Nader rocks out Cougars golden in Berkeley opinion/pap 5 sportsjpage 7 THE DAILY

~VE EEwww.dailyevergreen.com Vol. 107 No. 28 A Student Publication of Washington State University since 1895 Monday, October 2, 2000 Fall Expo helps students get jobs By Jordan Falk

The chance to start a succes~­ ful career awaits many WSU and University of Idaho stu­ dents at the annual Fall Career Expo of the Palouse. The event, sponsored by both universities, will be held from 9 a.m. to 3:30p.m. 'fuesday at the UI Kibbie Dome. The Fall Career Expo broke new ground this year. More than 200 employers will attend - . more than any previous Expo. In addition, graduate schools will recruit for the first time at the Expo. Event Coordinator Dave Raining of WSU Career Services said this Expo is the largest in the Pacific Northwest and it offers more than just a MIKE STUNTZ/DAILY EVERGREEN chance to gather information on ROTC members compete in the one-rope bridge event at the Ranger Challenge at the Dan O'Brien Track Complex in Moscow. a company or graduate school. Students can schedule inter­ views with organizations for the following day. ROTC teams duel in Moscow Many of the companies attending the Expo are return and then disassemble a bridge, visitors. These companies keep Paramilitary forces coming back because they "are without ever touching the build rope bridges, ground. historically satisfied with the quality of students (in this throw fake grenades After all teams finished, they were flown to the starting point area)," Raining said. By T.J. Conrads of the ten-kilometer "ruck­ Raining warned students march" in two UH-60 who want to impress recruiters Cadets battled incessant Blackhawk helicopters, each to be well prepared. With an rain, wind and other universi­ taking one team. All cadets ran expected crowd of about 3,000 ties in the annual Palouse Task the ten kilometers with 35- job seekers, getting a recruiter's Force ROTC Ranger Challenge pound rucksacks and an M-16 attention won't be easy. at the University of Idaho early rifle. All rucksacks were 'Ib give WSU students a pro­ yesterday. checked at the end of the race to fessional edge at the fair, a series More than 100 students from ensure all participants carried of events are scheduled for WSU, UI Gonzaga University, the required items, including today, including the "Be a Star" and Eastern Washington boots and jackets. Etiquette Dinner and mock University began the competi­ Although WSU Tham 1 won interviews with corporate repre­ tion at 8 a.m., and participated the APFT, problems during the sentatives. in several intense competitions one-rope bridge competition WSU Career Services also is for 10 hours, including a MIKE STUNTZ/DAILY EVERGREEN prevented them from winning having an open house from 10 grenade accuracy toss and a A competitor in the Ranger Challenge readies the rope for his the first-place trophy, but they am. to 4 p.m. today in Lighty two-mile sprint. team. were able to claim third place. 180. Staff will be on hand to cri­ All WSU team members Defending male champions GU tique resumes, explain the setup have trained from 5:30 to 7:30 minutes to do as many push­ The next events were the Tham 1 were victorious once ofthe Expo and sign up students a.m., five days a week and ups and sit-ups as possible. grenade-accuracy drill and the again, keeping the trophy they for other preliminary events. another hour at night since the They also were timed on a two­ one-rope bridge, both won by UI earned last year when the com­ Raining said WSU students beginning of school. The Cougar mile run. WSU Team 1 won this Team 1. The grenade-accuracy petition was held at EWU. shouldn't have too much trouble Battalion sent one male team event by a single point, scoring drill required teams to throw "We worked as hard as we getting to the Expo. Airport (Team 1) and two co-ed teams 595 points compared to the 594 fake grenades at a target 30 could," said Brian Hollman, Road will be clear of construc­ (Team 2 and Team 3). of GU's Team 1. All nine mem­ meters away, UI Team 1 ~cored WSU sophomore and Tham 1 The ROTC Rangers began tion and the Wheatland Express bers of WSU Team 1 finished 420 out of a possible 480 points. member. ''We'll be back winning Bus Service will be making with the Army Physical Fitness the two-mile run in under 12 In the one-rope bridge event, Test. Cadets were given two minutes. the team must assemble, cross See ROTC, page 19 extended stops at the Kibbie Dome. Few show up for Nethercutt speech in Pullman By Cameron Probert Spokane attorney. students pay back some stu­ petroleum reserve to lower Nethercutt said he also sup­ Nethercutt spoke on issues dent loans through teaching in heating oil and gasoline prices ports drilling for oil in the Arctic About 20 people braved the ranging from education to tap­ understaffed schools. also was a subject. Natural Wildlife Reserve. rain Saturday to meet with ping the strategic oil reserve to "I think that makes sense," There are several problems "It's a very small portion in Rep. George Nethercutt, R­ how to get more students Nethercutt said. "I'm in favor of with this decision, Nethercutt the comer of the reserve that Spokane, at Republic'an involved in the election. incentives for graduates to go said. The refineries in the would be tapped," Nethercutt Headquarters on Main Street Nethercutt said some tax back and serve their communi­ United States are running at 95 said. "We've gone from 40 per­ in Pullman. _ relief is necessary to help work­ ties." percent capacity. Also, there cent dependence on foreign oil Nethercutt is running for ing families. Nethercutt also said he sup­ needs to be more energy solu­ to 60 percent dependence. This reelection to a fourth term in ''My daughter is a junior in ports raising the amount of tions in America. is dangerous because if any of the House of Representatives. college," Nethercutt said. ''It's money the federal government ''We don't have a nuclear (pol­ the oil-producing foreign nation He is running for the 5th not any cheaper now than it gives universities for financial icy)," Nethercutt said. "We don't wants to be oppressive to us District, which includes was when I went to college." aid. have an oil policy. We don't have they can." Spokane, Walla Walla and Both Nethercutt and Keefe The Clinton administration's a policy for any of these things. 'Nethercutt also asked the Pullman. His opponent is have said they agree with creat­ decision to use 30 million bar­ Wmd power isn't going to do it. Democrat Tom Keefe, a ing programs to help college rels of oil from the strategic Solar power isn't going to do it." See Nethercutt, page 19 2 THE DAILY EVERGREEN MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 - POLICE LOG Thursday, Sept. 28 Non-Injury Traffic Accident Agency Assistance 4:52 p.m., Terre View Drive 9:05 a.m., B Street Subject said a van from the Request for traffic control Community Services Learning Environmental Health Services was Center hit another car in the park­ pumping gas, water and oil from an ing lot. underground storage tank in front of the Coug for the WSU Honors Suspicious Person or College. The Pullman Police depart­ Circumstance ment was unable to supply traffic 9:05 p.m., New learning center control. EHS wanted WSU police There was a beeping sound but that was out of WSU's jurisdic­ coming from large piece of hea"Y tion. EHS was advised to make equipment on the construction preparations ahead of time instead site. It was possibly a road grader of waiting until the last minute. parked near the blue emergency phone. Animal Problem/Complaint Vehicle Prowl 12:26 p.m., Bishop Boulevard 9:53 p.m., Bishop Boulevard A woman found a German Suspicious male subject look- Sheppard; the shelter told her to call ing in car windows in the parking the police, as she could not trans­ lot at the rear of the Holiday Inn port the dog. The acMsed officers Express, near the dumpster area. could not pick up the dog and animal The vehicles were not damaged. shelter personnel v.ere not available. Noise Complaint Viscous Animal Compliant 10:13 p.m., Terre View Drive 2:39 p.m., Paradise and Pine Loud bass music, floor vibrat- streets ing, and people are yelling and A pit bull tried to attack some­ screaming. one. The owner was contacted and warned for a leash law violation. Disorderly Conduct 11:03 p.m., Stephenson South Citizen Dispute A couple of males v.ere outside 4:19 p.m., Davis Way yelling at residents, threatening Subject reported to the police them with .fights and sv.earing. The department that he had a problem reporting party called back seven with another driver. The problem minutes later to report that they continued on the WSU campus. had just entered Stephenson East. COMMUNITY CALENDAR --- Today A Monday Supper-With-Service at the Koinonia House will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. This week's topic will be an environmental project.

Sign up for mock interviews with a recruiter coming to the Fall Career Expo. Online registration required. Call Career Services at 335- 2546 for more information or come to Lighty 180. Outdoor Photo Contest sponsored by Sign up for the second annual "Be a Star!" Etiquette Dinner to be + held in the CUB Ballroom. Cost is $10 (check, MC, VISA only). Call 335- ASWSU Oudoor Rec.Center CUB Gallery 9107 or come to Career Services in Lighty 160 to register. O::tal:er 9-27th in CUB Gallery. Ehtries due by noon Friday, Oct. 6th in LANDSCAPE, OUTIX)()R AcriON, Students for Individual Uberty will meet at 7 p.m. in CUB 224. WILDLIFE and STILL LIFE categories·. Tomorrow Contest rules and aplications Anyone interested in WSU Archery can meet at the CUB Study available at ORC, COB B-22 Call 335-2651 for info. Lounge at 4:30 p.m. 1:tf the fireplace. Those with questions should email [email protected].

Cougar Communicators, Toastmaster Club will meet from 12 to 1 p.m. in CUB 108-109. ASWSU Election Board

Wednesday, Oct. 4 Undergraduate students interested in serving on the La Hermandad de 0 eMe Te, an Aztec-based brotherhood, will hold ASWSU Election Board please contact: an information meeting at 7:30 p.m. in CUB 224. · Carolyn Stolmeier, Student Programs Coordinator at Gay and Lesbian History month begins with a Gay Hollywood Camp 335-6243 or by e-mail - [email protected] Classics Aim Series, showing at the GLBTA center (in the CUB base­ ment). "The Celluloid Closet" will begin at 7 p.m.

STUDENTS NEEDED for the ASWSU lecture and Perfomance Pullman Weather Series Committee. Help bring lecturers + performance Today: Partly Cloudy to WSU that will build awareness of different social, High: 61, Low: 41 political and cultural issues. Tomorrow: Partly Cloudy Call Carolyn Stolmeier, Coordinator for Student Programs High: 57, Low: 32 335-6243 Wednesday: Partly Cloudy High: 56, Low: 31

