W orld/N ation I n s id e Classifieds............ .......... 16 Comics.......... 1.................12 Sports I srael c o m p le te s So ccer lo o k s t o a v e n g e a n CONTROVERSIAL TUNNEL C r o s s w o r d ...................14 Horoscopes ................„ ,..¿ 1 9 EARLIER LOSS TO G RAND CANYON NEAR HOLY SITES Opinion.........‘„oi....,4 Page 13 Police Report.... ...... Sports....................... Page 3 9 13 C o p y rig h t. State Press, 1996 ‘ Tèmpe, Arizona Voi. 81 No. 21 T e m An Independent M orning Daily p e r a c in g B y Ray Stern State P ress W ednesday, Septem ber 25,1996 t o w a r d p h o to catch speeders. Units will also be mounted at two Tempe intersections to stop red-light runners. Photo radar units will be installed in Chevrolet Blazers and placed at varying times and changing locations. The red-light system consists of permanent gear placed at dangerous intersections and data-recovery and camera pieces that can be removed and repositioned over time. Motorists will know that an intersection is equipped for photo-enforcement, but will not know whether the camera unit is in operation at any given time, said Sgt. Will Price, the Tempe police officer handling the system’s research and implementation. Possible sites being discussed for the photo radar are the intersections of University and McClintock drives, Apache B oulevard and R ural Road, and B aseline Road and Interstate 10. Signs will warn motorists they are approaching a photo enforcement zone. “ They are Certainly not going to be hidden,” Price said. Love it or hate it, photo speed enforcement is coming to Tempe. “We’re doing something that has shown some success in Other cities,” said Bridgett Hanna, Tempe public information Officer. “Basically, our goal is to reduce traffic accidents.” Hanna added that 51 percent of all accident violations in Tempe are speed related. The city is now requesting bids for the photo enforce­ ment contract, and expects two companies, American T raffic System s o f S cottsdale, and U.S. Public Technologies of San Diègo, to reply by Oct. 22. H anna said the vendor will be decided by midNovember, and the police will begin training and staffing positions through Jan. 1 as equipment is acquired and installed. There will be a warning period from Feb. 1 to March ], and full-time enforcement starts March 1. Thè system will involve one or more photo radar units to “People driving in the area will know it’s deployed. We’re going to give people every opportunity not to get their picture taken." Price added that photo enforcement is seen as a pilot program, and effectiveness will be evaluated after one year by examining accidents and other statistics. Tempe saw a 33 percent increase in accidents between 1992 and 1995, according to police information. Dana King, vice-president of marketing for U.S. Public Technologies, said the. equipment will definitely save lives by slowing drivers down. “I’m not going to kid you and say I always obey the speed limit,” he said. “But driving through one of our juris­ dictions, I don’t speed.” King said many cities that use photo enforcement see a noticeable decrease in accidents. “N atio n al City (California) saw their accident rate drop by 50 percent,” he said, adding that the city’s population is about 60,000. The Tempe City Council is scheduled to receive an update on photo enforcement at Thursday night’s meeting. M O ut and about r a d a r in o r it y e n r o llm u p e n t a t A S U B y D eanna D ark State P ress Minority enrollment at ASU has increased in all cate­ gories this semester. Statistics released by the Office of Institutional Analysis Monday show a 5 percent increase in total minority enrollment for the fall 1996 semester. Minority enrollment now stands at 7,735, up 382 students from 7,353 in the fall of 1995. The population of most minority groups represented on campus has also risen: • The number of Native-American students has risen from 788 in 1995 to 844 this Semester, a 7 percent increase. • The number of Hispanic students has increased from 3,747 to 3,974, a 6 percent increase. • The number of African-American students has increased from 1,116 to 1,162, a 4 percent increase. • The number Asian*American students has increased from 1,702 to 1,755, a 3 percent increase. Peterson Zah, adviser to the ASU president on American Indian affairs, said he attributes the growth within .the NativeAmerican community to his office’s recruitment efforts. The administration has been venturing out to the various Lisa Goettsche/Special to thé State Press Experienced rock climbers Kjrt Karl and Jim Pfeiffer tend the ropes as novice climber Art Palmer m aps his way up a cliff. The climbers are members of The Arizona Outing Club, a campus organization that schedules activities every weekend. Sunday’s climb was at Oak Creek Canyon’s Scenic Overview near Sedona. The Club organizes other activities a s well, including cave exploring, mountain biking and skydiving, T urn to M inorities, page 2. Sum m ers ozone decrease likely due to favorable w eather B y J eff O wens State P ress A Phoenix air quality official said Tuesday this sum­ mer’s low ozone readings may win Arizona points with the federal government, but he doubts the existence of a drastic drop in levels of the gas. L.G. Mace, air monitoring network supervisor for the Maricopa County Environmental Services Department, said the Valley media is “comparing apples and oranges” when it reports that ozone violations have declined by 64 percent since summer 1995. Ozone, a chemical variation of oxygen, is a major smog­ forming agent that the Valley struggles with every summer. This summer. 10 federal level violations were reported, down sharply from the 28 reported in the metropolitan Phoenix area in 1995. The Valley is currently heading for “serious” ozone status from the U.S. Environm ental Protection Agency, but the drop in excess readings of the gas may avert the classification. Mace said while Valley residents may be creating a little less ozone than last summer, the drop is more likely due to favorable weather. “It’s questionable that we’ve made any progress at all,” he said. “We had a slightly cooler summer than usual. If you have high winds, cloudy skies, higher humidity and fewer hours of sunlight, you’re not going to see as much ozone formation. This year was a little different from last year.” Last May, Gov. Fife Symington ordered government employees to adopt various commuting plans in an effort to reduce ozone levels. “Cities are trying different methods to reduce the ozone element,” said Randall Cerveny, ASU associate professor of geography. “People are changing work schedules and changing their driving habits.” He agreed that the best explanation for the reported drop was probably more weather-related than anything else. “One. we’re getting better at forecasting,” he said. “Two, this wasn’t the hottest summer on record.” Cerveny said better forecasting means better ability to T urn to O zone , page 2. Pat Shannahan/ State Press According to pollution monitors around the Valley, air quality in Maricopa County may have improved in the past year. A slightly cooler summer may have helped the Valley’s air pollution problem. Page 2 St a t e P ress W ednesday, S eptem ber 25,-1996 M in o r it ie s T oday C ontinued Campus dubs and organizations may submit mitten entries to the State Press in the basement of Matthews Center. Requests wM not be taken over the phone or via fax. Deadline h r requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted more than three working days before publication. Only one entry per organization per day is permitted. Entries must contain the full name of the did) or organization, a desorption of the event, date, time and the full address of the location. AB requests are subfed to editing for content, space and clarity. Incomplete or illegible entries will be discarded. The Today Section is a daily calendar of events printed as a service to the ASU community. Requests are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis and are printed as space permits. • C a re e r Services Workshops — Gaining career focus and interviewing skills workshops from 5 to 6 p.m. and 1 1 :4 0 to 1 2 :4 0 in th e C a re e r Development Center on the third floor of the Student Services Building and in the MU Room 222 respectively. C all 9654420 for more information. • Cycling Devils — Road and mountain bike club m eeting at 8:30 p.m . on the north side of the Life Sciences Tower. Riders of all levels are welcome. • College Republicans — General meeting at 2:40 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room 211. • MUAB Film /Net — Re-broadcast of Jon Stow art (illegible) at 7 p.m. in the MU Cinema. Also, weekly meeting at 3 p.m, in the MU C inem a. C all 965-6822 fo r more information. • N a tiv e W in d s o f A S U — G eneral m eeting and discussion of upcom ing events and newsletter printing. Begins at 5:30 p.m. in the American Indian Institute Conference Room. • MUAB C ultu re and A rts C om m ittee — General inform ational m eeting at 3 p.m. in Conference Room 2 on the third flo or of the MU. Everyone welcome to attend arid discuss upcom ing cu ltural events. • Econom ics A ssociation — Dr. Chris Schnucker from Am erican Express w ill be speaking about microeconomic fore­ casting a t,3 p.m. in BA 265. •; Y o u n g D e m o c ra ts /S tu d e n ts fo r Clinton/G ore — Voter registration all day in front of the Cady Mall fountain. • S tu d e n t L ife - L e a rn in g R eso u rce C e n te r —- Free com puter skills Work­ shops. A lso , E x p e rie n c in g C u ltu re Diversity workshop from 3 to 4 p.m. in SSV 373. C all 965-6250 for tim es and locations. • AWARE — Relaxation Techniques pre­ sentation by Debbie. Stretching exercises, et al at 12:40 p.m. in the Women’s Student Center on the lower level of the MU. • D ecisio n and in fo rm atio n S ystem s C lu b — R e p re s e n ta tiv e s from T h e Summit Group will be speaking a t the meeting at 7 p.m. in BA 358. • B e lic ia ’s S .A . - (S p an ish lan g u ag e th eater group) — Performing of E l dia que me quieras by Venezuelan dramatist José Ignacio Cabrujas. Begins at 1:40 p.m. in LL C 57. • R ainbow A llian ce — Lyle M iller and B arb Jo nes from th e C om m unity C enter/Lesbian Resource P roject w ill speak at the m eeting. Begins at 7:30 p.m. in the MU La Paz Room 223. • K undalini Yoga C lub — Class every Monday and Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the MU Graham Room 216. • W o m e n ’s L e s b ia n & B is e x u a l D iscu ssio n G roup — W eekly meeting with ongoing discussion from 5 to 6:30 p.m, in the Women’s Student Center on the lower level of the MU. • Eckankar — Discussion: Dreams: Do they have a meaning? Begins at noon in the MU Graham Room 216. from page 1. Indian communities to reassure families and convince students to come to ASU. Santos Vega, d irecto r o f the Communication Documentation Program of the Hispanic R esearch C enter, said he attributes the growth within the Hispanic community to five reasons. The first reason is that the number of Mexican families sending their children to college in the United States has risen due to the country’s better quality of education. He also attributes the growth to the fact that more Hispanic students are going straight to a four-year university rather than to com- munity colleges. He added that within the last few years, the number of scholarships avail­ able for minority students has increased. Vega added that mòre students are real­ izing they need more schooling because of the great change in technology. “If they don’t want to get stuck in a ser­ vice-type job, they need the skills offered at the university,” Vega said. Vega added that more women are going into the work force and attending college. “There isn’t the old idea Of machismo; the young Hispanic woman is liberated,” he said. O zo n e C ontinued from page 1. inform the public o f days when conditions are likely to lead to excessive ozone readings. Ozone high in the atmosphere is neces­ sary to keep the Earth from being barbe­ cued by ultraviolet solar radiation, but lowaltitude ozone is a pollutant. Ground-level ozone, forms when em issions from gasburning machinery cook in the air for sever­ al hours in intense sunlight. Mace said the EPA allows Maricopa County three violations in a three-year peri­ od at a particular monitoring point, a level which was reached by the end of 1995. “T hat’s the point at which they (the EPA) look at us and ask ‘What’s going on here?’ ” he said. Mace added th at the county was then granted a one-year extension to come up with a workable ozone-reduction program. “The EPA is very flexible,” he said. “It’s up in the air, so to speak. If the state can Convince the EPA th a t they have a good plan, the EPA could grant a second extension ” A '“serious’’ ozone designation could mean expensive increases in monitoring requirements and more federal pollution restrictions. S tate P ress online - s a u • A lp ha Kappa A lpha S o ro rity In c .— Interactive discussion about intimacy at 7 p.m. in the Programming Lounge on the second floor of Umoja (Ocotillo Halt). Football, Royalty, Parade, Cultural Unity, and one Pevil of a’Concerti ROYALTY applications are out and can b e picked up at ASASU, 3rd flo o r M il. (You w ill be g reeted by our lovely receptionist Peg) A ll royalty applications are due O ctober 1 1th. h t t p : / / n e w s . v p . a s u . e d _________ W STATE P r e s s o r ld ___________________ /N a t io n ___________ * W ednesday, S eptem ber 25, 1996 ________ C o n troversial tu n n els don e near h o ly sites B y Karin L aub A ssociated P ress JERUSALEM Asserting control over sites holy to Jews and Muslims, Israel broke through the last stretch of an archaeological tunnel near thè Al Aqsa Mosque compound on Tuesday, a move that prompted angry Palestinians to throw stones at police and Jewish worshipers. