utils. Fireplace, all appliances 3002 Elizabeth. Available YOUR OWN PLACE 0732. 4 BEDROOM Call Brandon at 310-3083. Basement apt w/ separate included. 1-car garage +pool. August 1st. Microwave, W/D, BIKE PATH 1 bed duplex near City Park. TOWNHOUSE garage, 2 patios. $1100/ mo. entrance, 1 bdrm w/ office, $900. 1601 W. Swallow. Newer town homes. 3-4 Super clean, new carpets 5 BDRM HOUSES! near campus, optionally Beautiful, 4 bdrm, 3.5 bath, 303-274-0837. $1,100. 1 bdrm, 1 bath. Private unit. 4 thebrandtcompany.com. bdrm, 2 bath. Pre- and fresh paint. Great big 1201 S. Shields: Across furnished, $495/mo. 207- Summerhill Townhome. blocks to campus. All utils 224-0852. leasing for August. 970-226- kitchen. Only $525. Water/ street from CSU! W/D, pets 0886. Wonderful area, excellent incl. 419 Elizabeth. $480/mo. BIG HOUSES CLOSE 2046. sewer/ trash paid in rent. Visit ok, $1600. condition, all appliances, 214-1047. TO CSU thebrandtcompany.com or 2 bdrm, 1/2 block to CSU, 2 overlooks open space, Only 3 adults/ unit. Don’t call for showings 224-0852. 921 Timber Ln: W/D, 2 garage, 1637 Westbridge (off 3 BED IN OLD TOWN 4-5 bdrm houses avail for bdrm, new club house, sum- 1/2 OFF Spotless +perfect location! 3 rent mid May & Aug. Contact lease 4+! Info contact kitchens, 2 living rooms, pets mer only avail June. Starting West Prospect), H-3. ASCSU 491-5931. ok, $1395. $178,900. 577-1915. First month rent. 3 bdrm, 2 bdrm, 2.5 bath. Walk every- Alison 443-3234. HOUSES at $495. Call 419-8394. bath ranch, sunroom, deck, where! $900. 1 for August, 1 1 bdrm duplex. Fenced yard/ Avail Aug 1. Good landlord: fenced yard, A/C, 2-car. SW for June. 224-0852. QUALITY HOMES- PRE LEASING dog run/ patio. Free use W/D. 472-1270 CHARMING CONDO FOR SALE area, 2.5 mi campus. Pets thebrandtcompany.com. AFFORDABLE RENT! QUALITY HOMES Great for grad students! VINTAGE 1 bdrm, 1.5 bath, loft, fire- nego, N/S. $1100 +deposit. 3, 4 & 5 Bdrm Near CSU. $595/mo +deposit +utils. 1 bdrm, avail June 1st. Oak place, pool, SE location, 3 bdrms, 2.5 baths, wonderful FOR NEXT SUMMER 5 BEDROOM HOUS- Pre-lease for Aug or now. Immediate Vacancy, Summer Avail Aug 1st. 495-9914. floors, lots of windows, next wood/ tile floors, updated, location, full basement, & FALL 303-973-1430 or 495-0092. and Fall Pre-leasing. ES FOR RENT to campus, $525/mo utils quiet. Great for Grad student! fenced backyard, pets nego, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 bdrm homes www.rentals4you.com 5 bdrm, 2 bath. W/D, deck, incl. Steve 430-0407. avail. All properties include 1.5 BLOCKS TO $89k. 970-226-2001. 100’s of apts, garage, W/D, F/P, back patio, 303-667-4023. fenced yard, wood floors, free high speed internet, lawn condos, houses for rent avail Aug 1st. $1300/mo. 820 CAMPUS pets ok, 2 car garage, 3 living W. Mountain Ave. 490-1830 care & all appliances. Beat Condo for sale! 2 bdrm, 2.5 with photos. 5 bdrm, 2 bath- 2 kitchens. rooms, 2 F/P. On bus route, or 231-2187. YOU’VE GOTTA SEE the rush & reserve your next FANTASIC bath, garage, pool, F/P, NorthernColoradoRentals.com. W/D, fenced yard, great near stadium. 1524 THESE REMOLED home now. Visit us online $139,500. 2828 Sileverplume house- 1620 S. Whitcomb. Cedarwood, 2600sqft. PENTHOUSE LOFT www.szqualityhomes.com, #21. 970-482-3339. 3 or 4 bdrms, 2.5 baths, won- HOUSES. $1400/mo. Bob- 222-4848. $1650. 402-4748. Recently remodeled 900 sqft 2 BDRM derful location, full basement, Only two left! or call Nate 402-2588. 1 bdrm apartment. Oak floors DOWNTOWN LOFT fenced backyard, pets nego, 4 Bdrms Near CSU. 1206 Elm. 5 bdrm, 2 bath, 5 bdrm, 3 bath. W/D, backs throughout. Sits high above CONDO FOR SALE All new custom finishes. garage, W/D, F/P, back patio, Immediate Vacancy, Fall Pre- Leasing for 6/1 and 8/1. 4-5 fenced yard. 1.2 miles from to open space, 2 living College Ave. Overlooking 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 1 block from Stainless appliances. Granite. avail Aug 1st. $1300/mo. 822 leasing. bdrm houses for rent. Close campus. Pets nego. rooms. 1 car, large home. CSU campus. $700/mo incl campus. joshscondo.com, Wood floors. Top floor w/ W Mountain Ave. 490-1830 or www.rentals4you.com to campus. Great condition. $1200/mo. Avail Aug 1st. 704 Kimball. $1500. Kevin@ most utils. Avail June 1st. 303-522-5488. balcony. $900/mo. 481-8712. 231-2187. 303-667-4023. Call Aaron 970-310-7457. 229-0732 970-402-4748. Steve 430-0407.