THE Editor: Candace Baltz [email protected] DAILY EVERGREEN Managing Editor: Stephanie Munson Make Your Dad #1 P.O. Box 642510; Pullman. WA 99164 [email protected] Sparta Editor: Ryan Ford Applications for Dad of the Year are now available on the 3rd The Daily Evergreen IS the official student publica­ [email protected] tion of washington State University. operaMg Photo Editor: Hsiu-chu. Chung floor of the CUB and at all living group front desks. App's under authonty granted to the Board of Student [email protected] Publications by the WSU Board of Regents. Assistant Managing Editor: Brye Butler Due Oct.7th by s:oo PM. on 3rd floor of CUB. Winner will be Respons1b1h~es for establishing news and adVer­ [email protected] tising policies and deciding issues related to con­ Online Editor: Sharul Subki announced at the Dad's Weekend Breakfast Oct.22nd tent rest solely with the student staff. The ed1tor online<@dallyevergreen.com and adVertising manager provide reports to the Advertising Manager: Sara Legerski Board of Publications at its monthly meetings. [email protected] Graphics Manager: Darcie Fitzpatrick The govemmg ·Statement of Policies and [email protected] Operating Bylaws" is available at SP's administra­ Production Manager: Marcus Michelson tive offices 1n Room 113. Murrow Building. SP [email protected] wsu Democrats general manager is Bob Hilliard. Contact Us: Do you want to make a difference? If you'd like to work for The Dally Evergreen ..• Editor: 335-3194 Sports: 335-2465 Come to the WSU Democrats Meetings every contact Assistant Editor Ryan Ford at Circulation: 335-5138 Classlfled: 335-4573 335-2290. Newsroom: 335-1140 Fax: 335-7401 Monday at 4:3opm in CUB 2.2.0. Advertising: 335-2124 Graphics: 335-4179 If you'd like to place an ad ... call 335-2124 and Photo: 335-2292 Online: 335-2290 ask for Advert• sing Manager Sara Legerski. e-mail: [email protected] Internet: www.dailyevergreen.com For more information contact Nick at 332-852.5 If you think something has been Incorrectly or n illard unix.wsu.edu reported ... contact Assistant Editor Stephanie Copyngllt 10 2000 WSU Student Publications Board. All WSU Student Publications articles. Munson at 335-1099. photographs and graphics are the property of thE If you have • news tip ... call the newsroom at WSU Student Publications Board and may not be 335-1099. ·. reproduced without expressed wntten consent. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Daily To purchase a copy of any photo published In Evergreen at P.O. Box 642510. Pullman, WA Anenuon Students The Daily Evergreen ... call Hs1u.Chu. Chung at 99164-2510. .335-2292. First-class semester subscriptions are $90 if The ASWSU Senate has changed its meeting time to 7:15pm First copy free, each mailed daily; $60 if mailed weekly.()ne.year sut> additional 50¢ scriptions are $160 if mailed daily, $100 if mailed weekly. USPS Permit No. 142-860. MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 THE DAILY EVERGREEN 3 Student arrested for permit forgery By Emily Wagnitz the search, which listed Weaver's age as 21. A forged parking permit and The fake ID also was well a fake driver's license could done, Jacobson said. "It took me land a WSU student with crim­ a while to figure out what was inal charges and a university wrong with it." disciplinary hearing. As with the parking pennit, Craig Weaver, 18, was the hologram on the license arrested for forgery on Sept. 12 was not accurately reproduced, after a Parking Services Jacobson said. employee tipped offWSU police "We'll be sending the report to a car displaying a phony in the next couple of days," parking permit. The car turned Jacobson said, adding that they out to be Weaver's. have been in contact with the Weaver was released on his Whitman County Prosecutors own recognizance after the Office throughout the investi­ arrest pending a court appear­ gation. ance. As of Friday, WSU polke The police report will include had not yet sent the case report a recommendation to prosecu­ to Whitman County prosecu­ tors to charge Weaver with two tors, so no criminal charges counts of forgery, a class C have been filed against the sus­ felony, Jacobson said. pect. WSU police also will send a ·It was a really good (parking copy of the report to the WSU permit) except for the hologram Office of Student Affairs, strip through the middle," said Jacobson said. WSU Police Sgt. Bryan Student Affairs officials will Jacobson on Friday. review the evidence to deter­ After discovering the forged mine whether they will bring pennit, police obtained a search disciplinary charges against warrant for Weaver's residence Weaver, said Elaine Voss, assis­ and confiscated his computer tant dean of students. DAVE ELLERBROCK/DAILY EVERGREEN and accessories, including a Jacobson said WSU police cancer survivors release balloons to commence the Relay for Life at Pullman High School scanner and printer. dealt with a handful of similar Friday night. Officers also discovered a forgery cases during the last forged driver's license during ·academic year. Nocturnal cancer walk brings Fraternity raises money, record fund-raising crowds food to help community By Jennifer Jackson Community Hall team captain the walk. By Michelle Phillips Members enjoyed talking to Jonel Anderson, a sophomore Music provided by a loo:li _disc different people and represent­ As moonlight shined down on A small group of WSU stu­ ing their fraternity by wearing majoring in fine arts. jockey and WSU mUSICianS dents made a big effort this the Palouse Friday night, more Since the walk lasted through ZuZu Pedal and Dan Maher their royal purple and "old gold" than 300 WSU students and weekend to help feed local com­ colors. the night, many of the teams kept the walkers motivated munity members in need. oommunity members took to the rented tents to sleep in when throughout the long night of ''It turned out better than we track at Pullman High School The five members of Omega expected," said Eboni Wilson, they were not walking. rain and cold. Psi Phi Fraternity Inc. held a for the second annual "City of Any residence hall, campus From 9 to 10 p.m., the walk­ Omega Psi Phi graduate advis­ Destiny" 24-hour Relay for Life food drive from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. er. "'twas a really joyous experi­ organization or business could ers participated in a luminary Saturday at the Pullman cancer walk. participate for an entrance fee of ceremony. During the week ence." The American Cancer Society Safeway store in Wheatland Curtis Holden, Omega Psi $5 per participant. Tham sizes before the City of Destiny Walk, Center. sponsored the walk, which last­ ranged from six to more than 50 people were given the opportuni­ Phi president, said it's easy for ed from 6 p.m. on Friday to 10 The members collected 20 fraternities to throw parties, but walkers. ty to purchase tea lights in bags boxes of canned and non-perish­ a.m. on Saturday. Twenty-seven At least one participant from that were decorated to honor a it takes more of an effort to help teams from WSU and Pullman able food items to donate to the out with community service each team was required to walk deceased loved one. During the Pullman Food Drive. participated. in the walk . this during every half-hour incre­ ceremony, the candles in each events. Damon Arnold, the faculty "We are trying to get on the year, which IS almost four times ment. Some people walked the bag were lit and walkers could adviser for the African American as many teams as last year. entire time and others walked look at the bags as they walked serious level," Holden said. fraternity, said members not ''This is just the beginning point Proceeds from the walk went for half-hour to hour increments their laps. only collected the food, but also toward cancer research and in pairs. In addition to more than 200 of many community service will go the extra step to help dis­ events we have planned." many teams raised money in The walk was kicked off with bags lining the track, additio~ tribute the food to those in need. addition to the entrance fee to a survivor lap. Bagpipes played luminary bags were placed m Quantavian Wilson, Omega Cash donations also were Psi Phi secretary, said members donate to the cause. as cancer survivors walked the stadium stands to spell out accepted to help the fraternity ''I was really pleased with the around the track, releasing bal­ the words ''hope" and "cure." The plan on visiting with residents with future oommunity service of retirement homes, playing participation around campus loons as they went. Following stadium lights were turned off events and the purchase of a and that the groups that walked the survivor lap was a group lap so that the words stood out in new fraternity banner. See Fraternity, page 13 stayed the whole time," said consisting of every participant in See Walk, page 13 4 THE DAILY EVERGREEN MONDAY, OCTOBER 2 , 2000 NEWS ATVP to spread awareness about domestic violence

From staff and wire reports .

WSU · ~eterinarv Teaching Hospital 10% discount lor WSU students Offering full serviee Appointments are veterinary eare in a available Monday modern facility for through Friday, 8 a.m.· Companion Animals~ S p.m. & the Farm Animals~ Veterinary Teaching Horses and Exotie Hospital is always open Animals. for emergencies. Call 335-0711 to makes an appointment. www.dailyevergreen.com ·-· ·The Veterinary Teaehing Hospital is located on the WS_Ueampus on Grimes Way.

L- -- THE DAILY EVERGREEN In My Opinion: "Where talent is a dwarf, self-esteem is a giant." -J. Petit-Senn Monday, October 2PINION, 2000 Page 5 THE Fusing SOAPBOX music and NBC gives America 'Must politics all Not See TV' the Rage The National Broadcasting Company has done a terrible job for Nader covering the Olympics. NBC paid an unprecedented David Morris amount of money to gain exclu­ The Daily Princetonian s ive rights to broadcast the Princeton University games to Ame ri ca. The Canadian Broadcasting Channel bought its {U-WIRE) own national broadcasting rights. The difference in coverage could ic videos are terri- not be any more stark. CBC has e. This is a well- been running nearly round-the­ W own fact to anyone clock live broadcasts supplanted with a brain in his or her head by highlight footage; NBC has and an ounce of taste in his or repackaged each day's Olympic her body. Despite the lofty aspi­ events into a meager eight-and-a­ rations of a few directors work­ half hours of early morning, ing in the video industry today, primetime and late night cover­ them~wnsUrrtedoffasa age, nearly 24 hours after the simple promotional tool events happened. designed to plug records, and With all of the focus on prime­ for the most part, so it time ratings and with the results remains. broadcast on the Internet, the One of the unfortunate reali­ Olympics have become no more ties of this is that the bands exciting than an instant replay. that seem to benefit most from NBC should be showing as many them are usually a) good-look­ live events as it can. If ratings are ing and b) not very talented a concern, then hold some of the musically. Can you say Duran best stuff for primetime - but do Duran? Videos have been the not cut out other events. chosen m~um for some of the The best moments in sports greater atrocities of the recent do not need manufactured dra­ past, including-the "We Are matics. The most exciting parts The World" debacle, and later of the games- the nationalism, on, ''Hit Me Baby (One More the shattering of world records Time)." and the upset victories - lose The odds of a video causing their luster when they are people to genuinely reexamine processed in a cutting room. their political views seem infin­ T HE CHRONICLE (DUKE U.) itesimally small. With its new video, however, it looks like Rage Against the Machine New abortion might be ready to help the music video industry along the pills a more winding road to respectability. After the success of the video humane option for the song "Sleep Now In The The Food and Drug Fire," the rock band has again Administration approved the use teamed up with controversial of RU-486 Thursday, an abortion documentary director Michael pill available in Europe for more Moore to produce the video for than a decade, and is expected "Testify," Rage's latest single to make the abortion process from the album wrhe Battle Of Prayer in Congress creates intolerance more private and accessible. ." According to the Although America still remains campaign Web site for Green Party candidate Ralph Nader, Martha Knox eve!Y man and his Maker, in respects the beliefs of all divided on the issue of abortion, The Lantern which no other, and far less Americans, the First RU-486 is now the safest way to the video was conceived by Moore and the band "to Ohio State University the public, had a right to inter­ Amendment- which states have an abortion. The fact is that meddle." "Congress shall make no law in many places across the cour}­ express their disgust at what (U-WIRE) the aristocratic two-party Prayer before sessions of respecting an establishment of try abortion is already legal. In Congress has been a long-held religion, or prohibiting the free such a situation, the most . Democratic and Republican n Sept. 14, Ohio Rep. political system has put forth tradition. CUITently the exercise thereof..." - is truly humane thing to do is make the Sherrod Brown made a being violated, and millions of procedure as safe as possible. for this year's presidential can­ House's full-time chaplin is a didates." O great step forward in Roman Catholic priest, but a Americans are being insulted There is an obligation to think of celebrating our nation's reli­ by their own government. the health and to limit the suffer­ At www. votenader.org, there · guest often perfonns the invo­ is a link to the MTV Web site gious diversity. Brown created cation. Of course the other side of ing of women. a more inclusive atmosphere While RU-486 may be more where one can view the video, Despite the cries of the coin is that if all religious or vote for it on Thtal Request in Congress by inviting a and non-religious groups in accessible, a certain degree of Hindu priest to give the tradi­ Christian fundamentalists, the responsibility must come with it. Live. In case you didn't know, United States is a country America were represented pro­ TRL is the one show where the tional opening prayer. portionately, more of the intol­ Even though it is up to each ind~ Unfortunately, such a bold with some of the richest reli­ vidual woman to make the choice audience is guaranteed on any gious diversity in the world. erant sentiment from the reli­ given day to be made up of act caught the attention of the gious right would rear its ugly for herself, she cannot take the fanatic religious right. The Hinduism is currently the teen and pre-teen girls (on the head. Instead of fostering reli­ matter lightly. While "taking a pill " Family Research Council eighth-largest religion prac­ may seem at first to make the likes and dislikes of whom all decisions about popular enter­ immediately vocalized its dis­ ticed by American citizens, and gious tolerance, invocations process easier psychologically, tainment rest). so it seems completely appro­ and reflections before Congress the procedure is just as serious may. On its Web site it stated Around the end of August, that the founding fathers priate for Congress to acknowl­ might breed ill will between as its surgical counterpart. A the Nader campaign sent out edge and include that particu­ groups. human life may be at stake, and "would have found utterly e-rnails to supporters asking incredible the idea that all reli­ lar group of adherents. Other Americans have to make a the woman must live with the them to vote for the video. decision. Are we mature choice for the rest of her life. gions, including paganism, be religions in the top 10 include Judaism, Islam, Unitarian enough to confront this intoler­ THE lANTERN {O HIO STATE U.) treated with equal deference." See Nader, page 6 The group also remarked to Universalists, Buddhism, ance once and for all for the the press, "As for our Hindu Native American religions and sake of bringing our multitude THE priest friend, the United States Scientology. of belief systems more into the is a nation that has historically However, it should also be mainstream public sphere, or DAILY EVERGREEN honored the one true God." known that the second largest do we want to avoid potentially Candace Baltz This would come as a sur­ religious group in the United ugly conflict by removing Etlii/Jr prise to the founding fathers States is the non-religious, prayers and reflections from Stephanie Munson Tonya Ricks Ryan Ford such as Thomas Jefferson, including atheists, secular Congress and make the topic Mw~c~gins £./itor 46rL/OpiniOII Editor Sports Editor John Adams and Ben Frankin hwnanists and agnostics. It of religion in polite conversa­ Brye Butler Hsiu-Chu Chung Sharul Subki who held naturalistic philoso­ would be a true victory for reli­ tion taboo? Assis/cll/1 \lclllcl.~i ll.~ fdi/or Plloto &iltor On/me E.lilor phies, not Christian ideologies. gious tolerance and_ diversity if I hope that we are overall