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat denounced the tun­ nel work, carried out just after midnight under heavy police guard, as a “crime against Our religious and holy places.” The Al Aqsa Mosque is Islam 's third holiest site. Palestinians threw stones at Israeli police from the mosque compound, known in Arabic as Haram a$Sharif, or “noble enclosure.” Jews saying prayers at the Western Wall below were briefly ordered by police to step back when stones started flying. The violence at one of the most sensitive spots in the Israeli-Arab conflict illustrated how easily the two sides can collide in the city claimed by both Israel and the Palestinians. Israel claimed the narrow pedestrian tunnel would be a boon to tourism because it links the Western Wall, Judaism’s holiest site, to the Via Dolorosa, where Jesus was said to have walked before his crucifixion. But the 12-year-old project was completed only on the p erso n al o rd ers o f Isra e li Prim e M in iste r Benjamin Netanyahu, who intended to send a mes­ sage to the P ale stin ia n s th a t Isra el is th e only sovereign in Jerusalem. “The government says, ‘Hey guys, we are not playing games here,” ’ said Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmeti. “We will not agree that everything that happens in Jerusalem will be subject to negotiations.” Olmert was present early Tuesday when workers broke through the last stretch of the tunnel — a wall about 1 1/2 feet thick. Netanyahu said Tuesday that he visited the tunnel last year and was moved. “Without exaggerating, we are touching a rock of our existence,” Netanyahu said dur­ ing a trip to Britain. “Jerusalem is important." Haram as-Sharif is referred to by Jews as Temple Mount, site of the Jewish Temple destroyed by the Romans in 70 A.D. The mount houses the Al Aqsa and Dome of the Rock mosques. The Western Wall, the last Khaled Zighari/Associated Press Palestinians carry a friend injured in clashes with Israeli soldiers during protests in Hebron, West Bank against continued Israeli settlements and Israel’s overdue troop withdrawal from Hebron on Tuesday. remains of the Temple and Judaism’s holiest site, runs along one side of the compound. Muslim clerics claimed Tuesday that the 500-yardlong tunnel excavated by Israel runs underneath Haram as-Sharif and has endangered the stability of the build­ ings above. They also said they feared the tunnel was a first step by Israel to tear down the mosques and rebuild the Temple. “Those who destroy what is underneath (the com­ pound);: will eventually destroy what is above.” said Sheik Jamal Rifai. Olmert dismissed the Muslims’ charges as “ridicu­ lous.” The tunnel runs alongside, but not underneath the compound, and Israel respects Muslim administration of the holy sites, he said. The tunnel starts to the left of the Western Wall plaza, the first 200 yards consisting of medieval and Roman halls on various levels. That is followed by a 300-yard-long, five-foot wide tunnel built by the Hasmoneans about 2,200 years ago to channel water to the Temple Mount. At the end of the water tunnel, a few steps lead up to the Via Dolorosa. U .S . join s major nuclear pow ers in signing nuclear test ban treaty B y R obert H . R eid A ssociated P ress Rlchfd Df w/AMoelrt»d Piim President Clinton signs the historic Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty at the United Nations in New York on Tuesday. In a ceremony full o f symbol­ ism, Clinton said he signed the treaty with the same pen President John F. Kennedy used to sign the 1963 Lim ited Test Ban Treaty. The treaty, he said, is a “solemn vow” to create a “better, safer w orld.” UNITED NATIONS — The United States and the world’s major nuclear powers overrode the objections o f India on Tuesday and signed a treaty to end all testing and developm ent of nuclear weapons. President Clinton signed the treaty with the same pen President John F. Kennedy used to sign the 1963 Limited Test Ban Treaty. After a 10minute address to the General Assembly, Clinton went to New Jersey to campaign for re-election. India, one of the countries that must sign the treaty for it to become law, refused to endorse the pact because it does not require nuclear powers to scrap weapons. India borders China, which has nuclear weapons, and Pakistan, which is believed to be capable of making nuclear arms. Nevertheless, supporters believe the treaty as signed will make it difficult for any country to con­ duct nuclear test explosions in defiance of interna­ tional opinion. The 1963 treaty prohibited nuclear test explo­ sions in the atmosphere, in space and underwater but perm itted them underground. The 1974 Threshold Test Ban Treaty set a size limit on under­ ground test explosions but the new treaty bans all test explosions, including underground blasts. By signing the treaty, Clinton promised to create a “better, safer world,” one that “will help to pre­ vent the nuclear powers from developing more advanced and more dangerous weapons. “It will limit the ability of other states to acquire such devices themselves. It points us toward a cen­ tury in which the ... nuclear weapons can be further reduced and ultimately eliminated.” After Clinton signed, he was followed by rep­ resentatives of the world’s other declared nuclear powers — China, France, Russia and Britain. U N. officials said 65 countries would sign the treaty on Tuesday. Israel, which is believed to have nuclear capa­ bilities, is to sign the treaty on Wednesday. Australia was credited with saving the treaty, which had foundered in Geneva when India refused to sign the pact, by bringing it to the General Assembly. The move followed widespread outrage in A ustralia last year when France conducted nuclear tests in French Polynesia. U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali presided over Tuesday’s signing. E arlier, he and C linton m et b riefly . U.N. spokesman Sylvana Foa said they discussed the ethnic crisis in Burundi and terrorism but avoid­ ed talking about U.S. opposition to B outrosGhali’s re-election. On the issu e o f B o u tro s -G h a li’s term , R ussian Foreign M inister Yevgeny Primakov praised the “considerable contribution” made by the secretary-general. O pin io n St a t e P ress Wednesday, September 25, 1996 P age 4 St a t e P ress j w Baitonal P hoto radar w ill save lives It looks like the days o f careening at the speed o f light through Tempe are about to end. Dam those Tempe officials. They’re really going to implement photo radar units to catch speeders and those who can’t seem to hit die brakes for red lights. Sacrilege, w e say. No longer can w e sleep in late and count on going 20 mph over the speed lim it to get us to our destinations on time. No more sneaking through red lights. Well, not unless we want to get tickets. Starting March 1, motorists who disobey those pesky traffic rules will find themselves sharing a Kodak moment with the cops, and paying for it, too. Photo radar gear will be stationed at two intersec­ tions for red light enforcement, and mobile photo radar units will monitor speeding. Posted warning signs w ill provide motorists with plenty o f warning about the areas being watched. O f course, som e tw itchy citizen s w ill undoubtedly ignore the signs and zip right on through the photo radar zones. Too bad for you, we say, because in all serious­ ness, we support photo radar. It’s a way to slow peo­ ple down, and by doing that w e can help prevent accidents. Anyone who has ever been involved in an accident caused by som eone speeding or running a red ligh t should support photo radar. W ith these enforcement units installed, maybe traffic disasters w ill not happen as often. The threat o f getting fined or going to traffic school m ight make som eone think tw ice about breaking the traffic law s. And that, in turn, might save people the lrind o f whiplash that turns them into human weather instruments. S Photo radar is certainly worth a try — 51 percent o f all accident violations in Tempe are speed-relat­ ed, according to B ridge« Hanna, Tem pe’s public information officer. From 1992 to 1995, Tempe had a 33 percent increase in accidents, according to Tempe police. And photo radar has already been used successfully in other U.S. cities, like National C ity, C alif., where the accident rate dropped 50 per­ cen t ’ '■ ^ Many people w ill gripe about photo radar for a variety o f reasons. One reason is that it constitutes an invasion o f privacy. This is not a valid argument, partly because Tempe w ill have posted signs vraming you o f photo radar units. It’s not lik e you’re being surreptitiously photographed. A lso, although what you do in your car is normally your own busi­ ness, the minute you break the law the cops have a right to step in and have a chat People m ay also argue that photo radar is not necessarily entirely accurate. However, police regu­ larly calibrate the units mid keep documentation o f it This is not to say that photo radar w ill always be 100 percent accurate, but you can always plead your casern traffic court. . \ ,’¿1*1218 How e ffe c tiv e photo radar w ill be in Tem pe remains to be seen. But if it prevents just one traffic accident — an accident that m ight have involved your ca r— ira’tfr w c r ti it? s TAFF STATE PRESS THEMOBILEPHONE- THE LAPTOP COMPUTER- r CALL THOSE IMPORTANT . .. .T O ..FOR STORING YOURFILES CLIENTS ANT WHERE ANDAT ANYTIME. (BUT NOTYOURKIDS, AND ORGANIZING THOSE r POWER LUNCHES ANDQTNER BECAUSE HEYYWRE ACAREER WOMAN AND bON’T HAVE ANY!?) MISC. DAILY APPOINTMENTS. Factions using G od to ju stify actions create m etam orphosis Lately it seems everybody is ~ crawling out of the woodwork with some sort of religious claim, crite ria or crisis. F rankly, it ELIZONDO makes me want to go stick my columnist head into a large pile o f sand -----— until the battle for my soul is over. ' ' Religious critics claim the movies I watch are immoral, my classrooms are full of sinners and that big bad Satan is lurking behind street comers and barstools. Perhaps so,. But in all fairness, lately the image of “God” has not exactly been up to snuff to the image that I was taught he (or she) was supposed to uphold. Don’t get me wrong — I’m riot knocking God. 1 am only trying to point out that lately it appears who ever is in charge of God’s public relations is asleep at the wheel. For example: two weeks ago a man travels across the country in order to destroy a Tempe Planned Parenthood clinic. His reasoning was “God told him to.” On Sept. 20, a four-month-old girl dies after sustaining injuries from a near-drowning which occurred during a bap­ tism, a ceremony symbolizing one’s relation to “God”. The Christian Coalition recently threatened to boycott the Disney Company if they decided to go ahead with plans to have the lead character in the TV show “Ellen" be a les­ bian. The Christian Coalition is the self-proclaimed politi­ cal lobbying group of “God”. Spirituality is a very serious and personal aspect of the human existence. I embrace and look for spirituality in my own life. But whenever “God” is brought into the equation, it is always something we should be a bit leery about. No one ever really knows what “God” has come to mean any­ more. Is the same “God” the Planned Parenthood basher was receiving messages from the same deity Ralph Reed claims to represent? The Tempe basher’s God tells men to drop what they are doing, travel long distances and destroy medical clinics. The Christian Coalition’s God insists that God told a man named Noah to drop what he was doing, build a big boat and ride out an impending flood. Where’s the distinction? They both sound a bit silly to me. If a person believes something different, he’s crazy. If a group of people don’t believe it, they’re a cult. But, if a large organized group of people believe it, it is considered a religion. Our society is so over polluted with messages about God it becomes difficult to pinpoint exactly what (or who) “God” is within the context of our culture. Some argue “God” is merely the unexplainable in life. They say God is what can not be explained, but I need “God” explained to me. When “God” is used to ban books, condemn lifestyles and justify terror, I can’t just shrug off “God” as some cos­ mic force that doesn’t need to be worried about. It scares me. “God” is used by many factions in our society to justify many things. As a result, I never know exactly where to stand in relation to the heavenly creator. I don’t want to be a part of any group or theology which preaches hate, stands for discrimination, or divides the world into flocks and sinners. I can’t accept the "us” versus “them” mentality “God” has come to symbolize. I want to believe in “God,” but 1 can’t embrace what the term has metamorphosed into. A man travels across the country and destroys a Tempe Planned Parenthood clinic. Why? Because “God" told him to. Almost immediately the local townsfolk write in letters to the newspaper declaring this man is a freak and the “God” he pledged to is not the real deal. They insist his “God” could never be their “God.” The crowd states their “God” would never do such a thing. They insist “God only acts in a certain agreeable fashion.” Obviously, they say, the man must be mad. Why? Because his “God” is different. But what criteria do we use? The Tempe basher’s story causes us to snicker, but there are others on this campus who believe God talks to them and we think nothing of it. I guess all it roots down to is that some people’s “God” is just more popular than oth­ ers. In the meantime, I’ll be tucked away under my bed. Please wake me when it’s over. Tim Elizondo is a senior studying communications. A N G E LA M U LL , E ditor B R IA N A N D ER SO N , M anaging E ditor KEVIN L ApEY .... .....................„Night Editor TIM BAXTER ........... ......... ........................-....City Editor ANDREA HEALEY. KELLY W & p B f c Editor TIMOTHY TAIT ? JEREMY SfElN ^ Editor LIZ I^NTALBANO. ... ¿ . v . LESLILINDGREN.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v ; . . . Asst. Magaitine Editor REPORTERS: Kennes Bolig, Sara Bush, Deanna Darr, Becky Hill, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Jeff Owens, Ray Stern, SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Cook, Josh DeFamio, Randy Jones, Dustin Krugel, Ed Odeven. COPY EDITORS: Christa Cerrentano, Theresa Valles. PHOTOGRAPHERS; Lori Cain, Pat Shannahan. COLUMNISTS: Bryn Chancellor, Mark Cohen, Tim Elizondo, Steve Forsbérg, David Galantowicz, Tina Holder, Rick Liljegren, Joshua Solövskoy, Vivi Stenberg, Theresa Valles. CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington, Steve Tansley. PRODUCTION: Aaron R. Bratcher, Adriarina Garcia, Diana Kessinger, John Kestner, Jeremy Meyer,; Corey Saunders, Shellie Spott. ^ „ SALES REPRESENTATIVES; Cari Dewald, Dan Ellstrom, Chris Ferrugia, David Goodwin, Nickelle Kastein, Sean Lambright, Branden Mudd, Jess Rankin, Simon Roberts, Shane Siren, Jesse Sletteland, Leslie Vegter. CLASSIFIEDS: Lisa Bayléss, Heidi Heister, Wayne Hoover, Stacey Thayer, Joy Thompson. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board, decided by a majority,voted among its members. They do not reflect the opinion'of the State Press staff as a Whole. Board members includé: ;|ANGELA MULL .