W S ports orld / N ation M ic h a e l M a r t in h a s C U N T O N H O STS M lD E A S T b eco m e PEA CE TALKS C o a ch S n yd er 's K IN D O F TA ILBA CK Page 3 Page Ow ens, H ayw orth escalating bitter battle 13 I n s id e Cjassifieds 16 Comics.................................. 12 Crossword,..:........ .¿tí.... 15 Horoscopes .............. 19 Opinion....!..... ........... ........ 4 Police Report..„„:*.'.ÿ...9 Sports.... ....................,.,¡.......13 ctive reminder B y B ec k y H ilt S t a t e P ress ■, Congressional candidate Steve Owens said at a Tuesday, press conference that his opponent, J.D. Hayworth, RDistrict 6. is “despicable." ; ; Hayworth, the Republican incumbent, accused Owens of accepting campaign contributions from a labor union with connections to organized crime Monday. Although Owens accepted the money, he said he was not aware of any organized crime ties until he learned about Hayworth's campaign ads addressing the issue. The ads : were unveiled Monday. Owens said he and his staff spent most of Monday night and Tuesday on the phone and concluded that Hayworth’s information regarding the union was no longer relevant. “We still don't know everything, but as I understand the situation. Congressman Hayworth's accusations relate to facts that happened several years ago,'” he said. “There are ■ now reform individuals in charge of this organization who have ousted any corrupt influences. “Hayworth is running this ad hoping people will con­ clude — and some already have — that 1 am tainted and somehow involved in Organized crime,” Owens said. . In 1994, the Justice Department filed a 212-page com­ plaint citing the Laborers’ International Union of North America with fraudulent activity in partnership with the mob including “a conspiracy to drain benefit funds.” Though the specific terms of the eventual 1995 agree­ ment between LI UNA and the Justice Department are not available to the public, it is known that several members of LIUNA left the labor organization shortly thereafter. The labor union’s recent admission to having previous ties to the mob are also suspected to be part of a type of settlement referred to as a consent decree. Owens said Hayworth and other Republicans have bene­ fited from the same union funds, and evidence of LIUNA’s current respectability could be found by referring to a list of prominent Republicans who received campaign funds from the organization during the last three years. The list, provided by the Owens campaign and taken Lori Cain/State Press Rebecca Morton (right), third-year graduate student in m usic, and Vanessa Fox, graduate student in American hum anics, partook in the Tuesday festivities of the Sukkot on Hayden Lawn. Hillel Jew ish Student Union hosted the occasion with a spread of food typical of the Hebrew culture for all students to enjoy. Jew ish students celebrate contributions o f ancestors B y D e a n n a D akr S t a t e P ress Understanding the lives of those who lived thousands of years ago can be difficult for students living in a mod­ em metropolis. But the members of Hillel Jewish Student Union are doing their part to remember and celebrate their ancient ancestors. Members have constructed a sukkah, or har­ vest hut, on Hayden Lawn for the Sukkot holiday. Hillel Director Rabbi Barton Lee said thrs holiday “reflects the experience of Jewish people in wandering the wilderness after the exodus from Egypt.” The sukkah is the type of temporary structure the Jewish people used as they wandered through the desert for 40 years. It was also used when the Jewish people lived in the fields during harvest season. Lee said that building the structure is a way of getting back to nature. “It reminds us that life is fragile,” he said. v * While in the sukkah, the ceremonial waving of the lulav is performed to symbolize the. omnipresence of God, Lee said. After reciting a prayer, each individual then shakes a bundle containing palm, myrtle and willow branches and a citron, or citrus fruit. The bundle is shak­ en to all compass directions and up and down, The Hillel students will continue celebrating Sukkot for the remainder of the week. In additiQn, they will make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches today for the homeless, said Michelle Schechter, Hillel project director. Interested students can join them in their efforts, and the sandwiches will later be donated to a local homeless shelter. , T u rn to O w en s, pag e 2 . Support m ounting to eject Sym ington from office B y R ay S t e r n St a t e P ress The d riv e to recall Gov. Fife Symington has gained speed following the latest slew of media reports on his legal troubles, according to recall organizers. John Kromko. a Tucson attorney who played a big role in former Gov. Evan Mecham’s recall movement, said calls on the recall drive’s hotline had S y m in g t o n been in a lull recently, but are now up to about 200 per day. “We are getting hundreds of new petition gatherers,” he said. “I expect we're going to do OK.” Signatures have been piling up on the Young Democrats’ table near the Memorial Union, said 20-year-old Justin Turner a sophomore political science major. The Young Democrats are not officially involved in the recall drivé, he said, but many people have stopped by to sign the petition or pick up more petitions to collect signatures themselves. “It has been picking up a lot of steam, especially with his accounting firm turning against him,” Turner said. On Sept. 20, the governor’s former accounting firm, Coopers and Lybrand, revealed that the governor had misrep­ resented or left out information on three financial statements. Even if a resignation is in the cards for Symington, Turner said the recall movement should not be ignored by the public. “I think it’s more important that people get names on the recall list,” he said. “We’re going to have to put his hand on the pen.” The recall drive must collect 282,402 valid signatures by Jan. 3 to force a vote on the governor’s future in office. Kromko said the group was shooting for at least 15 to 20 percent over that figure to cover any invalid signatures. Roger Axford, an ASU professor emeritus who said he collected 3,000 signatures for the Mecham recall drive nine years ago, reported that his collection of signatures on cam­ pus has been extremely brisk in the last week or so. “It’s picked up a lot. They are coming out of the wood­ work,” he said of petition signers. “I’ve gotten 13 (pages) already signed. I’m going to get another 35.” Each petition form contains 15 spaces for the signatures of registered voters. Of 623 registered voters polled by KAET-TV Wednesday, 60 percent said Symington should resign, 28 percent said he should stay in office and 12 percent were undecided. When asked if they would sign a recall petition, 54 percent said yes, 42 percent said no and 4 percent were undecided. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 per­ centage points. Those interested in obtaining petition forms can call the Symington Recall Committee at 1-888-FIFE-OUT. Page 2 St a t e P r ess W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 T oday Cam pus d u b s and organizations m ay subm it written entries to the State P re ss in the b a se­ m ent o f Matthews Center. R eq u ests will not b e taken over the phone or via lax. Deadline for requests is noon the day before publication and entries will not be accepted m ore than three working days before publication. O nly one entry p er organization p e r day is perm itted. Entries m ust contain the full name o f the club Or organization, a description o f the event, date, time and the full ad dress o f the location. A ll requests are subject to editing tor content, sp a ce and clarity. Incom plete or illegible entries will be discarded. th e Today Section is a daily calendar o f events printed a s a service to the A SU community. R equests are accepted on a first-com e, first-served b a sis and are printed a s sp a ce perm its. • School of Art — Virginia artist Katherine P o rter wiR d iscu ss how thé a rtis t fits in to today’s American culture. Begins at 7:30 p.m. in Architecture North Room D 68. • F .A .C .E .S . in M edicine — John M olina, M .D ., will speak about his experiences as a physician at Phoenix Indian Medical Center. Begins at 6 p.m . in LLC 133. • H illel - Jew ish Student Union — PB & J on the M all. Help make peanut butter and jetty Sandwiches for the le ss fortunate. From 9 a.m . to 2 p.m. on Hayden Lawn. • TTSA — Lorraine Saucedo. marketing and special events person for the Phoenix Zoo, will be speaking at 11 a.m . in the MU Room 213. • E ck an ka r — D iscussion: the Alpha State. Begins at noon in the MU Graham Room 216. • Religious Studies Club — Fall reorganiza­ tion meeting from 12:40 to 1:40 p.m . in EC A 371. • Women’s Lesbian & Bisexual D iscussion Group •— W eekly meeting from 5 to 6:30 p.m. in the Women’s Student Center on the lower level of the MU. • MUAB C u ltu re and A rts Com m ittee — Meeting at 3:15 p.m . in Conference Room 1 A on the third floor of the MU. Also, Marketing Com m ittee m eeting at 2 p.m . in the sam e location. • Rainbow A llian ce — M ichael C am acho, from Project Lifeguard, will speak at 7:30 p.m, in the MU Yavapai Room 209. • The Four W inds (Cam pus Com munities) — G eneral meeting to d iscuss the calendar and logo. B eg in s at 8 p.m . in the O cotilio Programming Lounge. • Kundalini Yoga Club — Come unite your­ se lf with the cosm os at 7 p .m . in the MU Graham Room 216. • A ISES, N SBE, SH PE, SW E — Meeting with representatives from technical companies and find out about hiring needs. Tickets are $15. C all Je n n ife r M cNeil at 965-2115 for more information. • AW ARE — Meeting open to all women over p O *A Y FORA 25. Begins at 12:40 in the Women’s Student Center on the lower level of the MU. • Red, White and Blue Republican Women — Nominations for office at 3:30 p.rh. in the MU Cochise Room 212 E . • Student Life-Learning Resource Center — Free com puter sk ills w orkshops. C a ll John Bloomquist at 965-6250 for tim es and locations . » Student Alum ni A sso ciatio n — Monthly meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the Student Services Amphitheater. • Homecoming Publicity Committee—- Help spread the word about homecoming. Begins at 3 p.m. at A SA SU on the third floor of the MU. ■ . • Cycling Devils — Meeting at 8:30 p.m. on the north side of the Life Sciences Tower. • Phi A lpha D elta - Pre-Law C hap ter — Come by our table for some information about our group, from 10 a.m . to 2 p.m. today and tomorrow at the fountain on Orange Mall. • Yo un g D e m o crats/S tu d e n ts fo r Clinton/G ore — W eekly m eeting at 11:30 p.m . in the MU Yuma Room. • Residence Life and Department of Public S a fe ty — S e x a n d V io le n c e a n d R a p e Prevention information. Begins at 7 p.m . in the Palo Verde W est Resource Center. • Counselor Training Center — Counseling graduate students will provide free counseling to A SU stu d en ts, frie n d s and fa m ily . C a ll M elinda Lôpez at 965-5067 for an appointm entor more information. • Com m unication Student A sso ciatio n — Communication in London guest speaker at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Navajo Room 219. • ASU - DC Quilt Committee — Hair-Cut-AThon. Sponsored by N. Maxin salon. From 10 a.m , to 6:3 0 p.m . at N. M axin oh the lower level of the MU. ■ U b i q u i t y : A S U S ta ff & F a c u lt y Sup p o rting L e sb ia n , G ay and B ise x u a l Issu e s — Retreat and so cial. Begins at 5:30 p .m . a t P iz z e r ia U n o , M ill A ve n u e and University D rive. Democratic Congressional candidate Steve Owens holds a press conference Tuesday afternoon to d iscu ss allegations that he accepted moneytrom a labor union with known ties to organized crime. O w ens C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e 1 . from docum ents filed with the Federal Election Commission, includes a U.S. sena­ tor and national election chairman for Bob D ole’s presidential bid, and Congresswoman Nancy Johnson, Chair of the House Ethics Committee. According to Owens, Hayworth received money from L1UNA via the N ational Republican Congressional Committee. At the conclusion of the press confer­ ence, Hayworth spokesperson Scott Celley said he could offer proof that Hayworth would no longer receive contributions sent STATE P r e s s ONLINE — h t t p :/ / n e w s .v p s a .a s u .e d u Football, Royalty,Parade, CulturalUnity,andone DevilofaConcert! y o u r s e v e n « rn ary # th re e I ’9 E \ s What do Bob Dole, %Bill Clinton, and U Jackie Chan have in common. They love ASASU Election Info Slams! ROYALTY applications can be picked up at ASASU, 3rd floor MU. (You will be greeted by our lovely receptionist Peg) All royalty applications are due OCTOBER 11th!!!! m w hJm 3 to the NRCC from the union fund. Celley also said he was informed by the NRCC that $7,500 worth of LIUNA contri­ butions received in April had been returned, but he could not provide documentation. Bob Grossfeld, a spokesperson for the Owens campaign, said Hayworth was try­ ing to dupe people. “They talk in their ad as if there is a cur­ rent investigation. There is no reasonable person who can sit and watch that ad and not sense that Hayworth is attempting to mislead people toward an incorrect conclusion. k At and h e P ie rs o n H P tiS P ! K LocalCandidates IntereitGrout d,W hite&BlueatASU & Jimmy Eat World «L Nov. 7th m ASU Activity Center Homecoming Show Tickets on sale Oct. 4th at Gammage Box Office and Dillards ASU Students $5 Non-Students $7.50 udent Government" W O R LD /N A T IO N _________¿¡j STATE P r e s s ________ W ednesday, O ctober 2 ,1 9 9 6 , _____________ ^ CIA examines U.S troops’ exposure to chem