When you buy a Collegian Classified ad, we post it online F FRREEEE!! F FRREEEE!! www.collegian.com 970-491-1686 10 Friday, April 14, 2006 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian

To pla ce an ad: R a tes: Pa ym ent O ption s: ‚ P h one: (9 7 0 ) 491-1686 ‚ 30¢ p er w ord , p er d a y, C L A SSIF IE D LIN E ADS ‚ F a x: (9 7 0 ) 491-1690 15 w ord minimum REQUIRE PRE-PAYM ENT ‚ O ffice: Lory Stu dent C enter ‚ 3 pu blica tion s or m ore, 25¢ T h e C ollegian a ccepts: CLASSIF IED S L ow er Level , Sou th E nd p er w ord p er da y (B est B u y) ‚ C a sh ‚ M oney O rd ers ‚ M ail: Lory Stu dent C enter, B ox 13 ‚ Bold Type - 20¢ p er w ord ‚ IM O ‚ P erson a l C h eck s 970-491-1686 F ort C ollin s, CO 80523 (in crea se you r visibility!) ‚ Visa , M a sterca rd Office Hours: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday ‚ E -M a il: ‚ G ra ph ic † $1.20/Day and Discover Deadline to submit ads: 4 p.m. day prior to publication cla ssa d s@ lam ar.colo sta te.edu All classified ads also appear online at www.collegian.com

APARTMENTS CONDOS ROOMMATE ROOMMATE ROOMMATE EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT JOB JUST ACROSS 1, 2, 3 BDRM WANTED WANTED WANTED !BARTENDING! Group fitness, yoga, and OPPORTUNITIES LAUREL BEAUTIFUL Up to $300/day. No experi- pilates instructors needed. *$250/MO MALE ROOMMATES Free horse board with rent. Email resumes to: VET TECH WANTED 2 bdrm, 1 bath. Central Air, CONDOMINIUMS Large room in farm house, 5 ence necessary. Age 18+ ok. 1/2 block from CSU. 1 bdrm in 5 bdrm, 2 bath, WANTED Training provided. 1-800- [email protected] 2 F/T Vet Tech for small ani- Pool, hot tub, 24 hour fitness M/F, Internet, 1 month miles north of Old Town, om or stop by Definitions. mal clinic. Closed weekends. $425/mo no deposit. Windy center. Open house 2 rooms in newer house near W/D, D/W, pets welcome, lots 965-6520 ext 167. 318-5009 or Jeff 402-6593. deposit. Near King Soopers campus. Quiet, clean, Start training P/T mid April & Mon,Tues,Thurs,Fri 9am- on Taft, on bus stop. 556- of room to play, $300/mo with F/T in May. Experience 6pm, Wednesday 10am- responsible, hard working deposit +utils. 970-310-4280. LAB TECHNICIAN 3335. roommates. A/C, W/D, N/S, CAMP WAYNE FOR required. Call 224-2929 or WALK TO CSU & 7pm, Saturday 10am- 5pm. Biology/ Anatomy / fax resume to 495-6747. No app fees or deposit N/P. Avail 5/1. GIRLS Histology preferred. Good OLD TOWN -Finished basement bdrm, Roommate wanted. 2 bdrms required. 1020 Wabash St, ***SUMMER*** Children’s sleep- away camp, pay/ benefits. Flexible 1 bdrm. D/W, coin laundry, own bath and living room. avail in 4 bdrm house. 377-2077. Female roommates avail in 5 Northeast Pennsylvania hours. Fax resume 493- pets ok. $500/mo incl utils, $280/mo, split utils. Walking distance to campus. $10- 24/ HOUR bdrm, near CSU, W/D, no (6/17- 8/13/06) If you love 8834. avail Aug 1st. 831-247-3388. -Upstairs bdrm, share bath- $335/mo +shared utils. 970- The Students Group is look- pets/ smokers, $300/mo. 219-5914. children and want a caring, ing for CSU students to fill 5 NEW 3 bdrm, 2 full bath, cov- room. $225/mo split utils. 