> Editor BRIAN ANDERSON Managing Editor KELLY WENDEL Opinion Editor The State Press i? published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the academic year, except holidays and gxam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-15Ó2. We do not answer questions of a general nature. Y"§ The State Press is the only newspaper Exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campii?. Thè news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Information.............. .965-7572 Newsroom.................965-2292 Magazine.................965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds................. 965-6735 h ttp ://n e w s . v s p a . a su . e d u _________ O pin io n _________ St a t e P ress . W ednesday, S eptem ber 25, 1 9 9 6 Page 5 E xcluding Perot from debates sow s seeds o f voter cyn icism starts at hom e He may be annoying as hell, but he does spark a lot of discus­ sion. Ross Perot is running for president — again — providing STENBERG people with an alternative to the Colum nist traditional patties — and a little comic relief. Unfortunately, for Perot, he doesn’t stand a real chance of ever getting near the Oval Office (unless he starts donat­ ing some of those billions of his to the president-to-be), and therefore the Commission On Presidential Debátes has cho­ sen to exclude the guy from the upcoming campaign 1996 debates. The reasons why the commission decided to exclude Perot and various other independent candidates are proba­ bly good, old-fashioned political reality and not really worth contemplating. (Of course, Bob Dole doesn’t stand much of a chance of winning either, but Bill Clinton needs someone to debate). The effect this has on the political pro­ cess, though, is of a much greater significance. Perot says excluding him will deepen the public cyni­ cism (and of course damage his campaign). Probably one of the last things this country needs is a higher degree of polit­ ical cynicism, leading to an even greater voter apathy. I have addressed this issue before and I will probably do it again: voting is crucial for a democratic country and last time I checked, the United States preferred to be labeled as such. There is no way two political parties can even start to cover the many and diverse interests of the broad spectrum of American people. Both Republicans and Democrats try, by presenting platforms so vague, they can hardly be called political at all. This "Hallelujah-typc-politics” has resulted [ V ;r in is a political turn-off, not a tum-out. With the gradual inclusion of other parties into the polit­ ical arena, there is a chance more issues will be raised, engaging a greater number of people in the political debate than the predictable for-and-against type discussion we’re so bored of. If you look at other countries which exercise a political system where a variety of parties reflect the diverse inter­ ests of people, you will find a much higher voter tum-out than in the United States. The social dem ocracies of Scandinavia all have about eight parties included in the political process, ranging from far left to moderate right. In these countries the televised debates are national events, sparking much discussion and participation among the vot­ ers. It can be argued that these countries, because of their limited population, are much easier to govern and can allow such a "chaos” of parties, while the United States can’t. Actually it’s even more vital for this country to finally engage in a political system where a larger amount of peo­ ple feel represented in the elections. There has definitely been enough exclusions of certain groups of the American society and I’m not speaking of the poor billionaires (no pun intended) of Perot’s like. However, giving Perot and other independent candidates access to national exposure may be the way to go if the goal is to encourage people to vote. Naturally, the idea of shared political power will at least have two fanatic opponents: The Democratic and Republican powerhouses. So far in this campaign, they have been efficient in keep­ ing the arena to themselves. Maybe it is time to send in the other clowns too. Vivi Stenberg is a junior studying journalism. Columnist oozes condescension When I finished Joshua Solovskoy's Sept. 19 column, I was angry. But not at Bob Dole, Sheriff Joe or repeated sex offenders. What irritated me was the condescension that oozes in such charming turns of phrase as "liberal dogs whining," “low-life predators" and “But we know the discourse on crime will be just that. Talk.'" I suppose that defaming liberals and ACLU. and pre­ scribing that child molesters' sex organs be chopped at a block behind the courthouse, is just talk. too. If not, well you could’ve fooled me. because Solovskoy said all of these things in his column. ; It’s not that I’m a bleeding heart out to defend my buddies, because I'm not. And it's not that I am opposed to punishing violent crimes, because I’m not. I am a per­ fe c tly re aso n ab le hum an being. I only ask that Solovskoy, faithful journalist that he is supposed to be, editorialize responsibly. That way, he could appeal to our most reasonable, and best informed impulses. But he just answers symbol ("the liberals” and “the ACLU”) with rhetoric and in a gruesome aside, goes so far as to endorse behavior that he calls “barbaric” in the same breath. • Is this the kind of archetype the American conserva­ tive element needs right now? Let’s be realistic. We are trapped for the mom ent in E lection '9 6 hell. If the Republican party ever needed to appeal to the greatest subset of the American people, instead of the lunaticfringe conservatives, it’s now. If I thought that the Republicans needed an ideology like Solovskoy’s, I would support the write-in campaign of Rush Limbaugh for president. And we all know what he stands for: getting rid of Clinton and selling more copies of his book. So I suppose that integrity in the ranks is just talk, too. The subject of a future colum n, by Solovskoy maybe? That is not an encouraging thought. Austin Spencer Freshm an R ecent GOP telev isio n advertisem ents portray President Clinton as turning I C a rin the other cheek in the war bn WADSACK drugs. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R- Guest Columnist U tah, was quoted in Monday’s State Press as say­ ing on CBS’ Face the Nation that “literally, there is no leadership from the White House on this issue.” This statement is not literally true, but it does seem strange an electorate who knew Clinton used drugs when they voted him into the White House believed he would spend a lot of federal time and money frying to force other people not to. . The White House’s own anti-drug “czar,” retired four star General Bany McCaffrey, said on Sunday an effec­ tive drug education had to start in the home. He’s right. However, in many of the homes in America, parents who grew up in the first tide of recreational drug use are not able to tell their kids to listen to Nancy Reagan and “just say no.” This is why teen drug use is on the rise. Legislation and federal efforts to combat drug use are like a morn­ ing-after pill: a kid who gets arrested for possession of LSD and goes to jail on a felony charge obviously wasn’t taught to have a problem with experimental drug use. Congress and the police are not the ones sitting in his living room who tried to have an open mind when he told them of his exploits with marijuana. C onfess and the police are not going to be the ones who have to check kids into rehabilitation programs. And they are not the ones who have to clean up after a kid dies of a heroin overdose. Experimental drug use is not something that started with this generation. Our patents’ generation started this wave and, in many cases, they do not know how to con­ front the probtem When it comes to teaching their chil­ dren about choices. The inability of many parents to honestly say “np, I never did that and neither should you” leads ip many cases to an inability to discuss drug issues with children or to pinpoint a danger line that absolutely cannot be crossed. Clinton doesn’t seem to know where that line lies either. This summer, White House staffers were exposed as former drug users and the GOP is partially correct in saying Clinton has done little to boost the war on drugs. McCaffrey’s recent call for drug, education and the request for $15 billion to fight drug use will no doubt have some external effects on drug use in America and may reduce the amour# of drugs entering the country. Education, however, needs to start at home. Kids need to know what is dangerous. “Just say no” doesn’t work anymore and federal and social insistence on blan­ ket disapproval has only led to parents leaving their chil­ dren without education as to the risks and dangers of experimental drug use. Drug overdoses result from kids not knowing when to stop. Clinton’s and American parents’ silence on this issue has to end in order to save these lives. If Clinton and America’s parents can’t tell kids to just say no, hopefully McCaffrey’s work and an increase in funding can tell them how to teach kids to say “when.” Karin Wadsack is a graduate student studying mass communication. American eye needed Doctors haven’t given up on medical oath for S. Korean events I am w ritin g in reg ard to the a rtic le “ South Korean soldiers shoot two Northern spies.” The arti­ cle is by Y.J. Ahn. The concern 1 have is that this article may not be accurate. Even though it is from the Associated Press, the lack of a full name and the fact that South Korea and North Korea are mortal enemies leads me to feel that the whole story is not coming out. When one country government’s power is based on fear, truth is usually the first traitor executed. As you well know, several South Korean officials were sentenced for, as I recall, betraying the country. As the champion of democracy, though we don’t really have it, the United States better watch over these ongoing events in South Korea before someone like Adolf Hitler gets into their government. T revor Fields This is in response to the article by Joshua Solovskoy on Thursday saying that doctors have lost their sense of being just that, doctors. I do not feel that doctors are hypocrites or lost their devotion to the oath they took to be doctors. He first talks about abortion. A woman has many things to think about before she may have an abortion. What if the child is going to be men­ tally handicapped or w ithout appendages? Would you bring a child in this world knowing that he would live a life of poverty? Many young people that decide to keep their babies have to drop out of school and spend the rest of their life working at M cDonald’s. There are many reasons why a woman should have the choice to do what they do. It is important that we have trained doctors to do such procedures because without them it would be done by non­ professionals in back alleys. Then he speaks of euthanasia. No one really wants to die but just like the line in Stephen K in g ’s novel P et Sematary, “Sometimes dead is better.” Dr. Kevorkian doesn’t help just any- one. There are many processes that one has to go through to be selected. If you knew you only had a short time to live and during that time you were going to be in constant pain day and night, you would want to die too. The way Kevorkian does it is a lot better and cleaner than taking a gun to one’s head and pulling the trigger. So you see, d o ctors still care about th eir patients. They want what is best and sometimes the easing of pain and hard­ ship is better than life itself. Jason Michael Walker Sophomore Page 6 S t a t e P r ess W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 M oney may keep students from trek to A ID S q u ilt B y S a ra B u s h S t a t e P ress A group o f ASU students plan to attend the Washington, D C., display of the AIDS Memorial Quilt October 11-13— if they can raise enough money. ASU students heading up die ASU-DC ‘96 vol­ unteer committee would like to send 30 volunteers to help with the quilt display, but without a corpo­ rate sponsor, they are worried about fundraising. The NAMES Project Foundation organizes the quilt on a national level by cataloging the names raid organizing displays. Based on the number of people who viewed the quilt in 1992, the foundation officials estimate that 730,000 people will view 0m AIDS quilt during its three day display. Each one of die 39,166 coffin-sized panels in die quilt displays the name of a person who died from AIDS. The entire quilt covers about the same area as 25 football fields. “It is one of the most powerful tools we have (in ending the ADDS epidemic). There is no other edu­ cational tool like it.” said Leah Sample, regional coordinator for the NAMES Project Patricia Pozo, co-chair for the ASU-DC ‘96 committee and director o f the ASU Counseling Health Advisory Committee, said it is especially important for ASU students to be involved. "The state of Arizona is. 49th in funding for AIDS research and testing and there is no anony­ mous testing (at ASU) anym ore,” .Pozo said. “We’re not doing our job with AIDS education.” Pozo said it is important to educate the campus and fight against the prejudice and fear which often surrounds AIDS. Jeffrey Chow, a freshman biology and economics major who plans to attend the Washington quilt display, said more money should be spent on AIDS research. “1 feel that there is a need for me to help,” Chow said. “We’re living in a country where Shaquille O’Neal makes more money in a year than goes to AIDS research. Seeing the quilt, AIDS becomes mote than statistics,” .. Court rejects ASASU bribery claim restraining order and a permanent injunction to stop ASASU from working with political candidates. Leone alleged the State Relations Department was endorsing incumbents and recruiting students to work for these politicians in return for a favorable vote on student issues in the Legislature. The $tate Relations Department maintains they are con­ necting student volunteers with whichever candidate’s campaign a student wants to work for. The temporary restraining order was denied by the court on Sept. 10. The decision made Tuesday stated that the court does not have the authority to conduct a full investigation. Government Relations Director James Faulkner— also named in the suit — said the decision wasn’t surprising. “There was nothing going on here,” Faulkner said. “)Ve were hoping this would get resolved quickly ... now we can move forward.” Leone said he would