ical w eapons By S u sa n n e M . Sch a fer A s s o c ia t e d P ress President Clinton, second from left, leads Middle East leaders on a walk outside the White House on Tuesday after a meeting. From left are, Israeli Prime Minister Beniamin Netanyahu, the president, King H ussein of Jordan and PLO lead­ er Y asser Arafat. C lin to n h o sts N e ta n y a h u , A ra fa t By T erence H unt A s s o c ia t e d P ress WASHINGTON — After tensions and suspicion inflamed by Mideast violence, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat shook hands at a White House summit Tuesday and held lengthy face-to-face talks. “We’ve come a long way in the last three years,” President Clinton said as he sought to build on a 1993 peace accord between die two sides. “No one wants to turn back.” Netanyahu said they had come together “to try to put the peace process back on track” after last week’s vio­ lence that left 76 people dead. He said he was absolute­ ly committed to the 1993 agreements, which include the promised redeployment away from Arabs in the West Bank town of Hebron. The White House said the crisis-shrouded talks between Netanyahu and Arafat went “a long way towards re-establishing that notion of trust that must exist between the parties.” Still, presidential spokesman Mike McCurry said, “We are at a very, very difficult moment. We are still at that moment” „ It was only the second meeting between Netanyahu and Arafat. They talked for three hours in the presiden­ tial library under a portrait of George Washington. Despite the upbeat assessment about re-establishing trust, there was no indication of a breakthrough on divi­ sive issues; such as a promised but ctelayed Israeli troop redeployment in Hebron or how rn'oeat holy sites in Jerusalem. “They have a number ofA'ery deep differ­ ences,” McCurry said. The talks are to wind up today. Clinton said the meetings show "a common commitment to end the vio­ lence and to get the peace process back on track. We are committed to that.” Hasan Abed Rahman, head of the PLO office in Washington and one of Arafat’s closest advisors, said he was hopeful about the summit’s outcome. “The gen­ eral environment is not cold,” he said. Assembling at the outset in the Roosevelt Room, Netanyahu and Arafat — along with Jordan’s King Hussein — greeted each other with handshakes and spoke amiably, McCurry said. The atmosphere was described as very relaxed — despite the bitterness growing out o f bloody battles between Israeli troops and Palestinian police. The leaders met individually with Clinton in the Oval Office and then all together for 45 minutes. Then Clinton invited them to lunch in the White House library where they dined on pan-roasted chicken with vegetables and couscous. WASHINGTON — A CIA study looking into how many U.S. troops may have been exposed to a chemical weapons explosion could reveal “a very large number” were involved —. even far greater than 15,000 troops, a Pentagon spokesman said Tuesday. Pentagon officials are contacting about 5,000 troops whom they believe may have been exposed during the first of two explosions at an Iraqi chemical weapons dump in southern Iraq in March 1991. But Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said a new study that looks at wind conditions, the potential number of chemical rockets destroyed and other matters involving a second explosion on March 10, 1991, may show far greater numbers of troops could have been exposed. “My expectation is that, based on the amount of chemi­ cal weapons in the pit and what we’ve been told, there could be a very large number of troops included in a possi­ ble cloud area,” Bacon said. Pressed to define the number, he answered, “I just don’t think we know at this stage, but we have to think in terms of big numbers, bigger than 15,000 certainly." Veterans have long suspected that contact with Iraqi chemical or biological agents contributed to the chronic illnesses afflicting thousands of Gulf War soldiers. Until June 21. the Pentagon insisted there was no evi­ dence the Iraqis used chemical or biological weapons dur­ ing the war. Then, the officials acknowledged that U.S. troops may have exposed themselves by blowing up Iraqi chemical rockets at a site they believed contained only conventional weapons. The CIA computer model is supposed to help ascertain how many troops may have been exposed to sarin nerve gas during the destruction in a bunker and an open pit at the weapons depot site called Khamiseyah. At first, Pentagon officials said only 300 to 400 engi­ neers were nearby. But later, they began warning about 5,000 veterans who may have been near the depot that they could have been exposed to nerve gas. The computer model could help estimate the potential dispersion of chemical agents over a certain area, given the number of weapons that may have been destroyed, the prevailing winds and other conditions. Bacon said the reason for an increase in potential expo­ sures would be that wind patterns were very different dur­ ing the March 10 explosion. Also, he said, the number of rockets destroyed apparently is much higher than original­ ly estimated, but he could not immediately cite a number. Bacon stressed that no matter what the CIA model shows, it will only be an estimate for what might have occurred, since it is impossible to exactly recreate the cir­ cumstances. U.S. Suprem e C o u rt sets stage for ‘right-to-die5 decision B y R ic h a r d C a r e l l i A s s o c ia t e d P ress WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to decide whether states* may ban doctor-assisted suicides, setting the stage for a momentous ruling on the “right to die.” Six years after recognizing a constitu­ tional right to refuse lifesaving treatment, the court said it will decide by July whether doctors can be barred from actu­ ally giving life-ending drugs to mentally competent, terminally ill patients who no longer want to live. Most states have such laws, but lower courts this year struck down assisted-suicide bans imposed by New York and Washington state. By reviewing those two rulings, the justices are expected to set national guidelines. ‘This is one of those watershed legal issues that will be out there until the nation’s highest court makes a decision,” Washington Attorney General Christine Grégoire said after learning of the court’s action. Susan D unshee, p resident o f the Seattle-based Compassion in Hying group that successfully challenged the Washington law, said the court now has “an opportunity to benefit patients throughout the country.” Jumping the gun on its 1996-97 term, which officially begins next week, the court also granted review to several other cases. The justices: —Agreed to decide in a Georgia case whether states may require political can­ didates to pass a drug test. — V o ted to d ec id e w h eth er M ississippi may continue using the dual voter-registration system it adopt- One of Kevorkian’s lawyers and the ed when the federal Motor Voter law prosecutors who three times tried unsuc­ took effect last year. cessfully to have him convicted of help­ —Said they will decide in a case from North Dakota whether an Indian tribal ing someone commit suicide said the court can preside over a l&wsuit stemming lower court rulings will be overturned. “They took the two cases that support­ from an on-reservation traffic accident ed Kevorkian’s view so they could over­ involving two non-Indians. —Agreed to decide in a Georgia case turn them,” Kevorkian attorney Geoffrey whether federal judges may bypass immi­ Fieger said. “It is my prediction that the court gration procedures and order the deporta­ w ill re v erse (th e New Y ork and tion of aliens convicted of crimes. The constitutional right to die was first Washington) decisions and allow indi­ recognized by the Supreme C ourt in vidual states to make political deci­ 1990. Assuming that such a right exists, sions based on policy rather than the the justices said then that a terminally ill Constitution,” said prosecutor Richard person may refuse life-sustaining medical Thompson. The gen erally co n serv ativ e high treatment. co u rt may choose to o v ertu rn the Just last year, however, the justices appeals courts’ rulings, said Howard re je c te d a ch a lle n g e by D r. Jack Kevorkian to Michigan’s bap on assist­ Simon of the American Civil Liberties Union in Michigan. ed suicide. Opinion State P ress W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 Page 4 $2 INSAVINGS Sta te P ress _ » tutorial D irty campaigns leave voters in haze Ahh, politics in Arizona — always an entertaining spectacle to behold. Entertaining, but sad, because it reflects a problem Americans are confronting today. The problem is that many voters are not satisfied with the candidates they put in office. Voting has turned into choosing the lesser of two evils. Some people refuse to vote in such a situation, while bthers punch their ballots grudgingly. What makes it so difficult to choose candidates? People have come up with a variety of reasons. One is that the candidates are not really qualified for their prospective offices. That is, they may think that they can do a good job, but in reality they will end up harming the people they serve. Another reason is that the campaigns are so mud­ died with bickering and confusing accusations that gleaning the truth is like frying to find a magazine without the Friends cast monopolizing the pages. Both reasons make it next to impossible to confi­ dently choose a candidate. A 'case in point can be viewed in Congressional District 6, which covers north and east Mesa and much of northeastern Arizona. Even if you don’t live in this lovely area, you have most likely heard of die Stimulating discussions bouncing back and forth between Republican incumbent Rep. J.D. Hayworth and Democratic challenger Steve Owens. The two seem to have engaged in what’s coming across as the kind of bickering that annoys voters instead o f im pressing them. T uesday, Owens responded to criticism for accepting $5,000 this year from a Washington labor union that has admitted ties to organized crime. Owens said he did not know about these ties u ntil he was n o tified about Hayworth’s ad. In addition, Owens said the people who were involved with organized crime are no longer in the union. So where does that leave us? It leaves us with hav­ ing to decide whether or not we believe Owens never knew about the organized crime ties. Owens says he didn’t know, but all we have to go on here is his word. And how valuable is a politician’s word in a nation littered with broken political promises? Hayworth has not had. a squeaky-clean campaign either. His signature was forged on an election affi­ davit filed in June with the Secretary of State’s Office. Hayworth said Sunday that his former cam­ paign manager, Marcus Dell’Artino, was responsible. However, Owens has criticized Hayworth for his han­ dling of the situation —- Hayworth did not fire Dell’Artino until a month later. In this situation, we’re left with deciding whether or not Hayworth handled this situation correctly. This requires us to play judge and jury. And even if we think Hayworth made a mistake in waiting to fire DelTArtinO, does this affect his ability to serve in office? Who are we to say he can’t learn from his mistake? We're not mind readers. We can only work with the information given to us through speeches, news­ paper articles, televised debates, conventions and advertising. In a perfect world, we could get inside the candi­ dates’ heads and learn the truth about the campaign issues and their motivations. Then again, the truth may be so frightening we’re better off stumbling around in die dak. s TAFF STATE PRESS 'la*--. is vm»rtheaverage citizen has sotten outofthe American economic system ... . ■ ■ ------ .---— ---:---i---- ,—.