970-443-3846. fun environment we need P/T positions, flexible hours, ered parking, condo, 2133 Branden 567-1197. Mackenzie’s Pub & Grill at CONDOS Directors and Instructors for: 12- 25 hrs/ week. Email thes- Krisron #E105, @ Timberline TWO ROOMMATES SouthRidge Golf Club is Tennis, Swimming (W.S.I. [email protected] or 1 female for new 3 bdrm & Drake, N/P, N/S, refrigera- 1 bdrm avail in new 3 bdrm WANTED hiring cooks. Please apply in condo. W/D, water, cable Mature CSU students wanted preferred), Golf, Gymnastics, person at 5750 S. Lemay call 1-877-257-7776. tor, W/D, microwave, F/P, townhouse. W/D, A/C, D/W, for great house, Taft Hill/ Nice 4 bdrm house. Taft/ Cheerleading, Drama, High & incl. $395 +1/3 utils. 970- pool, high-spd internet ready, highspeed internet. On Ave. 412-4888. Prospect area. W/D, A/C, Prospect (1305 Fuqua Dr). Low Ropes, Team Sports, multi- phone ready, wheel Elizabeth and bus route. Avail N/S, N/P. Each has own con- Bar, W/D, A/C, 2.5 car Waterskiing, Sailing, BOHEMIAN June. $350/mo +utils. Call chair accessible, security/ fire tract. $395/mo. 303-776- garage. $360/mo +utils, inter- Painting/ Drawing, Ceramics, MANAGEMENT COMPANIES 2 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 story, systems, walk to shopping. Lauren 303-570-3213. 2829. net. June- May. Call Silkscreen, Printmaking, POSITIONS A dynamic office, responsible immaculate! W/D, F/P, pool. $1050/mo. 970-613-9876. Courtney 720-201-3227. Batik, Jewelry, Calligraphy, $800/mo, avail June 1. 970- Love the outdoors? Summer for the management of a vari- 1 bdrm in 3 bdrm house. MAY FREE Photography, Sculpture, jobs in Colorado mountains. ety of family owned busi- 690-0252. Guitar, Aerobics, Self- Across from campus. W/D, 1 bdrm in beautiful 5 bdrm, 2 WANTED Salary +housing. Internships nesses and a foundation, PROSPECT & Defense, Video, Piano. Other DSL. Utilities inluded. bath. Female, near campus, avail. 303-791-2834. invites you to be part of a SHIELDS Front Range Recreation is staff: Administrative, CDL 2 bdrm, 1 bath. Avail June $400/mo. 970-471-2361. two kitchens, furnished, W/D, hard working team that Large 2 bdrm, 2 bath. A/C, hiring lifeguards and pool Driver (21+), Nurses (RN’s & 1st. Close to campus. Cable, high speed, cable TV. Avail knows how to have fun. We W/D, D/W, 1yr lease, from managers for this summer in Nursing Students), NANNY NEEDED water, W/D. $700/mo. May through end of July, are currently looking for a June 1st or Aug. 1st. 1 bdrm in 3 bdrm, W/D, D/W, the Parker, Englewood, Bookkeeper, Mothers’ Contact Jason 227-2565. $325/mo, nego +utils. Jen FOR 18 MONTH responsible, upbeat, team- $795/mo. 970-635-9885. garage, 1 block from cam- Littleton, Aurora, Centennial Helper. On campus inter- 307-690-8688. oriented person to fill the fol- pus, nice & clean. $366/mo and Erie areas. Call 303-617- Select The OLD GIRL! views April 19th. lowing position: 3 BDRM 3 BATH +1/3 util. Avail ASAP! First 0221 for application and Camp That Selects The Must be very reliable and I.T. Administrative Assistant NICE TOWN HOME PROSPECT AND month 1/2 off! 970-201-1642. Need a place for summer? details. Best Staff! Call 1-800-279- have car. M-F, 9-4pm. SE Ft. Collins area. Can pay cash. Responsibilities include but 2 min from campus. 2 car SHIELDS 1 bdrm in 4 bdrm house. 3019 or apply on-line @ Avail 5/15, end 7/31. May 970-266-1408. are not limited to: General garage, A/C, W/D, all appli- 2 bdrm, 2 bath, W/D, D/W, 1 bdrm in 3 bdrm. Quiet, Targus Leather Laptop carry- www.campwaynegirls.com. free, $325/mo incl utils. 3 administrative assistance to ances, F/P, loft, quiet neigh- A/C , No pets, 12 month great for student. W/D, DSL, ing case. Looks like new! chill roommates. Mark 303- the I.T. Manager, documen- borhood. Avail July 1, $1200. lease. Avail June, $875/mo fenced yard, 1 block to CSU. Size: 15x12x6. $38. 484- Outdoor summer job, free 905-7002. tation of software, license 970-686-2232. 224-9358. $295 + utils. 825 Remington. 