look into taking further action against the State Relations Department outside of the ASASU supreme court. B y J ennifer N etherby State P ress The Associated Students of ASU Supreme Court unani­ mously denied a complaint Tuesday charging the State Relations Department with trading endorsements for politi­ cal influence. The court’s decision cited no proof of the allegations. The court also found that no bylaws or ASASU constitu­ tion violations were cited in the complaint. “I’m not surprised,” said Damon Pace, ASASU state relations coordinator. “We didn’t break any bylaws. The Supreme Court realized that.” . \ Charles Leone, the student who filed the suit, called the charge of not having any proof “nonsense.” He said his main concern is the lack of an investigation into the State Relations Department. Leone, a senior history major, filed a complaint Sept. 9 against the ASASU State Relations Department and Pace. He charged that ASASU was endorsing candidates for future political support on state legislation, Leone asked the court for a full investigation of the State Relations Department with an independent examiner, a temporary Kiss on cheek lands first-grader in trouble The rules are outlined in a student handbook given to each child at the start of the school year. Parents arc asked to sign a form confirming that they explained the do’s and don’t’s, Martin said. A teacher who saw the incident reported it to the princi­ pal, who decided the first-grader should be punished. Johnathan missed out on coloring and playing with his friends. He also missed an ice-cream party honoring stu­ dents with good attendance. Prevette said she could understand a sexual harassment rule directed at older students. She said she will ask the school board to make allowances for children in third grade and below. “This makes children wonder ‘Should I hug some­ body?”’ she said. “It’s no wonder we have all these people with behavior problems.” LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP) — These days, a kiss isn't just a kiss — not even in the first grade. A 6-year-old boy who kissed a girl on the cheek was suspended last week on the grounds o f sexual harassment. Jackie Prevette said the school overreacted to an inno­ cent peck on the cheek by banishing her son, Johnathan, to a room apart from his classmates. Johnathan said that the girl asked him to kiss her and that he was expressing friendship, according to his mother. “Can’t you just imagine children skipping down the hall holding hands? Isn’t that Norman Rockwell America?” Prevette said. District spokeswoman Jane Martin said the policy is clear: “A 6-year-old kissing another 6-year-old is inappro­ priate behavior. Unwelcome is unwelcome at any age.” WannaDrink? ASU WOMEN'S SOCCER D rown N ight GRAND CANYON UNIVERSITY only vs 5 C Today, Wednesday, T o D rink From 7 TO 1 1 PM 2 FOR 1 SHOTS W ednesdays 4 :0 0 p .m . FREE ADMISSION! Sun Devil Soccer Field Adjacent to Cornerstone mall, 6th Street and Rural Road. Follow signs to the field. Everyone in attendance will receive a free women's soccer schedule poster sponsored by Fine Host. TOMATO <3 After the game, visit Tomato Cafe, the all you can eat gourmet Italian food bar. Located in the Cornerstone M all, Tomato Cafe is a proud sponsor o f ASU Women's Soccer. S tate P ress Pagfi 7 W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 Institute helps Native-American students adjust truly helps students. “Some of their problems look a lot easier Adjusting to life at ASU is never easy, when someone shows them how,” he said. but the American Indian Institute is trying ' Elroy Naswood, sophomore aerospace to make that transition a little easier for engineering major, said he takes advantage Native-American students. of the tutors whenever he can. He addec that The An, located in the Engineering Annex there seems to be a tutor for every subject building, was established in 1989 to help any student could be having problems with. Native-American students adjust to life at col­ Cal Seciwa, director of the All, said the lege and to keep them here after they arrive. institute is quickly outgrowing their current Gretchen Fletcher, academic adviser for facilities. With the growing amount of All, said they use a two-fold approach. The Native-American students taking oart in first is cultural adjustment and the second the program — about 350 this semester — is academic support. there is little room to spare. “It’s adjusting to an impersonal world The All is also used as a social gather­ coming from a personal one." Fletcher said. ing place for Native-American students. She added that All provides a “tremen­ Students ean socialize, find out about activ­ dous aid in the tran sitio n from high ities and social events, as well as meet with school to college.” Native-American student groups. To increase retention rates, the center Seciwa said his goals for the center has computers available to students and include expanding services offered to stu­ employs three tutors to help students. dents, expanding facilities and promoting Daniel Alvarez, a graduate student in growth in existing programs. electrical engineering, has been one of He added that culture shock is one of these tutors for two semesters. He said he the biggest problems Native Americans works with an average of 12 students each „ face in college, and he hopes the center is a week for about 20 hours per week. place where students can relax, feel com­ He said he believes that this service fortable and “might even call home.” B y D eanna D arr State P ress Pat Shannahan/ State Press At the American Indian Institute, Native American students can find a quit place to study, have access to computers, and receive help from tutors; The American Indian Institute is located in the Engineering Annex building, Simpson jurors appear split along racial lines during jury selection SANTA MONICA. Calif. (AP) — Prospective jurors in the O.J. Simpson civil case split largely along racial lines Tuesday, with whites saying he was probably guilty and blacks suggesting he was innocent. “We all realized this case had divided America, but not as starkly as we are seeing it in jury selection,” said Loyola Law School Professor Laurie Levenson, who is observing the selection process. “It’s not just the media reading some­ thing into a verdict." Three blacks, two whites and one Asian were excused from the wrongful-death case for having strong opinions one way or the other about his role in the murder of exwife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman. Two people, an Asian and a black, made it past the ini­ tial screening to join 10 others awaiting further questioning in the selection process. : ; The two prospective jurors who made it past the screen­ ing included a Japanese-American woman who said she was visiting Japan when Simpson’s criminal trial was mak­ ing headlines. S t a t e P ress ® ]?@ Iâ7§! W e're there w hen you c a n 't be. Simpson lawyer Robert Baker opposed the Asian woman because she wrote on her questionnaire that Simpson was “probably guilty.” She said she wrote that because “I heard it on the news, the police.” Asked if she could base a verdict on the evidence alone, she giggled and said she would try. The victims’ families arc suing Simpson for unspecified damages. Simpson took notes and occasionally talked with a jury consultant during jury selection. 3 FREE CONDOMS W ITH TH IS CO U PO N EX PIR ES 1 0 *7 *9 6 LOCATED AT PALM WALK & UNIVERSITY BRIDGE ASU STUDENT HEALTH PHARMACY965*3338 18 & O LD ER OPEN MWF 8:30-5:00 TTH 9-5 Closed Daily 12:30-1:00 ■ ■ -1 B B .1 1 R W http://www.asu.edu/health/shrxhom e.htm l 1 FRO NT OR REAR § ^ m Many Vehicles c ,o O £ G t ■ É 1' 1 ■ 1 I C LU TC H R EPLA CEM EN T I O » P e• P re r A x le w •»S S eem m i M e ta llic H igh ig h e r » m iu m P a dd ss/S • PPrre em /S hhio e s • R e s u r fa c e R o to r s /D r u m s C oupon 1 The CLUTCH Pro* The BRAKE Pro A A “ 9 | J A W n f l W UU J « P re s s u re P la te « F r ic tio n D is c « R e le a se B e a rin g M Many RWD Vehicles & P.U.'s E x p ir e s 1 0 -3 0 -9 6 n tr C Îû fc h s B r a k e s _____________ P h o e n ix____________ W ED N ESD A YS 864-8338 955-1996 788-5443 8820 N. BLACK 3310 E. THOMAS RD. 17209 N. CAVE CANYON HWY (32ND & THOMAS) CREEK RD. 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The Fed’s decision not to raise interest rates means ASU Students who owe money on student loans may not see an increase in their interest rates this year. Though the function of the Reserve is to charge the increased rate to banks, the banks traditionally pass on the increase to borrowers. “What the Fed does with interest rates is im portant to students because they have variable-fate loans that are adjusted toward the end of the. federal fiscal year,” said Kate Dillon, student financial assis­ tance director. Dillon said the annual adjustment is typ­ ically done sometime in September and could have had an immediate impact on students if increased. “Obviously, from a student point of View, the announcement is good news,’’ said Lee Bolin, ASU Young Democrat club member. Ron Jackson, president of ASU College Republicans, said the decision may have been put off to cooperate with the Clinton administration. “Economic conservatives think a slight rise in the interest rates is OK if it pre-empts inflation,” he said. But he also said it is pos- S St a t e P ress W ednesday, S eptem ber 25, 1996 t a t e P sible that the Federal Reserve is simply waiting until after the election to raise them. "If you look at any party you can find examples of the Federal Reserve cooperating with die current presidential administration.” Art Blakemore, economics department chairman, said this is sometimes true. “There were times when the Fed was friendly to the adm inistration but Greenspan has a history of not doing that,” he said, referring to Alan Greenspan, chair­ man of the Federal Reserve. In fact, B lakem ore said he thought Greenspan was avoiding election-year poli­ tics altogether. “I think there was an attempt to stay apolit­ ical this time,” he said. “I was a little surprised they waited to raise them, but I don’t think the economy is in danger one way or another within the range they were talking about” Blakemore said the figure being consid­ ered was a quarter-point increase as a com­ promise between the two sides of the issue — one calling for no raise and the other for a half-point raise, Blakemore said the Federal Reserve meets several times a year to consider such things as interest rates and meets again shortly after the election. ; “I think at that meeting they will raise it a quarter-point.” r e s s po u c e repo rts State’s incomes on rise to m anufacture silico n w afers. However, those plans are opposed by environmental groups. Still, the influx of high-tech jobs has helped Arizona to continue to offset its reliance on agriculture as a source of income, Vieh said. “Arizona, has been holding its own as we’ve shifted from agriculture to high-tech,” she said. The state also continues to experi­ ence a construction boom as more peo­ ple migrate to Arizona. Vieh said both housing and industrial starts have shown marked increases. “The state is just becoming known as a good place to do business,” she said. “Our workforce is known as one that is well-educated. W e’ve done a good job training workers to provide the kind of skills businesses want,” New M exico experienced the largest growth in per-capita income among Western states, with a 6.2 per­ cent increase in 1995, Oregon was next at 6.0 percent, with California slightly ahead of Arizona, also at 5.7 percent. Several other Western states report­ ed growth under 5.0 percent, including Nevada (4.2), Montana (4.2), Alaska (2.8) and Hawaii (2.4). Slow growth in those states were largely attributed to losses in farm income. (AP) — While most of the West struggled to keep pace with the nation’s fastest per-capita income growth in five years, Arizona residents continued to experience an economic boom in 1995. U.S. Commerce Department figures released Monday showed that Arizonans earned an average of $20,489 last year, an increase of 5.7 percent over 1994 figures. The national average was $23,208, or a 5.3 percent increase over the pre­ vious year. Arizona’s increase ranked fourth among Western states and 14th overall, “That’s certainly good news to us,” said Jackie V ieh, directo r o f the Arizona Departm ent of Commerce. “W e’re not at all surprised. It’s the result of a strategy to encourage growth of high-paying jobs in the state,” Vieh said many of those jobs were in the high-tech industry, a field that accounts for some 100,000 jobs in the state and an economic impact of nearly $10 billion. Intel Corp. b u ilt a facility in Chandler three years ago to produce Pentium microchips, while Motorola has been manufacturing semiconduc­ tors and other electronic components. In addition, Japanese com puter giant Sumitomo Corp. has announced its intention to build a plant in Phoenix Too bizarre to be anything but real. G o d 's W is d o m in O u r L iv e s an Exp erien tia l S tu d y of the Book of Proverbs Thursday Noon Bible Study S tu d y in g in th e U SA Christian Students Fellowship is sponsoring a noon Bible study every Thursday during the Fall Semester on the various aspects o f G od's Wisdom in O u r Lives, a study from the Book of Proverbs. This week we will talk about: The Secret of Wisdom T h u r s d a y , S e p t, 2 6 , 1 2 : 4 0 '‘- 1 : 3 0 p m M e m o r ia l U n io n / M o h a v e / 2 2 2 C h ristian S tudents F ellow ship CS^S <{♦ stu d e n t S p e c ia l! 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Nelson Fine Arts courtyard. \ f ' f .,1 V , r , | \ p , | * | | rv l • Two vending machines were burglarized at the Language ■ and Literature Building. 