-----— 1 w si. , . -a S ' 2V Keep working, suckers. • s. iM W rÜ Support for Israel holds back U.S. relations Israel is losing and losing big. It is too bad many of those TEV E in power there are too proud to FO RSBERG admit it. The original peace Columnist agreement, which Israel was lucky enough to get, is now in grave danger. That is right, “lucky enough to get,” Such a statement flies in the face o f the myth o f “The Mighty Israel.” According to many of her Western backers and now unfortunately some of her rulers, Israel is a m inisuperpower which does not negotiate, but rather dictates. Israel does not give, but takes at will. Israel never backs down;, it doesn’t have to. The Israeli military is mighty and unbeatable and Israel is a tightly knit community of likeminded people who are willing to do anything in order to further their nation’s interests. Too bad for Israel that little of this is true. Israel lives or dies off of Western support. If it goes away, Israel goes down. The Israeli military is designed around the fighting of fast wars via conventional means, like most “Western” militaries it has not shown any particularly great aptitude at winning the hearts and minds of occupied peoples and any prolonged conflict will require, once again, support from outside powers-Internally, Israel is being increasingly tom by conflicts between widely divergent views of just what Israel should be about. Orthodox and reformed Jews have many ideas about how Israel should be governed, but they rarely see eye to eye. Deciding a simple thing such as whether a McDonald’s in Tel Aviv should remain open on the Sabbath illustrates the divergence of ideas in the Israeli community. “Nations don’t have friends, they have interests.” Or so a former Israeli prime minister was fond of saying. With the end of the Cold War the United States’ main interest in Israel is gone. America no longer needs a hedge to counterbahmee-Soviet-Ieamng Arab states. With the notable excep­ tions of Iran and Iraq, most of the important Middle East states have fairly decent relations with the United States S and it is our continuing Support of Israel (at the expense of the Palestinians) which holds us back. At some point it will probably make a great deal of sense to jettison the regions “odd man out” iii order to solidify relations with the rest. Playing nations off against one another (i.e., Egypt vs. Israel) doesn’t usually work out in the long run. This, taken in conjunction with the volatility of the U.S. domestic political scene, is a bad omen. Many in Israel have come to take heavy American support as a given, when it could go away in what is. historically speaking, a hurry. Big cuts in foreign aid may eventually have a signifi­ cant impact on the amounts Israel can get. Isolationist trends, while they might not result in the complete severing of overseas relations, may make the United States far less likely to intervene overseas no matter who is yelling for help. And within the next decade there will probably be more Muslims in the United States than Jews. While there is no reason to supposé their political views on foreign affairs will be as unified of those of U.S. Jews, any net loss of power for the ’’Israel Lobby” will hurt. With American support uncertain, why don’t Israel’s leaders press for agreements which; will attempt to resolve some of the more troubling problems the nation facës? Because far too many of them are suffering from the “arro­ gance of power.” Israel has been successful in carving out a niche for herself in the Middle East but a long string of vic­ tories, especially military victories, has made many of her prominent citizens think there is no way Israel can lose. Much like the U.S. leadership during the Vietnam War, the Israeli’s are fond of looking over their squadrons of supersonic fighter aircraft and thinking there is no way rock throwing refugees can “defeat” them. Like the U.S. leader­ ship they are refusing to negotiate in good faith (i.e., be willing to make significant sacrifices) because they think their position will only get better. Like the U.S. leadership they are likely to dismiss reality with patriotic slogans and recitations of “God is oh our side !” Like much the U.S. leadership from the Vietnam War years, they are likely to be spending the last years of their lives making excuses as to why their side didn’t prevail and why they didn’t take half a loaf when they could have. Steve Forsberg is a senior studying history. ANGELA MULL, Editor BRIAN ANDERSON, Managing Editor COPY EDITORS: Christa Cerrentano, Theresa Valles. KEVIN 1, ADEY............ ................................Night Editor PHOTOGRAPHERS: Lori Cain, Pat Shannahan. TIM BAXTER................ .City Editor COLUMNISTS: Bryn Chancellor, Mark Cohen, Tim ANDREA HEALEY........................ „...............City Editor Elizondo. Steve Forsberg, David Galantowicz. Tina KELLY WENDEL....... ..................... Opinion Editor Holder, Rick Liljegren, Joshua Solovskoy, Vivi Stenberg, TIMOTHY TAIT........................................................NewsEditor Theresa Valles. TIMHACKER.... ........ ............Photo Editor CARTOONISTS: Brian Fairrington, Steve Tansley. JIM POULIN................ Photo Editor PRODUCTION: Adrianna Garcia, Diana Kessinger. John JEREMY STEIN.... .............................. Sports Editor Kestner, Jeremy Meyer, Corey Saunders, Shellie Scott. LIZ MONTALBANO...................... .....Magazine Editor SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Cari Dewald, Dan Ellstrom, LESLILINDGREN.... .....................Asst. Magazine Editor Chris: Ferrugia, David Goodwin, Nickelle Kastein, Sean AARON BRUTCHER..~....... Night Production Supervisor Lambright, Branden Mudd, Jess Rankin, Simon Roberts, Shane Siren, Jesse Slettelaiid, Leslie Vegter. REPORTERS: Kennes Bolig, Sara. Bush, Deanna Darr, CLASSIFIEDS: Lisa Bayless, Heidi Heister, Wayne Becky Hill, Melody McDonald, Jennifer Netherby, Jeff Hoover, Stacey Thayer, Joy.Thompson. Owens, Ray Stern. SPORTS REPORTERS: Doug Cook, josh DeFamio. Randy Jones, Dustin Krugel, Ed Odeven. Unsigned editorials reflect the views of die editorial board, decided by a majority voted among its members. They do riot reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: ANGELA MULL Editor BRIAN ANDERSON Managing Editor KELLY WENDEL Opinion Editor The State Press is published Monday through Friday dur­ ing the acadediic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center,- Room 15, Arizona State. University, Tempe, Ariz. 85287-1502. We do not answer questions of a general nature. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively pub­ lished for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are riot necessarily those ofthe ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State P ress P hone N umbers Inform ation.............. 965-7572 N ew sroom ........... ,....965-2292 M agazine.................. 965-1695 Advertising............... 965-6555 Classifieds........ ...... ..965-6735 http://news. vspa.asu. edu Opinion St a t e P r ess W ednesday, O ctober ASASU sponsoring Election Info-Slam The primary goal of the Associated Students of ASU Government Relations department is to get the students of ASU as informed about the candidates and the issues as possible. For this reason, we are putting on the ASASU Election Info-Slam. This event will take place on Hayden Lawn today. It will consist of interest groups, candidate informa­ tion tables and all of die politically oriented organiza­ tions on our campus. There will also be two bands playing live m usic— The Piersons and The Beat Angels — along with a local radio station, The Edge. Among the interest groups attending die info-slam are the Arizona Right to Life, the Arizona Right to Choose, National Organization for Women, National R ifle Association, National Association for the A dvancem ent of C olored People and Planned Parenthood. Since this is the last week to register to vote for the upcoming November "election, ASASU and other campus political organizations will be on die mall to register voters. Be aware, the deadline for voter regis­ tration is next Monday, Oct. 7. This is the week the voter registration numbers are expected to double and hopefully our goal of 5,000 registered voters will be accomplished. We at ASASU feel it is part of our duty to remain committed to the students of ASU. This is achieved by providing opportunities for students to enhance their knowledge of candidates and issues and by help­ ing them become involved in the process as much as possible with the approaching Nov. 5 election. This event is to inform the students of ASU as well as to get them to participate in the election process. This is ASASU’s opportunity to bring the information to the students, rather than having the students com­ ing .directly to us, the campaigns or the interest groups. The importance of getting informed and involved with the elections process cannot be over­ emphasized and we hope the students of ASU take the time to get inform«! and involved in this year’s election, In addition, ASASU is putting on a reception for the students and administrators to meet our respective candidates from around the state. This is another effort that we are putting forth to strengthen the awareness of University issues to our perspective rep­ resentatives. We hope the students of ASU will have stronger representation by not only our representa­ tives. but by representatives in other districts as well. We hope students realize the importance of their right to vote. Because, after all, it is your voice, your choice and this is your chance to use it. Damon D. Pace ASASU State Relations Coordinator Junior Busines Page 5 1996 Voters em pty handed — again A little glimpse into the w orkings o f W ashington D C. can be pretty scary. There are many stories about how and why things d o n ’t get done there. Politicians may decry gov­ ernment mistrust and deplore voter apathy, but h ere’s a story about how they earn their paychecks and we earn our cynicism, A resolution calling on the Department of Education to make Campus security co m p lian ce a p rio rity passed the H ouse of Representatives on Sept. 11. The unanimous vote approving House Resolution 470 was an indictment on Secretary of Education Richard R iley’s passive effort to m onitor the safety on the nation's university and college campuses. Under the 1990 Student Right to Know and Campus Security Act, every college and university receiving any federal funding must compile campus crime statistics. Such accurate information would theoretically help stu­ dents make more informed decisions when choosing a school. In remarks made earlier this year, however, the DOE made it clear campus crime was not a “priority.” Lax supervision by the department, including a missed deadline for aJCongressi anally mandated compliance report (due Sept. 1995), has given universities free reign over issuing questionable statistics. Many schools have been accused of altering or under-reporting crime rates to make campuses look safer for prospective students. Before the vote on H.R. 470, criticism of R iley’s actions and university non-compliance were heard at a Capitol Hill press conference. Rep. Bill Goodling, R-Pa., co-sponsor of the bill, derided the DOE for its irresponsi­ bility and said that if the current resolution does not force the department into action, then stronger measures would betaken ' The conference was also attended by Connie Clery, whose daughter Jeanne Anne was raped and murdered in 1986 by a fellow student who broke into her Lehigh University dorm room. After discovering negligent and conflicting information relating to Lehigh’s reporting of campus crime, the Clery family pursued stricter state and local laws for. reporting campus crime information. At the conference, Clery and other campus crime vic- Tortilla tossers should take ammo to visitor’s section . It is hard to imagine having anything to complain about after ASU's awesome shut­ out of the dreaded “C ornshuckers,” However, 1 do have one minor gripe and it is aimed specifically at the person or per­ sons (you know who you aré) standing in the student section Who apparently cannot control their desperate urge to toss tortillas at everyone and everything. These persdh(s) unknown are tossing tortillas in the student section at each and every ASU home game, as if they were attending a tractor pull rather than a football game. Do you really think that this immature behavior makes you cool? I realize that you are only throwing tor­ tillas — soft and tasty cakes of corn or flour that are relatively harmless ---- but Why 2, throw them on your fellow students and on the Sun Devil football players? That’s plain stupidity! (Not to mention a waste of tor­ tillas). If you really must let the little boogers fly. then here is what you should do: go over to the visitor's side of the field and practice your tortilla toss-off on the; visiting team and their fans, not Ours! Just picture it — thousands of tortillas raining down on the opposing team’s fans and players while some to rtilla-to ssin g psycho scream s "Welcome to Arizona!” all while ASU is pounding the epemy into submission. Now that would be cool! Chris Sargent Senior CIS and Management e-mail to th e editor krw 2 7 i4 @lmap2 asu.edu tims also pushed for adoption of the Open Campus Police Logs Act. This bill proposes to go even further than H.R. 470. It would make campus police and security logs open to public inspection. This would presumably aid journal­ ists and students in m aking unobstructed judgm ents about the state of crime on campus. * Support for this act is the essence of Goodling’s threat to the DOE if they don’t comply with existing laws. But who, one m ight im agine, would be against such an important issue as crime on campus? In Washington, it seems nothing is immune from back room political wran­ gling or front room political showmanship. The Open Campus Police Logs Act is specifically designed to compel many universities to release informa­ tion they have previously refused to make available. It is the same type of public information that is unconditional­ ly available in most communities. To this day, however, many universities obstruct access to most criminal statistics and law enforcement records by using whatever obstacles they can find. The DOE, which is charged with overseeing the welfare of students, has cow-towed to a higher education establish­ ment that does not want to be compelled to release poten­ tially tuition-losing Crime figures, So, it all comes down to money? The universities officially Cry “unfunded mandate” or over-regulation in response to the Police Logs Act. Some Democrats, either beholden to higher education special interests or simply aggravated by largely heretofore Republican rhetoric on unfunded mandates, are crying foul to the proposed législation. It is necessary to add that the Open Campus Police Logs Act has bipartisan sponsorship in the House and the Senate. Yet, in calling the emotional press conference last month on H.R. 470, and intimating the Police Logs Act, some accused the Republicans of trying to coax this into a crimerelated campaign issue. Oh. so it is all about politics? The 104th Congress officially wrapped up business this week without action on the Open Campus Police Logs Act- For now, the initiative is dead. Who are the winners and losers? Some politicians will be able to go home touting tough crime.' Some politicians will go home having assured thé support of a select con­ stituency. And the losers? It looks like the average, distrustful and often cynical