UnS>gned edctonals are the >TlilJOOI) ""te ol the ed1tona1 board. Tl1t' edctonal board Is composed of Candace In1813 Jefferson wrote in a all these non-Christian groups an educated and inclusive BallZ. Stepha""' MUrnon@!la~.com All tetter& under 200 words are constdered tor pubhcatton. A name. stgnature and phone number must lously reserved. I have consid­ least once a year. In fact, with­ those with beliefs different ace~ all letters. The Da1ly E-ergreen reserves the ng)1t to edit fa< space. ~bel, obscene matenal and clanty. ered it as a matter between out such an open platform that from our own. 6 THE DAILY EVERGREEN MONDAY. OCTOBER 2, 2000 OPINION Candidates don't get votes of lthe people' Adam I. Arenson American landScape, but for 33 million A call to the people should be like the AARP and its waving fields of Harvard Crimson people, still not enough to lift them out gray, but a powerful constituency of poverty. a promise to these Harvard University nonetheless. It's why Medicare, pre­ Following historic trends, the highest scription drug importation and income­ economically7 socially and (U-WIRE) poverty rate and lowest median income tax credits fill the candidates' speeches, were those of black Americans, followed culturally marginalized even when they are held in school audi­ ch has been made in this closely in both categories by Latinos. Americans that the candidate toriums and on city streets. ear's presidential campaign Asian Americans earned significantly will bring them on the trip to At another level, however, one can M bout fighting for "the people." better than the average median income, hardly excuse the candidates. Thxas Gov. George W. Bush says he will while whites hugged the national line. the White House. Understanding who "the people" are leave no child behind and will end what These are most obviously the people may be a Rorschach test of American he has termed the education recession of the country - rural whites, urban shift manager, the childcare provider.or social thought, but it is unfeeling and in the midst of economic progress. Vice blacks and Latinos. A call to the people the overworked spouse. For these men immoral not to include the needs of the President (and newly anointed frontrun­ should be a promise to these economi­ and women, undecided does not only nation's poorest in your plans. Policies ner) AI Gore has laid his claim to repre­ cally, socially and culturally marginal­ describe their status on who to vote for that could help those at the margin sent "the people, not the powerful." And ized Americans that the candidate will - it describes their feelings on whether include a rise in the minimum wage to ever-fading into the obscurity of low bring them along on the trip to the voting is worth their time at all. a livable standard; guarantees of safety polling percentages, presidential hope­ White House. 'Ibday, there are 33 million votes up for their children and of a quality educa­ fuls Patrick J. Buchanan and Ralph If a claim for the support of the peo­ for grabs - and no one is paying any tion; a reform of the penal system and Nader claim that only their stands can ple is anything more than rhetoric, it attention. its rehabilitation programs; and support represent Americans in the face of the can be a gutsy one. Because these peo­ Despite positioning themselves as for families, whether in helping them Republicrat system. ple are not those suburban independent men of"the people," Bush and Gore are retain a family farm or reunite with rel­ Yet who are "the people?" And do they voters, whom the campaigns are wooing ignoring the poor in favor of the shop­ atives wishing to immigrate here. - vote? somewhere between the private school pers at the suburban strip malls where Sure, the people to whom the candi­ On Tuesday, the U.S. Census Bureau door, the movie theater and the gas they work and the commuters at the dates talk, who opine on private invest­ released its numbers on income and tank of the SUV These people are more rail station where they make change. ment of Social Security funds and con­ poverty for 1999, which showed a medi­ likely to be the ones pumping that gas, At one level, you can hardly blame sider taking public funds to pay the an household income of $40,816 and an taking the ticket or mopping the school­ the major party candidates. The shop­ local private school tuition, will vote in 11.8 percent poverty rate- the lowest room floor. pers, the commuters, the high-tech November and will likely decide the numbers since before the recession of These are people who may not appear employees and yes, the soccer moms­ contest's outcome. But wouldn't we be the early 1990s. Good figures, and in the polls as likely to vote because the they are registered voters, likely to vote prouder as a nation if the people who important affirmation of the strong five minutes of civic duty may be five but unsure for whom. They may be fick­ languish at the base of our society economy's ability to reach deep into the free minutes too many to ask of the le, but they have influence too; not quite would be the focus of such attention?

video three times now, however, sons, not the least of which has When Rage's debut album Machine, Michael Moore, Ralph Nader and I wouldn't hesitate to say been the band's audience. We came out, it didn't sell anywhere Nader, George W. Bush or AI continued from page 5 that it is hands-down the best all know the frat-boy Rage fan near the numbers of "Battle Of GDre have to say, you owe it to video I have ever seen. who loves to head-bang his way Los Angeles," and you can rest the country that you will inhab­ According to Rage's official Web Politically meaningful as well through "Guerrilla Radio" with assured that Sony was leaning it for the next four years to site, www.ratm.com, the video as technically flawless, the his Gap shorts on. on the band pretty hard to tem­ check out this video on the recently just fell short of mak­ satirical images in ''Testify" But on the other hand, Rage per its liberal politics. Rage Web site and find out ing it into the top 10, and a few actually enhance the lyrics' has done a lot to further the Rage didn't let it affect the what it has to say. more votes could push it over message, making the song even causes the band believes in by band, and now despite the fact If nothing else, one viewing of the edge. more powerful than it was to lending both its name and its that Rage is one of the biggest ''Testify" makes it clear Rage is I was not a Nader supporter begin with. finances. Bottom line, I will bands in the world, it continues refusing to participate in the before I saw this video. I wasn't It is, of course, very left-wing, support any group that can con­ to break all the music industry's two-party system anymore, particularly interested in any of since Rage's politics have tinue to speak its mind, despite rules by standing up and con­ with its soft money donations, the candidates since Bill always leaned toward the radi­ the pressure that Sony - tinuing to say what the band blatant pandering to religious Bradley was about as close to a cal. I have always been a little Rage's record label - undoubt­ believes. groups and unadventurous candidate as I felt I could have bothered by Rage Against the edly would have put on the So whether you believe in platforms. And after seeing this supported. I have seen the Machine for a number of rea- band to conform. what Rage Against the video, so am I.

E L L E LJ E

l\low hiring prof'e!i!iional!i wit:h a degree in all rnajor!i t:o work in our growing, luxuriou!i healt:h club.

Pro is current:ly in t:he midst: of an expansion. By t:he • Per!ional Trainer!i year i!!001., we will be doubled in size which will make us • Manager!i t:he single largest: healt:h club facilit:y in t:he Nort:hwest:. • !iale!i/Market:ing • l:u!it:omer !iervice PRO offers compet:it:ive wages and excellent: benefit:s • l:u!it:odial including a FREE HEALH CLUB MEMBER§HIP! Great: • !ihuttle Drivers working environment: wit:h room for growt:h and advancement:. Vi!ii~ www.proclub.corn/job!i.h~rn • l:ook!i or call4i!5-B61-6i!Di! for more info ~n how t:o become • Di!ihWa!iher!i a part: of our dynamic t:eam. • l:a!ihier!i • 4455 t4B~h Avenue I\IE Bellevue, WA gaoo7 • C~me !it;!l! U!i at: t:he .Job Fair on Tue!iday, Oct:ober 3. THE DAILY EVERGREEN Audible: "There's nothing better than baseball in October." -Mariners fan Steve Specht Monday, OctoberPORTS 2, 2000 Page 7

THE OLYMPICS SIDELINE Tennis team excels during 4; ~~~~~ wil!~ h~!~~~! WSUAT planned-much to Baba set a world-record pace with singles play The eighth Olympic medalist in Lagat's liking. an opening lap time of 54 seconds. THE WSU history almost won it all Friday El Guerrouj But he couldn't hold pace for the next PROVO, Utah - WSU fresh­ OLYMPICS night in Sydney. relied on his fellow lap, nor the race, a!! he finished last. man Anna Dybicz lost only eight Bernard Lagat, running for Kenya, c o u n t r y m a n , So, El Guerrouj set the pace after games in eight sets during three TRACK placed third in the 1,500 meters. Youssef Baba, to BOOm - and the race was on. days to win the BYU Invitational Columnist His time of 3 minutes, 32.44 sec­ set a quick pace- Ngenyi and Lagat were behind El Saturday. looks at onds was just 37-hundredths of a sec­ the kind of pace El Guerrouj, before they closed the gap Senior Moniek Van de Ven also ond behind fellow countryman, Noah Guerrouj thrives down the final homestretch. won her flight in singles play. 'disabled' Ngenyi, the gold-medal winner. on. ''The two Kenyans moved to the Van de Ven beat BYU 's Elyse athlete Ngenyi's time of 3:32.07 broke La gat James Li, WSU outside," Li said. "You could tell they Jensen 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 in flight four. page 8 Sebastian Coe's Olympic-record time Cross Country were getting ready to pass." Dybicz earned the flight three title ROUNDUP of 3:32.53, set in 1984 in Los Angeles. coach and Lagat's Ngenyi won by one-quarter of a sec- with a 6-2, 6-3 victory over World record holder Hicham El former coach, said he understood the ond, while Lagat almost nipped El Lindsay Ferrell of BYU . Games Guerrouj, of Morocco, finished second consequences of a fast pace for the Guerrouj at the finish line. The man Senior Erica Perkins finished finish on with a time of 3:32.32. He was pre­ rest of the field. that had not lost a 1,500-meter race third in flight one with a 7-5, 6-3 high note dicted to win the event and possibly "If the pace was fast, only two men in more than three years was outrun win over Renata Stoop of Boise better his time of 3:26.00. However, (in the world), besides El Guerrouj, pageS State. the race did not turn out as El could keep up with the pace - Noah See Brouze, page 8 Freshman Zorana Roganovic won the flight three consolation championship with a 6-2, 6-3 win over Claudia Oropeza of Weber State. The Cougars mrssed out on a wsu doubles title in flight two as Dybrcz and Roganovrc lost 4-8 to BYU 's Ferrell and Lu Oswald in the champronship match. golden on WSU will play host to the Ninth Annual Cougar Classic Oct. 6-7. f ROM S~AFF AND WIRE REPORT'> M's clinch wild the road card with 5-2 Team gets first Pac-10 road win over Angels win since 1997 Apple Cup ANAHEIM, Calif. -The Seattle AL-WSU BY From staff and wire Mariners clinched the AL wrld THE UMBER reports card spot and closed out Cleveland from the playoffs, get­ It was an incompletion. ting home runs from Alex but an incompletion that Rodriguez and Davrd Bell to beat possibly saved a season and Anaheim 5-2 Sunday. restored confidence to a unit Seattle set a team record for that had been earching for wins. gorng 91-71 and finishrng a it the past week. half-game behind AL West cham­ CA YA!!Il When California quarter­ pion Oakland. 238 yards back Kyle Boller threw an The Manners got strong pitch­ incomplete pass on fourth­ ing from starter Aaron Sele, reliev­ *IJ s 279 yards and-11 from WSU's 12-yru·d­ er Arthur Rhodes (5-8) and line with :3:19 to play, it not Kazuhiro Sasaki. WSU R only secured WSU's 21-17 Sasaki got his 37th save, YAR DS win, it restored faith in a breaking the major league record 41 yards defense that for the past for a rookie. set by Todd Worrell week had been as cruti­ for St. Louis in 1986. CAL RUSIIING nized a · much as any presi­ Seattle's Raul Ibanez chipped YAA S dential candidate. rn w1th a two-run double in a 149 yards three-run seventh Inning as the The win evened WSU' WSU YARDS record at 2-2 overall. and Mariners snapped a 2-2 tie. Bell ! ... led off with his 11th homer, hittmg most importantly, at 1-1 in reliever Shigetoshi Hasegawa's 1.1 yards the Pac-10. first pitch. CA y R s Cal, meanwhile, is now in THE ASSOCIATED PRE SS F A 5 A's earn first 3.2 yards See Cal, page 12 playoff game CAREY WAGNER/THE DAILY CALIFORNIAN Left: Members of the WSU defense bring since 1992 down Cal running back Joe lgber OAKLAND, Calif. Tim SoccER Hudson eamed hrs 20th victory and the Oakland Athletics clinched the AL West by beating Texas 3-0 Sunday for their first playoff appearance since 1992. Ramon Hernandez broke up a By Jeff Chrapczynski post, spun around her defender and hit a scoreless game in the seventh rocket into the top of the net from 30 feet inning with an RBI double, and Randy In its final weekend of soccer before out. Velarde and Olmedo Saenz each hit the Pac-10 season begins, the WSU "She is incredibly dangerous with the solo home runs in the eighth. women's soccer team continued to ball," Montana Coach Betsy Duerksen Hudson (20-6) gave up four improve and impress. said. 'We knew that coming in. You can't hits in eight scoreless innings The Cougars added two more victories give her a second with the ball because and struck out 10. to their record-breaking season with a she is deadly. That first shot was a rip. Jason lsringhausen pitched a close win against the University of We knew it was coming, yet she hit it so scoreless ninth, work1ng arou_nd Montana on Friday and a blow-out victo­ fast our goalkeeper was late." two hits. for his 33rd save. ry against the University of Las Vegas­ The goal in the 21st minute was With two outs 1n the bottom of Nevada on Sunday. DeWitt's first touch of the game. the seventh. Jeremy Giambi dou­ WSU now is 8-2, "I just struck it through and I knew bled and the sellout crowd start­ eclipsing its previous once it left my foot, it was going in," ed to buu: Then Hernandez dou­ Montana 2 best start of 5-3. DeWitt said. "I don't know why, but there bled off Ryan Glynn {6-6). wsu 4 WSU senior Deka has only been a couple times I've hit balb Velarde hit h1s home run to DeWitt was t.he like that where I knew it wa~ going." deep cente field in the e1ghth deciding factor m the The shot ih'llited the fru1. and helped tnnlng. An out later, P''1Ch-hitter Montana game. the Cougar· regain momentum. JEFF WHITNEY/DAILY EVERGREEN Saenz also homered. Down 1-0 against L\Iontana. DeWitt WSU forward Katrina Stroh, right, dribbles ThE ASSilCtA•Eo PRro;.-; recei\'ed a pass \\;th her back to the goal- Sl'e Sweep, pase 12 around a Montana defender Friday. 8 THE DAILY EVERGREEN MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 SPORTS OLYMPICS OLYMPICS Grace and disgrace: Blind distance runner redefines 'disabled' arla Runyan a different way. the story of Sydney can't see any- ·Why shouldn't someone in a thing but shad- wheelchair compete against Tile Associated Press Australia was fourth, with 58. Md Jones or Greene? They would- ows an vague shapes. n't have an advantage; SYDNEY, Australia -The Sydney Games bid BOXING: The women she runs instead of spending years farewell to the world SWlday in an Aussie-sized against are streaks of training their legs to break extravaganza of exuberance, sparkling the skies The U.S. boxing team, which arrived in Sydney hoping to reverse its recent Olympic for­ light around her. world records, they've trained and rocking Olympic Stadium in a closing cere­ Yet she placed eighth in the their arms to act in place of mony bursting with the exhilaration of the land tunes, wound up without a single gold medal for the first time since London in 1948. final of the women's 1,500. their legs. they call Oz. meters in the Olympics. The Olympic creed is But before the party, there were a few final U.S. boxers Ricardo Juarez and Ricardo Williams each won silver medals. She rede- "Faster, Higher, Stronger," not stars. fined what a "Faster, Higher, Stronger for Gezahgne Abera of Ethiopia won· the Sydney disability is all of those people who were Olympics' final event - the 26.2-mile marathon WRESniNG: Disaster struck quickly with four straight loss­ by just mak- born with everything in the - striding into the stadium just a few hours ing the U.S. proper working order." before it was taken over by the robots on stilts, es Sunday, dashing any hopes of a U.S. gold - the first time that's happened since Mexico City Olympic Men and women with dis- the J!rankenstein kangaroo and the giant shrimp Track and abilities who happen to com- on btcycles that helped Sydney cap its games. in 1968. On Saturday, U.S. wrestlers Brandon Slay and Field team. pete in a sport should no The U.S. "Dream Team" survived another bad Webster longer be shoved to the fore- dream to capture the gold in an 85-75 victory over Sammie Henson won silver after tough defeats in the finals. needs to put front of the "feel-good" news France - two days after beating Lithuania by a new spot just to show how much the just two points. MARATHON: Jolene in the dictio- world loves its "superheroes." Emily deRiel of Haverford, Pa., stunned even nary for her, Sport is not a "touchy-feely" herself by winning the silver medal in the first Abera, 22, the l'Wlller-up this year in the clos­ est Boston Marathon ever, captured the gold Crancer because the way oflife, it's tough. Athletes Olympic women's modem pentathlon. "I don't Commentary whole defini- who have disabilities should know how it happened. I really don't," said ahead of Eric Wainaina of Kenya and Tesfaye 'Ibla of Ethiopia. - - tion of dis- not be seen as the "feel-good deRiel, who started competing at the interna­ ability has changed after she side of sports," they should be tional level only this year. It marked the first marathon medal for Ethiopia since a bronze in 1972. ran in the final of the 1,500 seen as athletes. By the day's end, there was only celebration as meters. Paralympians live by the Juan Antonio Samaranch, president of the Abera fought a strong headwind to win in 2 hours, 10 minutes and 11 seconds. Runyan is the first competi- same idea as Olympians; they International Olympic Committee, gave the tens tor in history to make the want to win, not just try to of thousands packed into Olympic Stadium the DRUGS: switch from the Paralympics to win. words they wanted to hear: the Olympics. The change Athletes with disabilities are The Sydney Games' last day started with an "I am proud and happy to proclaim that you might be a little difficult at not superheroes because they have presented to the world the best Olympic all-too-familiar refrain: three Olympians, one a first - she went from five overcome their disabilities. Games ever." bronze medalist, busted for steroids. medals in the 1996 They're superheroes because ~enian lifter Ashot Danielyan was stripped And what Down Under Olympic closing cere­ Paralympics to eighth place - they overcome a stereotype, of his medal after a positive test for the steroid mony could be complete without one last rendition but it's a needed change. which is twice as hard. of the cheer now known around the world (though nandrolone, becoming the fourth weightlifter to test positive in the Summer Games. The world needs to see that All those athletes who have not usually in Sarnaranch's Spanish accent): people with disabilities can disabilities have to fight a "Aussie, Aussie, Aussie!" chanted the SO-year­ WATER POLO: compete with the rest of the stereotype: ''They need help old IOC chief. world on the same scale. with everything, so they obvi- "Oi! Oi! Oi!" thundered the crowd. A 10-8 loss to Italy left the U.S. squad with a This year's Paralympics will ously are just playing, not real- The United States led the way in the final sixth-place finish in Sydney- one spot up from be the largest ever, but will ly competing." medal tally, collecting 97 (39 gold, 25 silver and 1996, but still a disappointment. The United anyone know about them? Marla Runyan did just that. 33 bronze). Russia was second with 88 (32, 28 States finished with a record of2-5-1 in the com­ Not really, because there Let's see who does it in and 28), and China third with 59 (28, 16, 15). petition.. isn't a Marion Jones or a Athens- the more the better. Maurice Greene to admire. Webster may have to write a There are only athletes who whole new dictionary for the have no recognition or real word "disabled" alone. respect on the world stage. From a disabled athlete in They can compete on the same training to Marla RWlyan: level as Jones or Green, but in--- Thank you. Bronze continued from page 7