4 Si/ nnl i r e r ennr t e/ i t he f ni t nui i na i nri Aont * T , . o c An v * Four vending machines were burglarized in the Physical " a Sci ences Building F-wing. removed his bicycle from 620 Alpha Drive, where it was * ASU officers assisted Tempe police with a roll-over accisecured with a lock. dent at Rio Salado Parkway and Packard Drive. • A male affiliated with ASU reported that someone • Two female students were arrested for possession of marremoved his bicycle from the Student Services Building ijuana and drug paraphernalia at Cholla Hall. where it was secured with lock Tempe police reported the follow ing incidents Tuesday; • A female student reported that someone removed her • A man was found dead from an apparent gun shot wound bicycle from the Student Recreational Complex where it in the laundry room at his residence at 821 E. Dava Drive, was secured with a lock. The man had previously pointed the gun at his wife after • A male affiliated with ASU reported that someone crimi- she told him that she wanted a divorce and said he had nally damaged a computer in Manzanita Hall. enough bullets to take care of her and their two children, • A male not affiliated with ASU was arrested on an out- who were asleep in their bedroom. The woman fled the standing warrant from Tempe police. The subject was apartment unharmed, leaving the two children, ages one unable to post bond and was booked. and three, in the residence. Police secured^ the perimeter • Two males not affiliated with ASU were arrested, cited around the residence but negotiators were unsuccessful in and released for interference for peaceful conduct in the making phone contact with the man. A SWAT team later \ entered the residence and found the man’s body. The two children were still asleep and unharmed. • A man was arrested for misdemeanor assault and domestic violence after punching his girlfriend in the face several times with a closed fist at thfeif residence at 2735 N. Saratoga Drive. No medical treatment was required and the man denied hitting the woman. He was booked into Tempe City Jail. • A man was arrested for shoplifting at K-Mart, 1330 W'. Baseline Road. The man walked down, the shoe aisle, removed his shoes and put on a pair of new boots. He then attempted to leave the store but the merchandise set off an alarm. The suspect was detained, and the boots were removed. He was warned that if he returned to the store, he would be arrested for shoplifting. He then returned later that day, put on a hat from a display and attempted to conceal a bottle of aspirin down his pants, The man was detained again and arrested. He was booked into Tempe City Jail. Compiled by State Press reporter Kennes Bolig. rak V V V tfy g g ^ v v v v v v v v v v ^ v v v v ! MIGUEL'SMUSICCENTER J I i J i J | ►METRONOMES• ACCESSORIES• ETC. W ►ELECTRIC & ACOUSTIC GUITARS ® ►AMPS • ELECTRIC EFFECTS • SHEET MUSIC Jjj ►LESSONS (Rock«Contemporary•Folk*Classic Guitar) ►REPAIRS > On AHInstruments! Bl ...and much MORE! m I n T h e A r c h e s S h o p p in g C e n te r [l 130 E. U niversity Dr. 968-2310 Career Fair : / (< [H i r >\ ft X / * \ Y V .J OJ “i r I I \ \ » • \ \ / \\ S OLDE, America’s Full Service DiscountBroker is looking for motivated people to establish a career in the stockbrokeragebusiness. 12-18 m onth paid training program ' ... I 1 | . .A ] .| ■ National Recruiting 751 G risw old Street Detroit, M I 48226 / f j /y t M * / W \ A ll | ■ T . . ' JH L \ | : ■J I H I H ■ ■ If you are unable to attend the Career Fair call: / ^ - 401(k) Program . If you possess excellent communication skills, I general m arket knowledge and the desire to excel, see u s at the Career Fair on 10/02/96. v -v . W k m : JM JH A M f m ' J ■ I H tJ B , k f f j l AHHv B l Wm 1 I b mm M t ^ I 1 " I I I A ■ f _ I I l \ JUST SOUTHEAST 1 # V | M ^ L M #m m H H I A M I I I I . SOLDE # I W E V #m J M M . ' I A I 076 F BroArlwav Rrfl I DISCOUNT STOCKBROKERS i ^ / | f f '• B kJ 1| I O c to b e r 2, 199 6 I ~ \\ , \ \ a«-*-' ' \ \ / M ,. ' m +*’ C% V j jr'- I , ~ I ' Tempe - 829-6824 [ ° ° ®@Q3 ° tF0®[fa I Film Developing H U w / M m . *1 0 H 'r th ase C ool Oitdoor Patio Buy 1 Shawerma & Get a 2nd Money Orders ONLY 1 9 * - —— MEGAFOODS COUPON----- , W I 4. ii •f. | Buy 1Dinner | I &Get a2ndofEqual I * orLesserValueFor I O FF F R E E ¡H alfPrice' ______ __________ i___________________ i kk 1 0 M S . T e r r a c e R d . L smhe A Z N e x t T o H ig h e r G r o u n d • 1 1 a m - 1 1 pm as*- P Postage Stamps & 8 b5 b "| Credit & Debit Cards Accepted m ft. r i Mi p kk kk Video Rentals 5 9 1 Everyday - N ew Releases $ 1 .49 Wh %> JÆ i>- ’ tM i* M kk Jlr u i s i n e RS* ■ li A %> ligi Li. %J\ ft u IN OUR DAIRY DEPARTMENT >IN OUR DELI DEPARTMENT • IN OUR RAKERY GRÏÏCERiYIPaURÏHflM (D? » 0 0 (0 3 1 1 1 1 I GET $5.00 OFF YOUR NEXT TOTAL PURCHASE OF $25.00OR MORE, EXCLUDING ALL ! LIQUOR AND TOBACCO PRODUCTS. OFFER GOOD ONLY AT MEGAF00DS I 1706 E. SOUTHERN, TEMPE ARIZONA COUPON CANNOT BE DOUBLED, i J J M i n COUPON PER CUSTOMER VISIT. EFFECTIVE: */2S THRU 10¿1¿996 PU B2000 I e Double Coupons & A cce p t A ll C o m p etito rs Coupons P a ge l l W ednesday, S eptem ber 25, 1996 State P ress H in t o f W h it e w a t e r p a r d o n s r a is e s s t o r m WASHINGTON (AP) President Clinton’s refusal to rule out pardons for his former Whitewater partners raised storm warnings Tuesday. Some observers said a Whitewater pardon would cause as m uch outrage as President F o rd ’s act of clem ency toward Richard Nixon. Clinton was noncommittal when asked Monday about a potential post­ election pardon for Jim McDougal, C l in t o n his former wife Susan McDougal and former Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker. But he didn't slam the door shut. He said he would review such requests “after there’s an evaluation done by the Justice Department.’’ But that was enough to arouse strong reaction from Republicans. “It would be an unprecedented use of the pardon power when you pardon someone who is involved in a matter in which you yourself are being investigated,” said Joseph diGenova. who was U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia in the Reagan and Bush administrations. He said it could be grounds for impeachment and “would doom his presidency — doom it. no matter what his other accom­ plishments." ; “There would be a storm of outrage and indignation."’ agreed Robert Goldwin, a constitutional scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Goldwin served in the Ford White House and observed the protests following Ford’s pardon of Nixon for crimes he “committed or might have committed.” Some historians think the pardon cost Ford re­ S ïA T £ SA She is also to begin a two-year term Monday following election in 1976. In 1992, President B ush’s last days in office were her conviction in May — along with her ex-husband and dogged by reaction to his pardons of former Defense Tucker — on Whitewater-related fraud charges. Clinton said the prosecutors wanted Mrs. McDougal “to Secretary Caspar Weinberger and five Other former offi­ say something bad about us, whether it was the truth or not. cials in the Iran-Contra affair. B ush’s, own vice presidential conduct could have And if it was false, it would still be perfectly all right. And become an issue at Weinberger’s trial. BuSh’s role had been if she told the troth and it wasn’t bad about us she simply under investigation by the prosecutor’s office at the time would be punished for it. That’s what her lawyer said.” As for a post-election pardon, he said: “I’ve given no Bush pardoned Weinberger, a fact the prosecutor empha­ consideration to that. And you know, their cases are still sized in his final report on Iran-Contra. At the time, Clinton, awaiting his own inauguration, on appeal. And I would — my position would be that their commented, “I am concerned by any action that sends a cases should be handled like others, they should go signal that if you work for the government, you’re beyond through. There’s a regular process for that. I review those the law or that not telling the truth to Congress under oath cases as they come up after there’s an evaluation done by is somehow less serious than not telling the truth to some the Justice Department. And that’s how I think it should be handled.” other body under oath.” So far Clinton has granted 53 pardons, fewer than any On Tuesday, the president did not elaborate on his remarks concerning his former business associates. His president this century. Many have been hardship cases. On Capitol Hill, some of Clinton’s sharpest critics called press secretary, Mike McCurry, said Clinton was “absolute­ ly not" holding the door open for pardons, adding, “He said his remarks inappropriate. Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., said the president was offering Mrs. McDougal an inducement to he hadn’t given it any consideration.” In an interview Monday on t h e N e w s H o u r w ith J im keep silent. “It’s like putting a carrot on a stick in front of her and L e h r e r on PBS, Clinton agreed with Susan McDougal’s charge that Whitewater independent counsel Kenneth Starr further politicizing what she’s been doing,” Mica said in . an interview. “She's been playing to him and now he’s is “out to get the Clintons.” playing to her. To me, it’s a disgusting perversion of the “Isn’t it obvious?” he said. Mrs. McDougal was jailed Sept. 9 on a contempt of judicial system.” Another frequent Clinton critic, Rep. Robert Walker, Rcourt charge for refusing to answer questions before a fed­ eral grand jury investigating Whitewater. Among the ques­ Pa., said the president was “leaving hope open to people tions was whether Clinton told the truth in sworn testimony who don’t cooperate that he might in fact pardon them. That’s what he seems to be saying.” denying knowledge of a fraudulent $300,000 loan. iàv* £ tf Coi . ^ " ^ 1 . ArÌ 2 6 *A IT A T I « « I f Ï M lT T TENT SALE 'T " ^ B '• S ta te P ress ?• 4 DAYS ONLY Sept. 26 - 29 Thursday, Friday, Saturday,Sunday 10% to 50% R e a l n e w P R IN T E D s O N R EA L P A P ER ! AFI2ÓIA STATE ' * tv? PHOENIX (AP) — The Phoenix Coyotes assigned | defensemen Dérpn Quint and Kevin Dahl to minor league affiliates Tuesday. The m oves trim m ed the roster o f the form er Winnipeg Jets to 28, w#hm four o f the NHL lim it. Quint, 20, w ho played in 51 gam es last season with the Jets, was returned'to the Springfield Jfelcons o f the American Hockey League. Dahl was assigned to th e L a s V egas Thunder o f the International H octeyD agae. ■ Quint had five goals and 13 assists for the Jets last season, and collected two goals and three assists in 11 games with Springfield, Dahl, a free agent sig p d A u g .2 6 after spending four years in die Calgary Flames organization, played in two exhibition games with the Coyotes this month but did not score. P age 1 4 U l t im a t e F r is b e e T e a m The ASU ultimate frisbee team competed in the Club Desert Sectional tournament in Tucson last weekend. The Women’s team took second place and were led by Mary Barcio. With the win, the women's team qualified for October’s regional tourney in Las Vegas. The ultimate frisbee team will host some of the Southwest’s best college teams in November in the Desert Disc Duel at Tempe Diablo Stadium. Water S ki D evils ASU junior Todd Phillips took first place overall in the m en’s division last weekend for the Water Ski S tate P ress W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 Devils. Phillips’ score of 940 was good enough to give him first place over team m ate Jared Heim bigner. Heimbigner finished with a score of 820. Courtney Bunjer took first place for the Women’s team with a score of 835. Bunjer placed first in the slalom and jumping events, and second in the trick com­ petition. Teammate Renee Miller placed second in the slalom. Lacrosse T eam The ASU lacrosse team is looking for players. Anyone interested can call Rhino at 220-0306. C o m p ile d b y P ercy EdnaU no Jr., sp e c ia l to ffe? State Press. Help; send thirty ASÜ students to D.C.: They will . be volunteers at the largest guilt display ever. W a s h in g to n needs to know A rizo n a cares. Please Call <602) 965-3161 to make donations o r purchase $1 raffle tickets in front o f thé MU. “Philadelphia” will be showing at the MU Cinema Tues., Sept. 24 • 7pm Wed., Sept. 25 »4 pm Thurs., Sept. 26 «3:10 pm DONATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED Please join us at the largest display of AIDS Memorial Quilt. 40,000 panels. 25 football fields of fab­ ric. An intensely moving memorial. And if we surround it with one or two million souls who dan vote, Congress may even lose sleep over jt W e hope so. AIDS .funding depends oh it. Call the NAMES Project Foundation: 415-882'55Q0. Travel informations 800*926-2631. CROSSWORD b y THOMAS JOSEPH ACRO SS Get your act together with Dr. Maya Angelou, as featured on PBS TV keynote speaker at the College &- Career Expo ‘96 An Evenre with Maya Angelou F R ID A Y N IG H T O C T O B E R 4 ,1 9 9 6 • 7 :0 0 P M Phoenix Civic Plaza, Hall B Tickets $22 at Dillards Box Office 602/678-2222 “Opening Doors toHigher Education” College Career E>qx> % F R ID A Y &■ S A T U R D A Y • 1 0 A M -6 P M O C T O B E R 4 & 5 ,1 9 9 6 DO W N 1 Wrist1 Rural abode related 2 Concert 7 Press site 11 Wake 12 Finished 3 Map lines 13 Grin’s 4 Btuenose counter­ 5 Euphrates setting part 14 Scatter 6 Permit 7 ThinkFitzgerald 15 “The tank output Jungle Book” 8 Arrives setting 9Taking a 16 More sabbatical 10 Almost ashef) 17 Cartoonist 16 Pie that’s Thomas served hot 18 Church 18 Planted book spies 19 The gamut 21 Wall • climber 22 Panama area 25 Impair 26 Dessert fruit 27 Comes up 29 Bound 33 Naps 34 Actress Sinclair 35 Balm ingredient 36 Tears 37 Fix 38 Fiery 39 Historic times 40 Perches 20 Music buys 22 Seasonal singer 23 Hopi home 24 Magic city 2 5 Tussaud, for dhe 28 Water- melon waste 30 Advantages 31 Spy 32 Nuisances. 34 Painter Joan 36 Saloon 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 12 13 14 15 16 17 1 8 ■ 19 20 -■ 21 2223 24 25 ■26 27 20 1 29303132 33 3A _■ 35 3 6 ■38 37 39 40 i ■ j m i DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work It: AXYDLBAAXR is L O N G F E L L O W One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and form ation o f the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. Phoenix Civic Plaza, Yuma &- Tucson Rooms FREE Admission Workshops, college reps on-site, freebies and $10,000 in scholarships to be given away. MJ D ! L For more information, call Southwest Student Services Corporation at 602/461-6525. M V B D C G D M G H D ’ L. — O . C . KJFD Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ANY TWO PHILOSO­ PHERS CAN TELL EACH OTHER ALL THEY KNOW IN TWO HOURS.—OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES 10-12 V B D CRYPTOQUOTES U K S M W G BKH M LM G BE M O J L V R N E KJ F KL V M S KJ N , Q 1996 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. PJ M O J MV State P ress Pag e 15 W ednesday, Septem ber 25, 1996 ASUs win has fans popping up all over campus, W iley I was wrong — dead wrong. EREMY Like almost all other media in the Valley and STEIN around the country, I pre­ Sports dicted Nebraska would Editor romp over ASUObviously, the opposite was die case. Saturday night, ASU was by far the better team and probably could have put up an even more lop­ sided victory than it did. My congratulations go out to the Sun Devil team. By knocking off the top-ranked team in the country, the ASU football team has brought upon itself many things — national media attention, respect from other J' Jim Poulin/State Press Since ASU's upset of Nebraska, Sun Devil fans have been coming out of the woodwork. teams around the country, a top-10 ranking in the Associated Press poll and hundreds upon hundreds of fair-weather, bandwagon-jumping fans. In an area notorious for fair-weather fans, it’s amaz­ ing how quickly people changed from a normal, unin­ terested ASU student or Valley resident into a diehard, maroon-and-gold-bleeding Sun Devil fanatic. The same people who preferred to make a few bucks by scalping, their ASU/Nebraska tickets, instead of watching ASU play the top-ranked team in the nation, are the ones who are now clamoring to the ASU box office to get tickets to see “their” team play Oregon. It is really sad, and pitiful, to see people, especially students, who don’t even know the scores of ASU’s first two games, calling the Sun Devils "their” team. The whole point of being a fan is following a team through its ups and downs and showing your pride for that team no matter what happens. T urn to Stein , page 16. Mtl m -f SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Hound trip from Phoenix LONDON . .. . ........ .438 ..........498 PARIS...;.. FRANKFURT ........ ......498 AMSTERDAM.................646 MUNICH................. ..........458 MADRID................. ........ .498 ROME....................... ....... 647 DUBLIN ................. .........652 ATHENS........... ....... ,.....,..733 CABO SAN LUCAS ...,. .158 PUERTO VALLARTA... ...158 MAZATLAN................... ...198 MEXICO C IT Y .......... .1 5 8 VANCOUVER.............. .205 GUATEMALA................. ...507 COSTA RICA ............. ...488 ...554 BELIZE....... HONDURAS............ ...603 Other Cities Available MILL AVENUE TRAVEL 966-6300 Discounts Also Available To Faculty & Staff R e strictions A p p ly . S u bject to A v a ila b ility - si ~ jam n i l '; PRINC ETON r i \ il w O RE Casses s f¿ n v f o C T . 2 C\ 1-800-2R EV IEW The Princeton Review is not affiliated with ETS or Princeton University Bike Co-Op p r o v id e s a f a c ilit y w h e r e s tu d e n ts r e p a ir t h e ir o w n b i k e s , w i t h t o o ls p r o v id e d . C a ll 9 6 5 - 4 7 4 8 Sponsored by ASASU oaw s t u d e n t «novciO ’n***«-*»# IT-« P age 1 6 S tate P ress W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 M a r i n o _ ___________ S t e i n _______________ C o n t in u e d fro m pag e C ontinued 13. yards in 3 1/2 quarters. He completed 15 of 22 passes for 122 yards, but was sacked five times. “I was disappointed in our performance offensively, and the quarterback is a reflection of what wc do offen­ sively,” Johnson said. “There were times we didn’t exe­ cute well — both Benue and the rest of the offense.” Marino’s injury occurred when he turned his ankle while planting his right foot to throw a 34-yard comple­ tion to O.J. McDuffie. “He wasn’t hit,” Johnson said. “He just turned it the Wrong way.” The exact diagnosis was an acute non-displaced frac­ ture of Marino’s right ankle. The term “acute’’ means the injury was new. Doctors had yet to decide whether the ankle would require a cast or screws to stabilize it, Johnson said. Players had the day off, and Marino declined to com­ ment. “He's disappointed,” Johnson said. “He’s anxious to do whatever it takes to get well. He realizes he’s impor­ tant to the team. W e’re on the road to having a good team, and Dari wants to be part of it.” Despite the D olphins’ first defeat in four games, Johnson said he was pleased with the way his players reacted to the loss of Marino and the hostile environment at the RCA Dome. “I’ve seen teams come unraveled on the road with that noise when you lose your quarterback,” Johnson said. “ Because of our kicking game and our defense, and because we didn’t turn the ball over, we had a chance to win the game right up until the end.” fro m page 15. Another requirement for being a “true” fan is always believ­ ing in “your” team, no matter how big of a task lies ahead of it. Last week, I walked around campus wearing Nebraska Tshirts and hats every day. (I grew up in Nebraska and have been a die-hard Cornhusker fan since I was 4.) Despite being dressed in the “enemy’s” colors, I did not receive one comment all week from any so-called ASU fans. However, when I showed up on campus Sunday and Monday after the game, of course donning Nebraska red and white, several ASU “fans” were quick to shout out a few choice comments about my choice of clothing. Where were these “die-hard” ASÚ fans before Saturday night’s upset? Now, I’m not saying there are no real ASU fans out there. In fact, I have met some real Sun Devil fans, all of whorin have stuck with ASU through the past eight-frustrating years since the team’s last bowl berth. For these fans, I am happy to see their devotion pay off with ASU returning to national prominence. As for all the new ASU “fans,” the next time ASU has a los­ ing season or fails to qualify for a bowl game remember the Sun Devils are still “your” team. TONIGHT! c u r^ s mm mum " W H IT E T R A S H .mm® LO UNG E” 1 0 :0 0 - C L O S E .WHITE TRASH PHILOSOPHERS W ITH M E L L O W M IN D B L O W O FF-TRACK BETTING iM k 9 6 6 -5 6 0 0 5TH & ASH C l a s s if ie d s Notice to our readers: Before APARTMENTS responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the 1050 S. STANLEY Lacrecenta company and offer. The State Press Apt. 1 bed. $465/mo, utili in­ cannot assume responsibility for cluded. $200 off move in.. Call the validity of the offers advertised i Sang 731-9184 in our classified section. For more IB R /IB A , LAÜNDRY. 2 information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, blocks from campus. Quiet, please contact the Better Business small complex. 933 S. Farmer. Bureau at Ì64-Ì721., . 675 0928 v v 41 1 More Trivia... The firs t modern Olympic» opened in Athens, Greece in 1896 with 311 ath­ letes from 13 nations competing in 9 / ANNOUNCEMENTS AUDITIONING VOICES for the pop/jazz acapel la singing group En Fbrte. 482-7374; 2BR/2BA W/DEN, laundry. 2 blocks from campus. Quiet, small complex. 945 S Farmer. 675-0928. : ;> LARGE 2 bedroom apartment. TV, câble, pool, laundry. Walk to ASU. Very quiet. 966^4797. iïS v T I BoHnmro Coupon Book Made for ASU students, by ASU students to save you money ail over town! In t e r e s t e d .3 BDR, . 2 ba, tile floors, $950/mo. Others also available. QUÉSTA VIDA 3bd 3bà. 1 894-0288 ' .Vly.;. V ;.'' /; • 1/2 mi. from ;ASÌJ, w/d, vaulted ceilings w /fans $ 1050/mo. 1B WAY & Mill lrg Studio 800-921-5713 or 921-0960 $285/mo. 1 bd, 1 ba $3lO/ffio! Tim 894-0288 ; " FOUR BDR. Ht)lise for rent. 2ba, double carport, 3/4 mi frorrt ASU, 890-2271. Call after 2pm. WALK TO ASU i 1 bd 1 ba condo with w/d, $41.0/md, 4 bd 3 ba, pool $ 1075/md.. 894-, 0288 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR STUDIO. WALK to’ ASU, pri­ vate, laundry, facility, green, in- . RENT eludes util's $425/md. 9685122 . COMMONS ON Lemon. Furn, 2 bd 2 ba Walk to ÀSÜ. Pri­ THE COMMONS on Lemon 2 vate owner. 838-6621 BR furnished condo all appl., inc\ utilities included. 1215 E. Lemon St. . #216. HELP WANTED$800/mpnth; , Avail now. GENERAL Weary Realty 968-3414. HELP WANTEDGENERAL APARTMENTS 1BD/1BA 2 blocks from cam­ pus, pool, spa, laundry, cov­ ered parking, available now, no pets, 1700 S. College Aye.. 967.7212 TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR RENT HOMES FOR RENT B u s/T ra m A tte n d a n t Part time help needed for night and weekend hours to help load/unload passengers from buses or trams at special events held in the Valley, i.e. State Fair & P.I.R. $6.00/hr. Flexible schedule. Call Leslie at 935-2799 for further information. in p o l i t i c s ? U.S. Congressional cam p aig n now has p a id positions a v a ila b le . Flexible schedule. Please c o n ta c t Jake, Sean, or C aroline a t 235-9704. RURAL /UNIVERSITY 2bd/ 2ba wflkUndry from $695, 3bd/ 2ba w/iaundry. from.$895 pool­ s id e /c o v e re d parking. Ray Wisely 94^1410 RENTAL SHARING RMMTE FOR 3bd/2+i/2ba townhouse. Laundry room, pools, tennis courts* & more, $$25/mo + 1/3util & phone. ; 413-9478; RMMTE WTD. smdker ok, par­ tially furnished. $250+1/2 util. Call Casey 966-3714 after 5pm. RO O M S FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING ROOM AV AIL ABLE 4 bed RMTE WANTED to share ex­ house, pool, hot tub, pool penses^ 3 b d 2 ba condo with table, lakes, $330 mth, l/4utl pool & Jacuzzi* w/d incl. cvrd 491 8776 / . park. 1/2 mile front. ASU, $250/iiiO. Gall after 5 pm. 496ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 8930. 4 bd house $ 180/mo + Util. & dep. S. Tempe Gall 820-9360. ROOM S FOR RENT FEMALE PREFERRED to take over lease for spring semester. Commons on Apuche. $339.02/mb .& $80 utility cap. : Gall Mimi 303-7066 F in d COUNTRY STYLE living in the city with this. 4br home w/pool. $124,000..: Scotts.. & Thomas. C alf Roma, Realty 968-6890. t h e S te tte P r e s s o n t h e I n te r n e t : h ttp ://h e w s .v p s a .a s u .e d u / HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL PAPAGO PARK, Questa Vida, & more! 2 & 3 bdrms.; Own for leSs than rent. Greg, Bealty Ex­ ecutives. 966-0016. REAL ESTATE UNDEVELOPED LAND in Northern AZ for sale. 2 1/2 acres just north of Ash Fork in Kaibab Estates. Call 894-2150 for more info: COMPUTERS M EM ORY At wholesale. 4 MB 30 pin sirnm $25. 16 MB 4x32 72 pin simm $84. Call Netram '80O-Â 505-1555. HELP WANTEDGENERAL ) p e r s o n a l HOMES FOR SALE TO W NHO M ES/ C O N D O S FOR S A L |= = = ,n S u p p o r t P r o v id e r Looking for individual to work with developmentally and physically handicapped men in our Personal Skills Program. Employees will teach various living skills arid involve the individuals in recreational and sports activities. Hourly posi­ tions available. $7.00-$7.50 DGE. Call Vince @431-9511. EOE. NEÊ DATA 'Tis the season to work at Neodata, a global leader in quality integrated direct marketing services. Bring us your skills and professionalism, and let us brighten your bank account with extra holiday cash. Immediate Opportunities for Banking CLIMB ABOARD! If you take pride in a job well-done and thrive in a fast-paced ¡environment; then Wells Fargo invites you to climb aboard! As one of the largest, most innovative banking institutions in the country, we can put you into the seat of a rewarding career with a bright and exciting future! Vault Processors Full and part-time opportunities are available. Full time processors work from 12:15pm to 9pm,.Monday-Friday; parttime processors work 5pm-9pm, Monday-Friday or Sunday 8:30am to 5:15pm with weekdays of 12:15pm to 9pm or 5pm to 9pm. With the exception o f Sunday, all shifts are openended and regularly run past 9pm. 100 SEASONAL POSITIONS ★ Mail Processors * Inbound Telephone Sales • Full or part-time positions. • Neodata represents well-known, established companies OPEN INTERVIEWS Tuesday, Oct. 1st 7 a m -1 0 a m 12 n o o n -3 p m 4 p m -6 p m D O N T MISS THE CHANCE FOR AN INSTANT INTERVIEW YOU COULD BE WORKING tH E NEXT DAY! R esponsibilities ind ude handling and counting cash and coins, as w ell as verifying deposits m ade by corporate cus­ tom ers. The ability to lift up to 50 pounds is required. T eller and/or farsh handling experience is preferred. W ells Fargo offers com petitive com pensation, attractive work schedules and com prehensive benefits. Basic sk ills testing is necessary. The next testing session w ill b e held on cam pus, at Arizona State U niversity, and is scheduled for M onday, Septem ber 30 at 2pm . Sign-up for this session by calling <602) 528-1185, press 2 w hen prom pted, and b e sure to m ention this ad. Please reserve your testing appointm ent by 10am on Septem ber 30. EOE R E S ID E N T IA L C O U N S E L O R S Social Service Agency has positions available w orking w ith ad u lts w ho are developm entally and m entally challenged in group hom es * apartm ent settings located in Fhx., M esa & Tem pe. $6.00-$6.50/hr. D O E Pd. training. Call Julie 0 431-9511 btw 1 2 4 o r Job line 4384617. EOE W HAT CAN YOU DO ABOUT A ID S ? Join the steering committee to help plan ASU AIDS Awareness Week! COME T O T H E FIRST MEETING to find out how you can volunteer. TUESDAY OCTOBER 8 3-4:30 Memorial Union, Rm. 209 Questions? Call Freddy at 965-8276 ore-m ail icfxr@asuvm. inre.asu.edu GET INVOLVED! St a t e P ress J fó g e l? W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 COMPUTERS AUTOMOBILES TOSHIBA LAPTOP $249 T 12.00 XE 286/3MB- RAM 24Ò0 baud modem, battery & charger; paded case, loaded with Word Perfect, great for students/ word processing, ac­ cess to CompuServe & AOL. Call toil free !-888-845-1699 89 HONDA CIVIC DX 4dr auto AC JVC cd player Infiniti speakers $5700 967-6902 TICKETS GEORGIE STRAIT tickets, row 8. fri 27, $80 ea obo. 877-4823 ; AUTOMOBILES • 91 MUSTANG, 72k, at, àc, ps, pw, fairly nice, $8,000 obo. Call Casey 966-3714. 1988 MUSTANG Convertible LX: 5.0 V8, a/c, loaded,, excel­ lent, condition, new paihit. ¿6700. 813-9645 òr 4970612. ; 86 MAZDA 626, orig. owner, a lot . o f hwy miles. 5sp, ac, am/fm cass. $900 obo, 8201883 or 848-9539, CASH TO DAY!!! I BUY ALL Used Cars/T rucks/ Jewelry/Misc. Items. 481-9053 SEIZED GARS from $175. Porsches* Cadillacs, Chevy's, BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your, area. Toll free 1800-898-9778 Ext A-1676 for current listings. MOTORCYCLES 1990 KAWASAKI Ninja 600R, Has 7800 miles, runs & looks like new, comes w/2 hel­ mets & cover. $3200obo. 7864488. HELP WANTEDGENERAL DISC JO C K EYS NEEDED HONDA CB125S, fully re­ stored looks and runs great. $450 813-6102. BICYCLES 18" ALPINESTARS MTB. Full XT, Cromoly frame ONZA clipless pedals Tigoa, Bontrager $1,000. 985-4448. 19" KHS PRO FZ-XT Onza pedal rock shock m ag2t SLrace ready ! $700.00 obo. 8321911 TRAVEL Call 9 6 6 -9 9 0 0 Large corporation looking fo r individual to assist in m ortgage­ financing process. Excellent o p po rtunity fo r a candidate w h o is career-m in ded , a business student, highly m otivated an d an excellent com m unicator. Start im m ediately, this is a once in a lifetim e opportunity! Call Jon C ooper a t 4 6 4 -3 2 0 4 o r Kit Creighton at 4 6 4 -3 2 1 5 . 4 th Flo o r B a r & G rill YckJr-around work for The right career oriented individual. Food Handler's card req'd. PM WAIT STAFF COCKTAIL SERVER ROT. SET-UP BROILER COOK BARTENDER BOT. SERVERS Come jo in o u r staff where we offe r competitive wages, uni- , forms, free employee meal and much more. Please a pp ly in per­ son a t Human Resources, 5001 N . Scottsdale Rd.