voter comes up empty-handed again. Mark D. Cohen is a graduate student studying communi­ cations. Republicans aren’t worried I would like to share one thought in response to the “Opinion/Dole bash” page in the Oct, 24 issue. There are some who wish to think that Republicans are holding their breath with fingers crossed in hope that Clinton will somehow fumble and stumble in the next fpw months before the election. That idea just isn’t true. Even Joe Friday can piece together this one. Just the facts ma’am: • Socialized medicine attempted. • Democrats are voted out of Congress. • Paula’s harassed. • Travel office fired. • Vince is dead. ' • Whitewater brought to light. • Hillary’s friends in prison. • Taxes raised • No. commitment to deficit reduction. • Private FBI files found. • Government spending increased. • Appointed staff caught in the act. There is no need to wait. We've got all the evidence wc need. Jon Ramsay s ■ ■ -• Senior A rt education n Student thinks Press improving I am submitting this in response to the letter submitted by Shannon Conley on Sept. 2 7 .1 think that finally The State Press, has become better at what it does. Keep up the good work Wendel and give my best to Fairrington. B rian D. Thompson Sophomore Journalism | | u o ta B h s .. . V y “Once I thought to write a history o f the immigrants in ”1 America. Then I discov­ ered that the immigrants were American history. ” — Oscar Handlin, The Uprooted, 1951 St a t e P r ess W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 Page 6 Haircuts financing students’ trip to AIDS quilt Bv T a r a T e ic h g r a f .b e K S p e c ia l t o t h e S t a t e P r e s s Your next $10 haircut could help send a group of ASU students to Washington, D.C. Students hoping to assist with the display of the AIDS Memorial Quilt in Washington, D.C. will host a Hair Cut-a-Thon today on the lower level of the Memorial Union in N. Maxim salon to raise money for airfare. The Hair Cut-a-Thon, from 10 a m. to 6 p.m., is the latest fund-raising attempt by volunteers in need of at least $6,500 to make their journey to the nation's capital. Oct. 11 to 13. . Previous fund-raising attem pts have raised only 2 to 3 percent o f the total amount needed. The quilt, composed of 44,000 panels, is sponsored by the NAMES Project Foundation. Each 3-by-6-foot panel repre­ sents one AIDS victim. “It’s difficult for students on this campus to picture how emotional this trip will be,” said Greg German, co-coordinator of the ASU-D.C. 1996 volunteer committee. In Washington, students will aid in unfolding B ack tp sd p b U o o Jd n g VI Ct J w a y c o o l. students.” The M u lticultural ' A w areness Programming Board, part of the Associated Students of ASU, loaned the committee money for 17 plane tickets, The amount must be repaid by Oct. 7, said Patricia Pozo, co-coordinator of the ASU-D.C. vol­ unteer com m ittee. Each ticket costs $380.50. German said the Hair Cut-a-Thon will be “a great way for the students of ASU to express their support of our trip and their support of AIDS in general.” HAIRCUT NAILS $Q 99 $ -j Q 9 9 m en & wom en full se t includes shampoo sculps or tips s t a t e p r e s s s ta te p r e s s s t Our stylists specialize in making great first impressions, Working closely with you, we'll design a cut and style that complements your personality. Plus we'll show you how to re-create that look with Matrix styling products so every day back at school is are al fashion statement. matrix the quilt, reading names of AIDS victims and offering emotional support to those attending, he said. German added that the trip w ill help inspire students to educate others at ASU about the risks of AIDS, “The quilt is one of the most powerful tools we have to educate about AIDS,” said Leah Sample, Memorial Union Activities Board program coordinator and NAMES southwestern display coordinator. “It puts humanity behind the statistics. This will be a life changing experience for some of these te p r e s s s ta t We do “m agic* with hair...and nails! e p r e s s s ta te W tZ Z ARDS HAIR STUDIO 903 S. Rural Rd., Tempe 9 6 7 -2 3 6 0 MATRIX. EXPANDING THE SALON EXPERIENCE a te p r e s s s ta (new clients) (new clients) Walk-ins welcome...BUT...appointments recommended s t a t e p r e s s s ta te p r e s s s t a te p r e s s s ta PARIS L$239j Lo n d o n Frankfurt To k y o Ba n g k o k Fares are each way from $289 $329 $309 $428 Phobrx bash) on a ROUND1WPPURCHASE.. FARES DO NOT NCLUDE FEDER­ ALTAXESOR PFCs TOTALINGBfTWEfN$3 AND$45, OEPBtiNG ON DESTINATION OR DEPARTURECHANGES PAD ORECTIYTO FOR8GN GOVERNMENTS. FARES ARE SUBJECTTOCHANGEWIHOUT NOTICE. Around-The-World Fares from $1,285 W e o h o s p e c ia liz e in : 9- Adventure Tours > International ID Cards Issued > Work abroad programs Council 130 E. University, Ste. A Tempe, AZ 85281 located at Forest and University I (directly across from ASU) 966-3544 http://wwtv.cice.orgHravel.htm JOBS AVAILABLE RIGHT NOW THIS INSTANT AS WE SPEAK Get The Picture? Welcome TÒ U S WEST Telecard C areer F iesta C h a n g i n g The S h a p e Of Money The U S WEST Telecard. It's like money. Only better./No more scrounging for spare change. Use felecards at any U S WEST pay phone with the yellow card slot. Local or long distance, you' get U S WEST'S best rates. So get Telecard. And save your change for a semester's worth of notes 2 n d F lo o r, MU T o d ay! J*ag e _7 W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 S tate P ress s tu d e n t n a m e d F ie s ta B o w l q u e e n B y S a ra B u s h S t a t e P r ess ASU student Allison Alexander said she was “in complete shock” after Fiesta Bowl o fficials chose h er as th is y e a r 's F ie sta Bowl queen. “I was just completely surprised,” said Alexander, a senior broadcasting major. “My goal was to just be on the court. I never thought I 'd be A l e x a n d e r queen.” . Alexander began the application process for the posi­ Mmtmr L U B E • O IL • F IL T E R * 9 88 TIRI i AUtOMOtiyl 20 33 W. UNIVERSITY, MESA DOBSON S UNIVERSITY 6 4 4 -1 2 0 1 ONLY 3 MILES FROM ASU B CO A ST -T O - n WCOASTmt tion in April, participating in interviews with 150 other applicants. The interviews narrowed the bunch to four court members. These four women each gave a slide presentation and performance to an audience of more than 500 people Monday night, where a group of local executives associ­ ated with the Fiesta Bowl judged them, “ The queen is chosen based on scholastic achieve­ ment, citizenship, poise, appearance and personality,” said Kerry Luginbill, assistant public relations director for the Fiesta Bowl. As Fiesta Bowl queen, Alexander will attend more than 60 Fiesta Bowl events in the months leading to the • • • • • • Lubricate your vehicle & ch a ssis Dtaift old oil Add up to 5 qts. of new oil Install a new oil filter Includes a 17 pt. inspection D iesel extra M ost cars and light trucks ^CORPORATION .C orporation AMERICAN EXPRESS IW Interested in Developing Digital Signal Processing Solutions for the Future HL MoM. Changing oUfor over 125years. Rincon Research Corp. (RRC) has entry- to mid-level positions for EEs, Software Engineers and MIS/C1S graduates with a BS, MS or Ph D. to join our technical staff. Candidates will work in a challenging developmental environment to create and design Digital Signal Processing solutions. From concept definition to rapid-prototyping solutions we are setting the standard for research and scientific engineering in time-critical environments. Candidates should have background in the following disciplines: Our Tire & Service Warranties Are Honored A t Over 8,000 Affiliated Dealers Nationwide S3 C o m p u te r S c ie n c e l R esearch M a n a g e m e n t I n f o r m a t i o n S y s te m s LIMITEDSERVICEW ARRANTY~ ' 90 DAYS NO PA YM EN T90 DAYS NO INTEREST *** NO ANNUAL FEE LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS D ec, '96 an d M ay '97 G raduates in E le c tr ic a l E n g in e e r in g I L R incon 8 WITH COUPON Jan. 1 Fiesta Bowl game; “I basically act as an ambassador of goodwill and a rep resen tativ e o f A rizona at F iesta Bowl e v e n ts,” Alexander said. Alexander said that she is honored to be this year’s Fiesta Bowl queen. As for her goals, she said, “I’d just like to be as good of a representative as last year’s queen.” Alexander said she would eventually like to become a television newsr anchor. Other Fiesta Bowl court members are ASU student Kari Strobel, and UofA students Nicole Tibshraeny and Jolene Silverthom. C O M P U T ER IZ ED W H EEL B A LA N C E & 4 T IR E RO TA TIO N $ 1 9 88 WITH COUPON • • • • Check Inflation On A ll Tires Com puterized Balance On 4 Tires Four tire Rotation M ost Cars & Light Trucks Electrical Engineers: with strong background in signal processing techniques, com m unication theory, control theory algorithm developm ent and coding and digital signal processing theory; Software Engineers: with background in C++; OOD/A methodologies, graphic framework design, distributed processing, Sybase/Orade, Arc/Info and H/W control a n d device drivers; System M anagers: familiar w ith DEC Alpha and VAX Systems, DEC Unix, PCs, • W orkstations, SGI arid understanding of routers switches, módems a n d network architectures and protocols. Stop by our booth on Thursday, October 3 at the Career Fiesta to discuss opportunities at RRC We are registered at the Career Services office and will be doing on-campus interviewing-. Headquartered in Tucson, RRC offers competitive salaries and manifests its committment to employee health and welfare by offering an excellent benefit package, U.S. Citizenship required and SSBI eligibility. Principals Only PA STA ) W EDNESDAY 7 Q< DRAFTS *2 .8 1 PITCHERS BUD LICHT MILLER LITE 3P M - CLOSE N O CA TCH . N O C O V ER . N O R ID D IN O . 1 3 0 1 E . U n ive rsity B etw een R u ral & M cClintOCk 9 6 8 -6 6 6 6 CREDIT CARDS Z > + £ *apNv -S N A IL S u> N A IL S cNA,1 s N A l - ; \ (A s m ^ N*U s N A "-. ^ ' V 1 n a i u v VI 5 v> T o D r in k F r o m 7 TO 11 PM 2 FOR 1 SHOTS W H ’s Best P izzeria | jSBrooklyn r m only n VI Z J > l< Ki Z NAILS NAILS NAILS NAILS NAILS NAILS NAILS NAILS NAILS W ALKING DISTANCE TO ASU CRIMPERS LTD 9 6 5 -S 1 9 2 3 5 0 S . M ill A v e # 1 0 4 ed n es d a y s T h e C L U T C H Pro9 I CLUTCH REPLACEM EN T h e B R A K E P ro FRONT OR REA R I ■ -P e r A x le »Sem i M etallic H ig h e r •P re m iu m P a d s / S h o e s t ors/D r s / D ru r um ms •R e su rfa c e R oJto Mw Many V e h icle s C o u p o n A 4 ^ e— n n ■O J 1.1W UU I _ .^ y » 1 » P r e s s u r e P late •F ric tio n D is c « R e le a s e B e a rin g « Lab o r Many RW D V e h icle s & P.U .'s E x p ir e s 1 0 -3 0 -9 6 1/ F R E E 8 POINT D IA GN O STIC C H E C K LOST?... Call 9 6 8 -9 1 9 0 meClinch's Brakes Tempe Phoenix 864-8338 955-1996 788-5443 8820 N. BLACK 3310 E. THOMAS RD. 17209 N. CAVE 731-9490 1395 E. APACHE BLVD. (WEST OF WATCH FOI OTHER METRO ARE an Ap p le C o m p uter L o a n . Dop’ t p a v f o r 90 d a y s* Tour . Pmmr MacMosh’ 7200 ■I u w p — u i w i n s e w PowerPC601/120 MHz/16MB RAM UGB/8X CD-R0M/15‘display PowerPC603e/120MHz/16MB MM 1.6GB/8XCD-ROM/15'deploy Com puter S to re ins o s th e M ain F lo o r Com puting i 9 :0 0 a.m . t o 5:00 p*.m. Monday - F rid a y Phone 965-4488 •. :F ax 965-1168 Only (199. Over 12 software titles F re e o n e - y e a r A p p le Qñerafores October11,1996. Nopaymentofmlenst orprinqpaludl be requiredfor90 days. Merest accruingdaring tMs90-dayperiod wiUbe addedlo theprincipal ami wit bear Merest, wbld wiUbe mduded to He repaymentschedule. Forexample, dxnortdicfMay 1996badan Merest rale of11.15%witb an Annual Percentage Rale (APR) of1393%. A monêlypayment of (4658fir IbePouer Mac'7200/120system is an estimale basedon a Mai loan amount of (2,71277, uM ) includes a samplepurchaseprice of (2,538 and a 6%loan originationfee. Interest is variable basedon tie Prime Rateas reportedon the 5th business day <4the month « T h e Wall Soeajomol plus a spreadof39%. Monthlypayment andAPRshown assumes deferment ofprincipal and does not Mude slate or localsales lax. TheApple Computer Loan has an 8-year loan tem wiê noprepaymentpenalty and is subject to creditapproval. MonlUypay­ ments may vary deferring machuü amputer systemprices, total loan amounts, staleand localsales taxes and a change in the monthly variable interest rale. ©1996Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, theApple logo, AppleCare, LaserWriter, Mac, Macintosh, Performa, PotverBook, Power Macintoshand StyUMTieran registeredtrademarks t^Apple Computer, Inc. PowerMac is a trademark cfApple Computer, tnc. PowerPCi a trademark ofInternational Business Machines Corporation, usedunder license ther^rom. Comics Page 12 State P ress W ednesday, O ctober 2 ,1 9 9 6 b y C a r r ie B e h re n s K in g d o m s As scon e iÿ n olroocivcc^. b y Mark Parisi UfA... ftRSf WoPP.- flRST SY/Z-täLC <^e.-t o e .ce . ^ o o ca .o -toJte o pO’C dûoot) W M . . . T iA R A L L Y r tc fT Y É fc y c£«.SV¡cr¿? fTVtxV'S V x o c . n ,G>nv'? ) " off themark V* Good JXi .l . !... atcv Aa ^ ad^ s - o .. ÜJ b y J o n a th a n In g e T ria ls a n d T rib u la tio n s think i better TAKE A BREAK FROM STMlNb, ATLANTICFEATURE © 1996 MARK PARISI 8-10 b y Scott A d a m s D ilb ert IF SOMEONE ASKS FOR SOMETHING, I CHECK THE SUPPLY C A B IN ET FIR ST. THEN I SAY, "THERE'S ONE LEFT. YOU CAN T HAVE IT BECAUSE THEN Ca J E ’ D BE ALL OUT.' CAROL, I NEED TO DOCUMENT YOUR PROCEDURE FOR ORDERING OFFICE. SUPPLIES’ XT'S A N ISO ^000 r e q u ir e m e n t » THEN I SPEND THE REST OF THE DAY COIAPLAINING ABOUT THE p e r s o n LORO ^ ASKED. - UNDISSOLVED MYSTERIES by ALLENBY /Í t jh - o h T X /- IT A OUT < Vj OF IN K . J » L \ 11______ (L . K e ith G e rc h ic k P la k a E xcuse, m e. b o K vnv - YOU LOOK U K E T h a t O u r C jE v n o s T ; OM ’ \X Dvr?tsivT . v J T j'X ' w Jf&i) S ■s .’YJY U Getting Tourette's answering m achine CSsS ♦}♦ s tu d e n t S p e c ia l! Computer Systems En o m eem no M ajor Intu SOOMme PmnwM* 5 8 6 - i3 3 M H z S y ste m www.css-comfiuters.c0m Pro Processor, $9 9 8 "A+ S cholar S tstim" 133/160MHz Mini Tower Case • 72pin SIMM Ram* Teac 1.44 Floppy Drive • 1.2 GB EIDE Hard Drive • PCI Video Adapter w/ I mb • 14" .28NI Color Monitor • 8x CD ROM Multimedia Kit • lOlKeyboard, MS Mouse • 28.8k Internai Fax Modem* MS Windows 95 on CD • MS Office Pro 95 on CD* • PCI - ISA Architecture • 6-Bay Tower Case 1 Óm b • 32 ms RAM, 1.44 FDD • 8X CD ROM Multimedia Kit • 2.1 G BEIDE Hard Drive • ATi Xpression w/ 2 mb • V ie w S o n ic 15" Monitor • MS Mouse/101 Kybrd • 28.8K Fax/Modem • MS Windows 95 on CD • MS Office Pro 95 on CD Only! *288« $1 7 3 8 /M 9 8 8 ¡¡Special!! 