7680 @ room and board, summer management, inventory, sub- 970-482-7613. [email protected]. camp for girls looking for scriptions, domain registra- 3 bdrm, 2 bath, avail 8/1, 6 Newer private bdrm/ bath. counselors for 6/3 until 8/5, tion, warranty tracking, and Spectacular condo near Near campus, W/D, high- 45 min from Colorado blocks west of campus, W/D, 1 bdrm in 4 bdrm house until SERVICES purchasing for department. Centerra, 2 bdrm 2 bath, speed access, cable TV, cat Springs. Contact Melanie at D/W, A/C, carport, storage, 7/31. Female roommate CHILD CARE Other responsibilities include: pool, small pets ok, $900/mo. oversize garage, A/C, F/P, ok. $320-375/mo. 226-0650. ABC SELF STORAGE 303-738-1283. Level 1 help desk support ASAP. Rent is $301.25. 970- Great opportunity to work w/ 215-4769. W/D, private courtyard. LLC and setup and maintenance 581-7871. children w/ developmental $875/mo +util 215-0440. for 30+ desktop computers. POOL 2600 South Lincoln Avenue disabilities. Seeking P/T child NEED SUMMER This support includes virus, Master bdrm +full bath in 3- Loveland, CO 80537-7373 care providers includes days, HELP 3 BLOCKS TO CSU & 1 OR 2 ROOMMATES spam, spy-ware and mal- story town home. W/D. Cool (970)663-2988 evenings, weekends. CITY PARK WALK TO CAMPUS STARTING MAY ware prevention. Relevant WANTED people. By stadium. abcselfstorage.com Minimum 1 yr commitment. Large updated 3 bdrm, 1.5 Top corner bright condo, 2 P/T milkers for early AM & computer support skills are a 1 or 2 roommates for Aug $400/mo. 970-222-0685. Summer Special Respite Care, 207-9435. bath condo. W/D. Lots of Bdrm, 2 Bath, Balcony, A/C, Inside Storage PM shifts. Close to campus. plus, but will train the right W/D, F/P 303-770-4477. needed to live in huge house parking. On bus route. No with huge yard. Old room- 5x 10 =37.00/month Call Brad. Evenings 493- person. RETURNING FROM 1471. pets please, new carpet. 1st mates are graduating. W/D, 10x 10 =60.00/month COUNTER/ COOK/ Qualified candidates must be month FREE. Avail. May or TOWN HOUSES $325/mo. Call Will 720-308- INTERNSHIP 10x 20 =90.00/month proactive and have the ability August. $780/ mo. Tari 303- CATERING 3 bdrm, 2 bath. 1/2 block to 7554. Quiet guest house has two 10x 25 =120.00/month PLAY SPORTS! HAVE to make independent deci- 241-6449. P/T- F/T. Apply 1624 S. sions, within the given scope CSU. Walk to Old Town. furnished room avail w/ 5% off for 3 month Prepay. FUN! SAVE MONEY! shared bath- completely fur- Free Lock. Lemay Ave. #4 or fax resume of authority, while producing $1200/mo. Avail 8/1. Call Maine camp needs fun loving 1 room in nice 3 bdrm house. nished w/ A/C, TV, and DSL, Ask About Our Trucks. 494-4502. high quality results. The can- CONDOMINIUM FOR 218-2396. counselors to teach land/ Great location, new appli- microwave and mini-fridge, TASTEBUDS EPICUREAN didate will have exceptional water sports. Great summer! RENT ances. $275/mo +utils, small new furniture, access to W/D SUITE. communication, administra- deposit flexible lease. Please Want your summer body? Call (888) 844-8080, Spacious 2- story unfur- 3+ bdrms, 3.5 bath free, den w/ F/P, spa, large tive and organizational skills, call 215-6525 (Molly). You need an elite fitness pro- Apply: www.campcedar.com. nished condominium with 3 town house, W/D, F/P, kitchen. $400/mo, utilities fessional. Call 303-619-2365 as well as advanced skills bdrm, 2.5 bath, single car garage, pets nego. 3025 W. free, no deposit, no contract, or 970-416-7896. DARE TO BE with Microsoft Office- specifi- garage, unfurnished base- Elizabeth. Avail 8/1. $1050. 