by one Kenyan, and almost ing, 1956) and Gabriel Tiacoh another. (Ivory Coast, silver, track and "We've been working for this field, 1984). moment," Lagat told the At WSU, Lagat was the 1999 Philadelphia Inquirer. "We work NCAA indoor champion in the together to share this victory for mile and 3,000 meters. He also Kenya. We picked up the pace was the 1999 NCAA 5,000- and that was not good for (El meter champion. Guerrouj). He had a lot of pres­ Lagat was the NCAA Indoor sure on him coming into this." Track and Field Male Athlete of ''The bronze is nothing to be the Year and the Pac-10 Men's ashamed of," Li said. "He's Track and Field Athlete of the every bit as good as any other Year that year. guy." He has exhausted his NCAA "It's an outstanding perfor­ eligibility. mance - racing with the Lagat will compete in the fastest guys ever," said Rick last sanctioned 1,500-meter Sloan, Lagat's former WSU race of the year - the track and field coach. "It could­ International Amateur n't happen to a nicer guy." Athletics Federation Grand Lagat joined Mike Kinkade, Prix Final - Oct. 5. gold medalist in baseball, as Li said Lagat then will WSU's medalists this year. return to Kenya, before return­ Joining them as WSU's other ing to Pullman around Nov. 1. You're About to Meet Your Match Olympic medalists are Paul Sloan said Lagat will contin­ Enquist (USA, gold, rowing, ue training in Pullman for the ARAMARii is a global leader in _food and support services for schools, hospitals ad businesses with over 500,000 locations 1984), Peter Koech (Kenya, sil­ World Indoor Championships around the globe, and we contmue to grow aggressively, creating plentiful career opportunities. So put what you've 1 d 1 Washington State University to work with ARAMARii Uniform Services, the nation's top garment and textile rental co earne a ver, track and field, 1988), next year. We pr~vide uniforms an_d career_ a.pparel products to businesses across the U.S., and we're looking for knowledgea~~~ny. Julius Korir (Kenya, gold, track Lagat also will be completing dynamtc people who bnng creativity to everythmg they do. Come join us :o explore opportunities at the ... and field, 1984), Kristi Norelius course work in management (USA, gold rowing, 1984), Pete information systems and deci­ Career Expo of the Palouse ARAMARK Information Session Rademacher (USA, gold, box- sion sciences at WSU. Tuesday, October 3, 2000 Wednesday, October 4, 2000 University of Idaho Campus CUB Rooms 208-216 Kibble Dome, 9am-3:30pm 7:00pm-9:00pm ARAMARK team members enjoy: • A World Class Management Training Program • Competitive Salaries • Medical Dental and Vision Insurance Options • Retirement Investment Opportunities Including 401(k) • Professionai Development • UNLIMITED Room for Advancement and Growth

If you can no~ attend, please send your resume to: Human Resources, ARAMARK Corporation, 11 o1 ~larket Street, Philade~hta, ~A 19107. ARAMARK is an Equal Opportunity Employer. KARM«RK- N 0 L I M I T S. SPORTS MONDAY. OCTOBER 2, 2000 THE DAILY EVERGREEN 9 CROSS COUNTRY Gilmore does more for WSU By Darren A. Fessenden Assistant Coach Rick Sloan said. "This week she challenged herself to another level and keeps per- The WSU women moved up two places, while forming better." . . . . the men dropped two places from last year at the Alishia Booterbaugh firushed th1rd With a time Big Cross Invitational in Pasco Saturday. of 18:45 37 seconds better than last year's time. Ryan Gilmore placed second in the 5,000 "She did a great job in finishing third," Sloan meters to lead the WSU women's second-place said. "She's gaining confidence with every race." finish. Megan Maynard was WSU's third-~st ~er Her time of 18 minutes, 18 seconds bettered for the third consecutive week, after wmrung the her time last year by more than one-and-a-half first two meets of the season. minutes. Gilmore finished as WSU's top runner Her time, 18:55, was more than five seconds for the third consecutive week. "She's gaining confidence with every race," See Gilmore, page 11