8 X M ultim edia K it, CD KOMI, Se wad C a n i, Stereo Sp eakers Factory Authorized Complete Network Warranty Center Solutions Packard Bell* O KPOA C an o n | g | H E W LET T I P A CK A R D C ER TIFIED PROFESSIONAL P roduct Specialist Computar Systems Serving the VtaMey Since 1987/ 968-8585 T he G oal : A J o b . T he Path : Y ou C hoose C areer Fe s t a 1'96 **«o* Novell. 1505 W. University Suite#103 Tempe, Arizona 85281 To day & T o m o rro w ■ 2 nd F lo o r , MU _______ STATE P ress S ports_________ Page Ï 3 W ednesday, O cto b er 2 ,1 9 9 6 Physical tailback Martin fit s S n y d e r s offense fine B y D u s t in K r ü g e l S t a t e P ress ASU head coach Bruce Snyder is a little biased when it comes to running backs, •He loves big, physical running backs and it's no wonder why the 6-foot-1, 215-pound Michael Martin is one of his favorites. “Hike those big guys,” he said. “If I were coaching a baseball team. I'd have home-run hitters. Bant ! Hit the ball out of the park. Base runners? Who the hell wants base run­ ners? Dave Kingman — man that would be my first draft pick." ' ; ; . Apparently Snyder doesn't watch much baseball. This year has been dubbed the year of the home run in the m ajor leagues. Kingman, a notorious strikeout victim before he retired, hasn't hit a home run since 1986. finishing his career with 442. ; It's a good thing Snyder knows a little more about yards than grand slams. Martin, a junior recreation major, may not be able to hang a 3-0 pitch 400 yards to left-center field, but he can plow through defenses, as Oregon's defense.will attest to. Against the Ducks last Saturday. Martin tal­ lied a career-high 161 yards on 25 carries and is on the pace to reach over 1,000 yards. The last Sun Devil to reach 1.000 yards rushing in a season was Mario Bates in 1993. "I've been a big Michael Martin fan for quite a w hile,” Snyder said. “1 really believed in my heart that he was going to be good if he could remain healthy. The way he ran Saturday night (against Oregon) is how I want a back to run. He was not going to be denied. I know he’s not the fastest, (but) boy is he a load. I expect, and I think Michael expects, to have those games every week.” Most of Martin’s yards are earned the hard way. plowing head-to-head with, big linebackers and linemen. Martin’s bruising running style keeps him from getting tackled for losses. Against Oregon, Martin was not tackled once behind the line of scrimmage. "When he gets hit, he's always falling forward." running backs coach Cornell Jackson said. “He runs through people. I think the thing that helps him is he is big with quick feet.” ■’ Snyder is in favoT of Martin’s straight­ ahead mentality. He doesn’t like it when running backs dance in the backfteld. , "When Michael Marlin hits that line of scrimmage it's going forward." Snyder said. “He’s a positive-yardage guy. That’s what you want from your tailback. Those little guys run around and make a big run, but also get caught in the backfield because they want to go over here and over there.” After falling just short of 100 yards rush­ ing in several previous games. Martin was elated to finally accomplish the feat: Martin has finished with 77 yards or more six times in the last two seasons, including 98 yards against Stanford last year and 92 yards against Washington in this year’s season opener. “It was kind of an emotional high for me and the linemen," Martin said of ASU’s run­ ning game, which has had only one other 100-yard game the last two seasons (Chris Hopkins 188-yard perform ance against California last November). “We haven’t had a 100-yard back in awhile." With a 100-yard game already in the bank, Martin said his teammates may need something else to heckle him about. “I would come to the sidelines and my teammates would be messing with me. "Don't you know you have a certain amount of yards. You need, to call the press box and T u r n t o M a r t in , p a g e 1 6 . ^ Jim Poulin/State Press ju n io r Michael Martin is ju st the kind of big, bruising runner ASU coach Bruce Snyder wants in h is backfield. ASU outside hitter Cox leading Pac on both sides of ball By D o u g C ook S t a t e P ress J im Po ulin/State P r e s s Heading into this season, junior Terri Cox had no Idea she would take the Pac-10 by storm . She is leading the conference in both kills average and digs average. Heading into the '96 volleyball season, ASU's Terri Cox would've never expected to be leading the Pac-10 in two major statis­ tical categories. However, the junior outside hitter now finds herself at the top of arguably the toughest volleyball conference in the nation in kills average and digs average. She has registered an average o f 5.94 kills and 5 digs a game in the Sun Devils’ 33 games this season. • Going into the season, Cox said she believed that she would be outshined by would-be transfer Erin Borske. But, Borske, a junior outside hitter from the University of Illinois, was barred from transferring to ASU by Illinois over a month ago. “Last year, (outside hitters) Christine Gamer and Jenn Snyder were our big guns and I was just kind of in their shadow,” Cox said of last year’s two starters, who are no longer on the team. “So 1 just figured it would be like that (this year).” Sun Devil starting setter Traci Heflin, who has known Cox since the eighth grade when they competed against one another on club teams, said Cox’s performance thus far is no surprise. ■ “Terri has complete skills," she said. *Tve always had faith in her (abilities). Everyone knows she’s a great player. This year, I've noticed more of her smartness on the court.” :ui-y ■', 1 . , "y Cox credited Heflin for helping her put up the impressive numbers. “It’s funny because one of the main rea­ sons I’m set so much is because I hit from the backrow, too,” Cox said. “A lot of times Tracy could always run somebody else, ... but she always finds me and always has confidence in me that I’ll get the ball down.” Although Cox has put up impressive offensive statistics, she takes die most pride in her defensive skills. “You can never run quick sets, never get anything hit perfectly straight down, unless T urn to V olleyball, page 15. Associate A. D. finds no trouble relating to ASU athletes B y J o s h D e F a m io S t a t e P ress One of the biggest problems facing most administrators in a university athletic department is relating to the athletes. Many officials simply are not able to understand the wants and needs of the student-athletes. Victor Cegles, lead associate athletic director for external affairs, is a former student-athlete himself and does not have that problem. “When you’ve been a student-athlete and you have been a coach, you appreciate the positions that those people are in,” he said. "As an administrator, it helps me in making my decisions. It tells you what those people are going through. I know what a student athlete goes through, and I know what a coach goes through." Cegles’ athletic career has helped him make some important decisions at ASU. During his time here, Cegles has been instm- mental in three important foundations — the Wings of Gold, a program developed to help raise funds for women’s sports, the Slam Dunk Club, which raises money for the basketball pro­ gram, and the Maroon and Gold Fund, which brings money to the football program that ticket sales alone cannot His efforts have not been overlooked by his colleagues. “Vic has come in and really started clubs we never had before,” said Tom Collins, associate athletic director of corpo­ ration and community relations. “(The programs), particularly the Wings of Gold, do a great job of supplementing funds for the women’s programs. We have to have areas where people can donate resources, and Vic has been able to create those pro­ grams that help attract high level donors.” This year will be Cegles’ 11th in the athletic department. He spent the previous 10 years as the assistant athletic director. He was moved into his current position in August when Athletic T urn t o C egles, page 14. IN T E R C O L L È G ÏA T E S hop T im H acker/State P r e s s A ssociate athletic director Victor C egles understands what it is like to be an athlete and a coach, sin ce he had been both before becoming an athletic administrator. Cegles________ C ontinued State P ress W ednesday, O ctober 2 ,1 9 9 6 14 fro m page 13. Director Kevin White announced his reorganization. Prior to ASU, Cegles spent five years at Rutgers University as art assistant athletic director for development. He also spent time working in the administration and coaching at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and West Virginia Wesleyan. Cegles did his undergraduate studying at Bucknell University, where he was captain of both the basketball and baseball teams. For the upcoming year, Cegles’ two major goals are to make - a smooth and successful transition under White’s new system and to improve outside support for the athletic department. “I just think right now ... it’s going to take some time to go through that transition (of the reorganization),” he said. “We have a lot of work to do as the season progresses. We. want to maximize support for our teams, whether it be contributions or sponsorships.” Cegles added that the success of ASU’s football team is helping his cause greatly. ham B e irâ l Clmfe Spaseti Men’s Soccer The ASU club soccer team earned its, first win of toe sea­ son with a 4-0 victory over Embry Riddle on Sunday. Chns Van Tuyl, Dan Adams, Milan Djukic and Ryan Snee each scored for toe Sun Devils, while defender Jake Havenar chipped in two assists. The team’s win came after a 2-2 tie against UofA last Friday in which Van Tuyl and Jeff Purcell scored goals. ■Water Ski The water ski team beat out a field of 18 teams over toe weekend in toe Western Conference Championships field at Firebird Lake. ASU edged out the Washington Huskies 5,890 to 5,540, The top two teams advance to toe National Championships held Oct. 10-12 in Atlanta. Freshman Eric Phillips clinched first place overall with a win in the slalom and a second-place finish in the jump, while sophomore Jared Hcimbigner placed first in the jump. Courtney Buntjer won first place in toe women’s division in both the slalom and toe jump. Renee Miller finished second in toe slalom, while Jennifer Kaiser took third in toe jump. Serving Lunch and Dinner 7 Days e cwmMM m I Irm jd^OUPONNOT TRAN SFERABLE LIM IT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE To the ■ rotator Chot America wtil retm txw e you to rt» teoovtoueotW e coupon ptusaeeeito■ irtW to e o m p le io e w *1 » lta m d We e lh cW d o n ^ » redeemed b yd W b iio m o l ■ our merctundtae or anyone speofcally authorized by Chet Am erica. Cash value 1/20*. I Mdl to Chef Anerice^ C liB Oepertnent 43606. One ty c e ri M we, CM n o , TX 7884a _ P a g e _ lS W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 St a t e P r ess ¡RF ■ W V olleyb all C ontinued L E G # %■ A D V I C E prom page 13. there’s a pass or a rally,” Cox said. “If I make a great dig or a great pass it boosts me up to hit the crap out of the ball.” ASU head coach Patti Snyder-Park said she has always been amazed by the play of her most talented out­ side hitter. “She has a lot of athletic ability and is such a strong, quick player,” Snyder-Park said of Cox. “She has really become an effective, strong hitter and a great passer.” Cox has seen her offensive numbers steadily rise since she arrived at ASU two years ago. She went from 41 kills in 99 games as a freshman in 1994, to 286 kills in 100 games last year. She already has 196 kills in just 33 games this season. Despite her impressive performance so far. Cox still sees room for improvement. “ Everything has im proved and I still want it to improve,” she said of her play. “But, I don’t think my stats are up to what 1 want.” ’ Part-Haeottoneysprovide fr« legal athriccandconsei toenrolleditadeih. ca ll f< 8 -< 3 0 7 Sponsored fay ASASU Y o u r stu d e n t g o v e rn m e n t If there’s one thing Cox wants people to realize about her play, it’s what she’s doing on the defensive side. “It’s funny. A lot of people that don’t know that much about volleyball think that defense and passing isn’t a main thing,” Cox said. “They just think it’s the person that spikes the ball. I don’t really consider hitting a big thing, but that’s why people think I’m a good player.” Cox said she enjoys being a leader on a team that has four freshmen on its nine-player roster. “It hasn’t been hard at all,” she said of helping lead the young team. “I think the girls respect me a great deal, just as much as I respect them. I’m not a captain or anything, but 1 don’t need the title to help support the players or tell them what to do. “It’s all about positive attitude. My main role is just to have a good time. If someone on the team makes a mistake, I’m always there to, try and joke with that person or put a smile on their face to ease the intensity.” ROTHER'S ' BOOKSTORE (6- *YO UR C O LLEC 5 BOOKSTORE" I S P E C IA L O RD ER BO O KS l I » sin g le c o p ie s » ca se b o o k s ■ textbooks A Open 7 day» * weak 6 2 5 E. A p th e 9 6 7 -5 4 4 5 CROSSWORD L 1 M o by THOMAS JO SEP H A CRO SS DOWN S E R Al a G G i U E W E E W E R V 1 V E. R E K L A L Al L E X 1 A L E N N 1 D O M A R e 1 Long­ 1 Show ed D boredom haired ox A 2 President 7 Traveling D 11 Rub the tial wrong . nicknam e o w S Dl way 3 Ironically T H A 12 Arrived funny G TO 4 Tw angy 13 En ters O S S EJ text 5 Do film Yesterday's Answer work 14 Nile biters view 15 Join 18 Methu6 C ar ' se fa h 's 17 W ater sc a r 33 llks father 35 L e a v e off 7 Flow ering source 36 Salad 19 Attacked shrub 20 W icked fish verbally one 8 Fad ed in 21 Like O din 37 Nabokov color 23 O ne — novel and Thor million 9 G uitarist's 38 C alen d ar 22 Fan tasy 24 Corrida aid abbr. 24 Silent , hero 10 “You 40 Balder­ perform* 26 Dawn betcha!” d ash ers goddess 16 Following 41 Low bill 25 Top card 27 Rink 17Actress 30 Com e into 42 Unite D ianne surface 28 Refinery 1 2 g 3 J¡ 4 5 8 9 10 stuff 6 7 ta 11 29 O ne with plots 13 31 Som e 14 15 O lym pics 16 jersey 17 18 19 21 22 letters 32 Motif 23 25 33 Goblet 24 26 28 part 34 Explorer 29 3^ Hernando f 31 37 "Omnia 32 33 vindt " 34 35 36 39 Newsm an Edw ard R . 