1- 2 BDRMS IN 5 month-to-month, grad [email protected]. DIFFERENT Someone to care for our cally Outlook, Excel, and ment for storage, W/D, and Water paid. 226-3361. student preferred. N/S, M/F, Dancers wanted $$$ poten- active 8 year old son durring Word. large family room for rent. BDRM HOUSE N/P. Call 224-9068; 980- tial. Great way to pay for summer break. Near Littleton A very strong service orienta- Condominium is 2 years old Avail 5/15 end 7/31. $250/mo 5468 or email: RIDES school and earn extra cash. hospital. M-F, 7am-4pm. tion and the ability to multi- and is located 2 miles west if 4 bdrm, 2 bath. 1/2 block to +utils. May free! W/D, near [email protected]. My furniture needs a ride to Flexible Schedule for stu- Must have reliale car. task and be flexible are a campus on Elizabeth close to CSU, walk to Old Town. $500 CSU. 970-218-4879. the San Hose, CA area. I will dents. No experience neces- References and background must. Attention to detail and Hughes Stadium. Rent is signing bonus. Avail 8/1. Call help pay for your move if you sary. A Hunt Club. 490-1885. check required. follow up is a high priority. $1425/mo (incl all utils except 218-2396. ROOM IN HOUSE FOR add a queen bed, couch & 303-519-9585. Periodic travel is required. Internet access and tele- Room avail in nice Timber RENT. Spacious, 2 story, coffee table to your load. Please fax or mail resumes phone) and requires a $1125 Lane house near campus. large house, large yard. Pets Please call Betsy 303-916- ENTRY LEVEL- B2B and salary requirements to: security deposit. N/P and M/F, $350/mo + share utils. SUMMER CAMP BEAUTIFUL ok. $300-$350. Sean 970- 2965. Bohemian Companies N/S. If interested or need Call Ryan 805-680-6843. OUTSIDE SALES JOBS ACROSS ATTN: I.T. Assistant Position TOWN HOUSE 402-6709. Innovative Careers is now additional info please call 2 oversized bdrms, 3 bath. NOTICES THE USA 103 West Mountain Ave 303-790-8588. Roomates needed in 5 bdrm accepting resumes for Entry Fort Collins, CO 80524 W/D, F/P, skylight, storage. to Mid level outside sales Hundreds of excting and Close to CSU. Cat okay. 2 rooms avail in great 4 house. $300/mo +1/5 util. WANT TO MAKE (970)482-6139 (fax) bdrm home, D/W, W/D, N/P, Less han 1 mile from cam- representatives in a variety of rewarding positions avail. June 1 and Aug 1. $795/ mo. MONEY IN THE www.campchannel.com. big back yard, $340/mo 970- pus. 303-949-8544. industries. Base from $20K- Or, email in PDF form to: (Extra for 3) 482-2123, 482- STOCK MARKET? 40K depending on experi- 0841, 227-3056. 310-8013, 847-899-9600. [email protected] Consult a real investor for ence plus commission. $45- SUMMER CAMP om ROOMMATE WANT- free on Thursday & Monday 60K first year earnings plus with “ATTN: I.T. Assistant 3 bdrms avail in 5 bdrm ED in the LSC Flea Market benefits. Experience in sales JOBS IN Position” in the subject line. house. Students welcome. $325 +shared utilities. 4 across from the bookstore. a plus. Recent grads wel- COLORADO: Resumes must be received COMEC COOMMEE Rent from $360. N/P. Jason bdrm, 2 bath, beautiful Questions? Contact come. Paid training provided. Tomahawk & Flying ‘G’ by 5pm Monday, April 17th, at 215-7352. house, near campus, FABU- LifeVestors Inc. 226-1419. Please submit your resume Ranch. 2006. Resumes received www.lifevestorsonline.com. SSEE! SEEEE!! LOUS roommates!! Kelsey toLive & work in the mountains after this date will not be 4 bdrm house, females, 303-881-5260. [email protected] SW of Denver. General considered. NO PHONE $350/mo includes utilities. EMPLOYMENT or give us a call at 303-837- Counselors & Program CALLS PLEASE. 1571. 1/2 Block to CSU F/P, D/W, W/D, DSL, satellite ROOMMATE WANT- ADMINISTRATIVE Specialists (Western horse- TV. 213-2828. back riding, backpacking, Now showing ED ASSISTANT/ st crafts, nature, sports, chal- EARN EXTRA 1 PLACE 1 bdrm in 3 bdrm w/ own RECEPTIONIST EQUINE SCIENCE lenge course, farm, pioneer, STUDIO Awesome female roommate bath. W/D, D/W, big yard, P/T, Mon, Wed, Fri, 8 am- 5 INTERNSHIPS: MONEY TO LOOK wanted! 