BEN EVERGREEN A WSU player serves against Arizona State University as setter Kali Surplus looks on. ASU beat WSU 3-0 in Bohler Gym Sept. 23. LaToya Harris sparks win over Huskies From staff and wire reports "I had to keep a clear VPLAC's 2000.-2001 Series The WSU volleyball team mind and play like I Future Visions: took care of business on Friday know how. Since it was in beating the University of Art as a Way of Looking at Looking at the Future Washington 3-0 for its first Pac- Washington­ 10 victory. Washington State, it http://cub. wsu.edu/VPLAC T h e pumped me up a little WS U 3 Cougars are ~-=---1----'-- now 1-4 in more than usual." UW 0 Pac-10 play and 10-4 on laToya Harris the season. WSU volleyball player The Huskies dropped to 4-8 overall and 0-5 in the Pac-10, three aces and 10 digs. including losses in all three "I had to keep a clear mind home games. and play like I know how," The Cougars broke open the La'Ibya Harris said. "Since it first game 6-1 and did not look was Washington-Washington back in taking the game 15-2. State, it pumped me up a little La'Ibya Harris had six kills more than usual." in eight attacks in leading the Cougars who joined La'Ibya Cougars to a .500 attack per­ Harris in double digits included centage in the first game, while Schafer, with 16 kills and a .467 the Huskies only managed a attack percentage; Holly .057 attack percentage. Harris, with 11 kills; and The Huskies battled with the Bautre, who had 12 kills and 11 Cougars to a 7-7 tie in game digs starting in place of Adrian two before the Cougars scored Hankoff. eight straight points to put the Setter Kali Surplus added 58 game away 15-7. assists for the Cougars. La1bya Harris racked up Underhill led the Huskies with eight more kills in the game as 17 kills, followed by senior Emily the Cougars continued their Seacat with 10 kills. Allison good hitting with a .488 attack Richardson had eight kills and 10 percentage for the game. digs. Gretchen Maurer and Britni The Cougars found them­ Churnside combined for 46 selves down 5-6 in the third game assists for the Huskies. before scoring seven of eight "There's no better feeling in points to take the lead 12-7. the world than to be able to sing LaToya Harris' second hit­ the Cougar fight song in the ting error in the match and UW Husky gymnasium when you junior Lisa Underhill's kill finish with probably just as made it 12-9. Two kills from many fans there as they did," Chelsie Schafer made it 13-9 for Cougar Coach Cindy Fredrick the Cougars before UW came said in a press release. "The back to tie it at 13-13. kids carne out to take care of A hitting error by Underhill business tonight and that's brought up match point, and a exactly what they did." block by Zanda Bautre and Holly 'We needed to play as a team," Harris sealed the game and the La'Ibya Harris said. "Now that match for the CougaiQ, 15-13. we have our win and our The Cougars finished the momentum is up, we11 be able to game with a .422 attack per­ take on Stanford and Cal." centage, their second-highest WSU travels to California mark of the season. The this weekend to take on Huskies hit only .244. Stanford University on Friday LaToya Harris finished the and the University of match with a season-high 21 California-Berkeley on kills, a .704 attack percentage, Saturday. 10 THE DAILY EVERGREEN MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 SPORTS p A c 1 0 R 0 u N D u p Beavers break 26-year streak Tile Associated Press CORVALLIS, Ore. - Ken Simonton ran for a career-high 234 yards and three touch­ downs as Oregon State University beat No. 8 University of Southern California 31-21 on Saturday to end its 26-game losing streak to the Thojans. Simonton, who had 37 car­ ries, scored on a 2-yard run with 11:14 left to give OSU a 21-14lead. USC had a 49-yard pass negated by an illegal procedure penalty and was forced to punt, with T.J. Houshmandzadeh returning the ball 36 yards to the Trojans' 27. Ryan Cesca then connected on his first field-goal attempt of the year, a 41-yarder that made it 24-14 with 8:04 left. USC closed to 24-21 after OSU's punter bobbled the ball and had to fall on it on the Beavers' 12. USC completed an 11-yard pass to Malaefou Mackenzie and a 1-yard TD pass to Chad Pierson to bring the FILE PHOTO/DAILY EVERGREEN Trojans within three with Oregon State Uni~ersity running back Ken Simonton, right, celebrates after scoring one of his two against WSU 2:16 left. Oct. 30, 1999. Simonton had 234 yards and three touchdowns Saturday to lead OSU to its first win over USC in 26 years. With the Beavers trying to run out the clock, Simonton PAc-10 STANDINGS OTHER PAc-10 SCORES bolted downfield for a 36-yard League Overall TD run that made it 31-21 with 1:36left. Team W L W L Oregon tops Huskies at home The clock was still ticking Oregon 2 0 4 1 Oregon 23, Washington 16 down its final seconds when we need to, and a score when "We spotted them 21 osu 1 0 4 0 EUGENE, Ore. -Call it the we need to." orange-and-black clad Beavers It's also a statistic that has points. Ifwe hadn't fans rushed onto the field - Arizona 1 0 3 1 11-minute victory margin. hugging each other, mobbing Oregon quarterback Joey predicted just about every game turned it over, it would UCLA 1 1 4 1 for Washington (3-1, 0-1 Pac-10) the players and jumping up Harrington kept the ball 11:04 which led the Pac-10 in ball have been one heck ofa and down. Stanford 1 1 2 2 longer than Washington's Oregon State's Jonathan Marques Thiasosopo to lead the control last season with an football game. As it was, wsu 1 1 2 2 average of 32:57. The Huskies Smith completed 10 of 29 pass­ No. 20 Duck to a 23-16 victory won all six games when they it got pretty exciting at es for 157 yards and one touch­ uw 0 1 3 1 over the No.6 Huskies. ASU 0 1 3 1 "It gave us confidence," had the ball longer than an the end." down. opponent last year, and lost five Palmer was 19-of-38 for 282 Harrington said of the differ­ usc 0 1 3 1 ence in possession times. ''We've of the six games they didn't. Bob Toledo yards, two touchdowns and Thiasosopo blamed himself for three . Cal 0 1 1 3 been able to get a drive when UCLA football coach not moving the ball in the first half against Oregon, leaving the Cory Paus threw two scoring Huskies trailing 17-3 at halftime. passes to Freddie Mitchell in a "We lost because of our ineffi­ 28-point third quarter as the ciency and ineffectiveness on Bruins rallied from a three­ offense in the first half," he said. deficit to beat the Oregon led all the way before a Sun Devils 38-31. home crowd of 46,153, the third­ ''Nice comeback, nice come­ largest ever at Autzen Stadium. back by our football team," UCLA coach Bob Toledo said. Arizona 27, Stanford 3 ''We spotted them 21 points. If STANFORD, Calif.- Clarence we hadn't turned it over, it Fanner ran for 116 yards and a would have been one heck of a touchdown, and Ort.ege Jenkins football game. As it was, it got passed for 198 yards and another pretty exciting at the end." soore as Arizona beat Stanford 27-3. Arizona State (3-1, 0-1 The Wildcats' three-back offense Pacific-10 Conference) had won of the Pt~fouse turned into a one-man show. five of the last six games Fanner, a freshman who had just between the teams, including 15 carries in Arizona's first three the last three, despite trailing games, battered Stanford's defen­ sive front on several long drives by 14, 21 and 17 points at half­ and scored early in the second time. This time, the Sun Devils quarter to help Arizona (3-1, 1-0 had the big halftime lead that Pac-10) to an easy victory in its didn't stand up. conference opener. "I want to compliment UCLA Jenkins completed 12 of 22 on the way they came back," passes in his best start since Arizona State coach Bruce taking over as Arizona's full­ Snyder said. "They're very tal­ U3 /Cilltllll 'DoNtll, 9:00A.M- :J::JOPM time starter after three years of ented. The third quarter was sharing time with Keith Smith. like an avalanche, and it was a h•• l'tM/illtiJ, hu day Way Meanwhile, redshirt freshman real tribute to UCLA." B~ts all lro~~t Sttllll~tllt Callow quarterback Chris Lewis' first Paus and Mitchell teamed up on an 80-yard pass play with •xtra tl~~t• eo~aslr~tdlo~aJ. Jl~ad yow dr•tlllt etv••r, ptvl-tl~~t• start for Stanford (2-2, 1-1) was a lot disaster as the defending Pac-10 1:31left in the third quarter to /ol, IHIMH8Aip 01 flad se•ool. HM•B BOIIt• ol •lftPioyMS: champs lost for just the second snap a 28-all tie and put the t•• time in 12 conference games. Bruins (4-1, 1-1) ahead for good. AFLAC Excel Corp Hummel Architects Lewis threw three wild "I felt like I had to change the Allegiance Telecom Family Hosp Corp Hyatt Hotels incompletions before Alex LWla momentum of the game," said intercepted his fourth pass of Mitchell, who caught four passes Am Microsystems First Western Hotels Majiq, Inc the game and returned it to the for 125 yards. "I told Cory to throw ARAMARK The Gap Microsoft Stanford 22, setting up Sean me the ball, because I saw the AT&T General Construction Motorola Keel's 33-yard field goal. safeties were biting on the runs." The Bruins played a miser­ Battelle Gov's Internship Prog Pro Sports Club UCLA 38, Arizona State 31 · able first half, committing four Boeing Hastings SAFECO PASADENA, Calif. -UCLA turnovers and failing on a fake let substantial leads slip away punt to help Arizona State take to Arizona State in each of their a 21-0 lead. In addition, they -. three previous games. lost leading rusher DeShaun This time, the No. 15 Bruins Foster in the second quarter used a second-half comeback to with a broken right hand. win. THE ASSOC IATED PRESS .SPORTS MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 THE DAILY EVERGREEN 11 R 0 u N D u p Oregon State enters the AP top "No doubt our defense gives us a "It seemed like every time I cut back 25 for first time since 1969 Jot of at-bats. We misfired and there was someone there to hit me. But The Associated Press "It just gives them misfired and then bam. al some point you have to think about There's a new No. 1 in town more fuel for the fire. and it's Florida State, the we hit. .. winning the game, not stopping one guy. .. defending national champions. Playing down at their The Seminoles returned to place is always tough, Tommy Bowden LaDainian Tomlinson the top spot in The Associated Clemson University football coach Texas Christian University running back Press 'Ibp 25 poll Sunday even and this will give them though former No. 1 Nebraska extra incentive. But our remained unbeaten with a 42- goal is to end up No. 1." ''Mississippi State ought to be ··t won't say fm unstoppable. I will 14 win against Missouri. Florida State (5-0), which Bobby Bowden embarrassed teanng down t~?e say in the opet~ field - tl's not being became the first team to go wire-to-wire in the poll last sea­ Florida State University goal posts after beatmg arrogant- but I don It feel/ can be son, moved well ahead of football coach this team·· tackled one on one." Nebraska (4-0) following ballot­ ing by the 71 sports writers and after a 16-15 win over Steve Spurrier Woodrow Danzler broadcasters on the AP panel. Minnesota (Nebraska took University of Florida football coach Clemson University quarterback The Seminoles collected 42 over). Michigan won the AP first-place votes and 1,745 national title in '97. points, while the Cornhuskers In 1994, Nebraska won a State. had 28 first-place votes and national title after it moved into How last week's top 25 fared 1,731 points after a third con­ No. 18 Michigan State (3-1) lost to the No. 1 spot late in the season No.1 Nebraska (4-0) beat Missouri Wisconsin 13-10. Next: at No. 22 Northwestern 3 7-17. Next at Iowa. secutive harder-than-expected when Penn State fell to No. 2 victory. Florida State defeated 42-24. Next at Iowa State. Purdue. No.19 Aubum (5-0) beat Vanderbilt despite beating Indiana 35-29. No. 2 Aorlda State (5-0) beat No.10 Miami (3-1) beat Rutgers 64-6. 33-0. Next at Mississippi State. Maryland 59-7 last Thursday "It doesn't mean a thing at night. Maryland 59-7. Thursday. Next at No. Next vs. No. 2 Rorida State. No. 20 O~n (4-1) beat No.6 this time," Florida State coach 10 Miami. No. 11 Tennessee (2-2) lost to LSU Washington 23-16. Next: at No.8 Last week, Nebraska had 39 Bobby Bowden said Sunday. first-place votes and 1,743 No.3 Aorida (4-1) lostto Mississippi 38-31, Ot Next at No. 25 Georgia. Southern Cal, Oct 14. "Especially when we're going State 47-35. Next vs. LSU. No.12 Ohio State (4-0) did not play. No. 21 Southem Mississippi (3-1) points to Florida State's 30 to a place like Miami this first-place votes and 1, 732 No. 4 Virginia Tech (4-0) beat Boston Next at No. 17 Wisconsin. beat Memphis 24-3. Next: vs. South week. It just gives them more College 48-34. Next: vs. Temple. No. 13 Texas (3-1) beat Oklahoma Rorida. · points. In the new poll, Florida fuel for the fire. Playing down No. 5 Kansas State (5-0) beat State 42-7. Next vs. No.14 Oklahoma. No. 22 Purdue (3-2) lost to Penn State State gained 12 first-place at their place is always tough, Colorado 44-21. Next: at Kansas. No. 14 Oklahoma (4-0) beat Kansas 22-20. Next vs. No.9 Michig:m. votes; Nebraska lost 11 first­ and this will give them extra No. 6 washington (3-1) lost to No. 20 34-16. Next vs. No. 13 Texas. No. 23 South Carolina (4-1) lost to place votes. incentive. But our goal is to Oregon 23-16. Next vs. Oregon State. No.15 UClA (4-1) beat Arizona State Alabama 27-17. Next at Kentucky. In addition, Oregon State end up No. 1." No.1 Clemson (5-0) beat Duke 52-22. 38-31. Next at California, Oct 14. No. 241111nois (3-2) lost to Minnesota moved into the AP poll for the Texas was No. 11, followed by Next: vs. North Carolina State. No. 16 TCU (4-0) beat Navy 24-0. 44-10. Next: vs. Iowa, Oct. 14. first time since ·Jan. 4, 1969. Florida, Washington, TCU, The Beavers (4-0), who beat No.8 Southem Cal (3-1) lost to Next at Hawaii. No. 25 Georgia (3-1) beat Arkansas Auburn, UCLA, Southern Oregon State 31-21. Next: vs.Arizona. No.17 Wisconsin (3-2) lost to No.9 USC 31-21 for their first win Mississippi, USC, Georgia and 38-7. Next: vs. No. 11 Tennessee. over the Trojans after 26 con­ No.9 Michigan (4-1) beat No. 17 Michigan 13-10. Next vs. No. 12 Ohio THE ASSOCIATED PRESS No. 20 Mississippi State. USC secutive losses in a 33-year dropped 10 places after its loss span, are ranked No. 23. to Oregon State. e love yo\J, Y The top 25 underwent a top­ to-bottom shakeup as nine Tennessee, a 38-31 overtime 0 teams ranked last week were loser at LSU, was No. 21 - \J beaten - seven by unranked down 10 places - folJowed by r' teams. Northwestern, Oregon State, ~~ VIrginia Tech (4-0 ), a 48-34 Wisconsin and No. 25 Notre Dame. ;; winner at Boston College, I moved up to No. 3, replacing Michigan moved up three Florida, a 4 7-35 loser to spots to No.6 with a 13-10 win Mississippi State. The Gators over Wisconsin (3-2), which fell (4-1) tumbled to No. 12. seven places to No. 24; and e Kan as State (5-0) moved up Oregon jumped 11 spots to No. r' 9 with its 23-16 win over a spot to No. 4 after a 44-21 win ;> at Colorado, followed by Washington (3-1) , which felJ Clemson, Michigan, Miami, seven places to No. 13. Ohio State, Oregon and No. 10 Northwestern, a 37-17 win­ Oklahoma. Kansas State ner over Michigan State, received one first-place vote. returned to the Thp 25 for the It's rare for a No. 1 team to first time since early in the Palouse Optieal fall after winning. The last time 1997 season. it happened was 1997, when Dropping out of the poll this Many new materials, designs and lens treatment are availabl~ that didn't Penn State dropped from the week were Illinois, Michigan top spot twice, once after a 57- State, Purdue and South exist a year or two ago. We will help you select lenses that will be exactly 21 win against Louisville Carolina (4-1), which lost at right for the way you use your eyes. (Florida took over), and again Alabama, 27-17. • Polarized • Exciting sunglasses with a time of 17:48. that eliminate reflective glare. Gilmore Oscar Franco-Parra placed continued from page 9 third in the 8,000, helping the • Polyea••bonate • Impact resistant, men place third. light and comfortable. slower than last year's time. His time of 25:10 was more Her 12th-place finish was eight than two minutes faster than spots below her finish last year. his time last year and he • Pro~•·es_s~ve • ~odern lenses that "She got stuck in the back improved ten places. Franco­ provide Clear VISIOn at all distances. and worked her way up," Coach Parra suffered from mononu­ James Li said. "She had to clesis in last year's race. He led the WSU men for the • Sports • Special lens_ designs for the work so hard to catch up." visual needs of sports enthusiasts. Maynard has been focusing fifth consecutive week, despite on strength workouts and will suffering from the flu the past do more speed workouts this two weeks. • ~ompu~•· • ~pecial filters, tint month. Jon Welsh, in his third meet and anti-reflective coatmgs. "She definitely can do better, of the season, was ninth with a but he's doing fine," Li said. time of 25:42. Scott Johnson, "fm very confident she'll get lOth, was three seconds behind • Oeeupation~l • Designs t~ solve better." Welsh. visual and safety reqUirements on the JOb. Greta Johnson finished 18th, Sloan said he was happy • Lens Treatments • with a time of 19:13, in her first with Johnson's second meet of • Ultra Violet Prot~ction meet of the season. the season. "She was very good for some­ "He did a really great job - • Anti/reflective coatings one running their first race," Li working his way to the front • Scratch protective Coatings said. and racing," Sloan said. Johnson has been hampered Kyle Barker, 16th, and Jim • Designe•· F••ames • by a strain on the outside of her Neeway, 34th, were WSU's knee. other scorers. "She's still not 100 percent," The University of Sloan said. "But her knee didn"t Washington won the men's get worse during or after (the team title. race)." Lyle Weese of Montana State ~ E~~@,A Jenny Filipy, 28th, was University, won with a time of WSU's other scorer. 25:00. Appointments available with Michael C. Ford, M.D., Ophthalmologist The University of Idaho won WSU next competes Oct. 14 Next to Palouse Eye Center. the women's team title, finish­ at the Pre-NCAA Invitational ing one point ahead ofWSU. in Arne , Iowa, on the same 825 SE Bisltop Blvd #110 Sabrina Monro, from the course where the NCAA cham­ Univer ity of Montana, won pionships will be held Nov. 20. Pnllmatt: 332-4169 12 THE DAILY EVERGREEN MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 SPORTS quarterback Jason Gesser pleting 15 of 24 passes for 238 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Cal completed a 56-yard pass to yards. Williams had five recep­ continued from page 7 Marcus Williams and the tions for 90 yards. Milton Wynn Cougars proceeded to run out continued his recent solid play, Phillies send the midst of a three-game los­ the clock. with six receptions for 125 ing streak, dropping to 1-3 over­ But it was a Gesser to yards, all in the first half. all and 0-1 in the conference. It Williams connection in the California, meanwhile, was the Cougars' first Pac-10 third quarter that proved to be wasted yet another strong Francona packing road win since 1997. the game's biggest play. defensive showing. The Bears' Tile As3ociated Press "This has been a tremen­ allowed WSU only 41 yards Boller's incompletion on Three plays after WSU safe­ MIAMI - Philadelphia dously difficult time for all of fourth down came after Cal ty Erik Coleman blocked the rushing and 279 yards overall. Phillies manager Terry us," Wade said. "Those difficul­ Coach Tom Holmoe elected to second punt of the game for the The Cal offense, ninth in the Francona was fired Sunday ties are compounded when you go for the game-winning touch­ Cougars, Gesser lofted a ball Pac-10, continued to struggle. after a season in which his have to let good baseball people down, rather than kick a field from Cal's 12 into the comer of Boller was 11 of 31 passing for team finished last in its division and good friends go." goal to trim the WSU lead to the end zone to a leaping 89 yards with one touchdown and with the second-worst Francona managed the team one point. Williams. Williams appeared pass and an . record in the Nati9nal League. to a losing record in each of his four seasons in Philadelphia. The stand capped a solid to drop the pass as he hit the One bright spot for the The team scheduled a news defensive effort for the WSU conference before its season He had a 285-362 record enter­ ground. The officials ruled the Bears was the presence of a defense. A week earlier, in an play an incomplete pass, then finale against the Florida ing Sun,day's game. running game. The Bears Marlins. upset loss to Idaho, the reversed their decision and Also dj~ssed were four Cougars surrendered 462 gained 149 yards on the General manager Ed Wade coaches: hitting coach Hal yards of offense. Against the ruled it a touchdown, giving ground, led by Joe Igber's 74 informed Francona of the deci­ McRae, first base coach Brad Bears, WSU allowed 238 total WSU a 21-17 lead it never yards on 18 carries. Joseph sion Sunday. Francona was to Mills, pitching coach Galen Cisco yards. relinquished. Echema added 72 yards, also manage the closing game. and bench coach Chuck Cottier. On the next drive. WSU Gesser finished the day com- on 18 carries.