37 38 40 41 42 43 M agician - 39 Henning 43 44 4 4 Chant « 4 5 Pot starter 45 4 6 Sam pled i Ji f■ V c H E T s A U D t O S M 1 T H ■ J FOOD & DRUG IUST SOUTHEAST OF CAMPUS AT 926 E. Broadway Rd„ Tempe - 829-6824 ° ■ J 10-2 ° EFOQijjt UX§w(BÜ®ipäijQg ' F o r a n sw e rs to tod ay's cro ssw ord, ca ll 1 ■ 600454-7377199eperm lnute,touchtone /ro tary pho n es. (18+ only.) A King Fe a tu re s se rv ice , N Y C . 9 I w ills C l/ ■ DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES — Here's how to work it:. AXYDLBAAXR isLONGFELLOW One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. 10-2 D U LY ° ©@03 ° IJitetMiO Q O CRYPTO Q U O TES U I T F K U Q H I W X Q Y . C Z YW Z Y K U W N X V X K H X C Q N X VV O , U I V O F K U Q H I O X D U 1Z Y I W X N X V .— 1XVKMY V Q G Q X C Q Y esterday's C ryp toq u ote: THE PEDIGREE OF HONEY DOES NOT CONCERN THE BEE, A CLOVER ANY TIME, TO HIM IS ARISTOCRACY.— EMILY DICKINSON N EEDHELPwith C ryp to q u o tes? C a ll 1-900-420-07001 990 p er m inute, touch-tone/rotary p hones. (18+ only .) A king Featu res S e rv ic e , N Y C . ~ . . - . • .... O 1996 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. SAFEWAY COUPON 12 Pack Safeway SELECT Soda »Cola, Diet Cola. Lemon Lime, Root Beer. Grape. Orange, Grapefruit. Skipper, Mist with a Twist, Punch or Seltzer •Limit 6 SAVE $1.80 on 6 St a t e P r ess W ednesday, O ctober 2 , -1996 Page 16 M artin T&S3'èÒ&ÌjèfT£$&Sb&1&£]artS$8b&Ì&]^%33SÌj&b>g]>T%&S3%ììh^Tk88S'ti- C o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e & te]’?#8SS1>&1té]yY£8S8h&bgJ3r#883tia1Í&J*l&888b&Í&J’r£S881¡8.tf&t¿J3rg8S8bÁl& ]’rg33S:tiá1^J}rg388bát&]?rg8.8SÓ&Í&]3 Master Adobe PhotoshoD In Taylor Design Interactive now offers high-intensity courses taught by designers, not com­ puter geeks, on super-fast 5 Pentium systems with large ^ color monitors in small classes. These are hands-on, all exer­ cise-based classes with 4 to F a 1 student/instructor ratios. If r A you want to learn Photoshop the way the : experts usie it, call Taylor Design \* r i t f ¡ Interactive and tell the a. operator’ Iwant to Crash-Dive Photoshop!" 13 . ask the coaches how many I have,’” Martin said, If there is one drawback to Martin’s full throttle game, it’s the inordinate amouht of injuries he sustains. This week alone Martin is recovering from knee and back injuries. “I don’t think it is meant for me to be healthy,” Martin said. “I’m starting to think that. I don’t know, it’s just little things. I would play hurt anyway, so it doesn’t matter. Once game time comes, I don’t care. I have to leave it at the field. I can’t worry about a little injury that could slow me down.” Martin said it often takes a week to recover from a Saturday night pounding. “After a Saturday game I am totally beat down because I get a lot of the hard hits,” he said. “I don’t show that they are hitting hard. I just get back up and go back to the huddle.” Jackson said Martin’s ailments are to be expected. “I don't think there is a back in the country who doesn’t have a nick or bruise if he is carry­ ing the ball 20-25 times," he said. “Mike is no different from any other back in the country at this time of year. But, when the lights come on Saturday night he’s right there.” Michael Martin Rushing YdsVAtt. 7.6 W â Yards 192 W BSSË5 98.0 R eceiving p Recpt. 9 TDs Yds/Game Yds. 108 Yds/Recpt. Yds/Game 12.0 27.0 TDs Plummer cleared The NCAA decided not to penalize ASU or senior quarterback Jake Plummer Tuesday, after he committed a NCAA violation three years ago. Plummer, while in Boise, Idaho plugged an Idaho radio station with a few lines promoting the station. Plummer, who was unaware that it is a NCAA violation, is a native of Boise. He will not be giving any ‘liners’ this week to any radio stations, including Boise’s. ASU will play Boise State at 7 Saturday night at Sun Devil Stadium. TONIGHT! (L&'ffB KURTS ^ m s S m "W H IT E T R A S H LO U N G E" lO:OQ - CLOSE WHITE TRASH PHILOSOPHERS W IT H MELLOW MIND BLOW O FF -T R A C K BE TT IN G ADwisono' K imberlyCorporation Taylor Design Interactive 4020 N Scottsdale RoaC Scottsdale, AZ 85251 6 0 2 ■4 2 3 - 5 0 5 6 9 6 6 -5 6 0 0 5TH & ASH C l a s s if ie d s Nolicé to o ü r'readers: Before responding to any advertisement requesting money be sent or invested, you may wish to investigate the company and offer. The State Press cannot assume responsibility for the ¿validity of the offers advertised in our classified section. For more information and assistance regarding the investigation of an advertisement, please contact the Better Business Bureau at 264-17.21. . . Mere Trivia... Anheuser-Busch introduced Michelob beer in 1896. ANNOUNCEMENTS AUDITIONING MALE voices fo.r the pop/jazz acapella, sing­ ing group En Forte. 482-7374, . APARTMENTS 1214 E. ORANGE, Marianna Apts. Studios. $50 off move inw/ad. 966-8597. / 1BD / IB A, . .Dishwasher, Indry, pool, spa, pf tbl, wkept rm, 5niins, to ASU. $480/mo, w/titiL Ready how!- Kevin 994-8463 HOMES FOR RENT RENTAL SHARING LARGE 2BRM mobile home on 5-acre farm ac, yard, trees rural and secluded. Call Ron 276-9385, TOWNHOMES/ CO N D O S FOR RENT LARGE 2 bedroom apartment. TV;: cable, pool, laundry .W alk . : SUPER 2 BDR/Ba condo in to ASU/Very quiet 966-4797. great complex. 8 min. from cam­ pus. Pool at door. $500/mo. LOOK 2BR/1BA $450 move Contact Todd W illiams 813-. in special. Pool, laundry. 1900. y-"-,-;'/ Safe, quiet, 5 minute bike ride to school. Í21 E Broadway. TOWNHOUSE 3 bd, 1.5 bâ, 967-7372. fully furnished w/xtras, lg. pool, ree. room w./kitchen, 2 HOMES FOR covered parking space. Close to freeways, airport, 2 mi. from " RENT ASU, Nice quiét complex. Only 3 BDR, 2 : ba, tile floors, $75Q/mo 279-4940/ $950/md Others also available. 894r0288 HOUSE FOR rent- 3 bdrm 3 bath $890/mo; Walk to A;SU: ju%968-(M61: APARTMENTS APARTMENTS Find it F A S T 'in the C la ssifie d s HELP WANTEDGENERAL OPEN-MINDED RMMT to share 2br/2ba apt. near Univ. /McClint. Walk in closet, pvt. storage. Student pref. $360/mo ••"+ X tï ù tü 9683^89. TEMPE. RESP. ro/f to share lux. 2 bd/ba apt. All amens. $400 + 1/2 util. Close to ASU 777-9749. HOMES FOR SALE TERRIFIC 4 BDRM, 2 full bath and two car garage home just 25 minutés from ASU- Ex­ cellent condition with new car­ pet and fresh paint. Priced below comps for a quick saleonly $112,900, Call Scott at . 267-0500; HELP WANTEDGENERAL ' 1A 2. Bedroom I BD/I BA. 2 blocks from cam­ pus, pool, spa. laundry, covered parking. available now. no. pet.s. 1700 .&./College Aye. 967-7212 ; Apartments j avalahle Am. t u t ,1' taking reservations I C la s s if ie d s W O R K ! ApacheTerraceApahieiita ÜP 968-6383 s illo n s Club leader positions a v a ila b le , w orking directly with children. S h ifts a v a il­ a b le in sc h o o l- b a se d pro­ g ra m s b e tw e en the h ou rs of 6 :3 0 -8 :3 0 a m and/or i 2 :3 0 - 6 :15pm . C o m p le te app lication in p e rs o n with HELP WANTEDGENERAL NEED 4TH person for 2-story ' fully furnished apt, $175 total per month 804-2452 Chris HELP WANTEDGENERAL 3 ref. letters a n d re s u m e at K y re n e S c h o o l District 1 6 -W H R , 8 7 0 0 S o u th K y re n e R d . JAMES ," 957-7770 T e m p e (co rn er of W a rn e r an d K y re n e ). C a ll 5 9 8 P e r s o n a l S u p p o r t p r o v id e r Looking for individual to work with dçyelopmehtally and physically hancücappéd men in our Personal Sldlls Program. Employees will teach various living skills and involve the individuáis in recreational and sports activities. Hourly posi­ tions available. $7.00-$7 50 DOE- Gall V i n c e 431-9511. ÉÔE. REPUBLICAIN PARTY MEEDS YOUi PART-TIME MRS. V J 7 3 0 8 with qu estio n s. Find the State Press on the Internet: http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ REAL ESTATE UNDEVELOPED LAND in Northern A Z .for sale. 2 1/2 acres just north of Ash-Fork in - Kaibab Estates. Call 894-2150 for more info. M ISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE POWER ACOUSTIK : 4ch/400wt car amp, 2 Kicker 8" spkrs. in deluxe box. Brock .921-3237, : ~ ' REPLICA ROLEX Tag Heuer/ Cartier $65-95 Dean 800-742574 Ì dr 212-517-4545 / \ WES TONE BASS guitar for sàie. Good cond- $175 obo. Call Joe at 668-7276 or 965¿ 145 . ■ : F in d th e T O O A Y s e c tio n o n p a g e 2| o r o h th e In te rn e t at http://news.vps% asu.edu/ FURNITURE TWIN SIZE m attress. Box spring, frame. Clean & nice $85. Student desk $45 8207095. COMPUTERS C lassified s W O R K ! HELP WANTEDGENERAL HOME BASED BUSINESS Major Carp. Expanding to AZ Seeking • U p to S IX F IG U R E S /y e a r. • E a s y S ta rt, Njo In v e n to rie s, • F R E E Lap to p C o m puter F o r Info. PART-TIME ASSISTANT Financial planner located in Phoenix Biltmore Area needs person 3 hrs/day to assist with various projects. Must ha ve good knowledge of Excel and experience with various general office procedures. For more information call Chris @2644582. STIVERS TEMPORARY PERSONNEL, INC. - M EM ORY At wholesale. 4 MB 30 pin simm $25. 16 MB 4x32 72 pin simili $84. Gall Ne tram 800505-1555. LAPTOP P90, 8mb, cd-rom, 28.8, Alt Mat sern. Sager Sys. $2j2G0‘+ software. Call Tim 813-6995. Enterprising Peop le HELP WANTEDGENERAL COMPUTERS Call (602) 759-6422 Bus/Tram 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. S6.00/hr. Fléxible schedule. Call Leslie at 935-2799 for further information. W HAT CAN YO U D O A b o u t a i d s ? Join the steering , committee to help plan ASLt AIDS Awareness Week! CO M E TO T H E , FIRST MEETING to find out how you can volunteer. TUESDAY OCTO BER 8 ' 3-4:30 Memorial Union, Rm. 209 Questions? Call Fre'ddy at 965-8276 ore-mail icfxr@asuvm. inre.asu.edu GET. - r . INVOLVED! i s St a t e P ress PageJ_7 W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 TICKETS JIMMY BUFFET 2 tix, resv 9121 $75ea obo 755- TRANSPORTATION CARPOOL From Westsi.de of valley. Monday-Friday, 8 to 5 or at least 3 days per week. Call Jan, 9653387. AUTOMOBILES Now you can place your C lassified ad from your own computer! 1996 TOYOTA Paseo, black, a/c, 1300 ml les. For lease or safe. $325/mp or $ 13;000, 213-5970 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu/ classad/classadf m.htm I 90 JEEP Wrangler, wht/tan, 6 cyl, 3" lift, chrome. 72000 mi. immac $9800.961-1174. HELP WANTEDGENERAL TRAVEL 93 MUSTANG LX auto, air, low mileage, pwr, wh, blue in­ ter. Asking $7500 838-2333. 18 " ALPINESTARS MTB. Full XT, Cromoly frame 0NZA clip­ less pedals Tigoa, Bontrager $1,000. 985-4448. DISCOUNT TRAVEL: Cheap in your name. I specialize in quick departures. Most places worldwide. I also buy transfert able çoupons/àwards. 968-7283 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. M O TO R CYCLES" '92 250 KAWASAKI Ninja. Excellent condition, must sell, $1500 obo, Don, 921-8249. KLEIN PULSE Comp, used once, Rock Shox 21R. $850 obo. Specialised Stumpjumper, exc mechanical cond. Manitou forks, $450 obo. Must S ell!!! 893-7849 M OTORCYCLES 4 th Flo o r B a r & G rill M A R K ET R ESEA R C H P H O N E IN TER VIEW IN G This is interesting work, tra t w ill provide you with valuable office experience. Conduct surveys with consumers on a variety of sub­ jects. No sales! We w ill train you to be an experienced interviewer. Flexible shifts, 4pm to 9pm, Mon.-Thurs., some Saturdays. $6.00 hourly for inexperienced, more $ with experience. Why work retail or fast food when you can put this on your resume! PM WAIT STAFF COCKTAIL SERVER BQT. SET-UP BQT. SERVERS Com e jo in b ur staff w here w e o ffer com petitive w ag es, u ni­ form s, free em ployee m eal and much m ore. Please ap p ly in per. son a t Hum an Resources, 5001 Ask for Judy at FOCUS MARKET RESEARCH : N . Scottsdale R d ., M , T , W o r F,- 874-2714 a D rug-Free W o rkp lace. EO E Because students like our • • • • • Flexible Hours Great Pay (avg. $9-$ 12/hr.) Guaranteed Paid Training Fun/friendly environment Leam Communication skilis/resume builder • No experience necessary. Easy jo b - w e train Please calbtoday to schedule a confidential interview. DialAmerica 345-9509 & , Telemarketing fo r the Image Conscious FUN PEOPLE Wanted: Outgoing, energetic appointment setters for Univer­ sal Portraits. $6-10/hr. Call Carrie at 777-1054. ANIMAL HOSP. in Chandler. P/t evenings, clean-up/vet asst. $4.507hr: to . start. Call office mngr. 963-2340. HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL Ideal for students P /T up to SlOO/day+HN o Investment Required Apply on campus Wednesday, O ct. 2nd, between 2 -4:30pm at the M U , [* Rm 203N (Gold North Room) 8 :3 0 -1 0 :3 0 a m o r 2-4pm . Sco ttsd ale Em b assy Suite supports W E H IR E S T U D E N T S ÜÜIâL__ $100 TO keep homeopathic journal for 7 weeks. Healthy people needed/ 274-1340 M-F days. Year-around work for the right career oriented individual. Food Handler's card req'd. Ideal for Part Time HELP WANTED- $8-ld/H R TAKINQ orders, Weekly pay, flex, schedule. Fill applications at Autom 5226 S. 31st Place Phx/Az 85040 HELP WANTEDGENERAL J M i l l // BICYCLES 93 GEpTRACKER soft top. Excln't cond. 21,000 mi. Au­ tomatic, pwr. brks, steer. Stereo. $9,850: Call 460-2134 Go ah ea d -T R Y IT! HELP WANTEDGENERAL AUTOMOBILES (jisajic Difss... ...Serious Payf Processing * D ata Entry (A ll S h iftl Available) CAMPUS SECURITY Assis­ tants now hi ring. Good ;e x|>. and valuable training. Work with police? officers, Flex hrs.. Call now for details. Scott @ 965-5643 or pick up an app. atthe DPS bldg in lot 40.. 