1.5 blocks to CSU, dance, & drama). June 1- COTTAGE high speed internet. Quiet 1.5 pm. The Executive Center Make a difference this sum- August 7. Competitive salary, Students needed for market $319/mo + utils, W/D, D/W. miles to CSU $350/mo +utils. professional office, in Old research surveys. Earn $3- Call 484-4253. mer at Flying ‘G’ Ranch housing, meals, health insur- Summer only 970-412-7170. Avail ASAP, Town Fort Collins. General overnight camp in the moun- ance, travel & end-of-season $20 per survey. Free to par- GREAT HOMES, OR 12-Month lease no rent till May 1st. office skills needed: MS tains SW of Denver. Teach bonuses. Internships avail- ticipate. For more information Office (Word, Excel, Power go to CONDOS & 1 person $395 BIG NEW HOUSE basic skills & lead trail rides; able. Apply online at TOWNHOMES ROOMMATE WANT- ROOMMATE Point, Outlook) Quick Books, learn barn management & www.girlscoutsmilehi.org/ca http://www.zses.com/paidres Telephone answering. Mail basic vet care. May 21- mpjobs. earch.html. ED! WANTED resume to 123 N. College CALL FOR ****Also**** August 7. Training, competi- SHOWINGS Great location. Close to CSU. 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 2-car, big Ave. Suite 200, Ft. Collins, tive salary, housing, meals, 3 BR APT 2 bdrm avail, furnished back yard. Cool roomates. CO 80524, Fax 212-4739, or health insurance, travel & SUMMER NANNY SANBORN 621 1/2 Remington except bdrms. A/C, W/D, Summer avail. W/D. $425/mo e-mail end-of-season bonuses. POSITION WESTERN CAMPS: utils incl. Off campus. 303- Front Porch Property For FALL Lease D/W, F/P, big yard! $350/mo [email protected] Apply online at Qualified nanny wanted to Would you like to work with incl utils. Avail summer/ 717-2139. www.girlscoutsmilehi.org/ca watch the coolest little girl! 1220 W. Elizabeth No Pets $1005 horses and kids in the moun- school year. David 303-596- AUSTIN’S mpjobs. June 12- Aug 4. Centrally tains? Wranglers needed for 970-472-8165 8519. ROOMMATE WANT- HOMESTEAD located in Fort Collins. summer camp. Half day rides www.1234rent.com 3303-499-6635 303-499-6635 ED IN 4 BDRM/ 3 References a must. Call up to 5-day pack trips. Must BAR AND GRILL Great employment opportuni- Heather at (307)421-0734. be 21 yrs. Apply online: BATH HOUSE Work in a resort atmosphere! ty w/ local financial sales sanbornwesterncamps.com $400 includes utilities. Want We are seeking high energy company. No experience or call 719-689-2228. someone to share a room in people for all positions. necessary. Outstanding com- Whitewater guides needed. a beautiful house with 3 girls. Apply in person munication skills required! Training course for state cer- Walk in closet and big room. Mon-Thurs 2-4pm Opportunity for advance- tification and summer ABSOLUTELY THE BEST House is located by stadium. 1600 Pelican Lakes Drive ment, P/T evening. Paid employment. Details A-1 SUMMER JOB EVER. Avail June 1st. 303-489- Windsor nightly! 970-377-0024 (Scott Wildwater. 224-3379. WWW.DEBTFREESTU- 4009. 970-674-1100. or Chris). 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Non Sequitur

‘ t ‘ t Wiley 11

COLLEGIAN SPORTS FRIDAY Friday, April 14, 2006 | Page 12

Women’s Basketball Coach QUESTIONS 10 with...Jen Warden week too. You’ve got to keep and talent coming in. criticism about the decisions have been on the team. I wish absolutely necessary to build yourself fresh. They have to that have been made as far success to Liz, to Casie, and to up the confi dence not only get used to working with each Q: Let’s talk about Nya as the players who won’t be the other girls who won’t be the players, but the team as a other. Mason who recently signed returning next year. What is back next season in whatever whole. And it’s a good way to get with the Rams. Her statistics your plan for the direction the direction they are going. Q: Changing direction out and just be together. coming up to this point are women’s basketball program Q: And so as you watch a little bit, what are your outstanding. She recorded will take for the 2006-07 this new team come together, thoughts on the new athletic Q: So far, you have signed a game with 35 points, 25 season? how are you feeling about the