JEFF WHITNEY/DAILY EVERGREEN WSU midfielder Jessica Allen prepares to pass against Montana Friday. Allen scored her first goal of the season against Montana. Beth Childs. Sweep Childs' goa came from a cor­ continued from page 7 ner kick that curved inside the The los Angeles Police Department far post. "So far this season, that is Liz Duncan scored her first is Coming to Pullman, Washington one ofthe best college goals I've goal of the year to put the seen," WSU Coach Dan 'Ibbias Cougars up 3-0 and DeWitt said. "It was just a total individ­ added her third goal of the ual effort." weekend to give the Cougars Freshman Jessica Allen the 4-0 win. Saturday, October 7, 2000 scored the Cougars' second goal "I've been waiting," Duncan of the game, and her first of the said. "I've been really trying Washington State University season. the last couple weeks especial­ Montana came back to tie the ly, and people have been at Pullman game at two before DeWitt hit a telling me to just be patient Todd Building, Room 130 cross that Natalie Kehl finished and it will come, and finally it into the net. did." Pullman, Washington The assist by De Witt was The Cougars didn't practice on Saturday, choosing instead Co-sponsored by the Political Science & career No. 15, breaking the WSU record. to watch the tape of the Criminal Justice Program "I knew I had to pull it Montana game. because the keeper had been "It was important for every­ coming out," DeWitt said. "I one to watch and see how we can NO TESTING FEE was lucky to get there and then do some things better," 'Ibbias said. "'t was real helpful. We Begin the process to NO RESERVATIONS REQUIRED I got it across, and Natalie was there to finish it. It was awe- liked the result on Friday but I join the LAPD and think the play and performance Police Officer written test offered at: some." start a challenging DeWitt added a second goal was what we needed to pick up. 9:00 am and 1:00 pm to give WSU a 4-2 win. We cleaned up on a lot of things and rewarding career (Pollee Officer Written Test takes approx. 2 1/2 hours) The victory against we didn't do on Friday." as a police officer Minimum Reqirements: Montana, who beat WSU last Freshman goalkeeper Sara with the Los Angeles 112 year 4-0, was the second time Leibowitz started the game 20 years old; maximum age limit 34 years old WSU beat an opponent it lost to Sunday and recorded the Police Department. U.S. High School Diploma, GED, or CHSPE the previous year. shutout, because starter U.S. Citizen or have applied for citizenship "They had a great recruiting Lindsey Jorgensen received a No felony convictions class with Kim Morgan and concussion in the game against Rachel Rodrick," Duerksen Montana. Excellent health said. "They got those back The concussion was a result For information call: Benefits: defenders (freshmen Mariette of a collision between Full pay during Academy training, starting at Boyce and Shay Hobby), too. It Jorgensen and a Montana play­ {800) 954-0321 looks like Dan ('Ibbias) is doing er in the 78th minute. {323} 957-4529 $42,000+ per year a good job turning this program Jorgensen remained in the Family and domestic partner health & around." game. www.lapdonline.org dental coverage UNLV Pac-10 play begins this week­ Variety of assignments UN LV 0 didn't pose end in Pullman against the www.cityofla.orgfPERjpolyrecru.htm ---,s=-u=----1-- as much of a University of California­ Paid vacation, sick leave and holidays W 4 challenge for Berkeley Friday and Sunday wsu. against Stanford University, WSU scored twice in the first two of six Pac-10 teams ranked An Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer half on goals from Morgan and in the top 25. NEWS MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 THE DAILY EVERGREEN 1.3 want any candles to go unlit - walkers that the rain was a - NEWS BRIEFS------­ Walk they were someone's memory." small price to pay to participate continued from page 3 At 7 a.m., the walkers were in the cause. the city limits. rewarded for their hard work "I felt really good about doing Gas pipe leak The boy called just after 4 the darkness. with coffee, juice and bagels. this," said junior Callie forces evacuation p.m., refused to give his ''The luminary ceremony real­ They then continued their laps DeMeerleer, a nursing major. "It address and threatened to kill Pullman residents were ly makes you realize that these around the track. is amazing to see how many pe

YOU HAVE AMBitiONS, YOU LOVE TECHNOLOGY, YOU'RE A PROBLEM-SOLVER OF THE HIGHEST ORDER, LEAVING FRESH IDEAS IN YOUR WAKE.

>ENTRY-LEVEL IS PROFESSIONALS

You've taken on every challenge

college could throw at you, and

now you're ready for something

new. Good. At Airborne

Express, you'll get the opportu­

nity you're looking for. For the

first five months you are in our

fully paid Information Systems

Training Program that builds on

your college classes and experiences. The program includes Airborne business training,

structured programming, mainframe, distributed and PC technologies, and application

analysis design and development techniques. When completed you will work in a team as

a Programmer Analyst working with business users to analyze problems, develop solu­

tions and technically implement those solutions. If you liked your Systems Analysis and '\ Design courses and are looking for a career with serious impact, check out everything

that Airborne has to offer. And become a hero overnight.

Visit us at the Career Expo of the Palouse, Oct. 3rd, at the Kibbie Dome. Airborne will also be at the MIS. Club meeting on 10/2.

Sign up now with your career center for on-campus interviews 10/16 and 10/17! All posi­ tions are full-time salaried and located in Seattle, WA.

Questions? E-mail [email protected]. Equal Opportunity Employer. AIRBORNE EXPRESS~

iobs.airborne.com Overnight Heroes. 16 THE DAILY EVERGREEN MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 NEWS just plain odd ------Finger transplants make the hand perform about pulled on the cash machine - NASA and the National Park Police Chief Gary Wallace, fea­ as well as any other hand, he to no avail. Then he got back in Service - and received letters tured small red cherries. showing progress, said. The study was published his truck and rammed the store of l"efusal from both agencies Wallace apologized to village recently in The Journal of and the ATM. Still no luck. this summer. But they still board members after admitting doctor says Hand Surgery. He eventually threw up his hope the United Nations will the patches symbolized the Tire Associated Press Chung said the surgery is arms and walked out empty­ come through. police department's fame in preferable to prosthetics, which handed, leaving police with a A 1967 international treaty law-enforcement circles for ATLANTA - They aren't security tape. on outer space prevents making "cherry bombs," hard­ pretty, but Mark Pringle likes he said are cumbersome, lack "It was a comedy of errors," nations from ch~iming any core party treats made from his new fingers. At least he can sensation and require too much maintenance. Tendons, nerves, said Framingham Police Lt. part of the moon. But the maraschino cherries soaked in now play baseball with his tw.o 95 percent grain alcohol. boys. veins, arteries, bone and skin Louis Griffith. "This is one of U.N. Educational, Scientific from the foot are removed and those videotapes that will be and Cultural Organization, Wallace told the Belleville Pringle was born without on 'World's Dumbest News-Democrat the patches the three middle fingers on his reconnected to the hand. or UNESCO, could declare Chung said most patients Criminals.m the area a World Heritage did not represent the depart­ left hand, and last April he lost The store's alarm never ment condoning alcohol use, half of a finger in a table-saw don't like how the transplants Site. look, but they don't come to him went off; police believe the sus­ The need to protect the site is but rather were a unifYing accident. for that. pect managed to disable it. symbol. When other specialists said urgent, the students say, The department is known for "They come to me for func­ It wasn't clear if the man because lunar exploration by they could do nothing to help stole anything from the store. bringing the alcoholic snaclr..S to him, Pringle sought out Dr. tion," the surgeon said. "The other nations and corporations next step is learning how to Police are trying to digitally police events. "We go out of Kevin Chung, an innovator in may not be that far off. town to conferences and stuff make the toes look more like enhance the video to see if they "We think once people rec­ toe-finger transplants at the can identify him. - we have cherries," Wallace University of Michigan. Chung fingers. Hopefully, the field of ognize the site is threatened said. "We're known for this." tissue engineering will eventu­ The store reopened later - and that it's not protected transplanted two middle toes ally allow us to grow spare Friday, but customers had to to Pringle's hand. enter through the space where - they'll want to see it pro- Las Vegas taxis get parts that cosmetically tected and recognized nation­ "My wife always used to say enhance this procedure." the front window was before the gambling software that my toes were so long that man drove his vehicle into the ally and globally," Gibson The Associated Press I could wave with them. I guess Burglar makes 'a building. The ATM lay on its side said. she was right," Pringle said. in the center of the store. To bolster their preservation LAS VEGAS - You don't Few surgeons in the world comedy of errors' in effort, Gibson and Versluis have to wait to get to a casino perform the procedure. Chung, attempt to rob ATM College students have compiled a list of more to gamble in Las Vegas. the director of the University of than 88 Apollo 11 artifacts left Vegas visitors can now try Michigan Hand Center has The Associated Press fail in bid to make on the moon in 1969. their luck in the back of a taxi. transplanted fingers for sever­ FRAMINGHAM, Mass. - Ten Yellow-Checker-Star cabs al farmers who lost digits in moon monument Police force moves have been equipped with work accidents. The video of a burglar's The Associated Press botched attempt to break into away from 'cherry mobile video poker, blackjack "The procedure is perfected and slot machines. about as well as it can be from an ATM machine appears des­ LAS CRUCES, N.M. - Call bomb' association In a couple of months, as tined for a criminal bloopers it a moonument. the standpoint of function," The Associated Press many 600 taxis will be Chung said at a conference show. 'l\vo New Mexico State equipped with the computer­ Sunday at Emory University. "I Police say the suspect first University graduate students PONTOON BEACH, Ill. - ized touch-screen devices. cannot make it look like a real broke into a convenience store want the United Nations to The town's police chief decided But cabbies won't have to finger, but I can make it feel early Friday, then returned to declare the Apollo 11 moon­ patches worn by officers on worry about customers losing and function like one." his truck and let the door close landing zone a World Heritage their sleeves pack too powerful their tip money. Cab riders can A collaborative study con­ behind him. He forced his way Site. a punch, and ordered them play the machines for free, ducted with a hospital in in a second time. Ralph Gibson and John removed. while racking up coupons from Taiwan shows toe transfers Back inside, he pushed and Versluis took their idea to The patch, designed by local advertisers.