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. GREAT SCHOOL job. Care­ giver for active quadriplegic. Healthy, smoke/drug free, posi­ tive attitude. Will train. Tom 949-7241 lv. msg. CLUB 411 Wtiitstaff and security staff. Apply in person Thursday 47pm. 411 S: Mill 966-2020 CONSULTING CO seeks p/t recruiter. Contact indy interested in evaluatihg servic­ es^ Fun office. Cali 951;-6d06 ext. 208 DELICIOUS DELIYERIpS is hiririg experienced/drivers, earn $10 to $15 per hour, make your own schedule, meet beau­ tiful women arid impress your friends. Call 220-0000 ; • ; DRIVERS WANTED $8-10/hr. Flexible shifts 833-5116 EARN $6.0 0 /H R . .as a; court document searcher/phone veri-. fier. Psychology research grant. Flexible hrs. 965-5423. You can now find State Press Classifieds on the World Wide Web! http://news. vpsa.asu.edu HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ■ P aid Holiday & V a ca tio n s ■ Short & Long Te rm Disability ■ M edical, Dental an d Life « Credit Authorization ATTENDANT P/T 20-25. hrs./wk. 10am-2pm M-F Assist quadriplegic male in pleasant surroundings. ÀZ drive lie. No substance abusers. 273-7775 HELP W ANTED-" GENERAL In su ran ce ■ Shift Differential for e venin g s an d w ee ke n d s ■ And More! (Benefits apply to full time Associates) Candidates, for these positions must have good key­ board and verbal communication skills. C a li M onday - T h u rsd a y betw een 8 am an d 8 pm or S atu rd ay betw een 8 am an d 12 noon for a telephone interview. S e a rs N ational Bank 8 0 4 -6 3 2 0 Bilingual students/staff sought for contract tech/scientific translation work. Flexible hours. Excellent pay. Best language combinations: Jpn, Ger, Dut, Fre, Spa, Port, Eng or reverse. For more information application, please fax resume to 415-512-8846 (attn: Dr. Reiter: ASU) or call 415-512-8800 x 112. THEM. •â È à or app ly in person at 2 6 2 6 South H ardy Drive, T e m p e, A Z Drug Free Workplace Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V P ro M ark O n e M arketing S e rv ic e s. Inc. N O W H IR IN G ProM ark One is now accepting applications for our dynamic, new Tempe Center. POSITIONS FUll-tim e and FUrt-time 1Health A Dental Benefits 1Paid Vacations ’ Paid Holidays 1Flexible Schedules 1Professional Work Environment 1Promotion From Within 1No Experience Necessary Paid Training 1Advancement Opportunities $ 6 .0 0 An Hour Plus Commission (Top Reps Can Earn $12.00+ Hourly) Relocation Opportunities 1 vl-" - • Call Today to Set Up An Interview • 7 7 7 - 0 8 7 7 • • Or stop by at 3 1 3 6 S . McClintock Ste 7, Tempo • "ProM ark O ne Is the 166th F a s t e s t Grow ing C o m p a n y in Am erica" - IN C 5 0 0 M ag azine W e a r e the 6th Larg e st, an d 3rd F a s t e s t G row in g Telem arketing Firm in the Nation EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM PLOYER N K f DATA Trs 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 100 S E A S O N A L P O S IT IO N S ★ Mail Processors ■k Inbound Telephone Sales • Full or part-time positions. • Neodata represents well-known, established companies OPEN INTERVIEW S T u e sd a y , O ct. 1st DONT MISS THE CHANCE FOR AN INSTANT INTERVIEW YOU COULD BE WORKING THE NEXT DAY! End your ; “ workday early/ Full-tim e and part-time sh ifts available starting at 4am, Sam A Sam. E x c e ll Agen t S e r v ic e s offers our Directory A ssistan ce Agents a com petitive starting w ag e of $ 7 .0 4 , b a s e d on m eeting a d h e re n c e an d attendance guidelines, with the potential to e a rn up to $ 8 .2 4 per hour. T h e re i s n o selling involved, th e se a re inbound directory a s s is ta n c e positions. E x c e ll a lso offers paid training and excellent benefits. Apply in person M onday-Frl^ ay 8am -6pm , Satu rd ay 8am to 4pm or call our Job Info Line at 1-8884234796 Phoenix Tempo M esa 4250 E . Camelback Building K Suite 300 Cam aISquara Atrium 1919 W. Fairmont (off 48th Street between Broadway & Southern .near 1-10) 1906 E . Main (NW corner of Main & Gilbert) rvn rj t L A L L L L £ O E M/F/V/D A G E N T S U R V IC E S Drug screening is a condition o f employment. Page 18 St a t e P ress W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996' HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL HELP WANTEDGENERAL ENVIRONMENTALISTS! WORK M OpELS/ACTORS. In ti with the Sierra Club to protect scouts want you for music vid­ nat’i parks & forests, Earn $200eos and local print work. 941300/wk. Ft/pt Calf Steve 9676922. : ■■'^v ' 8898 ; ; MONfESSORI ASSISTANTS, FAMOUS SAM'S Tempe is hir­ permanent positions, 7:30ing dependable, hardworking 3:30pm, exp. preferred, but-not cooks/servers. Call 491 -0776 necessary. Salary DOE 7308886 FREE TRIPS & cash! Sell P/T FEMALE nanny needed for two school age children. Abili­ ty to stay overnight 2-4 nights per/wk. Must have frans. Good -salary + all expenses paid. Abwatukee area. 460-0463 P/T NIGHT OWL: tv monitor­ ing co needs the right person to preview evening news; Hours: evenings, early am, wee­ kends & some weekdays. Com­ puter literate, quick; accurate & reliable. Please call 957-7995. Serious applicants only ; spring break trips. Hottest places & :coolest spaces. Call Student Express 1-800-SURFS- UP- '• ' 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. v GROWING TEMPE firm needs part-time team members for re­ ceiving and packaging. Must be high-energy^ dependable, and friendly. Good math skills . à plus. Flex, hours, starting at; $6/ht. Apply in person at Total Fulfillment, 2850 S. Roosevelt #102; in,’ Tempe (south . o f Broadway. westof Mill), HELP WTO. P/t, am Hours lOiJô r '2 U 0 Of; 11:00-3:Q0. ApplV in person: 4-5 days/wk. 911 E Broadway. IN HOME providers; Ft/pt workers needed to provide cafe . to de ye 1o prn en ta 1,1y disabled persons living in natural farhjly settings, Salary $7-7.6Q/hr. . . College tuition reimbursement program, health, dental, and opr tical coverage for f/t. B.R.LT.E. ; Inç; Call Sokol; 254-2785 . MR; GOODCENTS subs & pas­ tas hiring for delivery drivers. Earn up to $8.50/hf. & more: Must have own vehicle & prop­ er documents. Please apply at: 528 W. Broadway, Tempe, MRKTING ASST. Family fup park in Scottsdale seeks mfkting asst. 30-40hrs,.; Must be computer literate. Busin-ess/mrkting student; pref. Please fax resume to Marketing Dept. 951-4065 NURSING ASST P/T nursing asst. req. for Scot­ tsdale home (7-1 lam). Flexible, great ih-home working environ, ;: Good pay. 661-3910; ON-SITE VIDEO is seeking pro­ duction specialist, for yidepgraphy; pre & post production. Strong academic background desired. See career services, or call Betsy 967-5061 ; P/T APT cleehing & painting for complex, in Tempe. Apply 1224 E-; Lemon St, Apt #165 M-S 894-2620 HELP WANTEDGENERAL SPORTS MINDED Now hiring 6-8 individuals for immediate emp. $8 guaranteed to start at 15-30 flex. hrs/wk. Flex, holiday hrs. avail. Call Jon for intv. between 3-5, 921• 8282. ; . . , •'■ y,,.-; ; SUBS TITU t É À SSlS TA NT S needed, Montessori School, exp. preferred, but not neces­ sary. Shifts: 7:30-3:30pm; 11-, 2:.30pm; 2:30-6pm. Salary DÔE 730-8886 You can VIEW and SEARCH the State Press Classifieds on the Internet! Jittp://news. P/T. WORK with your hours, ; office, clerical, would 1ike typ­ ing skills. Organize Every- y thing 243-9033. PROFESSIONAL BAR­ TENDERS needed for; part-time work. Must have black.& whim uniform; Call Dave at 37.51386. ¿ Q RÉAL ESTATE Secretary, p/t, Scottsdale office, must know IBM PCs & some apple. Call Dick 951-8666 vpsa.asu, edu/ 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 working with adults who are deyelopmentally arid mentally challenged in group homes & apartment settings located in Phx., Mesa & Tempe. $6.00-$6.50/hr.OOE. Pd. training. Gail Julie @ 431-9511 btw 12-4 or Job line 438-8617. EOE Looking For: • Aggressive Sellers • Customer Service • Competitive Personalities We Offer: • Advancement Opportunities • Average $8-510 per hour • Top sellers up to $20 per hour • 5$ Big incentives, vacations • Study at work » Comfortable working environment ■•Night and weekend positions available • Close to ASU at SKY HARBOR AIRPORT Call today for interview 220.0122 or drop in at 3700 E. Washington ■ WAREHOUSE STOCKER (PR) Sun-Thurs, 4am-8am. Loading vehicles. Must lift 501bs. $7/hr. Fill out application at -6220 E, Oak St., Scottsdale. Closing Date: 10/04/96 Employee drug testing req'd. EOE/M/F/D/V VALET PARKING attendants for special events: 2-3 nights/wk. Must be available weekend nights. At least 20 years olp, 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 t6 Glendale, go left to, central, go right to Dunlap, go left. American Valet Co. is 1 172 blocks up on the right. Also, hiring for f/t (day & night) valet position at a pres­ tigious resort. JO B OPPORTUNITIES SONOITA VINEYARDS winery rep., pt.r outgoing personality, sales exp., knowledge of wines pref., must be over 21. Send re­ sume :to: Dr. Gordon Dutt 6550 N. 1st Ave. Tucson, AZ 85718 RECEPTIONIST FT permanent, fun, fast-paced insurance office. Must be professional, energetic: & detail-oriented; M icrosoft. word & Excel a must $16,640 + great benefits Call Carole at 966-6276 ext. 740 C la ssified s W O RK! EVER THOUGHT ABOUT A CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AD? • Small businesses welcom e • Student personalized m essage Call me about design & scheduling Jess Rankin • State Press Ad Consultant • 965-6737 Earn up to $2,000+/mO; working for Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies. Seasonal and Full-Time employment available; Call: (206) 973-3550 ext. C59187 RESTAURANTS/ BARS RESTAURANTS/ BARS 966-554 5 UNIVERSITY & RURAL E A S T E R N EU R O P E JO B S Teach basic conversational English in Prague, B udap est, or Krakow . No teaching certifi­ cate or European languages required Inexpensive Room & Board + other benefits. Wb«e You BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 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; Funk Night D J 's S p in n in ' th e F u n k — 9 - c lo s e $ 1 .5 0 A n y D rin k ASim OGICAL FORECAST by Frances Drake > Maintain a professional attitude and appearance * Interact positively with thé , public:., and your supervisors. > Work flexible hours. Full-Time and Part-Time, short-term assignm ents, Oct. 7th - Nov. 3rd Include: > Ticket Sellers/Takers -V Food & Beverage Servers > Security Attendants •> Guest Control Custodial W orkers M erchandisers . Jobs like this don't come along very often, so call today for more information. • (602) 833-4436 - E a s t V a lle y (602) 604-6127 - C e n tra l (602) 993-1888 - M etro A re a •A 4 Western STAFF SERVICES Western Temporary Service Division Sounds Unbelievable? It's not! Longdistance phone cards, wholesale retail. Own your own business. The sure way to miss success is to miss the opportunity. Call Scott @ 926-5472 or Call Deanna 545-8206 4 •A HELP WANTEDGENERAL Telesales Consultants needed to make qualified calls for nationally televised Informercial Products. We have many shifts to fit your class schedule. Bool», Tuition, Bar Tab $7.50/hr. Guaranteed Help pay off $150 SIG N IN G BONUS A I AFTERMARKET COMPANY , ■D edicated and R esponsive T elesales I LE T S M AKE A D EA L W E W ILL G IV E YOU $8.75/hr !!!!! Part time positions (flexible hours) Paid Training Casual Dress TEAM EFFORT!! Paid Days Off Relaxed Environment No Cold Calling Afternoon & Evening Hours Commissions & Bonuses Benefits for Full Time Weekly Paychecks Full & Part Time No Çold Calling Paid Training QSM "Walking Distance from ASU" Give Us A Caii 894-9816 1310 E. Broadway Rd. Suite 103 Tempe, Az 85282 GAMES The MU Recreation Center's newest additions: DIEHARD CRYPT K ILLER & SU PER PUZZLE FIGHTER II located m the lower level of the MU • 965-3642 NEED SOME $ $ CASH $$ (c k a e to * HELP WANTEDSALES M/W/F AFTERNOONS & every other Sat; Phones, filing, dis­ patch. Must know valley. 9668795. City Wide Plumbing.. • Umited budget, need lots o f exposure • student organizations - what's up? o r join our dub Telesales Positions Available ■SSnU . LEGAL MESSENGERS" needed ndon-5:30 pm M-F paid hrly + mileage. 253-1155. (206) 971-3680 E x t. K59184 i Keep a sm ile on your face ... and customers' faces, as well • NOW HIRING VALET PARKING Attendants, must be clean cut, good atti­ tude, ;$6/hr. 602-639-6962 Call 12-3pm Students Needed! Are you available to start now? FUN AND EXCmNC TRAVEL INDUSTRY HELP WANTEDGENERAL C R U IS E J O B S Jobs so enjoyable you'll... Te m p e office n e e d s 6 motivated people to work d a y s contactingbusinesse s nation w ide: G uarantee; sa la ry + bongs. C e ll today for interview. M s.