director, Paul Kowalczyk? By STACEY ZYNEN seven new players. The last rebounds and seven blocks. A: I think the fi rst step season coming up? A: I really look forward to day to sign is on Wednesday. How do you plan on using her is to develop the core of the A: I have this instinctive working with Paul. I’ve been Are you hoping to sign any under the basket? returning players. We really excitement that I think all very impressed with the process Q: Tell me a little bit about more players until then? A: I think she’s going to need to develop learning, coaches have about their of the search committee and what is happening currently A: I think it would be a long have a little bit of development, leadership and trust for the teams. This is going to be a hiring. It was fi rst-class from with the team. What is the shot for us to get a new player she needs to build up. freshmen. process. We are responsible beginning to end. We’re all team working on right now? signed by next Wednesday but She is valuable for us The standard of to develop one day at a time. excited to sit down with him in A: We fi nished our season I don’t think it will be out of the because we’ve (played against) competition and teamwork We will create a program here. a couple weeks and sculpt the on March 8 and we took off until question to get another player centers with size and strength must be entrusted by the new Everything we accomplish will future of CSU athletics. April 3. We have eight hours by next fall. that we can’t neutralize. freshmen and that has to be have to be one day at a time a week to practice in the off- She’s going to do a terrifi c set by the players who are and that’s something we will Q: What about the season, Q: Among the new job for us. Right now, Marilyn returning. really work for. fi nancial situation in the and players, who really stands out (Moulton) will be coming athletic department at CSU? usually to you? Who are you looking back as a senior and a center Q: Casie Shepard, who Q: What will be your How will this help or hurt the we spend to as leaders for the team? who will do a terrifi c job, so has decided not to come back biggest challenge with this program? about 15 A: That’s a great question. when Marilyn graduates, it next season, recently made ‘new team’ you’ve created as A: Financially, well, it’s or 16 so They all have gifts and they’re will be Nya’s job to step up and some remarks criticizing far as building up a strong always important to compete it is much all in positions to help us right contribute right away. your particular coaching program? fi nancially. It gives you more away. This is a young woman style. What would you say in A: If there’s one thing, or opportunity to take care of relaxed. It’s a neat situation. I think with incredible potential. response to those? one goal for this new team, it’s your athletes. It’s a challenge We’re Emily Neal has a tremendous She has great hands, and A: In my heart, and on that they play with confi dence. for CSU, but you’ll always going to opportunity to cooperate. can do great things under the behalf of the whole staff, I Coaching has a lot to do with have a challenge somewhere. WARDEN go play Joyce (Cousseins) and basket. I feel fortunate to have absolutely wish all of our setting players free to play and It’s a challenge that is to be beach Jaunise (Cornell) both have her on the team. players that are moving in other that is something we really respected and acknowledged, volleyball tremendous opportunities to directions the best success. want for this season. That’s and it can only make things today instead of being on the contribute so we are excited I have appreciation for the something that is controllable better if we keep working on court and we played tennis last to have a variety of leadership Q: There has been some contribution of all the girls who with this team. I think it is it.