GET YOUR FOOT IN THE DOOR.

You're about to graduate and put your education to work. You've got your whole future ahead of you and you're ready to get started. Here's how:

Gap Inc. needs talented, enthusiastic people to help take our business to the next level. That's why we're looking for recent college graduates for entry-level positions in:

• College f\{lanager-in-Training

Gap Inc. has come a long way since we started as a single jeans store in 1969 in San Francisco. Today our three distinct brands-Gap, Banana Republic and Old Navy-are leading retail brands and have revenues topping $11.6 billion.

We offer unlimited career opportunities, thousands of locations and excellent benefits. Take a step in the right direction. Watch your career grow at Gap Inc.

We will be hosting on-campus interviews on October 4th, 2000. Interested? Drop off your resume at the Career Fair.

GAP INC. WHERE TO WORK. Gaplnc. Gap Banana Republic Old Navy EDE NEWS MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 THE DAILY EVERGREEN 17 Hurricane Keith Yugoslavia plans nationwide strike in opposition of Milosevic invades Mexico The Associated Press "No way are we going Protic urged people to come out hit areas, Red Cross officials BELGRADE, Yugoslavia to settle for a run-off into the streets Monday, stay Thousands flee to said. Winds battering the vil­ away from their jobs and keep Encouraged by cheering their children away from shelters as winds lage were clocked at 83 mph crowds, a convoy of 60 trucks and that is now the law before the instrument measur­ blocked a key highway Sunday school. Protic acknowledged hit 125 mph for everyone in this that it would take time to build ing the wind broke. Gusts were as opposition forces sought to The Associated Press reported up to 110 mph. country." momentum among a public gather support for a nationwide drained by years of conflict and "We have reports that roofs strike aimed at showing CHETUMAL, Mexico Velimir llic economic misery. Coastal residents of Mexico's are blowing off houses," said President Slobodan Milosevic Judith Reid, of the Red Cross in mayor of Cacak Protic, the opposition candi­ Yucatan peninsula and north­ he must relinquish power. Belize City. "The rain is coming The trucks - taking part in date for Belgrade mayor, said eastern Belize fled their homes the protest leaders would try to Sunday as the dangerous core on strong and the wind is pick­ a "dress rehearsal" for a series ing up here, and we are still far horns and pedestrians blew escalate the tempo systemati­ of Hurricane Keith came of full-scale blockades planned whistles and shook toy rattles cally "until Milosevic realizes ashore, bringing strong wind south of where the action is." for Monday - were greeted by Forecasters warned of flash - playing on a local expression ~at he is no longer president. and torrential rain. floods and mud slides as heavy jubilant supporters as they for something broken beyond In Washington, the National With the storm packing 125- rain fell throughout Belize, passed through the opposition repair. Security Council spokesman mph winds, scores of people in Honduras, Guatemala and stronghold Cacak in central "No way are we going to set­ P.J. Crowley said the Milosevic Chetumal, a bay-side city of Nicaragua, although the slow­ Yugoslavia. Some people tossed tle for a run-off and that is now opposition is "getting stronger." 130,000, abandoned their moving hurricane was expected flowers as the trucks headed to the law for everyone in this "They are sending a strong homes. Many live in low-lying to weaken as it moved inland. an important highway linking country," said Velimir Die, the message to Milosevic: 'Your areas, in shacks made of wood­ There were no reports of Belgrade with southern mayor of Cacak, an industrial time in office is over,"' he said. en slats and cardboard. deaths or injuries by midday in Yugoslavia. town of 80,000 people. Later But the eautious pace of the Mexican authorities set up tbe state of Quintana Roo, The truckers brandished Sunday, about 10,000 opposi­ opposition's campaign raises 15 shelters and evacuated 800 where Chetumal is located, said banners and posters of Vojislav tion supporters gathered at the questions about whether they people from high-risk areas in Jose Irabien, an official from Kostunica, whom the opposi­ main town square for a seventh will have the momentum to the region, about 190 miles the governor's office. tion and Western leaders insist consecutive night of anti­ carry out their threats of bring­ south of CanCWl. "The storm is acting strange, trounced Milosevic in Sept. 24 Milosevic rallies there. ing the entire country to a com- . Many residents seemed to usually the winds are a lot elections. Milosevic rejects the "Our victory is as pure as a plete standstill. take the weather in stride; fam­ stronger than this when a claims and says a run-off elec­ diamond," !lie told the crowd. Authorities in Yugoslavia's ilies waded t~ugh streets storm of this magnitude is this tion is needed Oct. 8. "K.ostunica is the elected presi­ main republic, Serbia, warned flooded with ankle-deep water. close, but this time we haven't Smaller, traffic-snarling dent and we must persist in our students against joining the Others rode bikes through the seen that," Irabien said. "We're blockades were held at main resistance." He called for a total Monday strike, saying "events pounding rain and old men working 24 hours a day to keep intersections in the capital blockade of the town Monday. disrupting school activities" for drank coffee on a covered side­ people informed and to help Belgrade. Drivers honked Opposition leader Milan political purposes "are illegal." walk. anyone who needs it." Hurricane Keith was station­ Maria de la Cruz, from the ary Sunday afterl).oon, about 50 nearby community of Izcalac, abandoned her shack Saturday miles south-southeast of with her husband, five children Chetumal, and about 40 miles and four other relatives. northeast of Belize City, where "They told us it's going to hit power lines were reported hard," said De la Cruz, one of RETIREMENT INSURANCE MUTUAL FUNDS TRUST SERVICES TUITION FINANCING down, the National Hurricane 217 area residents sleeping at a Center in Miami said. school in Chetumal. "Thank The U.S. government issued God we have some place to go." a travel warning to Americans A hurricane warning in Belize because of extensive remained in effeet Sunday flooding, the State Department along the Yucatan peninsula's said. Peace Corps volunteers eastern shore, from Cabo and U.S. government employ­ Catoche south to Monkey River Tax -deferred solutions ees in non-emergency jobs were Town, Belize. A hurricane moved out. watch was in effect for the The Belize village of San Yucatan's north coast, west of from TIAA-CREF can Pedro was one of the hardest- Cabo Catoche to Progreso. Haider joins former help you reach your ~azis in call for respect The Associated Press "Most who come here retirement goals faster. ULRICHSBERG, Austria - are not old Nazis or Austria's right-wing firebrand Joerg Haider joined veterans of neo-Nazis. They are old Adolf Hitler's army on a moun­ citizens who suffered taintop Sunday and called for during the war and lost respect and tolerance for the When you're investing for retirement, the adage TAX DEFERRAL MAKES ADIFFERENCE generation that "lost their their youth to the war "never put off until tomorrow what you can do today" youth" in World War ll. and then began to doesn't apply to taxes. Haider, former chairman of rebuild." $102,068 the far-right Freedom Party, That's because investments that aren't eroded by taxes Tax-

------· ------···-- ·---- ··~ 335-4573 CLASSIFIEDS MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2000 PAGE 18

ndex 1 05 Apts. For Rent 1 05 Apts. For Rent 140 Duplexes 301 General 1024 SE Latah. 2 bdrm, $525- Very Large 1 bdrm unfurnished apt. Very nice! Big 4 bdrm., WID, great ·Molecular Biologist: Amplicon Ex­ $545/mo, close to campus, no pets. Now renting: immediate or reserved location, amazing deal @ $350- press, a rapidly growing biotech com­ 100 RENTALS www.kipdev.com Call 334-7444. for summer and/or fall. Quiet residen­ 800/mo. (dep on #occupants). New pany, seeks a responsible, ambitious tial locations on Pullman Bus A route extensive remodeL (509)979-3265 molecular biologist to join our team . 200 REAL ESTATE Palouse, 1 bdrm. apt. Available first $360-$385 332-7704 Sam -6pm. The successful candidate will have of October. $200/mo. + utils. Call 3 bdrm., 1-3/4 bath, full set of appli­ experience building eDNA libraries (509) 878-1607. 545 NE Kamiaken. 2+study $560- ances, incl. W/0. Quiet, residential EMPLOYMENT and expertise in recombinant DNA 300 225 NW Terre View, 2 bdrm. 615/mo. a/c, d/w, w/d hkup, cov­ area, near bus. Call 208-875-0673. techniques and protein expression . $600/mo, storage, a/c, d/w, w/d & ered pkg, no pets, on campus. Closing date for applications is Octo­ www.kipdev.com Call 334-7444. Close to campus, downtown, quiet 3 400 FOR SALE microwave in unit, no pets. bdrm . on Kamiaken. WID, NP, NS, ber 6, 2000. Send, e-mail or person­ www.kipdev.com Call 334--7444. $750. Call 332-4923. ally deliver CV aod cover letter to: TRANSPORT Amplicon Express 500 In Albion. Small cottage for one. Fur­ 1610 NE Eastgate Blvd. #880 mshed except bed. $300/mo. Pets 145 Subleases Pullman, WA 99163 SERVICES neg 332-5609. E-mail: [email protected] 600 Rm avail in newer, quiet complex. WIL-RU APTS. WID, OW, $250/mo. + utiL Dep & NOTICES Our quiet community next to the last mo rent pd. 334--2951 . PUUMAN SCHOOL DISlRICT is 700 Chipman Trail is offering spacious accepting applications for the follow­ 2 bdrm units at the best rates in Nice 2 bdr behind Dissmores, quiet ing position: Playground paraprofes­ Pullman. Call for more details, 332- neighborhood, WID on site, avail. im­ sional at Sunnyside Bementary. H9wto place 5631. www.palouse.neVallamerican mediately, $570, 334-3075 lv. mess. Position open until filled . Call (509) a-n ad in · 334-5384 for application/more infor­ '· The Dairy Evergreen: 150 NW Terre View, 3 bdrm., Large, clean 1 bedroom apt. Close to mation . AA/EOE. $690/mo, a/c, d/w, w/d hkup, play­ IGA & bus route. Last mo. & deposit ground, covered pkg, no pets. free. call 332-1615 or 332-8453. Palouse Medical is seeking a tempo­ a www.kipdev.com Call 334-7444. rary experienced transcriptionist to :~ :~:~~~~~:;e~t9· ~te~ 155 Wanted to Rent work 30-40 hours/week. Please .... one day .. ,.,,- drop off resume at 825 SE Bishop . · • $1 ;?~/line per day r Looking to rent garage space. I have Blvd., Suite 200, Pullman, WA; fax it TWo.fuur dayS .·.· . too many toys and not enough space. to (509) 334-9247, or e-mail to 333-4329 ask for Ben. tkwate@pullman .com $1.45/line per day REAL_E_ST._'/4._TE__ '"' F'.W.14~ .... MOSCOW SCHOOL DIST. NO. 281 Basketball Coaching Positions, High $1,10/llniiji}er day School and Junior High School posi­ ~ys ,, 205 Houses tions awllable. JV Boys Coach, 9th :. ..frtteeo+ Grade Boys Coach, 9th Grade Girts ·' ' $:95/llhe pefd/;\Y' Coach, 7th/8th/9th/JV & no-cut pro­ .; .. :;·· Now offering a 328 Cleveland. PRICE REDUCED! $90,000. 3 bdrm/2 bath, laundry gram assistant boys and girls basket­ unique limited room formal dining room . 1200sq. ft. ball coaches. Open until filled. Ex­ total on large 50' x 150' flat lot. Apple tra-curricular application form and special. Call ASAP trees, plum trees & an 8' x 12' storage three letters of reference must be in bam in back yard . OW & disposal. Human Resource Office as soon a8 before they're gone! Central electric furnace. Electric bills possible. Moscow School District, averaged $46/mo for last year. The 650 N. Cleveland, Moscow, 10 Units are very clean house is 4 yrs old. 338-9596. 83843-3659. (208)892-1126. Studio apt. 215 W Main. Quiet www.sd281,k12 jd,us EOE. with new carpet. nghbrhd, parking for 1, no dogs, close to bus. $200/mo + util. Call 3 bdrm, 2 bath MH in Pullman. Great Palouse Hills Nursing Center needs 334-4663 or 334-3036. rental investment. No down payment, Furnished or assume loan . Call (509) 939-3908. loving, caring, compassionate people to help care for our elderly. Certified unfurnished nurses aide starts $8.50/hr; non-cer­ EMPLOYMENT tified starts $7.75/hr. Flexible hours. Please contact Lea, 332-1566. NOrth 301 General 305 Parttime 1535 NE MERMAN DR. IF YOU MISSED the Summer Job & RENTALS camPUS Internship Fair last spring, don't miss House Boys needed for Gamma Phi (509) 334-6408 Career Expo tor careers, grad Beta. Lunches and Dinners. call schools and Internships. Sponsored -Sharon 332-2839. 101 Roommates by WSU/ Ul Career Services, Ul Kib­ AL.SUEAPTS aeishts ble Dome, Oct 3 only, ~:30 PM. M/F rmmt needed for 2 bdrm. house. A.M. hours before school or work. 1 + 2 bdrm, cats & dogs 15 lbs or less Free pariast Girls Basketball Coach at Un­ WEEKEND HOUSEKEEPER needed. coln Middle School; />ast Wrestling Apply in person Hilltop Restaurant, fully fum. condo w/view, reasonable l.rg 2 br 2 ba, avail Oct 16. $650/ tenants. at $. 360-687-5069 or 334--7805. Coach at Pullman High School; AIJ8t Davis Way, Pullman. mo. Oct rent free. W/0, OW, AC , no Cheerleading Coach at Pullman High 1 or 2 roomates wanted to share pets, NS. Call 332-1794, lv msg . School. Positions open until filled. Part-time exp. line cook. Evenings. brand new 4 bedroom apartment Move ASAP, get satellite dish free. NE 15'10 Merman Or. Call 334-3584 for application/more Apply in person. Swilly's, 200 Ka­ close to WSU . Be one of the first to Pullman information. AA/ECJE. miaken, Pullman. 334--3395. share a new apartment home at Cou­ gar Crest. For details, please call College Crest 334--6028 332-6777 332-3410 M/F needed for New 2 bdrm/1 bath •FREE high speed internet on B street. W /0, big back yard & Quiet apts. in South Grand bldg. Stu­ parking lot. Call 332-1583. •$250 per bedroom dio, 1, 2 & 5 bdrms. avail. Flexible leases, pets allowed. Call for details, Looking for a rmmt. to share a 2 bdr. •On E_xpress Bus Route 332-4208. apt. Quiet area, close to bus. $210 •Individual Leasing ------mo + 1/2 uti. Call Scott 334-2064. Furnished Apts. uscrs.pullman.com/cca , 11 0 Urgentl Roommate needed at Col­ lege Crest, after December 21 Rent Quiet 2 bdrm daylight bsmt apt. All pd thru January. Call 332-7229. utils fum, $500/mo, 15 min. walk to www.kipdev.com campus. (509) 534--5200/979-3138. 1 05 Apts. For Rent ...... 120 Rooms Helene's Property Place,LLc Rm in 3 bdrm condo, fully fum., WID, Renfal• great view, cable & internet access, ~c~ul~au•er 225 NE Olsen *Pullman avail ASAP. $300/ mo. 332-8460 2 Bedroom Apts. l ~.. 338-9008 125 Mobile Homes $385/mo plus Pullman j~or All Your RealestaJe NeeruJ! 332-1602 2 bdrm, very clean, 3 miles out in the www.helenspropertyplace.conL country, no pets. Available immed. $450/mo. Call 332-6983. MOVE IN SPECIAL Lrg. 1 bdr. unfurnished apt. Quiet Great location. Lots of parking. Are residential location. Close to A bus 130 Houses you searching for the perfectly afford­ route. 332-7704 able apartment? Call us! We can NEAR ALPHA &"B" ST 2 bdrm. in Albion. $440/mo. Quiet neighborhood. No dogs. Days take care of your housing needs. New fridge, W/0, carpet & paint, nice 335- Ask about our move-in special. 3 bdr, off-street parking, call for 2896, eves/wknds 334-4630. 332-8622. more details NS, NP (800) 791-7979. Small1 bedroom house for rent, laun­ OTIO HILL APTS. ANTHONY HALL APTS. dry avail., $340/mo, W/S/Garb paid, 2 bdrm, private decks, patios & park­ 332-Q514 Hill. ENTERPRISES ing. On site laundry. Close to bus & GRAB YOUR FRIENDSII 11 bdrm Very well m3intained 2 bdrm. apts. shopping. Helene's Property Place, house on campus. Available immed. 334-6408 LLC. 338-9008. Call Associated Brokers, 334--0562. 21Xlrm.apta on·Oollege Hill. 3 bdrm. 1513 Tumer Dr. 3 bdrm, 1 study, LQ 4 br 2.5 ba, W/0 hk-i.~p, no dogs/ townhouse on Sunnyside Hill. ORA lndry hook-up, disposal, $800/mo. smoking, quiet residential. $900. Rentals, ~7700 or ~23-453. Available now. Call Phong, 332-1018. 1st/last/dep. 332-7983 or 332-5979. MIKE STUNTZ/DAILY EVERGREEN A WSU ROTC member tightens the end of the rope for a one­ rope bridge. "We did outstanding. ROTC It was a blast. " · continued from front page Jason Rocks it next year." This was Member of Team 2 Hollman's first Ranger Challenge, and he will compete again next year. "I had a good Both WSU co-ed teams time." placed in the competition. Team With all events finished, 3 took tlllrd place in the co-ed many exhausted students rankings, and Team 2 walked could be found sprawled-out, away with a first-place plaque. sleeping on the side of the Co-ed teams receive plaques, Kibbie Dome, finally getting a single-sex teams receive tro­ chance to rest as they waited phies. for the awards ceremony to "We did outstanding," said commence. junior Jason Rocks of WSU With many more men than Team 2. "It was a blast." women competing, there were "We did much better than we only two all-female teams, and thought we'd do," said junior GU Green edged out the UI Manny Gonzalez, also of WSU Women for the trophy. Team 2.