> M , T, W o r F, . HELP WANTEDGENERAL ¿1000'S POSSIBLE Reading books. Part Time. At home. Toll free 1-800-898-9778 Ext. R-1676 for listings. FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits,. $6- 10/hr. Call Carrie at 777-1054. j )C-MOTION PICTURE and tél­ évision shows hiring. Earn to $3000/mo. Work with- you fa­ vorite stars. Local & world trav­ el. Transportation, room/board! No experience nee ! (818) 3851555 Ext M-50300 ARTISTS Art & photography majors: DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap color artwork and B & W pho­ in your name. I specialize in tography needed for publica­ quick departures. Most places . tion in Hayden '$ Ferry Review, worldwide. I also buy transfer­ ASU's national awàrd-winning able coupons/a wards. literary magazine. All levels of 968-7283 exp. encouraged to apply. Please deliver 5-20: slides, SASE, resume, # any other perMake your advertising tihent materials to the HFR of­ fice in the basement o f Mat­ $$$$ work harder! thews Center, or mail: to: Tiffa­ ny Owens, Art Editor, Hayden's Ferry Rëview, Box 871502, Ar­ izona State Univ., Tempe, Az 85287-1502; Deadline is Sept. 30, 1996; For more info., Call 965-1243 ★ ★ ★ .. • Earn $1.0-840 per hour •Will Train Mortgage Banker Assistant 8 :3 0 -10:30am o r 2-4pm. 92 SUZUKI Swift - - 2dr htchbck. tn td w in d o w s, a/c, ■new tifes & struts, new plates, am/firi radio cass. Great com­ muter car - 45mpg. Runs per­ fect. $5900.: 6 6 I -4848 1ve msg. 82 KAWASAKI LTD 550, looks, runs good, ext. local transportation. $900, 966-3590; • /'■ V ,. A Z's #1 m obile DJ ser­ vice is looking for DJ's. •Transportations weekend availability a must HELP WANTEDGENERAL Scottsdale Embassy Suite supports 89 MAZDA B2200 PU truck. Runs well No a/c. Kenwood stereo. Bedliner. Must sell, $3000 OBO. 596-5244 MOTORCYCLES Put it in the Classifieds! Exciting surroundings... competitive benefits... great training. Looking for fun, customer oriented SALES ASSOCIATES & SELLING SUPERVISORS to work at airport spe­ cialty retail gift shops. Call Sylvia at 956-9600 D A ILY PAT! FUN! EA SY! Ideal for students p / t up to $100/day+ + No Investment Required Apply on campus Thursday, Sept. 26th, between 2-4:30pm at the MU, Rm 2 09 (Yavapai Room) MARKET RESEARCH INTERVIEWER Part-Time - Training Provided A jo b as a market research interview : er provides you w ith new skills, flexi­ ble day or evening shifts, variety and an opportunity to use your "people" and clerical skills in our Scottsdale phone room. Ideal for students. Looks good on your resume! Start at $6/hr; or higher if exp. Call Judy at 874-2714. Focus Market Research. Be part o f an industry th a t Makes Opinions Count! F in d it #v4S7"in th e C la s s ifie d s HELP WANTED* GENERAL ASU STUDENTS the A^U Tel­ efund is hiring! Working for the telefund you will have a po­ sition that will improve your communication skills, enhance your resume, and allow you the ability to choose y o u r own shifts weekly. We call ASU alumni to update information/ inform alumni about advance­ ments here on campus and ask for financial support for the uni­ versity. Call ,965 t6754 for more information. ASU STUDENTS. Short sur­ veys. Easy $7/hr, base + bo­ nus. Also have clerical posi­ tion. Start now. 784-2270 ATTN: STUDENTS, need extra cash? Perfect opportunity working in romance department at New Times eyes/pL ■Call for details 238-4811 CAD ENGINEERING assistantpart-time flexible hours approx. 9 months. Assisting engineers With drawing and designing flexible circuits. Experience creating and interpreting engineeririg/architectural drawings. Experience with PC based CAD software. 786-8344 CAMPUS SECURITY A ssis­ tants now hiring. Good exp. . apd valuable training. Work with police officers. Flex hrs. Call now for details. Scott @ 965-5643 or pick up an app. at the DPS bldg in lot 40; Telesales Positions Available Telesales Consultants needed to make qualified calls for nationally televised . Informercial Products. We have many shifts to fit your class schedule. $ 7 .5 0 /h r . G u a r a n t e e d (A.vg. $10/hr (w ith com m ission s)) Afternoon & E vening Hours Com m issions & B onuses ■Benefits fo r Full Time W eekly Paychecks : Full & Part Time No Cold Calling Paid Training HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL CAN YOU keep track of exp. & income? Quicken? MS Money? Flex. hrs. (30-40+/wk) Ac­ counting/ Finance Major pre­ ferred/ light Financial Statement Prep. Up to $ 10/hr. 460-1704 Jim Leave detailed mess. Immed. open. DRIVER/CQURIER TRICOR America has immediate F/T & P/T postions available. Profes­ sional attitude and good MVR required. Insurance necessitates applicants be 21 yrs. min. Hourly rate + benefits. Various shifts available. We also have openings for owners operators with insurance. Apply in per­ son at 2425 W. 12th St. Tempe or call 967-2939 bet­ ween 8am-5pm. CASHIER PART-TIME bight shift $6/hr. start, Sakana Ja­ panese Resturant 598-0506. CLUCK-U ENERGETIC, HARD working person needed fo r custodial work at elem entary school.: Hours 3-7pm M-F. $8/hr. 4964730. ; Now recruiting wildly energetic people to be bur chicken mas­ cot. Apply in person 855 S. Rural Rd. COMP. CONSLT hrdcore type needed, xtensv knwlg of Inet & bulk e-mail abil req 599-3743 FAIRYTALE BROWNIES on 68th Str & Thomas in Scotts. seeks retail & gift packaging help. Pt/ft avail. Call Andrea 276-9643 M-F 9-6» DIETARY STAFF needed for nursing facility, dishwashers & wait staff, day & evening shifts, com petitive wages & benefits. Apply Scot­ tsdale Village Square 2620 N. 68th St: 946-6571 FAMOUS SAM'S Tempe is hir­ ing dependable, hardworking cooks/servers. Call 491-0776 DIRECTORY INFORMATION operator, 30 wpm, good arèa knowledge, all shifts, $6.50/hr start, 225-9661; M etro . One, 5025 E; Washington #1 i0. GAIN EXP. in your field. Work with special needs children in S. Scottsdale; $6.65/hr. Pd training flex, hrs,; Call; our job line 829-5572. P la c e y o O la s s if ie a d f r o m t In t e r n e t u r d h e ! h ttp ://r ie w ë .v p s a . a s u .e d u /c ia s s a d / c la s s a c f f iri- h itm l , HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ^ H O M E BASED • B U S IN E S S THE A RIZO N A REPUBLICAN PARTY NEEDS YOU! PART-TIME HRS. Major Corp. Expanding to AZ Seeking Enterprising People • Up to SIX FIGURES/year. • Easy Start, No Inventories, • FREE Laptop Computer JA M ES For Info. Call (602) 759-6422 9 5 7 -7 7 7 0 =5T- C a U A fta n u r li :: 4m am p i W e're located a t 40th St: ,<9tf*10. (close to ASU) AFTERMARKET COMPANY I D edicated and R esponsive T elesales I a Drug-Free W orkplace. EOE NEED SOME $ $ CASH $ $ D u c ss... .Serious Pay! Help pay off I ■ Paid Holiday & Vacations ■ Short & Long Term Disability ■ Medical, Dental and Life Insurance ■ Shift Differential for evenings and weekends ■ And Morel B o o ks, Tuition, B ar Tab $150 S IG N IN G BÒNUS LET'S MAKE A DEAL WE WILL GIVE YOU $ 8 .7 5 /h r!!U ! Part time positions (flexible hours) Paid Training team effort!! Casual Dress - V -:.. ( Paid Days Off - _ ' . Relaxed Environment ,u • No Cold Calling "Walking Distance from ASU" Give Us A Call 894-9876 (Benefits apply to full time Associates) Candidates for these positions must have good key­ board and verbal communication skills. Call Monday - Thursday between 8“am and 8 pm er Saturday, between 8 am and 12 noon for a telephone Interview. [ : r ,: L Sears National Bank 804-6320 or.apply in person at 2626 South tyardy Drive, LTetnpe, AZ * > Drug Free Workplace Equal’bpportunlty Employer M/F/D/V Page 18 St a t e P r e s s W edn esd ay, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL GREAT PART-TIME job, 9amPICTURE FRAMER wanted. MRKTING ASST. 2pm MWF. Packing videos P/t positions in busy south Family fun park in Scottsdale and audio tapes ; Vou get to Tempe custom framing shop, seeks mrkting asst. 30-40hrs„ wear casual clothes, listen to Must have exp. & great cus­ Must be computer literate. Busiyour fayorité musicV & work for tomer ser. skills. Call 820-9426 ness/m rkting student pref. a great company. We need Please fax resume to Marketing PRE-SCHOOL HIRING teachers someone with a clue, no flakes Dept. 951-4065 : & aides f/t & p/t. Mesa location. need apply, must possess ex­ ON-SITE VIDEO is seeking pro­ 890-1849. cellent communication skills, duction specialist, for videogprovide your own transporta­ PUT YOUR mouth where the raphy, pre & post production. tion. You may be asked to do money is! Set appts for a travel : basic office work also, if you . Strong academic background club. No selling, $8/hr + desired. See career $ervices or have a fear of phones or love to comm. Reps avg $15/hr. Flex call Betsy 967-5062. mumble this, isn't for you. We sched. Tempe, Cbyote Market­ pay $7.00/hr but we won't hire P/T APT cleaning & painting ing - Bill EL894-1114 you if you can't handle the for complex in Terilpe. Apply; above 437^143x10. REAL ESTATE Secretary; p/t, 1224 E. Lemon St. Apt # 165 Scottsdale office, must know M-S 894-2620 GYMNASTICS COACH Want* IBM PCs & some apple. Call ed. Must enjoy working P/T CUS-T., serv./cashier eves & Dick 951-8666 w/kids. M-F, after 3:15 pm. wknds. Apply in person at WaGreat pay, flex. hrs. 941-3496. RETAIL P/T easy schedule, ter'n Ice at 3141 S._McClintock. close to A$U. 804-1554. HELP WANTED: Mail Bo^es P/T NIGHT OWL: ttf monitor­ Etc. Mornings/evenings. F/t & ing co. needs the right person RETAIL SALES, all shifts avail. p/t. Apply at 903 S. Rural Rd. to preview evening news, Full Or part time. Base plus Hours: evenings, early am, wee­ commission. Benefits, drug free MESA YMCA looking for en­ kends & some weekdays. Com­ workplace- Apply in persqn ergetic customer-service-minded puter literate, quick, accurate & only. Space Age Paint 7Q7 S. individuals to work the front reliable. Please call 957-7995. Country Club Dr. Mesa. desk. Flex hrs, great, at­ . Serious applicants only. V , mosphere 207 N. Mesa Dr. . PARADISE BAKERY & Cafe TRADER JOE'S MODELS/ACTOR S. in t'l new store taking off Oct- 1st. p/t clerks & stockpeople want­ scouts want you for music vid­ Sky Harbor Airport terminal 4ed. flex hrs: good pay. Scot­ Hiring all pos ft/pt flex hr. Free éos and local print work. 941tsdale 948-9886 meals/parking $6/hr+easy ac­ 6922: cess from ASU campus!! Call: TRAVEL AGENTS. No exp. Brenda 483-1862, Be part o f r’eqV W ork from home. Will Classifieds WORK! the opening team! train. Julie 940^8384 lv. msg. HELP WANTEDGENERAL VALET PARKING attendants for special eyents:2-3 nights/wk. Must be available Weekend nights. At least 20 years old, good driving record, clean cut, willing to drive to Scotts, Phoenix, etc. Apply at 34 W. Dunlap m -f between, 1:30-4:30. Directions to apply from Tempe: Squaw Peak Free­ way north to Glendale, go left to central, go right to Dunlap, go left. American Valet Co. is 1 1/2 blocks tip on the; right. Also, hiring for f/f (day & night) valet position at a pres­ tigious resort. WINDOW CLEANER, local area, $20/hr. Full or Part time. Call 801-399-5758 VETERINARIAN TECH./KENNEL person needed. 2-8pm,;'2-.. 3/tim es a wki 3-4 hrs every other wknd $6 50/hr. 948- 177Ó WANTED FUN, energetic, out­ going people for family fun en­ vironment. Apply in person at Outer Limits 8800 E. Indian Bend, Scottsdale 85250: WEB DESIGN firm needs HTML and JavaScript pro­ grammers. Pt/full, good $. Call Kevin 921-0598 or e-mail work@paletteproductionSiCom HELP WANTEDSALES COLD CALLER, telemarketing. Part time. Possibly some data entry. Flexible hours. $6/hr. Dean W hitter Phoenix, Call Sarah 381-7563. COLLEGE COUPONS - the student coupon book you love to use is seeking a local Sales representative! Earn $.7/hr or. more! Put your sales experience to good use. Must have car, Call 800/767-8393 ask for Ja­ nee. s e r V i c e top pay, 4^8pm M-F Wknd shift 81 pm. Start immed. 736-0034 c u sto m er HELP WANTEDCLERICAL ACCTING CLERK 10 key PT, Computer exp. Tempe Chris 893-6884. RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS /> 5 v 7 TONIGHT LIVE! Able to accurately enter order» into computer Stone Circle GENERAL SHIPPING/ORDER PACKING Able to pick and pack small items fo r shipment * N SPRAY \\ Off Ail ' Tempo • 9B7-7744 P IZ Z A & PA ST A ; WACKY W EDNESDAY 70 DRAFTS ^ $2.81 PITCHERS Bud Light • Coors Light Now you can actually have a fun job... that pays great! If you consider yourself a “people person" who wants to be a part of the fast-paced, electrifying world of entertainment, don't miss this dream- come-true opportunity. You'll qualify if you can: 3pm ■Close 9 68 -6 6 66 1301 E. University f t K eep a sm ile on your fa c e ... and custom ers' fa ces, as w ell f t M aintain a professional attitu de and appearance f t In teract positively w ith the public... an d your supervisors. f t W ork flexib le hours. St Full-Tim e and Part-Time, short-term assignments, Oct. 7th - Nov. 3rd Include: f t T icket S ellers/T akers f t Food & B everage S ervers f t S ecurity A ttendants f t G u est C ontrol f t C ustodial W orkers f t M erchandisers Jobs like this don't come along very often, so call today for more information. (602) 833-4436 - East Valley (602) 604-6127 - Central (602) 993-1888 - Metro Area 4 Western STAFF SERVICES «$■ J 1 STOCKYARDS RESTAORANT now hiring lunch serv­ ers, night food servers, b u ss-. ers, host/ess. Apply in person M-F 10am-5pm, 5001 EW ashington. East of 48th St. • 273-7378- ' : ' ' • • THE PICNIC Company Gour­ met Cafe is now hiring counter/sandwich maker, delivery f drivers f/t, p/t. 1415 E. Ohi" vers it y 2 blocks E. of Rural. Tempe 968-7740. JOB OPPORTUNITIES EASTERN EUROPE JOBS Teach basic conversational English in Prague, Budapest, or Krakow. N o teaching certifi­ cate o r European languages required. Inexpensive Room & Board + other benefits. (206) 971-3680 Ext. K59184 BANDERSNATCH 5th966.44F3 T st ASTPaOGICAL F0PECAST , by Frances Drake W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 y Where ASU Goes for Pizza V o -o SERVER, DAY/NIGHT, all shifts, , f/t or p/t, no exp. nec.c. Make pretty good money/tips. Nosh A Rye, 956-8781 or 3947 E. Camelback, Phx ASHLING a= 404 S. MW Ave. 966-1300 MAKE SOME Dough! Work at Bruegger's Bagel Bakery. Now hiring a ll positions f/t & p/t. Flexible hrs. Apply at 2095 W. 15th St. Tempe. 