SOFTBALL Conference play opens HOW By DREW GONZALES issue after playing such a while a pair of junior pitchers, The Rocky Mountain Collegian crowded road schedule. Karina Cannon and Meghan 2 Despite their hard Dyer, enhance their defense. After playing 34 games time crossing home plate As for CSU’s opponent on this season, the Rams softball last week, the Rams are Saturday, BYU’s offense also team will open up their still among the conference presents some problems, as conference home schedule leaders in several offensive it may be hard to get certain with games against BYU categories such as batting Cougars out. LONG SNAP on Friday and Utah on average (second), slugging Senior Ashlyn Russell Saturday. The Rams are third percentage (fi rst) and total leads the MWC with an on- In the 2002 NFL playoffs, arms pull the ball through. if your hands are correctly in conference play with a 3-3 runs scored (second). base percentage of .559, while the New York Giants played Finish & Block – Finish placed and you fi nish with record, (22-12 overall) while Friday’s games will be the freshman Andrea Martinez is the San Francisco 49ers in the with both thumbs pointed your thumbs. “And then get their opponents, BYU and fi rst of a long stretch of home second in that category. NFC wild-card game. After directly at your target. ready to block,” said Welp. Utah, are second and fourth games. Coach Yori believes BYU also has one of the 60 minutes of competition, it Don’t think about trying “Like I learned today.” respectively. this stretch can reenergize conference’s best pitchers in took only one play to cost the to put a spin on the ball, the CSU struggled to score the team. Daniella Urincho. Giants a trip to the fi rst round. ball will go into a natural spiral - By Brett Okamoto runs last weekend against “We’ve worked on our Though Urincho’s record With time running out, UNLV and SDSU. In four overall game and refocused may not be all that impressive and trailing by a score of 39-38, games against the Rebels on some key things. There’s at 8-5, she has been very hard the Giants found themselves and Aztecs, the Rams only been lots of energy at our to score on with an ERA of in possession of the football managed to score eight practices and I think the team 1.39, good for second in the within fi eld goal range. runs and went 1-3 for the is rejuvenated,” Yori said. Mountain West. Unfortunately, kicker Matt weekend. CSU will need both “Both teams have been Bryant never got the chance to Head coach Mary Yori energy and focus when they playing well,” Yori said. “Both kick the game-winner. was disappointed with the take on these challenging teams present different Long snapper Trey Junkin’s production during that teams from Utah. challenges.” snap was short and the game stretch. The Utes have a balanced Game one of Friday’s was over. “It was a disappointing offensive attack led by senior doubleheader against Utah Many people forget that weekend,” Yori said. “We second baseman, Jackie will start at 1 p.m. at Ram there are three stages to kicking were able to get hits; we Wong. Wong is batting .435 on Field, while Saturday’s games a fi eld goal – the snap, the hold just couldn’t turn them into the season and is one of fi ve will get underway at noon. and, if all goes well, the kick. runs.” Utes with more than 10 RBIs. Drew Gonzales can be The fi rst two have to be perfect Yori also believed that Utah is fi rst in the Mountain reached at sports@collegian. for there to even be a chance at fatigue might have been an West in fi elding percentage, com. the third. We got a chance to talk with freshman Nathan Welp, a walk-on trying to earn playing time with the Rams as a long snapper. Here are the tips he gave us on one of the most thankless jobs in football.

Stance & Grip – Set your stance with your feet a little wider than shoulder width apart. Pick the ball up like you would throw it, fi ngers on the laces, and roll it over so that the laces face the ground. Place the other hand on the opposite side with your middle fi nger touching the seam towards the top of the football. Crouch so that your nose is directly over the ball. “From the Gut” – When the signal from the holder comes to snap the ball, pull from your lower gut as hard and fast as you can. Try not to raise any other STEVE RYDZON | COLLEGIAN IAN CHAMBERS | COLLEGIAN part of your body. Your body Mary Beth Culp (13) winds up for a pitch in softball practice at the softball fi elds on campus should be stationary in the Nathan Welp (32), a freshman walk-on long snapper, demonstart- Thursday. crouched position while your es how to long snap during practice on Wednesday afternoon.

Be good to yourself. Be good to your friends. If you drink, drink responsibly.