dinator, said the Republicans Nethercutt seemed to be more passive than continued from front page the Democrats on campus. He said the RHA was trying to five students in the room if arrange forums on the issues. there was anything he could do "We represent 3,800 students to reach the students at WSU. living in the residence halls," DAVE ELLERBROCK/DAILY EVERGREEN James Stryker, the Stryker said. "We have the While the judge keeps time, a member of the Gonzaga black team ties off a rope to finish the Residence Hall Association power to influence those stu­ one-rope bridge event. National Communications coor- dents." 305 ParHime 395 Miscellaneous 515 Autos Nonces 795 Miscellaneous The SOCIAL & ECONOMIC SCI~ Whitman Co. Sheriffs Office. New reduced pricel 1972 Datsun CES RESEARCH CENTER (SESRC) Applications are now being accepted ~ Original owner. All paper­ 715 Found is accepting applications for tele­ for the volunteer position of Reserve work. $1750 . Call 332-0505, days. phone interviewers. This is a perfect Dept. Sheriff. Applications may be ac­ '89 lsuzu Trooper, 4 dr, 4 cylinder, job for High School or College stu­ quired at the Whitman County Sher­ The following items were found on only 1 owner, engine just rebuilt, ex­ dents or anyone else looking for extra iffs Office . Applicants must be 21 yrs. Pullman Transit buses: red Ceceba cellent condition $3950, 332-5295 income. We operate in a tearTK>rient­ by May 30, 2001 , have a high school sweatshirt, blue chenille girts' sweat­ ed environment. We require: Clear diploma or GED, no felony convic­ '85 Volk Golf. 5-spd, AM/FM, NC, 2 er, blue shirt, black vest, black chro­ Speaking Voice, Basic typing skills, tions, must be able to pass phys. agil­ sets of tires (studded & all terrain), matic unbrella. set of keys, surgical Excellent reading skills. We offer: ity, written, med., psych., and poly. Great mileage. $800 080 397-3710. steel stud, architectural drawings, BEST THEATRES gym clothes, eyeglasses in Eddie Ba­ Paid training, Evening shifts, must exams. Application deadline: Oct. 15, '93 Ford Escort wagon, 94K, auto, 334·MOV·E work 12-20 hrs/wk, Pay $6.50- 2000. Whitman County Sheriff, N 411 uer case, film negative & picture, AM/FM/cassette, air. $2995. Call reading glasses in black case, vari-" $9.00/ hr/ bonuses/raises, Easy lo­ Mill St. Colfax, WA. 99111 . (509) 397- 332-1561, ask for Gary. cation/ parking/ close to bus route/ 6266. ous articles of clothing & single keys. near campus apartments. Call 335- '86 Toyota Camry, 107K. miles. A/C, These items can be claimed at Pull­ 1721 , or pick up application from AlT. power windows, drs. & steering, man Transit, NW n5 Guy Street 7:30-4:00/Wilson Hall 133, WSU or FoR sALE incl snow tires . Call Ashok 334-7199. (332-6535) until 10/ 2/00. After 10/2/00, items can be claimed at the WSU Research Park/ SESRC, Suite '81 Gold Chevette. Manual transmis­ F. 1425 NE Terre View Dr. Closing Pullman Police Dept., or by calling 401 Stuff that's goHa sion , AM/FM radio . Runs fine . 87K" 334-0802. date for applications is 10/ 10/ 00. miles. $500 OBO. Call334-9358. go '97 Chevy Cavalier, 19,000 miles. Perfect condition, sporty, fun to drive . The Garden Lounge is now hiring PT Wheelal 215/40R17 Toyo Proxies, on $8500. Call 332-2487. 725 Announcements cocktail waitress. Applications may 5 spoke, Cobra R-type 4x4.25 lug $900. a~ Orion DVC sub w/box $60 be picked up after 3pm at 313 S. 525 Motorcycles Need insurance? Call Farmer's Insurance Main , Moscow. Experience pref. No OBO. Call 333-8339; email herr­ Tim Paul, 334-1200, S. 325 Grand. mann@wsu .edu. -- phone calls. '85 Yamaha XT 600. Kick start, Auto, Renters, Home, and Ufe. Bring It On-PG 13 410 Computers on/off rd ., guards, chain & sprock­ ( 12:40) (2:50)-5:00-7: I 0 9:20 ets. Clean . $1400 OBO. 332-5714. Kin~ of Comedv-R 320 Child Care 7 40 Fitness/Health (12:00) (2:30)5:00-7:25 9:50 200 MHZ, 32 Mb RAM, 3.4 Gb. hard 530 4WD/Vans drive . Monitor incl. Win . '95, Word Space Cowboys-PG 13 Childcare asst. New openings for Perfect Suite 8. $400. call Mike '90 Toyata 4x4, extra cab. Excellent (II :40) (2: 15)-4:50 7:20 9:55 334-7560. UNNERSITY RECREATION DANCE qualified, PT applicants. Must have condition, extras, low miles, original CLASSES. Classes & sign-ups begin Urban Legends 2-R experience in a childcare setting . For Sale, Blueberry lmac computer, owner. $6,000. call 334-2075. Oct. 9- CUB 337. Adult & children's (12:45) (2:55)-5:05 7: 15 9:25 Flex schedules for workstudy & non­ 6 months old, $525, call Family Den­ classes available . Call 335-9666, workstudy positions. Please call 332- What lies Benealh-PG13 tal Center 8a-5p, 882-0991 . http:/ /cub.wsu.edu/urec 2732 for application . SERVICES (II :50) (2:20)-4:55 7:25 9:55 TRANSPORT 325 Internships 625 Professional 760 Travel 515 Autos Cougnet has 3 paid internship po­ DUI- Misdemeanor- Felony MAZAn.AN SPRING BREAK sitions open. 2 openings for Web '91 Nissan Sentra. Runs excellent, 4 Guy C. Nelson, Attorney RT airfare from Spokane, 6 nights ac­ Development and Systems Admin ., 1 door, AM/FM/Cass., NC, PS, ASS, 520 E. Main, Pullman, 332-7692. comodations, & transfers. Seats are opening for Graphic Design . Call $3500 OBO. Call Leslie at 339-2197 21 years criminal law experience. limited. Call Palouse Travel882-5658 335-4978 for information. Mon.-Fri. 7:50am-6:00pm • Sat. 11 :OOam-S:OOpm

Medium grey collar .!), Crimson across shoulders 30°/o Off and down sleeves (1 }AMMIN Light grey piping runs between crimson Cougar Football and dark grey mesh Windsuit Dark grey mesh across chest and z;:l down lower sleeves z;:J Jacket has Medium grey zip front, side bottom of jacketS> pockets, elastic and wind pants. cuffs and waist. Mesh on back Pants have ~ of lower legs. elastic cuffs & Pants zip up drawstring the outside of waist. lqwer leg ¢ 1 00% Softened Nylon is soft CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS !JAY: Donna Karan, Stmb, Don Mclean, Rex Sold as a set only. to the touch and quiet Reed. T1ffany. M1ke Rulherford, George Regular $190 when moving. •span~y" McFarl;~ncl Happy B~r1hday : The yeM ahead rch 21-Apnl 191: You 11eeci some 01dventure m your Ide. Try to talk a good inend into ta"-mg .., holiday wi1h you, bu1 cons1der 1he cos1 October 6th ,.., Friday - Open 7:50am-7:00pm before you book a tnp 10 the exot•c desunauon beckoning you 4 stars at the BOOKIE (Lower Level will close at 6:00pm} TAURUS (Apn l 20-May 20): Pul ym.1r money clway for a ratny d,ly. Thi$ is a moil-in offer, S~ 1n-•tore d!wloy for ®falls. October 7th Saturday -- Open 8:30am-7:00pm D.m't lt!t others coerce you into Konica Pr-t>ot~ •ncb Ot!t:OmbeiC!ifS S~ie<:l 10 Cb