52nd & Broad­ way or call 829-1000. IRISH MUSIC 1 | | D rafts Balboa Cafe c Jobs so enjoyable you'll... Classifieds WORK! s ITAM IIX% From University, Take I* 10 West to 24th St Exit South, cross under 1-10 and we are the first building on le ft CORK'NCLEAVER Accepting apps. for lunch host (ess) & lunch food server; Will train; p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & #person­ ality are im portant; Apply in person M*F 2-5p:m. or by appt. 5101 N. 44th St. 952-0585. HELP WANTED Deli person 20-30 hrs7wk flex’, hrs. Ex­ perience preferred but not nec­ essary. Apply in person Capistranos Italian Deli 655 W. Warner Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene & Warner) 496-9044. , L ive $1 222 E. U niversity Dr. BANQUET SERVERS needed pn call.. Ask for Steve of Lisa 256-6645. S tu d e n ts N e e d e d ! Earn up to $2/000+/m o. working for Cruise Ships or Lancf-Tour conipanies. Seasonal arid Full-Time employment available. Call: (206) 971-3550 ext. C59187 ORDER ENTRY M -F 1 0 p m -M id . (cream cheese extra) ASSISTANT MGR Mike Pulos Spaghetti Compa­ ny 414 S. Mill Ave., Tempe, AZ. 8528 L. looking for asst. ‘ mgr. with a minimum of 1 year restaurant management experi­ ence required- Mail resume to above address or fax to 9665265 by October 2.- C R U ISE JO B S Learn valuable business skills. Gain experience for your career. MADNESS ♦AMERICAN* Valet needs v alet parking at­ tendants. F/T and P/T great pay flex. hrs. days or nights: Call 861-9182. JOB OPPORTUNITIES FULL Ô PART TIME $6.00 per hour to start with a 90 day review. F le x ib le sched ule« within a 7:00 atn-7:00 pm day, Monday thru Friday. A p p ly In p erso n . KareMor* International, Inc. @ 2401 South 24th Street HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDFO O D SERVICE HELP WANTEDGENERAL Tbmght7 p.m. at the “Hang 10 Patio," @ Cluck U 894 :m 855 S. Rural Rd. 894 2112 (1 blk S. ofUniv. Dr.) 2112 21) Romance pops up out of the ARIES (March 21 to April blue, taking your breath away, 19) Don’t allow temperament to You take up a fascinating new get in the way of being efficient venture later in the day. Expect on the job. Reaching financial agreements with partners could a breakthrough on 4 Work pro­ prove difficult. Thus, keep a , ject, SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to low profile; . Dec. 2 J ) Y où find y o u rself TAURUS (April 20 to May dealing with, an overbearing 20) Vou get an uhexpectëd type early in the day. Instead of answer to a question you pose. butting heads, merely listen and A career move you’re consider­ then go your own way- Make ing requires further thought. changes on the home front. The watchword for the evening CAPRICORN (Dec, 22 to Jan. is cooperation. 19) W hat you have to do at GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) work is mòre time-consuming While you have a need to get than you’d thought originally. off by yourself, be sure not to Try to approach this one step at neglect that special someone a tim e to avoid being o v er­ who feels left out.. Family mem­ w helm ed. A p artn er has art b ers are argum entative. unusual suggestion. H ow ever,: proper rest is the AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. cure. 18) Something a close friend CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You face an important decision says rubs you the wrong way. However, avoid overreacting. regarding a domestic issue. Be Later in the day, guard against sure to consider all facets before overspending on pleasure pur­ coming to a conclusion. Later, suits. guard against petty arguments PISCES (Feb. 19 to March with a loved one. 20) The key to success on the LEO (July 23 to A ug. 22) job is originality: However, be You’re going in the right direc­ tion concerning business ven­ . careful to avoid fights with co­ workers. You have a tendency tures. It Seems no matter what to dig your heels in, but avoid you do, a certain friend isn’t sat­ doing so for a while. isfied. Stop being so accommo­ ’ you BORN TODAY crave dating. the undying gratitude of those VIRGO (Aug, 23 to Sept. 22) you afe im pelled to help You are not in agreement with because o f your sym pathetic someone who is just trying to nature. Physically, you are only help you. Express your position sporadically active, and your diplomatically, A friend is a bit need to fill your tummy can envious of your good fortune. bring added weight unless you LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) force your self to exercise and Avoid making promises to jpeoutilize discipline in your diet. ple that you can’t possibly keep. You compete most effectively This isn’t like you, and you’re when you are outwardly nurtur­ doing it for the sake of populari­ ing, parental, comforting, pro­ ty. E n tertain in g at hom e is tective and supportive. favored after daric. © King Features Syndicate Inc. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo Don't rely on luck to make your advertising work- S ta te Press Classifieds make it happen! MI-471« VIDEO GAMES Our latest video game in the MU Recreation Center Im M h Dm hMT M d «MMU- M 5dM2 P age 19 W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 St a t e P r e s s HELP WANTEDCHILD CARE JOB OPPORTUNITIES AFTER SCHOOL program teacher needed. M-F 12:30-5pm for childcare center. Call 8395953 / CHARLIE ROSE Baseball. Full & part time pos. avail, at both our Tempe & North Phoenix lo­ cations. Apply at 937 E. Broad­ way#?, Tempe. 921-7889 BABYSITTER FOR infant wanted 15+hrs/wk. Own trans­ portation. North Phx area. 9510810 TEACHERS To be. Opportun­ ity to continue your career de­ velopment as a child care pro­ fessional. Flex hrs. M-F. E0E. Kindercare Valley Wide loca­ tions. Jobline 460-2040. JOB““ O PPO RTUNITI|S_ ALASKA SUMMER employ­ ment- Fishing Industry. Earn tip to $3,000-$6,000+ per month. Room & board! Trans­ portation! Male/Female. No ex­ perience necessary! (206)9713510 Cxt A59188 Classifieds WORK! PERSONALS ADOPTION? PREGNANT? Think about it! Choosing th e righ t Family to ad op t your baby involves m ore than reading ads and calling 8 0 0 n u m b ers.! m an adoption consultant w h o can help. W ith us, yo u read about th e couple and decide if th ey are th e righ t fam ily . for you and your baby ■ ; before you speak to th em . O pen or ■ do sed adoptions. You CHOOSE! 1-800-675-3407 BUSINESS O P P O R T yN m |S _ ENJOY LIFE -Retire before your parents, Earn $4370+ per month for life just giving away free calling cards. $49 invest­ ment gets you started toward your future. Call now, 1-800493-2665, 24 hrs. Source code 3531. EXCELLENT INCOME + busi­ ness experience while going to school. Independent distribu­ tors needed to market revolu­ tionary autom otive product. Call now for free information, 1800-788-9546; ext. 1 o r fax 1808-878-3057,24 hrs. PART-TIME Sales position with Canon Computer Systems Inc. For immediate wkend work $8/hr plus bonus incentives. Call BiU @ 1-800-55CANON, SERVICES MAKE MORE money in one day than most people make in a month. Call 1-800-899-0035 ex t 540 TEACHER S/ STAFF: CONCERNED about retirement income? Create & generate residual income. Free booklet. Call 2305206 SPORTS & RggfcAnON^^ GUN SHOW October 5 & 6 Tempe American Legion Post 2. FUNDRAISING FAST FUNDRAISER -Raise $500 in 5 days-Greeks, clubs, m otivated individuals. Fast, easy-no financial obligations. (800) 862-1982 Ext 33. PERSONALS $19.99 FOR a full set o f nails is an awesome deal at Wizzards Hair Studio. 967-2360 SERVICES FREE HAIR SERVICES! Haircolor & Clipper Cut models needed fo r Sept. 28-30 hairshow. FREE color &/cut PLUS beauty products. Call Bryan, MAKA I Beauty Systems I 968-7980 AMBITIOUS? BUILD a busi­ ness part-time while in school. Call 340-4626. SERVICES FREEZE FRAME Fotography (formerly Cactus Candids) an­ nounces Reorder Days from the Spring 1996 Parties. Proofs will be displayed in front of P.V. Main.Wed/Thurs, Sept 2526. btwn. noon & 3pm. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR GRANTS OR SCHOLARSHIPS? Read this firs t ASU Student Financial A ssis­ tance can help fin d money fo r you without charging a p ro ­ cessing fee. Call 965-3355* I f MEN OF ASU get ready to rum­ you choose to use a private ble this weekend at XQ kickball!| ; ■' ; ■ company to obtain grants or scholar ships, be sure to get PIKES ARE going to kick eve­ verifiable references before re­ ryone to the cuib at Chi O kickmitting. ball! ! Love your coaches. ATTENTION ALL Students! ZN; GET ready for an amazing Over $6 Billion in public and week full of AO excitement! private sector grants & scholar­ ships is now available. All YOUR HOLIDAY shopping students are eligible. Let: us can be FREE! Details, call Jodi help. For more, info, call: 1-800@203-7390 (voicemail) today! 263-6495 ext. F59186 F in d it E A S r i n th e C la s s if ie d s DOCTOR S TWENTY sugges­ tions that will change your diet fo re v e r Send $5.99 to Diet Plus 903 S. Rural Rd. Ste 101236 Tempe, Az 85281 TYPING /W O R D PROCESSING $1.98 PG. APA/MLA. Exp’d edit. Fast, accurate. Rural/Univ. Full editing Jim 967-2360 $1.99/PG, $15/RES. Proofed. . APA/MLA. Samé day. DTP. 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Free hair services. Please call 392-4166 for more info. Would you prefer a more... up-to-date way to find a buyer for that ugly old couch? ELECTROLYSIS B Y Degna. All methods. Low rates. Rural/Southem area. 921-1146. SERVICES ROCK GARDEN BPS 5 0 + lin es, ch at, gam es, files! 2 2 2 -3 0 0 0 ADOPT - MAKE our dreams come true. Loving couple wishes to share warmth, love, & laughter w/newbora. Expenses paid. Ellen/Steve 800-4561499. $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. Avoid the ’chop shops'. W iz­ zards Hair Studio. 967-2360 M N T |D _ _ _ _ HEALTH & FITNESS AD O PTIO N PERSONALS Use the State Press Classified Advertising order form on the World Wide Web! RESUMES FROM SCRATCH CREATIVE, PROFESSIONAL Resumes for. jobs. internships &. career fairs. CVS, cover letters, updates &, salary histories. T em pe http://hews.vpsa.aSu.edu/classaci/classadfrn.html 9 6 8 -7 7 3 5 Pick up your copy of Hayden's Ferry Review! Mon .-Sun, 8am-8prri 6 8 9 -8 2 9 9 State Press Classifieds ASU Box 871502 Matthews Center, .E le m e n t Tempe, AZ 85287-1502 Office: 965-6735 CROSSROADS Fax: 965-4706 Classified Ad Order Form Name Home Phone Business Phone Address City, State Zip Please print one letter per box, leave a blank box between words. Epi s c oPAL C hr i s t i a n s O n C a mp u s T here’s a d ifferen ce b etw een b ein g b aptised and brainw ashed; Our church believes baptism isn't a magic cleansing designed to save you from dam nation, but a way to becom e a member of God's family. We invite you to grow w ith us in the faith and fellow ship o f Jesus Christ. Please be sure to check your ad. M ake sure it reads exactly as you w ish it to appear in the State Press, including punctuation. Please check your ad the firs t day it appears-the lia b ility o f the State Press p Commercial Private Party • A j 1 day, $2.30 per line 2-4 days, $1.75 per line, per day 1-4 days, $1.45 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.40 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.25 per line, per day 5-9 days, $1.50 per line, per day 10+ days, $1.35 per line, per day shall not exceed the cost of the ad arid credit m ay be given fo r the firs t insertion only. M inor spelling errors do not qua lify fo r m ake­ goods. No refunds wiU be given, but if you need to cancel your ad a credit w ill be held on account fo r future advertising. a •j \ □ :0 B Haaee Include Ì 1 — Check# i n y 3 line minimum. Add a bold headline for the cost of 2 lines. Price par Day □ g ¡ $ BankCard Number tofOaya X ; Total v v; " •= -'« S a S jS ». ClanHteaBon Namadtumher: Name on Card C ome w orship w ith us th is S unday in T empe os we celebrate his resurrection and the gift of everlasting life. S t. A u g ustine 's 1735 S. College St. 8 and 10 am C h u rch of the EPIPHANY 2222 S. Price Rd. 8 and 10 am and S pm S t .J am es 97SE. Warner Rd. 8 and 10:30 am For more inform ation ,about our programs, please call 967-0990 Sony, ««cannot accept peraonaladl throughHiemal!. ExpMtgnDate - •: J _____ ^ 1..-...____________i ."i- « , 086 Free Lost/Found 068 Fundraising 070 H elp W anted-G eneral 056 Jew elry 084 Pets 065 Airplanes 071 H elp W anted-Sales 076 Job O pportunities 110 Photography 010 Announcem ents 052 Furniture 030 Homes fo r Rent 015 Legal N otices 097 Pregnancy C ounseling 041 Townhom es/Condps 120 M iscellaneous 047 Real Estate 035 Rental Sharing fo r Sale 060 Transportation 098 Adoption 061 Autom obiles 049 Garage Sales 101 H ealth & Fitness 040 Hom e fo r Sale 102 H ousecleaning 064 B icycles 074 H elp W anted- 107 Instruction 020 Apartm ents 051 Books 077 Business O pportunities 054 Com puters C hildC are 072 H elp W anted-C lerica! 073 Help W antedFood Service 050 M iscellaneous 031 Townhom es/Condos fo r Rent fo r Sale 045‘ M obile Homes 080 Restaurants/Bars 067 Travel 103 Insurance 037 Rooms fo r Rent 108 Tutors 135 Internet-R elated 063 M otorcycles 105 Typing/W ord 082 M usic 100 Services 081 Sports & Recreation 090 Personals 058 T ickets 115 W anted Services 130 Internet URLs Processing Page 2 0 W ednesday, S eptem ber 2 5 ,1 9 9 6 St a t e P r e s s .rAV* Expert preparation for the written and CAT exams. .... N A ILS . aV ^ a i . c Hails ¡?,MLS -^NAILS N/y,. Ha N A ILS i l s n a ' 1' • Live classes with highly train ed teachers • C om puterized individual score analysis and study plan • S oftw are, videos an d on-line help • Thousands of practice questions and explanations C all: 1-800-KAP-TEST • Nobody offers you more way to practice. KAPLA CR IM PER S LTD Proud sponsors of P si-C h i, National Psychology Honors Society H O N D A WALKING DISTANCE TO ASU 9 6 5 -5 1 9 2 350 5. M ill A ve #104 • A C U R A ASU 19 NEB ZEEEEERO Congratulations SunDevils! O ne Day Service on M ost Repairs W E H O N O R M OST E X T E N D E D W A R R A N T IE S Where to gel the things you need. Complete Parts Dept. — Factory Trained Technicians V . 1 AMERICAN ■I EXPRESS 954-7923 968-5989 3039 E. Thomas Rd. 1820 E. Apache art, engineering & school supplies greeting cards and gifts small household appliances bike accessories textbooks - used &new ASU clothing & backpacks dorm & apartment accessories posters & prints P h o e n ix Tempo (2 Blks. W. of 32nd St.) (1 Blk. E. of McClintock) 1015 South Rural Road at Lemon ♦ Tempe, AZ 85281 ♦ 894-1400 Mon.-Thur. 730-7:00 Fri. 730-500 Sat 1000-500 Sun. 1ZOO-5O0 AUTHENTIC ITALIAN FOOD, SERVED FAST FO CA CCIA FIORENTINA N E W Y O R K • L O N D O N • P H O E N I X . T E M P E WELCOMING ASU WITH A 10 % DISCOUNT WITH VALID STUDENT I.D. FRESH PASTA starting at LOCATED AT CENTERPOINT BEHIND COFFEE G ood Portions. G reat Price HOURS PLANTATION & PLUS 7AM - 10PM M-TH 7AM - 1 1PM W K N D S DUCK SOUP 50% off all coffee drinks 9 6 6 -0 9 0 0