-Shaw 73 0-0 1 1 0 O n b u s route HELP WANTEDCLERICA L HELP WANTEDGENERAL Wednesday, October 2, 1996 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) The watchword is persistence! You make several starts on one project until you finally achieve the right approach. Although tempted to give up, you ulti­ mately; are successful. TAURUS (April 20 to Miiy 20) You’re a bit of a workaholic, but avoid pushing youfself too hard.4A co-worker’s suggestion takes you by surprise, but explore this. The evening is best for catching up Oh rest. GEMINI (May 21 tb June 20). You’re not getting your wishes across to others clearly. This could cause you to lose enthusi­ asm for. youi; ideas. Think about how you can be better at com­ municating. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You dig right in on that special project. However, you realize soon enough that it’s a lot more difficult than you’d anticipated. Be patient. ■ LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Those out shopping could make an impulsive purchase that only results in a return trip to the store. Your judgment is off, so avoid temptation. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) The morning hours find you stuck on how to proceed with an assignment. As the day wears on, you find the solution. On the home front, it’s not a good time to insist on having your own way. •- . LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) The morning hours find you sus­ picious of someone you think is hiding Something from you. You spend most of your time on a home improvement project. At night, accent peace with family. SCORPIO (Oct, 23 to Nov. 21) ; You are tempted to friend off but should avoid this. What this person did is really a minor thing and it’s best to let it go. Instead, the aecenf should be placed on harmony. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You’re not afraid to speak out on just about eyefy subject. However be careful in . yoUr choice o f words. Intellectual projects, are most favored and you accom plish mucli in this area. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Some find that they’re in over their heads with credit card debts. A restructuring o f that debt is in order. Extra expendi­ tures are On the way in connec­ tion with family. AQUARIUS (Jan, 20 to Feb. 18) You are so determined to get things done that you don’t real­ ize you’re being abrasive. It’s OK to be assertive but you don’t have to be pushy. A child seeks you out. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Your feelings are roiling around and this could leac) to an unchar­ acteristic display of temper. Try to get to the heart o f w hat’s bothering y oh. Evening hours are favored for relaxation. c YOU BORN TODAY find it easier to viçw the world through rose-colored glasses than in any brutally realistic way. You love to surround yourself with beauti­ ful things and must be in an aes­ thetically pleasing environment in order to be truly happy. You find some difficulty with logic and mathematics but are won­ derful with literature and have a flair for the w ritten word. However; creative writing is favqred ov.er hard hitting jour­ nalism. Relationships are impor­ tant to you. tell a © 1996 King Features Syndicate Inc. L ive mm IRISH M U S I C ASHLI NG BANDERSNATCH Mh4 ^ ,st S t a t e P r ess Page 19 W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 HELP WANTEDCLERICA L SECRETARY PT secretariai/clerical position. - business consulting activities along with graduate studiés help. Scottsdale location, flex hrs approx 20/wk, salary DOE. Call for interview 661 -391(3. WORK 4:00.to 8:00 pm MonFri. processing ad claims. We :w ill train if you have basic math skills. No phones,, typ' ing.. Casual dress.' Apply at AÒB 1919 W. Fairmont Dr. Ste iti tempè 438-23ÌÒ EÉD'M/F RESTAURANTS/ BARS ASSISTANT MGR CORK'NCLEAVER , Mike Pulos Spaghetti Compa­ ny ‘414 SV Mill. Ave., Tempe, AZ. 85281 looking for asst, ritgr. with a minimum of 1 year restaurant management experi­ ence required. Mail resume to above address or fax to 9665265 by October 2. . Accepting apps. for lunch host(ess) & lunch food server.. Will train, p/t. Concern w/ ap­ pearance, reliability & person­ ality are . important; Apply in person M-F 2-5p.m. or by appt. 5101 N; 44th St. 952-0585. BANQU ET SERV ERS needed on call. Ask for Steve or Lisa 256:6645. CAFE TÈRRÀ Cottà one of the country’s premiere rest, in' sw cuisiné is;seeking friendly peo­ ple for host/hosteSs, bussers and line cook pos. Apply- in . •person. 6166 N. Scottsdale Rd. i#100.-:'- ; ^ F in d it F A S T in t h e C la s s if ie d s RESTAURANTS/ BARS Os') HELP WANTED Deli person 20-30 hrs./wk flex. hrs. Ex­ perience preferred but not nec­ essary, Apply in person Capistrands Italian Deli 655 W. Warner Suite #110 Tempe (Kyrene & Warner) 496-904^. POSITIONS A VAIL, at fun cajun restaurant at both loca­ tions. Please, call Baby Kay's and mention this, ad before . I lam or after 3pm at 955-00111 \ RESTAURANTS/ BARS > JW Dundee's Honey Brown ^ Green y $1 HELP WANTEDCHILD CA RE JOB OPPORTUNITIES BA B Y SITTER /M O TH ER S helper. Must be experienced with newborns, p/t, flex; hrs; South Tempe, Warner/Kyrehe home. $5/hr, 777-8389 EXCELLENT INCOME + businéss experience while going to school. Independent distribu­ tors needed to market revolu­ tionary automotive product. Call now for free information, 1800-788*9546, ext. t or fax T808-878-3057, 24 hrs. JOB OPPORTUNITIES ALASKA SUMMER employ­ ment- Fishing Industry. Earn up to $3,000- $6,000+ per month. Room & board! Trans­ portation! Male/Female. No ex­ perience necessary! (206)97135 i 0 ext A’59188 : BE YOUR own boss; New cqV looking for disi. Seeking thè #2 motivated people. Call 945* ‘ - :-■• .V.v ■: . 3107 ENJOY LIFE -Retire before your parents! Earn $4370+ per month for life, just giving away free calling cards. $49 invest'.mèht getsy o u started toward your future. Call now, 1-800493-2665, 2,4 hrsV>5òii.ree code 3531; y Xv\‘- . H D fffU N ■J,A ID 3 |1 | AWARENESS w eek : PINTS TONIGHT LIVE! Fred HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE HELP WANTEDFOOD SERVICE BAGEL (o a t lo th« fart meeting and find ont how you can volunteer.; 111 j| I tn m y O é I r tÉ Off Alt Drafts Balboa Cafe MADNESS 3pm-4:30pm 1 MURm.«09 I® M -F 10pm - M id. (cream cheese extra) 965-8t76 404 S. Mill Ave. 966 1300 2 2 2 E . U n iv e rsity Dr. «1, T em p e • 9 6 7 -7 7 4 4 j y SERVICES SERVICES SERVICES BEST MUSIC of Witchcraft video series; New ltd. ed. qd scored by com poser Miriam Cutler. $17.99 plus $1.27 tax & $3 s&h/cd. Check or money Order to Circa Limited 2839 W. 49th PI Phx, AZ 85008, 2wk delivery ASU Student F inancial Assistance can help fin d money fù r you w ithout charging a pro­ cessing fee;: C all 965?3355. I f you choose to use a private com pany to obtain g ra h ts,or scholarships, be sure to get verifiable references before: re­ mitting. FREE LOST/FOUND FOUND: VACATION photos & sunglasses left in State Press Classified office, 965-6735, MAKE MORE money in one . day than most people make in a month, Cal 1 I -800-899-0035 ex t 540 .' FOUND: WATCH with broken band. Found 9/26 near parking structure 3 965-1243. T E A C H E R S /S T A F F : CONCERNED, about retirement income? Create & generate residual income. Free bookjet. Gall 2305206 . RESTAURANTS/ BARS LIGUORI LOUNGE Phx. 957!2444. Best of Phoenix 1995. : 7 day$ Happy Hour :10am-, 1Opm, domestic pitchers $3.00, Kami & well shots $1, Guin­ ness bn tap SPORTS & RECREATION IN COUNTR Y Vietnam .Vets, pres-.. Gun & Military coll, show. Oct. 5-6 at Amer. Legion Post 2, 2125 S. Indus. Park, Tempe. Sat. 9-5» Sun 9*4. B/S/Tr.. knives, militaria, sport­ ing gbods, & weapons. . Free Parking, good • in-house fe! freshments. Adm. $4.00 (Pro­ ceeds to charity). 898-3878 for info or 984-9683. $1 off adm, with this ad. ATTENTION ALL Students! Over $6 Billion ih public! and private sector grants & scholar­ ships is now available. All students are eligible. Let us help. For more info, call: 1-800263-6495 ext, F59186 FOUND: PHOTOGRAPHS in LL A209 on Friday 9/27. Ruth Kocher 965-3835. ; BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Advertise your , Internet business or Web site in the Classifieds. SERVICES SERVICES WORK FROM home or dormEarn up to $25/hr assembling jewelry. No gimmick. Inter­ viewing in Tempe. Call 8299689 for more information. MUSIC LOST CAT male light gray tiger green eyes, female tan grey black striped thin green eyés- 296» family 4yfs.,675-5Ó06 : FUNDRAISINGFAS T FU N DR A IS ER - Rai se $500 in 5 daysTGreeks^ clubs, mòtiVated individuals! Fast, easy-no financial obligations. (800) 862-1982 Ext. 33; / ! CURRENT JOB listings for over. 50 top local com panies most don't advertise. Send. $ 1.4.95 to PO B o x 2 8 9 3 T tm pe»Xz. 85281> ; ! X. v ' > / Ë LEC t ROLYS I S BY Degna. All methods! Low rates; R.u. ral/Southerh area. 921-1.146; • !FREE INFORMATION on find­ ing & ob taih in g g tan t money. Send $3 for shipping hân-! • dling to DCL Publications PO Box 54Ô27, Phx, AZ. $5078. TYPING/WORD PROCESSIN G PERSONALS $ 19.99 FOR a full set of nails is an awesome deal at Wizzards Hair Studiò, 967-2360 $9.99 GETS a custom haircut. Avoid the 'chop shops'. ^Wiz­ zards Hair Studio, 967-2360. $ 1.9 8 PG; A PÂ/M L A ! Exp'd edit. Fast, accurate. Rural/LJriiv. . Full editing Jim 967-23(50 $1.99/PG, $ 15/RES. Proofed, . APA/MLA. Same day. DTP. , Near ASU. Brian 967-5987; A fA MICHELLE B. Happy ; 2.1 st' birthday.. ... Your sisters, love you!! AM BITrOtis? BUIJLD a busi­ ness part-time while in. school. Call 340-4626; CONGRATULATIONS TO the newly! inducted pledges! Of Delta Sigma Pi for the fall sem estéf'óf 1996. . Good job at the first meeting and keep tip the good work. I Only C a l l 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 f o r m o r e in f o r m a t io n I $ 4 4 .9 4 Sfunttñl: INTERNET-RELATED SERVICES C R O SSR O A D S Spaes sìl APA/MLA EXPERIENCED typing/wofd processing. Need it fast?! Call Jessie, 945-5744. Editing services available, TYPING - accurate» honest work. Reliable. APA/M LA, Competitive rates 83 M 384. WANTED NEEDED EGG donor imrned! Between the age of 16-25, must be, African-American, in exceilent health. Will pay up to $1,500. Contact Lorna! and mention Bèrniçe Albert 9567481! . INTERNET URLS CHECK OUT your student g o V e .r n m e n t . h ftp :// www. a s u e d u/s tudentlife/ÀSASU RESUMES FROM SCRATCH State Press on the Internet! CREATIVE, PROFESSIONAL Resumes for jobsinternships & career fairs. CVs, cover letters, - updates & salary histories. E P 1 SC 6 P A L C H R I S T I A N S O N C A M P US If all you want from church is hell, fire and brimstone. B u r n t h is a it T em pe 9 6 8 -7 7 3 5 Mon.-Sun, 8am-8pm FIG H T S P E ED IN G TIC K ET S Info that will save you SIOO's In law fees, fines and inflated insurance rates. THE SPEEDING TICKET M ANUAL Hell, fire and brimstone you won’t find in our church. But if it's warm fellowship and the love of a forgiving and understanding God you want, join us in worship this Sunday. Call now for your copy 2 3 0 -4 3 3 4 onif Internet! lust visit our website ind test your skill playing Itplifl Sports Gim». Hi cost. No gambling. Andit’sfun! You’ll fiidus oi Thorbecke's Gym www.flphasports.comalpha 9 6 6 -6 6 2 1 Mi limili. Find all the stories, the Today section, special sections, and the Classifieds on the World Wide Web ^$2 p e r w orkout p lcis $10 m em bership o r yearly tiem bèrship $200 http://news.vpsa.asu.edu ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! G r a n t s & S c h o l a r s h ip s AVAILABLE FROM SPONSORS! N O REPAYMENTS EVER! $ $ $ • For I nfo Call: 1-800-400-0209 TUTORS ASVs Coupon Book Made for ASU students, by ASU students to save you money all over town! TUTORS TUTORS TUTORS EXPERIEN CE....RELIA BILITY....PERFO RM AN CE....RESU LTS.... YOU W ILL RECEIVE THO SE....AN D M O RE.... A T M ATRIX EDUCATION CENTER. St. A u g u s t in e 's 1735 S. College St. 8 and W arn C hurch of the Epiph any .2222 S. Price Rd. 8 and 10 am and 5 pm ST.J ames 975 E. Warner Rd. 8 and 10:30 am We offer tutorial for the following classes: A lg e b ra M A T 1 0 6 , M A T 11 4 , M A T 117* C a lc u lu s/P re c a lc u lu s M A T 2 1 0 , M A T 2 7 0 , M A T 2 7 1 , M A T 170 F in ite M a th M A T 11 9 S ta tistic s Q B A 221, P S Y 230, STP 226 P h y sics C h e m is try • A d v a n c e d M a th A p p lie d E n g in e e rin g P H Y 11 1 , P H Y 11 2 , P H Y 121 C H M 1 0 1 , C H M 11 3 , C H M 11 5 , C H M 116 M A T 2 7 2 , M A T 2 7 4 , M A T 34 2 CO N 221, CO N 323, ECE 210 ‘ Includes complete calculator instruction. O u r sessions fill up fast -.'call' us to d ay for in form ation . O u r tutoring program i s an e xce lle n t su pplem en t to your c la s s e s St A S U . O u r stu d en ts h a v e a lw a y s sc o re d in the 90th percentile of their .exam s. Fof more information about ourprograms, please call 9674990 - Successfully h elpin g stu den ts Since 19 8 0 . MATRIX EDUCATION CENTER • “SIMON' Cornerstone Mall • 968-4668 Page 20 State P ress W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1996 state press on-line http://news.vpsa.asu.edu W hen T h in gs N eed To B e B la c k & W h ite . . . We use only top quality Ilford products & equipment to give you the best pictures. F IL M P R O C E S S I N G . . . . $ 2 .4 9 C O N T A C T S H E E T S ............................$ 4 .0 0 5 x 7 .................i - i . . . . . $ 3 .0 0 8 x 1 0 . .......................... $ 4 .4 9 11x14 . . . . . . . . . . . . _____ .$9.50 1 6 x 2 0 _____ . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 7 .5 0 ËÊtâiÊÊ Image I B L it S IVIAI. ■ Jit JiTO I FINE FAST FOTOS 32nd S i. & Indian School 468-9970 P h o to : M. R o s e Wednesday % JË S 3 È Ë S m FridasV Evening Star Presents M a x w e ll w/ Satellite No Cover All Night For Ladies All Ages Show Saturday|||j SundayV ___________________________ a Jo an O sborne >w/ D ogs Eye View and Boogie Knights “Call TIckctmastcr for . Sjj&K 10 $. M ill